Shades of Blue
Page 27
Andie flashes me a look. “Stay out of this, Evan,” Andie says.
“Who the fuck are you?” the big man says to me.
“Evan Horne. The tapes, are, were, mine. I simply came down here to get them back when your man Rollins showed up and interfered with the exchange.”
“How do you know Special Agent Rollins?”
“Through Wendell Cook in your Los Angeles office.”
“Wendell Cook?” He looks at me for a moment, his eyes squinting, then some flicker of recognition washes over his face. “Are you the guy who…the Gillian Payne case a couple of years ago—”
“That would be me.”
Out of the corner of my eye I catch Andie shaking her head and sighing.
“If you call Agent Cook, I’m sure he’ll vouch for me. This has just been a big misunderstanding all around.”
The big man looks down, scrapes his foot on the asphalt, like he’s about to step into the batters box. He nods, turns and walks away, then turns back. “Agent Lawrence, I’ll want to see you in the morning, my office.”
“Yes, sir,” Andie says. She takes something out of her pocket and hands it to her boss. “I think this belongs to Agent Rollins.” He shakes his head and walks away.
She looks at me and shakes her head. “You are something else,” she says, but manages a slight smile.
“What was that?”
“Tracking device. It was under the bumper of my car. That’s how he knew where we were.”
“Hey,” somebody yells. “It’s one of the two divers that arrived earlier.” He pulls himself up and over the edge on the wall, his rubber suit glistening in the moonlight, clutching Cameron’s laptop bag by the strap. “Got it,” he says.
He holds it up, water dripping and pooling on the asphalt around his fins, the mask pulled up on his forehead. Cameron gets up and walks over, taking it from him. He looks at me and shrugs.
We all watch as Eddie Solano is handcuffed and put in one of the police cruisers. Rollins is right behind him, escorted to a waiting FBI car.
“This isn’t over, Horne,” he says as he walks by. His clothes are dripping water, his hair plastered to his head. He points at Andie. “You, you’re finished Lawrence,” he snaps at Andie, then he’s gone.
Things start breaking up then. Car doors slam, engines start, the lights are taken down as Andie, Cameron, and I walk to our cars. Cameron throws the water logged laptop in the trunk. There’s nothing for any of us to say now.
“Talk to you,” he says, and gets in his car and drives off. Andie and I go to her car and I wind slowly back toward the main entrance, not wanting to talk, not wanting to think. When we get to the guard shack it’s manned now. They must have shaken awake whoever should have been on duty. Cameron’s car is in front of us, the doors and trunk lid open. Suddenly security conscious, the guard, flashlight in hand, is going through everything.
Cameron glances toward us and puts his hands out in a helpless shrug as the guard lifts the wet laptop case out of the trunk. I roll down the window and hear the guard tell Cameron to open it and take the computer out.
“Oh for Christ’s sake,” Cameron says but complies with the guard’s instructions. He unzips the case and pulls out the laptop, then opens the side pocket with his cell phone and the tapes. I stare in morbid fascination as Cameron holds them up. He studies them for a moment, then turns to me and yells. “Evan!”
I get out and walk to his car, Andie right beside me. “Jesus,” he says. “Look.”
Just like the CDs that Buzz had sent FedEx, the tapes are shrink wrapped and encased in zip lock bags. Cameron unzips one of the bags and holds the tape up to the guard’s flashlight. Then we both smile. The guard looks confused but Cameron, Andie, and I all smile.
“Yes!” Cameron says.
Thank you, Buzz. The tapes are bone dry. Not a drop of water on them.
Coda
“Sure looks different in the daytime doesn’t it?” Cameron Brody says.
We’re standing on the sidewalk, just outside the Hunters Point Naval Yard, looking toward the guard shack. It’s manned now, and after what happened there it probably will be all the time.
“Yeah, it does.” We can see past the shack at the collections of buildings, old structures that housed Navy personnel at one time. Further on, the dark water where ships once docked, and the span of the Bay Bridge, filled now with traffic on both decks.
We turn and walk back to Dago Mary’s restaurant and go inside. It’s crowded, but we find a table out on the patio and order the lunch special.
“Andie is meeting us here?” Cameron asks.
“Yeah, she had another meeting at the Bureau, kind of winding things up, but the review board gave her a clean pass on the bank robbery shooting. Today is more about her and Rollins and what happened here.”
It’s been nearly two weeks since Rollins and Eddie Solano went in the Bay along with Cameron’s computer and my tapes. Things had settled down considerably since then. I was even finally getting my mind around Dana’s death.
Coop had followed up with his contacts at Hollywood police. Brent Sergent confirmed he had coerced Dana to help him get me to sell Cal’s house, exploiting the relationship they’d had earlier. She’d gone along with it at first, but later balked and refused to cooperate further.
“She just got caught up in things with the wrong guy,” Coop said.
Her status as a UCLA grad student was genuine, and her family had come out to take her back to Iowa for the funeral. They wanted to prosecute Sergent, but Coop didn’t think it would fly. Tragic, but an accident nevertheless. It would never go away completely, but I was dealing with the finality that she was just gone.
The waitress brings our order and we dig into thick hamburgers and a pile of fries. “You’re right, the food is good.”
Cameron nods. “Yeah imagine what this place was like sixty years ago.” He looks up and waves then. “Hey, here comes the FBI.”
I turn and see Andie standing at the entrance to the dining room waving back. She comes over, eyeing our plates, kisses me lightly and sits down. She’s dressed smartly in a dark pants suit and white blouse.
“So, tell us. How’d it go?” I ask.
Andie puts both hands on the table and looks at us, a grin spreading over her face. “How’d it go? It went fucking great!” She looks around for the waitress. “God, I’m hungry.”
She orders what we have and still grinning, looks at us. “The best part is Rollins got reamed for unauthorized use of a tracking device, and transferred. With any luck to North Dakota.” She sits up straighter and beams. “I, on the other hand, have been reassigned to active duty.”
“So you’re a good girl again,” I say.
“Well there was, shall we say, somewhat of a reprimand, but nothing serious.”
“Congratulations.” Cameron joins in with me.
“Thank you gentlemen.” She looks at Cameron. “Eddie Solano has been arraigned too. New York waived extradition for the assault charge, so it’ll all happen here.”
Cameron had already made a statement to the police. He frowns. “You know,” he says, “I feel kind of sorry for him in a way. He did have that money coming.”
“Maybe so, but that wasn’t the way to get it.” Andie says. “He’ll be doing some time.”
I’d thought about Solano too, what the waiting had done to him, knowing his song had been recorded and unable to collect the royalties. He’d gone over the edge but in a way I could almost understand. The same could have happened to Cal but he turned the frustration in on himself.
“Hey,” Andie adds, seeing Cameron’s face. “It’s a first offense. It might not be too hard on him.”
Cameron nods and finishes his hamburger without looking up.
Andie gives me a puzzled look, but I just shrug. Things were finally almost back to normal. I’d started to get a trio together and was doing some gigs locally, hanging out at Niki
’s Deli in Crockett on Sundays, and enjoying the quiet of Monte Rio. I’d already had some feelers from Yoshi’s, the Bay Area’s premier jazz club. The release of the Roy Haynes CD should help things along nicely. I’d played and replayed my two tracks and was very satisfied with the final mix.
Cameron had done more checking for me on the Birth of the Cool band, but it was pretty definite that Cal had not penned any of the tunes. It was disappointing but deep down I knew it was true, and I did have the tapes. It was enough for me to know and have proof that Cal played a small role. I hadn’t told Andie or Cameron about the call from Dan Morgenstern.
“The Institute of Jazz Studies is interested in the tapes and how I came into them,” I tell them. “They want to add them to their collection, and have me tape the story for their oral history collection.”
“Awesome,” Cameron says. “Another little piece of jazz history falls into place.”
“Oh, sweetie, that’s wonderful,” Andie says. She squeezes my hand.
“Did you hear about the Monk and Coltrane discovery?” Cameron asks.
“No. What was it?”
“Wait,” Andie says. “That’s Thelonious Monk and John Coltrane?”
“Exactly,” Cameron says.
Andie beams and nods toward me.
“At Carnegie Hall in 1957. It was originally done as a Voice of America broadcast, but it was never aired. Somebody going through some old tapes found a box just marked. T. Monk.”
“Amazing.”
“So jazz things get lost too,” Andie says, smiling, looking at me.
We hadn’t talked about it anymore, but we both assumed Rollins had mailed me the file on Cal. His non denial when Andie had called him on it was proof enough for me. As for the blacked out lines, well, we’d never know and it didn’t matter now.
I’d called my mother and had a couple of long talks to assure her I was okay with things and update her a little. She’d sounded pleased but I was still digesting everything I’d learned, not sure when I’d really have it all together, getting used to the idea that Richard Horne was not my real father. I may not ever. That seems to be more difficult than accepting Cal. I know though, that Richard is right. I may have come from a different name, a different father, but I’m still who I am, and I can live with that.
We finish lunch and walk out to the parking lot, all of us instinctively glancing again at the guard shack at the entrance to the Naval Yard one last time.
“Well, I’m outta here,” Cameron says. We shake hands and he hugs Andie. “Stay in touch. Let me know where you’re playing.”
“Will do.” He gets in his car and we watch him drive off.
“I want to spend the rest of the week in Monte Rio,” I tell Andie.
“Me too,” she says. “Now I can really relax. I’ll be down later. Just have to do a few things at home.”
***
I sit upstairs in the loft, the headphones on, listening to the tapes one last time before I pack them up to send to the Institute of Jazz at Rutgers University. A light rain coats the redwood trees and trickles down the glass, and I can hear a steady tapping on the sky lights. Fall is definitely here now as I feel the chill in the air.
The CD copies are better quality of course, but somehow for me, not the same as the actual tapes, the raw recordings. Miles Davis, the band, and Calvin on piano. Maybe it’s just watching those plastic reels slowly turn. I’d managed to borrow an old reel to reel recorder to listen to them again.
I glance out the window and see Andie’s car turn into the driveway, then the front door opens and I hear her footsteps on the stairs. Milton raises his head off my foot and perks up his big floppy ears.
I switch off the recorder and walk down to the living room, thinking how I like the idea that the tapes will be at Rutgers, making Calvin Hughes at least a footnote in jazz history.
I think my father would like that.
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