LOUISIANA
HOTSHOT
PI
Eddie Valentino is old, tough, street smart, racist, sexist,
grammatically challenged, and a high school dropout, His new
associate, Talba Wallis (aka the Baroness de Pontalba)
is young, inexperienced, African-American, female, well-spoken, well-educated,
and not only has the soul of a poet, but is one. Why did he hire
her? Even he could see she's a hotshot. (Also,
his wife and daughter made him.) Why did she take the job? She
felt sorry for him. (And hermother made her.)
Their
mission is to find a guy who likes to have sex with underage
girls. A guy known only as Toes. Easy enough except that the one person
who knows his real name has suffered a fatal accident.A funny
thing about that. Talba goes to her funeral and she suffers
something herself--what, exactly, she doesn't know. A funny kind of
deja vu. Yet this is her first funeral. (Or so her family says.)
The
cops could help Eddie and Talba--but they won't. Toes seems
to have juice in the department.The teen-age girls who've met
him could help--but they're too frightened.
On
the long road to the perp, it becomes clear that Eddie's got
a problem--something he's keeping from his family, something involving
the son he hasn't seen in ten years. Talba's got one too--her family's
keeping something from her--in fact, they're hiding everything
about her father, including his name and whether or not he's even alive.Eddie
has an accident similar to the one that took the witness
out. And the mother of the client disappears. Talba's having
flashbacks to a violent childhood she never dreamed
she lived through--and she's got to solve an increasingly violent
case alone. Or almost alone--a hotshot like herself can easily
locate a missing son, and she finds Eddie's
kid, Tony Tino. Then Tony goes missing.
That's
the bare bones. For me, the fun of the book was developing
Talba (introduced in a previous book, 82
DESIRE and creating Eddie, who, I discovered, really is kind
of a lovable old cuss once you get to know him. Talba's vital, sassy,
intelligent, and funny--I truly loved spending time with her. She and
Eddie have quite a few things to teach each other. Watching them cope
with that had its moments of hilarity, though I meant the book to be
fairly serious in tone, dealing with the twin issues of parental neglect
and over-protection.
I
can't say too much, of course, but boy, do these two have
problems. Talba's investigation into her own secrets and Eddie's is
really more than a sub-plot--it's more or less a parallel plot, and
is for me the real heart of the book, the place where you see who
she and Eddie really are, what they've suffered, and whether they have
the mettle to handle it.
Want
to try a chapter?
LOUISIANA
HOT SHOT
Nerd
wanted. Nerdette wouldn't be too bad. Young hot shot, under thirty,
5 yrs. computer, 10 yrs. investigative exp. Harvard ed., no visible
piercings. Must play the computer like Horowitz played piano. Slave
wages.
CHAPTER
ONE
"Huh.
This one see you comin'--he as picky as you." "Let me see
that." Unbelieving, Talba Wallis grabbed for the
classifieds. She was having breakfast with her mother at the old black-painted
table, trying to ignore Miz Clara's morning meddling. Talba had
nothing against getting a job, indeed fully intended
to. She merely preferred to peruse the Times-Picayune ads at her own
pace, if at all. The best jobs in her field would be on the Internet,
so why bother? However, she had to admit her mother had happened
on a rare gem--an honest ad. The kind you
usually saw only in the personals: "Fat toad, sixty-five, stinks,
seeks hard-bodied blue-eyed blonde for hideous perversions. Must be
18 and star of own TV series.""Must be some kind of
joke," Miz Clara said. "Nobody under thirty
with all that experience." Hardly hearing, Talba took the
paper and wandered toward her room. Who the
hell would place an ad like that? It was easy enough to find out, and
she couldn't resist--it was a slow Sunday morning. Darryl had his kid
for the weekend.
Actually,
she met quite a few of the criteria. She was under
thirty, had no visible piercings, did have investigative experience,
and was, in fact, the Horowitz of the computer. She'd probably be employed
if she weren't so damn good. In fact, she certainly would be--she'd
just quit a cushy gig at United Oil out of pure boredom. Elsewhere,
there were plenty of jobs for a nerd of her distinction, but Talba was
a New Orleanian through and through. Her mama was here and her boy friend
was here, but that was only part of it. Her heart was here.
The
last line of the ad said "Fax resume," and gave a number.
That was all she needed. A few strokes of the keyboard and she had a
name: Edward Valentino. A few more and she had another: E.V.
Anthony Investigations. A detective agency
on Carondelet. No web site. "Well, well, well, well, well.
What can we deduce from this?" She mumbled
to herself, thoroughly delighted. Her mentor, Gene Allred, had told
her he got a good percentage of his work from being first in
the phonebook--therefore, given the "E.V.",
there probably was no Anthony.Carondelet Street was in the CBD, or Central
Business District--therefore maybe Valentino was a pretty respectable
guy (which was more than she could say for Allred.)
She
grabbed for the Yellow Pages. Aha, an ad. Twenty-five years'
experience. Specializing in criminal defense, undercover, divorce, child
custody, missing persons, insurance, pre-nuptial. In other words, not
specializing. Interesting, though--the ad didn't mention too
much about background checks. Corporate and
pre-nuptial might cover that, but something told Talba Mr. Valentino
didn't care much for doing heavy computer searches.
Well,
hell. That was a nerd's job. She got back on the net and
sometime after lunch had a stack of papers half an inch thick. An excellent
day's work. She decided to give her mother a treat. "Come
on, Mama. Let's take a ride." Miz Clara was dozing in
front of the television set. "Where ya want to go?"
"Let's go see Aunt Carrie. I've got this nice car--we might as
well use it." She had bought a five-year-old Camry out of her United
Oil earnings.
Miz
Clara said, "Hmmph. Not nice enough."
"Oh, yeah, I think so. In this neighborhood, I think it's quite
nice enough." Her mama lived in a run-down cottage in the Ninth
Ward, in a block poetically situated between Desire and Piety. A better
car would just be a better target. Miz Clara went off to trade
her floppy old blue slippers for a pair of
Nikes, and find herself a wig to wear. When she came back, she said,
"What you been doin' in there by ya self?"
"Writing poetry," said Talba, and Miz Clara shut up.
It
was eight forty-five the next morning when Talba tried the
door marked E.V. Anthony. It was locked. Good. That probably meant they
came in at nine. She found a ladies room in which to replenish
her lipstick and returned to stand guard.
At approximately nine-oh-five, a young white woman unlocked the door.
"Are you waiting for someone?"
"Edward Valentino."
"Come on in. Do you have an appointment?"
"No. Just taking a chance."
"Can I help you with anything?"
"Oh, no thanks. I'll just read a magazine." It was obvious
the woman was dying of curiosity, but Talba
figured once was enough to tell her story. It was another few
minutes--twenty maybe--before a stocky man
came in, a man who'd be sixty-five in a matter of days, stood five-feet-ten,
and limped a little. Not even giving him a chance to greet the help,
she rose and extended her hand.
"Mr. Valentino, I presume."
"Good morning. Good morning," he said, clearly a little
flustered.
"I didn't know about the limp."
"Say that again?" Now he was irritated.
Talba
noticed that he said "dat" for "that". He had the
kind of New Orleans accent that sounded, for all the world, as if he'd
grown up in Brooklyn. She held up her file.
"Everything else was on the Internet. But I missed the limp."
He nodded at the secretary.
"You're Eileen Fisher, aren't you?" She turned back to Valentino.
"And you're about to have a birthday. Congratulations."
Smoke
was starting to come out of Valentino's ears. "What the
hell is this?" What da hell is dis?
"This," she said, "is a young hot shot, able to
play the computer like Horowitz tickles the
ivories. No visible piercings and well under thirty. Talba Wallis at
your service."
Valentino
looked exhausted, but he stuck out his hand manfully.
"Eddie Valentino. You gotta be a friend of Angela's."
"Angela? I must be missing something."
"Come on, come on. Angela put ya up to this."
"Angela. Your wife's name is Audrey, it can't be...oh! Daughter.
She must be your daughter."
He was laughing now. "Angie, Angie--don't you ever give
up?"
Mr.
Valentino, I'm as much of a hot shot as you're gonna get,
but your daughter's name wasn't in any of the databases. Now if I'd
known I was going to need it, I could have had it in two seconds."
A
look of astonishment spread over his features. Talba figured
he was starting to catch on. "How'd you know who placed the ad?"Talba
shrugged. "You advertised for an investigator. I investigated."
Valentino
closed his eyes and shook his head slowly, a man clearly
at the end of his rope. "Eileen, you got any coffee?"
"Yes sir. Of course." The girl looked terrified.
"Bring us some, will ya? Ms. Wallis, come on in."
He
led the way to one of three other rooms she could see, another of which
seemed to be a combination coffee and copy room. Valentino's office
wasn't a whole lot grander. He turned on a light and slipped behind
a desk, gesturing at two facing chairs. Talba took one, and for the
first time really looked at him.
His
hair was salt and pepper, not yet white, and not soon to
be, but his face was deeply lined. Almost as if it had been carved out
of a once-handsome, very Mediterranean demeanor that had become, for
some reason, very tired. Deeply, deeply tired. The bags under his eyes
were duffels. She almost asked if he were getting enough sleep."Start
at the beginning, Ms. Wallis."
She
passed him most of the file, holding back her ace in the
hole. "Here's the background check I did on you, omplete with driving
record and newspaper clips. I see you worked on the Houlihan case."
He nodded impatiently. "Yeah, yeah. Okay, you're a hot shot.
Ya went to Harvard?" Eileen brought in a couple of mugs of coffee,
and he had his to his face almost before he'd finished speaking. "Xavier.
Computer skills mostly self-taught, except for five
years at TeleSyst. Five years off and on, I mean--some of it was summer
stuff while I was in school. But I bow to he applicant who did go to
Harvard and brings you a package like this."
"Pretty
pushy broad, aren't ya?" His eyes crinkled a little.
He was starting to loosen up. Talba knew guys like this--the way they
showed they liked you was to get insulting. Best to let
it go, she thought. Stow the righteous indignation.
She gave him a grin instead. "I try to be." He had drunk about
half his coffee by now and it was doing him a world of good. His skin
was looking less gray, his eyes starting to show some spirit, the purple
of the duffels smoothing to puce. What's in that stuff? she thought,
and took a sip herself. If she hadn't already
been sitting, it would have knocked her on her butt.
"How
much investigative experience ya had?"
"About two months." She paused.
"Not counting the ten minutes I spent
on this." Gesturing grandly at the pile she'd given him. He
didn't crack a smile, and she made a mental note to lay
off the bragging. It wasn't going over. "I'm just kidding. It really
took me about an hour and a half." "You tellin' me
the truth?" Da trut'. She made an attempt to look modest, but it
was something she hadn't tried before; she
wasn't sure she succeeded. "Yes sir. Give or take." "Tell
me about your experience." "Well, it was a funny thing. I
had a problem I needed a private eye for.
So I picked one out of the phonebook, and the guy hired me." "Oh,
yeah? Who was that?" "Gene Allred."
He
leaned forward a little, and his eyes threw off sparks like
a couple of mini-fires. The guy had something she hadn't seen at first.
"Gene Allred? I knew Gene Allred. Crooked son of a bitch."
Talba laughed. "Guess you right." She hardly ever lapsed
into dialect, but this guy was such an old-time New Orleanian, it was
catching. "A little sleazy, but he sure could detect." "What
was so special about ya he just had to hire ya?" "He said
I had the right demographics." Valentino raised an eyebrow. "Meaning
I could go undercover in places he couldn't. That and
my computer skills. Gene was kind of a Luddite." "A
what?" "Luddite. You're one too, aren't you?" "I'll
let ya know when ya clue me in what ya talkin' about."
"A Luddite is somebody who'd rather give the government
thirty-three cents than send E-mail."
"I got no time for that crap." "I rest my case.
But an awful lot of detective work is done
on computers these days. Which must be why you advertised." "It
ain't the business it was." Valentino was a heavy-set guy,
somewhere around five-ten, but a little shorter, she thought. His shoulders
sagged forward as if he'd just suffered a defeat. Talba hated
seeing him that way; found it made her truly sad, and noticed for the
first time the sadness in the detective's eyes. The sadness, and
the intelligence; and the kindness. Oh motherfucker oh shit,
she thought, realizing she had started to
care about him. She recognized instantly that it wasn't a sexual thing--never
could be, never would be. She had a great boy friend, a dynamite boy
friend, and this dude was white, married, old enough to be her father,
and so depressed he probably couldn't get it up. Definitely not sexual,
but definitely something, and something she thought she recognized.
Something not too healthy. Valentino's eyes--the sad, intelligent,
oh-so-kind eyes, the terribly caring, deeply
understanding, tender-as-the-night eyes, were the sort of eyes sometimes
referred to soulful; the sort that, in a young, attractive man were
almost guaranteed to get a young woman in trouble. She had seen
those eyes before, seen them on many an attractive,
hurt, tough, scary young face; and she had followed them where they
had led and had gotten in the kind of trouble they invariably got you
in. She was such a sucker for that kind of thing her mother and
brother had sunk to trying an intervention to get her to dump her last
boy friend, the one before Darryl, the one she now recognized was the
second biggest asshole in the city of New Orleans (she being the biggest
for not seeing it sooner).
She
knew perfectly well why these eyes were so attractive. They
were irresistible because they were the only soft thing in a hard face;
a worldly, leather-tough face that had seen it all and dealt with it,
a face you wouldn't want to mess with. They were a cry for help from
a soul that desired no help, wanted no help, chose no help, couldn't
in any way be helped. They were not eyes that cried, they were
themselves the tears; they were the fatal
tipoff that mutilated and now aggressively armored soul needed to be
kissed and made well. That the imaginary tears must be wiped away, crying,
desperate eyes replaced by the carefree, corner-crinkled eyes of a man
who has just been made to laugh by his beloved; or the devoted, follow-you-to-the-grave
eyes of a man who has just made love to her. Or to anyone. Or to a plank
with a mink-lined hole in it.
Oh,
yes. Talba was not only under thirty, but well under twenty-five,
and already she knew everything about eyes like that--everything except
what they meant when they were underscored by velvet-soft pouches so
big they needed a bra; so bloodstained, so seemingly bruised you wanted
to order emergency ice. What they meant when they sometimes
sparked like small fires and peered from the
head of an old white man who said dese and dose.
When
Eddie Valentino spoke again, interrupting her silent ocular
love song, she nearly did a double take. "I'll think about
it, Ms. Wallis."
"You'll think about it? Here I stay up half the night to
show you what I can do, and then I get here before sunrise, and you'll
think about it?"
And
for the first time in the interview, sad, soulful Eddie Valentino
really did smile--a broad, amused, gotcha smile. "I thought
it only took you ten minutes. Hour and a half at the most."
"I'm
making a point, Mr. Valentino. I tend to exagggerate when
I'm making a point. And the point is, I'm your hot shot. Who else was
here before your door opened with a complete dossier on you? I mean,
what's the definition of a hot shot?" He smiled again, "You're
a ball of fire, all right. I just gotta sleep
on it, that's all.
"Oh.
Well." Twice Talba had made him smile. Maybe that's what
her mission was; maybe that was all she was meant to do. Of course he
had to sleep on it. What was she thinking? I'm believing my own
P.R., she thought, and felt embarrassed. What
did I think he was going to do? Welcome me like a long-lost daughter?