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Authors: Marc Krulewitch

Tags: #Mystery

Gold Coast Blues

BOOK: Gold Coast Blues
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Gold Coast Blues
is a work of fiction. Names, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

An Alibi eBook Original

Copyright © 2015 by Marc Krulewitch

All rights reserved.

Published in the United States by Alibi, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

ALIBI is a registered trademark and the ALIBI colophon is a trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.

eBook ISBN 9780804177696

Cover design by Scott Biel and Caroline Teagle

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Contents

Cover

Title Page

Copyright

Prologue

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Chapter 41

Chapter 42

Chapter 43

Chapter 44

Chapter 45

Chapter 46

Chapter 47

Chapter 48

Chapter 49

Chapter 50

Chapter 51

By Marc Krulewitch

About the Author

Prologue

Stones crunching and popping off tires registered innocuously in the back of Tanya’s mind as she sat in an armless swayback lounge chair swiping her finger across an iPad. She felt wonderfully cozy with her legs folded tightly underneath herself, wearing jersey knit stretch pants and an oversized sweatshirt. At no time in her young life had she ever imagined
seeing
a house like the ones on the Home & Design website, never mind relaxing in a modern living room of concrete and glass looking into a leafy paradise. When she heard knocking and doorbell chimes, Tanya felt more annoyed at having to leave her comfy lounge chair than alarmed by the urgency of whoever was visiting.

She opened the front door to see her friend’s familiar smile. He treated her like gold but his arrival deflated her mood a bit, reminded her that her days of living in a suburban wonderland were coming to a close. Good things lay ahead, she knew, but a bittersweet mixture of hope and anxiety was also never far away.

“What’s in the suitcase?” Tanya asked, as if she didn’t know.

“Your train has finally arrived, my love,” her friend said, locking the door then following Tanya back to the living room, pulling a small metallic suitcase on rollers. Tanya returned to the lounge chair. Her friend dragged a chair over from a card table and sat in front of her. They made small talk for several minutes before he smiled broadly, put both hands on the suitcase handle, then struggled to lift it chest high, where he held it a few seconds before dropping it back down.

“Oh, my god!” Tanya said.

They both laughed. Tanya told her friend she couldn’t wait to buy more
comfy
clothes like what she was wearing. Then tires skidded on gravel. Soon after, someone fiddled with the door. Tanya’s friend jumped to his feet, then backed away from the living room entrance, dragging the suitcase with him.

That’s when the guys with the guns walked in.

Chapter 1

T
EN DAYS EARLIER

The first day of spring. Cold, rainy. Ten
A.M.

Coltrane, a giant saxophone-playing rodent wearing a red beret, hung from the ceiling of Mocha Mouse, a kind of coffee shop–deli that had become my hangout. I had just finished reading an article in
The Partisan
about the most recent collection of rubber stamps given to the new mayor—the one who promised a city free of bookkeeping ploys or sleight-of-hand political maneuvers—when I looked up to see a kid standing in front of the door, shaking the water off his leather jacket and scanning the room. His T-shirt clung to a severely chiseled physique. He was slim, about five-nine, and his shaved head and baby face reminded me of the screaming man in that famous painting. When his gaze reached the far corner of the room, he looked at me squint-eyed for several seconds, then advanced. His swagger meant business. As he approached, I recalled eyeing my holstered gun as I left my apartment. Alas, I’d left it behind.

“Are you Mr. Landau?” he said in blue-collar New Jersey.

“I might be,” I said, unable to keep a straight face. My humor escaped him.

“Oh. I thought maybe—”

“Sorry. I’m Landau. What can I do for you?”

The kid took a seat and folded the jacket on his lap. “Mr. Kalijero told me to see you.”

“First, tell me who you are.”

“Uh, I’m Eddie Byrne.” Eddie offered his hand. I took it. A spiderweb tattoo stretched between thumb and forefinger.

“How do you know Detective Kalijero?”

“I don’t know Detective Kalijero. But he’s friends with a cop I know back East. Kalijero said you’re good at findin’ people.”

“Tell me what Kalijero looks like.”

“I just talked to him on the phone.”

I folded the newspaper shut and pushed it aside. “Are you searching for birth parents?”

The kid screwed up his face. “No, no. My girlfriend, Tanya Maggio.”

He handed me a photo taken in a booth where you sat on a stool while the camera flashed rapid-fire then spit out a strip of pictures. She bordered between cute and pretty, with straight dark hair and a perky nose.

“How old is this picture?”

“It was a while ago,” he said. “But that’s what she looks like.”

“When did you last see her?”

“Over a year ago.” He started scratching the back of his neck. A bear claw of black ink graced his left forearm.

“Okay, if you want me to help you, then you need to tell me a story about Eddie and the gal he hasn’t seen in a year. Let’s start with where
you’ve
been the last year.”

“Yeah, yeah. Sorry, I ain’t never talked with a guy like you before. I’ve been away. So me and Tanya haven’t been seein’ each other so much but now I’m back and I heard she came to Chicago.”

He was starting to annoy me. “You were away, like away in the Peace Corps?” I was pretty sure that wasn’t it.

Eddie looked confused. “No, no. I don’t know no Peace Corps. I just had some business out of town for a while.”

I stared at him then took a calculated risk. “Just say it.
I was in prison the last year.

Eddie scratched his neck again then looked at me with a sheepish, mea culpa face. “Yeah, okay, I was, but more like three years. She stopped visitin’ me over a year ago. I got my last letter six months ago. And then nothin’. She knew I was gettin’ out. And we was all excited because I was gonna make a new start with her, you know? And then she takes off.”

“Hang on. She came to Chicago a year ago, after her last visit to you in the can? Or six months ago, after her last letter?”

“I dunno. Her last letter had no return address or nothin’.”

“You didn’t even get an email?”

“Ain’t no email in East Jersey State Prison.”

“What about the postmark on the letter?”

More confusion. “I don’t remember.”

“What did the letter say?”

Eddie shrugged. “Nothin’ special. Nothin’ about leavin’.”

“What about her friends?”

“Nobody knows nothin’ except she took off for Chicago. And she was workin’ at some fancy wine bar.”

“And nobody knows why she left without telling you
nothin’
?”

Eddie turned his head away just enough to indicate he was about to lie—then he looked back at me and nodded.

“Well, I don’t think I’m your guy. But it was nice meeting you.” I picked up
The Partisan
.

“What? Why? I got money.” From under the leather jacket he took a folded wad of cash in a rubber band, then reached across the table and dropped it in front of me. General Grant and the troops looked pretty well worn, like they’d just retreated from Cold Harbor. I looked around the room. “That’s five large,” Eddie said quietly.

“You got balls, Eddie. I mean, this isn’t a tough neighborhood, but if you go tossing 5K bankrolls around, it’s only a matter of time.”

Suddenly, his eyes narrowed, turning the nice kid into a serial killer. Just as quickly, he softened. “Yeah, well, I guess this is how I know to do business. It’s just a down payment to show you I ain’t full a shit. And I got plenty more. I really gotta find Tanya. She’s been at my side my whole crappy life. She’s never let me down. I don’t care what it costs, Mr. Landau. I’ll pay it.”

He slouched in his chair, staring at the table. His lower lip quivered a few times. I picked up the cash and fingered the beat-up bills. Then I took two cards out of my jacket pocket and tossed them to Eddie. “Write your number on one of them. And tell me about this wine bar.”

Eddie wrote down a number. “I don’t got the name of the bar, except it’s on the North Side and they serve the fancy stuff to yuppies.”

“Maybe they don’t drink wine in Jersey, but the North Side’s a big neighborhood with a lot of fancy wine bars.”

Eddie rubbed his temples. “It’s near the river.”

Actually, that narrowed my search significantly and I took this as a good sign.

Chapter 2

The late morning rush at the Kutaisi Georgian Bakery on Devon Avenue was winding down as I parked in front of the place. Six months had passed since the owner had been arrested, along with Chicago’s deputy director of the department of revenue and two Russian gangsters, for their roles in murder, human trafficking, prostitution, and money laundering. The cousin of one of the murder victims now owned and operated the thriving bakery. In the course of my investigation, we had become intimate. Gradually, the bakery wedged us apart. Yesterday, she left a message asking me to stop by.

Tamar, a petite woman with jet-black hair framing a beautiful, slightly Asiatic face, flitted through the kitchen and prep room, absorbed in her endless duties. I watched from the counter, curious how long it would take for my presence to break the spell. The apron and silly hat did nothing to diminish Tamar’s loveliness. She approached me, obviously distracted, offering nothing in the way of intimate recognition.

“I should’ve told you to call first,” Tamar said.

Before I could respond, she grabbed an employee’s arm, spoke in her ear while taking off her apron and hat, then motioned for me to follow her to a table.

“I’m sorry I didn’t offer you anything,” she said after we sat. She looked about to cry.

“You look sad.”

She sort of nodded her head. “I don’t think I have the time or energy right now.”

“For me.”

“For us. Until I find people I can trust to help me run this place. It’s not fair to you.”

It’s not you, it’s me.

Disheartening scenes should be brief. “Call me when you feel more settled,” I said.

“Thank you,” Tamar said, then looked over to the kitchen where several employees were peering into the huge brick-domed oven. “I better get back; we’ll talk soon.”

Halt and catch fire,
said the female computer to her boyfriend. We wouldn’t talk soon, but that was beside the point. I watched Tamar put the apron and hat back on, quickly give directions to subordinates, then disappear into the prep room. Just in case my visit hadn’t depressed me enough, I still had one more stop before beginning the fancy wine bar search.

BOOK: Gold Coast Blues
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