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Authors: Nancy Stancill

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BOOK: Winning Texas
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What are you doing here, Mr. Detective? Trying to get your jollies?

He sneered in a belligerent tone.

We follow all of the rules.


I expect you

ll see plenty of cops here

in uniform and civilian clothes,

Matt said in a neutral tone.

A striking woman with long brown hair and a glittering outfit stepped out from the ticket booth and said,

Bobo, what

s wrong?


Nothing, Miss Juliana,

he said with a chastened air. He walked outside.

She looked at them as if memorizing their faces, examined their IDs and led them to the front of the large room, where some tables still remained empty toward the stage. She showed them to one with a forced smile and swept out.


Who

s that babe?

Annie wondered.

She acts like she owns the place.


It must be Juliana Souza, girlfriend of the owner,

Matt said.

She helps Kyle Krause run the clubs, I hear. Bobo the bouncer has a reputation as a really bad dude, though he certainly minds Juliana. Did you ever see a big man slink away so fast?

Annie laughed.

You seem to know an awfully lot about the clubs. Didn

t think that was your specialty.


I

ve just been helping one of the vice cops who

s looking at Krause

s whole operation. She

s here tonight,

he said, beckoning to a corner table. A woman came over, wearing a black slacks outfit rather than a uniform. She was in her thirties, Annie guessed, and attractive, with thick, curvy eyebrows and curly dark hair.


Hi, Monica,

he said.

May I present my friend, Annie Price? Monica Gardiner is a colleague of mine who

s here to see that Carla Carmine behaves herself.


Seriously?

Annie asked.

How does a porn star behave herself in a strip club?


We just want to make sure there are no sex shows,

she said.

We

ll shut them down very quickly if that happens. They can strip all they want, but they have to obey the public decency laws.


My goodness,

Annie said.

You have your work cut out for you.


Indeed we do. Can you excuse us for a moment? I need to talk to Matt privately,

Monica said.

See you, Annie.

He went to Monica

s table and the two of them talked for a while with a man Annie assumed was another plainclothes officer. She looked at the strip clubs

magazine she

d picked up at the entrance. It was glossy, with big photos of women in lacy underwear and flashy ads for local clubs. She noticed a two-page feature previewing Carla Carmine

s appearance.

The feature story noted that Carmine had worked for

major XXX film companies, including Bang Brothers, Naughty America and New Sensations.

The tall blonde

s shapely body was praised as

all natural

and her interests were described as

men, women and threesomes.

Some day she wanted to run a cupcake shop.

Annie put the magazine down, annoyed that she was wasting time reading such inanities. She guessed there was a market for that sort of thing, but it sounded so phony. She hoped that she

d never be reduced to writing PR for sleazy enterprises.

She saw a familiar-looking man stopping at the table and smiled, trying to remember where she

d seen him. To her surprise, she recognized State Senator Sam Wurzbach, the champion of the German-Texas movement.


Hi, Annie,

he said, looking sheepish.


Hey, Sam,

she said.

What

re you doing here?


Last week, you asked me whom I was seeing in Houston,

he said.

Now you know. Kyle Krause and I were high-school wrestling buddies in Fredericksburg.


The plot thickens,

she said.

I

d heard he might be a supporter of the German-Texas movement.


Kyle is a terrific businessman and really believes in what we

re doing,

Wurzbach said.

So I support his ventures whenever I can. I was in town today, so I decided to stop by. My wife even knows I

m here.


How

re things going in the Hill Country? Any new threats?


Nothing of a serious nature,

he said.

Hope you and your reporter can come to Austin soon. We

ll be having our first German Texas fund-raiser.


Sounds interesting. We

ll call you,

Annie said.

Matt returned to the table as the lights went down and they drank their $7.50 beers in silence. The crowd grew hushed as a breathless-sounding deejay ran through Carmine

s resume from California.


She

s a native Texan who loves horses, ranches and longneck beers,

he added. The deejay put on music, some hard-rock anthem Annie recognized from the 1980s.

Carmine came out, tall, blonde and natural, and twined her legs around the pole on stage. She looked pretty good, Annie thought, and seemed to know how to dance. After the first two numbers, though, the novelty of her performance wore off. Annie chugged the rest of her beer, feeling restless.

The tempo sped up, Carmine smiled knowingly and a man in a leopard bikini danced on to the stage. He looked handsome but seedy, like Matthew McConaughey in the strip-club movie,
Magic Mike
. The man moved closer to Carla Carmine and they began dancing together.

Suddenly the lights went out and Annie heard worried murmurs. After a few minutes of uncertainly, a stage light went on and Monica Gardiner, the policewoman she

d met earlier, spoke briefly.


The Houston Police Department is closing this establishment for the rest of the night,

she said.

Please leave by the normal exits in an orderly fashion.

Annie got up with Matt and they began walking to the door.


What happened?

Annie asked.


The man on stage with Carla Carmine is also a porn star,

Matt said.

We agreed that if he appeared, we

d have to shut down the show. Heard rumors that there might be a sex show in the making. Houston ain

t New Orleans, you know.

CHAPTER 13

 

Annie sat in her glass cubicle office editing one of many stories she needed to send over before the afternoon news meeting. Her day had started off with a couple of editors

meetings, lagged until after her solitary lunch at her desk, and gathered speed as the afternoon wore on. Assigning editors always had to wait for reporters to file their daily stories, some at the last possible moment. Annie couldn

t begrudge their last-minute work because as a reporter, she

d done the same thing, hoping for one last phone call to be returned. But her tension would mount as the stories piled up, and today she felt winded, as if she was running a race she couldn

t possibly win. She wondered if she ought to have her blood pressure checked. She looked up and saw Travis Dunbar standing outside the door.


Hey, boss,

he said.

Can I come in?


Sure, Travis,

she said, trying to sound welcoming.

What

s going on?


You remember the floater in the Ship Channel? Finally got Sharpe to talk on the record about what they found.


Was it a Russian Mafia smuggling deal?


No,

Travis said, plopping his bulldog body into a creaky chair.

He thinks the body is that of a young woman from Eastern Europe. They found a label in clothes fragments that they traced to a shop in Tirana.


Tirana? Where

s that?


The capital of Albania. Has about a half-million people. Not a common hot spot for trafficking, though the Russian Mafia has tentacles everywhere in Eastern Europe. But Sharpe doesn

t think it was the Mafia.


Why not?


The body was basically in good shape. Some of the girls who get tossed overboard have broken bones and worse. The Mafia treats them like garbage and throws them away.


So how does he think the girl got here?


A stowaway, perhaps a girlfriend of a seaman. He

s trying to trace the ships that have moved in and out of the port in the last few weeks.


Doesn

t sound like big news,

Annie said.

Maybe a six-inch story?


All right,

Travis said.

But I think there

s something bigger behind it. It smells rotten to me.


Keep tabs on it, but you

ve got lots of other things going. What about that drug lord from the Valley who landed in jail here yesterday? Can you get his lawyer to talk?


I

m trying. I

ll write the other story and send it to you. Then I

ll head over to the courthouse.

She resumed her editing, noticing it was almost 4 p.m. She

d be here really late if she didn

t hurry, but it was hard to concentrate with the interruptions. She noticed Maggie Mahaffey tapping on the glass. Drat, she thought. Maggie wasn

t exactly her favorite reporter and she tended to be longwinded.


Come in, Maggie,

she said, mustering a smile.

What can I do for you?

The reporter sat down, smoothed her hot pink skirt and crossed her legs, showing off high-heeled ankle boots that encased tiny feet. Petite women who dressed like Barbie dolls had a tendency to raise Annie

s hackles. She felt guilty for hoping that Maggie wouldn

t prolong the interruption, but she couldn

t exactly tell her to state her business and go away.

BOOK: Winning Texas
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