The woman looked around the bar with vacant, listless eyes. She nodded vaguely to several people and then pushed her way through the crowd. She walked up to the bar.
“Wanna buy me a drink?” She had a heavy Spanish accent, and up close she was even more unattractive.
She looks like a fat, unmilked cow, Lantz thought. And she’s drunk. “Get lost, sister.”
“Esteban say you are lookin’ for me, no?”
He stared at her. “Who?”
“Esteban. The bartender.”
Harry Lantz still could not accept it. “He must have made a mistake. I’m looking for Neusa Muñez.”
“Sí. Yo soy Neusa Muñez.”
But the wrong one, Harry Lantz thought. Shit! “Are you Angel’s friend?”
She smiled drunkenly. “Sí.”
Harry Lantz recovered swiftly. “Well, well.” He forced a smile. “Can we go to a corner table and talk?”
She nodded indifferently. “Ess okay.”
They fought their way across the smoky bar, and when they were seated, Harry Lantz said, “I’d like to talk about—”
“You buy me a rum, sí?”
Lantz nodded. “Sure thing.”
A waiter appeared, wearing a filthy apron, and Lantz said, “One rum and a Scotch and soda.”
Muñez said, “Make mine a double, huh?’”
When the waiter left, Lantz turned to the woman seated beside him. “I want to meet with Angel.”
She studied him with her dull, watery eyes. “Wha’ for?”
Lantz lowered his voice. “I have a little present for him.”
“¿Sí? What kin’ a presen’?”
“Two million dollars.” Their drinks arrived. Harry Lantz raised his glass and said, “Cheers.”
“Yeah.” She downed her drink in one gulp. “Wha’ for you wanna give Angel two million dollars?”
“That’s something I’ll have to discuss with him in person.”
“Tha’s not possible. Angel, he don’ talk to nobody.”
“Lady, for two million dollars—”
“Kin I have ‘nother rum? A double, huh?”
My God, she already looks like she’s about to pass out. “Sure.” Lantz summoned the waiter and ordered the drink. “Have you known Angel a long time?” He made his tone casual.
She shrugged. “Yeah.”
“He must be an interesting man.”
Her vacant eyes were fixed on a spot on the table in front of her.
Jesus! Harry Lantz thought. It’s like trying to have a conversation with a fucking wall.
Her drink arrived, and she finished it in one long swallow.
She has the body of a cow and the manners of a pig. “How soon can I talk to Angel?”
Neusa Muñez struggled to her feet. “I tol’ you, he don’ talk to nobody. Adios.”
Harry Lantz was filled with a sudden panic. “Hey! Wait a minute! Don’t go.”
She stopped and looked down at him with bleary eyes. “What you wan’?”
“Sit down,” Lantz said slowly, “and I’ll tell you what I want.”
She sat down heavily. “I need a rum, huh?”
Harry Lantz was baffled. What the fuck kind of man is this Angel? His mistress is not only the ugliest broad in all of South America, but she’s a lush.
Lantz did not like dealing with drunks. They were too unreliable. On the other hand, he hated the thought of losing his fifty-thousand-dollar commission. He watched as Muñez gulped her drink. He wondered how many she had had before coming to meet him.
Lantz smiled and said reasonably, “Neusa, if I can’t talk to Angel, how can I do business with him?”
“Ess simple. You tell me what you wan’. I tell Angel. If he say si, I tell you si. If he say no, I tell you no.”
Harry Lantz distrusted using her as a go-between, but he had no choice. “You’ve heard of Marin Groza.”
“No.”
Of course she hadn’t. Because it wasn’t the name of a rum. This stupid bitch was going to get the message all wrong and screw up the deal for him.
“I need a drink, huh?”
He patted her fat hand. “Certainly.” He ordered another double rum. “Angel will know who Groza is. You just say Marin Groza. He’ll know.”
“Yeah? Then wha’?”
She was even stupider than she looked. What the fuck did she think Angel was supposed to do for two million dollars? Kiss the guy? Harry Lantz said carefully, “The people who sent me want him blown away.”