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CON TEST: Double Life (A Mystery)
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CON TEST
DOUBLE LIFE
Rahiem Brooks
Prodigy Publishing Group
PHILADELPHIA
The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead is coincidental and not intended by the author.
Copyright © 2011 by Rahiem Brooks
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Prodigy Publishing Group www.prodigypublishinggroup.com
RAHIEM BROOKS www.rahiembrooks.com
FOR MAMA BEVERLY AND GRANDMOM MARY
There are no words, even from an author, to describe a grandmother!
CON TEST
DOUBLE LIFE
PART 1
ONE
The Wachovia Bank teller had no idea that she would be robbed that day. Had she known, perhaps she would not have reported for duty. She would not experience an ordinary robbery, though. Not one involving drawn guns or threatening notes. Her life would not be in jeopardy. Nor would she witness a sophisticated scheme to drill through the bank’s vault. This robbery would be deceitful and conniving, but as devastating in its effect as any armed caper.
Wachovia Bank customer Lavern Grisby had parked in the bank’s parking lot. The shadows from the pine trees neatly lined across the back of the lot forced the warm autumn air to seem chilly. Lavern checked her garish makeup in the rearview mirror before she opened the car door. She quivered as an eerie chill came over her. Then she walked slowly and apprehensively from the handicapped parking space. She was a jazzy black woman, clad in daywear and donning a cane.
She reached the bank door. Before she reached out to open it, the door swung open. A security guard held the door open until she crossed the threshold. That was why she adored Wachovia, they provided extraordinary customer relations from the moment customers were on the property. She flashed him a prismatic smile and showcased teeth that were so perfectly capped that they were enviable. She thanked him and gleefully waltzed across the dark green carpet.
Lavern peered over her shoulder from time to time expecting a black, derelict thug brandishing a gun, or worse, a white man with a bomb foolishly wrapped snuggly about his throat to rush into the bank behind her, she fell in line behind three other customers. She prayed the bad men were on hiatus that morning.
Lavern stood in the roped line and used her cane as an additional leg. She rested her hand on the chrome post; it was cool. She was hot, though. She pulled a church fan from her Chanel handbag and began to fan herself. The air hit her nostrils and she smelled the potpourri which sat in bowls all around the bank. She hoped that her allergies did not act up. If so, she would sweat and have a sneezing attack. Either would ruin her makeup, and ultimately, her day.
She turned her head to look around the bank and her large gray curls swung wildly. Along the wall behind her were three customer service representatives chatting with customers. To the left of them was the vault, complete with an armed sentry. Lavern glanced at her watch and then was instructed by a white flashing arrow to proceed to the available teller.
In front of the teller, she removed extra-large Fendi glasses and slipped them into her bag. She used a gloved hand and a fancy pen to sign a withdrawal slip.
“How may I help you today?” the teller asked smiling.
“A withdrawal, sweetie,” Lavern said, and stacked above that she said, “Here’s a withdrawal slip from the back of my checkbook. I have signed the slip, but with my arthritis,”—she held up a mildly shaking writing hand—“Could you? Would you mind filling out the remainder of the slip?” she pleaded in her raspy, deep, Southern drawl.
The teller looked at the elderly woman and said, “Of course not, ma’am. I have your account number here on the bottom of the slip. All I need is the amount you’d like to withdraw and see photo identification along with a second form of ID.”
“Oh, certainly,” Lavern said, pulling out her wallet to retrieve her ID. “I need a cashier’s check for … Shoot,” Lavern said, frustratingly, as she passed the teller her ID. She took a deep breath and then coughed into a cupped hand over her mouth. “Pardon me,” she said, apologetically.
“It’s okay, Ms. Grisby,” the teller cooed. “Take your time,” she told her. “Can I get you a cup of water?”
“No … no. I’ll be fine. Thanks, though,” Lavern said, having gathered her composure. “Math has never been my strongest subject. Could you tally two months’ rent and two months’ security, if the rent is $1,400 per month? I’ll need a check for that amount. Also, $3,000 in cash. Can you add that accordingly for me, please?”
“Sure, no problem.”
“You’re a doll.”
“A $5,600 cashier’s check and $3,000 in cash will be a total withdrawal of $8,600,” the teller said, filling out the withdrawal slip as she spoke. She then handed the slip to Lavern. “Verify the amount for me, Ms. Grisby and place your right thumbprint on the slip, as well. Thanks.”
Lavern scanned the slip and handed it back to the teller without the thumbprint. “Hon, these protective arthritis gloves are a pain to get off, and worse to squeeze on. My hands swell, and…”
The teller cut her off, politely. “But…”
Ms. Grisby returned the favor. “I have not been here in a while, but the head teller over there,” she pointed to a white woman who scanned a spreadsheet, “could verify who I am,” she said. “She used to help me when I would come in daily to make business deposits.”
“You mean Rose Randall. She’s the head teller. Let me get her,” the teller said, stepping away from her station. She showed Rose the withdrawal slip and two pieces of identification and informed her of the situation.
Both women walked back over to Lavern.
“How’ve you been, Ms. Grisby?” Rose asked sincerely.
“I’m fine. This arthritis acts a fool, but otherwise, I’m sixty-six years young. And you?”
“Peachy! It’s been some time since you last visited us, huh? How’s the business heading up?” Rose asked, throwing Lavern a smile.
“Business is fine. The children are running it since I’ve retired,” Lavern said. She switched gears to get the topic off her. “You’ve moved up, I see. Congrats!”
“Thanks … Ms. Grisby, I do not mean to cut this short, but I have a budget due in half an hour. Just jot your birth date and Social Security number down on the withdrawal slip and I will approve your transaction. Thanks.”
Lavern gave the back of her fan a quick glance for her personal data. She knew the information, but liked to be careful. She complied with Rose’s request and watched the bankers verify the information on the computer monitor. Rose initialed the slip, offered Lavern a good day, and sent the teller to fabricate the teller’s check.
Lavern watched the teller as her pulse began to march double time. A hot ball of acid, scorching and burning, elevated from her stomach to her chest. She suddenly felt that she was trapped in a vat of hot air. She fanned herself before she had a panic attack. She kept her ears alert, head held high. Lavern was not prepared for another dangerous bank episode.
Four minutes passed and the teller came back with the check. She punched buttons on her computer keyboard, and then counted $3,000 from her drawer. She placed the notes into an envelope, and then handed it to her customer. Lavern counted the bills and then tucked the envelope into her bosom.
“Can I do anything else for you, ma’am?”
“Just a receipt with the balance, and I’ll be outta your hair.”
“Sure. Let me get your receipt, and—”
The teller was interrupted by loud music, which blared from a cell phone. With the phone out of her bag, the teller and Lavern distinctly heard th
e chorus to the Ying Yang Twins “Whisper” song: Wait till you see my dick. Both the teller and Lavern gagged.
Lavern spoke into the phone: “Before you ask, yes, I found your phone in my car. I had planned on dropping it to you with the check for your rent deposit and money for college. That was before I heard this ringtone … Sorry, nothing … Do you know how embarrassing this is? I’m still in the bank, boy … I don’t want to hear … Is that what you play to those young gals you’re having sex with, ’cause I have seen it, and it ain’t worth waiting to see … Sure it grew, tell me anything!” Ms. Grisby slammed the phone shut and turned her attention back to the teller.
“That’s right. You tell him, Grandma,” the teller joked. She handed Lavern the receipt and asked, “Will that be all?”
“Yes, and have a nice day,” Lavern said, and then left the bank.
* * *
Lavern reached her car, tossed her cane into the backseat, and sat slowly in the driver’s seat. She started the ignition and backed out of the parking space. She eased her Prada Mary Jane’s down on the accelerator and blended with the two-lane Cheltenham Avenue traffic. Her heart pounded. She adjusted the ventilation to a cool sixty-five degrees. She needed to cool and calm down. She had survived. She glanced into her mirror slightly disoriented as she drove away from the bank into a morning so brilliant and indigo and full of hope for the future.
With all intent on getting away from the bank, she drove hastily west on the avenue like a bat out of hell; certainly not like an elderly woman. She turned southbound onto Broad Street, and shortly thereafter, she flipped a left onto a small street. Her only purpose for that turn was to ditch the stolen vehicle that she had been driving. She put the car in park and turned her fake grandson’s cell phone back on. She dialed a friend who answered on the second ring.
“What’s crackin’?” Flocco, the Puerto Rican chop-shop runner, asked.
“This is JL. I have something for you,” Justice Lorenzo said in his authentic, late-night, radio-type voice.
“Yeah!” Flocco responded, excitedly. He knew that Justice was good for good vehicles.
“I’m stepping out of a Nissan Maxima with 683 miles, straight from Enterprise,” Justice confessed, stepping femininely out of the Maxima, remaining in character. He hopped into a navy Cadillac Escalade.
“I need dat. What color?”
“Metallic gold.”
“Good … Good. Six-thousand, right?”
“Homey,” Justice said, disgustedly, “a brand-new wheel. Don’t try to play me, man. I need ten, or I go to the New Yorkers.” There were no New Yorkers, but Flocco did not know that though.
“Man, ten is steep. I tell you what—”
Justice interrupted him. “Ten, Flocco!”
“A’ight, pa, damn. I’ll pick up the keys and bring the cash later tonight.”
* * *
Justice drove back out onto Broad Street, then continued west on the county dividing Cheltenham Avenue. On the right side of the avenue—the side that he meandered along—was Montgomery County. The world was deepening into the new century. Just when he had lost faith in the idea of fulfilling the American dream and mentally extinguishing his aspirations, he found the courage to rise from among the dead. His bottomless well of ideas burned brightly, and on that beautiful autumn morning he promised to attain the ultimate goal of all—becoming a celebrity.
Cruising along the crowded avenue, he brooded over whether his family would find the same faith in him. He had become the biggest Lorenzo family fuck up. He was morbidly determined to lose that crown. He lowered the system and dialed his friend Amir, who answered on the first ring.
“My dude, what was all that bullshit you said to me when I called a few minutes ago?”
“I left my cell phone on, and I had to improvise,” Justice told him.
Amir let out a brief gasp. He could not believe that Justice could be so careless. Since Justice had retired, Amir had been his only thief-in-training. “So, the Twins was banging all in the bank?” Amir asked, laughing.
“Man, that shit was scary and funny. That’s what I be tryin’a show you. You gotta be ready for anything. I kept thinking that them alphabet boys was going to run up in there. The same bitch that testified at my trial handled my transaction.”
“Wow, that’s crazy. You’re back out and back at it and got the bitch that had you booked. You’re a bold nigga. Them boys was not gonna run up in there on Ms. Lavern Grisby,” Amir said, chuckling. Everything was comical to him with this game.
“I’m tryin’a get this bitch bagged and tagged and burned, fo’ real, homie,” Justice said, unbuttoning a few buttons on his blouse. No one could see through his tinted windows. “This old lady has to go.”
“They’re not going to link you to this shit later, are they?”
“Naw. The teller filled out the slip, and I did not leave a thumbprint. So, no handwriting or fingerprint analysis.”
“And definitely no video. You did a great job.”
“Yeah! I am the teacher, remember?”
“I remember. What you got planned today?”
“Gotta run this crash dummy I met last week to the bank to cash this cashier’s check. Then I’ma go to meet M&M. And after that, I have a class: forensic science.”
“You swear you’re a smart nigga. Forensic science.”
“I am smart dawg, that’s why I go to Villanova, and take electives like Forensic Science. That’s how I’ma beat ’em, and get revenge. We’re working on finding evidence on bodies today. I might kill a bitch.”
“That’s crazy. Holla at a nigga when you leave M&M’s,” Amir said and hung up.
Justice drove and pondered that even if he did build a conglomerate that secured the lion’s share of the urban fiction industry, married, and lived on an estate as big as Oprah’s, would his mother accept his success, knowing that the seed money was illegally gained? He glanced up and saw Cheltenham Square Mall on his right. Then he turned left onto Washington Lane and ultimately back into Philadelphia County.
A few streets away, he turned onto the manicured lawns, tree-lined Briar Road. He pulled into the driveway and parked in his aunt’s garage. Safe in the garage, the large door quietly closed behind him. The adrenaline rush had subdued as he sat in the truck and peacefully contemplated his next job. Bad Justice, he thought. Bad, bad Justice.
He glanced into the rearview mirror. Lavern Grisby smiled back at him. She was proud of him. He thanked her and walked from the garage into his basement lair. Justice was back.
Well, after he murdered Ms. Lavern Grisby.
TWO
It was funny how things unanimously came to an end, Justice thought as he stared blankly at the credentials plastered on his federal probation officer’s wall. There he was parked in a wood chair as Mauve Miller—M & M, he had nicknamed her—typed answers to her ridiculously redundant questions into her computer.
“Do you reside at the same address?”
Justice’s head shook “yes”. The answer was really no. His mind flashed to the four-bedroom home that he lived in Doylestown, Pennsylvania. There was no need to tell her that he lived 25miles out the district, as he moved from his aunt’s home in West Oak Lane months earlier.
Mauve then asked, “So, how’s school?”
“Fine,” was the automated response. Majoring in Marketing at Villanova University was Justice’s way of avoiding a job while he served his one-year supervised release. That was the extension to his 18-month sentence served at FCI Allenwood in White Deer, Pennsylvania. Going to school meant that he did not have to work. No job meant that he did not have to make restitution payments to American Express. He had fraudulently used stolen corporate-platinum American Express cards over a two month period to the tune of $264,000. Having an uncle employed at the post office was a blessing. The uncle stole the cards, but the elaborate scheme to get the cards activated was the work of Justice. It was simple. Theft victims applied for the cards and expected them. So, w
hen Justice called them—posing as the creditor—and explained that he needed to verify their social security numbers to approve the card, the victims spilled the number. It was such a simple thing, and worth the 18 months on vacation.
Upon release, Justice had been fired from one job, because his criminal background check came back as hot as a rat on the witness stand. M & M demanded that he quit another job, citing third party risk. Come on, if a bank hired him as a teller, let the man work. Justice was over the idea of working, and he knew that finishing college, relocating, and then starting his own company was the only tandem to create a prismatic future. M & M’s third party risk rule meant not even McDonald’s was an employment option, considering the food chain accepted credit cards as payment. The feds had a lien on his credit report for the money he owed. That deemed Justice extremely risky for a business loan. Ergo, he was in a life threatening catch-22.
No matter which questions M & M asked, and no matter the order she asked them, her finale remained the same: “Any new arrests?”
“Of course not,” Justice usually replied with the truthfulness of a tyke. Had she asked whether he had committed a crime, she may have been on to something. He laughed at the response that he would have given her: “Now let’s see here. I drive an Escalade that was $700 a month. My mortgage was $800 a month. Seasonal clothing expenses were $4,000 a month.” That look on her face had he said that, priceless.
He sat as she typed the last keystroke. He waited for her to spin from her computer station and consult her desk calendar to give him a new date to report. She did her spin, but she did not consult her calendar. He analyzed her body language, but she gave away no hints. She turned from her computer and clapped her hands together on her desk. She stared at him quizzically. The seconds of silence was louder than kids on the street screaming after an ice cream truck. Talk bitch, he yelled in his head.