Chapter Eight - "Enemy dance card"
Despite the fact that there wasn't much of a connection between the Lady of Tides death and my runaway bride, I couldn't help but feel like the two cases were connected. The Atlantean thread was there, but it was flimsy, at best. And as much as I wanted to get back to Detective Gao with some positive news, so far, all I was getting were mixed signals, inscrutable clues and conflicting information that wasn't leading me any closer to where she'd gone.
Any angle of attack I wanted to apply to Gao's case was, unfortunately, going to have to wait. Appointing a new Regent of Tides had to take priority for the next day or two, despite how much I would have rather been working on Gao's case. Dad's echo had said I had thirty days before things would start getting problematic, but there were already reports of conflicts springing up between Elves and Werewolves, both of whom wanted to bring things into the country by sea but couldn't land until they had the approval of a Regent. Since I was the one who had to appoint a new Regent, they were leaving messages with my secretary, asking when they would be able to conduct business again.
If it was just messages, I could probably duck them for a month or two, but people with investments in the matter were starting to hang around my office now, pitching themselves as 'the perfect person' to be the new Regent. Most of them would've been utter disasters, and I could tell that without doing any research. I'd decided that hanging around my office wasn't going to get anything done, so I'd headed down to a coffee shop a few blocks away while I was considering my options. I'd had to use my own back door so that I didn't get followed by people eager to tell me why they were awesome, when I knew that they weren't. I decided to talk to the few people I knew who might be able to offer me some advice on this particular position, and hoped I could spin it as a mutual favor between colleagues.
The first on my list and I hadn't left things on the best of notes last time, though.
I pulled my phone out of my pocket and scrolled through the list of contacts before finding her halfway down the alphabet. Mathias, Judith. I'd just gotten up, which meant it was just a little after noon, and well within Judy's normal operating hours, so I tapped her name on the screen and the line sprang to life, ringing her.
"Judy!" I said as I tried to put as much cheer and optimism into my voice as I possibly could. "How are you on this fine day?"
"Sexton," the voice grumbled on the other side end of the line as I could hear her four arms typing away at various keyboards. Judy's a wraith, but I've never held that against her, especially when I have so many
other
things I could hold against her instead. She was holding up in an office deep in the Tenderloin, but as much as I'd expected someone to break into her office at some point, she'd never called me about that. "I cannot possibly think of any good reason that you would be calling me, so I'm going to give you thirty seconds before I hang up on you and pretend you never called me."
"You heard about the Lady of Tides, yeah?"
"No, I'm jammed up with a shitload of shipments that aren't moving anywhere because I'm a dopey bitch who's so out of the loop she can't figure out why nothing's moving in her aquatic businesses," she grumbled at me, her fingers never stopping, capable of doing five or six things at once without too much slowing down. "Of course, I've fucking heard about the Lady of Tides. Everybody's heard about the Lady of Fucking Tides. She's dead, and it's fucking up everybody's day. What's that got to do with me?"
"Despite our differences, Judy, I happen to value your opinion a hell of a lot, so I'm calling you to see if there's anyone you'd want to nominate for the position," I told her, as I heard all the typing suddenly come to a complete stop. "Can't be you, obviously, but..."
"Oh, I wouldn't touch that fucking job with Morgana's little toe," she said with a slightly bitter laugh, pausing in her typing for just a second. "On its'
best
day, it's ten kinds of toxic, and I don't know how many of those kinds of days it's likely to see any time soon. But getting to put someone else in the job? Someone I think is capable of handling it? That
does
have a certain sense of appeal to it. Let me email you a list of five names. Can you give me an hour?"
"Only just," I told her. "I've got a short list of my own, five of you whose opinions I mostly trust when it comes to sea faring business. I'm giving each of you until 1 pm to get me a list of candidates I should consider, because I can't have this shit taking up any more of my time. I've got Low Tide Timmy hanging around my office, and he's fucking stinking up the place. Fucking zombie pirates. Always rotting but never falling apart. He stays there much longer, the seagulls are going to set up shop nearby, and once that happens, I'll never feel safe leaving my motorcycle outside again. So gather up your names and have them to me within the hour, and maybe the next Regent of Tides will owe you a favor for putting their name into the ring. Got it?"
"Thanks, Sexton," Judy said, sighing a little bit as she started up typing again. Her business stopped for no one. "This isn't what I expected when I saw your name light up my caller ID. It don't make us totally square, but let's just say I can see the edge of black butting up against the red in your ledger."
"Same for you in mine, Judy," I told her, terminating the call. Judy was the first of five calls I made to various people I knew in either the import/export businesses or people who worked around the Dark Docks, the premiere loading/unloading space for magical goods coming and going from the west coast. I made the same pitch to all four of the others, each of whom was sufficiently pleased to hear from me, and delighted to be offered a chance to pitch who they thought should be the next overseer of North American nautical work. Mostly they were happy I wasn't considering any of the people in San Diego or Seattle, but I told them both of those ports were too far away for us to be able to keep tabs on them.
An hour later, I had a lot of options, but only one name had been on over half of the lists - Carlos Aquino, and he practically had water in his lineage. Carlos handled most of the trade between the Southeast Asian factions and the North American factions, and while he was generally known to be a little ruthless when it came to making sure he got his, he also wasn't known to be exceptionally cruel in preventing others from getting what they'd earned.
That meant I had to do my homework on the guy and see just what kinds of things he was up to, and if any of them presented a problem for me elevating him into a position of significant power. And that took up much of my afternoon. I'd brought my laptop with me and I even had to plug it to keep the battery from running dead. Whereas the details about our vanishing bride-to-be were sparse, the details about Aquino were all over the recommendations about him that my colleagues had sent me, not to mention all the notes in his file that my sister kept, which was in our family database.
He was rough around the edges. He hadn't come from money and had built everything in his empire with his own two hands. He took offense maybe a little easier than I'd like, but he was very slow to take out that offense on anyone, almost as if he'd long ago learned that he riled up easily and that if he didn't keep it in check, people would use it to their own advantage instead of his.
After three hours of digging, I was a little surprised that Aquino and I had never personally crossed paths, but I figured he must have been doing everything he could not to get into my crosshairs, and that sort of delicate touch I could appreciate. He had kept all of his business at the Dark Docks from crossing into the sort of forbidden stuff that would've pulled down my ire.
But there was one opinion I hadn't heard from that I wanted to weigh in on the matter, so I pulled my cell phone back out and called my sister, to find out what she
hadn't
included in her notes.
"What's up, little brother?" her voice said to me, even as I could hear her taking the occasional singular rifle shot.
"Are you on hunt?"
"I can multitask," she said to me with the sort of calmness I've learned she'd made second nature when she's staring down the scope of a sniper rifle, picking people off from well outside of their range of discovery. "What's happening?"
"I've been investigating potential new Regents of Tides, and I have a name I want to run by you, see what you think."
"Sure," she said quietly before I heard another singular shot ringing out in the background. "Who are you considering?"
"Carlos Aquino," I told her. "Know him?" Of course I knew that she knew him. She'd put together a whole file on him. That wasn't why I was asking. I was asking to gauge her first reaction, which wasn't what I expected.
There was a moment's pause, which I noted. I didn't know what it meant, but I do know it meant
something
because my sister isn't one to pause when an immediate answer will do. "I do know him," she replied. "I've got a file on him in our database that probably can answer most of your questions. Any reason you're considering him in particular?"
"I put together a list of people I respect in the oceanics business, and of those people, multiple recommended Carlos as a person to consider, independent of each other. So that means he's currently top of my list. But I don't know this guy from Cousin Larry, so I'm asking you, because you've got a lot more experience importing and exporting things for the family than I do."
"Mmm," she agreed noncommittally. "That I have." She paused, maybe considering her options or maybe lining up another shot, because I heard her rifle quietly bark once more before she spoke again. "While Carlos isn't the kind of person I'd want to have dinner with, or invite over to book club, he gets things done and he keeps his enemy dance card mostly a clean slate. He seems like he'd be a fine choice to assume the title, and I wouldn't even have to build a new relationship from the ground up with the guy." She fired yet another round, clearly killing some troublesome pest off on the horizon. "You already read my file on him, didn't you?"
"I did, I've known you long enough, Shar, that I know at least half of what you know about anyone isn't something you write down in their file. I do the same thing. So I called you to see what isn't in the file that I needed to be concerned with."