121865.fb2 Dark Horse - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 41

Dark Horse - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 41

Remo nodded. "He taught me everything I know. Everything."

That was all the Crips and the Bloods needed to hear. Madly, they scooped up Esperanza campaign posters. They stole push brooms and barrels from hardware store displays. They got to work on Compton Street, determined to make it presentable for the old Korean who had taught the downest white men in the world everything he knew.

Chapter 15

Cheeta Ching had not slept in two days. There were hollows under her sharp, predatory eyes. Her brain felt like it had been dipped in Alka-Seltzer fizz.

A face haunted her. A strong, white face with prominent, almost Korean cheekbones and deep-set hollow eyes. Those eyes had pierced her ambitious soul. His name was burned into her soul.

"Nero." She spoke the name aloud, tasting its unKorean vowels. "Nero."

She had never met anyone like him. Well, maybe once before. Years ago.

She had almost forgotten the experience. A strange man had broke into her apartment and tied her to a chair. After he had perversely dressed her in a flowing Korean native dress.

Cheeta had thought she was going to be raped. So she had resorted to the formidable weapon that had brought her to national prominence: her razor-sharp tongue. Cheeta heaped abuse on the man. Threatened him. Taunted him. Nothing seemed to work. It was a first. No man-from network presidents to her husband-had ever failed to wither under a Cheeta Ching tonguelashing.

She had steeled herself for the worst.

Instead of raping or kidnapping her, the attacker simply shot a roll of thirty-five-millimeter film of Cheeta, tied to the chair, dressed in Lyi dynasty ham-bok dress, and sputtering scorn.

Then he had left, much to Cheeta's relief.

After she had struggled free of her bonds, Cheeta Ching had contacted Don Cooder, her arch-rival, and accused him of staging the attack. Cooder had denied it.

"You're not even in my class," Cooder had snarled.

Cheeta then hung up and hired thugs to beat him up, shouting "What's the frequency, Kenneth?"

Satisfied, Cheeta then waited for the photos to appear in some tabloid. They never had. Nor had they been used to blackmail her.

It was a mystery, and eventually Cheeta Ching had put it out of her mind. But she had never been able to put her strange assailant out of her mind. There was something about his cruel forcefulness that lingered, and sometimes made her fantasize about his return-even though the memory of that ugly incident still made her shiver.

The man who had attacked her reminded her of Nero. A little. The face was different. The eyes were alike. But it was not the same man, she was sure of that. The other had been a pig.

But Nero was different from other men. He was . . .

Words failed Cheeta Ching. No surprise. Most of her on-air material was written for her. Still, there was something about him, something that had made her shiver at the first glimpse of his lean, strong body. Shiver in the same way she had just shivered at the memory of the strange, picture-taking intruder. He was . . .

"A dreamboat," she decided finally, dipping into her half-forgotten teenage vocabulary. "That's what he is. A dreamboat."

Cheeta was hunched in a cubbyhole of the local network affiliate, eating spicy jungol casserole soup. It was in her contract that she be catered in Korean ethnic foods, and God help the idiot who served her Moo Goo Gai Pan. She was trying to figure out what had happened to the tape of her self-interview.

Nero couldn't have stolen it, she told herself. Never.

Yet the tape he had given her proved to be blank. And the network had refused to run her interview with Enrique Espiritu Esperanza, calling it "Soft and unprofessional."

Cheeta had instantly blamed this on her cameraman. But the missing tape still bothered her.

There is only one way to solve this mystery, she decided, as she stirred her jungol and let the scrumptious turnip-and-cabbage odor soothe her flaring nostrils.

She picked up the phone and called personnel.

"Did anyone named Nero drop off a resume today?" she asked the personnel manager.

"No. Nor Demo. Nor Nemo, or any of the other names you keep mentioning."

"Well, if anyone with any of those names drops off a resume, I am to be notified instantly or it's your job."

"You don't hire and fire at this station," the personnel manager had said.

"Fine," Cheeta Ching replied tartly. "I won't fire you. What I'll do is rip your Adam's apple out of your gullet with my naked teeth."

There was a pregnant pause while the threat sank in.

"The very minute anyone with those vowels in his name drops off a resume, you'll be the first to know, Miss Ching," the personnel manager said, helpfully.

"Thank you," Cheeta said sweetly. "I'm glad we understand each other."

Cheeta hung up the phone. It rang a second later. It was the station news director.

"We just received word that Esperanza is giving a speech down in the South Central district. I can get you a cameraman, if you want to cover it."

"I want to cover it," Cheeta said quickly, bolting from her chair. Here was her chance to redeem herself. And maybe run into Nero the Divine, too.

The thought of coming into contact with the dark-eyed Nero made more delicious shivers course up and down her spine. She wondered if it would stimulate ovulation. She had tried just about everything else.

The station microwave van came off the freeway and into the worst section of South Central Los Angeles.

The driver looked startled. He pulled over to the side of the road, his face wearing a confused expression.

From the back of the van, Cheeta poked her stickyhaired head forward.

"What's wrong?" she demanded, shrill-voiced.

"I think I took a wrong turn," he said, pulling a folding map from the glove compartment.

"Don't you know your own city, you nitwit?"

"I thought I did. But this can't be South Central."

Cheeta peered through the windshield. She saw a neat downtown area. No litter clogged its gutters. The sides of buildings were wet from recent scrubbing. Even the sidewalks looked freshly washed.

More incredibly, there were no loitering gang members, no back-alley drug dealing, no hookers in tight clothes leaning against building facades.

"Why not?" she asked, her too-smooth face puckering in perplexity.

"Look at this place," said the driver. "It's neat as a pin. South Central is a dump."