“I don’t think so, sir.”
“Good. You’re doing a fine job.”
“Thank you, sir.”
“One more thing. Just remind Nat to let Mrs. White know that he’s my partner. That way, nobody will be freaking out when he comes knocking.”
“Got it.”
“Penny, I might have to leave town for a few days. If you don’t hear from me by say-?”
“Monday?” I mouthed to Hank.
He nodded.
“Monday,” I said to Penny. “Can you come to my house and feed my fish? There’s a spare house key in my desk.”
“I’ll do that, sir. Have a good day, sir.”
Have a good day? Me? She didn’t know me very well.
I hung up.
Hank raised his eyebrows.
“What?” I asked.
I wasn’t sure why I’d asked for information on Julie, or why I’d asked Penny to pass it on to Nat Bierstone to do. That’s not like me. Usually I hit things pretty much head on, and the consequences be damned. But looking at it, I think maybe that it was some reflex action. A nod at self-preservation. I sometimes didn’t take too good of care of myself, I guess, the way I tended to fall into things like I’d just done.
I had a feeling right then. That feeling of something not right.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
I’d learned a long time ago that the only way to head off trouble was to face it head on. Doing anything else only tends to stack it up deeper further down the road. So, I was hoping that my little call to Pat Kinsey would be worth something later on. Also, I was hoping beyond hope that Julie would get something out of what I was doing. She’d been running for some time, it appeared, probably mostly from herself. Maybe I was just kidding myself, but what I was wishing for most of all was that she’d begin to face up to whatever she had done.
Me, I’m no saint. I’m basically lazy, and I’ve found it far simpler to get along in life by looking, confronting, and stopping the stone before it gets too much inertia going down that long hill. Sometimes, waiting too long before trying to stop it gets you nothing but flattened by it.
Julie sat next to me on the couch while I dialed Archie Carpin’s number.
“Do you want to talk to him first?” I asked her.
She shook her head.
I got a ring.
“Start talking,” the voice said. It was a masculine voice.
“If this is Archie, Julie wants to talk to you,” I said.
There was a long silence. I could almost hear the gears turning.
“I don’t care much for talk,” he said.
“I can understand that,” I said. “But the fact remains that talking is better than shooting.”
“Who says?”
“Marshal Dillon, for one. The word we’re looking for here is negotiation, I think.”
“Well,” he said. “Really, I ought to kiss her. She killed my number one competitor. Nobody else was brave enough to do that.”
“Are you talking about Mr. Neil? Your horse-racing competitor?”
“The one and only.”
It was my turn for silence. I looked at Julie. She was petting Dingo. Also, she was biting her lower lip.
“How did he die?” I asked.
“Somebody put a very large caliber bullet through his neck. Like to have cut his head off.”
“Well damn,” I said.
“That’s ancient history. What I want to know is where she put it.”
“I thought he died last week,” I said.
“Last week and a million years ago are about the same. Dead is dead. I repeat: so where did she put it?”
“Put what?” For a moment my question was sincere. I had forgotten about the money. Then I got the picture in my head: the close lightning and the fat drops of rain and the grating metal-on-metal sound of the vent cover opening and two million sliding down into oblivion.
“Don’t be an idiot,” he said. “I want that money.”
“Oh…
“I won’t negotiate,” Carpin said.
“That’s what Julie said. But people can change, Archie,” I said.
“What the hell are you talking about?”
“I’m talking about a deal,” I said.
I noticed Hank looking at me rather studiously. He nodded his head “no”.
“The money first, then we talk,” Carpin said.
“No way,” I said. I didn’t have to hesitate.
“I know she stashed it somewhere,” he said. “There’s a certain little girl who will attest she didn’t have it the last time she saw her.”
“What little girl?” I looked at Julie. Her eyes went wide as I watched.
“You don’t know?” Carpin asked. He laughed; a great hollow chuckle with about as much humor as a lynching party. “Hah! That figures. Tell Julie the kid is safe right here with me. Ain’t that right, little darlin’?” his voice had become distant. He was holding the mouthpiece away. I pressed the phone against my ear so hard that it hurt, but I couldn’t make out a response.
“Carpin,” I said quickly. “You’re related to the Signal Hill bunch, aren’t you?”
“Hell yeah I am. That was my granddaddy.”
“Not that I want to win friends and influence people or anything, but your granddaddy was low-life scum of the earth. I’m surprised you never changed your name in shame. A sorrier cutthroat never walked,” I said, and hung up.
“Who’s the kid?” I asked Julie, immediately upon hanging up.
“Oh God,” Julie said. “I put her on the bus. I watched the bus leave that night. He’s lying. He can’t have her.”
“Have who?” Hank asked.
“Jessica.”
Isn’t it interesting how when you think you’ve got things pretty well nailed down, they start jumping around again? For me that normally doesn’t happen. I don’t like it much.
The room was still, but things were jumping.
She was about to lose it. I could tell. Another minute, maybe ten seconds, and she’d lose it for sure.
I reached out to her, grabbed her arm just as she was pushing herself up from the couch. Her wrists were bony and delicate, so I made sure not to break them. I’ve got a pretty good grip.
“Julie,” I said, choosing my words carefully, “you can tell us all about Jessica, and that’s probably a lot more important than any amount of money right now, but I want to know one thing first.”