'The rest was pretty much the way we figured,' I told Durkin. 'They tied him up and knocked him around a little to make it look good, set the stage so it fit the profile of a bungled burglary. They walked out and went home, and he called it in an hour or so later, whenever it was. He had his story all ready. He'd had days to work it out, all the while he was telling himself it was a joke.'

'And now he wants to hire you.'

'He did hire me,' I said. 'Last night, before we parted company.'

'What for?'

'He's afraid of the Stettners. Afraid they'll kill him.'

'Why would they do that?'

'To cover their asses. His conscience has been bothering him.'

'I should fucking hope so.'

'Well, according to him, it has. He keeps having the thought that she really loved him and she was the only person who ever did or ever will.'

'Only person damn fool enough.'

'And he wants to believe that she died without realizing he was a part of her murder. That she was unconscious when he had sex with her, that she was either unconscious or already dead when Stettner made him strangle her.'

'He wants the answer to that one, he doesn't need a detective, he needs a medium.'

It was midmorning, Thursday. I had gone to Midtown North after breakfast and waited for Joe to show, and we were at his desk now. He had a cigarette going. He must have quit smoking a dozen times that I knew about. He couldn't seem to stay off it.

I said, 'He thinks his conscience is showing. And he thinks Stettner doesn't need him anymore.'

'How did Stettner need him in the first place, Matt? It sounds to me like he's making Stettner the heavy when he was the one using Stettner instead of the other way around. Way I figure it he got a mil and a half out of the deal, and what did Stettner get? A quick piece of ass with a woman who's half-dead?'

'So far,' I said, 'Stettner got four hundred thousand dollars.'

'I must have missed that part.'

'I was just getting to it. After it was all over, after she was buried and the press coverage had died down, Stettner had a talk with him. He said their little joint venture had been a great success, but of course if it was indeed a joint venture it was only fair that the proceeds be shared jointly.'

'In other words, come up with half the dough.'

'That's the idea. Not the money he inherited from his wife, Stettner was willing to overlook that, but certainly the insurance proceeds. As soon as the insurance company paid up, he wanted half. It was a million with the double indemnity, since murder is accidental death-'

'Which I never understood.'

'Neither did I, but I guess it's an accident from the point of view of the victim. Anyway, it came to a million tax-free, and Stettner wanted half of it. The insurance company paid up late last month, which seems pretty quick in a case like this.'

'They had a guy over here,' he said. 'Wanted to know if Thurman was a suspect. Officially he wasn't, which is what I had to tell him. I was convinced he did it, I told you that-'

'Yes.'

'- but the only motive we had was the money, and we couldn't establish any need for the money, or anybody else he was mixed up with, or any reason to kill her.' He frowned. 'What you've been telling me is he really didn't have a reason.'

'Not the way he tells it. But the insurance company paid, and Stettner wanted his, and the way they worked it was that Thurman would turn over cash to Stettner in increments of a hundred thousand dollars that would ostensibly be used to purchase foreign currencies. The money would just go in Stettner's pocket, but Thurman would get memos of nonexistent transactions and they'd be structured in such a way that he would ultimately be able to write off most of it as losses for tax purposes. I think that may be my favorite part, Joe. Split the proceeds with your partner in crime and write it off on your taxes.'

'It's not bad. He's made four of these payments?'

'At one-week intervals. The final payment's due tonight. He'll be meeting Stettner in Maspeth, he's producing a telecast at a boxing arena out there. He'll turn over a briefcase with a hundred grand in it and that'll be that.'

'And then he thinks Stettner'll kill him. Because he'll have the money and he won't need Thurman anymore, and Thurman's just a loose end and is starting to develop a conscience, so why not close the account?'

'Right.'

'And he wants you to protect him,' he said. 'Did he happen to say how?'

'We left it open. I'm meeting him this afternoon to figure all that out.'

'And then you go out to whatchacallit, Maspeth?'

'Probably.'

He stubbed out his cigarette. 'Why you?'

'He knows me.'

'He knows you? How does he know you?'

'We met in a bar.'

'So you said, last night in that shithole your friend Ballou owns. Incidentally, I don't know what the hell you're doing keeping company with a guy like that.'

'He's a friend of mine.'

'One of these days he's gonna step on his cock and you don't want to be there when it happens. He's a good dancer, he's slippery as a fucking eel, but one of these days the Feds'll put a RICO case together and he's got free room and board in Atlanta.'

' 'Mother of mercy, is this the end of RICO?' '

'Huh?'

'Nothing,' I said. 'It's not important. We met at Grogan's last night because we needed a quiet place to talk. The reason he called me is we ran into each other the night before in another bar, a place in his neighborhood.'

'You ran into him because you're on his case. Did he know that?'

'No. He thought I was on Stettner's case.'

'Why would you be on Stettner's case?'

I hadn't told him anything about the tape of Happy's murder, or about the killing of Arnold Leveque. All of that seemed extraneous. The case in Joe's open file was the murder of Amanda Thurman, and that was the case I'd been hired for and the one that looked to be breaking.

'It was a way to hook him,' I said. 'I'd managed to connect him with Stettner, and that turned out to be the shoe in the door. If he can hang it all on Bergen and Olga, maybe he can get off the hook himself.'

'You think you can get him to come in, Matt?'

'That's what I'm hoping. That's what I'll be working on when I see him this afternoon.'

'I want you wearing a wire when you see him.'

'Fine.'

' 'Fine.' I wish to God you'd been wearing a wire when you saw him last night. You can get lucky, a guy feels like talking, he spills his guts and feels better. Then he gets up the next morning and wonders what got into him, and for the rest of his life he never gets the urge to open up again. Why the hell didn't you come in and get a wire before you saw him?'

'Come on,' I said. 'He called out of the blue at ten and wanted to meet me right away. Were you even here last night?'

'There's other people could have fitted you with a wire.'

'Sure, and it only would have taken two hours and ten phone calls to clear it, and I had no realistic reason to think he was going to open up like that in the first place.'

'Yeah, you're right.'

'I think I can get him to come in,' I said. 'I think that's what he wants to do.'

Вы читаете A Dance at the Slaughterhouse
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