money?'
'A minimum of fifty thousand. Probably a lot more than that.'
'Whose money?'
A good question. Joe Durkin had reminded me that money knows no owner. It was, he'd said, a principle of law.
'A couple named Stettner,' I said.
'Drug dealers?'
'Close. He deals in currencies, launders money for a pair of Iranian brothers from Los Angeles.'
'Eye-ranians,' he said, with relish. 'Well, now. Maybe you should tell me more.'
I must have talked for twenty minutes. I took out my notebook and showed him the sketches I'd made in Maspeth. There wasn't that much to tell, but he took me back over various points, covering everything thoroughly. He didn't say anything for a minute or two, and then he filled his glass with whiskey and drank it down as if it were cool water on a hot afternoon.
'Tomorrow night,' he said. 'Four men, I'd say. Two men and myself, and Andy for the driving. Tom would do for one of them, and either Eddie or John. You know Tom. You don't know Eddie or John.'
Tom was the day bartender, a pale tight-lipped man from Belfast. I'd always wondered what he did with his evenings.
'Maspeth,' he said. 'Can any good thing come out of Maspeth? By God, there we sat watching the niggers punching each other and all the time there's a money laundry beneath our feet. Is that why you went out there then? And brought me along for company?'
'No, it was work took me out there, but I was working on something else at the time.'
'But you kept your eyes open.'
'You could say that.'
'And put two and two together,' he said. 'Well, it's just the kind of situation I can use. I don't mind telling you, you've surprised me.'
'How?'
'By bringing this to me. It seems unlike you. It's more than a man does out of friendship.'
'You pay a finder's fee,' I said. 'Don't you?'
'Ah,' he said, and a curious light came into his eyes. 'That I do,' he said. 'Five percent.'
He excused himself to make a phone call. While he was gone I sat there and looked at the bottle and the glass. I could have had some of the coffee Burke had made but I didn't want any. I didn't want the booze either.
When he came back I said, 'Five percent's not enough.'
'Oh?' His face hardened. 'By God, you're full of surprises tonight, aren't you? I thought I knew ye. What's the matter with five percent, and how much is it you think you ought to have?'
'There's nothing wrong with five percent,' I said. 'For a finder's fee. I don't want a finder's fee.'
'You don't? Well, what in hell do you want?'
'A full share,' I said. 'I want to be a player. I want to go in.'
He sat back and looked at me. He poured a drink but didn't touch it, breathed in and breathed out and looked at me some more.
'Well, I'll be damned,' he said finally. 'Well, I'll be fucking damned.'
Chapter 22
In the morning I finally got around to stowing The Dirty Dozen in my safe-deposit box. I bought an ordinary copy to take to Maspeth, then began to imagine some of the things that might go wrong. I returned to the bank and retrieved the genuine article, and I left the replacement cassette in the box so I wouldn't mix them up later on.
If I got killed out in Maspeth, Joe Durkin could watch the cassette over and over, searching for a hidden meaning.
All day long I kept thinking that I ought to go to a meeting. I hadn't been to one since Sunday night. I thought I'd go at lunch hour but didn't, and then I thought about a Happy Hour meeting around five-thirty, and finally figured I'd catch at least the first half of my usual meeting at St. Paul's. But I kept finding other things to do.
At ten-thirty I walked over to Grogan's.
Mick was there, and we went into his office in the back. There's an old wooden desk there, and a safe, along with a pair of old-fashioned wooden office chairs and a Naugahyde recliner. There's an old green leather sofa, too, and sometimes he'll catch a few hours on it. He told me once he has three apartments around town, each of them rented in a name other than his own, and of course he has the farm upstate.
'You're the first,' he said. 'Tom and Andy'll be here by eleven. Matt, have you thought it over?'
'Some.'
'Have you had second thoughts, man?'
'Why should I?'
'It's no harm if you do. There'll likely be bloodshed. I told you that last night.'
'I remember.'
'You'll have to carry a gun. And if you carry one-'
'You have to be willing to use it. I know that.'
'Ah, Jesus,' he said. 'Are ye sure ye have the heart for it, man?'
'We'll find out, won't we?'
He opened the safe and showed me several guns. The one he recommended was a SIG Sauer 9-mm automatic. It weighed a ton and I figured you could stop a runaway train with it. I played with it, working the slide, taking the clip out and putting it back, and I liked the feel of it. It was a nice piece of machinery and it looked intimidating as all hell. But I wound up giving it back and choosing a.38 S amp;W short-barreled revolver instead. It lacked the SIG Sauer's menacing appearance, to say nothing of its stopping power, but it rode more comfortably tucked under my belt in the small of my back. More to the point, it was a close cousin to the piece I'd carried for years on the job.
Mick took the SIG for himself.
By eleven Tom and Andy had both arrived, and each had come into the office to select a weapon. We kept the office door closed, of course, and we were all pacing around, talking about the good weather, telling each other it would be a piece of cake. Then Andy went out and brought the car around and we filed out of Grogan's and got into it.
The car was a Ford, a big LTD Crown Victoria about five years old. It was long and roomy, with a big trunk and a powerful engine. I thought at first it had been stolen for the occasion, but it turned out to be a car Ballou had bought a while back. Andy Buckley kept it garaged up in the Bronx and drove it on occasions of this sort. The plates were legitimate but if you ran them you wouldn't get anywhere; the name and address on the registration were fictitious.
Andy drove crosstown on Fifty-seventh Street and we took the Fifty-ninth Street Bridge into Queens. I liked his route better than the one I had taken. Nobody talked much once we were in the car, and after we crossed the bridge the silence was only rarely interrupted. Maybe a locker room's like that in the minutes before a championship game. Or maybe not; in sports they don't shoot the losers.
I don't suppose the trip took us much more than half an hour door to door. There was no traffic to speak of and Andy knew the route cold. So it must have been somewhere around midnight when we reached the arena. He had not been driving fast, and he slowed down now to around twenty miles an hour and we looked at the building and scanned the surrounding area as we coasted on by.
We went up one street and down another, and from time to time we would pass the arena and take a good look at it. The streets were as empty as they'd been the night before, and the lateness of the hour made them seem even more desolate. After we'd cruised around for twenty minutes or more Mick told him to give it a rest.