wasn't a private detective anymore, remember? That was all over. He was finished. Hell, he'd been finished from the moment he'd shot those kids in New York. He'd crossed a line you didn't come back from. He was a convicted murderer; he'd taken three young lives in cold blood. That canceled out everything he'd once been and much of what he'd stood for.
And now he was setting up his former client. He'd never ratted out a client before and he'd never known an investigator who had?not even Beeson. It was something you didn't ever do, part of a long code of inviolable ethics, all of it unwritten, all of it handed down in whispers and winks.
Carver was, not surprisingly, drinking a very good scotch. Max could smell the quality coming out of his glass, even under all the water it had been doused with.
'Allain and Francesca will be down shortly,' Gustav said.
No they won't, thought Max. Max had passed them both on his way up, being driven away by Paul's men.
'So? How's the investigation going?' Gustav asked.
'Not too well, Mr. Carver. I think I've hit a dead end.'
'It happens in your profession, I'm sure, as it happens in most professions that require brains and drive, no? Go down a road and hit a block, what do you do? You go back to the start and find another way around.'
Carver drilled Max with a fierce look from his practically black eyes. The old man was dressed as Max remembered him from the last time they'd met?beige suit, white shirt, black shoes buffed to a dazzle.
'Is this constipation of yours a very recent thing? Allain told me, not a few days ago, that you were onto something?close to a breakthrough?' Carver's voice had an undertow of contempt about it now. He crushed out his cigarette and put the ashtray on the table. A maid came almost immediately and replaced the ashtray with an identical, clean one.
'I
'And?'
'It wasn't what I was expecting.'
Gustav studied Max's face, looked it over as though he'd seen something about it he hadn't seen before; then he smiled very slightly.
'You
Max thought of three possible responses to that?witty, sarcastic, and bubble-bursting confrontational. He used none; merely smiled and lowered his eyes to make Carver think he was flattered.
'Are you all right?' Carver asked, scrutinizing him. 'You don't seem yourself.'
'What self would that be?' Max asked, only it wasn't a question, it was a statement.
'The man who was here last. The one I admired?the gung-ho shitkicker, John Wayne?Mingus. Sure you're not coming down with something? You haven't been with one of the local whores, have you? Open those legs and you'll find an encyclopedia of venereal disease.' Carver chuckled, missing what was happening right next to him. Max had taken his gloves off. The interrogation was about to start.
Max shook his head.
'So what's the
Max stared hard at Carver, who stopped laughing. He was still smiling but it was only wrinkles and teeth; all merriment had fled his face.
'It's Vincent Paul, isn't it?' Gustav sat back. 'You've spoken to him. He told you things about me, didn't he?'
Max didn't reply, didn't let it rattle him. He just carried on giving Gustav his spotlight beams, his face a mask of indifference.
'I'm sure he told you some terrible things about me. Terrible things. The sort that would make you question what you're doing working for me?'monster' that I am. But you have to bear in mind that Vincent Paul hates me?and a man who hates
'He didn't take Charlie,' Max said.
'Oh what utter
'He
'What is
'And I tell you, quite clearly, it isn't him. He
'But he's a drug dealer.'
'Drug
'What's the difference?do they live a year longer?'
'Something like that, yeah.'
'So what did he
'Many things, Mr. Carver. Many
'Such as??' Carver threw his arms open in mock invitation. 'Did he tell you what I did to his father?'
'Yeah. You ruined his career, and?'
'I didn't 'ruin his career.' The poor sap was going out of business anyway. I just put him out of his misery.'
'You destroyed their estate. You didn't have to do that.'
'They owed me money. I collected. All's fair in love and war, Mr. Mingus. And business is war?and I
Carver laughed acidly. He poured himself more whiskey.
'How did you feel, after the Paul sob story?'
'I could understand why he would hate you, Mr. Carver,' Max answered. 'I could even sympathize with someone like him, in a place like this, where you're only as powerful as you make yourself, and that old-school eye-for-eye-and-tooth-for-tooth revenge is the only way you get even.
'And I understand how someone like you, who knows the true meaning of hatred and hating, would see the point of view of someone like Vincent Paul?a man who hates another man because of some bad stuff one did to the other. You wouldn't have it any other way, Mr. Carver. Because for you, there
'So you think I'm a 'monster'? Join the club!'
'I wouldn't call you a monster, Mr. Carver. You're just a man. Most men are good, some are bad?and then some are
Carver sighed, downed his whiskey, and dropped his cigarette in the glass, where it fizzled out in the residue.
'I
'I don't follow,' Carver responded, puzzled.
'Well. At this very moment your property in La Gonav is under new ownership. Your business there has been closed down.'
That hit Carver so quick and hard he had no time to cover up his shock. For a fraction of a second, Max saw him exposed and looking as close to scared as he imagined a man ever could be without screaming.
Carver reached slowly for his cigarette box. As a precaution, Max unclipped the trigger guard on his gun holster, even though he doubted the old man was packing or anywhere near a firearm.
The maid appeared silently out of the shadows, replaced the whiskey glass and ashtray with clean ones, and hurried out, head bowed.
Max wasn't going to force anything out of the old man, because he didn't think he'd have to. Carver would talk when he was good and ready.
The old man poured himself another whiskey, this one almost to the brim. Then he fired up another cigarette and settled back in his chair.
'I assume you already know what Paul's men will find there in La Gonave?' Carver asked, a little wearily.
'Children?'
'Twenty or so,' Carver confirmed with a calm and openness that disconcerted Max.
'You've got records there too, right? Details of each and every sale?who, what, where.'
'Yes.' Carver nodded. 'Filmed and photographic evidence too. But those aren't the crown jewels. By going into that house, the way you people have?Do you have the slightest
'Tell me.'
'This will make Pandora's Box look like a tin of peanuts.'
'I understand you're well connected, Mr. Carver,' Max dead- panned.