connected? I'm plugged into the fucking
'I don't doubt that, Mr. Carver. But those one or two phone calls aren't gonna help you now.'
'Oh? Why not?'
'The phone lines have been cut. Try it,' Max pointed to a telephone he spied on the other side of the room.
When he'd driven up the mountain road, he'd seen people working on the telegraph poles.
Carver snorted contemptuously and pulled hard on his cigarette.
'What do you want from me, Mingus?
'No.' Max shook his head. 'I have questions I need answers to.'
'Let me guess: Why did I do this?'
'That's a good enough place to start.'
'Do you know that in Greek and Roman times it was common for adults to have sex with children? It was commonplace. It was accepted. Today, in the non-Western world, girls are married off to grown men at the age of twelve, sometimes. And in your country, teenage pregnancies are
'Those were no
'Oh damn you and your
'Some of those kids looked no more than six years old,' Max said.
'Yeah? You know what? I've had a
Carver was raging on whiskey fumes, but this wasn't the drunk bragging of a man who didn't give a fuck until the hangover kicked in. He would have said the same thing and had the same attitude in identical circumstances if he'd been sober. He meant every word he said.
The maid reappeared, replaced the whiskey tumbler and ashtray, and quickly left with the used ones.
'What's the matter, Mingus? You look ill. This too much for you to
Max doubted the old man really understood his predicament. Decades of having everything his own way had blinded him to the obvious and the certain. He'd never faced someone he couldn't bribe, corrupt, or destroy. Nothing had stood in his way that he hadn't bulldozed or bought out. Right now, he was probably thinking that all of his pedophile clients would come to his aid, that the pervert cavalry would come riding over the hill to rescue him. Maybe he was thinking of bribing Max out of taking him in. Or maybe he had something else up his sleeve, some trapdoor that would suddenly open beneath his feet and drop him to freedom.
From outside the room Max heard a short cry and the sound of breaking glass. He looked at the doorway and saw nothing.
'But you're a father yourself?' Max began.
'That never stopped
'So you admit that what you've been doing is?'
'
'But you've done business with them for?'
'Close to forty years, yes. You know why? I have no conscience. I eradicated that from my way of thinking a long time ago. Having a conscience is an overrated pastime.' Carver edged closer to him. 'I may hate them, but I
'And you exploited that?'
'You also saw people you could blackmail?'
'I never 'blackmailed' anyone, as you put it. I've never had to threaten a single one of my clients into opening doors for me.'
'Because they already know the score?'
'Exactly. These are people who move in higher planes. People whose reputations are
'And these 'favors'?' Max asked. 'What did they give you? Trade monopolies? Access to confidential U.S. government files?'
Carver shook his head, smirking.
'Contacts.'
'More pedophiles? Ones on even
'Absolutely! You know the theory that you're only six people away from any one person? When you have the
'Everybody knows everybody else?'
'Yes. To a degree. I don't deal with
'Only the ones you can get something out of?'
'I'm a businessman, not a charity worker. There has to be something in it for me. Risk versus reward.' Carver reached for another cigarette. 'How do you think we got to you, in prison? All those calls? Did you ever think of that?'
'I guessed you had juice.'
'
Carver lit his cigarette.
'Why me?' Max asked.
'You were?in your prime?one of the best private detectives in the country, if not
'When?'
'That's for me to know and you to find out.' Carver smiled as he blew pale-blue tusks of smoke through his nose. 'How did you find out about me? Who broke? Who cracked? Who betrayed me?'
Max didn't reply.
'Oh come on Mingus! Tell me! What does it fucking matter?'
Max shook his head.
Carver's face dropped to an ungainly angry heap somewhere past his nose. His eyes narrowed to slits and blazed behind them.
'I
'Sit down, Carver!' Max shot up from his chair, snatched the cane, and pushed the old man roughly back on his seat. Carver looked at him, surprised and afraid. Then he glanced at the cigarette burning in his ashtray and crushed it out.
'You're outnumbered here.' He leered up at Max. 'You could beat me to death with that'?he nodded at the cane?'but you wouldn't get out of here alive.'
'I'm not here to kill you,' Max said, glancing over his shoulder, expecting to see the maid coming for the ashtray and maybe others with her,