A Catskill Eagle (19 page)

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Authors: Robert B. Parker

Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Detective, #Mystery, #Crime & mystery, #Mystery & Detective, #Fiction - Mystery, #Suspense, #Hard-Boiled, #Crime & Thriller, #Mystery & Detective - Hard-Boiled, #Mystery fiction, #Boston (Mass.), #Political, #Mystery & Detective - General, #Private investigators, #Spenser (Fictitious character), #Escapes, #Private investigators - Massachusetts - Boston

BOOK: A Catskill Eagle
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CHAPTER 43

I DROVE BAREFOOTED ALONG STORROW DRIVE TO Soldiers Field Road. I parked in a parking area opposite the Ground Round, not far from Channel 4. Then I turned and rested my right arm on the seat back and smiled at the Oriental man.

“What’s your name,” I said.

“Loo,” he said. “Richie Loo.”

“Chinese?”

“Yes.”

“Where you from?”

“I’m from here,” Richie said. “The two coolies were from Taiwan.”

“Maybe they still are,” I said.

Richie shrugged. “You gut shot one of them,” he said.

I nodded.

We were silent. Bicycles wont past along the river. Across the way on the Cambridge side there were joggers. A white cabin cruiser with mahogany trim moved up the river. I looked at Richie Loo. He nodded slightly, as if he’d been in conversation.

“I don’t know nothing about you,” he said. “I work for a guy here who works for a guy in Hong Kong who owes a favor. The Hong Kong guy sent the two goons over and I met them. They don’t speak English. We’re supposed to kill you. I’m supposed to guide and interpret and be backup, but they’re supposed to do it.”

“Who you work for,” I said.

Richie Loo shook his head. “Won’t do you any good. You want to know who wants you killed. Connection’s too complicated. Guy I work for don’t even know.”

“I know who wanted it done,” I said. “I want to know where he is.”

“Same answer,” Richie said. “Won’t do you no good.”

“Tell me who you work for,” I said. “It’s a start.”

Richie shook his head. “Can’t do that. I tell you stuff, I’m dead. Maybe you’ll kill me if I don’t. But they’ll kill me if I do, and they’ll do it slower.”

More silence. The traffic hum was steady behind us on Soldiers Field Road. Back toward the bend in the river, two kids were playing Frisbee with a golden retriever, the dog tearing off after the disk and sometimes catching it in the air.

“Get out,” I said.

Richie Loo got out of the car. “Close the door,” I said.

He did. I put the car in gear and backed out and drove away.

CHAPTER 44

WE WERE IN TWO CONNECTING ROOMS IN THE Holiday Inn on Blossom Street, back of Mass General Hospital. Belson was sitting in an armchair with his feet up on the bed watching a Popeye cartoon when Susan let us in. She raised her eyebrows at our half-naked wetness.

“What did they say at the desk,” she said.

“Came straight up,” I said. “Quirk gave us the room number.”

Rachel Wallace came out of the adjoining bedroom.

“Did you learn anything?” she said.

“Don’t swim in Boston Harbor,” I said.

“Was it a trap?” Susan said.

“Yes.”

“And you’re all right?”

“Yes.”

“We packed,” Susan said. “For all of us.”

“You suggesting I change?”

“And shower,” Susan said. “You smell like a fish.”

Hawk took our two handguns and the sawed-off from the gym bag. Popeye sent Bluto spinning into outer space, and Belson looked over.

“Do I see an illegally modified weapon,” he said.

“No,” Hawk said.

“I didn’t think I did,” Belson said. He stood up. “You folks going to be all right for a while by yourselves?”

“Who knows we’re here besides you and Quirk?”

“Nobody.”

“Let’s keep it that way,” I said.

“What do I tell Ives?”

“Tell him you don’t know,” I said.

“Lie?” Belson said. “To the representatives of a federal agency?”

“Yes,” I said.

“My pleasure,” Belson said.

“Tell Ives I’ll call him.”

Belson nodded. “Better clean those pieces,” he said. “Salt water will raise hell with them.”

He took Susan’s hand and squeezed it. She kissed him on the cheek. He said, “Ms. Wallace.”

Rachel Wallace said, “Thank you, Sergeant,” and Belson went out.

Hawk and I showered and put on clean clothes. Then I called Ives.

“Where the hell are you,” he said.

“Shangri-la,” I said. “Somebody in your organization is talking.”

“Impossible,” Ives said.

“Some people knew where we were, knew we had reason to look for Costigan, knew the phone number at the safe house.”

“Perhaps the maiden has made some phone calls,” Ives said.

“Her name is Ms. Silverman,” I said. “If you call her maiden again I am going to put you in the hospital. Also if you call me Lochinvar. Some asshole in your asshole operation is on Costigan’s string.”

“Your threats don’t scare me,” Ives said. “And I can’t run an operation like this without keeping track of the agents.”

“My threats should scare you, and you will have to learn to run this operation without keeping track of us. We’ll find Costigan, and we’ll kill him like we said we would. But we’ll do it without telling you where we are. Because you will probably run it live on the Today show.”

I hung up.

Hawk had broken down the two .357’s and was wiping them down with baby oil.

“Ives ain’t happy ‘bout us going underground,” he said.

“I think that’s right,” I said.

“We need him to get off the hook in California,” Hawk said.

“We’ll do what he wants done,” I said. “And he’s too far into this to pull out now.”

“‘Cause we’d blow the whistle on him?”

“Yes.”

Hawk nodded. “So we on our own,” he said.

“Who better,” I said.

Rachel Wallace was sitting on the bed with her briefcase open beside her on the bed.

“Perhaps we should begin,” she said, “by learning a bit more about our adversary.”

“Can we eat and drink while we do it?” I said.

“Certainly.”

I ordered some sandwiches and beer from room service, and Hawk reassembled and loaded one of the newly cleaned .357’s and stood just inside the door in the other room when the waiter came. I paid him in cash and he went away.

“Whose name we under,” I said.

“I don’t know,” Susan said. “Frank simply brought us here and opened the door with a key.”

“We’ll move on soon, anyway,” I said.

I reassembled the other handgun and loaded it. “We got money left?” Hawk said.

“About run out,” I said.

“Gonna need money,” Hawk said. “Airfare, cars, food, lodging, champagne.”

“I know a man who has some,” I said. “I’ll ask him.”

“Hugh Dixon,” Hawk said.

“The man whose wife and daughter were killed in London?” Susan said.

“He said if I ever needed help to ask him. I think this is the time.”

“Sho nuff is,” Hawk said.

CHAPTER 45

I ATE HALF A CLUB SANDWICH. RACHEL WALLACE got her notes in order and began to talk.

“To begin with you’ll have to accept some things,” she said. “For instance, you’ll have to accept the limits of research. I have accumulated a lot of facts about Jerry Costigan, but he remains, in the way that you are probably most interested in, an enigma wrapped in a mystery.”

“Nice phrase,” I said.

“I did not originate it,” she said, “as you well know. Why Costigan is as he is, and therefore, how you will best be able to bring him down, is beyond my skills. Perhaps Susan can help in that area.”

Susan nodded. She was sipping a Miller Lite. She ate her club sandwich by taking off the top slice of bread and nibbling on the ingredients one at a time. I could eat a brontosaurus in the time it took her to eat a club sandwich that way.

“His holdings are large and various, but his current interest lies primarily in international commerce in arms. He seems without politics in this, selling arms and equipment to all shades of the political spectrum, without regard to their position vis-a-vis the United States.”

“A citizen of the world,” I said.

Hawk drank some Heineken from the bottle. “Wendell Willkie,” he said.

“More than that,” Rachel Wallace said. “He supplies not only arms and equipment, but personnel. He maintains a corps of trained mercenaries, for example the group you encountered in Connecticut, and supplies them as well as materiel to whomever.”

“Rent-a-troop?” I said.

“In a sense,” Rachel Wallace said, “but it’s more interesting than that. As far as I can tell, and obviously I am interpreting data here, and may sometimes misinterpret, he uses some of his personnel to foment, and then sustain, conflict, thus creating a market for his product.”

Hawk and I looked at each other. Hawk nodded his head. “Elegant,” he said.

“Good old Yankee know-how,” I said.

“As I say, Costigan seems to favor no position in this. He will sell arms to rebels, to governments suppressing rebels, to oligarchies, communists, democracies and dictatorships, people yearning to breathe free, people eager to prevent it. He often supplies both sides, and sometimes supplies personnel to both sides. He operates through a number of differently named companies. His sole interest appears to be creating a market for his product.”

“This make sense to you, Suze?” I said.

“So far. I never knew too much about Jerry’s business.”

“Anything to add,” I said.

“Let Rachel finish, then I’ll offer whatever I can. If I hear anything I know to be wrong, I’ll say.”

“Okay.” I looked at Rachel Wallace. She swallowed a bite of a chicken salad sandwich. She poured some Lite beer in her glass, about two inches, and sipped some.

“In his pursuit of profit and power, Costigan seems entirely amoral. Each has a salutary effect on the other. The more profit he makes the more powerful he becomes, the more powerful he becomes the more profit he makes. All evidence suggests that he is wealthy beyond calculation. He has no need to pursue either profit or power. He seems to pursue them because”-she made an I-give-up gesture with both hands-“because they are there.”

“Maybe there’s a point where if you don’t pursue it, you lose it,” I said.

“Perhaps,” Rachel Wallace said. She finished her two inches of Lite beer. “And perhaps the process has become a purpose in itself.”

She poured another inch of beer into her glass and took another bite of her chicken sandwich. We waited while she chewed and swallowed. Susan sat motionless, her club sandwich disordered and half eaten on her plate. She looked quietly at Rachel Wallace with the same inwardness that she’d maintained since I’d found her in Connecticut.

“However, in his personal life, and of this I know very little, he appears to be Roman Catholic doctrinaire. He is entirely committed to the belief in some kind of frontier radicalism in which absolute individual freedom is life’s greatest good. He is also a white supremacist.”

“Him too,” Hawk murmured.

Rachel Wallace smiled. “And an anti-Semite. He seems to believe that America is in danger of being overrun by blacks and Jews and foreigners and”-she smiled again-“lesbians.”

“The lesbians are arming?” I said.

“And gay men,” she said, “and feminists, and the IRS.”

“How about the worldwide conspiracy,” I said.

“You get the idea,” Rachel Wallace said. “Costigan appears to be fearful that America will be overrun by Americans. As a result he maintains not only a level of security commensurate with his wealth and power; but he keeps elements of his mercenary army on alert near him in anticipation of the forthcoming apocalypse.”

“Where is he?” I said.

Rachel Wallace shook her head and smiled sadly. “Everywhere,” she said, “nowhere. He has estab lishments and redoubts and hideaways and retreats and castles and keeps everywhere. I can, and will, add to the list I gave you by phone in California, but there’s no way to know that the places I know of are all there are and less way than that to know if he’s there, or when he will be. We know for sure only that he’s not here in this room.”

“Gee, that a start,” Hawk said.

“Christ,” I said, “we’ve got him cornered.”

“Perhaps the government people can add to what I’ve got,” Rachel Wallace said.

“As far as I can tell,” I said, “they wouldn’t even he certain he wasn’t in this room.”

“But they’d manage to let Costigan know that we were,” Hawk said.

Rachel Wallace nodded. “So we’re on our own,” she said.

“I appreciate the we, ” I said.

“I had occasion to appreciate it some years ago,” she said. “Susan, do you have anything to add.” Susan was looking at her sandwich. She picked up a half slice of tomato and ate it carefully.

“I don’t know where to look either,” she said.

We were quiet. Hawk began on his second sandwich. Corned beef. I finished my beer and opened another.

“I don’t want to talk about Russell,” Susan said.

“Talk about whatever you want to,” I said. “Anything we know will put us ahead of where we are now.”

“Russell is not like his father,” Susan said. She foraged a small piece of bacon from the sandwich and ate it. “I…”

I leaned a little forward toward her. “I won’t hurt him,” I said.

“Do you promise,” Susan said.

“I just did,” I said.

Susan raised her eyes from her plate. “Yes,” she said. “You did. I’m sorry.” She shifted her glance to Hawk. He was lying on the bed fully invested in his corned beef sandwich. He looked back at Susan.

“You tough lady,” he said. Susan was silent.

Hawk grinned. “Okay, since you put it that way. I won’t hurt him either.”

Susan nodded her head, almost as if to herself.

“Less of course you change your mind,” Hawk said.

CHAPTER 46

“IN HIS PERSONAL HABITS JERRY IS QUITE ascetic,” Susan said, “He doesn’t drink, he doesn’t smoke. He doesn’t drink coffee or tea. Of course he does not ingest drugs. He runs five miles every morning. He avoids red meat. He is self-educated, and quite well. He reads a great deal, and he is very intelligent, but very rigid. He is devoted to his son, and devoted to his wife. Other than those two devotions, I have no reason to think he has any feelings whatsoever.”

“How did he treat you?” I said.

“His anti-Semitism is virulent. It must have deeply offended him that I was with his son, though it’s probably one of my charms for his son, but he never showed it. He was always polite, almost courtly, to me. If his son chose me, then he could forgive even my Jewishness.”

“My son right or wrong but still my son,” Rachel Wallace said.

“His love for his son is unflinching,” Susan said, “and his son often did not make that easy.”

“And his wife?” I said.

Susan shook her head. “Grace,” she said.

“He not infatuated with her beauty,” Hawk said.

Susan continued to shake her head. “I’ve always known that love was a compendium of needs. You learn that in your introductory psych course, but what complex of needs and pathologies binds those two people together…” She shrugged. “Yes, he loves her.”

“And she loves him?”

“I don’t know. She needs him, she manipulates him. She loves Russell,” Susan said. “I don’t know all the dynamics in that family. But I know… I know that Grace is the worm in that apple.”

Susan’s club sandwich lay unattended on her plate. I eyed it. Maybe if I reassembled it. No, it was hers. I looked at the sandwich platter. It was empty. I looked at Susan’s disorganized sandwich again. Hell, she wasn’t going to eat it. Susan took a piece of lettuce in her fingers and tore off a small triangle and ate it. She held the rest of the leaf poised in front of her.

“Talk a little more about Grace,” I said.

“She’s not very bright,” Susan said. “And she affects a kind of Iittle-girlishness that is simply incongruous with her bulk. She’s… what is the phrase Jerry used about her once… often wrong, but never uncertain. She’s overbearing and full of fear. She’s infantile and tyrannical at the same time. She’s weak and silly and her husband and her son are neither and she controls both of them.”

Susan shook her head. “Remarkable,” she said.

“Why,” Rachel Wallace said.

“Why does she do that?” Susan said.

“Yes.”

Susan tore off another edge of lettuce and ate it. The large remainder of the sandwich lay nearly pristine if confused on her plate.

“To be taken care of, probably.”

“She doesn’t trust them to do that,” Rachel Wallace said.

It wasn’t a question. She and Susan were beginning to work on a puzzle. People who were therapists or had had a lot of psychotherapy tended to do that. To get interested in the problem for its own sake, to work wondrous patterns out of human behavior. Sort of like close reading a poem. I couldn’t see where this would take us, but I didn’t have anything else to listen to that was more likely to help.

“No. She’s scared, it’s maybe the central fact about her. She doesn’t understand life and it scares hell out of her. She needs to be taken through it by the hand and she doesn’t trust anyone to do it unless she can control them.”

“Her husband doesn’t understand this,” Rachel Wallace said. “How about her son?”

“He hates her,” Susan said.

“Without ambivalence,” Rachel Wallace said.

Susan smiled. “And loves her.”

“Powerful father,” Rachel Wallace said, “seductive and susceptible mother.”

“Seductive?” I said.

“To Russell,” Rachel Wallace said. “Classic pattern.”

“Classic,” Hawk said.

“Of course it sounds like psychobabble,” Susan said. “But she’s right.”

I reached for one of the best-organized remnants of Susan’s sandwich. She slapped my wrist. I pulled my hand back.

“Is this getting me a shot at Jerry Costigan,” I said.

Susan shook her head. “Probably not,” she said. “But that’s really your area. What we can do is report what we know. You and Hawk are the ones who are supposed to see what can be made from it.”

“True,” I said. “Are you going to finish that sandwich?”

“In time,” Susan said.

“Grace always travel with them?” Hawk said.

“No, she’s afraid to fly,” Susan said.

Hawk raised his eyebrows and nodded his head once.

I sucked my lower lip in and worried it a little. “Okay,” I said. “Say we can get her alone, once we’ve got her what do we do with her?”

“He love her like he supposed to we can make him swap. Him for her.”

I said to Susan, “When he travels does she normally stay in Mill River?”

“Yes.”

“He knows we’re looking for him. Richie Loo knew it so Costigan knows it.”

“Ives know it,” Hawk said. “Everybody know it.”

“He loves her like he’s supposed to he won’t leave her alone.”

Hawk nodded. “A point,” he said.

“So he stays in Mill River with her, or he insists she go with him, scared or no.” I looked at Susan.

“Yes,” she said. “He wouldn’t leave her, and he wouldn’t force her to fly, maybe couldn’t force her to fly. But she’ll ride in a car.”

“We’ve already gotten inside the Mill River place once,” I said.

“Want to bet they’ve improved security,” Hawk said.

I nodded. “Still, if he had a better place.”

“That he could drive to,” Hawk said.

“So we narrow it to the West Coast,” I said.

“More or less,” Hawk said.

All of the tomato was gone from Susan’s sandwich. She was nibbling the last piece of bacon. “Say, arbitrarily, a day’s drive at fifty miles an hour.”

“How long a day?”

“Say twelve hours,” I said. “Six hundred miles. Draw a circle around Mill River with a sixteen-mile radius, what have you got?”

“A equals u th,” Hawk said. “ ‘Bout 3,600 square miles.”

“Search a square mile a day and, if he doesn’t move, we’ll have him within ten years.”

Hawk looked at me in amazement. “My God,” he said in a flawless English accent, “Holmes, you’re incredible.”

“Elementary,” I said.

“So what we know about Grace leaves us no better off than we were,” Rachel Wallace said.

“Only technically,” I said.

“‘Fore we discovered about her,” Hawk said, we thought we have to search three million square miles.“

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