Authors: Donald E Westlake
The fisherman looked up. His face looked astonished. He said, âYou won't believe what happened. I don't believe it myself.'
Kelp helped him up onto the pier. âWe saw it go,' he said. âA runaway trailer.'
âIt just come right along,' the fisherman said, âand threw me in the ocean. Lost my chair, lost my tackle, damn near lost myself.'
âYou kept your hat anyway,' Victor pointed out.
âTied under my chin,' the fisherman said. âWas there anybody in that thing?'
âNo, it was empty,' Kelp said.
The fisherman looked down at himself. âMy wife told me,' he said. âShe said this wasn't no day to fish. I'll be goddamned if she wasn't right for once.'
âJust so you didn't get hurt,' Kelp said.
âHurt?' The fisherman grinned. âListen,' he said. âI come out of this with the kind of fish story you just can't top. I wouldn't care if I got a broken leg out of it.'
âYou didn't, did you?' Victor asked.
The fisherman stomped his booted feet on the planks of the pier; they squished. âHell, no,' he said. âFit as a fiddle.' He sneezed. âExcept I do believe I'm coming down with pneumonia.'
âMaybe you ought to get home,' Kelp said. âGet into some dry things.'
âBourbon,' the fisherman said. âThat's what I need.' He glanced away toward the end of the pier. âDamnedest thing I ever saw,' he said and sneezed again and went off shaking his head.
âLet's take a look,' Kelp said. He and Victor walked out to the end of the pier and stared down into the rain-spattered water. âI don't see it,' Kelp said.
âHere it is. See it?'
Kelp looked where Victor was pointing. âRight,' he said, catching a glimpse of the thing, like a blue-and-white whale down there in the water. Then he frowned, peering at it, and said, âHey, it's moving.'
âIt is?'
The two of them squinted in silence for ten seconds or so, and then Victor said, âYou're right. It's the undertow, taking it away.'
âI don't believe it,' Kelp said.
Victor looked back toward shore. âHere comes the rest of them,' he said.
Kelp reluctantly turned and saw the other five getting out of the horse van. They came trailing out onto the pier, Dortmunder in the lead. Kelp put a sickly smile on his face and waited.
Dortmunder came up and looked into the water. âI don't suppose you two are out here for a tan,' he said.
âNo,' said Kelp.
Dortmunder nodded at the water. âIt went in there, right?'
âThat's right,' Kelp said. âYou can see it â¦' He pointed, then frowned. âNo, you can't any more.'
Victor said, âIt's moving.'
âMoving,' Dortmunder echoed.
âComing down the hill,' Victor said, âthe wind shut the doors again. I don't suppose it's completely airtight, but it is closed up pretty good, and it must have just enough air in it to make it buoyant enough not to be stuck in the mud or the sand on the bottom. So the undertow's moving it.'
The others had come up by now. May said, âYou mean it's going away?'
âThat's right,' Victor said.
Kelp felt Dortmunder looking at him but wouldn't acknowledge it. He kept staring into the water instead.
Murch's Mom said, âWhere's it going to?'
âFrance,' Dortmunder said.
Herman said, âYou mean it's gone for good? After all that work?'
âWell, we got some of the money anyway,' Kelp said and looked around with the sickly smile on his face again. But Dortmunder was already walking away along the pier toward the shore. One by one, the others followed him, and the rain rained down all around.
31
âTwenty-three thousand, eight hundred twenty dollars,' Dortmunder said and sneezed.
They were all in the apartment, his and May's. Everybody had changed clothes, with May and Murch's Mom both in clothing belonging to May, and all five men in Dortmunder's clothes. They were also all sneezing, and May had brewed up a lot of tea with whiskey in it.
âTwenty-three, almost twenty-four thousand,' Kelp said brightly. âIt could have been worse.'
âYes,' Dortmunder said. âIt could have been Confederate money.'
Murch sneezed and said, âHow much is that apiece?'
Dortmunder said, âFirst we pay off the financier. That's eight thousand, leaving fifteen thousand, eight hundred twenty. Divided by seven, that's two thousand, two hundred sixty bucks apiece.'
Murch made a face as though something smelled bad. âTwo thousand dollars? That's all?'
Herman and Murch's Mom sneezed simultaneously.
âWe'll spend more than that in medical bills,' Dortmunder said.
Victor said, âStill, we did the job, you have to admit that. You can't call it a failure.'
âI can if I want to,' Dortmunder said.
âHave some more tea,' said May.
Kelp sneezed.
âTwo thousand dollars,' Herman said; and blew his nose. âI spill that much.'
They were all in the living room, sitting around the money, the charred bills and wet bills all stacked in different piles on the coffee table. The apartment was warm and dry, but the smell of wet clothes and disaster filled the air from the bedroom.
Murch's Mom sighed. âI'll have to start wearing that brace again,' she said.
âYou lost it,' her son told her accusingly. âYou left it in the bank.'
âSo we'll buy a new one.'
âAnother expense.'
âWell,' Kelp said, âI guess we might as well divvy the-loot and go on home.'
âDivvy the loot,' Dortmunder echoed and looked at the paper on the coffee table. âYou got an eye dropper?'
âIt isn't that bad,' Kelp said. âWe didn't come out of it empty-handed.'
Victor got to his feet and stretched and said, âI suppose this would be more like a celebration if we'd gotten the rest of the money.'
Dortmunder nodded. âYou could say that.'
They split up the cash and departed, everybody promising to send back the borrowed clothes and reclaim their own. Left to themselves, Dortmunder and May sat on the sofa and looked at the four thousand, five hundred twenty dollars left on the coffee table. They sighed. Dortmunder said, âWell, it did give me something to think about, I have to admit it.'
âThe worst thing about a cold,' May said, âis the way it makes the cigarettes taste.' She plucked the ember from the corner of her mouth and flipped it into an ashtray but didn't light a new one. âYou want some more tea?'
âI still got some.' He sipped at the tea and frowned. âWhat's the percentage of tea and whisky in this thing?'
âAbout half and half.'
He drank a little more. The warm steam curled around his nostrils. âYou better brew up another pot,' he said.
She nodded, starting to smile. âRight,' she said.
32
âIt's on the Island,' Captain Deemer said. âIt's somewhere on this goddam Island.'
âYes, sir,' Lieutenant Hepplewhite said, but faintly.
âAnd I'm going to find it.'
âYes, sir.'
The two of them were alone in the unmarked patrol car, a black Ford, radio-equipped. The captain was driving, and the lieutenant was beside him. The captain hunched over the wheel, his eyes constantly moving as he drove back and forth and up and down and all over Long Island.
Beside him, the lieutenant's eyes were unfocused. He wasn't looking for or at anything, but was practicing once more the speech that he would never make to the captain. In its latest form it went: âCaptain, it's been three weeks. You're letting the precinct go to hell, you've become obsessed with this missing bank, all you do is spend all the daylight hours, seven days a week, driving around looking for that bank. It's
gone
, Captain, that bank is gone and we are never going to find it.'
âBut, Captain, even if you are obsessed and can't get out of your obsession,
I'm not.
You pulled me off night duty, and I loved night duty, I loved being the man behind the desk at night in the precinct. But you put that idiot Schlumgard in there in my place, and Schlumgard doesn't know what the hell he's doing, and morale is going to hell. If I ever
do
get my job back, Schlumgard will have undone everything I've tried to do.
âBut the point is, Captain, it has been
three weeks.
The New York City police stopped cooperating after four days, which means the bank could have been taken out of our jurisdiction anytime in the last two and a half weeks, which means it could be anywhere in the world by now. I know your theory, Captain, that the bank was hidden sometime that first night, that the crooks emptied the safe in the first day or two and went away and just left it there, but even if you're right, what good does it do? If they hid it so well we couldn't find it in the first few days, when we had search parties combing the entire Island, two of us are not going to find it by driving around in a car three weeks later.
âWhich is why, Captain, I feel I must tell you that I have come to a decision. If you want to go on looking for the bank, that's up to you. But either you let me go back to my regular duties, or I'll just have to talk to the Commissioner. Now, Captain, I've gone along with you on every â'
âYou say something?'
Startled, the lieutenant snapped his head around and stared at the captain. âWhat? What?'
Captain Deemer frowned at him, then faced the road again. âI thought you said something.'
âNo, sir.'
âWell, just keep your eyes open.'
âYes, sir.'
The lieutenant looked out the side window, though without any hope. They were climbing a hill, and just ahead was the sign for McKay's Diner. The lieutenant remembered the free cheeseburger he'd been promised, and smiled. He was about to turn his head toward the captain and suggest they stop for a snack when he saw the diner was gone again. âWell, I'll be darned,' he said.
âWhat?'
âThat diner, sir,' the lieutenant said as they drove by. âThey went out of business already.'
âIs that right.' The captain didn't sound interested.
âEven faster than I thought,' the lieutenant said, looking back at the space where the diner had been.
âWe're looking for a bank, Lieutenant, not a diner.'
âYes, sir.' The lieutenant faced front, began again to scan the countryside. âI knew they wouldn't make it,' he said.
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This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
copyright © 1972 by Donald E. Westlake
cover design by Mumtaz Mustafa
This edition published in 2011 by
MysteriousPress.com
/Open Road Integrated Media
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