Authors: Robert B. Parker
"Hawk," Vinnie said.
"For one," I said. "And there'd be a homicide investigation."
"Quirk," Vinnie said, as if he were counting off a list.
"So you trade me for them," I said, "maybe some others."
My drink was gone. I didn't want another one. The room was full of harshness and pain and a bitterness that had been distilled by silence. I wanted to get out of there.
"It's my kid, Spenser," Broz said. He sounded as if his throat were closing.
"I'm in sort of the same position, Joe."
"He's got to get some respect," Broz said.
I didn't say anything. Gerry wasn't going to get respect. He couldn't earn it and Joe couldn't earn it for him. Joe was silent, his hands folded, looking at his thumbs. He seemed to have gone somewhere.
After a while Vinnie Morris said, "Okay, Spenser. That's it. We'll talk to you later."
I stood. Broz didn't look up. I turned and walked toward the door across the big office. Vinnie walked with me.
At the door I said to Vinnie, "If Gerry gets in my way I will walk over him."
"I know," Vinnie said. He looked back at Joe Broz. "But if you do, you know who Joe will send."
I nodded. I turned back and looked at Joe.
"Tough being the boss's son," I said.
Joe didn't answer. Vinnie held the door open. And I went out.
"I heard that if you step on their back paws when they jump up like that, they learn not to," Susan said.
"Shhh," I said. "She'll hear you."
Susan had a big blue and white striped umbrella and she carried it so that it protected her and Pearl from the rain. Pearl didn't quite get it, and kept drifting out from under its protection and getting splattered and turning to look at me. I had on my leather trench coat and the replica
Boston Braves hat that Susan had ordered for me through the catalogue from
Manny's Baseball Land. It was black with a red visor and a red button.
There was a whiteB on it and when I wore it I looked very much like Nanny Fernandez.
"What will you do?" Susan said.
"I'll try to extract Patty Giacomin from the puzzle and leave the rest of it intact."
"And you won't warn Rich?"
"No need to warn him. He knows he's in trouble."
"But you won't try to save him?"
"No."
"Isn't that a little flinty?" Susan said.
"Yes."
"Officially, here in Cambridge," Susan said, "we're supposed to value all life."
"That's the official view here in Cambridge of people who will never have to act on it," I said.
"That is true of most of the official views here in Cambridge," Susan said.
"My business is with Patty-Paul really. Rich Beaumont had to know what he was getting himself into-and besides I seem to feel a little sorry for
Joe."
Pearl had wedged herself between my legs and Susan's, managing to stay mostly under her part of Susan's umbrella, and while she didn't seem happy, she was resigned. We turned the corner off Linnaean Street and walked along
Mass Avenue toward Harvard Square.
"You are the oddest combination," Susan said.
"Physical beauty matched with deep humility?"
"Aside from that," Susan said. "Except maybe for Hawk, you look at the world with fewer illusionsthan anyone I have ever known. And yet you ire as sentimental as you would be if the world were pretty-pretty."
"Which it isn't," I said.
"You cook a good chicken too," Susan said.
"Takes a tough man," I said, "to make a tender chicken."
"How come you cook so well?"
"It's a gift," I said.
"One not, apparently, bestowed on me."
"You do nice cornflakes," I said.
"Did you always cook?" she said.
Pearl darted out from under the umbrella long enough to snuffle the possible spoor of a fried chicken wing, near a trash barrel, then remembered the rain and ducked back in against my leg.
"Since I was small," I said.
As we passed Changsho Restaurant, Pearl's head went down and her ears pricked and her body elongated. She had found the lair of the chicken wings she'd been tracking earlier.
"Remember," I said, "there were no women. Just my father, my uncles, and me. So all the chores were done by men. There was no woman's work. There were no rules about what was woman's work. In our house all work was man's work. So I made beds and dusted and did laundry, and so did my father, and my uncles. And they took turns cooking."
We were past Changsho, Pearl looked back over her shoulder at it, but she kept pace with us and the protective umbrella. There was enough neon in this part of Mass Avenue so that the wet rain made it look pretty, reflecting the colors and fusing them on the wet pavement.
"I started when I was old enough to come home from school alone. I'd be hungry, so I'd make myself something to eat. First it was leftovers-stew, baked beans, meat loaf, whatever. And I'd heat them up. Then I graduated to cooking myself a hamburg, or making a club sandwich, and one day I wanted pie and there wasn't any so I made one."
"And the rest is history," Susan said.
A big MBTA bus pulled up at the stop beside us, the water streaming off its yellow flanks, the big wipers sweeping confidently back and forth across the broad windshield.
"Well, not entirely," I said. "The pie was edible, but a little odd. I didn't like to roll out the crust, so I just pressed overlapping scraps of dough into the bottom of the pie plate until I got a bottom crust."
"And the top crust?"
"Same thing."
The pneumatic doors of the bus closed with that soft, firm sound that they make and the bus ground into gear and plowed off through the rain.
"My father came home and had some and said it was pretty good and I should start sharing in the cooking. So I did."
"So all of you cooked?"
"Yeah, but no one was proprietary about it. It wasn't anyone's accomplishment, it was a way to get food in the proper condition to eat."
"Your father sounds as if he were comfortable with his ego," Susan said.
"He never felt the need to compete with me," I said. "He was always very willing for me to grow up. Ї
Pearl had located a discarded morsel of chewing gum on the pavement and was mouthing it vigorously. Apparently she found it unrewarding, because after a minute of ruminative mouthing she opened her jaws and let it drop out.
"There's something she won't eat," Susan said.
"I would have said there wasn't," I said.
We passed the corner of Shepard Street. Across Mass Avenue, on the corner of Wendell Street, the motel had changed names again.
"I got to shop some too," I said, "though mostly for things like milk and sugar. My father and my uncles had a vegetable garden they kept, and they all hunted, so there was lots of game. My father liked to come home after ten, twelve hours of carpentering and work in his garden. My uncles didn't care for the garden much, but they liked the fresh produce and they were too proud to take it without helping, so they'd be out there too. Took up most of the backyard. In the fall we'd put up a lot of it, and we'd smoke some game."
"Did you work in the garden?" Susan said.
"Sure."
"Do you miss it?"
"No," I said. "I always hated gardening."
"So when we retire you don't want to buy a little cottage and tend your roses?"
"While you're inside baking up some cookies," I said, "maybe brewing a pot of tea, or a batch of lemonade that you'd bring me in a pitcher."
"What a dreadful thought," Susan said.
"Yes," I said. "I prefer to think I can be the bouncer in a retirement home."
The Cambridge Common appeared through the shiny down-slanted rain. Pearl elongated a little when she sniffed it. There were always squirrels there, and Pearl had every intention of catching one.
"And you?" I said.
"When I retire?"
"Yeah."
Susan looked at the wet superstructure of the children's swing set for a moment as we crossed toward it.
"I think," she said, "that I shall remain young and beautiful forever."
We reached the Common and Pearl was now in low tension, leaning against the leash, her nose apparently pressed against the grass, sniffing.
"Well," I said, "you've got a hell of a start on it."
"Actually," she said, "I don't suppose either of us will retire. I'll practice therapy, and teach, and write some. You'll chase around rescuing maidens and slaying dragons, annoying all the right people.
"Someday I may not be the toughest kid on the block," I said.
She shook her head. "Someday you may not be the strongest," she said. "I suspect you'll always be the toughest."
"Good point," I said.
"Maybe," he said, "we were out in Lenox asking the wrong questions of the wrong people."
I was doing concentration curls, with relatively light weight, and many reps. Paul had been slowly weaning me from the heavy weights. It's the amount of work, not the amount of weight.
"Almost by definition," I said, trying to sound easy as I curled the dumbbells. "Since what we did produced nothing."
"Well, I mean I know I'm a dancer and you're a detective, but…"
"Go ahead," I said. "If you've got a good idea, my ego can stand it-unless it's brilliant."
"It's not brilliant," Paul said. He curled down and up and down again, and began curling up on an angle to involve the lateral obliques. "But if I had more than a million dollars in cash, and I were running away from the kind of people you've described, maybe I wouldn't stay in a hotel."
I finished the thirtieth curl and began to do hammer curls.
"Because you wouldn't be making a temporary departure," I said.
"That's right," Paul said. "You'd know you could never come back."
"So maybe you'd buy a place, or rent a place."
"Yes. I don't know what property costs, but if I had a million dollars.. ."
"More than a million," I said. "Yeah. You'd stay in a hotel if you were on your way somewhere. But if you were going to make it a permanent hideout, you'd want something more."
"Could you buy a place without proving your identity?" Paul said.
I put down the barbells. They were bright chrome. Everything was upscale at the Harbor Health Club except Henry Cimoli, who owned it. Henry hadn't changed much since he'd fought Willie.Pep, except that the scar tissue had, with time, thickened around his eyes, so that now he always looked as if he were squinting into the sun.
"You'd have to give a name, but if you were paying cash, I don't think you'd have to prove it."
"So maybe we should go out there and talk to real estate people," Paul said. "Yes," I said. "We should."
I finished my set of thirty hammers and went back to straight curls, concentrating on keeping my elbow still, using only the bicep.
"It's an excellent idea," I said.
Paul had gone into a hamstring stretch where he sat on the floor with his legs out straight and pressed his forehead against his kneecap.
"You'd have thought of it anyway," he said.
"Of course," I said. "Because I'm a professional detective, and you're just a performer."
"Certainly," Paul said.
We finished our workout, stretched, took some steam, showered, picked up
Pearl from the club office where she had been keeping company with Henry, and strolled out into the fresh-washed fall morning feeling loose and strong with all our pores breathing.
In the car I said, "Is there a picture of your mother?"
"Should be, at the house."
"Okay, let's go out there and break in again and get it."
"No need to break and enter," Paul said. "While we were there last time I got a key. She always was losing hers, so she kept a spare one under the porch overhang. I took it when we left."
We went out Storrow Drive toward Route 2. A little past Mass General
Hospital I spotted the tail. It was a maroon Chevy, and it was a very amateurish tail job. He kept fighting to stay right behind me, making himself noticeable as he cut in and cut off drivers to stay near my rear bumper. There was even horn blowing.
I said to Paul, "We are being followed by one of the worst followers in
Boston."
Paul turned and looked out the back window.
"Maroon Chevy," I said.
"Right behind us?"
"Yeah. Probably someone from Gerry," I said. "Joe would have someone better. If Vinnie Morris did it you wouldn't notice."
"Would you?"
"Yeah."
"What are we going to do?"
"We'll lose them," I said.
We continued out Storrow and onto Soldiers Field Road, past Harvard Stadium and across the Eliot Bridge by Mt. Auburn Hospital. In the athletic field near the stadium a number of Harvard women were playing field hockey. Their bare legs flashed under the short plaid skirts and their ankles were bulky with thick socks. The river as we crossed it was the color of strong tea, and a little choppy. A loon with his neck arched floated near the boat club. Behind us the maroon Chevy stayed close to our exhaust pipe. I could see two people in it. The guy driving was wearing sunglasses. Near the
Cambridge-Belmont line, where Fresh Pond Parkway meets Alewife Brook
Parkway there is a traffic circle. I went slowly around it with the Chevy behind me.
"Where we going?" Paul said.
"Ever see a dog circle a raccoon or some other animal it's got out in the open?"
"No."
I went all the way around the circle and started around again.
"They keep circling faster and faster until they get behind it," I said.
I held the car in a tight turn and put more pressure on the accelerator.
The Chevy tried to stay tight, but he didn't know what was going on and I did. Also I cornered better than he did. He lost some ground. I pushed the car harder, it bucked a little against the sharpness of the turn but I held it in.
"I get it," Paul said.
"Quicker than the guy in the Chevy," I said. He was still chasing us around the circle. On the third loop I was behind him and as he started around again, I peeled off right and floored it out the Alewife Brook Parkway, past the shopping center, ran the light at Rindge Avenue by passing three cars on the inside, and headed up Rindge back into Cambridge. By the time
I got to Mass Avenue he had lost us. I turned left and headed out toward
Lexington through Arlington.
"Wily," Paul said.
"Float like a butterfly," I said. "Sting like a bee."
"Pearl's looking a little queasy," Paul said.
"Being a canine crime stopper," I said, "is not always pretty."