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Authors: Donald Westlake

The Hot Rock (19 page)

BOOK: The Hot Rock
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Chapter 2
The emerald lay in the middle of the scarred wooden table, looking like a beautiful egg laid by the green–metal–shaded hanging light directly overhead. That light was reflected and refracted a thousand times in the prisms of the stone, so that the emerald looked as though it were silently laughing and chuckling and giggling in the middle of the table there. Happy to be the center of attention. Happy to be so much admired.

The five men sitting around the table stared at the emerald for some time, as though expecting pictures of their future to form in its facets. The outside world was far away, faint dim traffic sounds from another planet. The silence in the back room at the O.J. Bar and Grill was both reverential and ecstatic. The five men had an air of awed solemnity about them, and yet they were all smiling. From ear to ear. Gazing at the winking, laughing stone and smiling back at it.

Kelp sighed. He said, “There it is.”

The others shifted position, as though waking from a trance. Murch said, “I never thought it would happen.”

“But there she is,” Greenwood said. “And isn’t she a beauty.”

“I wish Maude could see that,” Chefwick said. “I should have brought my Polaroid to take a picture of it.”

“I almost hate to get rid of it,” Kelp said.

Dortmunder nodded and said, “I know what you mean. We went through so much for that rock. But we got to get rid of it, and right away. That stone’s made me too jumpy. I keep thinking any second that door over there is going to open and a million cops run in.”

“They’re all downtown beating up children,” Greenwood said.

“Nevertheless,” Dortmunder said, “the time has come to turn that rock over to Major Iko and collect our money.”

Murch said, “You want us all to go? I got my car.”

“No,” Dortmunder said. “The five of us together might attract attention. Besides, if something goes wrong there should at least be some of us still on the loose and ready to help. Kelp, this was your job first, you brought the rest of us into it, you were the first one the Major contacted. And you’re the one that’s been bringing him the lists and things all along. You want to bring him the stone?”

“Sure,” Kelp said. He was pleased. “If you guys all think I can make it across town.”

“Murch can drive you,” Dortmunder said, “and we three’ll stay here. And if the jinx hits again, it would have hit no matter who was carrying the stone. If it gets you, we’ll understand.”

Kelp wasn’t sure if that was reassuring or not, and while he sat there frowning about it, Dortmunder picked up the emerald and put it back into its little black plush box. He handed it to Kelp, who took it and said, “If we’re not back in an hour, God knows where we are.”

“We’ll wait till we hear from you,” Dortmunder said. “After you go, I’ll call the Major and tell him to open his safe.”

“Good.” Kelp put the little box away in his pocket, finished his bourbon, and got to his feet. “Come on, Murch.”

“Wait’ll I finish my beer,” Murch said. He was having trouble taking big swallows. Finally he emptied the glass and got to his feet. “Ready,” he said.

“See you later,” Kelp said to the others and went out.

Murch followed him, and the others heard him saying, “The question is, do we go through the park at Sixty–Fifth Street, or —” And the door closed.

Dortmunder had to borrow a dime. Chefwick gave him one, and he went out front to the phone booth and called the embassy. He had to talk to two other people before Iko at last got on the phone, and then he said, “We’re making delivery this afternoon.”

“Are you really?” The Major was obviously delighted. “That is good news. I’d about given up hope.”

“So had we all, Major. You understand it’s COD.”

“Naturally. I have the money waiting in the safe.”

“The usual guy is bringing it.”

“Not all of you?” The Major sounded disappointed.

“I didn’t like the idea of traveling in a bunch. It could get us the wrong kind of attention.”

“I suppose so,” the Major said dubiously. “Well, it will all work out, I’m sure. Thank you for calling. I’ll be expecting our friend.”

“Good,” Dortmunder said. He hung up and left the booth.

Rollo looked over at him as he started for the back room again and said, “You’re lookin’ cheerful today.”

“It’s a cheerful day,” Dortmunder said. “Looks like we won’t be using your back room any more for a while.”

“Mazeltov,” Rollo said.

“Yeah,” Dortmunder said, and went into the back room to wait.

Chapter 3
The usual ebony man with the light–reflecting glasses let Kelp in, but he did not lead him toward the usual room.

“Hey,” Kelp said when they made the wrong turning. “Pool table, remember?” He made motions of waggling a cue.

“Office today,” the ebony man said.

“Oh? Yeah, I guess today is special. Okay, lead on.” Besides, Kelp was just as relieved that the Major wouldn’t have the chance to show him any more tricks he’d learned.

Or would he? The ebony man opened the office door and Kelp went inside and the Major wasn’t sitting behind the desk at all. Prosker was, sitting there as though he owned the joint, smiling amiably at Kelp like a spider smiling at a fly.

Kelp stopped just past the door, but a hand in the middle of his back pushed him on. “Hey!” he said and turned around, and the ebony man had come in after him, had shut the door, had drawn an automatic from his pocket, and was pointing it at Kelp’s nose.

Kelp stepped backward farther into the room, putting more air between himself and the nozzle of that automatic. “What’s going on here?” he said, and now he saw two more black men with guns in their hands, standing against the back wall.

Prosker chuckled.

Kelp whirled and glared at him. “What’d you do with the Major?”

Prosker broke up entirely. “With the Major! Oh, my God! You people are babes in the woods, babes in the woods! What did I do with the Major!”

Kelp took a threatening step forward. “Yeah, what did you do with the Major. What are you up to?”

“I am speaking for the Major,” Prosker said, sobering. He rested his hands easily on the desktop. “I am working for the Major now,” he said, “and the Major thought it would be better if I took over the task of explaining the facts of life to you. He thought the legal mind would better be able to sum the whole matter up in a few sentences that you could then take back with you to your friends. Besides, I made up a good deal of the plot myself.”

“Plot?” Kelp could feel those three guns burning little holes in the back of his neck, but he was damned if he’d show anything but self–confidence and anger. “What plot?” he demanded.

“Sit down, Kelp,” Prosker offered. “We’ll talk.”

“We won’t talk,” Kelp said. “I’ll talk to the Major.”

Prosker’s smile turned, became saddened. “Do I have to ask the people behind you to force you to sit down? Wouldn’t you rather we handled all this without violence?”

Kelp thought it over, then said, “All right, I’ll listen. All it is is words so far.” He sat down.

“Words is all you’re going to get, I’m afraid,” said Prosker, “so listen to them carefully. In the first place, you are going to turn the Balabomo Emerald over to me, and you are not going to get any more money for it. The Major has paid you all a total of fourteen thousand three hundred dollars, plus five thousand for that hypnotist, plus nearly five thousand in other expenses, making over twenty–four thousand dollars he has paid out, which he considers quite enough.”

“For a half–million–dollar stone,” Kelp said bitterly.

“Which really belongs to the Major’s nation anyway,” Prosker pointed out. “Twenty–four thousand dollars is a lot of money for a small emerging nation like Talabwo, particularly when it’s paid out for the return of their own property.”

“Am I supposed to be feeling sorry for Talabwo?” Kelp asked. “I’m being hijacked, my partners and me are getting cheated out of two hundred thousand bucks, and you want me to feel sorry for some country in Africa?”

“I simply want you to understand the situation,” Prosker said. “First, I want you to understand why the Major feels justified in making no more payments for the return of his nation’s property. I believe I have covered that point now, and will go on to the second. Which is, the Major would prefer it if you and the others did not cause any trouble about this.”

“Oh, would he?” Kelp smiled with half his mouth. “That’s gonna be tough on the Major,” he said.

“Not necessarily,” said Prosker. “You recall the Major’s passion for dossiers.”

Kelp frowned. “Papers in folders,” he said. “So what?”

“A lot depends,” Prosker said, “on who opens those folders and reads those papers. The Manhattan DA, for instance, would find the dossiers on you five fascinating reading. It would solve five rather spectacular crimes of recent vintage, for one thing, as well as giving him some broad hints about other unsolved crimes in the past.”

Kelp squinted at Prosker. “The Major’s going to fink on us?”

“Only if you cause trouble,” Prosker said. He sat back and spread his hands. “After all,” he said, “you all made out rather well, considering how ineptly you handled the assignment.”


Ineptly!

“It took you five tries to do the job right,” Prosker reminded him. He held up a hand to forestall Kelp’s sputtering objections, saying, “No one’s criticizing. ‘All’s well that ends well,’ as the Bard once put it, and you and your friends did finally deliver. But you certainly weren’t the models of efficiency and professionalism the Major thought he was hiring.”

“He intended this double cross from the beginning,” Kelp said angrily.

“I have no opinion on that,” Prosker said. “Please put the emerald on this desk now.”

“You don’t think I was crazy enough to bring it with me, do you?”

“Yes, I do,” Prosker said, unruffled. “The question is, are you crazy enough to force those gentlemen behind you to force you to give it up. Are you?”

Kelp thought it over, angrily and bitterly, and decided he wasn’t. There was no point bringing unnecessary lumps on oneself. One merely conceded the round, consoling oneself with the thought that the fight wasn’t over. Kelp reached into his pocket, took out the black plush box, and put it on the desk.

“Very good,” Prosker said, smiling at the box. He reached out both hands, opened the box, smiled at its contents. He shut the box and looked past Kelp at the three silent enforcers. “One of you should take this to the Major,” he said.

The ebony man came forward, the light reflecting from his glasses, and took the box. Kelp watched him walk out of the room.

Prosker said, “Now,” and Kelp turned his head to look at him again. “Now,” Prosker repeated, “here is what is going to happen. Shortly, I am going to leave here and turn myself over to the police. I have a cock–and–bull story worked out about how I was kidnaped by a group that had the mistaken impression I knew where a former client’s booty was hidden. It took them several days to accept their mistake, and then they let me go. I didn’t recognize any of them, and I don’t expect to see any of their pictures in the rogues’ gallery. Neither the Major nor I, you see, are interested in causing you people any unnecessary difficulty. We hope you’ll bear that in mind and not force us to harsher steps.”

“Get on with it,” Kelp said. “What else?”

“Nothing else,” Prosker said. “You have been paid all you will be paid. The Major and I have taken it upon ourselves to cover you for your crimes in regard to the emerald. If you now go on about your own business, all five of you, that can be the end of it, but if any of you cause any trouble for either the Major or myself we are in a position to make life very, very difficult for all of you.”

“The Major can go back to Talabwo,” Kelp pointed out. “But you’ll still be around here.”

“As a matter of fact, I won’t,” Prosker said, smiling amiably. “Talabwo has an opening for a legal adviser in reference to their new constitution. A well–paying job, actually, with a subsidy from the United States Government. It should take about five years to get the new constitution ready for ratification. I’m looking forward to the change of scenery.”

“I’d like to suggest a change of scenery for you,” Kelp said.

“Undoubtedly,” agreed Prosker. He glanced at his watch. “I hate to rush you,” he said, “but I am a bit pressed for time. Do you have any questions?”

“None you’d like to answer,” Kelp said. He got to his feet. “See you around, Prosker,” he said.

“I doubt it,” Prosker said. “Those two gentlemen will see you to the door.”

They did, keeping Kelp in the middle, and closed the door firmly behind him once he was outside.

Murch’s car was just around the corner. Kelp ran around and slid into the front seat. Murch said, “Everything okay?”

“Everything stinks,” Kelp said quickly. “Pull up to where you can see around the corner.”

Murch acted at once, starting the engine and pulling the car forward as he said, “What’s the problem?”

“Double cross. I have to make a phone call. If anybody comes out of that embassy before I get back, run him down.”

“Right,” said Murch, and Kelp jumped out of the car again.

BOOK: The Hot Rock
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