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Robert B. Parker's Wonderland
  • Текст добавлен: 10 октября 2016, 03:36

Текст книги "Robert B. Parker's Wonderland"


Автор книги: Ace Atkins



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43

BRIGHT AND EARLY the next morning, Vinnie Morris walked into my office and took a seat in my client chair. Z was on the couch, with Pearl’s head resting in his lap. We were drinking coffee and discussing the night’s events. Although Vinnie had not called, the visit was not unexpected.

“Nice to see you,” I said.

“Congrats. You’re number one on Gino’s shit list.”

“With or without a bullet?”

“That’s up to you,” Vinnie said. “Reason I’m here.”

Vinnie was dressed, as was most often the case, like Ralph Lauren’s oft-neglected Italian cousin. He wore a trim-fitting blue blazer over a crisp yellow dress shirt and pink tie, with lightweight charcoal pants and buffed wingtips. His hair had been recently barbered and swept back with a light sheen. His nails were manicured. The pink tie was knotted with a single Windsor at his throat.

“I’m sorry about Gino’s nephew.”

“We’ll get to that in a second,” Vinnie said. “How the fuck did you get involved in this casino crap?”

“Would you believe sheer luck?”

Vinnie rubbed an invisible dirt spot off his wingtips. Z and I both wore sweaty workout clothes. I hadn’t been able to sleep, and I had run steps at Harvard Stadium while Z had walked the track. My thighs felt like Jell-O, but my breathing was calm. Relaxed. I folded my arms across my chest and leaned back in my chair. “Some sluggers were trying to push Henry Cimoli around.”

“That didn’t have shit to do with Gino.”

“Says who?”

“Says me,” Vinnie said.

I looked over Vinnie’s shoulder. Z lay back relaxed on the couch. He took a sip of coffee, listening but silent. Sunlight slanted across my wooden floor and over half of Vinnie’s face.

“Jimmy and Tommy were just trying to scare the broad,” Vinnie said. “Not kill her.”

“Attempted kidnapping.”

Vinnie shrugged.

“Why?” I said.

Vinnie kind of laughed, mainly just blew some air out of his nose. He sat erect in my client chair and leaned back to stare at the ceiling. I again glanced over at Z. Z patted Pearl’s head with one hand; the other hand put down the coffee and disappeared at his side. Z did not know Vinnie Morris.

“Gino wanted me to tell you to back off,” Vinnie said. “I told him that was a waste of breath. But he wanted to say it anyway. So there you go. I fucking said it.”

“What’s Gino say about Rick Weinberg being smoked?”

“The headless horseman?”

I nodded.

“Not our business,” Vinnie said. “Gino said you’d ask. And I said I’d tell you we were not involved.”

“You saying that or Gino?”

“Me.”

Vinnie widened his eyes. He shuffled in my client chair. He scratched his cheek.

“I’m sort of working for Rick Weinberg’s widow,” I said.

“What the fuck does ‘sort of’ mean?”

“I was asked to help, but now she’s being evasive.”

“Lot of that going around,” Vinnie said. “Big money makes people cautious.”

“Where has Gino put his money?”

Vinnie shrugged and yanked his head back. “That the big fucking Indian I keep hearing about?”

I nodded.

“A real-life fucking Indian,” Vinnie said.

“Say hello, Z.”

Z said: “How.”

“Fucking funny,” Vinnie said. “Is being a smartass part of the training?”

“Just a fortunate side effect,” I said.

“Are we clear now?”

“What about Gino’s nephew?” I said.

Vinnie stood and straightened the sleeves on his blazer. He found a bit of fuzz on his lapel and flicked it away with his finger. “He’s not taking this thing personally,” he said. “Between us, he never liked the numbnuts anyway. But on the business end, he says it was an unfortunate misunderstanding.”

“Why did Gino want Jemma Fraser?”

Vinnie shrugged. “Who shot first?” he said. “Just curious.”

“Not my gun,” I said.

Vinnie nodded.

“You know I won’t back off.”

“No fucking kidding,” Vinnie said.

“I need to see Gino.”

“Like I said, he doesn’t blame you for what happened, but he doesn’t want to talk to you, either. How the fuck would that look?”

“I am interested in why someone wanted to clip me.”

“He didn’t know you were involved.”

“Now he does,” I said. “Police think he may have aced Weinberg as a message.”

“You really think that’s his style?”

“To be honest, I’ve never really thought Gino had much of a style.”

Vinnie walked to the door and set his hand on the knob. “I told Gino if something goes down between you and him, it’s between you and him. I’m on the fucking sidelines.”

“I appreciate that, Vinnie.”

“But I’d consider it a personal favor not to put me in a bind and to back the fuck off,” Vinnie said. “You got to realize this is about shit tons of money. Lots of big-time players want a piece.”

“You ever meet Rick Weinberg?” I said.

“See you around, Spenser.”

“Or Harvey Rose?”

“Nice name.”

He opened the door halfway. He looked down at the place where the sunlight spilled across the office floor. “No matter what you do, things will shake out the same,” Vinnie said. “That’s what I came here to tell you.”

“And that if I stop poking around, Gino won’t turn me into a hunk of Swiss cheese for shooting his beloved nephew.”

Vinnie looked over to Z and grinned. “Stick close to this one. He’s quick.”

He closed the door with a light click. I propped my running shoes on the edge of the desk and leaned back in thought. Z’s hand came back out from under a pillow. He set a .44 by his leg and nodded. “You better watch your back with that guy.”

“Wait till you meet my enemies.”








44

JEMMA HAD TRIPLE-LOCKED the door and it took a moment of assurance before she let me into my apartment. Pearl trotted in first. I followed triumphantly with breakfast. I had stopped off at the Flour on Washington and bought some cinnamon-cream brioche and lemon-ginger scones. I filled a bowl of water for Pearl and set about making coffee.

“Do you feel better?” she said.

“Nothing like running steps to sweat off guilt.”

“He pulled the gun on us.”

I nodded.

“I borrowed one of your T-shirts,” she said. “I hope that’s okay.”

“Just don’t take the one from Karl’s Sausage Kitchen.”

Pearl lapped up all of her water. I again refilled the bowl. I waited for the water to boil and measured out eight heaping spoonfuls of coffee into the press. When the water started to bubble, I poured it over the grounds. While it steeped, I squeezed some oranges and set the juice on the kitchen counter.

“First-rate,” she said.

“How’s your head?”

“Horrific.”

I went to the bathroom and returned with two aspirin. I mashed the plunger on the press and poured us both some coffee. Brioche and scones were set in the toaster oven on low while I stirred just a little cream and sugar into my mug.

“I apologize for last night,” she said. “Quite embarrassing.”

“Don’t apologize,” I said. “Blame Kentucky’s finest.”

“I’m sure you saw more than you were bargaining for.”

“I averted my eyes.”

Jemma smiled and took a sip of her coffee. “Quite embarrassing.”

“You had a lot to drink,” I said. “Attempted kidnapping often leads to anxiety.”

She smiled. I drank some orange juice and took the scones and brioche from the toaster. I set them into a gingham cloth napkin and then into a basket.

“Truly first-rate,” she said.

“But there is a price to be paid,” I said.

She put down her coffee and set her elbow on the edge of my kitchen counter. Pearl sat at my feet and stared up at me, waiting for a sampling of goodies from Flour.

“I need you to explain in as much detail as possible exactly what the hell is going on,” I said. “I feel as if I’m in a maze.”

She nodded. She let out a long breath, looking as elegant as possible in a BU T-shirt and cut-off sweatpants. “You more than deserve it,” she said. Her face flushed. “More now, knowing that you weren’t willing to take any of the other spoils.”

“I barely remember,” I said.

“Liar.”

“I may recall a birthmark in the shape of Winston Churchill.”

“Most men would have made the most of the situation.”

“Most men don’t have what I have.”

“The woman in all of your pictures?”

“Yep.”

“She is quite beautiful,” she said.

I nodded.

Jemma smiled slightly as she shook her head and reached for a brioche. She took a healthy bite and washed it down with some coffee. I ate a scone and drank some coffee while standing at the counter.

“What do you think is happening?” she said.

“I think a lot of very powerful people are battling it out for a license to print money.”

“That’s most of it.”

“What I don’t understand is why they would come for you,” I said. “You don’t work for Rick Weinberg anymore.”

She nodded. “That’s partially true.”

“And the other part?”

Her eyes roamed over my face. A light breeze washed in from the window over my sink. I waited. “I did not tell you the other reason Rick came to see me,” she said.

“Okay.”

“He wanted to figure out the company’s next move,” she said. “I had not been fired. We only said that so the people in Revere would sign the agreement.”

“Makes sense.”

“You don’t believe me.”

“No,” I said. “I believe you very much.”

“Rick was in a very good mood. He knew we had made the deal and that Wonderland would be a reality.”

“So you are now in charge of the project in Revere?” I said.

“And Las Vegas, and Biloxi, and now Macao,” she said. “I now run the whole company.”

“Envolve?”

“Weinberg Entertainment,” she said. “In the event of Rick’s death, I take over as CEO. The board insisted on a clear line of succession.”

“What will Rachel Weinberg say?”

“Nothing.” She squinted her eyes in surprise. “She voted on the promotion like everyone else on the board.”

“I guess she forgot to tell me you were taking over.”

“I imagine she had other things to worry about.”

“She was more concerned about you and Rick having an affair.”

“She knew I was shagging her husband.”

“Yikes.”

“Well,” Jemma said. “We’re both adults.”

“Somewhat.”

“Well, that’s what adults do.”

“Shag each other?”

“Understand the difference between love and sex,” she said. “Rick and I had been intimate for some time. I’m surprised she didn’t tell you. She was completely complicit with the arrangement.”

“She did,” I said. “So now what’s Rachel’s role with the company?”

“She remains on the board,” she said. “But I am the CEO.”

“And the list grows.” I nodded and took a breath.

“What list?”

“People who would want you dead.”

“Aren’t you skipping the most obvious?” she said. Her legs looked tan and muscular in my cut-off sweatpants. Certain details were crucial to my profession.

“Let me go back to my notes,” I said. “I’m starting a flow chart.”

“Harvey Rose is one of the most ruthless, calculating bastards I have ever known,” she said. “With Rick dead, I am the only one left between him and getting the license for East Boston.”

I nodded.

“Have you checked in with your friend at the condos lately? I would expect an offer, if only to block the sale.”

“Do you think Harvey had Rick killed?”

“Perhaps,” she said.

“And tried to have you killed?”

“Perhaps,” she said. “I can make arrangements for my own protection. I can’t impose on you further.”

“I’ve spoken to my associate,” I said. “He can guard while I make inquiries.”

“Is he as good as you?” she said.

“I think one day he’ll be even better,” I said.

“With less ideals.”

“We share the same ideals,” I said. “Z just hasn’t found the right woman yet.”

“A stalwart lover,” she said. “I hope your girlfriend knows this.”

“I think she suspects it.”








45

“YOU WOULD LIKE the food down here,” Susan said. “They serve a lot of cornbread and have swell biscuits.”

I could hear restaurant sounds around her. She had stepped away from a table and the sounds became more slight.

“I took a drunk woman home last night,” I said. I leaned back in my office chair and crossed one jogging shoe over the other. “She got naked as a jaybird.”

“Good for you,” Susan said.

“And this morning, I brought her breakfast.”

“Even better,” she said. “If you had made her breakfast, I might become resentful.”

“She had great legs. Very tan and muscular.”

“Why else would you take her home?” Susan said.

“That and two men tried to kidnap her at gunpoint,” I said. “I had to intervene.”

“Are they dead?”

“One.”

“She must have been frightened to death. Or is she used to this kind of life?”

“Can’t say,” I said. “She’s from Vegas.”

“Ah,” Susan said. “The Brit who used to work for Rick Weinberg.”

“She says she’s now the CEO of his company.”

“And what does Rachel Weinberg say about that?”

“I don’t think she knows,” I said. “I’ve tried to reach her, without success.”

“Does your Brit admit to the affair?”

“She said Rachel and Rick had an open marriage.”

“Professionally, I do not condone or refute an open marriage,” she said. “I have patients who find it not only freeing but sexually stimulating.”

“Ick.”

“You would not find it sexually stimulating to think of me with another man.”

“Did you miss the part where I just killed someone?”

There was a long pause on the other end of the phone. My chest swelled with the sound of her breathing. “Have you spoken to Hawk?”

“I’m starting to develop a complex,” I said. “Every time something dangerous happens, you want me to call Hawk.”

“Just looking out for you.”

“I call Hawk only in case of emergency,” I said. “I break that glass sparingly.”

“Where is Z?”

“Close.”

“He is not Hawk,” she said.

“Hawk would argue that nobody is.”

“He may be right.”

“Z stumbled a bit after the beating,” I said. “Physically and mentally, but he’s making a comeback.”

“Is he drinking?”

“Not to excess.”

“As much as he tries to emulate you, you can’t change ingrained behavior overnight. It takes time. And often, therapy.”

“He works hard on his own,” I said. “I hope he’ll come back even better.”

“Has he wavered on wanting to be like you and Hawk?”

“Nope.”

“Could I interest him in a solid career as a social worker or a stable office job?”

“I don’t believe so.”

“And if he’s going to do this, we both have to watch him stumble and fail.”

“It’s never pretty,” I said.

“Before I met you, did you often fail?”

“Meaning did I often have the crap kicked out of me?”

“Yes.”

“But I never liked it much.”

“Perhaps until Z is one hundred percent, you find better help.”

“Few options,” I said.

“Vinnie?”

“I will explain later.”

“And dare I ask about the naked woman?”

“I plan to drop her at the Boston Harbor Hotel,” I said. “Z will watch her. But first I’ll make sure she puts on some clothes.”

“Did she really look that good naked?”

“I’m not sure,” I said. “I had my hands over my eyes.”

“Hmm.”

“But she is no lithe, flexible Jewess.”

“No shit,” Susan said.

“Z seems very excited about his new gig,” I said. “I think he put on some cologne.”

“Be careful,” she said. “After what he’s been through, he may be very susceptible to her advances.”

“And that would be bad?”

“You yourself seem not to trust the woman.”

“I don’t one bit.”

“And may I remind you, Z can be quite impressionable.”

“True.”

There was another long pause. Susan sounded lovely breathing way down south. “Not long,” she said.

“Every minute,” I said.

“Safe,” she said. “Please be safe.”








46

MANY BOATS FILLED the Boston Harbor that afternoon. Sailboats, speedboats, and water shuttles cut across the choppy, dark water. The day was bright, beautiful, and cloudless. There was a heavy wind as Henry and I stood outside the health club for a chat. The wind ruffled his white hair as he stood rock-solid in satin running pants and a tight-fitting white T-shirt. The shirt had the logo for Harbor Health Club on the pocket.

“Put me on the shirts,” I said, “and you’d sell more memberships.”

“You need to work your legs more,” Henry said. “Do more squats.”

“I had a tip that there may have been another offer on the Ocean View.”

Henry leaned against a piling. The air smelled heavily of salt and dead fish. No amount of posh condos and restaurants could eradicate the smell. But the wind was strong and cool, and felt good against my face.

“Yep,” he said. “Just heard myself. Five hundred grand more than the original.”

“They had a deal.”

“Tell that to Lou Coffone,” Henry said. “He’d screw a dog for a nickel.”

“Hard times.”

“They want to hire another lawyer to deep-six what we signed.”

“Will they?” I said.

“What do you think?”

I leaned against a separate piling, my back to the harbor and the wind. The day was warm enough to leave my jacket in the car. I wore a navy T-shirt with Levi’s and my dress running shoes. I held the edge of my T-shirt down with my right hand so as not to let the wind expose my .38.

“I need to tell Rachel Weinberg what’s going on.”

“I think her husband was stand-up,” Henry said. He chewed on his cheek and nodded. “Do it.”

I nodded.

“Z told me about what happened,” he said. “Fucking Gino Fish’s nephew?”

“I have it on good authority Gino wasn’t overly fond of him.”

“Does that matter?” Henry said. “Jesus, I’m sorry I pulled you into this crazy fucking mess. I just wanted to keep my place. I like it out in Revere.”

“Z seems to like it here.”

“And I want the kid to stay,” Henry said. “Part of his training is being able to live where he works out. We still got some work to do.”

I nodded. A bright, warm wind kicked off the harbor. We watched the Logan shuttle dock at the wharf and the bright-eyed tourists setting foot on land. A man dressed as Ben Franklin met them, ringing a handbell. Henry pushed off the piling as if doing a one-handed push-up.

Ben Franklin kept ringing the bell. “Didn’t you used to go to school with him?” I said.

“He was in the grade up,” Henry said. “We thought he was a pussy ’cause he wore them socks.”

“I’ll explain to Rachel what’s going on,” I said. “Try and set something up with the board.”

“Tell her something for me,” Henry said. “Okay? Tell her that I ain’t a part of this. I shook hands with her husband. It was a done deal. I don’t even know who the hell these people are who want to buy it now.”

“Guy named Harvey Rose.”

“Harvey who?”

“Rose.”

“How did you find that out?”

“Sometimes a raven is just like a writing desk.”

“You need to get some fucking sleep, Spenser,” Henry said. “Before you go nuts.”

“Too late,” I said.








47

IN THE SPIRIT OF true cooperation, I called Wayne Cosgrove as I drove back to my office. “How can we connect Rick Weinberg with any officials of our great Commonwealth?” I said.

“Now we’re a ‘we’?”

“Did I not share whiskey with you?”

“I had to stake out your place.”

“Can I help if I’m popular?”

Trees had started to leaf in the Common; red and yellow tulips waved in the light spring wind. My windows were down. I played some Gerry Mulligan. If there hadn’t been so much ugliness and Susan Silverman had been by my side, all would be right with the world.

“I read the report on the shooting,” Wayne said. “Jemma Fraser, formerly one of Weinberg’s inner circle, was with you.”

“Maybe not former.”

“What do you know?”

“Can you try and track down something on Weinberg and his philanthropic touch with local politicians?”

“I live to serve.”

“Ms. Fraser is now CEO of Weinberg’s company,” I said.

“How do you know?”

“Advanced investigation techniques,” I said.

“She told you.”

“Yep.”

“And Mrs. Weinberg?”

“She may not like it,” I said. “But she voted on it. She’s stuck with Jemma.”

I passed the Angel of the Waters statue at the edge of the Public Garden. Traffic slowed at the light and I continued on west toward Clarendon. “You could search out some of Bill Brett’s party photos?” I said.

“Or I could look through donation records of some politicians I might suspect of shady dealings.”

“The reason I love you, Wayne.”

“How about a quote on the shooting last night?”

“Pow,” I said. And I hung up.

I parked in front of a Marshalls discount store and walked the rest of the way down Boylston. I was halfway down my hall when I spotted something not quite right. My door was wide open. Perhaps it was Z. Perhaps Hawk had come back early. Maybe it was Angelina Jolie, waiting to give me an early birthday surprise. Always the cynic, I pulled the .38 from my hip and kept it down by my right thigh.

I crept close to the door. I waited. I listened for the sound of paneled floors creaking, or the smell of smoke. After a couple minutes of feeling silly, I gave up and walked inside.

It was empty. But not as I’d left it.

My file cabinets hung wide open. Desk drawers had been removed, shaken of their contents, and dumped on the floor. Sofa cushions had been ripped open and thrown on the floor. Even my Vermeer prints had been pulled from their frames and carelessly flung about. At least I knew we were not dealing with a lover of the Low Country masters.

I checked my overturned right-hand drawer. I found my .357. I checked my top filing cabinet. I found my Bushmills. I sighed with relief.

I could call Frank Belson or Healy. They would both tell me to go cry in my soup. If someone was ratting around my office, they would have worn gloves. I knocked on the door to the design showroom across the hall. I asked two very tall, very attractive women if they had seen anything unusual.

They said no.

I asked if they knew what evil lurks in the hearts of men.

They stared blankly at each other.

I knocked on the door to a commercial real-estate firm and on the door of a two-person marketing team. Same answer without the second question.

I went back to my disheveled office. I picked up my Vermeer prints, set them back inside the frames, and hung them on the proper nails. I stood back in a pile of loose letters and files and noted the print on the left was crooked.

I closed the door behind me, opened a window, and poured some Black Bush into a coffee mug. The wind off Berkeley kicked up and stirred some papers and files. I set the phone back on the cradle. Stuffing exploded from the rips in the sofa. My printer lay cracked and useless in the corner. I lowered the blinds. I drank some more Bushmills while I studied Vermeer. A young woman caught while taking a music lesson. Holding sheet music, she seemed shocked by the interruption of the artist. Her tutor unaware.

I threw back the whiskey, left the papers where they lay, and locked the door behind me.


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