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Widow’s Walk
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Текст книги "Widow’s Walk"


Автор книги: Robert B. Parker



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Текущая страница: 3 (всего у книги 13 страниц)

CHAPTER TEN

I was in my office tilted back in my chair with my feet up drinking a cup of coffee and eating my second corn muffin while I reread the list of Mary Smith’s closest friends. The sunlight sprawled its familiar light across my desk. Behind me I had the window open and the pleasant traffic sounds drifted up from the point where Berkeley Street intersects with Boylston. There was nothing new. Still no names with asterisks indicating a possible murderer. Just a bunch of mostly Anglo-Saxon names with mostly business addresses. One of the business addresses was Soldiers Field Development Ltd. Oh ho! I had taken to saying Oh ho! in moments like this ever since Susan had suggested that ah ha! was corny. The address was for someone named Felton Shawcross, who was listed as CEO. I took a bite of corn muffin. It’s hard to think when you’re hungry. It is also hard to think when you don’t have anything to think about. Something might develop out of the clue. But right now it was just a clue.

I finished my corn muffin, drank the last of my coffee, washed my hands and face, and headed off down Berkeley Street toward the South End. By the time I crossed Columbus Ave. I knew I was being followed again, on foot this time. A dark curly-haired guy with a big mustache had gotten out of a black Chrysler sedan as soon as I had come out of my building. The sedan had been double-parked in front of FAO Schwarz on the corner of Boylston and Berkeley, and pulled away down Boylston right after Curly got out. He was so conscientious in paying me no attention that I spotted him almost at once. Though in his defense, I suppose, I was looking for him. Berkeley Street was one way the other way, so I knew that if they were tailing me again, it would have to be on foot. Larson Graff’s place of business was a red brick row house on Appleton Street. The office was on the first floor. Graff lived above the store. Graff’s desk was in the bow window of a room that was probably once the dining room. It was a vast pale oak piece, with thickly turned legs. The window behind it was punctuated occasionally with panes of stained glass. Through it I could see Curly standing innocently across the street talking on his cell phone.

Graff was immaculate in a double-breasted blue blazer, a yellow silk tie, and a starched white broadcloth shirt. He stood to shake my hand.

“Mr. Spenser,” he said. “How nice to see you again.”

“Everybody says that.”

Graff smiled uncertainly. “Well,” he said. “I’m sure they mean it.”

He gestured me toward a client chair. I sat. Maybe it was better not to kid with Larson.

“I wanted to thank you for the list of names you sent over on behalf of Mary Smith,” I said.

“Oh, no problem. Just run it off on the computer, you know.”

“Yes. Do you know anybody that’s friendly with Mrs. Smith who is not on the list?”

Graff’s eyes widened.

“Not on the list?”

“Yeah. Maybe a pal from the old neighborhood? People she used to play miniature golf with?”

“Miniature golf?”

“Maybe an old boyfriend?”

“Perhaps you should ask Mrs. Smith.”

“Oh, I will,” I said. “This is just background. Make sure to touch all bases and all that.”

Graff nodded as if he weren’t so sure.

“You must know a name,” I said. “One name.”

It’s an old trick, ask for one name, implying that if you get it you’ll go away and leave them alone. Graff fell for it.

“Well, there’s Roy,” he said.

“And there’s Siegfried,” I said.

Graff looked as if he didn’t find me amusing. It was a look I’ve grown familiar with.

“Roy Levesque,” Graff said. “I believe she went to high school with him.”

“Do you have an address for Roy?” I said.

“I believe he lives in Franklin.”

Through the window I could see the Chrysler sedan cruise up and pause in front of where Curly was standing.

“Anybody else?” I said.

“You said one name.”

“I’m not very trustworthy,” I said. “You must know one more name.”

He didn’t bite the second time. Most of the time they don’t. But the effort was there.

“I’m dreadfully sorry, Mr. Spenser, I really don’t. I’m sure Mrs. Smith can help you.”

“I’m sure,” I said. “When you accompany her socially, are you paid for your time?”

Graff looked like he wanted to hang one on my kisser, though it seemed unlikely that he would.

“I am on retainer to Mrs. Smith,” Graff said.

“To do what?” I said.

“She has a very crowded and committed social calendar,” Graff said. “I help her organize it.”

Graff sounded as if he were not as pleased to see me as he had said he was when I came in.

“How about Mr. Smith?”

“He was not as socially oriented as Mrs. Smith.”

Outside the Chrysler moved away from Curly and cruised slowly down Appleton toward Berkeley. Curly remained, strolling up and down looking at roof lines, admiring the architecture.

“You and Mr. Smith friendly?” I said.

Graff looked offended. “Why do you ask?”

“I have no idea,” I said. “I’m just a gabby guy.”

“Oh, I’m sure,” Graff said.

“So were you friendly?”

“He was always a gentleman,” Graff said.

“But?”

“But nothing at all. I worked for Mrs. Smith. Mr. Smith was always pleasant. I don’t know him very well.”

“How about Marvin Conroy?”

“I’m sorry, I don’t know him.”

“Amy Peters?”

Graff shook his head. “I’m sorry, Mr. Spenser, but I really must cut this short. I have a client meeting that I’m already late for.”

“With whom?” I said.

“That is really none of your business, Mr. Spenser.”

I fought back the impulse to say, Well, I’m making it my business. Susan would be proud of me. I stood. We shook hands. And I went out to take Curly for a walk.

CHAPTER ELEVEN

Once you know you’re being tailed it is easy to spot it. Today we were cruising along Route 495. Me and my shadow. They were driving another black car, an Explorer. Everybody uses black cars for surveillance. Like somehow a black car wouldn’t be noticed. Maybe it’s the movies. At Route 140 we turned off toward Franklin. According to the phone book Roy Levesque still lived there.

The address was a green shingled ranch near the college. A narrow concrete walk led up to the house. The lawn was neat, and a big hydrangea with blue flowers bloomed beside the front door. I parked out front. The black Explorer drove on past, with Curly in the passenger seat, carefully looking the other way.

I went up the concrete walk and stood on the low concrete front step and rang the doorbell. A burly woman with gray hair opened the door. She was wearing a flowered dress that reached her ankles.

“Hi,” I said brightly, “I’m looking for Roy Levesque.”

She had a pale indoor face and thick black eyebrows that almost met over the bridge of her broad nose.

“Why?”

“I’d like to talk with him about Mary Toricelli.”

The woman looked like she had smelled a bad thing. Maybe it was Mary. Maybe she always looked that way.

“What about her?”

“Is Roy home?”

She thought about that for a moment.

“He’s eatin‘ his breakfast,” she said. “He works nights.”

“Maybe I could join him for coffee,” I said.

That seemed too hard a thing for her to think about. She tried for a while and gave up and yelled into the house. “Roy. Some guy here wants to see you.”

Roy appeared in an undershirt and baggy jeans with no belt. His long hair was clubbed back in a ponytail. He was barefoot and needed a shave. On his upper arm was a tattoo of a cowboy riding a bucking horse. The cowboy was holding the reins with one hand and waving his hat with the other. Below the horse, a banner read “Born to Raise Hell.”

“Whaddya need?” Roy said.

“I need to talk about Mary Toricelli.”

He looked at me for a moment without speaking. You could tell he thought he was scary. Then he spoke to the woman.

“Ma,” he said. “Whyn’t you go clean up the breakfast dishes.”

She shuffled off in her blue rubber flip-flops. Roy stepped out onto the front stoop and closed the door behind him.

“Go ahead,” Roy said. “Talk.”

“I understand you are a friend of Mary’s.”

“Who tole you that?”

“She did,” I lied.

“And who the fuck are you,” Roy said.

“My name is Spenser,” I said. “I’m trying to clear her of a murder charge.”

“Yeah, I heard about her husband. What are you coming to me for?”

“I understand you used to go out with her.”

“Yeah?”

“Are you still friends?”

“I seen her once, couple years ago, at a high school reunion,” Roy said.

He was dark-haired and taller than I was, with dark eyes that looked tired, and a little pouchy. I thought he looked like a boozer. Some women might think he looked soulful.

“Seen her since?” I said.

“None of your fucking business,” Roy said.

“Clever answer,” I said. “You go to high school together?”

“Yeah. Graduated Franklin High in ‘eighty-nine,” Levesque said. “You a fucking cop, man?”

“Private,” I said.

“Private? A fucking gumshoe? For crissake I’m trying to eat my breakfast.”

“The reunion the last time you saw her?”

“I don’t know. I seen her when I seen her.”

“You anything more than friends?”

“What’s that mean?”

“You intimate?”

“You mean did I fuck her?”

“Yes.”

“What if I did?”

“More power to you,” I said.

“I didn’t say I fucked her. I just said what if I did?”

“Sure,” I said.

“I don’t want to get mixed up in some freaking murder case, you know?”

“I know,” I said. “She date anyone else besides you?”

“No… I don’t know… I never said I dated her.”

“But you did.”

“I don’t have to talk with you, pal.”

“Of course you don’t,” I said. “You know anybody she might have been dating?”

“I got nothing else to say.”

“What a shame,” I said.

“So just shove fucking off, pal.”

“You bet,” I said. “How’d you feel about her marrying Nathan Smith?”

He tapped me on the chest with a long forefinger. “I told you once to take a walk. I’m not telling you again.”

“Actually you told me to ”shove fucking off.“ You didn’t say anything about taking a walk.”

Roy looked a little confused. But he was a tough guy, wasn’t he? He changed the jabbing finger into a flat hand on my chest and shoved. I didn’t move. There was no point to this. He wasn’t going to talk to me anymore. I was just being stubborn.

Roy said, “You don’t want to fuck with me, pal.”

“Why not?”

“Because you’re real close to a lot of trouble.”

“You?” I said.

“Yeah. Me.”

“Roy, you couldn’t cause me trouble if you had a bulldozer.”

Roy was maybe an inch taller than I was, but ten pounds lighter. He thought about it. But he didn’t do it. Instead he said, “Ahh,” and dismissed me with a hand gesture and turned back toward the house.

“We’ll talk again,” I said.

He kept going.

As I went back to my car I saw the nose of the Explorer around the corner on a side street. I thought about going over and grabbing one of the shadows. But that was just irritation. It wouldn’t produce anything good.

Nothing else had.

CHAPTER TWELVE

Susan had decided we should ride bikes. So we rented a couple, to see how we liked it, and set out.

“We’ll just ride along the river a little ways,” Susan had said. “And then we can sit and have our little lunch, and then ride back. It’ll be fun.”

“Did you know that bike riding is a threat to male fertility?” I said.

“That doesn’t matter.”

“How about a threat to potency?”

“That would matter,” Susan said.

We rode past the Harvard Business School on the Boston side of the river, heading into town. The balance was still a little shaky, but I knew it would come. There wasn’t room on the trail to ride beside each other. Bikes coming in the other direction couldn’t get by. So I trailed along behind her, admiring her butt in its spandex tights. It was not fun. I hadn’t ridden a bicycle since I was a kid in Wyoming, and after five minutes on this one I was glad I hadn’t. We went over the Weeks footbridge to the Cambridge side again, and stopped and sat on benches near the Harvard women’s boathouse. Susan took a brown paper bag out of her backpack and began to set out finger sandwiches.

“There,” Susan said. “Was that fun?”

“What would be fun about it?” I said. “We’re not even together while we’re riding.”

“You’re just afraid you’ll fall off and embarrass yourself.”

“I thought you thought I was fearless,” I said.

“About stuff that matters,” she said. “But when it doesn’t matter, you hate doing things at which you’re not accomplished.”

“Shall I lean back, Doc, and recall my childhood?”

Susan took a small bite of her egg salad sandwich. “I have all the information about you I require,” she said. “Tell me about the Nathan Smith business you’re working on.”

“There’s a lot wrong with the Nathan Smith business,” I said. “First of all, there’s someone following me.”

“Dangerous?”

“No,” I said. “It’s a what’s-he-up-to tail, rather than a try-to-kill-him tail.”

“Oh good,” Susan said. “Do they know you’ve spotted them?”

“I don’t think so,” I said. “They’re still being covert. If they knew I’d made them they wouldn’t bother.”

“And you think it relates to the Nathan Smith murder?”

“Started shortly after I took the case,” I said.

“Do you know who they are?”

“They’re connected to a company called Soldiers Field Development Limited, the CEO of which is on Mary Smith’s invitation list.”

I took a second finger sandwich from the bag.

“What’s here besides bread and ham?” I said.

“Butter.”

“Butter?”

“Well, not exactly butter. I sprayed it with one of those no-calorie butter-flavored sprays. Same thing.”

“Jesus,” I said.

“Is it possible that it’s a coincidence, the surveillance and stuff? Or maybe connected to another case you were involved in? A loose end somewhere?”

“Always possible,” I said. “I leave enough loose ends. On the other hand, what do you shrinks think about coincidences?”

“They occur, but it is not a good idea to assume them.”

“That’s what we sleuths think about them, too,” I said.

“So if this were the open-and-shut it seems to be,” Susan said, “why would anyone follow you?”

“Why indeed?” I said.

“Do you have a theory?”

“Nothing so grand,” I said. “The tail aside, there’s a lot I don’t like about this. I don’t like how lousy Mary Smith’s alibi is. I don’t like the sense I get that there’s a lot I’m not being told.”

“By whom?”

“By Mary Smith. By a guy named Roy Levesque that she was in high school with. By a guy named DeRosa who says Mary asked him to kill Nathan. By the woman I talked with at Nathan’s bank. Nice woman, Amy Peters.”

“As nice as I am?” Susan said.

“Of course not,” I said. “She has information, or at least a theory, that she’s not sharing. So does Mary Smith’s PR guy. I’d also like to figure out why a stiff like DeRosa is represented by an attorney from Kiley and Harbaugh.”

“But you have a plan,” Susan said.

“I always have a plan,” I said.

“Let me guess,” she said. “I’ll bet you plan to keep blundering along annoying people, and see what happens.”

“Wow,” I said. “You shrinks can really read a guy.”

“Magical, isn’t it,” she said.

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

I was on the low doorstep of a three-decker on Lithgow Street off Codman Square, looking for Esther Morales. She opened the door on my second ring, a small tan woman with bright intelligent eyes.

“Si?”

“My name is Spenser,” I said. “I’m working for Mary Smith. You do her housecleaning.”

“I clean for Mr. Smith,” she said. “Fifteen years.”

“Not Mrs. Smith?”

“She come along. I clean for her, too.”

“The police think she murdered her husband. What do you think?”

“I think I am very impolite. Please come into my house.”

“Thank you.”

She took me to the kitchen in the back of the house and made me some coffee. The woodwork and cabinets were stained a dark brown and gleamed with many coats of varnish. The vinyl tile flooring was made to look like quarry tile and gleamed with many coats of wax. I sat at a glistening white metal kitchen table and drank from a mug with a Red Sox logo on it.

Esther Morales sat across the table from me and had some coffee, too.

“Are you with the police?” she said.

“No,” I said. “I’m a private detective hired by the lawyer who represents Mrs. Smith.”

“So you are trying to help Mrs. Smith?”

“I’m sort of trying to find out the truth of what happened,” I said.

“She killed him.”

“You know that?”

“Yes.”

“Tell me what you know,” I said.

“Mr. Smith was a very nice man. He was very pleasant. He paid me well and gave me nice presents on the holidays.”

I nodded.

“Then she came,” Esther said.

“Yes?”

“She is not nice.”

“How so?” I said.

Esther frowned. I realized that she didn’t understand the expression.

“What wasn’t nice about her?” I said.

“She was bossy. She yelled at me. She yelled at Mr. Smith.”

“What did she yell about?”

“She would yell about money.”

Why should they be different.

“Anything else?” I said.

“I could not always hear them and, sometimes, when people speak too fast or speak oddly, my English…” She shrugged.

“How about Mr. Smith? He ever yell at her?” I said, “No. He was very kind to her. Sometimes she would make him cry.”

“They have friends over?”

“She did,” Esther said.

Esther disapproved of the friends.

“Female friends?” I said.

“No.”

“How about Mr. Smith?”

“Only the young men.”

“Young men?”

“Yes. He helped them. He was a, I don’t know the word in English. Mentor.”

“Same in English,” I said. “He mentors young men?”

“Yes. He is very generous. He helps poor boys to go to school and learn to do work and get ahead.”

“And they came to his house?”

“Yes. He would teach them at his home.”

“How about Mrs. Smith. She ever teach them?”

Esther was too nice to snort, but she breathed out a little more than normal.

“And why do you think she killed him?”

“For money.”

“His inheritance?” I said.

“I don’t understand.”

“Money he would leave her.”

“Yes.”

“Was there a gun anywhere around the house?”

“I did not see one.”

“Do you know anything I could use to prove that she killed him?” I said.

“She is a bad woman.”

I nodded.

“Anything else?”

“Just what I have told you.”

“Do you know anyone else who might have killed Mr. Smith?”

“No. It was she.”

I finished the last of my coffee.

“This is very good coffee, Mrs. Morales.”

“Would you wish more?”

“No. Thank you very much. I’ve kept you long enough.”

Esther walked me to the door.

“She is a terrible woman,” Esther said.

“Maybe she is,” I said.

I thanked her again and left and walked back toward Codman Square past a dark blue Ford with its motor on, to the convenient hydrant where I had parked my car.

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

Since she was a pillar of the community and adjudged not a flight risk, and because she had a dandy lawyer, Mary Smith was out on bail. So I could call on her in her home, rather than at the Suffolk County jail. It was nonetheless a daunting prospect. It was like talking to a dumb seventh-grader.

Rita Fiore let me in when I rang the bell. She was spectacular in a slim black and green polka-dot skirt and a bright green blouse.

“Mary asked me to sit in on your meeting,” Rita said.

“Doesn’t she get it that we’re on the same side?” I said.

“I think she doesn’t like to be alone with people.”

“They might use a big word?”

“Kindness, now,” Rita said. “Kindness.”

We went into an atrium that looked over the small spectacular garden that someone maintained for Mary in the not entirely nourishing soil of Beacon Hill.

Mary stood when we came in. She was wearing high-waisted gray slacks and a white silk scoop-neck T-shirt. She was barefoot. A pair of black sling-back shoes were on the floor near the couch. One of them was upright. The other had fallen over.

“Oh, Mr. Spenser,” she said, and put out her hand like a lady in a Godey print. “It is so lovely to see you. I mean it. It’s really lovely.”

“Gee,” I said.

“Will you have coffee?”

“No thanks,” I said. “I’m trying to cut back.”

“Good for you.”

“Brave,” Rita said.

I ignored her.

“Mrs. Smith,” I said. “Do you ever eat in a restaurant located in a store?”

“Louis‘,” she said. “They have a lovely cafe. I often have lunch there.”

One point for DeRosa.

“Do you know a man named Roy Levesque?” I said.

“Who?”

“Roy Levesque.”

“I don’t think so.”

“You went to high school with him. Dated him for a while, I believe.”

“Oh, that one.”

“Yes.”

Mary sat, quiet and attentive and blank. It wasn’t like talking to a dumb seventh-grader, it was like talking to a pancake.

“You still see him,” I said.

Mary smiled and shrugged.

“Old friends,” she said. “You know? Old friends.”

“Whom you just a minute ago said you didn’t know.”

She smiled and nodded. I waited. She smiled some more. Rita crossed her legs the other way.

“Tell me about the young men that your husband, ah, mentored,” I said.

Rita glanced at me. Mary smiled some more.

“He was so kind to them,” Mary said. “He’d been a lonely little boy, I guess, and he wanted to make it easier for other lonely little boys.”

“He give them money?” I said.

“Oh, I don’t know. I really never had much to do with our finances.”

“Help them out going to school? Maybe?”

“I’ll bet he did,” Mary said. “He was such a generous man.”

“He’d not been married before?” I said.

“No. He was a confirmed bachelor,” she said. “Until he met me.”

“Do you know why?” I said.

“Why what?”

I took in some air. It was tinged with her perfume, or maybe Rita’s, or maybe both.

“Do you know why he was a confirmed bachelor?”

“No.”

She shook her head. Eager to please. Sorry that she couldn’t supply more information.

“Do you know that he’d taken in a partner at the bank?”

“Oh no, I know nothing about the bank, or any of the other things.”

“Other things?”

“Oh, I don’t know.” She laughed. “Nathan was always up to something.”

“Do you know what they were?”

She shook her head.

“Are you sure you won’t have coffee?” she said.

I shook my head. I was sure I needed a drink.

“Do you stay in touch with any other people from your high school days?” I said.

“Well, Roy.”

“Anyone else?”

“Not really.” She smiled again. “I’ve reached out to them, but they aren’t, um, comfortable in my, ah…” She made a circular gesture with her hands.

“Circles,” Rita said.

“Oh, yes, thank you. Sometimes I have such trouble thinking what I want to say.”

“Lot of that going around,” I said. “You know Felton Shawcross?”

“Felton? I don’t think so.”

“CEO of a company called Soldiers Field Development Limited.”

“I don’t really know anything about companies,” she said.

“He was on the list of friends you had Larson give me.”

“Oh, well, mostly Larson keeps that list. They are people who contribute money to things and when I have a big charity event, Larson invites them.”

“So you don’t know Shawcross?”

She shook her head sadly.

“Would Larson have consulted your husband on that invitation list?” Rita said.

I could tell she was getting bored. She didn’t like being bored. Her voice had a small edge to it.

“I don’t really know. They were certainly pals,” she said. “They might have.”

“Larson come to you through your husband?” Rita said.

Asking questions was better than sitting around crossing her legs.

“Yes,” Mary said. “He’s so really nice, isn’t he?”

“Really,” Rita said.

“How did he know your husband?”

“Oh God, I don’t know. Some businessy thing.”

Hard questions made her panicky. I moved on.

“Could you tell me how much your husband left you?” I said.

“Money?”

“Yes.”

“Oh I couldn’t possibly imagine,” she said. “You’d have to ask Brink.”

“Brink?”

“Yes.”

“Who is Brink,” I said.

“Our financial advisor.”

“What would be his full name?” I said.

“Oh, I’m so used to him just being Brink. He’s a really old friend.”

“His name?”

“Brink Tyler. I think Brink is short for Brinkman.”

“And where would I find him?”

“He’s got an office in town here,” she said.

“Under his own name?”

“No he works for a big company.”

“Called?”

“Excuse me?”

“The name of the company,” I said.

“Oh, Something and Something,” she said. “I don’t know.” She frowned for a moment. “I have his phone number though.”

“That would be fine,” I said.

She stood gracefully and walked regally out of the room.

“I need a drink,” Rita said.

“Right after we leave,” I said.

Mary came back into the room with a pale green sheet of notepaper, on which she had written a phone number in purple ink. Her handwriting was very large and full of loops. I folded the paper and tucked it into my shirt pocket.

“Are you familiar with Marvin Conroy?” I said.

“Marvin?”

“Conroy,” I said.

The little frown came back. She thought about the name.

“No,” she said. “I’m really not.”

We talked for a while longer. Mary remained eager and impenetrable. Finally neither Rita nor I had anywhere else to go. We thanked Mary and assured her that we were making good progress, which was a lie. We were making so little progress that I would have been pleased with bad progress. Mary walked us to the door and said she really hoped she’d been a help. We said she had, and left and went to the Ritz bar and had two martinis each. From our seat in the window I could see a black Lincoln Town Car, double-parked with its motor running, on Arlington Street.


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