Out on the Cutting Edge

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Out on the Cutting Edge Page 34

by Lawrence Block

Page 34

 

  "The merciful angel of death. "

  "Matt?"

  I took her hands from my shoulders, stepped back. Her eyes widened, and I could see her trying to gauge which way I was leaning. I took a full breath and let it out and took off my suit jacket and hung it over the back of the chair.

  "Ah, my darling," she said.

  I took off my tie and strung it over the jacket. I unbuttoned my shirt, tugged it out of the waistband of my slacks. She smiled and moved to embrace me. I lifted a hand to hold her off.

  "Matt-"

  I drew my undershirt up over my head and off. She couldnt miss the wire. She saw it right away, wrapped around my middle, taped to my skin, but it took a minute or two for the implications to sink in.

  Then she got it, and her shoulders sagged with the knowledge and her face collapsed. One hand reached out, gripping the table to keep her from falling.

  While she was pouring herself more scotch, I got back into my clothes.

  I brought her in. It was a nice collar for Joe Durkin, with an assist for Bellamy and Andreotti. Willa didnt stay inside long. The equity in her buildings allowed her to make bond, and shes out on bail now pending disposition of her case.

  I dont think itll come to trial. The newspaper coverage was heavy, and neither her good looks nor her radical past got in the way of the story. The recording I made of our conversation should prove to be admissible evidence, although her lawyer will do what he can to hold it back, but aside from that theres not a wealth of physical evidence, so the betting right now is that her lawyer will want to plea-bargain the case and the Manhattan DAs office will be agreeable. Shell probably have to go away for a year or two. Most people would very likely say shell be getting off too easy, but then most people havent spent very much time in prison.

  I had taken a few things from Eddies apartment- books, mostly, and his wallet. I brought all his AA literature along to St. Pauls one night, and added the pamphlets to the stack on the free table. I gave his copies of the Big Book and the Twelve & Twelve to a newcomer named Ray, whom I havent laid eyes on since. I dont know if hes going to other meetings, or if hes staying sober, but I dont suppose the books drove him to drink.

  I kept his mothers Bible. I have one of my own, the King James version, and I figured it wouldnt hurt to have a Catholic Bible to keep it company. I still like the King James better, but I dont open either of them all that often.

  I spent more than seventy-two dollars worth of mental energy trying to decide what to do with the forty bucks in the Bible and the thirty-two dollars in his wallet. Ultimately I appointed myself his executor and hired myself retroactively to solve his murder, and paid myself seventy-two dollars for my services on his behalf. I dropped the empty wallet in a trash basket, where it no doubt proved a major disappointment for some sharp-eyed scavenger.

  Eddie was buried out of Twomey & Sons funeral parlor, on Fourteenth Street next to St. Bernards. Mickey Ballou arranged for the service and footed the bill for it. "At least hell have a priest reading over him and a decent burial in a proper cemetery," he said, "though you and Ill probably be the only ones there for him. " But I mentioned the event at a meeting, and as it turned out there were about two dozen of us who came to see him off.

  Ballou was astonished, and drew me aside. "I thought itd just be you and me," he said. "If Id known thered be all this turnout Id have laid on something after, a couple of bottles and some food. Do you suppose we could ask them all to come back to Grogans for a few jars?"

  "These people wont want to do that," I said.

  "Ah," he said, and looked thoughtfully around the room. "They dont drink. "

  "Not today. "

  "And thats where they knew him from. And theyre here for him now. " He considered this for a moment, then nodded shortly. "I guess he came out of it all right," he said.

  "I guess he did. "

  Not long after Eddies funeral I got a call from Warren Hoeldtke. Theyd just had a small service for Paula, and I guess his call to me was a part of the mourning process.

  "We announced that shed died in a boating accident," he said. "We talked it over, and that seemed like the best way to handle it. And I suppose its the truth, if not the whole truth. "

  He said he and his wife had agreed that I hadnt been paid enough for my services. "Ive put a check in the mail to you," he said. I didnt argue with him. Id been a New York cop long enough not to argue with people who wanted to give me money.

  "And if you ever want a car," he said, "youre more than welcome to anything on the lot at actual cost. It would be a genuine plea-sure for me. "

  "I wouldnt know where to park it. "

  "I know," he said. "Personally I wouldnt own a car in New York if someone gave it to me. But then I wouldnt care to live there either, with or without a car. Well. You should have that check in a few days. "

  It took three days, and it was for $1,500. I tried to decide if it bothered me to take it, and I concluded that it didnt. I had earned it, had put in sufficient effort to justify it and had produced sufficient results. I had pushed against the wall, and the wall had moved a little, so I had done real work and deserved real pay for it.

  I put the check in the bank and drew some cash and paid some bills. And I took a tenth of the sum in singles and made sure I always had a supply in my pocket, and I went on giving them out haphazardly to some of the people who stood on the street and asked for them.

  The same day the check came, I had dinner with Jim Faber and told him the whole story. I needed an ear to pour it all into, and he was decent enough to listen to it. "I figured out how the payment breaks down," I told him. "A thousand dollars for finding out how Paula died and fifteen hundred for lying about it. "

  "You couldnt tell him the truth. "

  "I dont see how I could have, no. I told him a truth. I told him that she died because she was in the wrong place at the wrong time, and I told him that the person who killed her was dead. Burial at sea sounds a lot more wholesome than getting dumped in a pigpen, but whats the real difference? Either way youre dead, and either way something eats you. "

  "I suppose. "

  "Fish or hogs," I said. "Whats the difference, when you come right down to it?"

  He nodded. "Why did you want Willa to listen in on your conversation with the Hoeldtkes?"

  "I wanted to start with the focus on Paula instead of on Eddie, so I could come up on her blind side. And I wanted her to have the same version they were getting, so she couldnt blurt anything out after she was in police custody. " I thought about it. "Maybe I just wanted to lie to her," I said.

  "Why?"

  "Because Id already shared a lot of myself with her, before I got Eddies autopsy results and found the chloral hydrate in her medicine chest. From that point I started drawing away. I never slept with her after that. The one time we went out, I think I encouraged her to drink. I wanted her to pass out, I wanted us to keep our clothes on. I wasnt sure shed done it, I didnt know everything at that point, but I was afraid of it and I didnt want the intimacy, or the illusion of intimacy. "

  "You cared about her. "

  "I was starting to. "

  "How do you feel now?"

  "Not great. "

  He nodded and poured himself another cup of tea. We were in a Chinese place, and theyd refilled the teapot twice already. "Oh, before I forget," he said, and reached into a pocket of his army jacket and came out with a small cardboard box. "This may not cheer you up," he said, "but its something. Its a present. Go on, open it. "

  The box contained business cards, nice ones, with raised lettering. They had my name, Matthew Scudder, and my telephone number. Nothing else.

  "Thank you," I said. "These are nice. "

  "I thought to myself that you ought to have cards, for Gods sake. Youve got a buddy with a printshop, you really ought to have cards. "

  I thanked him again, then started to laugh. He asked what was so funny.

 
"If Id had them earlier," I said, "I never would have found out who killed Paula. "

  * * *

  And that was that. The Mets went ahead and clinched their division, and theyll start the playoffs next week against the Dodgers. The Yankees still have a mathematical chance, but it looks as though itll be the Red Sox and Oakland in the American League.

  The night the Mets clinched, I had a call from Mickey Ballou. "I was thinking about you," he said. "You ought to come round to Grogans one of these nights. We could sit up all night telling lies and sad stories. "

  "That sounds good. "

  "And in the morning well catch the butchers mass. "

  "One of these days," I said.

  "I was thinking," he went on, "about all those people who came to say goodbye to Eddie. You go to those meetings yourself, dont you?"

  "Yes, I do. "

  After a moment he said, "One of these days I might ask you to take me along with you. Just for curiosity, dont you know. Just to see what its like. "

  "Anytime at all, Mick. "

  "Ah, theres no hurry," he said. "Its nothing youd want to rush into, is it? But one of these days. "

  "Just let me know when. "

  "Ah," he said. "Well see. "

  Ill probably get out to Shea for a game or two during the playoffs. They shouldnt have trouble with the Dodgers. They beat them eleven games out of twelve during the regular season, so they ought to breeze right past them.

  Still, you can never tell. Anything can happen in a short series.

 



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