The pace car made its circuit, then pulled in the gate. None of the horses seemed to want the lead—they hit the first turn in a clump. On the backstretch, Max’s horse fitted himself sixth along the rail. “Saving ground,” the track announcer called, but it looked more like phoning it in to me.
The horses came around the second turn Indian-file, Max’s pick still where he started. Two horses came off the rail, one drafting behind the other as they challenged the leader. Max’s horse closed up the gap they left. When the two challengers stayed parked out past the three-quarter pole, the file passed them by, moving them out of contention. At the top of the stretch, the leader was tiring, but none of the others seemed to have the will to make a move.
I felt a sudden stab of pain in my forearm. Max, using his rebar forefinger to tell me what my eyes had just picked up—the lead horse, exhausted, was drifting wide . . . and Dino’s Diamond was charging the inside lane like a downhill freight.
It was photo-close, but Max’s horse got a nose in front at the wire. Max stood up and bowed to the valiant warrior who had found his way home one more time. His flat Mongol face was split in a broad grin.
I spent the next few minutes acknowledging the celestial perfection of Max’s handicapping methods, admitting that we should have wheeled his pick instead of mine—sharing in my brother’s joy.
Dino’s Diamond paid $35.20, making us major winners, no matter what happened in the Double. Max would brag on this one forever, starting with Mama.
It was one of those times; anyone I’d have to explain it to, I wouldn’t want to.
They had just called the trotters for the second race when Sands sat down next to me.
“ There’s three more,” he said, without preamble.
“Three more not in the—?”
“Yeah.”
“Why not?”
“No complaining witnesses.”
“Then how would you know they were cases at all, never mind his?”
“One of them, he was almost caught in the act. But the vic denied it ever happened.”
“A hooker who—?”
“No. Stop asking questions. I can’t hang around here. Just listen. It was on the Lower East Side. A neighbor hears sounds of a struggle. Glass breaking, a scream. She calls it in; she’s too scared to go out and see what’s happening herself, so she turns off all the lights in her apartment, peeks out the window. And there’s the perp, going down the fire escape. She doesn’t get enough for an ID, but it’s our man, no question, right down to the ski mask and the gloves. In fucking July.
“By the time that one went down, everyone knows there’s a serial rapist making the rounds, so the uniforms don’t bother to knock. The door goes right in. And there’s the vic, still tied up, blood coming out of her. Nails on one hand all broken. She must have put up a hell of a fight. Place is ransacked, too.
“But the woman, she says nothing happened. She was playing with the ropes—‘experimenting,’ is what it says in the report—then she fell down and hurt herself. Utter, total bullshit. But she doesn’t budge an inch.
“The uniforms don’t know what to do. Fuck, neither would I—whoever heard of something like this? I mean, sure, people playing sex games, they get carried away, someone gets hurt . . . so they don’t tell the truth about how it happened. Anyone who works ER around here is going to see a few of those every year. But this one, with the witness and all, it was for real, all the way.
“So they call in the detectives. Nothing. They even try a social worker. Blank. Zero. Nada.”
“Christ.”
“The second one, she gets found by her aunt. Comes to pick her up in the morning for church, can you believe it? We get a statement. Same pattern, right down to the mouthpiece.
“Then, a week or so later, out of the blue, the vic calls up, says she doesn’t want to ‘press charges.’ Like it was some bitch-slap incident or something.
“Okay, so the plainclothes guys go to see her, too. A total washout. She’s not talking. Not saying it didn’t happen, just saying she’s not going to cooperate.”
“So they figured she probably knew the perp?” I said.
“That is what they figured. And we were going to put surveillance on her. If she was covering for the guy, or, better yet, blackmailing him, we could end up with a solid ID.”
“What happened?”
“She moved. To fucking Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Lock, stock, and barrel. They tried to get a wiretap going, but the judge laughed at them, said they were a mile short of probable cause. And what was the crime, anyway?”
“Maybe she just wanted out of New York,” I said. “Some people do that, put a lot of distance between themselves and . . . whatever happened to them.”
“I don’t know,” Sands said.
“You said three.”
“Yeah. The first one, who denied anything happened? She turned up, later. Dead.”
“You think it was Wychek?”
“He was already locked up by then,” Sands said. “For the one Wolfe nailed him on. Besides, something else was going on.”
“What do you mean?”
“She was tortured,” Sands said, voice flat and hard, a shield against his feelings, like the booze. “Somebody worked her over with a stun gun. Or electricity. Had those burn marks all over her . . . in the worst spots.”
“In her own apartment?”
“Nobody knows where it was done. Where they found her was in a building that was getting rehabbed over in Williamsburg. One of the workers spotted her, hanging, when he opened up in the morning. It was in the papers.”
“She was hung?”
“Not to kill her. They did that with a bullet. Two of them, one in each eye.”
“A message.”
“Yeah. Maybe it was for the third one.”
“Huh?”
“Her best friend. Roommate. Wasn’t home when the rape—the one she said never happened—went down. That one—the third one— just plain disappeared. The detectives looked for her as soon as the original vic wouldn’t cooperate. On the books, she’s a missing person.”
“Missing and presumed.”
“Yeah.”
“So the homicide case is still open, too?”
“Yeah.”
“You got names and—?”
“I see you already got a pen,” he said, nodding toward the program.
Max nudged my shoulder, bringing me back from wherever I’d gone. I looked up at the board. The third race was two minutes to post.
Max pointed to the info I’d jotted down, held up three fingers, made a questioning gesture.
“I don’t know,” I told him. I drew a stick figure of a man, surrounded by a ring of swastikas. “But it looks like Wychek’s friends may have started taking care of him earlier than we thought.”
Max hadn’t left my side, so I knew he hadn’t gotten a bet down since the second race. I turned to that page in the program, made a “What happened?” gesture.
He held up the ticket. All the answer I needed. If my horse hadn’t gotten home first, he would have torn it up.
I found a place in the program with some white space showing, handed it to Max. He diagrammed the race for me in increments, drawing it as clear as a video.
My mare had left hard, cranked off a good first quarter, put some real distance on the field without a challenge, and maintained strong fractions until her second time past the clubhouse turn. Then they all came at her, slingshotting around at the top of the stretch. She was fading fast, but still game, staggering home a half-length ahead of the nearest horse. Paid $8.80 to win, anchoring our four-hundred-and-change Double, a personal record.
Max held up his hand, fingers spread, to emphasize that we didn’t just have it, we had it five times!
Neither of us wanted to stay around after that. The minute they get ahead, suckers say they’re “playing with the track’s money.” That’s why they’re called suckers.
“ Anything new?”
“Stone-fucking-wall,” Davidson said. “Cocksuckers must think they’re playing with an amateur.”
“I spoke to Wolfe; she doesn’t seem worried.”
“I wouldn’t play poker with her, I was you.”
“Yeah, I know. So you’re saying . . . ?”
“I’m saying that somebody’s cooking up something. I don’t give an obese rodent’s rump what that is, so long as it isn’t my client on the burner.”
“I’m still with it,” I promised.
“You maybe got something?”
“Maybe. A long maybe.”
“Want to tell me?”
“I’m your investigator,” I said, “not your client.”
“ No, no, no,” Michelle said, hands on hips. “You cannot wear that same jacket.”
“But you said it would be like a—”
“Never mind what I said. This is different.”
“How?”
“Stop being such a dolt, Burke! We already went over this. That girl wants something. And if I’m right, we have to go for it.”
“I don’t see why I can’t wear the—”
“She’s a money-girl, right?”
“I . . . No, I don’t think so. Everything we have about her background says middle-class.”
“Give me strength,” Michelle muttered. “Sweetheart,” she said, her voice a mockery of patience, “I don’t mean a from-money girl, like a trust-funder. I mean she works with money. That’s her thing.”
“So?”
“So I’m guessing she wants to see you know how to make some. Or you already have.”
“Maybe she just wants to go slumming.”
“That could be,” Michelle admitted. “But any woman who’s willing to buy a man a cell phone and let him use her credit card can get all the downmarket action she wants. We play it like it’s something else,” she said, firmly.
“What do I have to buy this goddamned time?”
“You don’t have to buy anything,” she said, triumphantly. “Remember that beautiful Bally jacket I got you when we were working that movie scam?”
“How could I forget? It cost—”
“Well, maybe now you see the value of the classics,” she said. “You wear that number over a nice shirt with a plain tie. . . .”
“A tie now?”
“She said dinner, am I right?”
“Yeah. But she said ‘dinner’ that first time, and you said—”
“Oh, do shut up,” she said, closing the subject.
That night, I motored up Third Avenue, taking my time—as if I had any choice, at that hour. Still, I was in place twenty minutes before I was to meet Laura. The Plymouth isn’t the kind of car any cop lets sit at the curb, so I circled the block, budgeting ten minutes for each pass.
I wasn’t far off. At 6:55, she was already standing at the curb, wearing a fuchsia dress. As I pulled over, I could see her shoes matched it.
“I hope I didn’t keep you waiting,” I said, out the window.
“Oh!” she said, as if startled. But she trotted around to the passenger door and let herself in.
“You look—” I said, deliberately cutting myself off, like I’d said too much.
“What?” she said, flashing a smile. Her lipstick was only minutes old.
“I was going to say ‘great,’ I guess. But I didn’t want you to think I was—”
“What? Being polite?”
“No, no. Being . . . unprofessional.”
“Hmmmm . . .” she said.
“Where to?” I asked.
“The Midtown Tunnel,” she said. “I’ll guide you once we get out.”
“Yes, ma’am,” I said, touching two fingers to my forehead.
“ This is quite an . . . unusual car,” she said, as we waited in line at the tunnel entrance.
“It’s one of my hobbies,” I said. “I restore muscle cars from the Fifties and Sixties. This is an original Plymouth Roadrunner.”
“Roadrunner, like in the cartoon?”
I “meep-meeped” the horn for her. She clapped in delight.
“Oh, that’s exactly it. Are these . . . cars valuable?”
“Well, it’s not a Bugatti or a Duesenberg,” I said. “This one was mass-produced, and not exactly to the highest standards. But clean survivors are pretty rare now. When I get it all done, it should be worth, oh, thirty-five thousand.”
“And how much will all that cost you?” she said, looking over the raggedy dashboard out to the gray-primered hood.
“Depends on how much of the work I do myself,” I said. “Like, see this steering wheel? It’s an original Tuff model,” I bragged. “Pretty hard to find.”
I tapped the thick-rimmed, smaller-than-stock wheel, with its center horn button and three brushed-aluminum “holed” spokes. It wasn’t exactly a bolt-in—the turn-signal lever had to be shortened, so I wouldn’t risk snagging my left leg when I got out—but the look was still semi-original.
“Were they fast?” she asked, rolling up her window as we entered the tunnel. “When they were new, I mean.”
“The Hemi Roadrunner was one of the legitimate kings of the street, back in its glory days,” I said, not mentioning that the reincarnation I was driving wasn’t a Hemi. Or that the hogged-out wedge motor in mine would have inhaled anything that was prowling the boulevards back then.
“Didn’t they come with air conditioning?” she said, reaching in her pocketbook for a tissue.
“Not the serious ones,” I told her. “Those were stripped to the bone.”
“That doesn’t sound very pleasant.”
“Different people, different pleasures,” I said.
“Did you want a car just like this when you were a kid?” she asked, as we exited the tunnel and got in line for the toll booths.
“I wanted a lot of things when I was a kid,” I said, wishing I could pull back the ice in my voice as soon as I spoke.
“Oh! I didn’t mean to . . . I’ve just noticed that some of the men I know, they collect all kinds of things they wanted when they were young. One of the guys I work with, he’s got every baseball card ever made, I bet.”
“Well, I say it’s my hobby, but this is the only car I have,” I said, chuckling to muffle what she had triggered with her innocent question. “And I’ve had it a long time, like a project that never gets completed.”
“Are you going to make it perfect?”
“Perfect?”
“Like, what’s the word I’m looking for . . . concours? I have clients who fix up old cars so they’re exactly like they were brand-new. Then they have shows for them.”
“No,” I laughed. “I’m going to make it perfect, all right. But perfect for me, not for anyone else. Besides, I don’t see a piece of Detroit iron like this making the grade in that company.”
We took an E-ZPass lane, letting the scanner read the box I had fastened to the windshield instead of having to pay the toll in cash. Very efficient system. Speeds the traffic flow. And keeps very good records. I have “spares” I can use when I want to go certain places to do certain things, but tonight wasn’t anything I cared if the government knew about.
“The LIE’s a pain at this hour,” she said. “But it’s still the fastest . . .”
“I’m in no hurry,” I said.
“It must be frustrating.”
“What?”
“Having such a fast car, and not being able to go fast.”
“Not all the time, no. But that’s okay. Sometimes, knowing you can do something is pretty much as good as doing it.”
“That’s how I feel,” she said. “About my work. But that’s a mistake I can’t make too often.”
“I don’t understand,” I said.
“In my job, being very good at something, even being brilliant at it, doesn’t count. Only results do. If you allow yourself to just, I don’t know, luxuriate in your abilities, like a bubble bath with soft music and candles, you can forget that the world—my world, anyway—isn’t
about strategy, it’s about success.”
“I thought those were the same thing.”
“No,” she said, turning in her seat so her whole body was facing me, despite the seatbelt. “Strategy is what I love. The game of it. But if I come up with a perfect strategy to, say, put a deal together, and I don’t make the deal, my bonus is going to be light that year.”
“I think I know what you mean.” I goosed the throttle to switch lanes ahead of an overfilled minivan. “Kind of like my book, isn’t it?” I said.
“Strategy?”
“Not exactly. I mean, I already sold it. The book, that is. I’m talking about my idea for it. I know it’s perfect. But if I can’t bring it off, the book will still happen, but it won’t be as good as if—”
“That’s one idea,” she said. “I was talking more about . . . models.”
“Models?”
“Ways of doing things. Ones you develop over time, testing and retesting . . .”
“Like a system for picking winners at the racetrack?”
“A little more sophisticated than that, I hope,” she said, chuckling. “And a little more successful, too. None of those ‘systems’ really work, do they?”
“I never heard of one that did,” I told her, pure truth.
“Here we go,” she said. “You know the Maurice Avenue switch-off?”
“Sure,” I said. “I once worked as a cab driver. To get perspective for a piece I was doing.”
“Okay, now just follow it around until we get to Sixty-first.”
“That’s Maspeth, right?”
“Yes, it is. Not many people from the City know that.”
“That’s one of the things about having a car,” I said. “You go places where the subway doesn’t.”
“I have a car, too, remember? Turn . . . there! Yes. Now just go along until I tell you to turn again.”
“You like that Audi?” I asked her.
“Oh, yes,” she said. “Whoever did the interior-design work on it was a genius.”
“Is it pretty quick?”
“It has a turbocharger,” she said, almost smugly. “I got a ticket when I went upstate for a ski weekend once. The officer said he clocked me at a hundred and ten. But he only wrote me up for eighty-five.”
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