"Some of us are beginning to suspect a connection," he said.
"You suspect me on that kind of flimsy evidence?" I said.
"Sort of."
I nodded. "They jumped me. They didn't say why. I was jogging along, minding my own business."
"Carrying a loaded gun?" Quirk said.
"Carrying a loaded gun, and these two guys attempted to shoot me."
"And succeeded," Quirk said.
"And I returned fire in self-defense," I said.
"You know either one of them?"
"No."
"Eddie is with Joe Broz… Was." Quirk said. "Roger, we don't know yet. We're still looking into him."
I nodded.
"And, small world, you were just recently sitting in my office reading the OCU file on Joe Broz."
I nodded.
"You care to comment on that?" Quirk said.
"No," I said. My leg felt hot and sore. I felt it with my right hand. It was heavily bandaged. The more I woke up, the sorer it felt. Maybe I would wait till tomorrow to go home. Quirk walked across the room and closed the door.
"How come I'm in a private room?" I said.
Quirk pointed at his own chest.
"I tried to get hold of Susan," Quirk said. "But she's not around."
"She's in Washington," I said.
Quirk rested his butt on the windowsill, folded his arms, and looked at me.
"Okay," he said. "Here's what I think. I think you were bothering Joe Broz and he sent Eddie and Roger out to kill you and they weren't quick enough. If two guys had to go down, they're not a bad choice. I don't know Roger, but I know Eddie. Eddie was a scumbag. I'm willing to bet Roger was pretty much the same. A day in which you shoot a scumbag like Eddie DiBernardi is a day well spent."
"Makes a nice hobby," I said.
"On the other hand," Quirk said, "I am not employed by the city to go around saying 'Way to go' when somebody blows up a couple of citizens in a public park. Even if the citizens are scumbags." I nodded.
"You see my position," Quirk said. I nodded some more.
"When you put your mind to it," Quirk said, "you can be an all-world pain in the balls. And you think you're smarter than you are, and you think if you want to do something it must be the right thing to do."
"I'm not as sure of that as I used to be," I said.
"Me either," Quirk said. "But, on the other hand, you haven't done too many things since I've known you that I wouldn't have done if I was you."
"Maybe we're both wrong," I said.
"Probably," Quirk said, "but I don't think there's much we can do about it." He stood up and unfolded his arms and put his hands back into his hip pockets. "Anyway. I don't see a reason to charge you at the moment, but I want some information. Eddie and Roger are not the last two guys that Broz can hire. If he wants you in the ground, he can be persistent. If he succeeds, I want to be able to nail him for it."
"You sentimental bastard," I said.
"Off the record," Quirk said, "what the fuck is going on?"
I told him. All of it.
When I got through Quirk said, "The guy's wife isn't worth it."
"Ronni Alexander?" I shrugged. "She's worth it to Meade."
"Meade ain't the one got shot in the leg," Quirk said.
I didn't say anything.
"You going to keep squeezing Broz?" Quirk said.
"I can't think of anything better," I said.
Quirk nodded. "Okay. I'll do this," he said. "I'll put the word out that I'm, ah, monitoring your well-being on this. It'll get back to Joe. I'll let him know that if you get killed, I'm going to make a mess of his life."
"That'll help," I said.
"Yeah. It will. Joe's very practical. But I don't know. This is family. I don't know if it will help enough."
"Maybe Joe will notice that I'm not easy to hit," I said. "Didn't work out too well this time."
"That was this time," Quirk said. "If he has to, he'll send Vinnie Morris. It's a lot harder to be too quick for Vinnie."
"True," I said.
Quirk got his topcoat from the back of the chair where it lay, neatly folded. "Anyway, that's your problem," he said.
"Also true," I said.
Quirk shrugged into the topcoat. "I called your little buddy down at the Harbor Health Club," Quirk said. "Cimoli. Told him someone had tried to kill you. He said he'd send someone over to comfort you."
"Thanks," I said.
Quirk nodded and opened the door to leave. As he went out, Hawk came in. They passed each other without expression or comment.
Chapter 31
There was a phone in the room and I called my apartment and got Paul and told him I wouldn't be home till tomorrow. I didn't tell him why.
He said he and Paige were going to Quincy Market for the afternoon and that night they were going to see a performance by a dance company I'd never heard of. He said he had enough money and I told him there was no such thing as enough money and we hung up.
Hawk was sitting in the visitor's chair reading a copy of The Ring magazine with his feet up on the windowsill. He had removed his down-filled leather jacket and put it on a hanger in the closet. A.357 magnum in a shoulder holster hung under his left arm. He had on a turtleneck sweater, designer jeans, and snakeskin boots.
"Man, you still fighting," Hawk said. "You be rich. They need a great white hope so bad, they'd rank you."
"Maybe it's not too late," I said. "Given what's out there, maybe we could fight for the title."
"You got a plan?" Hawk said.
"To fight for the title?"
"No, to take care of business. Quirk sorta implied to Henry, people might keep trying to shoot you. You got a plan for taking care of that?"
"Why," I said. "You in?"
"Un-huh."
"As soon as I can get out of here I want to see Joe Broz. If we can make it easier for him to go along with me than to kill me, I think we can deal."
"What kind of deal we after?" Hawk said.
I told him, as I had Quirk. All of it. Hawk's face was beaming when I finished.
"Hot diggity," he said. "You actually trying to squeeze Joe Broz? Goddamn."
"What other choice?" I said,
"Tell the congressman to keep his old lady at home," Hawk said. "Or kick her out."
I said, "No."
Hawk grinned.
"I didn't think so," Hawk said. "Just testing to see if your head still soft."
"Quirk says he'll let Broz know that he's interested too."
"Help," Hawk said. "Broz don't want Quirk on his ass."
The same small nurse came in and asked if I was hungry. I said yes and she gave me a meal order menu.
"I'll come back in a little while and pick it up," she said. If she noticed Hawk and his.357, she didn't show it.
Hawk watched her go, his lips pursed. When the door swung shut behind her Hawk said, "Broz probably don't want me and you on his ass either, when you come down to it."
"And I'm betting he doesn't want his kid embarrassed and maybe arrested," I said. "I bet he'll go along."
Hawk shrugged. "We could make sure," he said. "We could kill him. And his kid."
"Have to kill Vinnie Morris too," I said. "Vinnie's like family with Joe."
Hawk shrugged again. "Okay. Joe and the kid, and Vinnie."
"The films might still go public. I don't even know where they are."
Hawk grinned. "She good-looking?"
"Yes."
"Want me to review them? Check for technical accuracy?"
The nurse came back and took my order slip. She still paid Hawk no attention. Must be the training. Hawk was not easy to pay no attention to. Even without the gun under his arm. He weighed 205 and stood six two and had a twenty-nine-inch waist. His skin was densely black and his shaved head gleamed in the hospital fluorescence. When she went away again I said, "The film is accurate."
Hawk shrugged and went back to his magazine.
Lunch came an
d I shared it with Hawk. After it had digested I got out of bed and tried walking. I could do it with a hobble and a little support from Hawk.
"He ain't heavy," Hawk said. "He's my brother."
"I'll get a cane," I said. "I'll be out of here in the morning."
"Good," Hawk said. "It's awful boring in here."
"No need for you to stay," I said.
"I let you get scragged while you lying in bed and Henry be laughing at me long as I'm living. You know how the little bastard is."
I nodded. "A ball buster," I said.
"Rather sleep in a chair all night than let the little bastard have something like that on me."
"You're right," I said. "I hadn't thought of that."
"Susan be annoyed too," he said.
"I hope so," I said.
Chapter 32
We were meeting Broz on the small footbridge that spans the swan boat lagoon in the Public Garden. I hadn't talked to Broz. I had talked to Vinnie Morris who talked to Broz. When he called back, Vinnie had no comment.
"We'll be there," he said. And hung up.
Hawk drove me there in his Jaguar sedan with a James Brown tape playing loud enough to distract me from how sore my leg was. He parked on Arlington Street in a tow zone and we got out. It was 8:15, not very cold, but dark. I was wearing my other gun on my belt, and had a handful of spare cartridges in my righthand pants pocket. My coat was open.
Hawk went around and opened the trunk and took out a.12 gauge Ithaca pump gun and held it, muzzle down, beside his leg. He shook his head, put it back in the trunk, and took out a shorter gun, double barreled, and tried that out for size. He liked it, nodded to himself, took a handful of shells from a box, and put them into the pocket of his leather jacket. Then he broke open the shotgun, took two more shells from the box, and loaded the gun and closed it. He shut the trunk and with the shotgun, not especially conspicuous, held against his right leg he came around beside me and we walked into the Public Garden. Or Hawk did. I hobbled with my cane. I had traded the aluminum number in for a blackthorn walking stick that Susan had once given me when she thought it would make sense to maximize my Irish heritage with tweed walking hats and paisley scarfs and things. I had tried the hat on once and thrown it and the scarf away. But I kind of liked the stick. One of my ancestors would probably have called it a shillelagh.
There weren't many people in the Public Garden on a December night, but some walked through, and at least two glanced with some uneasiness at Hawk's shotgun. Nobody stopped. We got to the bridge first and there was no sign of Broz. I leaned against the railing in the middle and Hawk moved off quietly for a brief tour of the area. He was back in five minutes.
"Nobody hiding with a rifle," he said. "Nobody under the bridge." I nodded. Hawk drifted down to the end of the bridge toward Charles Street and, with the shotgun hanging at his side, leaned against the little pillars that anchored the bridge. He stayed there, motionless. We waited maybe ten minutes. A tall, thin guy wearing sunglasses and a gray overcoat with a velvet collar walked along the footpath from Arlington Street and onto the bridge. He had his hands in his coat pockets.
"You Spenser?" he said.
"Yes."
"The guy at the end of the bridge, he with you?"
"Yes."
"Who is he?"
"Jiminy Cricket," I said. "He hangs around to make sure my nose doesn't grow."
The thin man nodded. "Wait here," he said.
He walked down the bridge past Hawk and on along the footpath a ways, his head turning carefully as he looked on both sides. Then he turned and followed the footpath back and underneath the bridge and came back on the other side. He came back up on the bridge and leaned against the pillar at the Arlington Street end. In maybe a minute Vinnie Morris appeared and spoke to him. The thin man gestured with his head toward Hawk at the other end of the little bridge. Vinnie nodded and walked away. Two more minutes passed. Then Vinnie appeared with Joe Broz beside him. They walked out onto the bridge and stood beside me. Broz on the side away from Hawk. Vinnie between him and Hawk, in front of me.
Broz said, "What'd you bring the nigger for?"
"I put two of your people in the ground, Joe. Hawk's hoping I'll do it again so he can watch."
"Next time I'll come," Vinnie said.
I shook my head. "No next time, Vinnie. Joe's going to deal."
Vinnie started to speak and Broz said, "Vinnie."
We were all quiet. Hawk motionless at one end of the bridge, the thin guy at the other. Me leaning on the rail. Vinnie looking a little taut in front of me. Broz looking at my face like he was trying to memorize it.
"What's changed?" Broz said. "Why should I deal?"
"For one thing, when you tried to burn me and missed, it got the cops into it. Marty Quirk. You know him?"
"I know Quirk."
"I hear he's taking a special interest in this case."
Broz shook his head impatiently. "Fuck Quirk," he said. "What else?"
"I've had time to make arrangements. Anything happens to me the whole story on your kid goes to the cops and the papers. Pictures, names, everything. And if nothing happens to me, I'm going to stay on the kid's ass until I get the tapes back and Alexander's out from under."
"What else?"
"You didn't need to try and scare Alexander off. He's not going to get elected. He's a joke. He can get elected in his district, but he can't win a statewide election here. When he talks about crime in the streets he means tight pants on women."
"Don't tell me what I know. What have you got?"
"I leave Browne in place," I said. "He's in your pocket, but somebody always will be. He gets elected. You tell him what to do. Alexander goes home to Fitchburg and gets into bible study."
"Anything else?" Broz said.
"No," I said. "That's the package. One way you got aggravation, profit loss, embarrassment, cops in your hair. The other way you don't lose anything. You don't want Alexander anyway."
All of us were quiet. There was no wind. The moon was out. And the stars. Nobody crossed the footbridge. The occasional stroller who approached it detoured when he saw us.
"Okay," Broz said.
Vinnie snapped his head around and looked at Broz. "Joe," he said.
Broz shook his head. "No, Vinnie. I'm going to deal."
Vinnie was quiet.
Broz kept looking at me. "You know why I'm going to deal?"
"My charisma," I said.
"Because of the kid. I'm responsible for the kid. For how he acts. You unnerstand? Joe Broz's kid is supposed to know how to act."
I was quiet.
"He's not just some fucking college boy. He's Joe Broz's kid." Broz shook his head. "He's done this on his own. The whole thing, the coke trade, the videotapes, the two assholes in Springfield. Vinnie got them for him. I don't blame Vinnie. Vinnie was trying to cover for the kid, trying to… never mind. I know why Vinnie done it. But things were done using my name and I didn't know about it. And it was stupid." He shook his head again. And stared at me some more. Nobody else said anything. "First time you come around and told me this I was mad. I didn't get to be Joe Broz by letting some punk like you squeeze me. I told Ed to hit you. Vinnie said no. He said Ed wasn't good enough and it was a bad idea anyway. But I was mad, you unnerstand. You was trying to squeeze Joe Broz. You were fucking with Joe Broz's kid."
The traffic sounds from Boylston Street were clear in the silence. On the path that circled the lagoon a couple was walking with a German short-haired pointer on a leash.
"Okay. If Ed had done it right, maybe it would have worked. But he didn't. So you got a deal. But not because you squeezed. You unnerstand that? Not because you squeezed Joe Broz. Because… because my kid was wrong."
"And now it's even," I said.
"Yeah… Vinnie, go to the car and get the tape."
Chapter 33
It was Christmas Eve. Susan lay beside me in her bed at her house in Smithfield. Paul was in the living room wi
th Paige watching Singin' in the Rain on the late late movie.
"Won't Paige's mother and father be mad that she's not home for Christmas?" Susan said.
"They'll drive down tomorrow for Christmas dinner," I said.
"Gee," Susan said. "An empty nest."
"I'll think of something to pass the empty hours," I said.
"Will I like it?"
"Ecstasy," I said.
"Gee, is Bloomingdale's open on Christmas?" Susan said.
"That's not what I meant."
"Oh." Susan was reading a book called The Road Less Traveled. She had closed it on her index finger to hold the place. I was reading a review of the Gail Conrad Dance Company by Arlene Croce in The New Yorker. I was trying to learn about dance. I returned to it. The room was quiet.
I glanced at Susan. She still held her book on her lap, leaning back against the sit-up pillow, looking at me.
"A good Christmas for the Alexanders," she said.
"Maybe," I said.
"And she never knew?"
"Nope. She doesn't know anything about what he knows."
"That's insane," Susan said. "He's got to deal with her. He can't just go on waiting for her to do it again. Wondering what she's doing when she's not with him. That's crazy; he can't do it."
"Yes he can," I said.
"For the rest of his life?"
"Until she does something that makes the papers." I put my magazine down and turned a little on my side toward Susan.
"And then what?" she said.
"Then he drops out of public life, if he hasn't already. And tries to put it back together."
"He doesn't leave her?"
I shook my head.
"How can you be so sure?"
"He won't," I said.
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