Hundred-Dollar Baby

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Hundred-Dollar Baby Page 9

by Robert B. Parker


  “But not a lot more?” Susan said.

  “I like her better,” I said.

  “It’s good,” Susan said, “that you don’t let sentiment cloud your judgment.”

  “I’m a seasoned professional,” I said.

  “If she’s telling the truth,” Susan said, “then Lionel is, in effect, stalking her.”

  “Virtual stalking,” I said. “He hired Ollie DeMars to do it.”

  “Doesn’t matter. Stalking is about power and revenge and control, and who the physical stalker is doesn’t matter if the real stalker gets the feelings he needs.”

  “Or she needs,” I said.

  “Of course. I was speaking of this particular incident. Women can be stalkers, too.”

  “How come you don’t stalk me,” I said.

  “Don’t need to,” Susan said.

  “Because you already have feelings of power and control?”

  “Exactly,” Susan said.

  “Is that because I come across for you so easy,” I said.

  “It is.”

  “What if I didn’t?” I said.

  Susan smiled at me. She was halfway into the preparation for some sort of chicken in a pot. As she spoke she chopped carrots on a cutting board. It was slow going and I feared for her fingers, but I was smart enough to make no comment.

  “Empty threat,” she said. “What are you going to do about Lionel Whosie?”

  “I could kill him,” I said.

  “No,” Susan said, “you couldn’t.”

  “No?”

  “No. You would do that for me, maybe for Hawk. But not for April.”

  Susan began to peel onions. Her eyes were watering.

  “If you peel those onions under running water,” I said, “they won’t make you tear up.”

  Susan nodded and continued to peel them without benefit of water. When she was done she quartered them and tossed them into the pot, after the carrots.

  “How about the police?” Susan said.

  “And April gets dragged into it,” I said, “and probably Patricia Utley.”

  Susan smiled.

  “They’re whores,” Susan said. “By choice. One could consider getting in trouble with the police an occupational risk.”

  I shook my head. Susan smiled.

  “They may be whores,” Susan said. “But they’re your whores.”

  “Exactly,” I said

  Susan put some fresh parsley and some thyme into the pot, poured in some white wine, and put the cover on.

  “This might actually be good,” she said, “if I don’t over-cook it.”

  “How about setting the timer?” I said.

  She looked at me scornfully, and took off her apron, and set the timer.

  “So what shall we do while it cooks?” she said.

  “We could drink and fool around,” I said.

  “Pearl’s asleep on the bed,” Susan said.

  “I know,” I said. “She likes that late-afternoon sun in there.”

  “But there is the couch,” Susan said.

  “There is,” I said.

  “First I think we should shower.”

  “Together?”

  “Sure, get a clean start,” Susan said.

  “And if you put me under running water,” I said, “you may not tear up.”

  Susan began to unbutton her shirt as she walked toward the bedroom.

  “Oh,” she said. “I probably will anyway.”

  31

  I was drinking coffee and eating a corn muffin and reading the paper in my office with the window open and my feet on the desk. In mid-February the temperature was fifty-one, and the snow was melting as fast as it could. I had just finished reading Arlo & Janis when Quirk came in.

  “Got a shooting,” he said. “In Andrews Square. You might want to take a peek.”

  I took my paper, my coffee, and my muffin and went with him.

  There were eight or ten cop cars, marked and unmarked, clogging nearly all movement in the area of Ollie DeMars’s clubhouse. Belson walked to the car when it stopped. He looked in and saw me.

  “Oh, good,” Belson said. “You brought help.”

  We got out.

  “Every citizen’s duty,” I said, “to step forward when needed.”

  “Try not to stomp on the clues,” Quirk said as we went into the building.

  There was no one from Ollie’s crew in sight. Just Ollie, sitting in his chair behind his desk, with his head slumped forward and blood on his shirt. A couple of crime-scene types were photographing and writing notes and taking measurements.

  “Whaddya got,” Quirk said to one of them.

  “Took one in the forehead, Captain. Small-caliber. Snapped his head back, and then forward.”

  The crime-scene guy demonstrated snapping his head back and letting it rebound forward.

  “Probably dead before his head bounced,” the crime-scene guy said. “And that’s how we found him. No exit wound, so we’ll be able to salvage the slug. Might be kind of beat up, rattling around inside a skull.”

  Quirk nodded.

  “Muzzle was close to his forehead; there’s burns.”

  Quirk nodded again.

  “Gun in the desk drawer, loaded,” the crime-scene guy said. “Not fired recently. Drawer was closed when we found him.”

  “Got an idea of when he died?” Quirk said.

  “Not really,” the crime-scene guy said. “Guess? Sometime last night. We’ll know when they open him up.”

  “Lemme know,” he said.

  He looked at Belson.

  “Who found the body?” Quirk said.

  “Anonymous nine-one-one,” Belson said. “From a pay phone in Watertown. First car here was Garvey and Nelson.”

  Belson nodded at a bulky uniformed cop standing near the office door.

  “That’s Garvey,” Belson said.

  “What?” Quirk said to him.

  “Like you see it, Captain, nobody here but the stiff. He’s right the way we found him. Me and Nelson secured the crime scene and called the detectives.”

  Quirk nodded. The room was full of cops, tough men who had spent most of their working hours on the hard side of life. But all of them were careful around Quirk. Except maybe Belson…and me.

  “Any witnesses?” Quirk said.

  Belson shook his head.

  “So who did the nine-one-one?” Quirk said.

  “Shooter?” Belson said.

  “Why?” Quirk said.

  “Can’t imagine,” Belson said.

  Quirk looked at me.

  “You got anything to say?”

  “I’ve been here twice,” I said. “There were always people sitting around the front room.”

  “So where were they when Ollie was getting clipped?”

  Belson shook his head. Quirk looked at me. I shook my head.

  “And why was Ollie’s gun still in the drawer?” Quirk said.

  “He knew the killer?” I said.

  “Or the killer came in so fast and did him so quick he never got a chance at it,” Belson said.

  “Guy like Ollie doesn’t usually sit around with no protection,” Quirk said.

  “Somebody wants to kill a guy like Ollie,” I said, “doesn’t normally walk into where he would be sitting around with protection.”

  “Maybe they knew he’d be alone,” Belson said.

  “Or that the protection wouldn’t interfere,” Quirk said.

  “Somebody called it in,” I said.

  “One of Ollie’s associates came in, saw him, didn’t want to get involved,” Belson said. “So he screws. But what if Ollie ain’t dead? So he stops someplace and calls nine-one-one.”

  Quirk nodded without comment.

  “Or somebody wants it known that he’s dead,” I said.

  “Like a warning?” Quirk said

  “Maybe,” I said.

  Quirk nodded again. He looked around the room. Then at Belson. Then at me.

  “It is always
a special treat,” he said, “to find you involved in a nice homicide.”

  “Imagine my pleasure,” I said.

  Quirk didn’t respond for a moment as he looked at the crime scene. Then he turned back to me.

  “Frank’s filled me in,” Quirk said, nodding sideways at Belson, “a little on your involvement. But let’s you and me sit in my car and go over it anyway.”

  “It is the duty of every citizen….” I said.

  “Yeah,” Quirk said. “Yeah, yeah, yeah.”

  32

  I sat in the front room of the mansion with April and her working girls. There were other people to talk with: the two women who worked in the office, the woman who tended bar, the woman who cooked, the woman who did the housekeeping. But April was adamant at keeping the two kinds of staff separate. So I talked with the professional staff first.

  It was a good-looking group. Their makeup was understated. Their daytime wardrobe tended toward skirts and sweaters. Some of them were wearing penny loafers. I felt like it was 1957 and I was running a Tupperware party.

  I explained how Ollie DeMars had been killed, and reminded them who Ollie was.

  “The Homicide commander,” I said, “cop named Martin Quirk, knows that a full-scale investigation will have to include you and could be a source of great embarrassment and serious hardship to all of you.”

  They all looked tense.

  “He’s willing to work around you for the moment. Let me do the investigating here.”

  They all looked a little less tense. Several of them were drinking coffee from mugs, holding the mugs in both hands.

  “Don’t be confused,” I said. “This will not be a whitewash. If I uncover something germane, I will tell Quirk about it.”

  They tensed up a little more.

  “Cops tell me he died around midnight on Monday night,” I said. “Who’s got an alibi?”

  Everyone stared at me.

  A cute blonde woman with a blue headband said, “You think one of us might have killed somebody?”

  “Just trying to eliminate anyone with an alibi,” I said.

  “So if I got one, does it mean I’m out of this.”

  “Means we don’t think you did it,” I said. “Doesn’t mean you don’t know anything.”

  “You wouldn’t suspect us if we were a bunch of school teachers,” the blonde said.

  “What’s your name?” I said.

  “Darleen.”

  “I won’t suspect you if you have an alibi, Darleen,” I said. “Do you?”

  She nodded.

  “Tell me,” I said.

  “I can’t,” she said.

  “Because?”

  “I was with my husband. We went to a parents’ meeting at the school, and my husband drove the babysitter home. Monday night midnight we were in bed together watching Charlie Rose.”

  “I see your problem,” I said.

  “We don’t have any street sluts here,” April said. “Most of my girls have a home life. It’s one of the reasons I hired them.”

  “And if this life gets dragged into that life,” I said, “it will cause a lot of people a lot of pain they don’t deserve.”

  April nodded.

  “Unless they killed Ollie DeMars,” I said.

  “None of my girls killed anyone.”

  I nodded.

  “And if they were with a client, the same kind of problem exists.”

  “We don’t have confidentiality,” April said, “we are out of business.”

  The women sat around the room watchfully.

  I looked at them, one at a time.

  “Anybody with an alibi they can tell me?” I said.

  No one said anything.

  “Hot dog!” I said.

  Everyone was quiet.

  “Okay,” I said after a while. “We’ll put that aside for the moment. We may visit it later, but right now let’s just talk a little.”

  “About what?” another woman said. She had on a white shirt and a red plaid skirt and wore her dark hair in a Dorothy Hamill wedge.

  “Everything, anything. What is your name?”

  “Amy.”

  “Tell me about yourself. You married?”

  “Yes.”

  “Kids.”

  “Yes.”

  “Where do you live?”

  “Suburbs.”

  “And how’d you get into this business.”

  “You serious?” Amy said.

  “Sure. I might as well get to know you.”

  I just wanted them talking. People liked nothing as much as talking about themselves. And Susan often reminded me that there was no way to know what might pop up in the course of talking about other things.

  “You are serious,” Amy said.

  I nodded.

  “You want to know how a married suburban mother ends up in a whorehouse.”

  I nodded.

  She looked at the other women. They looked at her. She looked at April. April shrugged. She looked around at the other women again.

  “Give him an earful,” Darleen said. “He might learn something.”

  Two of the women giggled. Amy nodded.

  “I tell him then you tell him?” she said to Darleen.

  “You’re on,” she said.

  33

  Once the deluge began, it was nearly impossible to staunch. They were so thrilled to be talking about themselves that I thought I might have to shoot my way out of there.

  Darleen wouldn’t tell me where she lived, or what her last name was. She was married to a guy who worked nights. He was nice enough, a good father, but he was kind of boring. Not so boring she’d want to leave him, and she guessed she actually did love him. But she liked sex more than he did. She had fooled around almost since they married, and to her, the work at the mansion was just more fooling around, except she got paid. She had a nice mutual fund going for the kids, which her husband didn’t know about, and she had a little mad money of her own, which her husband thought she earned with a pickup-and-delivery service in the suburban area where they lived…. Amy was a grad student, she wouldn’t say where, and had been hooking up with guys since junior high. Like Darleen, she enjoyed sex, and when the tuition bills started piling in, she thought if she were going to do it anyway, maybe she should get paid…. Jan said that getting paid for sex made her feel empowered. All of them agreed that it did. They were items of value…. Kelly was divorced and supported two children and her mother. Mother looked after the kids while Kelly was working…. Emily was an airline attendant…. Kate was a third-grade teacher…. They all enjoyed sex. None of them felt exploited…. All of them enjoyed the free time that the work gave them…. They also, though they never quite knew how to say it, liked being a band of sisters…. Two of them had responded to April’s solicitation on the Internet. Two more had been recruited by a charming man they met in a dating bar. No one would name him, but I assumed it was Lionel Farnsworth….

  “Everybody always talks about how prostitution exploits women,” Amy said. “But I see it as exploiting men. They pay us for something we’d been doing for free. It’s fun. And…” She giggled. “They’ll do pretty much whatever you say when you have them excited.”

  The other women giggled with her.

  “They are kind of pathetic,” Kelly said.

  “I had a guy always brought candy,” Jan said. “I always threw it out after he left.”

  “A fat whore with zits, perfect,” Emily said.

  They all laughed.

  “You know what else I like?” Darleen said. “I like working for April.”

  They all did a little hand clap.

  “I mean, I don’t want to sound like some women’s lib crackpot,” she said, “but it’s nice to work for a woman in a woman’s business.”

  They all clapped.

  “I mean,” Kate said, “there’s no pimp. You know how nice that is?”

  They clapped again.

  “How about Lionel?” Amy said.
/>   April frowned at her. But they were having too good a time talking about something they had probably never talked about—and to a man. No one responded to her frown.

  “Lionel was just, like, a recruiter,” Kate said.

  “He was so sweet,” Darleen said.

  “And he never came on to us,” Kate said. “He was a real gentleman.”

  They all nodded agreement.

  “And cute,” Kelly said.

  “That’s important,” Amy said. “Wouldn’t want to waste it on an ugly guy.”

  They laughed happily.

  “You all know Lionel?” I said.

  They did.

  “It’s getting on toward business hours, ladies,” April said. “Is there anything else?”

  “What’s going to happen?” Darleen said.

  I smiled at her.

  “In general?” I said. “Or as regards Ollie DeMars?”

  “Are we going to be safe here?”

  “Probably.”

  “Will it come out about us?” Darleen said.

  “No one wants to out you unless we have to,” I said.

  “Why would you have to?” Darleen said.

  All the women, including April, I thought, had tensed up again.

  “No reason I can think of,” I said. “As long as everyone tells me the truth.”

  Darleen looked at me carefully.

  “But if we told you the truth and had to be a witness, or something,” she said, “wouldn’t that be worse?”

  “I was hoping you wouldn’t think of that,” I said.

  “So we are not your first priority,” Darleen said.

  “Darleen,” April said.

  “No,” Darleen said. “I want an answer.”

  The others agreed with Darleen. I took in a little air.

  “My primary purpose here is to help April. But Ollie DeMars is part of whatever threat there is, and I need to figure out who killed him so that I can figure out how best to help April. Collateral beneficiaries of anything good I can do for April would appear to be you. All of you.”

  “Would you sacrifice one of us to help April?”

  “Probably,” I said. “But we’re now getting into one of those hypothetical realms, like if you had two children and both were drowning and you could only save one, which one would you save.”

  Darleen nodded.

  “But,” she said, “we actually might drown, we need to know.”

 

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