Always Say Goodbye: A Lew Fonesca Mystery

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by Stuart M. Kaminsky


  “Yes, but …” Ann prompted.

  “She’s happy for the first time in her life.”

  “And you’re afraid you’ll become like your mother?”

  “Yes.”

  “Interesting,” said Ann. “We’ll talk about it next time. Now, you owe me—”

  “A joke,” Lew said, putting on his cap.

  “No, twenty dollars,” she said. “Now that you have money, the price goes up. Now that you’ve told me about your mother, you have a choice. Either tell me a joke or tell me something else about you that I don’t know.”

  Lew was standing, head down in front of her. He reached into his pocket, pulled out his wallet, handed her a twenty-dollar bill and something small and flat and neatly folded over with thin white tissue paper. She carefully unfolded the paper and looked at what was inside.

  “Catherine?” she said.

  “Catherine,” Lew said.

  “She was lovely.”

  “Yes,” said Lew as Ann carefully rewrapped the photograph with tissue and handed it to Lew, who put it back in the sleeve of his wallet. “She was lovely and I got her killed.”

  “Abstract guilt, Lewis.”

  “No,” he said. “Real responsibility.”

  “Sit,” she said gently.

  “You’ve got someone …” Lew said, looking at the door.

  “The person sitting out there can wait,” said Ann. “She is too docile. That’s part of her problem. If I have her wait, she may get angry, which would accomplish more than fifty minutes of talk.”

  Lew was sitting again, cap on his knee, looking at Ann’s desk, seeing nothing.

  “Why do you think you are responsible for the death of your wife?”

  “The night before she died we had an argument.”

  “About what?” Ann prompted.

  “I don’t think I’m ready to talk about this,” he said.

  “Not ready? You drop a small bomb of guilt. You sit down. You wait for me to become gluttonous in my search for information and then you say you’re not ready? You are ready.”

  Lew looked around the room for something to distract himself, an uneven pile of mail on the desk, a slightly crooked small print of a seascape, a beam of light through the single high window, a bookcase filled with psychology and history books.

  “We had an argument about ambition,” he said. “I was happy where we were, where I was. Catherine was ambitious. She was good and she was getting recognized. She wanted to consider some offers from outside Chicago.”

  “Political?”

  “Some. I was willing but not enthusiastic. She wanted and needed enthusiasm from me. She deserved to have it, but I’m not good at lying.”

  “You lie to yourself like a professional,” Ann said.

  “There was no shouting, crying. There were no threats. Nothing was resolved when we went to bed. In the morning we didn’t say a word till after we had coffee and buttered toast at the window.

  “We went to work, didn’t see each other much,” he went on. “We had lunch together at a deli on Monroe. She told me a District Attorney in Tennessee was pressing her for an answer to his offer. Catherine was admitted to the bar in six states and working to get admitted in others. Tennessee was one of the first states after Illinois that had—”

  “Lewis, are you going to start chewing your hat now?”

  “No,” he said. “She needed enthusiasm from me. I wasn’t enthusiastic about moving to Tennessee. Chicago was … all I knew or wanted. She packed up her work for the day and told the secretary she shared with Michael Hawes that she was going home to work. She didn’t tell me.”

  Ann said nothing. She looked at him, waiting. He knew what she was waiting for.

  “I’ve been telling you I didn’t know why Catherine was going home at three o’clock that afternoon. Catherine left work early that day because of the argument. She left early and was killed by a drunk driver.”

  “You are a wonderful hysteric,” said Ann with what sounded like sincere admiration. “You have, until the last five minutes, displayed an ability over the past two years we have been talking to block out reality. It’s a challenge. Maybe I’ll write an article for the Florida Journal of Psychopathology. I would focus on your depressive hysteria. With your permission of course.”

  “Permission granted.”

  “Do you have any idea of why you have given me all these secrets, this cornucopia of bitter fruit at the very end of our time together today?”

  “I just wanted to tell you. I don’t want to talk about them. Not today.”

  “Congratulations,” she said. “We’ve made a significant move. We’ve added guilt to your depression. What we need now is a long session and a reasonable supply of biscotti without hazelnuts. My confession. I really don’t like hazelnuts. I’ve got you down for next Monday. Can you make it this Wednesday too?”

  “Yes.”

  Lew got up and put his cap on his head.

  The phone wasn’t ringing when Lew got back to his office. There was no new mail under his door. He had no papers to serve for the Sarasota law firms that he regularly worked for. He needed something to keep him from climbing back in bed. He decided it was time for Joan Crawford. He had selected A Woman’s Face and Daisy Kenyon from his stack of tapes.

  Someone softly knocked at the door. Lew considered not answering. Another soft knock.

  Lew opened the door.

  The man looked tired. He needed a shave and a haircut and a clean shirt. His right hand tightly gripped the handle of a duffel bag. Under his left arm was a painting of the jungle of a city night.

  Lew stepped back and Victor Lee stepped in.

  Promise me you’ll never forget me because if I thought you would, I’d never leave.

  —Winnie the Pooh

  Don’t let yesterday take up too much of today.

  —Will Rogers

  Only in the agony of parting do we look into the depths of love.

  —George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans)

  When I was fourteen, Death came to my bedside and I said, “Please wait till after my recital on Sunday.” When I was twenty-four, Death came behind me at my desk and I said, “Please wait till I finish the book I have been writing.” When I was forty-four, Death came again and I said, “Please wait till I finish this chapter.” When I was fifty-four, Death returned and I said, “Please let me fin-ish this paragraph.” When I was sixty-four, I said to Death, “Please let me finish this sentence.” When Death returns, I’ll say, “Please, one more word.”

  —Rebecca Strum, Mountains of the Moon

  Everything has a moral, if only you can find it.

  —Lewis Carroll

  BY STUART M. KAMINSKY

  Lew Fonesca Mysteries

  Vengeance

  Retribution

  Midnight Pass

  Denial

  Always Say Goodbye

  Abe Lieberman Mysteries

  Lieberman’s Folly

  Lieberman’s Choice

  Lieberman’s Day

  Lieberman’s Thief

  Lieberman’s Law

  The Big Silence

  Not Quite Kosher

  The Last Dark Place

  Toby Peters Mysteries

  Bullet for a Star

  Murder on the Yellow Brick Road

  You Bet Your Life

  The Howard Hughes Affair

  Never Cross a Vampire

  High Midnight

  Catch a Falling Clown

  He Done Her Wrong

  The Fala Factor

  Down for the Count

  The Man Who Shot Lewis Vance

  Smart Moves

  Think Fast, Mr. Peters

  Buried Caesars

  Poor Butterfly

  The Melting Clock

  The Devil Met a Lady

  Tomorrow Is Another Day

  Dancing in the Dark

  A Fatal Glass of Beer

  A Few Minutes Past Midnight

  To Catch
a Spy

  Mildred Pierced

  Now You See It

  Porfiry Rostnikov Novels

  Death of a Dissident

  Black Knight in Red Square

  Red Chameleon

  A Cold, Red Sunrise

  A Fine Red Rain

  Rostnikov’s Vacation

  The Man Who Walked Like a

  Bear

  Death of a Russian Priest

  Hard Currency

  Blood and Rubles

  Tarnished Icons

  The Dog Who Bit a Policeman

  Fall of a Cosmonaut

  Murder on the Trans-Siberian

  Express

  Nonseries Novels

  When the Dark Man Calls

  Exercise in Terror

  Short Story Collections

  Opening Shots

  Hidden and Other Stories

  Biographies

  Don Siegel: Director

  Clint Eastwood

  John Huston, Maker of Magic

  Coop: The Life and Legend of

  Gary Cooper

  Other Nonfiction

  American Film Genres

  American Television Genres

  (with Jeffrey Mahan)

  Basic Filmmaking

  (with Dana Hodgdon)

  Writing for Television

  (with Mark Walker)

  This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this novel are either fictitious or are used fictitiously.

  ALWAYS SAY GOODBYE

  Copyright © 2006 by Double Tiger Productions, Inc.

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof, in any form.

  A Forge Book

  Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC

  175 Fifth Avenue

  New York, NY 10010

  www.tor-forge.com

  Forge® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.

  eISBN 9781429965736

  First eBook Edition : July 2011

  LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

  Kaminsky, Stuart M.

  Always say goodbye : a Lew Fonesca mystery / Stuart M. Kaminsky.—1st hardcover ed.

  p. cm.

  “A Tom Doherty Associates book.”

  1. Fonesca, Lew (Fictitious character)—Fiction. 2. Married women—Crimes against—Fiction. 3. Widowers—Fiction. 4. Chicago (Ill.)—Fiction. I. Title.

  PS3561.A43A79 2006

  813’.54—dc22

  2006008398

  First Edition: December 2006

 

 

 


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