The Big Killing

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The Big Killing Page 15

by Annette Meyers


  “I told him he was out of his fucking mind. I didn’t get it. He was making it with this sharp-looking piece from Connecticut—someone he worked with— but he was talking about marrying Buffie.” Georgie shook his head in disgust. “He said, can you believe this, none of us was getting any younger.”

  “Buffie?”

  “Yeah. She was one of the crowd—from the neighborhood—the four of us—” He raised his hand. “Same again here,” he called out to a passing waiter.

  Surreptitiously, she looked at her watch. Carlos would kill her.

  “Georgie, I’ve got to go—”

  “Wait a minute, Wetzon. Barry had some stuff of mine he was holding.” She could hardly hear him. Amsterdam’s had begun to fill up. People were standing three-deep at the bar.

  “I don’t know anything about that.” She started to stand.

  He clamped his hand on her shoulder and held her down, hurting her. “I went through his locker,” Georgie grunted, leaning beery-breathed into her. “Nothing. Not a goddam thing but old sweats and jogging shoes.”

  “Goddam it, Georgie.” Wetzon was furious. She’d had enough. “Kindly remove your hand,” she said through clenched teeth.

  Georgie took his hand away slowly, surprised by her reaction. His mouth twisted, jeering. “You’re a killer, Wetzon.”

  “I accept your apology, Georgie,” Wetzon said, standing. “One question.”

  “What?” He restored his Ray-Bans, covering his terrible eyes.

  “Is there going to be a funeral?”

  “Funeral? Barry?” Georgie laughed that high whinnying laugh. “Barry was a donor.”

  “A donor?”

  “Yeah. He signed one of those things on the back of his driver’s license that said you can have his organs. He loved the idea. He wanted everyone to have a piece of him, he used to say.” Georgie snorted. “Yeah. He wanted to be cremated and told me to spread his ashes along Wall Street and dump a little on the floor of the Exchange. Isn’t that a laugh?”

  “Very funny,” Wetzon said, not laughing. “I’ll see you, Georgie.” Her reflection looked back at her from his glasses.

  “Wetzon,” Georgie said, “if you remember anything, tell me first. And don’t talk to any strangers.”

  She didn’t answer. She was wondering why he had suggested Amsterdam’s on Eighty-second and Amsterdam, how he had known she lived on the West Side.

  25

  There were so many messages on her answering machine that the tape had run out, but she didn’t care. Carlos had pulled the plug on the phone in the bedroom, and she’d gotten the best night’s sleep since Barry’s murder. She had awakened peacefully in cool sheets, bright sunlight filtering in slatted patterns through the Venetian blinds. She’d managed to get back to the apartment only minutes before Carlos last night, so mercifully there’d been no involved explanations.

  Carlos was crooning “Singin’ in the Rain” in the kitchen, and the apartment smelled of fresh coffee and croissants. It was wonderful to be taken care of. All she really needed was a good wife. The warm sense of security she felt almost made her forget the events of the last two days. Almost.

  She moved Carlos’s towel off the shower rod and took a hot shower, acutely aware, now that she was rested, of her aching body. The bruise on her upper arm, in glorious shades of purple and yellow, was still quite tender. The one on her forehead was scabby and ugly. She rubbed shampoo into her hair and stuck her head under the steaming water. Then she turned off the hot water and took a final icy rinse, getting rid of the soap and closing her pores.

  She towel-dried her hair and put on her terry robe, padding barefoot into the kitchen, drawn by the magnetic smell of the coffee.

  “Coffee ... coffee ...” she moaned, like a wanderer in the desert calling for water.

  “Thought you’d never wake up, sleeping beauty,” Carlos said, breaking off his song. “The papers are full of the murder story, and you—the mystery woman in the case—you haven’t even told me anything about it.”

  “I don’t know anything more than I’ve told you.” She suddenly remembered why Carlos was there, why he’d stayed the night, and the small knot in her stomach came back, only bigger this time. “Did you hear anything during the night?”

  “No. Maybe it was all coincidence, no connection.”

  “But, Carlos, this building is pretty secure. Even small burglaries don’t happen here.”

  “Well, someone goofed, that’s all.”

  “Whatever, it’s pretty scary,” she said, pulling the terrycloth robe about her tightly.

  “I’m going out to get a locksmith, and I’ll get it done for you before I leave,” he assured her, “so not to worry. Then I have to get back to my life.” He smiled, excitement surfacing. “Marshall thinks there might be something for me in his new show—”

  “Oh, Carlos, that’s wonderful! Does he want you to audition?”

  Carlos nodded. “I’m picking up the script this afternoon.”

  “Great. What a super thing to happen. Have you been working out?”

  “Faithfully, darling,” he said, “even today. Used your barre. But let’s not get our hopes up. It hasn’t happened yet.”

  “I could do with a little workout myself this morning.”

  “Go ahead. I’ll be back as soon as I can.”

  She listened to the elevator door close and finished her coffee with her usual line-up of vitamins. She even took a big bite of Carlos’s half-eaten croissant, then, shrugging, finished it. She’d work it off. She changed into her leotard and did some stretches at the barre. Her body creaked a little, protested a lot. She was very tight.

  The phone rang. She took the towel from the barre and slipped it around her neck. She’d have to get it. The tape was out, and it might be important.

  “Hello.”

  “Leslie Wetzon? Is this Leslie Wetzon?” The voice was gravelly and coarse, somewhat familiar.

  “Yes, who’s calling?”

  “Mildred Gleason. I’m so glad I got you.”

  “Oh, yes, Mildred. I’m sorry I didn’t get back to you. It’s been pretty hectic ... because of the murder—”

  “I know— Look, that’s what I want to talk to you about.”

  “Okay, we’re talking.”

  “No, not on the phone. I can’t talk on the phone. In person, please, one on one.” The older woman sounded uncertain, not at all like the Mildred Gleason she had met that night at Harry’s. “I’ll come to you,” Mildred said, “wherever you say, whenever you say.” There was a hint of pleading in her voice. Mildred Gleason was not a pleader. “Please, it’s very important to me.”

  Wetzon thought for a minute. She vaguely remembered an appointment, an interview on her schedule downtown for tomorrow.

  “Hello, hello, Wetzon, are you there?” High anxiety.

  “Yes, wait a minute, Mildred. I want to check my appointment book.” She opened the Filofax and saw she had a meeting with Howie Minton at five o’clock the next day at the bar of the Vista Hotel at the World Trade Center. She could cancel, but why get backed up? He was a potential candidate. She could go downtown earlier and see Mildred Gleason around two-thirty, and look in on Shearson’s broker training program in the World Trade Center before she met Howie Minton. “Today is out, but I can come to your office tomorrow around two-thirty. Is that all right?”

  “No, it’s not all right. It must be today—as soon as possible.”

  Wetzon was taken aback by the imperiousness of her tone. “I told you I can’t do it today,” Wetzon said stiffly.

  There was no response for a few seconds, then ... I see. Well, it will have to do. Look, I’m very grateful ... you don’t know....”

  “It’s okay, but there really isn’t anything I can tell you—”

  “Thank you for this,” Mildred Gleason said hurriedly, whispering. “I’ll see you at two-thirty tomorrow.”

  Curious and intrigued, Wetzon replaced the receiver. The phone rang again. She pick
ed it up and said hello cautiously.

  “Wetzon, this is Smith.” Smith’s response was cold. “We have to speak seriously.”

  “About what? What’s the matter, Smith? What’s happened? Are you okay?”

  “It’s that animal. Carlos. I’ve been up all night ... sick about it. He’s a very bad person and he has a terrible effect on you.”

  “Oh, come on, Smith. Carlos has been my closest friend for almost ten years. You can’t bait him and expect him not to fight back.”

  “You’ll have to choose between us, Wetzon,” Smith said, beginning to cry. “I can’t be treated like that.”

  “I’m not going to do anything of the kind, Smith, so pull yourself together. You’re forgetting that I have heavier things on my mind right now.”

  “We’ll talk about it when you’re feeling better,” Smith backed off, fixing blame. “When you can handle it.”

  “I am handling it,” Wetzon insisted. “And we’re never going to talk about this again.” She hung up. What in hell had gotten into Smith lately? Wetzon felt as if her life had been turned inside out in the last twenty-four hours.

  Then she remembered the key. Did Smith’s odd behavior have anything to do with the key?

  26

  The office was a beehive of activity. It was Thursday morning, and the business of making money continued.

  Smith was on the phone with Loeb, Dawkins. “Jerry Matthews. Yes. The first invoice is dated October twentieth. I sent a duplicate in December.” She was making a major effort to keep her voice pleasant. “It is now over five months ... I would like to send someone down for the check.” Exasperation was creeping into her voice. “All right, Kathy. I hope so.” She slammed the phone down.

  “Standard procedure for them,” Wetzon said. “They’re not about to let us send for the check. They might lose some interest on the money.”

  Smith’s eyes glinted dangerously. “If they want a fight, we’ll give ‘em one.” She was wearing a deep plum knit suit with black braided trim, gold chains, and pearls. Around her throat was a long, narrow wisp of a band, a silk print tie of deep mauve cabbage roses. Her olive skin glowed.

  “You’re wearing a new suit,” Wetzon said, admiring. “Something special going on today?”

  Smith didn’t respond. She pressed the intercom. “Harold? Send another duplicate invoice on Jerry Matthews to Loeb, Dawkins, attention Kathy Cramer. Mark it fourth notice on the bottom.” She paused. “Just do it, please. No editorial comments.” She looked at Wetzon, who smiled. Harold was getting out of hand.

  “Seriously, Smith,” Wetzon said, “don’t you think we should drop Loeb, Dawkins as a client once they’ve paid us? Their slow payment is chronic. We’re a small business. If we were waiting for payment on a lot of placements from Loeb, Dawkins, we’d have no cash flow whatsoever, and we’d be out of business.”

  “Let’s think it through carefully,” Smith said, “when things have quieted down a little.”

  Wetzon nodded. Was that a dig? Maybe not. She’d give Smith the benefit of the doubt and try not to be sensitive. She looked at her watch. “Steve Switzer interviewed at Hallgarden this morning.”

  Harold opened the door. “Steve Switzer for Wetzon, on nine-o.” He stood in the doorway.

  “Come in and listen, if you want,” Wetzon said. She thought it was a good idea to give Harold as much exposure as they could before they moved him up to associate.

  “Steve? How did it go?” She heard horns honking, street noises. He was calling from a pay phone.

  Steve Switzer was the biggest producer at Murray, Allen, a disreputable penny-stock house that, rumor had it, was about to be closed down by the SEC. Switzer had been referred to Wetzon by a former Murray, Allen broker whom Wetzon had placed at Pru-Bache last year.

  Normally, a move would take a month or more from the initial interview to the start date at the new firm. And Wetzon always suggested that a broker see more than one firm, as a basis of comparison. But with Switzer, there was an undercurrent of urgency, and Wetzon was worried.

  “It went great,” Switzer said, shouting over the background noise. “I like this guy Garfeld. I want to go there. But I can’t talk now because I’m on my way to Bache.”

  “Bache?” Wetzon groaned silently.

  “Yeah. Warren set me up with his manager. Get me some feedback from Garfeld and I’ll call you later.”

  “Shit!” Wetzon said, hanging up. “He’s on his way to Bache—Warren set him up there. That’s rotten. Wouldn’t you think Warren would have let me do it? They’ll love Switzer at Bache.”

  Smith shook her head and pointed a well-manicured scarlet finger at Wetzon. “I told you, you can’t ever trust them.”

  “But what about Hallgarden?” Harold interjected.

  “Oh, right now he wants to go there, but let’s face it, Hallgarden is a small firm. Bache can make him a better offer. Let’s see what Andy Garfeld has to say.”

  Wetzon dialed Hallgarden and asked for Andy Garfeld.

  “I like him,” Garfeld told her. “He’s coming back tomorrow at nine o’clock to meet Gordon Kingston, our chairman.”

  “Well, we’re going to have to move fast with him, Andy, because he’s talking to Bache right now. And not through me.”

  “I’ll work something out. Have him call me when you hear from him again. Oh, and listen ... talk to him on how to dress.”

  “What do you mean?” She cringed. “How was he dressed?”

  “Sportjacket, striped shirt, red socks. It’ll never wash with Gordon.”

  Wetzon hung up the phone. She shook her head. It was all perception, how you looked at it. If your appearance was right and you said the right words in a forthright and confident tone, no one would doubt you. Brokers didn’t, as a rule, wear polyester, but every once in a while a client would reject a broker as unfit, and it was often because he wasn’t dressed properly. She remembered one broker who had lost his license because of unauthorized trading in several accounts. He had worn cowboy boots with his three-piece pinstripe, and after he had left the business in disgrace, everyone said, “Well, there, you see. He really didn’t fit in.” You could be forgiven a little cutting of legal corners, but only if you dressed properly. So much for individuality in an industry that prided itself on entrepreneurship.

  But for all the unwritten rules of dress, or the so-called dress code, if the broker’s numbers were big enough, if he made enough gross commissions for his firm, individualistic behavior was considered slight eccentricity, and the heads of firms looked the other way. One of the biggest producers at a major Wall Street firm wore jeans to the office.

  She sighed and looked at Smith. “I see it’s going to be that kind of day.”

  Smith turned. “Now what?”

  “Would you believe that Switzer went to his interview at Hallgarden in a sportjacket and red socks?”

  “Yes.” Smith’s attitude was so superior.

  “Oh, Smith.”

  “Wetzon, you are such a Hallmark card.” Smith smiled. “I’d really love to sit Switzer out with you, but I have a lunch appointment, and then after that—”

  “Something special?” Smith had made no further mention of Carlos, or Silvestri, for that matter, and Wetzon was not about to bring up either of them.

  “No,” Smith said, nose buried in her appointment book. “Obligatory lunch. Appointment afterward at Mark’s school.” She crossed to the bathroom and gave herself the once-over in the full-length mirror on the inside of the door. She added rouge to her cheeks and fluffed out her short, dark curls.

  Wetzon watched her curiously. Something was up. She could sense it. It was the same feeling she’d had yesterday at the precinct when Smith surrendered her to Silvestri.

  After Smith left, Wetzon sent Harold out for lunch and asked him to pick up an egg salad sandwich for her.

  She was worn out, but her mind ricocheted from question to question. Who had murdered Barry Stark? And why? What was Barry holding for Georg
ie? Had Georgie killed his friend? What did Mildred Gleason have to do with Barry’s murder, and why did she want to see Wetzon? Georgie had said Barry was doing a business deal with her—could she have killed him? What did that key open? And what about Leon Ostrow? He had been at the Four Seasons that night. Had Jake Donahue been there, too? Why else would Silvestri have asked her if she’d seen Donahue there? And Leon represented Jake Donahue and Jake Donahue was Barry’s boss. They wanted the key.... Always back to the key. Circles within circles within circles.

  And why was Smith behaving so strangely?

  Wetzon had thought of Barry as just another broker, perhaps a little crazier, a little greedier, than most, but now, in his death, he seemed to be taking on new dimension. There was Buffie, the girl he was going to marry, and the other girl—the one from Connecticut Georgie had mentioned—who worked with him at Donahue’s. Did Silvestri know about them? Had Georgie told Silvestri anything? She doubted it. Was Georgie the one who had tried to break into her apartment? Was it even connected with Barry’s death? And, she had almost forgotten ... who had stolen Barry’s attaché case? What was Barry doing with all those drugs from York Hospital? She had a pretty good idea what that was about. She remembered now that several brokers had told her Barry was a connection for drugs on the Street. Was Barry’s murder drug-related?

  It was too confusing.

  The phone rang. “Smith and Wetzon,” she said, grateful for the interruption.

  “I loved it,” Steve Switzer said, fresh from his meeting with Pru-Bache. “They took me to the trading floor. I think I could work there.” He was flying. “Cancel me at Hallgarden tomorrow.”

  “You can’t do that, Steve,” Wetzon said firmly. “First, what if Bache doesn’t come through with the deal you want? You can’t put all your eggs in one basket.” She meant what she said, and she was speaking calmly, sure of her territory. “But more important, Steve, this is a career decision. Bache is a behemoth organization. Prudential owns it. You would just be another fish in a big pond over there. You want to be with a firm that might still be bought by another company. You want to accumulate stock and stock options in the firm before this happens. When Primerica bought Smith Barney, I saw some brokers and longtime employees become millionaires overnight.” She knew, based on experience, that Steve Switzer would have a tough time going from being the top producer at his small firm to being one of many at Pru-Bache. That and culture shock would zap him. He would be starting all over again as a rookie in a new environment.

 

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