Book Read Free

The Alex Shanahan Series

Page 21

by Lynne Heitman


  We were quiet, both staring at the floor. The ground was covered with discarded handbills, some wet and soaked through, promising all manner of lewd exhibition at a gentlemen’s club down the street. I pushed a few of them around with the toe of my boot, trying to find a way to ask what I wanted to know. I decided on the direct approach. “John, do you know who planted the bomb?”

  He shook his head. “No.”

  “Would you tell me if you did?”

  He pushed his knit cap higher, then whipped it off altogether and wiped the sweat off his forehead with the back of his sleeve. “I wouldn’t tell you everything that goes on down there, but I would tell you that. Settin’ off a bomb on the ramp so close to the fuel tanks, an aircraft sittin’ right there on the gate—that’s just stupid. People coulda been killed.”

  “I’m thinking it was Big Pete’s idea.”

  “Nothing that big would happen without Big Pete knowing about it. But he didn’t plant the thing, and you’d never find a way to prove it was him told someone to do it.”

  “What’s the message?”

  “They’re trying to scare you, to let you know you’re not in charge. You pissed ’em off when you took out Little Pete. They’re not used to being challenged like that. The only other one ever did it was Ellen.”

  “And look what happened to her.”

  “What? I didn’t hear you.”

  “Nothing.” I hadn’t even been aware that I’d said it out loud. “John, tell me what you know about the IBG contract vote, the one that triggered the merger.”

  “Why? You think it has something to do with all this?”

  “Maybe. I keep running into references to the Majestic-Nor’easter deal, and the only link I can find to Boston is that IBG contract.”

  “Maybe it has to do with Big Pete tanking that contract.”

  I stared at John and not because I didn’t believe him, because I did. It was just so amazing what came out of his mouth when I figured out the right questions to ask. And it all seemed to be common knowledge floating around downstairs that never made it upstairs. “How did he do that? I thought it was a company-wide vote. Would he have had that much influence?”

  “He had as much as he needed. Back then at Nor’easter, Boston was the biggest local of the IBG by far. However the vote went here, that was how the vote was going to go for the company, and Big Pete wanted it killed.”

  “You wanted the proposal to pass?”

  “The way I saw it, the union shouldna had to give nothing back, but I knew if we merged we’d lose jobs. It happens every time. A lot of guys agreed with me till their tires started getting slashed, or their windows got broken, or they got acid poured on their car. One guy’s Rottweiler turned up dead. Broken back.”

  “Someone broke a Rottweiler’s back?” My own vertebrae stiffened at the thought.

  “I told you about Little Pete, how he acts when he gets drunk.”

  “It was him?”

  “He couldn’t keep his mouth shut about it. Wanted everyone to know how he used a baseball bat. The way I look at it, it was a lucky thing it was just the dog.”

  “Jesus Christ. What would be in it for Big Pete to kill the contract? What would he care? He was senior enough not to lose his job. So was the kid, right?”

  “He was paid off, pure and simple. He tried to make it look like he was taking a hard line for labor, but that guy doesn’t believe in anything, doesn’t stand for anything.”

  “Who paid him?”

  “I don’t know. There were so many deals and payoffs back then, it was hard to keep them all straight.”

  I began sorting through the list of loose ends, hoping to find one that he could shed light on in his matter-of-fact way. I’d already asked him about the Beechcraft. I’d found out what “fish” meant. Still unexplained was the porno video and Ellen’s secret liaisons.

  “John, this is awkward… I’m not sure how well you knew Ellen, but I’ve found a couple of things I’m wondering about. We—I think that Ellen may have been seeing someone, taking secret trips to meet him. Given the amount of scrutiny she received, I was wondering if anyone downstairs—”

  “You think she was going with someone on the ramp?”

  He began shifting his considerable weight from side to side, foot to foot, and I had the momentary thought that it might have been him. Nah. “I was actually thinking that someone from the ramp might have seen or heard something. It seems like a subject that would draw interest among your colleagues.” He was shifting faster and faster, and I knew I was on to something. “Is it true, John? Has someone said something to you?”

  He turned and leaned one shoulder against the wall and looked straight down so I couldn’t see his face. “I don’t think I should talk about this. What good would it do now?”

  A surge of excitement pushed through my tired muscles and exhausted brain. He knew. “It might help us figure out what happened to her.”

  He considered that for a moment as he let out a long sigh. “One of my guys was in Miami last year for a wedding. He had to fly back on United on an overnight to get back for his shift, and he saw the two of them at the airport that night. He was on Majestic and she was on my guy’s flight on United. When she saw my guy, she started acting really antsy, trying to hide.”

  “Who, John? Who was the man on Majestic?”

  “Lenny Caseaux.”

  I leaned against the wall next to him. “Your guy saw Ellen and Lenny together in Miami?”

  “Yeah, but they were acting funny, like ignoring each other.”

  “Like two people act,” I said, “when they don’t want to be seen together.” What a dispiriting thought. “So it’s true after all.”

  “I made my guy promise not to tell anyone, and I don’t think he ever did. I never heard anyone else talking about this.”

  “Ellen was good at keeping secrets”—I looked at him—“and you were a good friend to her.” My second wind had blown out, and I was ready to go. “I think I’m going to get on one of those trains and head back to the airport. I’m out of gas.”

  “Before you do, there’s something else I gotta tell that I wish I didn’t have to.”

  I could tell by the catch in his voice that it was something I wasn’t going to like. In fact, he was so uncomfortable that he couldn’t even look at me. It was alarming. “What? What is it?”

  “There’s been some talk downstairs…”

  “About what?”

  “About you. About Little Pete. He’s got nothing better to do these days but sit around and get plastered, and he’s worked up a pretty good hard-on about you—” He caught himself and blushed. “I’m sorry, I—”

  “Go on, what is he saying?”

  “The word is that he’s talking about how something could happen to you like it did the last one, to Ellen.”

  He was staring straight down, talking slower and slower with every new revelation. I wanted to grab him by those broad shoulders and shake him. “What else?”

  “He’s saying that suicide’s no good. Who would believe two in a row, right? But an accident, maybe…” He didn’t have to finish. He had finally made eye contact and was looking at me as if I was in real trouble.

  “Oh, my God.” I started pacing the narrow tunnel, back and forth, the soles of my boots slick on the damp floor. “This is… how can he… what kind of a place is this?”

  “I know,” was all he could come up with.

  We stared at each other for a moment, the dank air pressing in, feeling like more of a presence in the tunnel than the live human being curled up on the ground.

  “Does he mean it? Should I be worried, or is it just talk?”

  Before he could respond, a train rumbled overhead. He waited for the train to pass before answering. But I saw the answer in his eyes, and even standing in that stuffy passageway wearing too many clothes, I felt a chill, one that came from someplace deep and refused to pass. When it was quiet again, I asked him, “John, do you believ
e that Ellen was murdered?”

  He checked the tunnel both ways and moved closer. “When you’re downstairs, you worry most when it’s quiet. A thing happens, something’s going on, you can’t go nowhere without you hear all about it, the stuff that’s true and especially the stuff that isn’t. GM dies. Kills herself. You’d expect nothing but talk about it, all day, every day.”

  “Nobody’s talking?”

  “Everybody’s looking over their shoulder, but no one’s talking.”

  “But you haven’t heard anything definitive, right? You don’t know anything for sure.”

  “That’s the thing I’m saying. Nobody ever says it for sure, but that don’t mean they don’t know.”

  I started piling the rest of my layers back on—coat, hat, scarf. I felt claustrophobic in the tunnel. I wanted to be out in the open, around people. “I don’t want to do this alone, John. I can’t.”

  “I’ll help you best I can.”

  “I know you will, but I’m talking about Dan. I want to tell him all this stuff.”

  He sucked in his upper lip and raised his eyes to the ceiling, and I knew I’d put him on the spot. Frankly, I didn’t care. “I have to tell him I have a source, John. I won’t tell him it’s you, but I need his help, and if I don’t tell him I’ll never be able to explain where all this information is coming from. And I want to tell him about these threats. Please, John.”

  He switched to staring at the knit cap, which he was working with both hands. “You trust him?”

  “I do trust him, and if you don’t, I wish you’d tell me why.”

  His answer was a shrug. “All right. If you think you have to. But it’s under the condition that you never use my name.”

  “Thank you. I’ve leaving and I know you don’t want to walk with me, but will you keep an eye on me from a distance until I get onto the train? Better yet, I think I’ll take a cab.”

  “Sure, and I’ll tell Terry what you tried to do for him.”

  I started to walk, then remembered something else I’d meant to ask before I’d become terrorized. “Was Angelo involved in this vote fixing? Is that why Ellen would have wanted to talk to him?”

  “Whatever Big Pete’s into, Angelo knows about it.”

  “They’re friends?”

  “For years.”

  “Do you have any influence with Angelo?”

  “Nobody influences him except his wife, Theresa.”

  “Okay.” I wasn’t sure how that helped me. “Thanks.”

  I turned one way in the tunnel, and he went the other over to the inbound platform. As I reached the top of the stairs, I turned and looked for him. He’d been watching me from behind a post, and as I headed out of the station and to the street, he stepped onto a train and didn’t look back.

  I had once felt safe with John. Now I didn’t feel safe with anyone.

  By the time I slid the plastic card key into the slit in my hotel room door, it was almost ten o’clock. My clothes felt damp and heavy, and I couldn’t wait to peel them off.

  The orange message light on my phone was on, its reflection blinking in the dark room like some kind of a coastal beacon signaling a warning in the night.

  I flicked on the light, took one step in, stopped short. I took another halting half step and my mind went blank, short-circuited by the scene right in front of me. All the dresser drawers were open. My clothes were on the floor. My briefcase was on its side, its guts spilled out on the table. I stood in the silent room with both hands pressed against my heart, trying not to panic. Only, it wasn’t silent. A noise—a sweeping sound, back and forth. It was… Jesus, it was coming from behind me and it sounded like… I made myself turn around, and when I saw it, my heart turned to ice and all the blood pumping through it turned cold.

  It was a noose, a big, stiff noose with a big knot, and someone had looped it over the thing—that metal door thing, the pneumatic arm. I’d set it in motion when I’d walked in, and it was still swinging like a pendulum, scratching lightly against the paint. I tried to make my brain work, but it wouldn’t. I tried to make my body respond, but it wouldn’t. I couldn’t take my eyes from the noose. It felt like a living thing, like a bird that could fly off the hook where it was perched and ensnare me, wrap itself around my neck, and squeeze the eyeballs out of my head. The sick drawing of Ellen emerged from some feverish corner of my memory. I stumbled back, then a thought, a horrible thought as my gaze flew around the room—he could still be in here. I blew straight out the door and down to the lobby, where I had the front desk call security.

  An hour later, I was checked into the Airport Ramada, the seedier of the two airport hotels. I walked into my new room, went straight to the phone, and dialed the number from my address book, the one I had never really forgotten no matter how hard I’d tried. This time when his voice came on I closed my eyes and counted to myself and after the beep I left my number and my message, “I need to talk to you. Please call.”

  Chapter Twenty-seven

  “So the only thing missing was this tape?” Dan was trying to be somber and concerned as we stood in the window at Gate Forty-two, but he couldn’t completely hide his excitement. A hotel room invasion was exactly the kind of thing that got his blood flowing. Too bad it had happened to me and not him.

  “A tape is missing, but it’s definitely not the one he was looking for. The East Boston Video Vault is not going to be pleased with me. It was their only copy of The Wild Bunch, the anniversary edition.”

  “What’s that?”

  “It’s an old western. A classic.”

  He stared.

  “Sam Peckinpah? William Holden? Ernest Borgnine?”

  “I never would have pegged you for westerns, Shanahan.”

  “I love westerns, but this is not just a western. It’s a—”

  A crashing noise rattled through the silent concourse. I flinched, then realized it was the wire-mesh gate at the throat of the concourse. Someone at the security checkpoint had rolled it up into its nest in the ceiling, probably Facilities Maintenance doing their daily calibration of the metal detectors. It was four-thirty in the morning, and the Logan operation of Majestic Airlines was open for business.

  “Take it easy, boss.”

  “I’m edgy.”

  “Do you think it was Little Pete who was in your room?”

  “Yes, I do. He touched all my things. My clothes were all out of the drawers. In the bathroom my toothbrush and my razor, all my makeup, it was all there but moved, everything moved so that I would know that it had been touched. It felt personal. I felt him there. It made my skin crawl.”

  Dan leaned back against the window, hands in his pockets, and crossed one foot over the other at the ankle. He looked as if he’d gotten dressed in the dark this morning. His shirttail was out, his tie was draped around his neck, and one button was missing from his shirt. I probably didn’t look much better, although I had fewer parts to deal with. I had on a simple dark brown and slate blue turtleneck sweater, a long, heavy one that came down almost to my thighs. I wore it over a brown suede, shin-length skirt and leather boots, and is it any wonder I had every inch of my body covered up this morning? Our coats were in a pile on one of the chairs in the row behind us.

  “We know he knows where you were staying,” Dan said. “He’s got plenty of free time on his hands since he’s not working, and he hates your guts.” He threw me a sideways glance and grinned.

  “This is not funny to me.”

  “I’m sorry, boss. I’m teasing you. I’m getting you back for not telling me that you found Ellen’s snitch.”

  “I did what I thought was right. He’s paranoid about someone finding out what he’s doing, and I can’t blame him. Everyone knows everything that goes on in this place.”

  He tapped his knuckles and then his St. Christopher’s ring on the vertical metal strut that separated the large windowpanes. It was the only noise in a quiet concourse that felt cavernous at that time of the morning. “Well, fuck h
im,” he said finally, almost to himself.

  “Excuse me?”

  “Fuck him if he doesn’t trust me.”

  “It’s good that you’re not taking this personally. Let’s focus on his information and not him.”

  “Okay. Why would Little Pete take your copy of—what the hell is it? The Wild Bunch?”

  “Obviously, he thought it might be something else. Now I have a box with no video. Sound familiar?”

  “The porno box in Ellen’s gym locker.”

  “Exactly. I had plenty of time to think about this when I was lying awake all last night staring at the ceiling. I think that Dickie Flynn sent Ellen a videocassette. That’s what was in the mystery package.”

  “Why would they think you have it, especially when you don’t?”

  “All I can figure is that someone found out I rented a VCR, jumped to the conclusion that I had found the tape, and came looking. But only for the tape. All the stuff from Ellen’s box, her files and mail, it was dumped on the floor but it was all still there.”

  “What does the snitch say?”

  “I haven’t had a chance to ask him, but the package he described would have been about the right size. It could have been a videocassette, but he never looked inside the envelope, so he wouldn’t know for sure.” When I leaned against the window next to Dan, the glass felt cold on my arm all the way through my thick sweater. “I think we’re looking for Dickie Flynn’s videocassette, I think it’s the key to whatever happened to Ellen, and the Dwyers think we already have it.”

  Dan tilted his head from side to side, trying out the idea. “What’s on the tape?”

  “I don’t know. Let’s start with why Dickie Flynn would send his package to Ellen in the first place. Did he even know her?”

  “He knew her. She went to visit him when she heard he was sick. Between Nor’easter and Majestic the guy had given thirty-five years to the company, and she figured someone should pay their respects. Lenny couldn’t be bothered.”

 

‹ Prev