Too Many Murders

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Too Many Murders Page 11

by Colleen McCullough


  “No,” she said curtly, then summoned up a charming smile that suggested she was remembering that Myron, whom she liked very much, was tied to Carmine Delmonico by the strings that laced his heart.

  “Then I’ll leave you to your work.”

  Out in the foyer, he found Abe and Corey.

  “Did you get it home safely?” he asked.

  “As a baby, Carmine. We left Delia in charge.”

  “Good.”

  “Who’s the looker?” Corey asked.

  “Dr. Erica Davenport. Lovely but lethal.”

  “Isn’t she Myron’s new girlfriend?”

  “Yes, unfortunately.”

  “Come on, Carmine, Myron’s not impressionable,” said Abe.

  “I wouldn’t worry if she were another gold-digging bimbo, but she’s not. Her face might not have the power to launch a thousand ships, but her job combined with her intelligence just might. Still, it’s not my business. How’s Special Agent Kelly doing?”

  Corey and Abe laughed. “Not pleased when he found his filing cabinet on untouchable territory without that warrant, and he’ll have to go to Hartford to find a federal judge. So we sent him to see Doubting Doug Thwaites.”

  Carmine joined their mirth. “Brilliant! He’ll be hours.”

  Carmine, Corey and Abe decided to eat in the Cornucopia cafeteria, where, to Abe and Corey’s surprise, Carmine led the way to a roomy table where Michael Donald Sykes was eating a lonely lunch. Carmine’s prey—for such he clearly was—looked uneasy at first, then rather pleased.

  “Don’t you have a ticket to the executive dining room?” Carmine asked, unloading his New England clam chowder, chicken-and-rice, and lime Jell-O with pears and cream.

  “If I want it,” Sykes said defensively.

  “Isn’t the food upscale from this?”

  “That’s the trouble, it is. Also more expensive. I like eating plain. Besides, you’ve met Philip Smith—would you want to listen to him discussing which wine to have with his escaloppes de veau? What a pain that guy is!”

  “Not a wine buff, Mr. Sykes?” Corey asked.

  “I’m not an anything buff when it comes to food or drink,” said Mr. Sykes. “Model soldiers, now, that’s different!”

  “Shiloh spread out in the basement, huh?” Abe asked.

  Sykes looked scornful. “No! I’m a Napoleonic era man! Austerlitz and Marengo.”

  “And Waterloo?” Carmine enquired.

  “Waterloo is like the Civil War—common.”

  “How common is wealth among the Cornucopia executives?” Carmine asked, wondering if Mr. Sykes’s war games extended to military takeovers of industrial giants. That would certainly lift his basement activities out of the common way.

  “Apart from me and Erica Davenport, they’re all as rich as Croesus.” Michael Donald Sykes carefully cut his Jell-O into cubes and topped each one with a dollop of cream. “It’s an old-boy network—Mayflower families, fancy prep schools, Chubb University. It wouldn’t surprise me if they were all related. Desmond Skeps’s father was well heeled, you know, otherwise he would never have found the capital to establish Cornucopia. Up until 1938 he’d manufactured parts for automobiles, but it was chickenfeed, couldn’t have funded Cornucopia. Yet he had the clout to call on enough private loans among his friends from family and school to do it. But he was too smart to part with shares. As soon as the Second World War was raking in the money, he paid his loans back with interest and sat on the company like a dog with a dinosaur bone.”

  Well, well, thought Carmine, leaning back. Mr. Sykes might dwell in a limbo between middle and top management, but he sure knows all the dirt. A wonderful thing, the soul of a gossip.

  “So where does Philip Smith fit in?” he asked.

  “A Skeps connection by blood or marriage, certainly. Hugely rich! You always know how rich they are by the size of their salaries and perks. Like a vast fortune automatically entitles you to more. Take Gus Purvey, managing director of Landmark Machines—that’s a polite term for field and naval guns. Not one of the biggest or most profitable subsidiaries, but Gus Purvey earns almost as much as Phil Smith. On a par with Fred Collins of Polycorn Plastics, and Wallace Grierson of Dormus—turbine engines. Their take-home pay would stagger you, Captain. It would stagger the President of the United States of America, for that matter. Whatever they work for, it isn’t the money. Every last one of them could live the life of a playboy until he died, and still not have dented what he’s got.”

  “The Puritan work ethic?” suggested Abe.

  “Or the impulse to make even more?” asked Corey.

  “Huh!” Michael Donald Sykes sucked up the last cube of Jell-O. “I don’t believe it’s any of those reasons. I believe that the life of a playboy would bore them, but they can’t stand being at home all day with their wives. They’re avoiding their wives without the grief of philandering. I mean, can you see Philip Smith working up a sweat fucking? Nah! Never happen.”

  “Sykes is a cuckoo,” said Corey as they departed.

  “Maybe, but we know more about the men at the top of the Cornucopia heap,” said Carmine, very satisfied. “Philip Smith, Gus Purvey, Fred Collins and Wallace Grierson. Fine old WASP names, apparently accompanied by fortunes in the league of Scrooge McDuck. I know I have to dig deep into the contents of Special Agent Kelly’s filing cabinet, but I also have to dig into those four gentlemen, all of whom have the money to hire assassins.”

  “Speak of the devil,” Carmine said not a minute later, when Special Agent Kelly appeared out of the elevator. “How goes it?” he asked amiably. “Get your warrant?”

  “Tell me something, Captain, is everyone in this pint-sized state a total eccentric? My bosses are convinced Commissioner Silvestri is ready for the men in white coats, and the judge who finally issued me a warrant is like someone out of Longfellow!”

  “Longfellow is a poet,” said Carmine, “who didn’t versify about eccentrics. But I’m glad you got your warrant.”

  “Yes, and my filing cabinet,” Kelly said triumphantly. “Too soon for you to bust into it, lucky for you. But one thing—how did you wind up with Delia Carstairs? When the Director heard that she’d finally left the NYPD, he tried to get her, but she’d fallen down a crack somewhere.”

  “A crack named Holloman. She’s a total eccentric, you see,” Carmine said gravely. He jerked his head at a vacant table in the cafeteria, rapidly emptying. “In here, Special Agent, only that’s the last time I’m calling you something so clumsy. From now on, it’s Ted. I’m Carmine, no diminutive. Corey and Abe here are going back to Desmond Skeps’s offices while you and I have a little chat.”

  They sat down.

  “Okay, espionage,” Carmine said. “To me, the word means the selling of official secrets to an enemy power or nation, and I daresay it could be extrapolated to include enemy individuals. If Cornucopia is involved, then I presume the espionage isn’t of a place nature—plans, routines, locations. I would guess the secrets are tangible—advances in atomic reactors, analytical apparatus, plastics—a whole slew of stuff. Am I right?”

  Kelly was staring at him, stunned. “How did you work that out?” he asked.

  “I would have thought it was obvious to anyone with half a brain, Ted. I know you—know of you, rather. It was only a question of time before I remembered that you’re an espionage agent. And why else would the FBI be here? A murder? No, no matter how important the victim. The sensitive nature of Cornucopia’s contracts? Not unless the firm was already under scrutiny and Skeps’s murder confirmed federal suspicions. I’m right, aren’t I?”

  “Oh, yes,” Kelly said grimly. “Someone here has been giving secrets to the Communists for two years.”

  “How did you find out?”

  “When a top-secret missile fuel governor was stolen from the Russians with great pain and some loss of life. It turned out that the governor was ours, invented by Cornucopia Research. The Reds hadn’t even bothered to modify it.”

 
“Someone at Cornucopia Research is the villain?”

  “If he is, we can’t find a trace of him. It’s not Duncan MacDougall. He had the same kind of job at PetroBrit, and they’ve never lost the schematics of a pencil sharpener. The trouble is the same trouble we always have with private industry—people come and go anywhere they want if they’ve got the rank. Security? It’s a piece of paper you put in a safety deposit box.”

  “You’re talking about the fat cats at the top?”

  “Sure.”

  “Why would they steal for the Reds? They don’t need money, and it’s hard to doubt their patriotism.”

  “It’s hard to doubt anyone’s patriotism, Carmine, but treason happens. It’s ideological when money’s not the object of the game. I say ‘game’ because I’ve encountered two spies who did it to show how clever they were.”

  “But they slipped up in the end. What else has gone?”

  “It’s hard to know, but once you know there’s a leak, you look for any Russian or Chinese device that takes a sudden leap ahead. Other firms have lost secrets too, but in things they share with Cornucopia.”

  “I’m surprised you continue to use Cornucopia.”

  “Oh, come, Captain, you’re nobody’s fool! Industries that produce esoteric items are thin on the ground! And whoever the traitor is—our code name for him is Ulysses—he takes fine care to confine his thefts to articles or parts that Defense can’t obtain elsewhere. There’s also the onus of proof. Cornucopia Legal has argued most persuasively that the leaks happen in Washington elsewhere than at the Pentagon, like consultants, and they’re hard to refute. The most telling point against Cornucopia is that they can be connected to everything we know or suspect has been stolen.”

  “And do you think that Desmond Skeps’s filing cabinet will reveal the answers, Ted?”

  “No, I don’t. Skeps’s murder suggests to me that he found out who Ulysses is.”

  “Well, under ordinary circumstances I’d tell you to stick around and watch a murder expert in action, but you probably know that Holloman is snowed under with murders, and you’ve got your work cut out finding a spy. I’m not helpless, but Skeps is just one of eleven corpses, and I can’t be sure any of the deaths are related to Ulysses. Including Skeps’s.”

  “You can keep your murders,” Ted Kelly said with a grin. “How about we meet again for coffee here tomorrow, ten-ish?”

  “Suits me,” said Carmine.

  And down seven floors, to Polycorn Plastics and Frederick H. Collins, its managing director.

  Who was like Philip Smith, yet unlike him. The suit was wool from Savile Row, the tie that same silk Chubb edition, the links on his French-cuffed shirt platinum-and-enamel replicas of his old college coat of arms, the shoes custom-made in London. He looked fiftyish too, impeccably shaved and manicured, but he lacked Smith’s air of the weary aristocrat. In fact, thought Carmine, his face would have suited a butcher, and his black eyes found it hard to settle, not because they hunted for a mirror, but because they had things to hide.

  “Terrible, awful!” he said, squirming in his chair.

  “Were you and Mr. Skeps friends, sir?”

  “Oh, yes. Very close. All of us on the Board are. We’re a trifle older than Des—there was no one in his graduating class with whom he formed a close attachment, you see.”

  “Why do you think that was?”

  “I have no idea, though I heard his classmates didn’t like him. He drank heavily back then, and when he was drunk he could be—er—abrasive. Desmond Skeps Senior died a week after Des graduated, so Des stepped into Cornucopia as Chairman of the Board and owner of the majority of the shares. No experience whatsoever! Three of us already worked here as junior executives—Gus Purvey, Wal Grierson and me. Chubbers all! Phil Smith was thrust on us by Des as his cousin. I think he admired how Phil looked and talked. Since the word ‘work’ is as alien to Phil as the word ‘fuck,’ we got used to his being around as decoration. He’s sixty if he’s a day, so he knew Des’s dad well. Chubb, but before us.”

  “How many are on the Board, Mr. Collins?”

  “Phil Smith, Gus Purvey, Wal Grierson, Erica Davenport and yours truly, with Des in the chair and Phil as his deputy.”

  “That’s a very small board, surely?”

  “There’s no law regulating a board’s size, Captain.”

  “What about the external shareholders?”

  “They’re the four of us and hundreds of thousands of strays. Erica represents the strays.”

  “Does that mean she’s at loggerheads with the rest of you?”

  Collins laughed. “Lord, no! Think of us as like IBM—to own twenty shares is a small fortune, but peanuts all the same.”

  “How much top-secret work do you discuss?”

  “The lot,” said Frederick H. Collins, looking surprised.

  “You’re the head of Polycorn Plastics. Where do you make your cutting-edge advances, sir? At your factory?”

  The big butcher’s face crumpled into another bout of mirth. “No, sir! All I do is manufacture tried and true plastics. The research is where it should be—at Cornucopia Research.”

  “So you have no top-secret formulae lying around?”

  “No, I do not! By the time I see a new plastic, it’s been thoroughly tested and looks to anyone at Polycorn to be no different from everything else. I don’t broadcast advances.”

  “What makes a new plastic so desirable to the Reds?”

  “Do you have security clearances, Captain?” Collins demanded.

  Carmine handed over the typed contents of a wallet.

  After a thorough inspection, Collins shrugged. “Super-hard plastics that will prove suitable for the manufacture of hand and shoulder weapons,” he said. “Also different super-hard plastics for armor plating, engine blocks. Enough?”

  “Thank you, more than enough. Has any of your research been leaked to the Communists?”

  Collins gasped, pressed his hands against his eyes. “Oh, Jesus! Not as far as I’m aware. The first breakthrough since we knew about Ulysses came not much more than a month ago, and I refused to accept the formulae. In fact, I ordered Dr. MacDougall to put them and every last vestige of the test pieces including the shavings into his vault under seal. The Reds aren’t dumb, Captain, they do research too. But I will not see the Communists profit from my research! No new plastics will go into production until Ulysses is caught.”

  Okay, thought Carmine, I believe he’s sincere. Not a very likeable guy, but I pick him as a genuine patriot.

  “What does Special Agent Kelly say?” he asked.

  “Not a fucking thing,” said Frederick H. Collins bitterly.

  Time to change horses. “Are you married, sir?”

  “Yes,” said Collins, looking blank.

  “For how long?”

  “Two years, this time. I’ve had three previous wives.”

  “Any of them last longer than two years?”

  “My first, Aki. We were married twenty-one years.”

  “Do you have a family?”

  “Two boys by Aki, a boy by Michelle, a boy by Debbie, and another boy by Candy, my present wife.”

  “Lots of alimony.”

  “I can afford it.”

  He’s into bimbos, thought Carmine, wondering what had sent him off the rails after twenty-one years. Man, won’t there be a squabble after he dies, with all those boys! Obviously he had the money to hire professional killers, but it wouldn’t be in the service of Uncle Joe Stalin’s heirs. With nothing to suggest the espionage and the murder were connected, Frederick H. Collins’s name would remain written on the list stored inside Carmine’s mind.

  Then it was down two more floors to the offices of Landmark Machines, whose managing director was Mr. Augustus Barraclough Purvey. Not like the other pair, Smith and Collins. Purvey was Brooks Brothers from head to foot, wore a polka-dot bow tie and very expensive loafers. His thick, waving hair was greying, his smooth-skinned face was attractive, an
d his dark blue eyes looked directly into those seeking his. Carmine liked him much better than he had Smith or Collins.

  The only top-secret modification Landmark had lost to the Communists was a new gunsight, Purvey said.

  “Our real aim,” he went on, “is years away—namely, to link artillery fire to computers able to calculate the target precisely. It’s colossally complicated, and will require our sending up satellites whose function is to plot the globe. So it’s not exclusively Cornucopia. In fact, we only have a little corner of it. Everyone’s involved, from NASA on down.”

  “What effect would concrete knowledge of the project have on Russian or Chinese defense plans?” Carmine asked.

  “Serious, very serious. They smell something, but there are just too many cheeses on the board.”

  “What if Ulysses knows?”

  “Knows what? The thing I’ve just outlined to you, Captain, is so speculative and—and—ephemeral that I for one have no faith in our ability to do it.”

  “I thank you for your candor, Mr. Purvey. Now to other things. Are you married?”

  “I was, but not for the last ten years.” Purvey grinned. “In my opinion, women aren’t worth the pain. I’d want a quiet meal at home, she’d want to go to a party or a reception, get her picture in the society pages. My fault! I should have married one of my own kind. Instead I married a cocktail waitress. I mean, I don’t mind a party or a reception, but not every goddamn night!”

  “Any children?”

  “No. They would have slowed her down.”

  “Do you date?”

  “Oh, sure.”

  “Anyone I know?”

  “Erica Davenport. She’s my regular. Socially acceptable, a good blind for a guy who’s still a sucker for cocktail waitresses. Erica’s a good sport.”

  “What do you spend your money on, Mr. Purvey?”

  “Donzi motorboats. I’ve got a cabin on Moosehead Lake in Maine—Connecticut’s lakes are too crowded.”

  “How do you make it way up to Maine for a weekend?”

  “Fly my Sikorsky helicopter—I’m loyal to the locals.”

  “Do you travel regularly to anywhere else?”

 

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