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Koko brt-1

Page 59

by Peter Straub


  Painted on another wall were the slogans A DROWSY STIFLED UNIMPASSIONED GRIEF and A MAN OF SORROW AND ACQUAINTED WITH GRIEF.

  Poole passed the photographs to Underhill.

  “I’ll show you the other half of why I met you at the airport,” Murphy said. He took a copy of a typewritten letter from the envelope and gave it to the young detective. “This time give it to Dr. Poole, Dalton.”

  Dalton smiled handsomely at Maggie and handed the sheet of paper to Michael.

  “St. Louis police found it in his desk.”

  So this was how he had persuaded the journalists to come to him—Harry Beevers had been right. Poole read the letter very slowly:

  Dear Mr. Martinson,

  I have decided that it is no longer possible for me to remain silent about the truth of the events which occurred in the I Corps village of Ia Thuc …

  He became aware that Murphy was saying something about Roberto Ortiz’s apartment. The detective was holding up another typed sheet of paper. “It’s identical to the one addressed to Mr. Martinson, except that the writer instructs Mr. Ortiz to reach him at an address on something called”—he glanced at the sheet—“called Plantation Road, in Singapore. Which is where his body was found.”

  “Only these two letters were found?”

  Murphy nodded. “Some of the others must have done as he asked, and destroyed the letters. Anyhow, these letters and the room at the Y were the reason we were so interested in you, Mr. Underhill.”

  “Do you have any idea who placed the anonymous call?”

  “Do you?” Murphy asked.

  “Michael and Connor and I feel it must have been Harry Beevers.”

  “But if he got your friends to lie to me about your whereabouts, why would he send me out to arrest you?”

  “You know why that asshole called the police,” Conor said to Poole. “He was going to meet Koko, and he wanted you out of the way.”

  “So where is Mr. Beevers now? Trying to capture this man by himself?”

  Nobody spoke.

  “Get Beevers on the telephone,” Murphy said, and with a final look at Maggie, Dalton hurried out of the room.

  “If you people are hiding anything more from me, I promise you, you’ll spend a lot of time wishing you hadn’t.”

  They sat in silence until Dalton returned. “Beevers isn’t answering his phone. I left a message for him to call you as soon as he got back, and I sent a car over to his place in case he’s there.”

  “I think our business is over for the moment,” Murphy said. “I really do hope that I am through with you people. All of you are lucky not to be in jail. Now I want you to get out of my way and let me do my job.”

  “Are you going down to Chinatown?” Michael asked.

  “That is none of your business. You’ll find your car out in front, Mr. Poole.”

  “Are there any caves in Chinatown?” Underhill asked. “Anything that might look like a cave?”

  “New York is full of caves,” Murphy said. “Get out of here. Go home and stay there. If you hear from this man Dengler, call me immediately.”

  “I don’t know what’s going on,” Conor said. “Dengler? Will somebody sort of fill me in on what I missed?”

  Underhill pulled Conor toward him and whispered something in his ear.

  “I want to suggest something to you before you go,” Murphy said. He stood up behind his desk, and his face mottled with the force of the anger he did not allow himself to show. “In the future, when you come across something important to this case, do not mail it to me. Now please let me do my work.”

  He walked out of the office, and Dalton trailed behind him. Conor said, “Mikey, what is this? Dengler?”

  A uniformed policeman appeared in the door and politely told them to go away.

  3

  “I have to call Judy,” Poole said when they got outside. “We have a lot of things to get straight.”

  Maggie suggested that he make the call from Saigon. Poole looked at his watch—four o’clock.

  “Harry loved that bar,” Conor told Ellen. “I think he spent most of his afternoons there.”

  “You’re talking about him as though he was dead,” Ellen said.

  “I think we’re all afraid of that,” said Tim Underhill. “Michael told him our plane was getting in at two, and I bet he somehow managed to arrange a meeting with Koko around then. So it’s been two hours—if Dengler called Harry in order to turn himself in and Harry tried anything tricky, which would be impossible for Harry not to do, probably nobody could save him now.”

  “Can you explain all this stuff about Dengler now?” Conor asked.

  “That will require a drink,” Tim said. “For you, not for me.”

  Poole opened his car, and Maggie stepped beside him. “There’s someone uptown I want you to meet. My godfather.” He looked at her curiously, but she merely smiled and said, “Can all of us really squeeze into your car?”

  They all could.

  As Michael drove off, Underhill began describing their visit to Milwaukee. Underhill had always been a good describer, and while Poole drove down Seventh Avenue he saw the Spitalnys’ sad kitchen, and George Spitalny’s attempt to seduce Maggie with an old photograph; he saw an enraged man pounding a tire iron against the back of a bus, and snowdrifts like little mountain ranges. Kitty’s Pretty Muff, and the gas flares in the Valley. The smell of sizzling Wesson oil, Helga Dengler’s dog’s eyes. Little M.O. Dengler standing behind the body of a deer he had skinned and gutted.

  “Michael!” Maggie screamed.

  He twirled the wheel just in time to avoid ramming a taxicab. “Sorry. My mind was back there in that terrible house. And I hate the idea of giving up when there’s some chance that Harry is still alive.”

  “And Dengler too,” Underhill said. “Murphy said that New York is full of caves. Maggie, I don’t suppose that you can think of anything in Chinatown that might even faintly resemble a cave?”

  “No,” Maggie said. “Well, not really. I used to go to this place with Pumo that was in an arcade. I suppose it was as close to a cave as you can get in Chinatown.”

  Poole asked where it was.

  “Off Bowery, near Confucius Plaza.”

  “Let’s go take a look at it,” Underhill said.

  “Do you want to?” Poole asked.

  “Don’t you?”

  “Well,” Poole said.

  “You can’t give up now, Poole,” Maggie said. “You ate bad kielbasa in George Spitalny’s kitchen. You waded through Salisbury steak at the Tick Tock Restaurant.”

  “I’m the explorer type,” Poole said. “Conor? Ellen?”

  “Do it, Michael,” Ellen said. “We might as well try.”

  “You can tell she never met Harry Beevers,” Conor said.

  When Michael drove past Mulberry Street in the thick traffic on Canal Street, Underhill peered past the upturned collar of his huge coat and said, “Our friends are out in force. Take a look.”

  Poole glanced through the side window into Chinatown. Down on Mulberry Street, red lights spun on top of police cars drawn up to the curb; other red lights bounced off shop windows on Bayard Street. Poole glimpsed a group of policemen trotting diagonally across the street in a cluster, like a platoon.

  “They’ll find him,” Conor said, sounding as if he wanted to make himself believe it. “Look at all those cops. And we don’t know Beevers tried anything funny with Koko, not really.”

  Now they were passing the entrance to Mott Street. “I don’t see anything down there,” Poole said.

  “It looks like two cops are going door to door,” Underhill said. “But we really don’t have any proof that Harry is down here, do we, or that he tried to double-cross us and Dengler?”

  “He wanted Murphy to stop us before we got any further than the airport,” Poole said. He looked sideways into Elizabeth Street, which was emptier than the others. “That’s proof of something. He wanted us out of the way.”

  Poo
le turned with the traffic toward the tall white towers of Confucius Plaza.

  “There it is,” Maggie said, gesturing to the far side of the street. Poole looked sideways and saw an opening in the row of shops and restaurants along Bowery. Light penetrated the opening for about five feet, then melted into shadow. Maggie was right. It did look like a cave.

  Poole found a parking spot in front of a fish market on Division Street. When he got out of the car, he saw frozen fish guts and shiny puddles of ice on the sidewalk. “Let’s just try to stay out of Murphy’s way. After we check out the arcade we can go to Saigon, and I can begin figuring out where I’m going to live.”

  They began moving up Bowery in the stiff cold wind that came around the curved towers. A single policeman emerged from Bayard Street onto Bowery, and Michael realized that he did not at all want the policeman to walk into the arcade. Murphy and the rest of the policemen had Mulberry Street, Mott Street, Pell Street—all Poole wanted was the arcade.

  The policeman swiveled toward them, and Poole recognized him—he was the fat-necked young officer who had led Michael upstairs to the meeting on the morning of the line-up. The man looked idly at Poole, then glanced down at Maggie’s legs. He turned his back on them and walked down Bayard Street.

  “Oink,” Maggie whispered.

  Poole watched the young policeman waddle down Bayard Street toward a patrol car beside which a band of uniformed men gazed into the windows of a grocery store while they stood around looking vaguely official.

  Seconds later the five of them stood before the arcade. Maggie took the first step, and as they walked in they fanned out to cover both sides.

  “I wish we were looking for something specific,” Underhill said. He was moving forward slowly, trying to take in every inch of the floor.

  “There’s another level downstairs,” said Conor, who was with Ellen on the arcade’s right side. “Let’s check that out when we’re done up here.”

  “I don’t understand why we’re doing this,” Ellen said. “Don’t you think your friend would have arranged to meet Koko—this Dengler—in a park, or on a corner someplace? Or in an office?”

  Poole nodded, looking at a dusty display of women’s underwear. “If he just planned to meet him, that’s what he would do. But this is Harry Beevers we’re talking about.” He moved past posters for a rock club, and looked back at Conor, who was leaning on the railing of the stairs with his arm around Ellen Woyzak’s shoulders.

  “And the Lost Boss wouldn’t do anything simple,” Conor said. “He’d cook up some plan. He’d tell him to meet him somewhere and plan to meet him somewhere else. He’d want to take him by surprise.”

  They went past the angle in the arcade and stood for a moment looking at cold grey Elizabeth Street.

  “Let’s say Koko finally answered his ads,” Poole said. “It’s not impossible.”

  “Tina always answered my ads.”

  “That’s probably where he got the idea,” Poole said.

  “Okay, but why would he want to meet Koko in a cave?” Ellen asked. “That’s why we’re here, isn’t it? Because this is the only place Maggie could think of in Chinatown that looks like a cave?” She looked at each of the three men, who did not answer her. “I mean, wouldn’t it make more sense to get him to walk past a certain building and jump out at him? Or something like that?”

  “Harry Beevers once had the time of his life in a cave,” Underhill said. “He went inside it, and when he came out he was a famous person. His whole life had changed.”

  “Let’s check out the stairs,” Conor said. “Afterward we can go back to Saigon and wait for Murphy to tell us what happened.”

  Poole nodded. He had lost heart. Murphy would eventually come across Beevers’ corpse in some tenement room. He would have a card in his mouth, and his face would be mutilated.

  “Shouldn’t there be another light down there?” Maggie asked.

  They were at the top of the stairs, looking down into the darkness.

  “Burned out,” Conor said.

  Weak light came out into the lower level of the arcade from the barber shop. Further back, the light from another shop cast a fan-shaped gleam out onto the tiles.

  “No, it was taken out,” Maggie said. “Look.” She pointed at the empty socket set into the ceiling at the bottom of the stairs.

  “Took it out because it was burned out,” Conor said.

  “Then what’s that?” Maggie asked. In a corner of the bottom step, a nub of brass was just visible to them.

  “Looks like the bottom of a light bulb to me,” Ellen Woyzack said. “So somebody—”

  “Not somebody. Harry,” Poole said. “He unscrewed the bulb to conceal himself. Let’s go down and have a look.”

  Strung out along the top step, they began to move down the stairs in unison. Harry Beevers had hidden on these steps, after having arranged a police reception for them at the airport. What had happened then?

  “It’s the whole bulb,” Maggie said. She held it to her ear and shook it. “Nothing rattles in there.”

  “Well, looky here,” Conor said.

  Poole took his eyes from the light bulb and saw Conor holding out toward him a shiny pair of handcuffs.

  “Now I believe all this,” Ellen said. “Let’s take the handcuffs to Murphy and get him to come back here with us.” She wrapped her arms around herself and stepped closer to Conor.

  “I think he’d toss us all in the slammer if he saw us down here,” Conor said. “Beevers bought these, right?”

  Poole and Underhill nodded.

  “I want to see about something,” Maggie said, and went down the rest of the way, still clutching the light bulb. Poole watched her go into the barber shop.

  “I think Dengler took out the light bulb,” Conor said. “I bet Dengler was waiting for him when he got here. And he took him somewhere, which means they aren’t too far away.”

  Maggie came out of the barber shop looking very excited. “They saw him. The barbers noticed that the bulb was gone—burned out, they thought—early this afternoon. Later they saw a white man standing on the stairs. They thought he was a policeman.”

  “That’s funny,” Poole said. “Harry always wanted people to think he was a cop.”

  “It wasn’t Harry,” said Underhill. “They saw Dengler.”

  “Did they say anything else about him?”

  “Not really. They said he stood there a long time, and then they forgot about him, and when they looked the next time, he was gone. They didn’t see a struggle or anything.”

  “I don’t suppose they would have,” Poole said. “If you were going to take somebody quietly out of the arcade, which way would you go?”

  “That way,” Ellen said, pointing toward Elizabeth Street.

  “Me too.” Poole went up the steps ahead of the others.

  “What are you going to do, Michael?” Ellen called after him.

  “Take another look,” Poole said. “If Dengler hustled Beevers out onto the street, maybe something else fell out of his pockets. Maybe Beevers was bleeding. Harry wouldn’t have come unarmed, given what he intended to do. There has to be something out there.”

  It was almost hopeless, he knew. Koko could simply have shoved a knife into Beevers and dragged his body outside to a car. Anything Beevers would have dropped—a paper, a matchbook, a scarf—would have been blown away by the wind.

  “What are we looking for?” Maggie asked as they walked out onto the Elizabeth Street sidewalk.

  “Anything Beevers might have dropped.” Poole began moving down the sidewalk, looking at the pavement and the curb. “Conor, will you take the middle of the street? Tim, maybe there’s something on the other sidewalk.”

  “Conor,” said Ellen.

  Tim nodded, hunched himself against the wind in his big coat and hat, and crossed the street. He began making slow side-to-side sweeps up the opposite sidewalk. Maggie floated across the street to join him.

  “Conor?” Ellen repea
ted.

  Conor put his finger to his lips and walked out into the middle of the street. Poole moved slowly back and forth across the sidewalk, hoping to find anything at all that might tell him what had become of Beevers. Looking down for something he was not finding, he heard Maggie saying something to Underhill in her precise comedie voice, and then heard her giggle.

  “Oh, hell,” Ellen said, and went out into the middle of the street after him. “I suppose if we find any severed fingers or other body parts you won’t object to my yelling my head off.”

  All Poole had seen on the sidewalk were two pennies, a punctured nitrous oxide capsule, and a tiny unstoppered vial which he failed to recognize as the former container of ten dollars’ worth of crack. Ahead of him on the pavement were a discarded black rubber child’s boot and something that looked like a damp ball of fluff but which Poole was certain would turn out to be a dead sparrow. More than two hours ago, Koko had caught Beevers in his own killing box. It was likely that Beevers was dead by now. What he was forcing the others to do was quixotic. Yet his body still felt a spurious excitement. They had been right about the arcade; they were standing on ground that M.O. Dengler and Beevers had crossed only an hour or two before. He had traveled thousands of miles to come this close to Koko. His whole body balked at the idea of yelling for Lieutenant Murphy and the fat-necked young policeman.

  “Michael?” Maggie said softly from the other side of the street.

  “I know, I know,” Poole said. He wanted to throw himself down on the sidewalk and tear through the pavement with his fingernails, to rip through the concrete until he reached Koko and Harry Beevers.

  If he did that, if he could do that, if he knew where to dig and had the strength and tenacity to do it, maybe he could save Harry Beevers’ ridiculous life.

 

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