Cutter's Run

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Cutter's Run Page 26

by William G. Tapply


  Alex shrugged. “Weezie certainly didn’t know any of that. But it makes sense.”

  “So what’d you say to her?” I said. “About the baby, I mean.”

  She looked up at me. “I asked her if she loved Paris, and she kind of shrugged, like she had no idea what I was talking about. I asked her if she thought he loved her, and she said no, she really didn’t think so. ‘He’s a good kid’ is what she said, meaning that he’d marry her because he felt responsible. So I told her she had to tell Paris the baby wasn’t his. I told her if she didn’t, I would. And if he still said he wanted to marry her, she should tell him she didn’t love him. By this time she’s crying a little, like maybe there’s a little place in her that’s starting to understand. Then I mentioned a home I know of outside of Augusta where a pregnant woman can receive free medical attention, room and board, and tutoring for the duration. Afterward, they arrange for adoption.”

  “And?”

  “She said it was up to Paris.”

  I arched my eyebrows.

  Alex smiled. “I told her, like hell it was up to Paris,” she said. “I told her it was her body and her baby and her life, and it wasn’t even Paris’s child. She really started to cry then, but I told her I’d talk to her mother if she wanted, and she said she’d appreciate it.”

  I smiled at her. “You’re pretty awesome, lady,” I said.

  “I know,” she said.

  We were having coffee on the deck the next morning. It was Labor Day, the first Monday of September, but already there was a hint of frost in the air. A flock of blackbirds had gathered in the trees out back, eating everything in sight and making a racket as they prepared for their migration. The New Hampshire hills off to the west showed blurry patches of gold and orange and crimson through the early-morning fog.

  Alex had pulled a sweatshirt over her customary T-shirt, and she wore sweatpants. I wore a flannel shirt.

  “Well,” I yawned, “gotta head back to the city tonight.”

  Alex kept staring off toward the hills.

  I turned to her. “So what shall we do with this beautiful day?”

  “I guess I’ll work on my book,” she said.

  “What?”

  “You know,” she said quietly. “What I do every day. I write. That’s my life right now.”

  “But—”

  “If I were you, I’d head back this morning,” she said quickly. “Beat the traffic. It’ll be horrendous this afternoon.”

  “Is that what you want?” I said.

  She turned to me. “Yes.”

  I nodded. “Susannah, huh?”

  She gave her head a little sad shake. “I told my landlord I wanted to buy this place,” she said softly. “We shook hands on a deal. I’m going to live up here, Brady. This is going to be my home. I’m not going back to Boston. I’m going to write books and tend my gardens and be friends with Susannah and all the other nice folks around here. I’ll go to bean suppers on Saturday night and I’ll join the Congregational church. In the winter I’ll get snowed in, and in the spring I’ll get stuck in the mud. And I’ll miss you. But I know you’ll never live here with me. Maybe it took Susannah—what happened with her and you—to help me figure it out. But no, Brady. It’s not Susannah. It’s not that simple.”

  I leaned back in my rocker. “I don’t know what to say.”

  She reached over and patted my arm. “Don’t say anything. Please.”

  So I didn’t. I sat there thinking about it, and after a few minutes, I got up and went inside. I packed my stuff, took it out to my new BMW, threw it into the trunk, and slammed it shut.

  Alex came around from the back of the house. She was smiling at me: “I still want to talk to you sometimes,” she said.

  “Friends?” I said.

  “Yes,” she said. “We’re friends. We’ll always be friends.”

  I hugged her familiar body against mine.

  “Do me a favor,” she mumbled against my chest.

  “Sure,” I said. “Anything.”

  “Call Charlie or Doc Adams or J. W. Jackson. Go fishing for a weekend, before the season’s over. Be sure you go in your spiffy new car. Drive fast with that sunroof down, and play that ZZ Top CD you like real loud. Okay? Will you do that for me?”

  I held her close. “Sure, babe,” I said. “I’ll do it for you.”

  Turn the page to continue reading from the Brady Coyne Mysteries

  Prologue

  A TYPICAL FEBRUARY TUESDAY evening in Boston—hard, wind-driven snow in the air, slushy sidewalks underfoot. But it was cozy and dry at Skeeter’s Infield, my favorite hangout down the alley in the financial district, halfway between my office in Copley Square and my empty apartment on Lewis Wharf on the Harbor.

  Since Alex and I split back in September, I’d found myself stopping off at Skeeter’s on my way home from work more regularly than was probably healthy.

  I’d had one of Skeeter’s famous burgers and a stack of onion rings, and now I was lingering over a Sam Adams draft watching a college basketball game on the big television over the bar. Mick Fallon had taken the stool next to me. Mick was a hulking middle-aged guy, a giant of a man who’d once played power forward for the Detroit Pistons, one of the many ex-athletes I’d run into a few times at Skeeter’s. On the other side of me, two pretty thirty-something loan officers in business suits and short skirts—Molly and Joanne were their names—were sipping white wine and yelling at the television. Molly was the lanky brunette, and Joanne was the stocky blonde.

  Mick was leaning across in front of me explaining the pick-and-roll to the women, and I didn’t notice when the two men in silk suits came in and took the stools down at the other end of the bar until Mick jabbed me in the ribs with his elbow, jerked his head in their direction, and whispered, “Watch out for those two.”

  Skeeter was standing behind the bar with his arms folded across his chest. Skeeter O’Reilly had been a reserve infielder for the Red Sox back in the early seventies. He was a tough little monkey who’d known how to take an inside pitch on the ass and steal a base, and he’d hung around baseball until he blew out his knee trying to break up a double play in the late innings of a meaningless September game that the Sox were losing by seven runs.

  One of the guys in the silk suits was bending over the bar toward Skeeter. “Don’t gimme this crap,” he was saying. “Me and Paulie want a fuckin’ beer.” He looked to be in his late twenties. He had black hair and black eyes, black five o’clock shadow and a big black mustache, with a salmon-colored necktie and a matching show handkerchief in his breast pocket. His thick, corded neck and bulky shoulders suggested a narcissistic devotion to Nautilus machines. His companion—Paulie—could have been his twin, except he was clean-shaven and his necktie and handkerchief were turquoise.

  Skeeter was shaking his head. “You better watch your language, Patsy,” he said evenly. “Anyways, you ain’t welcome here, and that’s how it is and you know it. I don’t want no trouble, and neither do you. So just get out, okay?”

  “What?” said Patsy, jerking his thumb in our direction. “You only serve hookers and washed-up old jocks? We ain’t good enough for this dump?”

  Skeeter shrugged. “You better leave, both of you, before I call the cops.”

  Patsy glared at Skeeter for a minute. Skeeter stared right back at him. After a minute of that, Patsy glanced in our direction and grinned, as if he wanted to be sure that we were watching. Then he turned to Skeeter, nodded, and settled back on his barstool. “No need for cops,” he said. “No hard feelings, huh?” He hooked his finger at Skeeter. “Come here,” he said. “I wanna tell you something.”

  Skeeter shrugged. He unfolded his arms, wiped his hands on his rag, and leaned across the bar toward them.

  Patsy smiled and patted Skeeter’s cheek. Then suddenly his other hand shot out, clamped onto the front of Skeeter’s shirt, and yanked the little guy off his feet so that he was half-sprawled on the bartop. Patsy shoved his face into Skeeter’s
. “Okay, you little fuck,” he hissed. “Now you listen to me—”

  Beside me I heard Mick growl “Sonofabitch,” and the next thing I knew he was looming directly behind Patsy and Paulie. He grabbed each of them by the scruff of the neck, hauled them backwards off their barstools, and dragged them toward the door.

  “Hey, Brady,” said Mick. His voice was calm, but fury blazed in his eyes. “Gimme a hand here. Help me take out the trash.”

  I got up, went to the door, and opened it. Patsy and Paulie were both full-grown men, but Mick stood about six-seven and weighed close to two-eighty, and in his grasp they looked like a pair of plucked chickens being taken to slaughter by a big red-faced butcher. His huge paws nearly encircled their necks. They were gasping and flapping their arms in the helpless, doomed way a freshly caught trout flops his tail in the bottom of a canoe.

  Mick flung them outside one at a time. First went Patsy, who landed on his feet, staggered across the narrow alley, and smashed against the brick wall. Paulie followed, skidding on his knees and then sprawling facedown on the hard, dirty old snowbank.

  Patsy stood there rubbing his neck, sucking in deep breaths, and trying to look fierce. “You don’t know who you’re fuckin’ with,” he said.

  “Yeah,” said Mick. “Actually I do. A couple pieces a shit, that’s what.”

  “Man,” said Patsy, “you are dead fuckin’ meat, pal.”

  Paulie slowly stood up, brushed off his pants, and turned to Mick. “You know who our boss is?”

  “Sure,” said Mick. “I’m not impressed.”

  “Big mistake, pal,” said Paulie. “You’ll be hearin’ from our lawyer.”

  Mick grinned. “You know where to find me.” He stepped inside, took two camel-hair topcoats off the coatrack, pretended to sniff them, then threw them out into the alley. “These must be yours,” he said. “Same stink.”

  He slammed the door shut and returned to his barstool. I followed him.

  Skeeter came over rubbing the back of his neck. “You shouldn’ta done that, Mick. You know who those guys are?”

  Mick nodded. “Sure I know. Fuck ’em.”

  “Well, I don’t know,” said Molly, the brunette loan officer. “Who are they?

  “Couple of Vinnie Russo’s boys,” said Mick.

  “Wait a minute,” she said. “You mean the Vinnie Russo? That godfather guy from the North End?”

  “Yeah,” said Mick. “Uncle Vinnie lives practically around the corner from here.”

  “God,” she said. “He assassinates people.”

  “Not him personally,” said Mick. “He has guys like Patsy and Paulie do it for him.”

  Molly turned to me. “I heard what that man said. You’re a lawyer. Can those—those hoodlums really sue him?”

  “Anybody can sue anybody,” I said. “It’s the American way.”

  “They’d be more likely to shoot him,” said Skeeter.

  Mick grinned. “I think Paulie’s nice suit got ripped, and Patsy did bump his head against the wall. Wouldn’t put it past ’em to strap on neck braces and take me to court.” He looked at me with his eyebrows arched. “I don’t have a lawyer.”

  “I couldn’t represent you on this one,” I said. “I’m a witness.”

  “So?”

  I shrugged. “So it would be unethical.”

  Mick grinned. “Holy shit,” he said. “A lawyer with ethics. You got a card?”

  “Sure. But if you’re worried about those two goons…”

  Mick waved his hand. “You never know when you might need a lawyer with ethics, that’s all.”

  I fished a business card from my wallet and handed it to him.

  Molly clutched my arm and looked up at me. She had green eyes, I noticed. They crinkled when she smiled, as if she’d spent a lot of time outdoors. “Can I have one?” she said.

  “You need a lawyer with ethics, too?”

  She arched her eyebrows. “I might.”

  I gave her one of my cards. She looked at it, tucked it into her purse, then smiled up at me with her eyebrows arched…

  And it wasn’t until I was halfway home that I realized she’d expected me to ask for her business card.

  I hadn’t played those games for a long time.

  I had showered and brushed my teeth, and when I opened the bathroom door I heard a woman’s voice in my bedroom. My first—irrational—thought was that Alex had changed her mind, driven down from Maine, and snuck in while I was in the shower, that she’d decided she couldn’t stand living without me after all, and it took me a minute to realize the voice was coming from the answering machine on the night table beside my bed.

  “…asleep? Well, I didn’t mean to wake you up. I was just thinking how I really need a lawyer.” It was Molly, the pretty loan officer from Skeeter’s. “Hey, Brady,” she said, “pick up the phone. I’ve got a really good idea I want to run past you.” She paused. “Come on. You’re listening, aren’t you?”

  I sat on the bed, reached for the phone, hesitated, then pulled my hand back.

  “Oh, well,” she said after a moment. “At least maybe you’ll call me sometime, huh?” She recited a phone number. “I was just thinking,” she went on, “you might like a home-cooked meal. Believe it or not, I’m a pretty good cook. I heard you and Mick talking—I didn’t mean to eavesdrop, but I couldn’t help it—and I know you’re divorced. Well, ta-da, me, too.” She laughed quickly. “God, I feel like a jerk. I shouldn’t have called. Stupid me. Oh, well. Too late now. So you’ve got my number. I’d love to hear from you. I really would. Every ethical lawyer needs a new client now and then, right?” She paused. “Wow. This is embarrassing. Call me? Please?”

  She laughed again before she disconnected.

  I liked Molly’s laugh. It was low and throaty and intimate. I remembered the way her eyes crinkled when she smiled.

  I watched the message light blink for a minute. Then I reached over and hit the erase button.

  One

  I HAD SWIVELED MY office chair around so I could gaze out at a sun-drenched April morning. My window onto Copley Square looks east across the plaza to the dark-stoned, dour old Trinity Church, which crouches in the shadow of the sleek, glass-sided John Hancock Tower rising behind it. The old and the new Boston in counterpoint.

  The view from my office window takes in a lot of concrete and steel and glass and enterprise. It barely qualifies as “outdoors,” but on a pretty spring morning it’s good enough to get me daydreaming about casting dry flies to rising trout, which is what I was doing when Julie buzzed me.

  I rotated back to my desk and picked up the phone. “Yes, boss?” I said.

  “There’s a Michael Fallon on line two.”

  “What’s he want?”

  “He says he needs a lawyer. You’re the lawyer around here. Why don’t you ask him?”

  “Good plan.” I hit the blinking light on my telephone console and said, “Mick? How’re you doing?”

  “Not good,” he said. “Not good at all. Actually, I am one miserable old jockstrap, Brady. I gotta talk to you, man.”

  “What’s up?”

  I heard him sigh. “It’s Kaye. My wife. She’s… well, she says she wants a divorce, and she tells me I better get myself a good lawyer, because she’s got one, and…” He fell silent.

  “Mick?” I said after a minute.

  “Yeah, I’m here.”

  “I’ll be happy to represent you,” I said.

  “The thing is,” he said, “I don’t want a fucking divorce. I don’t want a lawyer. I just want my wife.”

  I glanced at my appointment calendar. “How about lunch? Say twelve-thirty?”

  “You gotta help me fight it, man.”

  “Meet me at Skeeter’s,” I said. “We’ll grab a booth and talk about it.”

  I left a little after noon for the familiar twenty-minute walk to Skeeter’s. Newbury Street was swarming with lunchtime shoppers, and I was pleased to observe that the female secretaries and lawyers a
nd college students had broken out their springtime outfits—short skirts, pastel blouses, flowered dresses. On the Common, the ancient beeches and stubborn old elms were leafing out, the pigeons were flocking, and even the bums on the benches who were feeding them seemed high-spirited. Ah, spring.

  No matter how many times I saw Mick, I was always surprised at how big he was. The booth at Skeeter’s seemed kindergarten-sized with Mick wedged into it. When he played for the Pistons back in the seventies, they’d listed him as six-nine, two-thirty in the program. Actually he was closer to six-seven, but the weight had been about right. He’d put on thirty or forty pounds since then.

  I slid in across from him. He was hunched over with his forearms on the table. His catcher’s-mitt hands dwarfed the mug of draft beer they were cradling. The beer was untouched.

  He looked up. “Thanks for coming.”

  I held out my hand to him. “It’s good to see you again, Mick.”

  He took my hand in his huge paw. “I know plenty of lawyers,” he said, “but this…”

  I nodded. I refuse to accept clients I don’t like, but I liked Mick, considered him a friend. I haven’t found that friendship gets in the way of serving my clients. “Tell me about it,” I said.

  At that point Skeeter sidled up to our booth. Skeeter, as usual, was wearing his old Red Sox cap. He was a little self-conscious about his bald head. He looked from Mick to me, nodded as if he could read Mick’s mood, and instead of his usual friendly greeting, he simply said, “Lunch, fellas?”

  “Just bring me some coffee, Skeets,” I said. “We’ll eat in a little while.”

  Skeeter nodded, glanced at Mick’s full beer mug, and left.

  I turned back to Mick. “So…?”

  “It’s hard, man. It hurts bad.”

  “Of course it does.”

  “Will you help me?”

  “Sure. We just—”

  “We’ve got to bring her to her senses, Brady. I don’t want a divorce. She can’t really do this to me, can she?”

 

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