Investigators

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Investigators Page 17

by W. E. B Griffin


  Leibowitz and Jernigan exchanged glances suggesting they fully understood the usefulness to a surveillance crew of a master key that might not have been acquired under innocent circumstances.

  “The Reynolds girl’s bed had not been slept in?” Leibowitz asked.

  Matt shook his head, “no.”

  “You find out anything else that might be useful?”

  “The rent-a-cop in the hotel garage said he remembered a red Porsche with a good-looking blonde in it leaving the garage about half past five the previous afternoon. Where—presuming this was in fact, Susan Reynolds; there really aren’t that many good-looking blondes in red Porsches—she was from five-thirty until she went to the Nesbitts’ at half past seven or so is anyone’s guess. I don’t know, but I’ll bet she did not put the car into the hotel garage again until a couple of hours after I was there.”

  “Why did Mrs. Nesbitt tell the suspect’s mother the suspect had left with you?” Jernigan asked.

  “I think she thought at the time that she had.”

  “You were friendly with her at the party?”

  “I tried to be. She was not interested.”

  “Pity,” Jernigan said.

  “Do you think you could change that situation?” Davis asked.

  “What do you mean by that?” Matt asked.

  “I mean get close to her,” Davis said.

  “What’s the opposite of her being ‘overwhelmed’ by my charms?” Matt asked.

  “What are you driving at, Walter?” Chief Coughlin asked.

  “Off the top of my head,” Davis said. “And I’m hearing a lot of this for the first time myself, which sometimes cuts through the fog. What I’m hearing is that the Reynolds girl is not all that close to the Nesbitts. But she goes to the Nesbitts’ party. And disappears overnight. That suggests she may have had a rendezvous with the fugitives. That suggests they may be here, or near here. Since it worked this time, they may try it again. If Detective Payne could get close . . .”

  “You’re suggesting that he work with you on this?” Coughlin asked.

  “You would have problems with that?”

  “Frankly, Walter, I have a lot of problems with it,” Coughlin said. “For one thing, he’s up to his neck right now in an important investigation.”

  “These people have been indicted by the Allegheny County Grand Jury for murder, Chief Coughlin,” Leibowitz said. “They’re fugitives from a Pennsylvania jurisdiction. They’re not just a federal problem.”

  “Still,” Coughlin said, somewhat lamely.

  “I see a lot of practical problems,” Wohl said, coming to Coughlin’s aid. “Presuming Chief Coughlin would go along with this. For one thing, Payne says the Reynolds girl was not . . . at all receptive to his charms. Even if she was, this is a long way from Harrisburg. Does she know you’re a cop, Matt?”

  “Yes, sir. Her eyes just sort of glazed over when she heard that.”

  “You didn’t think that was a little odd?” Jernigan asked.

  “Unfortunately, it happens to me all the time,” Matt said.

  “On the other hand,” Davis said. “She might decide what better cover could she have when making frequent trips to Philadelphia than a cop boyfriend?”

  Wohl thought: He’s right. Why am I surprised? You don’t get to be the FBI Philadelphia SAC if you’re stupid.

  Then he saw something on Matt’s face.

  “What, Matt?” he asked.

  “You know why I went to the Roundhouse last night?” Matt asked.

  Wohl had to think a moment before recalling that Matt had been sent to Personnel by Staff Inspector Weisbach.

  “There was some sort of a Harrisburg connection?” Wohl asked.

  Coughlin’s face indicated that he was having a hard time holding his questions about that until later.

  Matt nodded.

  “Something that would justify you being in Harrisburg on police business?” Davis asked.

  “What Matt is working on is sensitive,” Coughlin said. “There are people we don’t want to know he’ll be going to Harrisburg.”

  Walter Davis confirmed Wohl’s realization that stupid people do not get to be senior FBI officers:

  “An internal matter, eh?” Davis said. “Well, I can probably help you there a little, if you like. The chief of police there is not only an old friend, but he owes me a couple of favors. You tell me what sort of a cover story you’d like for Payne to have, and I’ll see that it’s leaked from the chief’s office.”

  “That could be very useful,” Wohl said, thinking out loud.

  “There is something else,” Davis said. “Payne can move easily in the same social circles as the Reynolds woman; that could be very useful, I would suspect.”

  “I’d have to clear Matt working with you on this with the commissioner,” Coughlin said. It was his last line of defense.

  “I don’t think that will pose a problem, Denny,” Davis said. “The last time I had lunch with the mayor—here, as a matter of fact—he gave me quite a speech about these people who blow up medical-research facilities because they use animals. He called them something I wouldn’t repeat in mixed company. He said they were more dangerous to the country than most people realized. I have the feeling that if he knew about this, he would ‘suggest’ to Commissioner Czernich that it was a splendid idea.”

  You may be an ass, Walter Davis, Peter Wohl thought, but you are not a stupid ass.

  TEN

  When the telephone rang in the elegantly furnished study of his South Philadelphia residence, Mr. Vincenzo Savarese, his jacket removed, his stiffly starched cuffs turned up, his eyes closed, was playing along from memory with a tape recording of the Philharmonica Sla vonica’s recording of Max Bruch’s Violin Concerto in G Minor, Opus 26, on a circa 1790 G. Strenelli violin for which he had paid nearly fifty thousand dollars.

  Mr. Pietro Cassandro, a very large, well-tailored forty-year-old who faithfully paid federal and state taxes on his income as vice president of Classic Livery, Inc., where his duties were primarily driving the Lincolns and Cadillacs in which Mr. Savarese moved about town, frowned when the telephone rang. Mr. S. did not like to be disturbed when he was playing the violin.

  Cassandro looked at Mr. Savarese to see his reaction to the ringing telephone. Only a very few people had the number of Mr. Savarese’s study.

  Mr. S. stopped playing and looked at Cassandro. Then he pointed with the bow at the telephone.

  Cassandro picked it up. “Yeah?” he said, listened a moment, then spoke to Mr. S.: “It’s the lawyer.”

  “Mr. Giacomo?” Cassandro nodded. “Tell him I will be with him directly.”

  Mr. Savarese walked to the reel-to-reel tape recorder and turned it off, and then to a Steinway grand piano on which he had placed the Strenelli violin’s case, carefully placed the violin, and the bow, in the case, and then closed it. He then pulled a crisp white handkerchief from his shirt collar and laid that upon the violin case.

  Then he walked to Cassandro and took the telephone from him.

  “Thank you for returning my call, Mr. Giacomo,” Savarese said.

  “I’m sorry it took me so long,” Armando Giacomo said. “I was in court.”

  “So your secretary said.”

  “How may I be of service?”

  “I thought you might be interested in hearing that I have had a report from my daughter about my granddaughter.”

  “Yes, I would.”

  “Dr. Payne has seen her three times so far,” Savarese said. “Late last night. The first thing this morning, and at lunch. My granddaughter is apparently very taken with her.”

  “I’m glad to hear that.”

  “I am grateful to you, Mr. Giacomo, for arranging for me to meet with Mr. Payne.”

  “I was happy to have been of service.”

  “And, of course, I am very grateful to Mr. Payne for speaking to his daughter on behalf of Cynthia. That is one of the reasons I asked you to call.”

 
“Brewster Payne was sympathetic to your problem. He is a very nice man.”

  “What I wanted to do was ask your advice about making some small gesture of my appreciation to Mr. Payne,” Savarese said.

  “I don’t think that’s necessary, Mr. Savarese.”

  “I have several bottles of some really fine cognac I thought would be appropriate.”

  “May I speak freely, Mr. Savarese?”

  “Of course.”

  “You went to Mr. Payne as a father and grandfather asking help from another father. He understood your problem and did what he could to help, one father helping another, so to speak. Under those circumstances, I don’t really think that a gift is in order.”

  Savarese didn’t reply for a long moment.

  “You think it would be inappropriate? Is that what you’re saying?”

  “Yes, both unnecessary and inappropriate.”

  “You’re suggesting he would be offended?”

  “Let me put it this way, Mr. Savarese,” Giacomo said. “If I had gone to Brewster Payne as you did, and he had responded as he did, I would not send him a gift. I would think that in his mind he had done only what a decent human should have done, and therefore, no attempt to repay—”

  “I take your meaning, Mr. Giacomo,” Savarese interrupted him. “And I respect your wisdom and trust your judgment in matters of this nature.”

  “Thank you,” Giacomo said.

  He hoped that his relief at being able to talk Savarese out of sending Brewster Payne a couple—he said “several bottles,” so maybe six, maybe a dozen—$500 bottles of French booze was not evident in his voice. There would be no telling how Payne would react. Payne regarded Vincenzo Savarese—loving grandfather or not—as a murdering gangster, and he didn’t want—worse, almost certainly would not accept—a present from him. Payne was entirely capable of sending the booze back, which would insult Savarese, and there’s no telling what trouble that would cause.

  “I would be grateful, Mr. Giacomo, if Mr. Payne could somehow be made aware that I consider myself deeply in his debt.”

  “I don’t think that’s necessary, Mr. Savarese. As I said before, Mr. Payne believes, in his mind, that he only did what a decent man was obligated to do.”

  “When the opportunity presents itself, Mr. Giacomo, as I’m sure it soon will, I would consider it a personal favor for you to tell Mr. Payne that I consider myself deeply in his debt. Would you do that for me, Mr. Giacomo?”

  “Of course.”

  You need anybody shot, Brewster? Somebody stiffing you on a fee, needs to have his legs broken? Just say the word. Vincenzo Savarese told me to tell you he owes you a big one.

  “Thank you. And there is one other thing about which I would be grateful for your advice, Mr. Giacomo.”

  “I’m at your service.”

  “Could you recommend a good, and by good I mean both highly competent and very discreet, private investigator?”

  A private investigator? Now what?

  “I don’t think I quite understand,” Giacomo said.

  “I need someone to make some discreet inquiries for me.”

  “Well, there’s a lot of people in that business, Mr. Savarese. I use half a dozen different ones myself. Good people. It depends, of course, on the nature of the information you want.”

  There was a perceptible pause, long enough for Armando C. Giacomo to decide Savarese was carefully deciding how much, if anything, he was going to tell him.

  “What I had in mind, Mr. Giacomo, was to look around my granddaughter’s environment, so to speak, and see if I couldn’t come up with some hint about what has so greatly disturbed her.”

  “I don’t think I would do anything like that until I’d spoken with Dr. Payne,” Giacomo said quickly.

  “All this information would be for Dr. Payne, of course.”

  Unless it turns out that the girl was raped or something—which might damned well be the case—in which case the cops would have an unlawful death by castration to deal with.

  “I just don’t see where any of the people who work for me would be any good at that sort of investigation. I could ask—”

  “That won’t be necessary, thank you just the same, Mr. Giacomo. And thank you for returning my call. I’m grateful to you.”

  “I’m glad things seem to be working out for your granddaughter,” Giacomo said.

  “Thank you. I very much appreciate your interest,” Vincenzo Savarese said, and hung up.

  He looked at Pietro Cassandro.

  “Mr. Giacomo does not seem to feel that any of the investigators with whom he has experience would be useful,” he said.

  Cassandro did not know how to interpret the remark. He responded as he usually did in similar circumstances. He held up both hands, palms upward, and shrugged.

  When Vincenzo Savarese’s daughter had told him how kind Dr. Payne was, even calling to tell her to bring Cynthia’s makeup and decent nightclothes to her in the hospital, she also said that Cynthia had told her that Dr. Payne had told her she was not to tell her mother, or her father, for that matter, anything that made her uncomfortable to relate.

  Savarese hadn’t said anything to his daughter, but he’d thought that while that might be—and probably was—good medical practice, it also suggested that there was something that Cynthia would be uncomfortable telling her mother about. He was naturally curious about what that might be.

  There was something else Savarese thought odd. The young man Cynthia had been seeing a lot of—his name was Ronald Ketcham, and all Savarese knew about him was that he was neither Italian nor Catholic, and Cynthia’s mother hoped their relationship wasn’t getting too serious—had not been around since Cynthia had started having her emotional trouble.

  “Tell Paulo to put the retired cop to work,” Mr. Savarese ordered.

  Paulo Cassandro, Pietro’s older and even larger brother, was president of Classic Livery, Inc., in which Mr. Savarese had the controlling—if off the books—interest.

  “Right, Mr. S.,” Pietro Cassandro said. “What do you want me to do with the cognac?”

  “Send it back to the restaurant,” Mr. Savarese said, making reference to Ristorante Alfredo, one of Philadelphia’s most elegant establishments, and in which he also had the controlling—if off the books—interest.

  “Right, Mr. S. I’ll do that on my way home.”

  Mr. Savarese changed his mind.

  “Keep out two bottles,” he said. “No. Three bottles. Drop them off at Giacomo’s office.”

  “Got it, Mr. S.”

  Mr. Savarese looked as if he was searching his mind for something else that had to be done, and then, that he had found nothing.

  He walked to the Steinway grand piano, took the handkerchief from the top of the violin case, and tucked it into his collar. Then he opened the violin case, took out the bow, tested the horsehair for proper tension, took out the Strenelli, and, holding it by the neck, walked to the reel-to-reel tape recorder and turned it back on.

  Then he tucked the Strenelli under his chin, raised the bow to its strings, and began to play along with the Philharmonica Slavonica’s rendition of Max Bruch’s Violin Concerto in G Minor, Opus 26.

  During the briefings given to Detective Matt Payne by the Philadelphia Police Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation to prepare him for his role in the apprehension of the fugitives Bryan C. Chenowith, Jennifer Ollwood, Edgar L. Cole, and Eloise Anne Fitzgerald (known to the FBI as “The Chenowith Group”), Matt had a number of thoughts he was aware would annoy or confound (probably both) both the FBI and his fellow officers of the Philadelphia Police Department.

  The first of these was his realization that Sir Walter Scott had been right on the money when he proclaimed, “Oh, what a tangled web we weave, When first we practise to deceive!”

  Chief Inspector Coughlin, Inspector Wohl, Staff Inspector Weisbach, and Sergeant Jason Washington were responsible for bringing this conclusion to Payne’s mind.

&n
bsp; They had spent the better part of an hour, starting at 8: 15 A.M. in Denny Coughlin’s Roundhouse office, conducting a discussion of the cover story Matt would use in Harrisburg. Detective Payne had been present, but it had been made immediately clear to him that his participation had not been solicited and was not desired.

  The three senior police supervisors decided that so far as the members of the Special Operations Division Investigation Section were concerned, they would be told that Matt would be in Harrisburg attempting to uncover suspicious financial activity on the part of any member of the Narcotics Unit Five Squad, with special attention being paid to Officer Timothy J. Calhoun, who had relatives in Harrisburg and Camp Hill.

  Only those with the need to know were to be made privy to the fact that Matt would also be “cooperating” with the FBI in their investigation of the Chenowith Group while he was in Harrisburg. Weisbach decided those with a need to know were those present, plus Sergeant Sandow.

  The Intelligence Division of the Philadelphia Police Department was to be made privy to Matt’s role vis-à-vis the FBI, but not to the fact that he would be in Harrisburg investigating the Narcotics Five Squad. The Intelligence Division, to prevent any possible leaks that might come to the attention of the Five Squad, was to be told a second cover story. This one had Matt looking into possible connections between vice operations in Philadelphia and Harrisburg.

  Chief Coughlin felt this second cover story would have a certain credibility, inasmuch as Lieutenant Seymour Meyer, who had commanded the Central District’s Vice Squad, had been relieved of his command and his badge and was presently awaiting trial on charges that he had sold his protection to the madam of a call girl ring.

  His replacement—and the new commanding officer of the Central District (Inspector Gregory F. Sawyer, Jr., the former commander, had been relieved of his command at the time of Meyer’s arrest)—would be told that the Special Operations investigation of Center City prostitution had not been completed, and that Detective Payne, specifically, was in Harrisburg working on it.

  Chief Coughlin also felt, and Inspectors Wohl and Weisbach agreed, that because of the close working relationship between the Central District generally, and the Central District’s Vice Squad and the Narcotics Unit, the word would quickly reach the Five Squad that Special Operations had sent Detective Payne to Harrisburg hoping that he would there find the final nails to drive in Lieutenant Meyer’s coffin.

 

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