by Ace Atkins
“Nope.”
Jacky shrugged, then rolled his shoulders. “Don’t know what to tell you. Ain’t my problem if you got it in for the broad.”
“Come again.”
“When she come to me the second time, she was shitting a brick.”
“Why?”
“Protection,” Jacky said. “She said someone was trying to fucking kill her.”
“They may have succeeded.”
“Not my problem,” he said. “Not now.”
Z turned from the stage and leaned forward to listen. The acoustics were not grand in the Purple Banana.
“She say who wanted to hurt her?” I said.
“Say, I could use a big guy like that,” Jacky said, looking at Z. “Work the door. Scare the knuckleheads who try and hump the furniture.”
“Not my kind of work,” Z said.
“What is?” Jacky said.
Z nodded toward me.
“Too bad,” Jacky said. “You looked smarter than that.”
Jacky studied Z. He then turned his attention back on me, slowly smiling. “I heard Hawk was out of town.”
“Maybe.”
“I’d watch your back if I were you,” he said. “These ain’t nice people.”
Jacky looked over Z’s shoulder. He then craned his neck behind him to another stage, another girl. He looked me up and down, took a deep breath, and leaned in. I met him halfway. “This ain’t nothing like the local crews you’re used to,” Jacky said, whispering. “I don’t want no part of this crap.”
“Why’s that?”
“’Cause I prefer to keep on breathing,” he said. “Too much money. Too many guns.”
“From Vegas?”
Jacky snorted. He shook his head with pity and walked away.
33
“Z BEEN IN ANOTHER fight?” Henry said. “His knuckles were busted again.”
“Yeah,” I said. “But this time he came out on top.”
“Good,” Henry said. “Good.”
“If I hadn’t pulled him off the guy, I think Z would have killed him.”
“Not good.”
“Nope,” I said. We both stood outside our own cars at the Ocean View. The storm had brought in a heavy surf. And even in the diminished rain, the waves rocked across Revere Beach. Henry locked his car and we walked toward the condo.
“Where’s Z now?”
“Looking for the woman who sent the thugs,” I said.
“Not satisfied?”
“Not in the least.”
“You think this broad killed Mr. Weinberg?”
“I’d like to find out what she knows,” I said. “So would the staties.”
We reached the glass doors to the condo. I held one open for him.
“Might’ve finally expanded the boxing room,” Henry said.
“And a sauna?”
“Don’t push it,” Henry said. He smiled.
“The fight today wasn’t much of one,” I said.
“Then what the hell was it?” Henry said.
We stood in the empty lobby together on the silent terrazzo floor. I searched for the word. “Rage,” I said.
“What’s wrong with being pissed off?” Henry said. “If it works.”
I shook my head.
“’Cause it’s what you think made him drink before?”
I nodded.
“Because of what happened before he ended up here?”
I nodded.
“No family, people that he knew wiped their ass with him?”
“Yep.”
“But he’s not drinking?” Henry said.
“Susan said he needed to work,” I said. “So we’re working. He’s handling things.”
“But you’re concerned about the after?”
“I am.”
Henry nodded. He walked to the elevator and pushed the up button.
“But how long can you look out for the kid?” Henry said.
I tilted my head. “Long as it takes.”
“Yeah,” Henry said. “Me, too.”
The elevator dinged and the door opened. Henry walked inside. I stayed in the lobby.
“’Cause he’s one of us now,” Henry said, pressing the button to his floor.
“Yep.”
34
WHEN I RETURNED to my apartment, Wayne Cosgrove was waiting at the front door. I unlocked the door, and without a word, Wayne followed me up to the second floor. I went to the kitchen, Pearl curiously sniffing at Wayne, and reached for a couple beers in the back of the refrigerator. I popped the tops. I handed Wayne one. He did not say thank you, only took a sip and said, “Okay, what the hell’s going on?”
“I left you a message.”
“Wasn’t much of a message,” Wayne said. “You said you would be in touch when you can.”
“Ta-da.”
“I have editors breathing down my neck while all the television stations are doing live shots in Revere,” Wayne said. “And the one guy who can shed some light decides to get shy on me.”
“You seem annoyed.”
“I have two whole file cabinets marked ‘Favors for Spenser.’”
I sat at a bar stool where a long counter separated the cooking from the dining. Pearl sat at Wayne’s feet. She tilted her head and waited for him to speak. I drank some beer and nodded. “I promise to tell you the whole story when I can,” I said. “But right now I’m really not sure I have anything for you. I can’t prove any of it. And what I think I know doesn’t make sense.”
“How about off the record?”
I nodded. I got up and poured out some morsels for Pearl. She sniffed the bowl and walked back to Wayne. “Have you eaten?”
“I’ve been waiting for you for the last four hours.”
“Nice to be in demand.”
“The last time we spoke, you wanted to know about casinos in Revere,” he said. “You asked me about Rick Weinberg buying up condos on Revere Beach.”
“True.”
“And now someone has cut off Rick Weinberg’s head and left it in Revere.”
“Yes.”
“And now I hear you’re working for Rachel Weinberg?”
“How about some fried chicken? You being a Southerner and everything. I have some kale, too. I can sauté it in sesame oil with some lemon.”
“That might get you arrested down south.”
I pulled out some chicken parts from the refrigerator and patted them dry with some paper towels. I reached for some black pepper, kosher salt, and garlic powder. I found a well-seasoned cast-iron skillet Susan had given me and filled it with peanut oil to set on the stove.
“You should feel honored,” I said. “I don’t fry chicken for just anyone.”
“I bet you’d be frying it for yourself just the same.”
“Probably,” I said. “I did just receive an ominous warning from the manager of the Purple Banana.”
“What did he say?”
“He reminded me Hawk was out of town,” I said. “You mind spicy?”
“Nope,” Wayne said. He walked to my refrigerator and helped himself to a second beer. He was in a threadbare blue oxford button-down and a brown knit tie. I was pretty sure he was in the same jeans and boots from the other day.
I poured some milk into a bowl, cracked some eggs, and added a nice dose of Crystal hot sauce. The mixture was whisked to an orangish pink. I mixed the spices with the flour and tested the oil with a pinch of it. Not hot enough.
“So you connected Weinberg to the condo sales?” Wayne said.
“I did,” I said. “And I had a nice deal negotiated for the residents.”
“And then someone kills him.”
“And perhaps shadows the deal.”
“But you’re still working it?” Wa
yne said. “I don’t get it.”
“Rachel Weinberg was so impressed by my relentless nature and perhaps by kind words from a state police captain, they hired me.”
“You got to be kidding me.”
“Nope.” I drank some beer. “Weinberg’s right-hand man asked me himself.”
“And before his untimely death, what did you find out about Weinberg?”
“That he really liked the works of Lewis Carroll.”
“And all your work is in the shitter.”
“His wife doesn’t think so,” I said. “She’s moving ahead with what she is calling Rick’s final dream.”
“Poetic,” Wayne said. “Can I use it?”
“Talk to her.”
“I tried,” Wayne said. “Her people in Vegas hung up on me.”
“Let me see what I can do.”
Wayne smiled for the first time since he walked in my door. Maybe he was thinking of the fried chicken. I tested the oil. Still not hot enough. It took a while to get the pan just right. You don’t get the oil hot enough, and your chicken turns out greasy.
“If the property deal is still good, will your people still sell?”
“Probably.”
Wayne nodded. He finished the beer. He walked in front of my windows and placed his hands in his old jeans. “So who killed him?”
“That’s where things get fuzzy.”
“How fuzzy?”
“The back of a grizzly?”
Wayne shrugged. “Some cops I know think it was the Mob wanting to stop legal gambling on their turf.”
“You make it legal and that cuts into most of their business.”
“Is that what you’re hearing?”
“What I suspect,” I said. “I just don’t know if it’s local or imported.”
I tried the oil again. The flour sputtered and hissed and started to brown. I started in on the chicken. I dipped each piece in the flour and spices, then bathed them in the hot-sauce-and-egg mix, then rolled them back into the flour, and finally set them into the hot oil.
My efforts earned another beer. I started in on my second. Wayne was on his third. He got a phone call from the desk at the Globe and excused himself for a few minutes to argue with a copy editor. When the desk was satisfied, he came back to the kitchen with his empty beer.
“That’s a message killing,” Wayne said.
“Mario Puzo would have loved it,” I said. “Or whoever writes his books now.”
“But you’re not so sure.”
I nodded. “Almost everything in this case is screwy.”
“Why don’t you just quit?”
“Henry Cimoli asked for help,” I said. “And he’s already counting his money.”
“So all we know is that not twenty-four hours after Rick Weinberg secured a very elusive piece of real estate for his dream casino, someone whacked him.”
“Yep.”
“But we don’t know who or why,” he said. “But we suspect it’s connected to organized crime either in the city or in Las Vegas.”
“That’s about all of it.”
“What’s next?” Wayne said.
I pulled out the browned chicken pieces and set them on paper towels. I forked the chicken breasts still in the milk and started the process again. I heated a wok for the kale and began rinsing the greens.
“You’re a Yankee,” Wayne said, turning his nose up at the kale. “Ever heard of collards?”
“Heard of grits, too,” I said. “And Tallulah Bankhead.”
Wayne watched me as I cooked. “Something bothering you?”
“There’s a woman who worked for Weinberg,” I said. “She had just been fired. But I think she may be dead, too.”
“What about other employees?” he said. “Surely there were others close to him.”
“I actually went the other way,” I said. “I reached out to Harvey Rose today.”
I added some sesame oil to the wok and started chopping the kale.
“What did he say?”
“His people hung out the ‘Do Not Disturb’ sign,” I said. “Or, more precisely, said ‘Fuck off.’”
“I wrote his first profile when he was still teaching at Harvard,” he said. “I could call him. Set something up. Hell, I interviewed him today on the obit on Weinberg.”
“What did he say?”
“Off the record and for your ears only, he says he may pull his name from the casino license bidding.”
I tossed the kale into the wok and started stirring fast. Two beautiful heirloom tomatoes from the Fresh Market sat on the ledge over my sink. I reached for some plates. I found a couple more beers. Maybe bourbon for dessert.
“Did he sound scared?” I said.
“Wouldn’t you be?”
“‘Maybe everybody in the whole damn world’s scared of each other.’”
Wayne smiled and shook his head. “Never trust a detective who reads.”
I grinned and added the chicken and greens to his plate. I sliced up the purple tomato on the side. “Food for thought.”
35
IF HARVEY ROSE was trying to make shareholders feel money wasn’t being wasted on office space, he had succeeded. The following morning, I found his Boston headquarters were housed in a run-down three-story in Newton that hadn’t seen a renovation since the Nixon administration. It was built of brick-and-beige panels with rusted air conditioners jutting from aluminum windows. From where I parked in a back lot, there was a great view of the Mass Pike and a U-Haul dealer. I walked to a back door and found an intercom and security camera. I punched the speaker button and waved to the camera. The deadbolt slipped open.
Inside were a bunch of office types trapped in no-frills cubicles. Phones buzzed, keyboards clicked, and worker bees did whatever they did for Harvey Rose. I walked down a narrow hallway until I was greeted by the bald guy I had met at Rose’s house. Today he wore a blue pin-striped suit and a lot of cologne.
I sniffed. “Wood smoke?”
Rose’s guard did not respond. He just motioned with his bald head to a stairwell we followed to the second floor and a large open room with drafting boards and blueprints tacked on corkboards. On a long table that sat twenty, there were open laptop computers, countless boxes of files, and legal notepads. The beefy guy I had also met in Lexington followed us, glanced at me, and joined his pal at a folding table. He leaned back in his chair, suit jacket open and holster purposefully exposed, and eyed me with a slow indifference.
The bald guy picked up a hand of cards and tossed some chips into the pot.
“I could order a couple pizzas, pick up some beer,” I said.
They did not answer. The fat guy tossed down some cards. Somewhere in a back room, a toilet flushed and out walked Harvey Rose. He was several inches below six feet, chunky, and wore black dress pants with a wrinkled white dress shirt with French cuffs. A blazing red designer tie hung loose and careless around his neck. Remnants of lunch or breakfast spotted the shirt. He had not shaved, and his eyes were dark-rimmed and bloodshot.
“Mr. Spenser?”
I nodded. He studied me as we shook hands, before slumping into an office chair. He leaned back against a headrest. His eyes darted around the room.
“Wayne Cosgrove is a good reporter,” he said. “He’s always been fair with us.”
“And me as well.”
“It’s been a tough twenty-four hours.” Rose pulled a pair of half-glasses from his breast pocket and glanced down at a cell phone. “First, we learn of what happened with Rick, and then someone broke into our offices. They stole several files and fifteen computers.”
“Anything else?”
“Whoever broke in knew what they wanted.”
I nodded. “And you believe this had something to do with Rick Weinberg’s murder.”
&nbs
p; Rose shook his head, placed the cell on the table, and stared up at the ceiling. He folded his hands over his chest and took in a great deal of air. He nodded as if agreeing with the direction of his thoughts and looked over the glasses. I felt the sudden urge to reach for a pen and notebook.
“There’s been illegal gambling here since the Pilgrims got off the Mayflower,” Rose said. “But the emergence of the gaming industry in Massachusetts signals the death knell to the underworld. We have numerous studies from the FBI that point to no less than fifteen criminal enterprises working in greater Boston.”
I whistled. “Just fifteen.”
“As you know, there are plenty more,” he said. “They hate us. We are changing everything they know. They can’t compete with modern business. Bartenders still keep leather ledgers under the register, for God’s sake.”
“Did you and Rick ever discuss possible threats of doing business in Boston?”
“Rick and I haven’t spoken in years,” Rose said. “The nature of competition. But we were businessmen, not gangsters. What happened is sickening and barbaric.”
“A long way from Harvard Business School.”
Rose nodded. He may have straightened up in his chair by an inch.
“How does one go from Cambridge to Vegas?”
“Money,” he said. “Opportunities for my family not afforded in academia.”
“Not to mention free tickets for Wayne Newton.”
Not amused, Rose laced his hands in his lap and waited for me to finish speaking. A technique he had no doubt perfected on grad students.
“So you think the same people who burgled you last night killed Weinberg?”
“I don’t like coincidences.”
“But Weinberg’s death would also open opportunities for others wanting the Commonwealth’s golden ticket.”
“Excuse me?”
“One of three casino licenses,” I said. “Or, as someone duly noted, a license to print money.”
“Wayne Cosgrove said you needed some basic background,” Rose said. “But if you think I had something to do with Rick’s death, I need to call a lawyer.”
“You’re not the only casino group in the running.”
“We prefer the term ‘gaming corporation.’”