She didn’t look frightened or even surprised at his outburst. She just gave him that lopsided smile. “But you’ll work with me?” she said.
He loosened his grip on her collar. “Yes. I’ll work with you.”
“Why?” Reggie asked.
“Because right now I need you to get information and to get inside the investigation. And I can use you to help me figure out what the hell’s going on.”
“And that’s the only reason?”
“That’s the only reason.”
“It’s a start,” she said. “Now . . . shall we clean up the mess you made?”
The thing is: they worked well together. They had in the past and they did now. Reggie was meticulous and tireless, and while her instincts weren’t quite as acute as his, they were fine. And she could cut through the bullshit to make a point when it needed making.
He printed up his notes and gave them to her to read. As she pored over them, she looked up from time to time to ask him questions: about Evan and Abby, about his relationship with Abby, about the conversations he’d had on his one visit to Rockworth and Williams. Her questions were sharp and clinical and on point. When she was done looking at his lists and written comments, he handed over the various folders of information he’d collected and told her she should go through it all over the next twenty-four hours. She said she would, and he knew she’d have a worthwhile take on what she read. He told her what his plans were for the next day and he told her what he wanted her to concentrate on. She agreed.
“Now,” she said, “what do you need from me?”
He told her he wanted to know everything that Wanda knew about Evan Harmon’s business. He wanted to know why Evan was being investigated.
“We don’t have a lot,” she told him. “And what we have isn’t all that firm. Wanda wasn’t reporting on a lot of what she was doing. And one of the problems is that Evan Harmon came in through the back door. He wasn’t who we were investigating.”
“Who were you looking at?”
“Leonardo Rubenelli. Your friend Bruno’s boss.”
“I know who he is. You guys have been trying to get something on him for most of my lifetime. What is it now?”
“Money laundering.”
“And what the hell is the connection between Evan Harmon and Lenny Rube? How’d they even cross into the same world?”
“Come on, Jay. You should be able to come up with that one. Who could link a New York hedgehogger with the head of the New England mob?”
Justin shook his head. “Ronald LaSalle? I don’t believe it. Just because he was a money guy in Providence? My father’s a money guy in Providence.”
“You should check with your pal Bruno.”
“Since he’s not here, why don’t you tell me what he’d say?”
“I don’t know what he’d say. I don’t have the same high regard that you do for his character,” Reggie told him. “But I know he’s been dealing with LaSalle. We have the two of them meeting several times over the past year. And we know that Bruno was here in East End Harbor for several weeks last year. Hell, you and I know that from personal experience. It would have been easy for him to cross paths with Harmon.”
“Do you have proof of any direct contact between Bruno and Evan?”
“Only according to Wanda’s reports. But they weren’t incident specific.”
“‘Incident specific.’ Nice phrase. I like that,” he said.
“We don’t have an eyewitness—is that better? At least none we know about. It seems as if Wanda did. But we can’t ask her.”
Justin frowned. “Evan and Ronald were laundering money for Lenny Rube—and Bruno was the go-between? It just doesn’t add up.”
“Why not?”
“From everything I’ve been told, Ron LaSalle was as straight as they come.”
“And who did the telling? The people who worked for him? His wife? Maybe they have a lot to gain by making us think that.”
“It’s possible.” He was thinking about sitting in Vicky’s living room, listening to her talk about her husband. She wasn’t lying. She might have been duped, but she wasn’t lying.
“What else doesn’t add up?” Reggie asked.
“Bruno. He’s not exactly the go-between type.”
“That’s right. That’s why we think he’s involved in a lot bigger way.”
“You think Bruno killed them?”
“We think it’s a good possibility.”
“I like the way you use the all-protective plural, Reggie. Do you ever think something all by yourself?”
“I’ve been out of the loop on this case, Jay. I was brought in at the last minute, so I can’t even say I’m fully briefed. I’m just telling you what I’ve been told so far. The more involved I am, the more I’ll learn and be able to think for myself. And the more I’ll be able to tell you.”
“All right, so give me some more groupthink on Bruno.”
“We know he was dealing with LaSalle on a regular basis. And we know he was using LaSalle to invest millions of dollars. Some of the investments were corporate investments. LaSalle was dealing with Bruno as if he were an institutional investor.”
“Bruno?” Justin had to smile. “He’s not what I’d call the corporate type.”
“Our point exactly. One of the companies investing has Rubenelli on its board.”
Justin sighed. “So you started investigating, looking for a way to get to Lenny Rube.”
Reggie nodded.
“I still don’t see the link to Harmon,” Justin said.
“I told you, we don’t have it firm. But it exists. We know from Wanda’s notes that some of the Rubenelli money was going through Harmon’s hedge fund.”
“If you know that, why don’t you have it firm?”
Reggie looked embarrassed. Finally she just shrugged and said, “You know what it’s been like since 9/11. If it’s not terrorism related, no one actually gives a damn. At least at the top levels. We’ve had a lot of our resources taken away from us. So we haven’t been able to make a financial paper trail.”
“So good old mob crimes and killings don’t really matter anymore?”
“Not so much, no. But Wanda wouldn’t let go of this. She thought it was big. And she was working on making the connections.”
“Which is why she got killed.”
“That’s what we’re assuming. And that’s why we’ve moved this to high priority.”
“Come on, even Lenny Rube’s not stupid enough to off a federal agent. Bruno certainly isn’t that dumb.”
“Again, you have a higher regard for your friends than we do.”
“I wouldn’t exactly call Lenny my friend.”
“And Bruno?”
“‘Friend’ is too strong a word. But just because we’re on opposite sides of the fence, I don’t underestimate him.” He was still shaking his head. “It makes sense on the surface, but it’s off. For one thing, even the way the murders were done. It’s not Bruno’s style. One thing you can count on, he wouldn’t have left Wanda alive long enough to do what she did.”
“Nice that you know his modus operandi so well.”
“It may not be nice, but it’s meaningful. Especially if your theory’s based on the fact that Bruno was killing for the family.”
“Am I missing something? Isn’t that what he does for a living?”
Justin sighed and said, “Look, I didn’t tell your guy Fletcher everything when we had our little chat yesterday.”
Reggie said nothing. There was just the cock of her head to the left and the fluttering of her eyelashes.
“I’m still not sure I want him to have this info. So I want to know if it’ll stay with you,” Justin said.
“I work for them.”
“But you’re partnering with me.”
“That’s not fair, Jay. You’re putting me in an untenable position.”
“Sure I am. And what do I give a shit about fair? You want me to trust you, tell me that you’ll k
eep this between us.”
“This is a test?”
“Pass-fail. One time only.”
She chewed on her lip for a moment, did her blinking thing, then she nodded.
“You lie to me, our partnership’s over,” he said.
“I get it. You’re not exactly subtle.”
“Okay,” Justin said. And he told her what happened at Dolce when he’d met with Bruno.
When he was finished, she said, “Who was it?”
“I don’t know yet. I got prints and I asked Billy to run ’em before anything had happened with Wanda and before I’d talked to Fletcher.”
“You’re unbelievable. How did you get prints off this guy?”
“He was reading some travel guide at the table, part of his cover. I took it on my way out. When I gave it to Billy, I didn’t have any idea he might be connected to Harmon or even LaSalle.”
“It was just you being curious.”
“Just me being a cop.”
“Most cops wouldn’t have left that guy there to meet his fate.”
“I did what I thought I had to do.”
“Which is usually your choice.”
“Yes,” Justin said. “That’s usually my choice. And one of my reasons was that Bruno said something that made me think I was involved.”
“And that was . . . ?”
“He told me that there were people who didn’t like that he was talking to me.”
“Why?”
“I don’t know. But that was reinforced when I saw Wanda. Or at least I thought it was. She knew I’d talked to Bruno. I thought it was because she was keeping tabs on me—I thought that was all part of her warning me away. Now I realize she was following Bruno—tailing him, not me. Or bugging him, more likely.”
“What have you gotten back from DiPezio?”
“Nothing yet,” Justin said. “I kind of downplayed it. Didn’t really want him getting overcurious.” And then he said, “Oh, screw it,” and went to the phone and dialed.
“What?” Billy DiPezio said when he answered the phone. “You want a raise to two dollars a week?”
“I’m checking up on the fingerprints I asked you to run,” Justin said. “I know you’re a half-assed department, but I thought maybe you could do something on time.”
“Kinda late for you to be calling, don’t you think?” Billy said. “Especially on a Sunday. And especially for something that didn’t seem too important yesterday.”
“It might be a little more important than I thought,” Justin admitted.
“Why don’t you have your hot-shit Fed friends run it, now that you’re workin’ so closely with ’em?”
“I would if I hadn’t been a moron and given the thing to you.”
“You got no gratitude, you know that,” Billy said. “But I’ll get you the results in the morning. And don’t blame me if you don’t like ’em.”
“What?” Justin said. “You already know something?”
“Hold on a second, will you?” Justin heard the sound of glass touching glass and a woman’s voice, laughing. No. Giggling. Definitely giggling. Billy had been married for something like twenty-five years and Justin was fairly sure his wife didn’t giggle like that.
“Billy,” Justin repeated, “you know something about this guy already?”
“I don’t know shit,” Billy said. “But I figure the way your life’s goin’, you’re not gonna like the results whatever they are.”
Justin hung up and looked at his watch. Past midnight. He didn’t know how Billy did it. He’d be out drinking until two or three this morning and he’d be sharp as a tack and on the job by seven-thirty. Justin was finding that harder and harder to manage. Hell, he was finding it harder just to stay awake past ten at night. As if on cue, Reggie yawned.
“I think we might have to finish this conversation tomorrow,” she said. “I’m pretty beat.”
“Where are you staying?” he asked.
“No house this time around. The drawback to not being undercover. I’ve got a room at the Fisherman. Cheap but really, really ugly.”
There was an awkward silence. They both stood facing each other, maybe two feet apart. The distance felt a lot farther at the same time it felt a lot closer.
“You need a ride?” he asked.
“Got a car.”
“You want one more beer before you go?” He heard his voice go dry for just an instant. Idiot, he thought. What are you, in high school? Stay away from this one. Don’t go there.
She said quietly, “Do you want me to stay and have one more beer, Jay?”
“No,” he said. “I don’t.”
“Then good night.”
“Good night,” he said.
He watched her from his living room window as she walked to her car parked on the street. It wasn’t anything fancy. Maybe a VW. He kept watching as she got in the driver’s seat and then drove away in the direction of her motel.
He took a deep breath. Went to his phone and dialed the number for Abby Harmon’s cell phone. He got the same voice message he’d heard over the past two days. When the message ended and he heard the tone, Justin didn’t say anything. He just stared at his receiver and then hung up.
He picked two songs to play on his computer, “Ends” by Everlast. And “Things Have Changed” by Dylan. He turned the volume way up.
The rap music was strangely soothing to him. And equally disturbing. He closed his eyes and got caught up in the sad rhythm of the song as he thought about what they were saying, how everything seemed to be about the ends.
Sometimes kids did indeed get murdered for the ends.
And he wondered if the all-wise Bob Dylan was right once again.
People were crazy. And people were strange. Justin knew that he used to care, too. He just wasn’t sure if things had changed.
He took another deep breath.
Then he put both songs on again and went and had a beer all on his own.
21
Ling stared at Togo. His face was impassive. She thought she knew everything about him, thought she understood every nuance of his body language and each and every tic, grimace, stare, or smile he was able to muster. But she couldn’t tell now if his complete lack of emotion was because he had been humiliated earlier and was angry, because he was trying to save face in front of her, or because he was trying to hide the fact that he found the woman they were watching—the blond woman coming out of the policeman’s house—attractive.
He had never indicated to her that he had ever desired another woman. But she could see that this one fascinated him. She was so American, so confident looking, so casual in her sexuality.
Ling realized that she was wet between her legs. She didn’t know if it was because she was thinking about Togo and this other woman or if it was because she was remembering the way he’d been humiliated, thinking about how vulnerable he had been in the big office building.
She was the reason for his humiliation.
And knowing that made her even more aroused.
They had been summoned to give a report, an update on their activities. They went to a big glass building that seemed to rise nearly to the sun. They had never met there before, it was a new place for them, and it was nearly empty. Almost no one was working on the summer weekend. A security guard had instructions to send them up in the elevator, and when they got out on a high floor, they were met by another security guard and shown to a wonderful room, with thick carpeting, many television screens built into the paneled walls, and a black marble table that shone like polished glass.
They were kept waiting before the familiar man had come into the room. Ling knew his name. And she knew that he was rich and had much power. That was all she really knew about him. Except that he was old. But even at his age, he stood straight, and his face was so chiseled it looked as if it were made from stone. There was something about this man that made her want to obey him. She did not understand why, although she had a vague inkling that the kind of power
he possessed was comparable to hers, possibly even greater. Whenever he needed them, they were told where to meet. They were told to do whatever he asked, to follow his instructions exactly as he gave them. And he usually gave them in Chinese. He spoke Cantonese and it was quite good. Not perfect but reasonable. And he spoke it confidently. During their meetings he never said much. He asked several questions, told them what they were to do next. That’s all. But she was always impressed with the way he communicated with them. He used their native tongue far more often than he used his own. She assumed that was for Togo’s benefit; her English was far better than his. Sometimes Ling actually believed that Togo didn’t speak English. She knew he understood it. She spoke to him in English sometimes, and, although he always responded in Hunanese, he knew what she was asking or saying. But sometimes this man spoke in English and Togo never acknowledged comprehension. So when the man spoke in English, he usually spoke to Ling.
This time she remembered he spoke to Togo in Cantonese. He ignored her almost completely. “Tell me how it went with the FBI woman,” and Togo had said that everything had gone well. That’s when the man pulled out an American newspaper. He showed them the headline. It was all about the unattractive woman, the one that Ling had left to die with dignity. She saw nothing wrong with what the paper said, but the man said the woman had lived long enough to send a message. He told her what the paper did not reveal: that the woman had used her own blood to write words on her body. He told them the words—he said them in English, he did not translate—but they meant nothing to Ling. She did not know if Togo understood their meaning because he said nothing and did nothing. But according to the man, what the unattractive woman had communicated was not a good thing. It meant she knew more than she was supposed to know. What she had done could cause them problems. Severe problems.
As the man spoke, he grew angrier. He shoved the paper in front of Togo’s face. Togo didn’t flinch. His eyes never even shifted. And when the man said, “What happened?” Togo didn’t answer. He still did not move.
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