by Thomas Perry
Elizabeth thought for a moment. Castiglione dead. She tried to put it together. DiGiorgio is spotted, Castiglione orders him killed, and DiGiorgio puts up a fight, killing—six men? And besides, there was the rifle in the swimming pool. And Castiglione had been watched for years. It was a fact of his life. He wouldn’t panic now. No. Try again. DiGiorgio is watching Castiglione’s house, and for some reason a fight breaks out between the men in the house. Shooting starts, one of them has a rifle; DiGiorgio goes to stop it and gets hit. But what about the fire? Try again. DiGiorgio is watching the house. Men come and try to burn the house, to kill Castiglione. Castiglione’s men fight back. DiGiorgio is there, tries to stop it or at least to apprehend somebody, and is wounded. She kept trying the combinations, trying desperately to ignore the one that kept coming back into her mind: DiGiorgio is standing outside the darkened house with a high-powered rifle in his hands, waiting for the old man to come through the door to escape the fire. DiGiorgio has spent too many years sitting in cold cars outside fancy restaurants, checking license numbers on parked limousines, translating taped conversations into English. DiGiorgio is an avid hunter.
The policeman had the microphone in his hand and said, “Go ahead.”
The radio clicked and farted, then the voice said, “You may proceed to the hotel directly.”
The policeman said, “Copy,” and slipped the microphone into its slot.
“What’s that about?” said Elizabeth.
“I guess your man didn’t make it.”
“THAT WAS QUICK,” said Brayer. “What have you got?”
“Not much,” said Elizabeth. She was standing at the glass door to the balcony. It overlooked the swimming pool, where people were lying immobile in long deck chairs, their bodies glistening with oil as though they were being rendered for their fat. But what she was thinking about was that the layout was just like the room where Senator Claremont had been killed. She edged along the wall to catch the light so she could study the finger smudges on the glass. “DiGiorgio died before I could get to the hospital. I just got off the line with the local homicide people and they said he’d been in a coma since shortly after they brought him in.” She waited, but he didn’t say anything. She added, “I’m sorry.”
“So he didn’t tell them anything either.” Brayer’s voice was gruff.
“Nothing anybody can use,” she said. “In the ambulance he was just raving. I think what he said was ‘a fucking war.’ ”
“What?” said Brayer.
“A fucking war. Over and over again. It could have been that it reminded him of something in Viet Nam. I didn’t know him well, but he was an ex-marine, wasn’t he? Although from what I’ve been told, that wouldn’t be too far off. You wouldn’t have to be delirious to make the connection. There were six besides DiGiorgio, and the house was a ruin.”
“Including Castiglione,” said Brayer. He paused for a moment. Then he said, “Look, Elizabeth. There’s the possibility that he was just describing what it looked like. Agreed. But there’s also a chance he was describing what he thought was happening. What if this Orloff character was involved in something? Say he was working for Castiglione, and somebody, maybe Toscanzio or Carl Bala, decided to take over and killed him? Then there was that family killed in their car. A reprisal? And there was another shootout in front of the Tropicana last night. Nobody knows what happened because when it was over the ones who were left standing put the ones that were hit into cars and drove off. But there was blood all over the pavement. So far nobody has been reported missing and no doctor within a hundred miles of Las Vegas has treated anybody for gunshot wounds. We’re monitoring for it. What’s it sound like to you?” He didn’t wait, just kept talking. “I’ll tell you what it sounds like. ‘A fucking war.’ ”
“You think so?” asked Elizabeth. “But who? And what do we do about it?”
“Well, obviously Castiglione was on one end of it. And I’ll bet whoever comes up top dog is on the other end. God knows what we’re supposed to do about it. I’ll tell you what I’d like to do. I’d like to pull all our people, you included, about a thousand miles eastward and let those bastards kill each other off. If it weren’t for the chance that it has something to do with Senator Claremont I think I’d damned well do it.”
She said, “That and your curiosity.” She heard him give a humorless little chuckle.
“You’re probably right,” he said. “And DiGiorgio.”
“Yes,” said Elizabeth, “I’m sorry about that, John. I didn’t know him well, but I guess you must have.”
“Oh. Yes,” he said, without inflection. Then his voice became animated again. “Jesus,” he said, “I think what bothers me most about it is that he had no business there in the first place. He was supposed to sit tight and watch, no matter what happened. He probably died trying to save that old piece of scum from something he had coming to him for years.”
Elizabeth said nothing. She didn’t see any reason to remind him that DiGiorgio was the only one found at the scene who hadn’t lived there, that he’d been found in the yard, not in his car, where every regulation, every procedure of the department insisted he should be. She knew Brayer had been thinking about that since he’d received the telephone call in the early morning.
“Now we’ve got to find out as much as we can without wasting time,” said Brayer. “But don’t do anything stupid.” He said it as though he had something specific in mind. “You find out what you can about the company and that’s all. The minute you see or hear anything that might be illegitimate you report it. And if it looks like it might be more than that you get on a plane and talk to me about it in person. You got that?”
“Got it,” said Elizabeth. “Don’t worry, John. I’m no hero.”
“I’ll be satisfied if you’re not a fool.” He hung up.
20
The building didn’t look like a place where there had been a murder. It looked still less like a corporation that would appear in the notebook of a United States senator. It consisted of a single one-story cinderblock structure with a small sign that read Fieldston Growth Enterprises, and a tiny lawn protected by a frail cordon of thirsty geraniums.
When Elizabeth walked in the front entrance the receptionist stopped typing and smiled with some sincerity, and Elizabeth believed the smile. This had the look of a place where a receptionist could get lonely. There were only the wood-paneled walls, the typewriter, and the telephone.
“Hello,” she said. “I’m Elizabeth Waring of the U.S. Department of Justice.” She held out her identification, but the woman didn’t look at it so she dropped it into her purse.
The receptionist was in her mid-forties but her hair was already tinted with a blue rinse, probably, Elizabeth decided, to draw attention to her vacant blue eyes. The eyes didn’t flinch or flicker. Any visitor was obviously a treat.
“May I help you?” asked the receptionist, her smile broadening. Elizabeth revised her estimate when she saw the tiny crinkles at the corners of the mouth—mid-fifties, she thought, but takes care of herself.
“I’d like to speak with Mr. Fieldston, please.”
“Oh, I’m sorry, Miss Waring,” said the receptionist. She seemed moved by the disappointment she was about to inflict. “Mr. Fieldston isn’t in today.”
“I wonder if you could tell me where I can reach him? I’d like very much to speak with him.”
“Mr. Fieldston is out of town this week,” said the receptionist, as though he had vanished into a realm that was out of reach to any form of human communication.
“Do you have a number for him? I’m on a tight schedule.”
“I’m sorry,” said the receptionist. “Mr. Fieldston is meeting with a client, and I’m never permitted to tell anyone where he is when he travels. I’m sure you understand.”
Elizabeth didn’t, but she was interested now. “Why is that?”
“The investment business is a difficult one. If Mr. Fieldston’s competitors knew in advance what he
was buying, the negotiations might be complicated by other bids. If people knew he was acquiring a particular holding, the price of all surrounding holdings might be artificially inflated.” The way she added, “And so on,” signaled that the receptionist had either run out of imaginary excuses or reached the limit of her understanding of the business, but Elizabeth couldn’t decide which it was.
“Let me leave my number then,” she said. “I’m staying at the Sands.” She fished in her purse and found a calling card, and wrote on the back of it Sands Hotel, Room 219. “If Mr. Fieldston calls, please ask him to get in touch with me.” She turned to go.
“What can I tell Mr. Fieldston?” asked the receptionist, already prepared with a message pad. “Is it about Mr. Orloff?”
Elizabeth hesitated, but she supposed that it was about Orloff, partly. “Yes it is,” she said.
“A shame,” said the receptionist. Elizabeth could see her write Re: Mr. Orloff on the note, then watched, fascinated, as the receptionist stapled her card to the note and placed it in her Out box. It was the only piece of paper in the box.
SOMEONE HAD BROUGHT her suitcase into the room during the day. Taped to it was a note on the front desk’s stationery: Please call Mr. Bechtman, Room 403. The time on it was only four thirty. Two hours ago.
Elizabeth dialed 403 and the voice said, “Elizabeth, stay where you are. I’ll be there in a minute.” She sat down on the bed with the dead telephone to her ear. Brayer!
Brayer’s seersucker sport coat and sunglasses weren’t a disguise so much as a radical change in his personality. After more than a year of getting used to the dark, conservative suits that got shiny and wrinkled in the back from the long days he spent sitting at a desk, Elizabeth was fascinated.
“Great outfit, John,” she smiled. “You look like a Cuban spy.” But she was thinking something else; he was perfect. He looked like another version of what he was—a middle-aged man from somewhere in the East. A man who had spent most of his years working too hard and not getting enough out of it to soften the signs of wear—but who wasn’t at the office today and meant to make the most of it. Maybe he was here for a convention; maybe he’d come with the little woman and managed to slip away from her for a few hours to look for some action at the tables.
But the voice was Brayer of Justice. “What have you got so far?” he said.
“Still very little to go on,” she answered. “Edgar Fieldston is out of town checking out some kind of investment. The secretary pretends she can’t tell anyone where he is but she’s probably lying and doesn’t know herself. After that I went to the police station to see what they had. It wasn’t much either.”
“You didn’t ask them about FGE, did you?” Brayer snapped.
“No,” said Elizabeth. “But it was just because there didn’t seem to be any reason to. I figured you’d want to know about DiGiorgio—”
“Right,” said Brayer. “What’s new on that?”
“The place was clean. If Castiglione was doing anything special it was miles from his house. Except for Castiglione the men killed had no criminal records and were legally entitled to carry the guns found there. They were officially employees of a private security company—there’s no question what they were but you couldn’t have proven it in court. The rifle that killed them was manufactured over twenty years ago, and the last time it was recorded as sold was at a gun shop in San Diego in 1967. It’ll take time to track down the man who bought it, if he’s still alive. DiGiorgio, Castiglione, and the driver were killed with a .32-caliber pistol. What they think now is that it was done by three men—one near the pool with the rifle, one near the garage with the pistol, and one somewhere near the front of the house who started the fires and then probably stayed with the getaway car to control the front door, driveway, and street.”
Brayer listened intently, then nodded. “Okay. So it’s probably the three who got the Mexican family. And DiGiorgio saw what was happening but didn’t see one of them or got distracted at the wrong moment.” Elizabeth could see he was imagining it, re-creating what must have happened, as a man re-creates the scene where he lost something valuable.
He sat down on the bed and took off his sunglasses. His eyes looked tired. “Okay,” he said again. “That’s probably all we’ll get on that. The rifle will turn out to have been lost or stolen years ago. The pistol was already at the bottom of Lake Mead or sawed into fifty pieces hours before the police got around to investigating. No surprises anywhere.”
She said, “Sorry, John. I guess your trip was a waste of time.”
He looked surprised, his gaze suddenly widening, but turning sharp and predatory. “No, we’re just beginning,” he said. “The reason I came is Fieldston Growth Enterprises. All your chickens have come home to roost.”
“What do you mean?” asked Elizabeth.
“I mean that there’s something wrong with it. When I got through to Justin Garfield, I didn’t see much in it. The list was only a statistical fluke. They programmed a computer at IRS to spit out the names of companies that had earned unusually high incomes last year but had reinvested most of them to avoid showing a big profit on the balance sheet at the end of the year—plowed the money back under. Senator Claremont was looking for instances where they might have disguised investments as operating expenses. He wanted to amend his tax bill to close the loophole. Fieldston Growth Enterprises had a high ratio of gross income to net profit and so it went on the list. It was no big deal. Garfield said it was possible the Senator might have decided to call in somebody from FGE to testify in next session’s hearings, but it was just as possible he’d have deleted it. It might not be big enough to use as an example. The Senator had a preference for the dramatic.” He pulled a notebook out of his coat and stared at it.
“So what makes it look interesting?” asked Elizabeth.
“Garfield’s people started poking around, doing groundwork for the committee. They came up with some odd facts. Edgar Fieldston started the company in 1971, so they began with him. He looked good. An old California family. They owned ranch land that got bought up in the thirties. They took a loss, but it didn’t matter much because the money involved was still enough to make them as rich as anybody needs to be, and in those days nobody would have believed what the land would be worth in fifty years, or cared much either. Fieldston looked fine, except for one thing, and it wasn’t much. In 1969 and 1970 his income taxes were in arrears. He was building up penalties.”
“So he started a business in 1971,” said Elizabeth, “and came out okay.” She shrugged.
“Right,” said Brayer. His mouth turned up into something like a smile, but colder and harder. “He couldn’t pay his taxes for two years. In the third year he had enough money to pay the taxes, penalties and all, and start a business with an initial investment of, let’s see—” he glanced at the notebook. “Four hundred and sixty thousand dollars.”
“A silent partner?” said Elizabeth.
“Has to be.” Brayer closed the notebook and slipped it back into his breast pocket. “And nobody got suspicious. He was the scion of an old family with money. Maybe he sold some land they had left somewhere, maybe a rich aunt died, maybe a friend loaned him the money. The rich have rich friends. Nobody asked any questions.”
“Until the name of the company started turning up around murders,” said Elizabeth. “Until they got careless.” She was warming to the hunt now, her mind racing ahead for the next stage of it, but Brayer stopped her.
“No,” he said. “Just the opposite. Until Garfield’s computer spit it out by accident. I think Fieldston’s silent partners got wind of it somehow and reacted to protect the company. Garfield’s people weren’t light-footed. They did credit checks, talked to bank officers, and so on.”
“But they wouldn’t do that,” said Elizabeth. “No. It doesn’t make sense. We’re off the track.” She was up now, pacing the hotel room. “First, there’s Veasy. A machinist in Ventura, California. He might have been a threat b
ecause he was critical of the union’s investment in FGE, but not much of a threat unless he got in touch with the Senator’s committee, and there’s no way he would have known about it. And if by some chance he did, the last thing they’d do is kill him because that would bring the police and maybe the FBI.” She walked back and forth, as though each step brought her closer to what she was looking for. “And killing the Senator wouldn’t do it either because there was still the committee, and Orloff was their man, their lawyer. No, John, it has to be something else. Something is missing.” She stopped and stared at him, but he was smiling that strange, cold smile, still sure.
He said, “You’re right about part of it, but wrong about the rest. Veasy was the first in time, but not in logic. That’s what you’re missing. The Senator was the main thing. If they got rid of him, the committee wouldn’t go after FGE, because he was the only one interested in it. Garfield told me today the information on Claremont’s inquiries has already been packed away. At the end of the next term it would have been shredded because it wasn’t part of an official, permanent record and it wasn’t part of an ongoing project. And nothing had happened yet. There was no reason for anybody to wonder if the Senator’s death was linked to FGE, certainly not the police, because the only ones who knew he’d ever heard of FGE were the committee staff, and they’d never hear about Veasy or Orloff or the rest of it. All they’d ever know was that it was one of a hundred or so that they were supposed to check out for a hearing months from now.”
Elizabeth was still shaking her head. She said, “There has to be more. A lot more. They knew they wouldn’t get caught, agreed. But that was because no reasonable stretch of the imagination would connect them with the Senator—but that’s still true. Because nobody would kill a U.S. senator just because he might subpoena their books or call clean, upright Edgar Fieldston to testify.”