Night Work (38 page)

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Authors: David C. Taylor

BOOK: Night Work
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“Yes.”

“That was a lie. The driver who picks him up thought he was going to the office, but took you to the airport. The tickets were reserved that morning at seven thirty.”

“Well then I guess we hadn't planned it for long.” She smiled.

“It's not a joke.”

“No. Of course not. I'm sorry.” Serious now, like a schoolgirl called to task for talking in class.

“You took Lucky for a walk like you usually do in the morning.” The dog raised its head at its name, and then flopped back down. “You went into the park at Seventy-second Street like you usually do, and you found Casey Allen sitting on a kitchen chair with a bullet hole in his head.”

She watched him for a while without speaking while she calculated.
If I say this, then what? If I say that?
“Even if I did see him, I didn't have anything to do with it. You don't think I killed him, do you?”

“No.”

She came to a decision that cleared her face. She nodded and shrugged. “Yes. I saw him.”

“Then what?”

“I thought he was dead. I mean, I'd never seen a dead man before, but he was so still, and he wasn't breathing, and he was very pale. And there was that hole in his forehead. I just knew.” She took a deep breath at the memory and let it out in a rush.

“And?”

“I came back here and told Bob what I had found. He told me to go pack a bag. He called the airline. We left. He thought there was a good chance that Casey would never be connected to us. And if he was, we weren't here.”

“Yeah. That worked well.”

“Bob's very smart about a lot of things, but dead men are outside his areas of expertise. And he was probably right to take the chance. Not all policemen are as smart as you are. We might never have been connected.”

“It didn't occur to you to call the police?”

“What for? He was dead. Someone was bound to call. Why did it have to be me?” A woman used to having her problems solved by other people.

“You may have been partially responsible for his death.”

“Me? Don't be ridiculous. How?”

“You were having an affair with him.”

She laughed. “I was not having an affair with him. I might have an affair with you, Michael, because you are an interesting, dangerous man. Casey Allen was a great big boy, enthusiastic, sweet, but simple. With him I got laid.” She laughed again. “Oh, the look on your face. Are you shocked?”

“Not really. I've heard about the Hopkinses' open marriage.”

“Oh, you've been out gossiping with the ladies, or was it the men? It's hard to know who finds it more exciting. I do know when I go to a party these days, I am never without male companionship.” Cassidy sensed defiance behind her smile.

“Did Casey's wife ever show up here?”

“His wife?” One of those questions asked to buy time to think. “Yes. Once, as far as I know. She brought him a sandwich.”

“After you started screwing him?”

“Now you're being unpleasant.”

“Answer the question.”

“After.”

“And while she was here, did you flirt with him?”

“No. Of course not.”

“No gesture, no hand on his shoulder, tap on the arm, one of those things where you pat a man's chest?”

Her eyes were wide and her face was serious. “I do that to everybody.”

“No, you don't. You do it to men you're attracted to. And she got the message. And you meant her to get the message. You just wanted to mark the territory a little, didn't you?”

“Don't be stupid. I did not,” she protested, but he could read the lie.

“Then he began showing up at home with all the new clothes. That must have gotten her attention.”

“I was trying to help him out. He asked me.” She lit another cigarette, oblivious to the one smoldering in the ashtray, and took a couple of fierce puffs.

“It turns out she's a very jealous woman. She attacked an old girlfriend of Casey's with a beer bottle for the crime of saying hello.”

“It's not true.”

“Yes, it is. She shot her husband because she was jealous of you, and somehow she moved him to where you would find him. She wanted you to see.”

“No. I don't believe it.” But she did. She stubbed the cigarette out hard in a crystal ashtray, saw there was another burning and said, “Goddamn it.” She looked at Cassidy and her face was stiff. “I'm going to call our lawyer. Bob said he should be here if you came back, and he's right.”

“Don't bother. I'm leaving.” He stood up.

“What's going to happen to me?”

“Nothing. I guess I could work up some sort of obstruction charge against you, but it wouldn't stick.”

“And her? What about her?”

“We'll probably get her. Everything she did was on the spur of the moment. There are bound to be some loose ends. But then again, she might get away with it. Who knows? Maybe she'll come see you.” Jane's eyes widened, and for a moment her composure dropped away and she looked scared.

Cassidy stopped on the corner of Fifth Avenue to light a cigarette. He looked back at the house he had just left. It was five stories of gray limestone with the entry blocked by the iron-barred door. The light reflected off the big, deep-set windows so they looked impenetrable. It was a fortress, a sanctuary, and the people who lived in it expected to be insulated from the dirtier problems of the world.

His comment about Theresa showing up here was a thin blade under Jane's guard, enough to prick her into fear, and he was glad that he had done it, but he knew it was cheap and petty revenge. The wound would close quickly. Careless people like Jane Hopkins sailed on untroubled by the wreckage they left in their wake.

 

24

The three men who had left the Lincoln in the parking lot of the Atlanta train station had two adjoining rooms in the Bradford Hotel on West 70th Street. The Bradford was a mid-range apartment hotel of no special distinction whose clientele consisted for the most part of businessmen in town for a week or two who, seeking economy, appreciated the kitchenettes in the rooms that allowed them to cook simple meals for themselves rather than eat in restaurants. The three men from the Lincoln were not interested in economy, since they were spending their employers' money, not their own. They appreciated the hotel's anonymity and its proximity to Central Park, half a block away, where they would do their work.

Two of the men from the Lincoln were twins, Terry and Jerry Brasoli. The third, Will Horner, was their first cousin. The three of them had grown up in Ybor City, the cigar-making section of Tampa, Florida. Their mothers, who were sisters, held jobs in the Arturo Fuente cigar factory, and their fathers, petty gangsters in the Trafficante mob, had died stupid, violent deaths. Pete Brasoli bled out on the floor of a dive called the Blind Pig with a hatchet buried in his neck after calling a cross-dressed Cuban meat cutter a fucking faggot. Tim Horner went down at the wrong end of a sawed-off shotgun that ended an argument about whether the Florida state bird was the pink flamingo. The boys, joined by blood and an instinct for mayhem, had grown up rough and wild. When they were in their late teens, a judge took a dim view of their joyriding through an upscale neighborhood in South Tampa in a stolen car and offered them the choice of enlistment in the Marines or three years in jail. They had opted for the military on the assumption that they could run when they got tired of it, but discovered, to their surprise and satisfaction, that the Marines would train them to kill people efficiently. They practiced their craft for a year in Korea and then came back to Tampa and offered their services to Santo Trafficante, Jr., who had a need for their talents.

Terry Brasoli, the most orderly and precise of the three, favored a Winchester M70 target rifle as opposed to the M1903 Springfield he had mastered in Marine Corps training. He mounted a Unertl 8 power scope with a one-and-a-half-inch objective lens and a fine crosshair reticle. He used M72 match ammunition and at six hundred yards he could group his shots in a four-inch circle. He preferred to work closer, because he liked to see the impact.

His brother Jerry had discovered an affection for explosives and could shape a charge in such a way that the target would lose his foot, his hand, or his entire being when he turned the key in his car. Cousin Tim was a more straightforward goon who liked to work in close with a knife or a handgun, and he favored the short, brutal Uzi the Israelis had developed. “A pretty goddamn good weapon for a bunch of yids.”

The three men ate pizza and drank Coca-Colas and watched a black-and-white rerun of Roy Rogers and Dale Evans chasing bad guys around a mythical Wild West where Jeeps, telephones, and the rest of the twentieth century coexisted happily with cowboys and cowgirls riding horses and sporting six shooters. The men wore the Parks Department uniforms they had found in the closets when they checked into their rooms. They had scouted the target area and were satisfied the plan would work as outlined. The rifle, wrapped in a couple of layers of cotton cloth, was in a wheeled canvas bucket surrounded by rakes, shovels, and hoes in the short hall near the front door. Roy Rogers leaped from Trigger and dragged two fleeing rustlers from their saddles and rode them to the ground. Dale Evans lassoed a third, and Pat Brady subdued a fourth with the front end of his Jeep. Roy and Dale sang “Happy Trails to You,” and they cut to a Jell-O commercial. Jerry stacked the plates and carried them to the kitchen and dumped them in the sink. They would not be coming back here tonight. Someone else could wash up.

*   *   *

Cassidy was restless. They had been over the plans for the rally in the park three times in the last three days. Who went where. Who was responsible for what. What to do if this contingency arose, or that one. Now all they could do was wait, and Cassidy was no good at waiting. He would meet Orso at the station house at five, but there was time to kill, and it died slowly for him if he did not have something to do. On the off chance that Fuentes was stupider than he seemed, Cassidy went back to the apartment building on 73rd and West End Avenue.

Drago Peck leaned against an awning pole and smoked a forbidden cigarette hidden in a cupped hand. When he saw Cassidy coming up the block, he flicked the cigarette out into the street, straightened, and smiled a tip-sucking smile. “How're you doing, Detective? What a day, huh?” He gestured proudly toward the blue sky and white clouds as if he had summoned them himself.

“I'm going up to the general's apartment.”

“Sure. Whatever you want. That Fuentes guy hasn't been back. I've been keeping my eye out. I told the other doormen, the elevator men, I wanted to know if he showed.”

“Thank you.”

“Just doing my job. The good of the tenants is my concern.”

The apartment looked much the same as when Cassidy last saw it, but it already had the musty, airless smell of an uninhabited place. He did not expect to find anything of note, but there was always the chance that Fuentes had slipped in. He walked down the corridor to Fuentes's room. As far as he could tell no one had been there since the day Garza y Mendoza had been killed. He opened bureau drawers and closed them again. He looked in the closet. The clothes still hung neatly and nothing seemed to be missing. He sat at the desk and let his eyes drift over the room. Sometimes if you did not look directly but let your glance slide, you picked up something out of place. Not this time. He checked his watch. Okay. You came. You looked. You didn't find anything, another long shot fired and missed. Time to go.

Drago Peck opened the front door with a flourish. “Everything copacetic, Detective?” The slang sounded weird coming with a thick Balkan accent.

“Yes. Everything's fine.”

“Let me get you a taxi.”

“No, thanks. I'm going to walk for a while.”

“What is it with cops? You don't like taxis?”

“What do you mean?”

“When that other cop came down with Mr. Fuentes, I had a cab right here. Mrs. Mendelstein was just getting out. I said, here you are gentlemen. He said, no thanks. They were going to walk. What is it with you guys, walking when there are perfectly good cabs to carry you where you want to go?”

Cassidy turned away without answering. He went back over his conversation with Orso in the hospital after Fuentes escaped. Orso said there had been no taxi outside the building when they came down, so they walked toward Broadway and the nearest call box.
Did I get it wrong? No. That's what he said. Why the lie?

*   *   *

Cassidy found Orso on one of the cots in the co-op room behind the squad room. He sat up rubbing his eyes when Cassidy came in.

“Time to go,” Cassidy said.

“Any coffee left in the pot?”

“I think so.”

“Give me a minute. I've got to splash some water on my face. Man, I was deep down.” He got up and stretched and shuffled to the bathroom. He came out to the squad room a couple of minutes later carrying a cup of coffee. Cassidy sat with his feet up on his desk smoking a cigarette and watched him come. Again he noticed that Orso, usually sleek, and fastidious, was pasty and tired-looking. His hair was hastily combed, and his suit coat was wrinkled.

“What's with you?” Orso asked.

“Nothing.”

“The way you're looking at me.”

“Tony, nothing. I was just thinking.”

“About what?”

“Casey Allen.”

“Yeah? Did you talk to the Hopkins broad?”

“I did.”

“What'd she say? Was she banging the carpenter?”

“Yup. And the wife came by one day.”

“Oh, boy. She got a whiff, huh?”

“It's what it looks like.”

“Broads, man. What are you going to do?” As if that said it all. He checked the clock. “We better get out of here. If we're late Clarkson's going to get his panties in a bunch.”

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