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Authors: R.J. Ellory

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'Which
was?'

'Basically,
it meant that a dockworker or a longshoreman didn't have a working contract. It
meant that he had to show up for work at the docks every day, and he had to be
hired newly each day. That kept everyone on their toes. Made people grateful to
work. Made them accept lower wages. A lot of these guys remembered the end of
the Depression, and if they didn't know it personally, they knew it from their
fathers. Within fifty years there were twenty-four different organized crime
families operating in the US. A city usually had one family running it, but
New York was the only city that had more than one. There were five here:
Genovese, Gambino, Lucchese, Bonnano and Colombo. Back in '83 a guy called
William Webster was the Director of the FBI. He testified before the
President's Commission on Organized Crime that there were approximately
seventeen thousand soldiers and about seventeen hundred made men.'

'Made men?'

'It's
a rank, a status if you like. It's awarded to a guy by the family he works for.
A made man cannot be killed by another family without the express authority of
the head of the made man's family. So say you have a Gambino who wants to kill
a made man in the Colombo family. Well, the rules say that he can't do that
unless a Colombo boss gives the go-ahead.'

'And
the families had complete control over running the unions and the docks?'

'They
ran a great deal more than that. They were into clothing, construction, furs, flower
shops, the entirety of the Fulton Market. They had butchers, funeral parlors,
barbershops, milk delivery companies, box manufacturers, window cleaners, and
an entire network of taxicab firms that spider-webbed across the whole
neighborhood. They ran everything, inside and out, so when someone came along
and said they were going to turn the old Idlewild Golf Course into an airport,
well what better business could they get into? Fifty thousand staff, ten
thousand car-parking spaces, five thousand acres just to begin with. The
payroll
at
Idlewild was
half a billion, and that was in the mid-Nineteen- Fifties. These guys came from
East New York, South Ozone Park, Howard Beach, Maspeth and the Rockaways.
Everyone wanted
a
piece
of the pie, and the truth of the matter was that the pie was so fucking big
they could keep on taking and keep on taking and it would never run out.'

'So
what about the police, the authorities who ran the place?'

'What
about them?'

'Well,
didn't they have security in place? Didn't they have the local police taking
care of security for the airport?'

'The
Port Authority had over a hundred uniformed police on the airport grounds every
day. They had customs inspectors, FBI, additional police from the 103rd
Precinct, but you're talking about five thousand acres of land and buildings.
Take, for example, the US Customs building. I don't remember how many floors it
had - ten, twelve, something like that. Huge place. People in and out. No
security to speak of. And here were the pigeonholes that carried the
consignment notes and bills of lading for every shipment that came though the
airport. In the early Sixties there was thirty billion dollars' worth of stuff
coming through Idlewild. So the airport loses thirty million dollars' worth of
traffic, that's only a tenth of one percent. Even three hundred million is only
one percent. They claim it off the insurance, the insurance pays up, the
insurance company hikes the premium, but all in all it's a hell of a lot less
hassle than hiring more security - managers and stuff - and the cost of it, you
know? As far as the airport was concerned, it was par for the course.'

'And
the police that were there . . . they took bribes as well?'

'Of
course they did. Police, Customs people, even some of the federal guys. Take
airline tickets, for example. Guys would come down with dozens of stolen credit
cards and buy up a bucket-load of tickets. Then they would get cash for them,
sometimes sell them at a discount. Frank Sinatra did a national tour on a wad
of stolen airline tickets.'

'You're
kidding—'

'Absolutely
true. He had a manager called Dante Barzottini. He bought fifty thousand
dollars' worth of airline tickets off of someone that had paid for them with
stolen cards. He used them to transport Frank Sinatra and eight other people
around the country. Barzottini got busted for that and they put him away.'

'And
no-one ever came forward and testified against these people?'

'They
tried to, of course, but people got killed. Informants, witnesses, as many as a
dozen a year. And the thing that made the most money for these guys was the
hijackings. They were kings of hijacking. You remember I mentioned Jimmy Burke?
Well, he was so damned good at hijacking that the Colombo family in Brooklyn
and the Luccheses in Queens shared his services. That was the first and only
time I'm aware of where one guy ended up working for two different families. He
had people in his own crew - people like Tommy DeSimone, Angelo Sepe, another
guy called Skinny Bobby Amelia - but the real prize was Jimmy Santos. Santos
was an ex-cop who got busted for armed robbery. He did his time and then he
went over to the bad guys. Well, Jimmy Santos knew everyone. He knew who was
good and who wasn't, and who would take money, or who wouldn't. He knew which
guys had mistresses and which were stretched with alimony payments. He knew
which cops gambled, and out of those who owed the most money. He got word out
through his contacts in the PD, and he got the people he wanted transferred
over to the airport detail. By the time they were through they had maybe half
the police on the airport working for them, and that's how come my father got
involved.'

'He knew
Santos.'

'He
knew of him. My father was already a sergeant in '67. He was here in Brooklyn,
ran the department that processed all the paperwork for inter-precinct
transfers. He had a couple of guys in his own precinct who wanted to move to
the airport, which had become JFK by then. Anyway, he thought this was strange,
two of his best people wanted out to the same detail within two or three months
of each other, so he dug a little and found the connection to Santos. And what
did he do? He went to Santos directly, said he couldn't have the men, not
without paying up. You ask me about my father, you ask me what kind of man he
was? That
's
who he was. A crook. No question about
it. Santos started giving my father a monthly amount, just a couple of hundred
dollars to make the transfers go smooth. My father would get the tip-off on
which transfers were Santos's, and he'd hurry them through. That arrangement
went on until my father moved to Organized Crime Control Bureau in 1972. Then
they had the airport as their territory, and right at the top of their
jurisdictional and operational priorities was cleaning up the scene down
there.'

'But
they didn't, did they?'

'They
cleaned up, that's for sure, and my asshole of a father was right inside of it
all. Just in the ten months from the start of '67 to October, two point two
million dollars' worth of goods went out of JFK. That was the actual value of
goods taken right out of the storage bins and security rooms of the Air Cargo
Center. TWA also lost two and half million dollars' worth of stock, and those
figures don't take into account any of the goods that were hijacked beyond the
airport limits. Believe me, Doctor Marie, the stuff that was stolen out of JFK
was pocket change compared to what they took once the trucks had left the
perimeter.'

'These
were the hijacks and the give-ups?'

'Yes.
Well - one of the difficulties the OCCB and the police had at the time was that
the New York State Legislature hadn't officially codified hijacking as a
felony. Anyone who got busted for hijacking actually had to be charged with
robbery or kidnapping, maybe firearms offences or possession of stolen property
. . . stuff like that. And because hijacking a truck wasn't in the statute
books yet, there was a loophole for these guys. They had the money to buy up
the best lawyers, and they paid off the courts to delay hearings and postpone
arraignments. I heard one time that one case was kept rolling back and forth
between the courts and the DA's Office for eleven years, and by the time it
actually came to court they fined the guy two hundred and fifty dollars.'

'Which
brings us to Lufthansa.'

'Yes,
it does, except—'

'Except
you have to go now.'

'I'm
afraid I do.'

'Well,
if nothing else it's been interesting, Frank.'

'Tomorrow.
We talk about Lufthansa tomorrow.'

'Tomorrow
is Sunday.'

'Monday
then?'

'Monday
it is.'

'You
going to manage without me for a whole day?'

'I'm
sure I'll cope somehow, Frank.'

'Well,
you have my file there, and my phone number's got to be
in there somewhere. You feel like
you need to talk to someone then you give me a call, okay?' 'That's very good
of you.' 'You take care now.' 'You too, Frank, you too.'

TWENTY

 

As if all the parts had been put
together by a clumsy child, the seams of his life gaped wide and would not
close with time. This was how Parrish felt sometimes.

Other
times he felt driven by a purpose, incandescent and fierce.
Blood on the teeth,
the Scandinavians said. You
caught the scent. The case had a hook and it pulled you. You pulled back and it
started to unravel like a ball of twine. Back in the Forties sometime, at least
from Parrish's perspective, the law and justice seemed to diverge. The law
served its own end, and then it served the lawyers. Justice, once fast and
cheap, was laborious and expensive, as rare as a prize diamond. People read
fiction, they watched movies, they wanted life to be like that, but it was not.
The good guys did not always win out, and the bad guys stayed bad and free.
Frank Parrish believed himself one of a dying breed. Someone who gave a damn.
He did not believe himself an arbiter of justice or a staunch testament to the
law, but there were cases he had pursued in his time that had resolved through
sheer persistence and an indomitable sense of purpose. And it was always
children. As he had so long considered, for the children there could be no
reason, no excuse. And though neither Rebecca nor Karen were children, they
were young enough to be unaware of the snares and pitfalls that lay in wait.
The dark spirits of the city had been out in force, and they had been too
naive, too innocent, to see them. And if Frank Parrish didn't care what had
happened, then who would?

He
carried a notebook in his pocket, and sometimes he wrote down thoughts that
came to mind. Seated in a coffee house three or four blocks south of the
Precinct, somewhere down near Schermerhorn, he scribbled down a line he
remembered from a
Tom
Waits song. The one about how
there wasn't really a Devil, that it was just God when He was drunk.

He
drank his coffee. He waited for Jimmy Radick to come meet him. He thought of
Rebecca, of Karen, and he tried so very hard to believe their deaths were
unrelated. But he was unable to convince himself. It was then that he decided
to go out and see Karen's parents.

Radick
was there just after eleven-thirty. Parrish told him what he wanted to do.

'And
you want to go alone again, right?'

'I
think it's best. This is now crossing precincts—'

'And
what was her name?'

'Karen
Pulaski, P-U-L-A-S-K-I.'

'And
you really think there's a connection between her and the Lange girl?'

Parrish
shook his head. 'Instinctively, yes. In reality? Probably not. But I've got to
check it out. It'll bug the hell out of me until I do.'

'OK.
I'll head back to the squad room. What do I tell Valderas?'

'Say
you don't know where I am. Tell him we're meeting later, that we're starting
the shift late, that you've just come in early to do paperwork or something.'

Radick
got up. 'Call me if you need me, okay?'

'Sure
I will,' Parrish replied.

 

Parrish
left Brooklyn at noon. He walked a while and then took the subway at Nevis
Street. Between Fulton and Clinton- Washington he instinctively looked left
towards his own apartment. A woman sat facing him and to the right. She was
reading
Trying To Save Piggy Sneed.
She glanced up at Parrish, and Parrish smiled. He opened his mouth to say
something about the book, but her expression cut him dead.
I don't know you. Don't even think about talking to me.
Say
one fucking word and I will scream until your ears bleed.

He
wondered when it had changed. The world. But
had
the world changed, or was it simply his
perception?

After
alighting at Broadway, he took another subway to Myrtle Avenue. He remembered
the Pulaskis' address, up there
on
Troutman
Street, and he found it without difficulty. The place,
a
three-storied brownstone walk-up, looked
cold and empty, as if vacant, but he went on up and knocked on the door anyway.

It
was when he heard the voice from within -
I'll get it! -
that he fully realized what he was
doing.

The
woman that opened the door was dark haired, five-four or five, wide in the
shoulders and slim in the waist. She had on sweat pants and a tee-shirt, over
that a loose-fitting gray cardigan sweater. She had socks on her feet but no
shoes, and she stood there for a moment just looking at Parrish as if he was
some long-lost relative finally returned.

'Police,'
she said matter-of-factly.

Parrish
nodded. He had his hand around his pocketbook, was ready to show his ID, but
who he was seemed such a foregone conclusion there was no point.

'Detective
Frank Parrish,' he said quietly. 'I've come up from Brooklyn, and I wondered
whether you might have a moment or two to answer some questions.'

'Karen?'

'Yes,
Karen.'

'You
haven't found the guy who killed her, have you? If you had you wouldn't have
more questions—'

'No,
I'm sorry, I haven't found the guy who killed her, Mrs Pulaski, but I have lost
another girl—'

'You
have lost another girl? What d'you mean,
you?'

Parrish
felt foolish all of a sudden. 'I don't
mean ...
I don't know, er . . . I'm sorry, it's just that sometimes I tend to take these
matters personally.'

'Well,
Detective Parrish, I'm glad someone does, and it's reassuring to know that the
investigation is still going on after a year. Come in. My husband's upstairs.
I'll fetch him down.'

Parrish
followed her into the front room of the house, stood there on a colorful rug,
looked at the wall, and found Karen looking right back from a photograph that
couldn't have been taken much before her death. He felt bad. The Pulaskis would
now think he was working on their daughter's murder, and he was not. He
imagined - in all likelihood - that the death of Karen hadn't been looked at
for a good seven or eight months. It was one of the Williamsburg 91st Precinct
ghosts.

The
father appeared, the management accountant. Mid-forties at a guess, graying
hair, bespectacled; the kind of guy who wore an old football shirt without ever
having played football in his life. He had on a wristwatch with multiple dials
and a black rubber housing. Why did desk jockeys always wear Navy SEAL watches?

'Detective,'
he said calmly. 'I'm David Pulaski. You've come to tell us something about
Karen?'

'No,
sir, I'm afraid not. I'm actually working on another case that may be related,
though that is not certain right now.'

David
Pulaski looked at his wife. The disappointment was evident in both their
expressions. They wanted to know that their daughter's killer had been found,
that he had been shot by the police as he tried to escape, that even now he was
experiencing the most excruciating agony, lying in a pool of his own blood in a
filthy alleyway somewhere. The medics would take their time. There was no
reason to hurry. I mean, why should this guy deserve any care at all? But they
would step in at the last moment, they would staunch the blood-loss, ferry him
to hospital, fix him up sufficiently for trial, conviction, for some
interminable prison sentence, and then a prolonged and terrifying execution.
This was what they wanted to hear, but this was not what Parrish would tell
them. This was real life; it only worked that way in the movies.

'Another
girl?' Pulaski asked.

Parrish
nodded.

'Sit
down, Detective.'

Elizabeth
Pulaski asked if Parrish wanted coffee. He declined. He didn't want to be here
any longer than was absolutely necessary.

'I
just wanted to know if there were any further details that you might have
remembered,' Parrish said.

Pulaski
shook his head. 'I don't know, Detective, I really don't. Karen was here, and
then she wasn't. She was a grown-up, even
at
sixteen.
She knew what she wanted in life, she knew where she was going. She was
responsible, polite . . .' He paused, glanced
at
his
wife. 'She often stayed with friends, always had lots of friends, and it was
Christmas. She went over to see them on the 26th. They live up on Willoughby.
She arrived about ten in the morning, was with them until four-ish. Then she
walked down the road, got on the bus, and that was the last anyone saw of her.
Whether she got off the bus before she reached home no-one knows. Whether she
made it all the way home and was abducted before she reached the house . . .'

'Or
if she never intended to come home?' Elizabeth Pulaski ventured.

The
question silenced her husband.

Parrish
understood that they knew no more than they had already told the police.

'And
the only reason I have ever considered that was because of her clothes,'
Elizabeth added.

'Her
clothes?' Parrish asked.

'When
they - er - found her . . . when they found her she was wearing clothes that
she would never have worn.'

Parrish's
nostrils cleared, as if someone had given him ammonia. 'Would never have
worn?'

'A
short skirt,' Elizabeth said. 'Very short. And high-heeled shoes. I mean, Karen
had high-heeled shoes, but only for dances, only for special occasions. She
dressed in jeans and sneakers and sweatshirts, things like that. She hardly
ever wore skirts, and even if she did they were long, down to her knees or
longer. A short skirt and a halter-neck top, and high-heeled shoes . . .' She
shook her head. 'That wasn't like Karen, not at all.'

'And
you told this to the investigating officers?'

'Yes,'
David Pulaski said. 'We told them everything. It should all be on record.'

'I'm
sure it is,' Parrish said, remembering no note regarding Karen's clothes in the
file. 'However, this is a Williamsburg investigation whereas my investigation
is Brooklyn.'

'And
the case you're investigating might be—'

'This
is standard,' Parrish interjected. 'The investigation of your daughter's death
will remain open until the perpetrator is found. The detectives working on it
will never close it, and though you might not hear from them for weeks, even months
at a time, it doesn't mean they're not giving it due attention.'

'We
understand,' Pulaski said, and in his tone Parrish recognized the resignation.
Pulaski knew that Parrish was telling him what he wanted to hear, and that this
may not necessarily be the most accurate of truths.

Elizabeth
Pulaski
rose from the chair. She looked at
Parrish, then at her husband. 'The sad thing is that after all the work we put
in
...'
She shook her head slowly.

'Sorry?' Parrish
asked.

'Karen was not
our daughter,' David Pulaski said. 'Not by blood. We adopted her when she was
seven. She was not doing well, not well at all. It took a good three or four
years to really get her to settle down.'

'You
adopted
her?' Parrish asked, attempting to
subdue the surprise in his voice.

Pulaski smiled
awkwardly. 'It's not so uncommon, Detective . . .'

'No, of course
not. I'm sorry. No, that's not what I meant. That just ties into something else
I am investigating.'

'Something else
you are investigating?'

'Another case.
I'm sorry. I don't mean to sound insensitive, but it just drew my attention to
another unrelated matter I am looking into.'

Parrish knew he
sounded unprofessional. He stood up, perhaps a little too quickly, and it was
obvious to both the Pulaskis that he was now ready to leave.

He thanked the
couple for their time, he wished them well, and when he crossed the road and
started down the facing sidewalk he did not look back towards the house. He
felt their eyes on him, and he wanted them to forget as much of their meeting,
as much about him, as possible. He had said nothing for a very simple reason:
If he had stressed the significance of the adoption, then he had no doubt that
they would have been up at the 91st asking questions of Detective Richard
Franco and his colleagues.
Did you know
that a girl was murdered in Brooklyn? A detective came to see us, and he told
us that the girl from Brooklyn had also lost her parents, just like Karen? Did
you know this? Was this part of your investigation when you were looking into
the murder of our daughter?

He did not wish
to be caught stepping on anyone's toes, least of all another homicide detective
from an entirely different precinct.

Parrish took the
subway at Myrtle and headed back to Brooklyn.

As far he could recall, the
Records Archives Division of New York County Child Services was over on
Manhattan. Whether they were open on a Saturday or not he wasn't certain, but
if they were he wanted to get there before they closed.

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