Read A Dance at the Slaughter House Page 40

Page 40

 

  "Ill stay out of drafts. "

  "You do that," he said. "You know, I think Olgas right, I think Im going to enjoy you. What are you doing tonight?"

  "Tonight?"

  "Tonight. Why dont you join us for dinner? Well drink some champagne, have a few laughs. Tomorrows for business but theres no reason we cant be social tonight. "

  "I cant. "

  "Why not?"

  "I have plans made. "

  "Cancel them! Whats so important you cant reschedule it, eh?"

  "I have to go to an AA meeting. "

  He laughed long and hard. "Oh, thats marvelous," he said. "Yes, now that you mention it, we all have plans. Olgas chaperoning a CYO dance and I have to go to, uh-"

  "The Boy Scout Council," I suggested.

  "Thats it exactly, the annual award dinner of the Boy Scout Area Council. Theyre going to give me a merit badge for buggery, its one of the most sought-after awards. Youre a funny man, Scudder. Youre costing me a great deal of money, but at least I get a few laughs out of it. "

  AFTER I got off the phone with Stettner I called a car rental agency in the neighborhood and reserved a car. I didnt pick it up right away but walked instead to Coliseum Books, where I picked up a Hagstrom map of Queens. On my way out of the bookstore I realized I was just down the street from the gallery where Id left the original Ray Galindez sketches for framing. They had done a nice job, and as I looked at the pencil drawings behind their shield of non-glare glass I tried to see them purely as art. I wasnt entirely successful. I kept seeing two dead boys and the man who killed them.

  They wrapped them for me and I paid with my credit card and carried the package back to my hotel. I stowed it in the closet and spent a few minutes studying the map of Queens. I went out for a sandwich and a cup of coffee and read a newspaper, then came back and looked at the map some more. Around seven I walked over to the car-rental place and used my credit card again, and they put me behind the wheel of a gray Toyota Corolla with sixty-two hundred miles on the clock. The gas tank was full and the ashtrays were empty, but whoever had vacuumed the interior had done a less than perfect job.

  I had the map with me but I got there without referring to it, taking the Midtown Tunnel and the Long Island Expressway and exiting just after the BQE interchange. There was some traffic on the LIE but not too much of it, with most of the commuters in front of their television sets by now. I cruised around the area, and when I reached the New Maspeth Arena I circled the block slowly once and found a place to park.

  I sat there for an hour or more like a lazy old cop on a stakeout. At one point I had to take a leak, and I hadnt brought along an empty quart jar, the way Id learned to do years ago. The fact that the neighborhood was deserted and I hadnt seen a soul in the past half hour made me positively reckless, and I drove two blocks and got out of the car to pee with abandon against a brick wall. I went around the block and parked in another spot across the street from the arena. The whole street was a car owners dream, just one empty parking space after another.

  Around nine or a little past it I left the Toyota and walked over to the arena. I took my time, paying close attention, and when I got back in the car I got out my notebook and made some sketches. I had the dome light on, but not for very long.

  At ten I took a different route and drove back to the city. The kid at the garage said he had to charge me for a full day. "Might as well keep her overnight," he said. "Bring her back tomorrow afternoon, wont cost you a nickel more. "

  I told him I had no further use for it. The garage was on Eleventh Avenue between Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth. I walked a block east, then south. I checked at Armstrongs but didnt see anyone I recognized, and just for the hell of it I looked in the door of Petes All-American to see if Durkin was there. He wasnt. Id spoken to him a few days earlier, and hed said he hoped he hadnt said anything out of line. Id assured him he was a perfect gentleman.

  "Then thats a first for me," he said. "I dont make a habit of it, but once in a while a man has to go and let the devil out. " I told him I knew what he meant.

  MICK wasnt at Grogans. "Hell probably be in later," Burke said. "Sometime between now and closing. "

  I sat at the bar with a Coke, and when Id finished it I switched to club soda. After a while Andy Buckley came in and Burke drew him a pint of the draft Guinness, and Andy took the stool next to mine and talked about basketball. I used to follow the game but I havent paid much attention to it in the past few years. That was all right because he was prepared to carry the whole conversation himself. He had gone to the Garden the night before and the Knicks had covered the spread with a three-pointer at the buzzer, winning his bet for him in the process.

  I let him talk me into a game of darts, but I wasnt fool enough to bet with him. He could have played left-handed and beat me. We played a second game, and then I went back to the bar and drank another Coke and watched television and Andy stayed at the dart board sharpening his game.

  At one point I thought about going to the midnight meeting. When I first got sober there was a meeting every night at twelve at the Moravian church at Lexington and Thirtieth. Then they lost the meeting place and the group moved to Alanon House, an AA clubhouse that has had various locations in the theater district and is currently housed in a third-floor apartment on West Forty-sixth. At one point Alanon House was between locations, and some people started a new midnight meeting downtown on Houston Street near Varick, where the Village butts up against SoHo. The downtown group has added other meetings, including an insomniacs special every morning at two.

  So I had a choice of midnight meetings, and I could tell Burke to let Mick know I was looking for him, and that Id be back by one-thirty at the latest. But something stopped me, something kept me on my stool and led me to order another Coke when my glass was empty.

  I was in the john when Mick finally showed up a little before one. When I emerged he was at the bar with his bottle of JJ&S and his Waterford tumbler. "Good man," he said. "Burke told me you were here and I said he should put on a pot of coffee. I hope youre up for a long night. "

  "Just a short night tonight," I said.

  "Ah, well," he said. "Maybe I can get you to change your mind. "

  We sat at our usual table and he filled his glass and held it to the light. "By God thats a good color," he said, and he took a drink.

  "If you ever quit drinking," I said, "they make a cream soda thats just about the same shade. "

  "Is that a fact?"

  "Of course youd have to let it go flat," I said, "or itd have a head on it. "

  "Spoil the effect, wouldnt it?" He took a drink and sighed. "Cream soda indeed," he said.

  We talked about nothing much, and then I leaned forward and said, "Do you still need money, Mick?"

  "Ive not got holes in my shoes," he said.

  "No. "

  "But I always need money. I told you that the other night. "

  "You did. "

  "Why?"

  "I know where you can get some," I said.

  "Ah," he said. He sat in silence for a moment, and a slight smile came and went, came and went. "How much money?"

  "A minimum of fifty thousand. Probably a lot more than that. "

  "Whose money?"

  A good question. Joe Durkin had reminded me that money knows no owner. It was, hed said, a principle of law.

  "A couple named Stettner," I said.

  "Drug dealers?"

  "Close. He deals in currencies, launders money for a pair of Iranian brothers from Los Angeles. "

  "Eye-ranians," he said, with relish. "Well, now. Maybe you should tell me more. "

  I must have talked for twenty minutes. I took out my notebook and showed him the sketches Id made in Maspeth. There wasnt that much to tell, but he took me back over various points, covering everything thoroughly. He didnt say anything for a minute or two, and then he filled his glass with whiskey and drank it down as if it were cool wat
er on a hot afternoon.

  "Tomorrow night," he said. "Four men, Id say. Two men and myself, and Andy for the driving. Tom would do for one of them, and either Eddie or John. You know Tom. You dont know Eddie or John. "

  Tom was the day bartender, a pale tight-lipped man from Belfast. Id always wondered what he did with his evenings.

  "Maspeth," he said. "Can any good thing come out of Maspeth? By God, there we sat watching the niggers punching each other and all the time theres a money laundry beneath our feet. Is that why you went out there then? And brought me along for company?"

  "No, it was work took me out there, but I was working on something else at the time. "

  "But you kept your eyes open. "

  "You could say that. "

  "And put two and two together," he said. "Well, its just the kind of situation I can use. I dont mind telling you, youve surprised me. "

  "How?"

  "By bringing this to me. It seems unlike you. Its more than a man does out of friendship. "

  "You pay a finders fee," I said. "Dont you?"

  "Ah," he said, and a curious light came into his eyes. "That I do," he said. "Five percent. "

  He excused himself to make a phone call. While he was gone I sat there and looked at the bottle and the glass. I could have had some of the coffee Burke had made but I didnt want any. I didnt want the booze either.

  When he came back I said, "Five percents not enough. "

  "Oh?" His face hardened. "By God, youre full of surprises tonight, arent you? I thought I knew ye. Whats the matter with five percent, and how much is it you think you ought to have?"

  "Theres nothing wrong with five percent," I said. "For a finders fee. I dont want a finders fee. "

  "You dont? Well, what in hell do you want?"

  "A full share," I said. "I want to be a player. I want to go in. "

  He sat back and looked at me. He poured a drink but didnt touch it, breathed in and breathed out and looked at me some more.

  "Well, Ill be damned," he said finally. "Well, Ill be fucking damned. "

  Chapter 22

  In the morning I finally got around to stowing The Dirty Dozen in my safe-deposit box. I bought an ordinary copy to take to Maspeth, then began to imagine some of the things that might go wrong. I returned to the bank and retrieved the genuine article, and I left the replacement cassette in the box so I wouldnt mix them up later on.

  If I got killed out in Maspeth, Joe Durkin could watch the cassette over and over, searching for a hidden meaning.

  All day long I kept thinking that I ought to go to a meeting. I hadnt been to one since Sunday night. I thought Id go at lunch hour but didnt, and then I thought about a Happy Hour meeting around five-thirty, and finally figured Id catch at least the first half of my usual meeting at St. Pauls. But I kept finding other things to do.

  At ten-thirty I walked over to Grogans.

  Mick was there, and we went into his office in the back. Theres an old wooden desk there, and a safe, along with a pair of old-fashioned wooden office chairs and a Naugahyde recliner. Theres an old green leather sofa, too, and sometimes hell catch a few hours on it. He told me once he has three apartments around town, each of them rented in a name other than his own, and of course he has the farm upstate.