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"And you never followed her?"
"I got a twelve-man force," Stone said. "The surveillance is voluntary. We're lucky to get him covered as much as we do."
I nodded. On top of a file cabinet there was an expensive and often used Rawlings baseball glove.
"Sonny's daughter would have been about sixteen when he bought the house."
Stone turned one of the head shots toward him and looked at it for a minute.
"That would make her, what, fifty-seven?" Stone said.
"Somebody must have known her."
"You'd think," Stone said.
"She go to school here?"
"Don't know," Stone said. "I can find out."
"And find out if anyone knew her?"
"Probably," Stone said.
"Without getting Sonny all worked up," I said.
"I got the impression Sonny was already worked up," Stone said.
"I don't want him to bury her where I'll never find her," I said.
"According to Healy, that would have to be pretty deep."
"Wow," I said. "He likes me."
"I wouldn't go that far," Stone said.
I shrugged. We were quiet for a moment, looking at the photos on the desk.
"You ever do business with the Bureau?" I said.
"FBI?" Stone said and smiled. "Yes."
"What do you think?"
"I think a lot of the agents could have used more street time."
I nodded.
"You've had some," I said.
"Yep."
"Where?"
"L.A.".
"You know a homicide guy named Samuelson out there?"
"I know the name," Stone said. "I worked for Cronjager."
"Don't know him," I said.
I took out one of my cards. "You learn anything, let me know," I said.
Stone took my card and slid it under the corner of his desk blotter. Then he picked up the photographs and slid them into a manila envelope.
"Take these along," he said. "I got more."
"Thanks," I said.
"Be my pleasure to bag Sonny," Stone said. "I don't like him."
I started for the door. Stone followed me.
"You being alone," Stone said, "I'll tail along back to the causeway."
"How kind," I said.
"Sonny murders you in my town," Stone said, "it'll f.u.c.k my chances for a pay raise."
47.
I was at the Hotel Meridian with Susan, at a fundraiser for Community Servings, which was, like me, a nonprofit to which Susan was devoted. Hawk was with us, leaning against the wall, monochromatic in black and no more noticeable than a machine-gun emplacement. I myself was everything the date of a prominent psychotherapist should be: un.o.btrusive in a dark blue suit, dark blue s.h.i.+rt, pale blue silk tie, and a pair of sapphire cufflinks that Susan had given me to celebrate my virility. Susan was amazing in red silk and painful shoes. There were hors d'ouevres in quant.i.ty, an open bar, and an ice-sculpture fountain from which flowed free and endless martinis. This seemed a great invention to me, and I felt privileged to have seen it.
The evening was called Life Savor and, in addition to Hawk, it drew a celebrity crowd. I spotted Oedipus, who was the program director for the big rock station in town and admitted to no other name. Will McDonough was there, and Bobby Orr, and Bill Poduska, the helicopter guy, and Fraser Lemley. I talked with Mike Barnicle and David Brudnoy. I was introduced to Jenifer Silverman, who a.s.sured me she was not related to Susan. I chatted with Chet Curtis. The Mayor came by, and a candidate for governor. Susan was on the board of this organization and raced around the room, greeting people and charming the a.s.s off anyone lucky enough to be in her path. For a moment, that person was me.
"If the atmosphere gets any more rarified," I said, "I may get a nosebleed."
"Don't get any on my dress," Susan said and zoomed across the room to talk with Honey Blonder.
I pushed through the crowd to the martini fountain, and, in the spirit of partic.i.p.ation, had a martini. Hawk kept me in sight. He was entirely unthreatening. To the extent that he had an expression as he moved through the crowd, it was one of benign amus.e.m.e.nt. But people made room for him. Hawk never had to fight for s.p.a.ce.
I plopped an olive in my martini and took a sip. I said h.e.l.lo to Joyce Kulhawik. She moved on to talk with Emily Rooney and I found myself in eye contact across the crowded room with Harvey. I smiled at him, and he shot me elaborately with his forefinger, c.o.c.king his thumb carefully as he aimed and bringing it down when he fired. Then he looked past me at Hawk. The benignity was gone from Hawk's face. In its place was the stare. Hawk had never seen Harvey and maybe didn't know who he was. But Hawk knew what he was.
The two of them looked at each other for a long time. Harvey met the stare, which, redirected, might have frozen the martinis. I unb.u.t.toned my suit coat. I checked the room to see where Susan was. If anything transpired, I wanted her out of range. The room was crowded, and I couldn't see her. Hawk's jacket was unb.u.t.toned, too. He moved gently along the wall toward Harvey. I moved around the fountain toward Harvey from the other side. Harvey smiled and drew his forefinger across his throat and made a spitting gesture with his mouth. Then he moved through the crowd away from us and disappeared. Hawk looked at me. I shrugged. Not a good place to shoot it out. Hawk nodded and leaned on the wall again.
I went and leaned beside him. "What do you think?" I said.
"He ain't no fund-raiser," Hawk said.
"Name's Harvey," I said. "Sonny's hired gun."
"He still think he going to scare you off?" Hawk said.
"I doubt it."
"So why you think he's here?"
"I don't know," I said. "You got a theory?"
"He's a freak," Hawk said. "He like shooting people."
"He's not going to shoot me here," I said.
"No," Hawk said. "This be foreplay."
I scanned the room for Susan and spotted her talking with Bob Kraft. Good.
"That makes sense," I said.
"It do," Hawk said. "He giving himself a little thrill, come here, flirt with you. Go home. Think about it. Make his night."
"Usually, it's women," I said.
Hawk smiled. "Sometimes you got to settle," he said.
48.
I was at my desk with pictures of Bonnie Karnofsky spread out on my desk. Hawk and the shotgun were settled in together on my office couch. Hawk was drinking coffee and reading The New York Times. I was drinking coffee and looking at the photos. In her adulthood, Bonnie was pretty good-looking, in a blonde, big-haired kind of way. However, information crucial to any decision of how good-looking she was had been omitted. The blown-up photographs were only of her face. They were useful for identification purposes only.
The phone rang and I answered.
"Hi," a woman said. "I'm officer Molly Crane from the Paradise Police. Chief Stone asked me to call and give you some information."
"Shoot," I said.
"Be careful what you say to an armed officer of the law," she said.
"Ill-phrased," I said. "What have you to tell me?"
"Bonnie Karnofsky did not attend any school in Paradise," she said.
"Do you know where she went?"
"School department shows only that it was an accredited private school."
"I'm sure Taft will probably have it in their admission records," I said, so she wouldn't feel she'd failed.
"Very likely," she said. "Chief Stone also asked me to tell you that we have built a file on Sarno Karnofsky, which Chief Stone has examined since he talked with you."
"And?"
"And he thinks you might find it interesting. Do you have a fax?"
"I do."
"If you will give me your fax number," she said, "I will fax you as much of the file as Chief Stone thinks relevant to your investigation."
"That's very kind," I said. "But why didn't Chief Stone give me this stuff when I was there?"
"Chief Stone didn't speak of it," she said. "But I would hazard that he wanted to reexamine the files himself and perhaps get further bona fides on you before he turned over secret surveillance material."
"You got a nice little department there," I said.
"We do. May I have your fax?"
I gave her my fax number, and in about five minutes the machine rang and the material began to creep out of it. I waited until it was all out, and then a.s.sembled it and read it through twice.
"I know," I said to Hawk, "that you are a simple lout with a gun, placed here for my protection."
Without looking up, Hawk said, "Ya.s.sah."
"But," I said, "I have come across some things which could actually be clues, and I was wondering if I might share them with you."
"Long as you don't use no big words," Hawk said and put the newspaper in his lap.
"Mrs. Sarno Karnofsky, the former Evelina Lombard, has her own phone, separate from her husband's," I said.
"Sounds like the first step toward open marriage," Hawk said.
I ignored him.
"Seems that several times a week she makes a phone call to a phone belonging to Sigmund Czernak," I said.
"See," Hawk said. "She got something going on the side."
"Mr. Czernak resides in Lynnfield," I said.