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chapter thirty-five.
QUIRK CALLED ME and asked me to come in for a talk. The thing that was unusual about it was that he asked. My office was a two-block walk up Berkeley Street from Police Headquarters and I was there in Quirk's office at the back of the homicide squad room in about five minutes.
"Close the door," he said.
I did.
"Civil Streets is a dead end," Quirk said when I sat down. "We went up there last week with the Stoneham cops and tossed the office. There's nothing there. No books. No computer. No paper. Nothing at all."
"So they cleaned it out," I said.
"Maybe," Quirk said. "Or maybe there never was anything there. We talked to the building owner. He said it was rented for a year by Carla Quagliozzi, paid on time every month with her personal check. I think it was just an address."
"That's what it looked like the day I went there," I said.
"So we figured we better talk to the president, and day before yesterday Lee Farrell called Carla Quagliozzi and asked her to come down with her attorney," Quirk said. "She was due here at ten in the morning. She didn't show. Farrell called. No answer. He called couple more times. Nothing. This morning we called Somerville and asked them to send a cruiser by. The cruiser guy found the front door ajar. He yelled. n.o.body answered, so he opened it and looked in. She was in the living room. Somebody had shot her in the head, and cut her tongue out."
"Jesus Christ."
"Medical examiner says it was probably done in that order."
"I hope so."
"ME was pretty sure," Quirk said. "No evidence that any of the kitchen knives were used, a.s.sumption is that he brought his knife with him."
"Hasn't this gotten ugly real quick," I said.
"It has."
"Did you, ah, find the tongue."
"No."
"So he took it with him," I said.
"That's our a.s.sumption," Quirk said. "He had to carry the tongue away in something. It would be kind of messy to stick it in your pocket. There's no sign that he got a Baggie or Saran Wrap or whatever from the kitchen, though it's possible. a.s.sumption is he came prepared."
"He knew ahead of time he was going to cut out her tongue and take it away," I said.
"That's our guess."
"I hate talking about this," I said.
Quirk said, "I know."
"So, why would he take the tongue with him?" I said.
"Got a guess?"
"He was going to show it to somebody."
Quirk nodded. "As a warning," he said.
"Which is probably why she was killed."
"To shut her up," Quirk said.
"And to shut other people up," I said. "No need to cut her tongue out to keep her quiet."
"And they left the door open," Quirk said.
"Because they wanted her to be found soon."
"Before we got to anyone else," Quirk said.
We thought about it for a minute.
"But you'd figure the tongue"-Quirk made a face-"would work pretty well as a warning."
"If they could show it to everyone they wanted to shut up," I said.
"So maybe there's more than one," Quirk said. "Maybe they left the door open to be sure we'd find her and word would get out and people they couldn't show the tongue to would hear about it, and know what it meant."
"Somebody they couldn't find," I said.
"Somebody missing."
Quirk sat back in his chair, his thick hands folded in front of his chin, the thumbs resting in the hollow under his lower lip.
"Like your client," he said after a time.
"Just like my client," I said.
"Who is Susan's ex-husband," Quirk said.
"Well put," I said. "No wonder you made captain."
Quirk tapped his thumbs gently against his chin. He looked at me silently, shaking his head slowly.
"So you figure her death was at least partly to be a warning to Brad Sterling?"
"Maybe," I said.
"All because somebody might have scammed some money from a charity bash?"
"Maybe."
"And they might have cut out her tongue to drive the point home," Quirk said, "but there'd be no need to take it away to show it to Sterling if they didn't know where he was."
"This is true," I said.
"So it wasn't for Sterling."
"Maybe just the fact of it, when he heard about it," I said.
"Then why take it away?"
"Good point," I said.
"So who's the tongue for?" Quirk said.
"Here's what I know," I said. "Carla is formerly married to Brad Sterling. I'm not sure which wife, but after Susan, who was the first. She is connected to Richard Gavin, who was a director of Civil Streets, who was also Cony Brown's lawyer, and Cony was killed in Sterling's office."
"You're thinking out loud," Quirk said, "and it's not a pretty sight. Tell me something I don't know."
"Couple days ago Hawk and I saw Gavin having lunch with Haskell Wechsler."
Quirk's head lifted slightly and he let his chair come forward so that his feet touched the ground. For Quirk that was a reaction approaching hysteria.
"Haskell the rascal," he said. "He spot you?"
"I sat down with them," I said.
"You would," Quirk said.
"They weren't pleased."
"They wouldn't be."
"Haskell said I was going to be tended to later."
"Haskell would mean that," Quirk said.
"If he can," I said.
"Anyone can kill anyone," Quirk said.
"I know that's true," I said. "But if I'm going to do what I do, I have to act like it's not so."
"You've gotten this far," Quirk said. "What's the relations.h.i.+p?"
"I don't know," I said. "Gavin acted as if he were Haskell's lawyer."
"He'd do that anyway," Quirk said. "Makes it a privileged relations.h.i.+p."
"Haskell could have somebody's tongue cut out," I said.
"Haskell probably would have done it himself twenty years ago," Quirk said.
"He's an executive now. Had a couple of subordinates at the next table. One of them was a little shrimp with long hair. The other one was a big guy named Buster."
"Buster DeMilo. Haskell rules with an iron fist. Buster is the fist. I don't know the other one."
"So there's an ugly murder and there's a connection to Haskell Wechsler. What's the presumption."
"The presumption is that Haskell did it, and we can't prove it."
"Right you are, Captain Quirk," I said.
chapter thirty-six.
SUSAN AND I were walking up Linnaean Street holding hands. They were halfway through laying the brick walk up to the new condominium being rehabbed out of an old Victorian next to Susan's place. The bricks were being set in stone dust instead of sand, and a pile of it made a small gray pyramid next to a half-empty pallet of paving bricks. It was eleven o'clock in the evening and the site was deserted, except for two guys who stepped out of the half-built condo. One of them had a gun and he was pointing it at me. The other one was Buster DeMilo.
"Don't do anything fancy," Buster said, "or the broad gets it too."
"Susan, this is Buster," I said. "Buster, Susan."
"Stand over there, Susan," Buster said. "And stay quiet."
Susan stepped aside. Buster's a.s.sociate kept the gun on me. He was a short guy with small eyes narrowly separated by a sharp nose. His hair was long and he wore an earring. The gun was a semiautomatic, nine millimeter, probably. Maybe a Colt. The short guy seemed comfortable with it.
"You got a beatin' coming," Buster said.
"No doubt," I said. "This one from Haskell?"
"Mr. Wechsler can't allow people to embarra.s.s him like you done. Been any worse and I'da had to kill you."
"You going to do the beating?" I said.
"Yeah."
"And Needle Nose with the gun? He's here to be sure you win?"
"They tell me you're always heeled," Buster said. "Shorty does most of the shooting."
"He shoot Carla Quagliozzi?"
Buster was putting on a pair of tan leather gloves. "We ain't here to talk, pal," he said.
Buster feinted with his right hand and brought in a pretty good left hook. I half slipped the punch and shuffled back and a little sideways. Buster was big. Bigger than I was, and he looked in shape, and he knew what he was doing. He shuffled after me in a way that told me he used to box. If he used to, then he knew I used to by the way I'd slipped his punch. Buster grinned at me.