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The blood was seeping between his fingers and staining his s.h.i.+rt front. He could see himself in the mirror, and I think it scared him.
"We run a little money through him," Haskell said.
"He wash it?"
"Yeah."
"How?"
"He never said. Talk to him, for crissake. I don't know what he's doing."
It made sense. Galapalooza was an excellent money-laundering vehicle. Haskell wasn't winning this. He really didn't know anything. I went into the bathroom and got a hand towel and soaked it in cold water and wrung it out and went back and handed it to Haskell.
"Okay," I said. "I'll mark your fine paid. I'll talk to Gavin. I find out you lied, I'll be back."
"I ain't lying."
"Anybody, you, someone employed by you, someone related to you, someone that knows you, comes within sight of Susan Silverman again and I'll kill you," I said.
"I don't know her. I got nothing to do with her," Haskell said.
"Keep it that way," I said. "One reason for this meeting is to help you understand that I can get to you."
Haskell was pressing the damp towel against his face. It m.u.f.fled his voice.
"Talk to Gavin," Haskell said.
chapter forty-three.
I MET RICHARD GAVIN for lunch at a steak house in Quincy Market. The weather was good and thcy had opened the atrium doors so that you could eat your steak and still feel connected to the ceaseless mill of people in souvenir tee s.h.i.+rts and plaid shorts misp.r.o.nouncing Faneuil Hall and looking for a fried dough stand.
Gavin and I sat at a table next to the atrium door. A rangy guy in a tan suit stood just outside the atrium. Another guy shorter and a bit wider stood on the other side of the opening. He wore a gray suit. Both of them had on official security service sungla.s.ses and little microphones in their lapels. I knew the rangy guy. His name was Clarke. He'd been in the Marshal Service. Now he worked for a big private security firm in town. When we sat down I shot at him with my forefinger. He nodded briefly.
"Why the bodyguards?" I said.
Gavin shook his head.
"You said you had a proposal," Gavin said. "You want to make it?"
He looked tired and the lines on either side of his mouth seemed deeper than I remembered. A waitress came and took our order.
"Actually it's more like a hypothesis," I said. "I wanted to share it with you. See what you thought."
"I don't have time for hypotheses," Gavin said. "And I have a lot less for you."
"I figure you and Sterling were in business together," I said. "With Haskell."
"I don't much care what you figure," Gavin said.
The waitress brought him a martini. I had a club soda. The martini looked good, but I had no time to take an afternoon nap.
"I figure that Sterling had money trouble. He'd run through his family, and friends, and so he did what he had done before when he was in trouble. He went to an ex-wife."
Gavin sipped his martini and looked at the menu.
"And the ex-wife he went to was Carla Quagliozzi."
Without looking up from the menu, Gavin said, "So?"
"Carla didn't have money to give him, or if she did, she was too smart to give it to him. But she was by now your girlfriend and she sent him to you. I don't know, you can fill it in later. Maybe she saw a chance to turn a profit. Maybe she felt sorry for him. His ex-wives seem to. Whatever her reason, you saw something useful. You saw a way to launder money and maybe make a profit on it in the process."
The waitress returned. Gavin ordered steak tips and another martini. I had a salad. A big lunch is nap city too. Gavin folded his menu, handed it to the waitress, leaned back in his chair, and looked straight at me.
"Why would I care about laundering cash?" he said.
"Because you're Haskell Wechsler's lawyer and he's in a cash business."
"Everyone has the right to a lawyer," Gavin said. "I'm a member of the Ma.s.sachusetts Bar."
"Sure," I said.
Gavin drank the rest of his martini. The security guys were being profoundly casual just outside the steak house. The waitress brought Gavin's new martini and he rescued the olive from the old one before she took the empty gla.s.s away. She looked at me. I shook my head. Gavin ate the olive he'd rescued and put the ornamental toothpick down on the bread dish and turned it carefully so that it was nicely centered on the curve of the rim. He studied it a moment, pushed it a millimeter closer to the rim, and then sat back again.
"How exactly did I pull this off?" Gavin said. "This laundering deal with Sterling."
"I'm not sure of the details, but the general outline is like this. You or Haskell would take some of Haskell's cash and use it to fund one of Sterling's promotions. Because it was a charitable enterprise which often received cash contributions, the large cash amounts never caused a ripple. Sterling was probably exempted. The event would transpire and one of the beneficiaries would be Civil Streets, which is a dummy company that you created with Carla's name on the door. Once the money was in Civil Street's account, Carla could write checks or transfer funds to anybody she wanted. Maybe you could too and it would go back to Haskell, or another dummy company you set up for him, and his money would be washed and show a little profit to boot."
Gavin's steak sandwich arrived, nearly covered with a sumptuous mound of narrow French fries. The waitress seemed sort of contemptuous as she put my salad in front of me.
"So what went wrong?" Gavin said.
"I don't know," I said. "Maybe the s.e.xual hara.s.sment lawsuit. It would call attention to Sterling and to Galapalooza. What I know about Sterling, he could screw up a stroll in the garden, so it may have been something else.
"Didn't Sterling invite you in?" Gavin said.
"Yes, that bothers me too," I said. "If he was involved in some kind of illegal activity, why ask a detective to look into his affairs?"
Gavin spread his hands as if to say, there you go.
"I'll have to splice the answer to that in later," I said. "But whatever his reasons, I was in, and either my being in, or the lawsuit, or whatever fast one Sterling had pulled, or all of the above convinced someone that action was needed. Someone, I'm guessing you, sent your old client Cony Brown over to talk to Sterling. And for reasons I haven't got yet, Sterling shot him and ran off. He took a blue computer disk with him. My guess is that the details of the money wash are on it. So he's out there like a loose cannon and you can't find him, and he has evidence that will sink you, and probably Haskell with you. And if you take Haskell down, you know that you're as good as dead. But as long as Sterling is running from the cops, he won't be talking to them. But Carla knows all this too, and she knows that Sterling is a loose cannon, and maybe the stress of it is getting to her and maybe the metal of her resolve is starting to fatigue."
I paused for a moment to admire the felicity of my metaphor. Gavin was drinking his martini. He hadn't touched his lunch.
"So you killed her. It would shut her up and it would serve as a warning to Sterling, and to make sure he got the warning, you cut out her tongue."
Gavin didn't say a word. Very slowly he put his martini gla.s.s down on the table, placing it carefully in the exact place it had been where the faint damp outline of the gla.s.s still showed. He stared at the gla.s.s.
"What I don't get is why you took her tongue with you," I said.
Gavin made no sound. Slowly at first, and then more rapidly, tears began to run down his cheeks. I could hear his breath going in and out. We sat just like that for a time that seemed very long.
"You son... of... a... b.i.t.c.h," he said finally.
He didn't seem out of breath. It was as if as he spoke he had to re-remember what he wished to say after each word.
"I... loved... her."
Then he said nothing and sat looking at his martini gla.s.s with the tears running silently down his face. I watched him for a while. The pain was genuine. I was watching grief and I'd seen enough of it to recognize it. Grief didn't mean he was innocent. He could be crying because he killed her. But I didn't think so. His hopelessness was too profound. His loss was too irredeemable. And his pain was undiluted by guilt. I didn't know I was right, but I had seen far too much of all of that as well to think I was wrong.
"I'm sorry," I said and stood up and walked out past the security men.
chapter forty-four.
MISTRAL WAS A new restaurant that had opened up on Columbus Avenue in the old Cahners building. It had a high ceiling and arched windows and the food was good. An extra plus was that it was about a three-minute walk from Police Headquarters and a five-minute walk from my office. So help was close at hand.
Hawk and I were at the bar drinking beer, eating oysters, and watching the sleek foodies.
"So we didn't take Haskell down after all," Hawk said.
"I know," I said. "Marcus will be disappointed."
"He'll get over it," Hawk said.
"And he can take satisfaction in having done the right thing."
"Sure he can," Hawk said. "Haskell not going to let you rough him up and get away with it."
I shrugged.
"He send couple of people to clean you clock for sitting down at lunch with him," Hawk said. "How you think he feel about getting hit."
"I scared him some," I said.
"Sure you did. You scary. But Haskell too mean to stay scared. We going to have to watch your back for a long while."
"Haskell will have to take a number," I said.
A tall blonde woman with a good tan walked by wearing white sling back shoes and as small a white linen dress as was legal in Ma.s.sachusetts. Hawk and I watched her all across the room to make sure she wasn't one of Haskell's people. When she was seated and partly hidden by the menu she was handed, Hawk turned back to me.
"You watching my back," I said to Hawk.
"She got a weapon," Hawk said, "be hard to think where she's concealed it."
The oysters were from the Pacific Northwest and were served with a dab of citrus sorbet on top. I got a taste of the sorbet on my fork, added an oyster, and slurped it in. Excellent.
"And you buying Haskell's story," Hawk said.
"Yeah."
"Well, you done this work before, 'spose you learn who to believe."
I drank my beer. "I hope so," I said.
"So if Haskell didn't have the woman killed, who did?" Hawk said. "Gavin?"
"I don't think so," I said. "He was in shock, and he had a couple of security people with him."
"Freelance?"
"No, legit guys from that big security outfit the former commissioner works for. One of them was Kevin Clarke."
"Used to be a marshal," Hawk said.
"That's right. Anyway, when I suggested to him he might have killed his girlfriend and cut out her tongue, he started to cry."
Hawk shrugged.
"He loved her," I said. "He wouldn't have killed her like that."
"I seen guys shoot a roomful of people and feel bad afterwards," Hawk said.
I shook my head.
"He loved her," I said.
"You the romantic in the group," Hawk said and ordered more beer and oysters.
The tall blonde woman in the minimal dress got up from her table and walked toward the ladies' room. She walked as if she were balancing a book on her head and everyone were watching to see if she could do it.
"She went to the ladies' room," Hawk said.
"Uh huh."
"Which mean she will be coming back."
"Stay alert," I said.