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"Klaus," I said, cutting off any possibility he might start in on our guest's sartorial inept.i.tude, "this is Mr. Weintraub from the state liquor authority."
Klaus turned on the charm. "Can I get you gentlemen some coffee? Some pastry?"
Weintraub did something with his mouth that was his excuse for a smile. "Black, two sugars. Seeded roll, extra b.u.t.ter." A civil servant was never born who could turn down free anything.
Klaus was shrewd enough to not bother waiting for a please and thank-you. He'd lived in New York long enough to know better. "Usual for you, boss?"
I nodded, but as Klaus retreated he could not help pulling a face behind Weintraub's back. He pinched his nose with the fingers and feigned gagging. I almost bit through my tongue trying to keep my composure.
"Come on into the office, Mr. Weintraub. What can we do for you?" I asked as I showed him downstairs.
"Just a routine spot check."
Routine spot check my a.s.s! I'd been around the block enough to know better. Go ask Pete Parson if you don't believe me. The liquor authority was one of the most politicized inst.i.tutions in the Empire State. In a state where "Patronage, Nepotism, and Influence" is the unofficial state motto, that's really saying something.
"Fine," I said. "Have a look around. Let me know how I can help you. Here's the office. Klaus will be down with your breakfast in a minute. Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to finish opening up."
Klaus quickly tracked me down once he'd delivered the complimentary continental breakfast to our uninvited guest.
"So what's that grubby little man doing here?"
"A spot check?" I sipped my coffee.
"A spot check indeed. He needs to do one on that hideous suit of his. Oh ... my ... G.o.d! I thought that color brown was outlawed by the Geneva Convention. I know several homeless men who wouldn't be caught dead in-"
"All right, I get the point."
"But what's he really doing here?"
"Sending a message, Klaus, sending a message."
It didn't take long for the other shoe to drop. About an hour after Weintraub waddled out the front door, the phone rang. I didn't race to pick it up, but I knew it would be for me.
"Boss, pick up!" Klaus called on the intercom.
I pressed the flashing b.u.t.ton and put the receiver to my ear. "Prager, Moses B.," I spoke into the mouthpiece. "Message received loud and clear."
There was an almost imperceptible laugh on the other end of the line. "I'd like you to meet me at Spivack and a.s.sociates, Suite 1404, Forty Court Street. Are you familiar with the building, Mr. Prager?"
"I am."
"In an hour?" It might have been phrased like a question, but it wasn't.
I didn't bother putting the phone back in its cradle. It was my turn to start making calls.
"Intelligence Division, Detective Steptoe," a woman answered.
"Sorry," I said, going over the number I'd dialed in my head, "I thought this was Detective McDonald's line."
"Who?"
"Larry McDonald, Detective Larry-"
"You mean Captain McDonald?"
"If you say so."
"Let me transfer you."
With the pa.s.sing years my contacts in the NYPD had withered. Some of the guys had, like me and Pete, gotten hurt on the job and been put out to pasture. Many made their twenty years, trading in their badges for golf bags. To the kids coming up as I was headed out the door, I was a relic, a fossil who didn't understand the job or the day-to-day bulls.h.i.t they had to put up with. I remembered feeling the same way about the guys who'd come up before me. Whenever they started a sentence with "In my day ..." I, too, would roll my eyes. But I could always depend on Larry McDonald. We'd worked together for years in Coney Island, and he owed me, big-time.
"Captain McDonald. Should I just genuflect or do I have to kiss the ring, too?"
"You gimpy Jew b.a.s.t.a.r.d, you couldn't genuflect if your life depended on it. s.h.i.t, I haven't heard a peep from you in years. I thought you were dead."
"Wishful thinking."
"Wha'd'ya need, brother?"
"State Senator Steven Brightman."
There was a long silence on the other end of the line.
"I'm the one who's supposed to be dead, Larry, remember? h.e.l.lo ..."
"This a fishing expedition, Moe? 'Cause if it is, I can't have any part in this. A politician and the missing daughter of an ex-cop; it's not a winning combination for anyone."
"Calm down. Calm down. I'm not out to f.u.c.k the guy. Fact is, I might be working for Brightman. Someone's got his ear that thinks I might have some luck finding the girl."
"Come on, man. You know what happened to her. You were a f.u.c.king cop before that piece a carbon paper f.u.c.ked up your knee. She's a pile of bones somewheres out in Bethpage State Park or in the Gowa.n.u.s Ca.n.a.l."
"Probably you're right, but I don't think I'm gonna have much of a choice about working the case. I need everything on both Brightman and the girl, Moira Heaton."
Again, there was an uncomfortable silence. The last time Larry helped me out he hadn't yet made rank and the information had come from departments outside the city. Now the landscape had changed. This was Larry Mac's own little fiefdom. Traditionally, each bureau or division within the NYPD jealously defends its turf. It was hard enough getting these various ent.i.ties to share information with each other, let alone a guy like me.
"Christ, Moe, I don't know," he hemmed and hawed like a man asked to pick his own pocket. "It's not like back in the day. They keep closer track of things than they used to."
"Yeah, yeah, Big Brother and all that, but 1984's still six months away. Why don't you just see what you can do and I'll check back with you, okay?" I knew not to argue with him.
"All right, let me see. Gimme a day or two."
"Thanks, Larry."
"Don't thank me yet and don't send me good champagne either. My wife just makes mimosas with it."
When we were done, I thought about making a second call, a much harder call to make. I put the phone down instead. There's an old baseball adage about some of the best trades being the ones you don't make. I didn't fool myself that it applied here. The call was going to get made, just not yet.
THEY DIDN'T CALL it Court Street for nothing. You could throw a rock across the road from the lobby of number 40 and hit the State Supreme Court Building. If you took to heart Shakespeare's line about killing all the lawyers, blowing up 40 Court Street would have been a good start. With its proximity to the court and the Brooklyn Tombs only a few blocks away on Atlantic Avenue, the dirty brown skysc.r.a.per was chock-full of lawyers. Where there are courts and jails and lawyers, there are investigators. Spivack and a.s.sociates among them.
When cops are on the job they love lawyers like lions love hyenas, only minus the mutual respect. But the minute a cop puts in his papers and goes into private investigations, he finds as many hyenas as he can and becomes an a.s.sociate member of the pack. When you beg sc.r.a.ps, it pays to stay close to the pack. That's why Spivack and a.s.sociates was such a natural fit in the brown building on Court Street. If I had gone into the business full-time, I too might have rented office s.p.a.ce here.
Suite 1404, all gla.s.s, stainless steel, and uncomfortable furniture, had a rather antiseptic feel to it. I suppose they could always rent it out to local hospitals for ambulatory surgery. The receptionist barely got "Good day" out of her mouth when a drill sergeant type approached. Easily six foot three, he had a graying brush cut, a square chin and shoulders, rough features, and impatient blue eyes.
"I'm Spivack," he barked, shaking my hand in spite of himself. "This way."
Spivack wore a short-sleeve white shirt, black slacks, black tie, black shoes. He sort of looked like an angry escapee from 1950s middle management. His strides ate up carpet in big chunks.
He stopped. "Here," he said, pushing open his office door.
His office, while not exactly inviting, was less antiseptic than the rest of the place. The chairs looked sat in, the desk was scratched and chipped. There were photos on the wall, certificates and diplomas, and a Lucite display featuring a green beret, an army-issue .45, and handcuffs. I took a more careful look at some of the photos. Several featured a younger Spivack in a U.S. marshal windbreaker escorting prisoners.
Mr. Geary was seated on a black leather sofa and waited for me to finish checking out the office before standing to greet me.
Spivack sat down behind his desk and glared even more contemptuously at Geary than he had at me.
"h.e.l.lo, Moe," Geary said, the b.u.t.ter melting in his mouth. "Good of you to come."
"I know a command performance when I see one."
Geary didn't waste time disputing the facts. "I see you've met Joe Spivack."
"Sort of, yeah."
He beckoned me to come join him back on the sofa. I was amazed at how in command he acted in someone else's place of business. He treated Spivack as another piece of furniture. I sat.
"Mr. Spivack's firm did the original investigation into Moira Heaton's unfortunate disappearance. I won't bore you with the details. Let's just say it was an expensive and thorough, if not very fruitful, exercise for Mr. Spivack and company."
Geary gestured to Spivack as if he were calling the busboy to refill his water gla.s.s. Spivack handed an accordion file to Geary, who handed it to me.
"Don't bother going through it now." It wasn't a suggestion. "This is the salient material. Take it home with you, Moe. I'm told there are several more boxes of ancillary material which we'll have delivered wherever you'd like. Mr. Spivack will lend you all possible a.s.sistance and answer any of your questions."
"Wait a second! Wait a second," I barked, my patience wearing razor thin. "Mr. Spivack, is there a room where Mr. Geary and I can talk in private? There's some stuff him and me have to get straight."
"Will right here do?" Spivack asked, happy at the prospect of getting out from under Geary's thumb.
"Works for me," I answered.
If Geary was upset by being left out of the decision-making process, he didn't show it. Spivack got up and left before that changed.
"I'm sorry, Moe," Geary offered as soon as the door clicked shut. "I've behaved badly, I know. I've taken things for granted."
"I don't like threats, Mr. Geary."
"Thomas," he corrected. "Call me Thomas."
Yeah, right, I thought. And we'll go have some b.u.t.tered scones and tea afterward.
"Like I was saying, I don't like threats, even implied ones. I didn't appreciate that little visit this morning from the New York State Liquor Authority. Not one bit."
"It got your attention, though?"
"I'm here, aren't I?"
"That was my idea, I'm afraid. I would ask you not to hold it against Steven, Senator Brightman. He would disapprove."
"I'm liking him better already."
Geary smiled. "Then you'll do it. You'll look into this matter for us."
"I didn't say that."
"But you will, won't you?"
"I may have been a cop once, Mr. Geary, but that doesn't mean I'm stupid."
"Far from it, I'd say. That's part of the reason you're here at all."
"Pardon me if I don't thank you, but that's been bugging me all weekend long," I confessed. "And now that I'm in this office, it's bothering me even more. Why do you need me? I'm a part-timer with no network. I mean, look around you. This guy is major league. He's a former U.S. marshal. They're like f.u.c.king bulldogs.
What can I do to find Moira Heaton that Spivack and a.s.sociates and their network and friends and informants couldn't?"
"Would it suffice to say you come highly recommended?"
"No."
"I didn't suppose it would. How about this then?" he asked, reaching into his inner jacket pocket.
I knew even before his hand reappeared what it would hold. "Gotham Magazine," I said, "pages seventeen through twenty, continued on page ninety-three, far left column."
When Katy's brother Patrick vanished in '77, an ambitious reporter for Gotham had done a piece about the disappearance and subsequent search. The reporter, correctly sensing there was a lot more to the story than what the press had been spoon-fed by the family, thought the story had Pulitzer Prize written all over it. Unfortunately for him, the people who knew the truth, myself included, kept it to themselves. The story turned into more of a puff piece and part of the puff was about me or, more accurately, about me and a little girl named Marina.
On Easter Sunday of 1972, Marina Conseco, the seven-year-old daughter of a city firefighter, went missing in Coney Island. Several days later, while searching the area with some off-duty firemen, I got the idea to check out the wooden rooftop water tanks on some of the older buildings in the neighborhood. We found Marina, battered but alive, in the third or fourth tank we checked. In an undistinguished career as a cop, finding her was my one shining moment. People would forget Patrick, but never Marina. It was this same story that had brought poor Arthur Rosen to me. However, there was nothing remotely poor or needy about the man who stood in front of me at the moment.
"Bravo, bravo." He applauded, his left hand hitting the folded pages in his right. "Bravo."
"That was eleven years ago when I found the girl."
"Don't be modest," he said coolly, the smile running away from his face. "I know much more about you than you'd think."
"What's that supposed to mean?" I asked, beginning to feel light-headed.
He didn't answer, checking his watch instead. "We can discuss your fee at a later date. I a.s.sure you you won't suffer financially. As I said previously, you can expect the fullest cooperation from Mr. Spivack. I must be on my way."
"You didn't answer my question. Why me?"
"In a word, luck. You're lucky, Mr. Prager."
"We're not on a first-name basis anymore, huh, Tom?"