Ollie’s room was a warm haven in the midst of the early winter snowfall. He lay propped upright while Ronnie fed him servings of warm strudel, the air throughout the small house rich with the aroma of fresh-baked pastry, apples, cinnamon and nutmeg.
McGuire sat in his usual bedside chair. On the table next to him was an empty plate scattered with small flakes of strudel pastry, which he picked up and nibbled at as he spoke.
He recounted the day’s interviews while Ollie nodded or scowled at significant information and his right hand squeezed the tennis ball, tightening and relaxing in a steady, unbroken rhythm.
When McGuire finished, Ronnie offered the last morsel of strudel to her husband, who opened his mouth dutifully and chewed silently.
“Sounds like a complicated case,” she said, standing and brushing crumbs from her lap and from Ollie’s blanket. “I’ll leave you two experts to work it out.”
McGuire turned down Ronnie’s offer of more coffee and waited until she left the room before asking Ollie’s assessment.
“I want to know who the brother is,” the older man said, staring straight ahead as he spoke.
“You don’t think they’re related? The birth records could be wrong. He could have been born out of wedlock.”
“Whoever he was, I’m betting he’ll turn up dead.”
“And whoever killed Jennifer Cornell killed the brother too.”
“Something like that.”
“Doesn’t make sense,” McGuire said, flipping through his notes. “The woman’s murder has impulse written all over it. She’s struck from behind by a piece of wood that’s apparently just lying around. No premeditation there. And the blow doesn’t kill her. Falling into the water and drowning does the job. Whoever hit her just left her there dying. But the brother, he’s gone without a trace. No clothes, nothing but fingerprints. That takes planning.”
“But it might explain why she didn’t have any keys or identification with her,” Ollie said, turning his head to look out the window. The light spilling from the room shone on snowflakes in the darkness, tracing their paths as they swirled in the air. “Work it out. Killer takes the keys, goes back to the apartment, gets rid of the brother.”
McGuire nodded in agreement. “Norm Cooper says there were only two sets of fresh prints in the place. He confirmed one set is hers, the other is a John Doe’s.”
Ollie Schantz rolled his massive head away from the window and gazed up at the ceiling. His wife’s words were still there. They were unavoidable. They spoke to him when he closed his eyes in the evening and they reassured him when he opened them the next morning.
“Reich, the apartment superintendent, he still bothers me,” Ollie said after a long, thoughtful pause. “Falling off the wagon like that. Hanging around with women. Buying good booze by the case. All just after the murder. Can’t get past that one.”
“You think he did it?” McGuire asked.
The other man ignored the question. “By the sound of things, his wife is a tough old bird.”
McGuire agreed.
“Probably knew her husband better than he knew himself. Some wives are like that. Especially ones who . . .”
“Who what?”
“Who either love you or hate you so goddamn much.” He looked over at McGuire. “You believe the widow?”
“Yeah,” McGuire nodded. “I believe her.”
“So do I.”
“But that means Reich didn’t kill Jennifer Cornell. She died around two in the morning. His wife is sure he got up to check a noise out back around four. Came back to bed a few minutes later. He couldn’t have made it across the street, down into the Fens, do the job and get back into bed. Even if he had a motive. The guy was over sixty years old.” McGuire leaned back in the chair. “You got any ideas?”
“That’s all I’ve got, is time and ideas,” Ollie said in a flat, toneless voice.
McGuire reached for his notebook, his pencil poised over the page.
“Who saw her last?” Ollie snapped. “And who was supposed to see her next? Same with her brother. Who was the last to see him?”
“Frances, the waitress,” McGuire replied, scribbling as he talked. “She left the bar with Andy the night of the murder. And I’ll talk to Fleckstone again. The brother was supposed to visit him and never showed.”
“How about the watch?”
McGuire looked up. “What watch?”
“The one she bought for her brother. What was it? A Cartier? What are they worth?”
“Out of my league.”
“The brother had no job?”
“Far as I know.”
“He wants to skip, he’ll need money. Check the pawnshop listings for a Cartier in June. See if any names match up.” He frowned again. “What’s this lawyer want with you tomorrow?”
McGuire shrugged. “Guess he’s handling the bankruptcy of Irene’s.”
“The store where the victim worked?”
“Yeah. I don’t expect anything much to come out of it, but the owner was interviewed by Fat Eddie. Who knows what he dropped through the cracks?”
The furrows between Ollie Schantz’s eyes deepened. “Seen her bank records?”
“Whose?”
“The victim’s, damn it!” Ollie barked. “Are her bank records in the file?”
“I don’t remember seeing them—”
“What the hell are those idiots doing down on Berkeley Street?” Ollie demanded. “Bank records are like a diary. Better than a diary sometimes. Mark a case NETGO and don’t check bank records? It’s crazy!”
“They’re short on staff—”
“And long on assholes! Try to get her bank records.”
McGuire made his notes in silence, broken only by Ollie’s laborious breathing; the right hand squeezed and released, squeezed and released the tennis ball at a faster tempo than before.
“You got inside her bones yet?”
It was Ollie’s manner of asking if McGuire understood the victim totally. “Let’s get inside their bones,” he would say to his partner when they worked together. “Best way to know the killer is to know the victim.”
“Not yet,” McGuire answered, closing his notebook. “She was complex. A few people thought she was wonderful, others thought she was a bitch. She had something that attracted men, that’s for sure. And she had the mental thing—three months in a loony bin. She liked her fun, she had a healthy sex drive, she took a few men home with her. She wanted more—more glamour, more money maybe, something to help get her past forty.”
Ollie looked down at his hand and watched the fingers tighten and relax around the tennis ball. “Where are you going with it from here?”
“Thought I’d start with the victim’s mother,” McGuire replied, slipping his notebook into his jacket and standing up. “She’s been dead for years, but maybe something happened while she was living in San Antonio, something we can use.”
“Nice place, San Antonio.” Ollie turned his head back to the window. “Went there once to bring back a crazy dude about twenty years ago. Middle of March. Colder than a witch’s tit when we left here. Snow and sleet everywhere. Arrive in San Antonio and it’s hot and dry, people walking around in shorts eating ice cream.”
At the door, Ronnie helped McGuire into his winter coat. “He’s thinking about that case of yours all the time,” she whispered. “He calls me during the day and talks about it. He has me make notes and read them back to him, over and over.” She touched the lapel of his coat absently.
McGuire nodded and brought his lips to her forehead.
At the end of the walk, he turned to wave to her as she watched from behind the storm door, the snow falling silently between them.
Driving home, McGuire remembered Janet’s warning about being followed. He exited at Charlestown, turned into a side street, accelerated quickly to the next block, turned right when he was almost through the next intersection, switched off the headlights and pulled quickly to the curb.
For five minutes he sat watching the empty street behind him in the rearview mirror before shifting into gear again and making a fishtailing U-turn in the gathering snow to head home.
The next morning dawned clear and dazzling white. McGuire stood at his window, finishing his third cup of coffee and watching Boston University students toss snowballs at each other. He set the cup aside, reached for the telephone and dialled the direct line to Ralph Innes at Berkeley Street Police Headquarters.
“Hey, big guy!” Innes almost shouted over the line when he heard McGuire’s voice. “Jeez, if you don’t make it to Hutch’s soon they’ll lose their Kronenbourg franchise, I swear to God!”
“What’s going on?” McGuire asked.
“Business or personal?”
“Start with the personal, what the hell.”
“Joe, I admit it. I took a date home last night for dinner. Broad was so ugly I made her sit in a corner and fed her with a slingshot. I’m telling you, it’s getting tough to find a good looking woman in this town who isn’t married, knocked up, or just changed her name from George to Georgette.”
“Anything else?”
“Bad news and good news.”
“Give me the bad news.”
“Sweet-ass Janet and her husband are talking separation.” He paused, waiting for a reply from McGuire before adding, “Now do you want to hear the good news?”
“Sure.”
“Sweet-ass and her husband are talking separation.” Innes roared with laughter.
“Ralph, I need a favour,” McGuire interrupted.
“Sure, Joe.” Innes became calm and serious. “I told you, you need anything, you call me.”
“It’s on the Cornell case.”
“Wait till I get a pencil here.”
McGuire explained what he needed: A survey of routine pawnshop reports on all items valued at five hundred dollars or more, specifically any Cartier watches pawned or sold since June, with the name of the seller. An accidental death report for one Henry Reich of Park Drive, died sometime in July. A general records report from the San Antonio Police Department regarding one Suzanne Alice Cornell, died May 31, 1983.
“Is Cornell her married name?”
“Maiden. Jesus, Ralph, I’m looking at the file right now. Says she married somebody and they don’t even get his name. Anyway, I need the victim’s bank records too.”
“How far back?”
“Whatever you’ve got. A year will do.” He gave Innes the bank and branch from the cheques found in Jennifer Cornell’s purse. “And I need it all tonight,” he added when he had finished.
“I’ll see what I can do,” Innes replied. “But listen, you didn’t get it from me, right?”
“Why not? This is legitimate business.”
“I know, I know.”
“Kavander?”
Innes exhaled slowly. “Yeah.”
“What about him?”
“He thinks you’re trying to shaft the department, Joe. He’s telling us to notify him about any contacts we have with you. Any at all. And he’s asking everybody if they’ve heard you bad-mouthing him or the commissioner or the commissioner’s dog, anybody. Know what I think? I think he never expected you to work the grey files. Way I see it, he figured you’d tell him to shove it and he could suspend you. Now he thinks you’re just doing it for revenge and planning to talk to the papers about it, I don’t know . . .”
“Ralph, I’m working on an assigned case. I don’t take files home for doorstops.”
Innes sighed into the telephone again, his breath making a noise over the line like distant thunder. “Joe, what can I say? Look, I’ll pass this through the channels, put a rush on it, give it a phoney file number. Nobody will ever know.”
McGuire said he would call later in the day. He lowered the telephone and stared down into the street again as three young men in the grey and maroon colours of B.U. leaped from behind a parked car to pelt two laughing co-eds with snowballs, the sound of their play echoing off the buildings along the street and penetrating the dusty glass of McGuire’s window.
I’m working the case until they take me off it, he said to himself. Me and Ollie. Nobody else turned up a thing in six months. Now it’s me and Ollie and we’ll work on it until we solve it—or they find a way to stop us.
Half an hour later, McGuire walked past the mound of snow concealing his car and headed for the Hancock Tower. He found no enjoyment in the fresh whiteness of the season’s first snowfall. Winters were the price of living in New England, and the price seemed to be rising with every passing year.
Arriving at the Hancock Tower shortly after ten, he rode the elevator to the offices of Raymond D. Robinson, entered and announced himself to the receptionist. He declined her offer of coffee and watched her disappear through a doorway in the elaborately panelled wall facing him. McGuire sat in a leather-and-chrome chair and wondered if law firms could function without walnut panelling. The decor seemed as important to the launching of law careers as textbooks and diplomas.
“Mr. Robinson will see you now,” the receptionist announced, standing in the doorway. She was young, slim and attractive; as McGuire passed her he breathed deeply, trying to inhale her perfume, and was disappointed when he detected none.
“Lieutenant McGuire.”
The voice boomed from a barrel-chested man in his fifties who looked up from where he had been bent over his desk shuffling papers.
It took several paces for McGuire to cross the thick carpeting and reach the lawyer. Ceiling-high windows on the wall to McGuire’s right revealed a spectacular view stretching northward from the Common to the coast, several miles distant. McGuire shook Robinson’s hand and proffered his identification, which the lawyer glanced at without interest before sitting down.
“As you probably noticed,” Robinson began, his eyes fixed on the papers in front of him, “I have been retained by the proprietor of Irene’s to handle legal concerns regarding dissolution of the firm.”
“I’m here on a criminal matter,” McGuire interrupted. “The murder of Jennifer Cornell, who used to work at the store.”
“Yes, yes, so I understand,” Robinson added. He seemed preoccupied and unaccountably nervous.
Raymond Robinson was sketched in shades of grey. His silver hair and moustache were immaculately trimmed and he wore a subtly-patterned grey suit over a white shirt and grey paisley tie. Even his glasses were silver-grey, poised on a patrician nose set between two grey eyes that seemed to be evading McGuire’s.
To McGuire, Robinson was a man who avoided spotlights, preferring to remain in the background of events.
“As it happens we’re both investigating the same person,” Robinson was saying. He swung the chair to his left, brought a hand to his chin, and stared out the window.
“Would you mind explaining that in detail?” McGuire asked, opening his notebook.
“My area is not criminal law, Lieutenant,” Robinson replied, his focus on the scene beyond the window. He scratched his ear, smoothed his eyebrow and adjusted his tie. “But I have clear evidence that Miss Cornell was systematically defrauding my client, Irene Hoffman, over a two-year period prior to her death. These losses had a direct impact on the store’s financial condition and led to its bankruptcy.”
McGuire nodded as he made notes. “Any idea how much money was involved?”
“As much as fifty thousand dollars. Not an astounding amount, perhaps, but Irene’s was a small exclusive shop with the usual retail cash-flow problems. Further, my client had recently completed extensive renovations which stretched her financial capacity. When she was unable to pay her suppliers’ invoices, they ceased shipping new merchandise. The store, I might add, had built its reputation on offering the very latest in ladies’ wear. Not being able to offer new merchandise had a negative impact on sales. Soon she was unable to meet her bank loan and things quickly tumbled from there.”
“When did you discover the fraud?”
“Officially, when an audit was conducted on . . .” The lawyer swivelled in his chair to examine his notes. “August twenty-eighth of this year. Unofficially, there were deep suspicions daring back to June.”
“When in June?”
Robinson’s eyes fastened on McGuire for the first time. “I beg your pardon?”
“When did your client, Irene Hoffman, discover that Jennifer Cornell was robbing her blind? And where is your client now?”
“I’m not sure that’s relevant—” the lawyer began, his eyes skipping from McGuire to his window.
“I’ll decide what’s relevant.” McGuire bit off each word. For years he had harboured a casual distaste for lawyers. Now it was developing into a finely-focused hatred. “Was it early in June? Late? Middle of the month?”
Robinson’s eyes dropped to his desk and he began shuffling his papers again, moving them delicately with the rips of his well-manicured fingers. “I would say it was early in June, but I can’t be more specific than that.”
“Which would make your client a suspect in this homicide investigation,” McGuire said. “Discovering a major theft by the victim, especially one which resulted in the failure of your client’s business, would constitute a motive for murder in the eyes of a grand jury. So where is she?”
“I must respect my client’s confidentiality,” Robinson replied. He began sliding the sheets of paper on his desk into a file folder.
“Until I obtain a subpoena,” McGuire said. “You try to hide her after getting one of those and you’ll be facing a charge—”
“Lieutenant McGuire,” the lawyer began.
“—of obstructing justice.” McGuire stood up, his hands in his pockets. “You got anything else to add?”
“Yes, as a matter of fact I have,” Robinson said, rising from his chair. “Please understand, Lieutenant, that what I am about to do has no bearing whatsoever on my legal obligations either to my client or to the community at large. Nor does it constitute any obstruction of justice in the opinion of my colleagues.”
McGuire remained standing, puzzled. When lawyers begin talking like textbooks, he reminded himself, it’s time to duck, because they’ll probably be throwing one at you.
Robinson walked to a doorway concealed in the panelled wall opposite the floor-to-ceiling windows. He opened the door slightly and stepped aside as McGuire approached. “It has been a distinct pleasure to make your acquaintance, Lieutenant,” he said with excess formality. “I expect we may have occasion to meet again.”
McGuire refused the lawyer’s outstretched hand, returning Robinson’s bland expression with a glare as he pushed through the open door into what he thought would be an outer hall. Instead, he saw three men sitting at a conference table, watching him with interest. He cursed and began to turn back but the door closed behind him, the lock sliding into place with a precise metallic click.