Chapter Twenty-Two

The flight to Washington left half an hour after McGuire and Susan arrived at O’Hare, the last one of the day. At the check-in counter, McGuire promised to call her the next morning from wherever he was staying. He pressed more than enough money into her hand for the cab ride to the halfway house, kissed her, seized his bag, and trotted towards the gate. He turned once to wave at her, before handing his ticket to the flight attendant. For the first time in his life, he questioned the energy driving him, the intensity that exploded whenever he grew this close to a resolution, to a settling of accounts.

McGuire’s obsession with Myers had built from the moment Susan described her life with him: the beatings, the lies, the deceptions, the arrogance. From his days as a rookie Boston cop, McGuire considered domestic violence among the most abhorrent aspect of his work. He had seen more than his share of battered wives and battered children, had encountered more than enough spineless men who would bow and scrape in the presence of other men whose respect they craved, and later terrorize those whom they should have loved, who expected their love and instead harvested only their contempt and brutality. They were men who manipulated people around them, their tactics coolly plotted, clear of conscience. They were con artists and sociopaths, popular with those with whom they wanted to ingratiate themselves, ruthless with those who provided only the means and the trust.

He had never encountered one with the apparent malice of Ross Myers. He pictured Myers lavishing gifts on women, spending money to impress his friends at the hundred-dollar betting windows in Florida, while Susan cowered in Boston, shaken by every demand for more money and unable to stop the flow, to halt the descent.

It was past ten o’clock when he landed at Washington, where he rented a car and set off for Annapolis. The traffic was light, and just after eleven he pulled the sedan onto State House Circle and down Maryland Avenue to the Academy Bar and Grill. He stepped aside as three young men left the restaurant, one wearing a St. John’s College sweatshirt, the others fastening their jackets against the night chill.

Inside, he was washed with warm air and the aromas of fried onions and beer. He walked through the restaurant area and past the bar, where perhaps half the stools were occupied. A gaunt bartender with unruly hair and bad teeth glanced up and nodded at McGuire.

“Who’s your Bud distributor?” McGuire asked him.

“Our what?”

“Who owns the beer distributorship? Who ships your Bud to you?”

The man shrugged. “Rollie Wade. It’s his company. He doesn’t deliver it.”

“Who delivers it?”

“Depends. Some days it’s a guy named Banting. Usually it’s Dan Daniels. You know either of them?”

McGuire shook his head and walked away, choosing a table near the far wall, where the bartender watched him with a mix of curiosity and suspicion.

Two waitresses were on duty, one bleached-blonde and heavyset, the other younger with a long, dark ponytail that swung with every step. When the younger one stopped at McGuire’s table, he ordered a beer. When she returned to set the glass on his table, he smiled up at her. “There’s another waitress who works here,” he said. “About thirty, thirty-five. Brown hair, not as long as yours. I’d like to see her.”

“Eileen,” the young woman said. “She’s in tomorrow. That’ll be two-fifty.”

McGuire handed her a five, told her to keep it.

“She’s got a boyfriend, you know.” The waitress tucked the money in an apron pocket. “At least, she did last time I heard. A jealous one, too.”

“I know,” McGuire said. “They still living together?” She shrugged.

“I don’t think so. Not anymore.”

“He still drive the Mercedes?”

“It’s a Cadillac. You having anything to eat?”

McGuire said no. He took two sips of the beer, tapped his fingers on the table, and left.

Half an hour later he was registered in a motel room outside the town, tossing and turning in bed, willing himself towards a sleep that refused to arrive for hours.

“I couldn’t sleep.” Susan’s voice was shaking but strong through the telephone wire. “All night long, I couldn’t sleep.”

McGuire sat up in bed, staring at dappled morning sunlight on the painted concrete-block wall of the motel room. “I didn’t do so well myself,” he said.

“Did you see him?”

McGuire said no. But he expected to. He gave her Ollie’s telephone number and address. “Take a cab up there,” he said. “I’ll call when I’ve got something. While you’re waiting, get Ollie to tell you stories about us. They’ll have you in stitches. Some of them might even be true.”

After hanging up, he dialed Boston again and counted nine rings before a woman’s angry, scratchy voice answered. “McGuire, you doorknob,” the woman spat through the phone after he identified himself. “The cats and I aren’t even out of bed yet.”

“Calm down, Libby. I need a favour.”

“I don’t do favours when I’m awake,” Libby Waxman almost shouted. “The hell makes you think I’ll do one for somebody who gets me out of a sound sleep?”

“Just for me, Libby.”

“What?”

“I need a name.”

“Whose?”

“The bookie in Baltimore, told you about Myers.”

“Are you nuts?”

“He’s a bookie, Libby. If he’s a bookie, he’s got other customers besides Myers, so they gotta know his name too. That’s all I’m asking. Just give me his name.”

“What? You wanta place a bet?”

“You got it. What’s the guy’s name?”

“Lou. Lou Wachtman.” She spelled the last name for him.

“You’re such a sweetheart,” McGuire said. “I almost wish I was there in bed between you and the cats. Thanks.”

“Wait a minute,” Libby said. “You wanta make a bet, don’t you want his number?”

McGuire said no, he had all he needed.

He was too excited to eat, too driven even to have coffee. After showering and dressing, he checked out of the motel and drove through a brilliant autumn morning across the Severn River bridge into Annapolis, parking in front of the Academy Bar and Grill.

This time he didn’t try opening the front door, but walked around the corner and down the service alley to the rear of the building. The rear door was unlocked, and he edged his way past trays of hamburger rolls and cartons of beer bottles into the bar area. From the dining room next door he heard the jangle of silverware being shuffled.

She was bent over one of the larger tables. Her hair was gathered on top of her head in Gibson-girl style, and the stained sweatshirt she wore was shapeless and frayed.

“Eileen,” McGuire said.

She turned to glance at him, her left hand clutching several stainless-steel dinner forks. “You the guy from the bakery?” she said, and looked back at her work, placing silverware on the round tables. “You still owe us four dozen rolls, Jenny tell you that?”

“I’m not from the bakery,” McGuire said. He stepped into the room, scanning the booths to make certain they were alone.

“Where you from?” She didn’t look up.

“Boston.”

“You just visiting? ’Cause if you are, we don’t open until eleven.”

“I know.” McGuire seated himself at one of the tables between her and the door. “I’ve been here before.”

She continued setting the forks in their correct location, but McGuire had seen her shoulders freeze for a moment, and now her actions were slower, more deliberate, as she tried to contain her emotion. She walked to a service counter in the corner and dropped the remaining forks into a tray with a loud clatter. She looked directly at him, then closed her eyes. “You’re the guy,” she said, recognizing McGuire, remembering.

“Where is he?”

“I don’t know.” She was wiping her hands on a towel.

“Yes, you do.”

“No, I don’t.”

“You know how to reach him, I’ll bet.”

“I haven’t seen him in . . .” She shrugged. “Nearly a week.”

“You pick him up in Weymouth?”

“Where?”

“Near Boston. Did you pick him up there one night in a shopping-mall parking lot? About a week ago?”

She dropped the towel on the serving counter and began to wipe her hands on her jeans. “Is he in trouble?”

“Oh yes. Ross Myers is in very big trouble.”

“With the same people?” She looked across at him. “Are you with them?”

“You mean the people from Baltimore?” McGuire said.

She nodded and bit her lip. “You’re not going to hurt me, are you?” she pleaded. Her eyes were filling with tears. “I’ve got three kids, for God’s sake . . .”

“Tell me where he is.”

I don’t know!” She leaned over the counter, refusing to look at him.

McGuire walked to her. When he placed a hand lightly on her back, she cringed. “I’m not going to hurt you,” he said. “Just tell me how to find him.”

She shook her head, unable to speak.

“Somebody’s threatened you before?”

She nodded her head.

“Both of you?”

Another nod.

“Look.” He moved his hand from her back to her upper arm, and she turned to look at him, a woman on the cusp between the final bright years of her youth and early middle age. She seemed to have grown ten years older since McGuire entered the room. “Get a message to him. Through somebody who knows how to reach him.”

“Jake knows,” she said. “He knows how to find him.”

“Who’s Jake?”

“The night bartender.”

“Thin guy, bad teeth?”

She nodded again, not looking at him.

“Okay, you get hold of Jake and tell him to pass a message to Myers. Tell him it’s got something to do with Lou Wachtman, his bookie, who doesn’t even know about it yet, so there’s no sense Myers calling and asking him. Tell Myers I’ve got a way to settle things with Wachtman and get Myers out from under the money he owes. I’ll be out in the open, where he can see me. Just tell him to get his ass and his Cadillac over here this afternoon between two and three and meet me . . .” McGuire looked around, recalling the layout of the town. “Up near the State House. In the park on that hill surrounding the State House. I’ll be alone, and he’ll be able to check if he wants. Okay? You tell him that?”

She nodded again.

“Did Myers tell you how he got to Weymouth?”

“He was delivering a car there. For a friend.”

“Sure he was,” McGuire said. “Sure he was.”

It was mid-morning when he drove through town and across the bridge to Bay Ridge Yachts, where a heavyset man in a pink polo shirt and elastic-waist slacks stood near the entrance, staring up at the hull of a trailered yacht with a critical eye. Across the breast of his shirt, McGuire read Bay Ridge Yachts, embroidered in aqua thread.

McGuire pulled his car near the man, who was making notes on a clipboard, and lowered his window. “Mrs. Diamond in today?” he asked.

“Who?”

“Christine Diamond. She back at work yet?”

“Haven’t seen her.” The voice was familiar, the words had the soft edges of a well-worn Georgian drawl.

“You Harrison Klees?”

“That’s me.” Klees underlined something he had written on the clipboard paper. “What can I do for you?”

“Nothing,” McGuire smiled, and as Klees watched he swung the car back towards the street where he had seen a telephone booth. He found a B. Diamond in the directory, remembered that her husband’s name was Bert, deposited a quarter, and dialed the number.

After three rings a woman’s voice answered.

“Mrs. Diamond?” McGuire said.

“Yes?” Was there a hint of a tremor there? McGuire thought he heard one.

“I was just talking to Mr. Klees down here at the office, and he said I should perhaps see you about . . .” He looked up at several sailboats sitting on cradles nearby. On the hull of one he read Nonsuch 26. “A Nonsuch twenty-six I’m kind of interested in.”

“We don’t have a Nonsuch for sale that I was aware of,” she said. “We had one last month, but I believe it was sold . . .”

“Oh, is that right?” McGuire looked down at the open telephone directory, memorizing the address. “Son of a gun. Well, I’m sorry to have bothered you. Thanks a lot.”

He walked back to the car, repeating the address from the telephone directory over and over in his mind.

An attendant at a gas station directed McGuire to North Point, a slim finger of land extending into the bay beyond the town. The road followed the crest of the point, with views of Chesapeake Bay on either side. The houses on North Point Road were large and elaborate, set at the end of long lanes, many with decorative stone gates at the entrance. The lots were large, and the rear yards were enclosed by high fences and shrubbery for privacy.

He found 3327, a large white Cape Cod with extensions on either side and twin brick chimneys. Behind it, McGuire could see a garden area extending to the shore. As he drove through the open gates and closer to the house, he noted a boathouse and an oversized dock on the shore. The lane led all the way to the dock. He saw a small sailing dinghy bobbing in the water.

He parked the car behind a gray Volvo in the driveway and walked to the heavy black door with its massive brass hardware: Colonial handle, letter slot, kick-plate, and a door knocker shaped like a schooner. He clattered the knocker against the door three times and waited, hearing only the wind and the faint crashing of waves against the dock and onto the shoreline.

The woman who opened the door had the same face as the one McGuire had met in Bay Ridge Yachts a week earlier, but in other ways she was not the same person. She wore no makeup, and her eyes were puffy, as though McGuire had wakened her. A man’s white shirt hung over her thin shoulders and almost halfway down the black tights she wore with black ballet slippers. “Yes?” she said. She looked past McGuire to see if he were alone, or to look for a car on the road perhaps.

“Hello, Mrs. Diamond,” McGuire said.

“Do I know you?” One hand rose self-consciously to the top of the shirt, pulling it closed near her neck.

“Well, we’ve met.” McGuire heard a television set in the background, an all-news channel reporting the tragedies of the day. “I came looking for Ross Myers, and you told me he was sailing to South Carolina, remember?”

He sensed her reaction, and shot his foot forward to prevent the door from closing. She screamed, “Get away from me!” and tried to close the door against him.

“Take it easy,” McGuire said.

“I’ve got a gun!” She was forcing her weight against the door, a losing battle.

“Well, I haven’t,” McGuire said. “I just want to talk to you.”

She released the door and ran for the stairs, stumbling and falling halfway up, then rising again, scurrying in panic to an upper hall. McGuire heard one dresser drawer open and close, then another. He stepped into the foyer and closed the door behind him. To his left, above an enormous brick fireplace, hung a large oil painting of a sailboat crashing through blue-green waves in what appeared to be a typhoon, except the mood was not of danger but of romance and heroism. McGuire wondered again about people who worshipped toys of wood and canvas and brass, toys that cost more than the average home, toys whose only function was to amuse, to divert, to relieve boredom.

He heard quick, short footsteps approaching down the upstairs hall, and even before he turned to look, he raised his hands in surrender.

Christine Diamond stood at the top of the stairs, her quick spastic breathing and her nervousness making the gun in her hands jump as though pulled by strings. Doggone, McGuire thought to himself, when did every woman in the United States of America get herself a weapon?

“I told you I’m not armed,” McGuire said.

“Get out of my house.” The gun wandered in one direction, then the other, and McGuire decided the safest location for him was exactly where he was, because it seemed to be the only place where the gun wasn’t pointing.

“I just came to tell you something.”

“I’ll call the police.”

“That’s fine, but you’ll have to put the gun down to do it, so I’ll just keep talking.”

“I don’t want to hear . . .” she began. Her head went back, her eyes closed for a moment, and she took a deep breath.

McGuire lowered his hands and placed them in his pockets.

When she opened her eyes and saw him standing there, she relaxed a little, and leaned against the stair railing. “Please go,” she said.

“I want to see Myers.”

“I don’t know where he is.”

“When did you see him last?”

“Three days ago.”

“Can you call him? Can you reach him by telephone?”

Her face crumbled and her shoulders sagged. McGuire took a step to climb the stairs, but she stiffened and raised the gun in his direction again. “Go away,” she said through her tears.

“What has he done?” McGuire asked.

She shook her head.

“Did a lawyer named Flanigan call you?” McGuire asked. “Did he come to see you? Did Flanigan warn you about anything? About not trusting Myers?”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” she said between sobs.

“Flanigan’s dead. They found his body in the Charles River, a mile from the ocean. His lungs contained salt water. Myers drove his car to Weymouth and left it there. Do you understand what I’m saying?”

“No,” she said. Then: “Yes.”

“Don’t trust him,” McGuire said. “Whatever you do. Don’t believe anything Myers tells you, okay? Especially if it has anything to do with money.” McGuire turned for the door, then looked back. “If you can reach him, or get a message to him somehow, tell him to meet me at the State House, in the little park that surrounds it. I’ll be there this afternoon, from two o’clock on.”

The tears flowed freely, and her chest heaved with sobs.

“I’d like to help you,” McGuire said, his voice softening. “If you want me to stay or something. . . .”

“No,” she said. “Please go.”

“You thought I was from Baltimore, right?” McGuire said. “He’s had people come here from Baltimore, threatening you, maybe? Threatening your kids too?”

“Please go away,” she said. She sank to the floor, the gun in her hand. “Please just go away.”

McGuire opened the door and stepped into the freshening air. The breeze chilled him, and he realized he had been perspiring. His hands were shaking and, as he walked to the car, he told himself they were shaking not from fright but from anger, from a helpless rage he needed to defuse.

He drove back into Annapolis and parked the car in the town square abutting the harbour. From a telephone booth near a seafood stall, he placed a collect call to Revere Beach, and heard Ollie’s raspy voice accept the charges through his speakerphone.

“The hell you up to?” Ollie asked.

“Planting some seeds.” He asked if Susan were there.

“Sittin’ here listenin’ to me tell lies about you,” Ollie said. “’Course some of them ain’t lies. I’m lettin’ her guess which ones.”

“Hi, Joe.” Susan’s voice sounded hollow and distant. “Are you all right?”

McGuire assured her he was fine, and she made him promise to look after himself. Then he told Ollie and Susan about the waitress Eileen, about the bartender and the beer distributor, about Christine Diamond, and about using the Baltimore bookie’s name as bait to draw Myers.

“You want a couple ideas?” Ollie asked.

McGuire said sure.

“One, if anybody’s been puttin’ pressure on those women, I’m bettin’ it’s Myers himself. He’s gettin’ somebody to do it for him, squeeze whatever he can. You know the drill, Joseph. Bookies and the muscle behind them, they don’t mess with girlfriends and kids. Not their style. They go after the bettor, get him to mess with the girlfriends and kids. Am I right? Susan, am I right about that?”

“I think so,” he heard Susan say in a small voice.

“What else?” McGuire said.

“Susan and I’ve been talkin’, see.” Ollie paused, waiting for a reaction from McGuire. “I figure, from what she’s told me about the guy, he thinks he’s invincible. He pisses away over a half million . . .” Ollie’s voice sounded weaker, as though he had turned his head. “Sorry there, sweetheart,” McGuire heard him say to Susan. “Still got this thing about swearin’ in front of a good-lookin’ woman. Anyway, he gets to burn the money, and somebody else takes the fall for it. You catch him doin’ elbow push-ups on one woman, and he slides you off to another one, who he calls when you leave and gets to cover his ass for him.”

“He’s cocky.”

“In a manner of speakin’, yeah. Thinks you’re a bit of junk on the sidewalk he’s gotta step around on the way to his Caddy, and he’ll brush you off like dandruff.”

“So what’s it mean?”

“Means you got the son of a bitch right where you want him.”

“He killed Flanigan.”

“’Course he did. Flanigan wouldn’t go down to threaten Myers, even if he could find him any easier than you did. He went down to cut off Myers’s supply of cash, warn off whatever woman the creep was usin’ like he used Susan and some others. He figured this Diamond woman was the new patsy, and he was going to let her know what Myers is all about, tell her not to give him a penny.”

“I could have done that myself. Or he could have put the local cops onto him.”

“Not a chance. You didn’t know what was up, and Flanigan wasn’t ready to tell you, because it would have meant tellin’ all the stuff Susan put up with. He was protectin’ her, he promised not to let anybody else know about it. Susan told me that. And how’d he know what Myers was doin’ with this Diamond woman? Here’s a bet, Joseph. I’ll bet that Flanigan did a little diggin’ on his own, through business directories and stuff, and found out where the Diamond woman lived . . . what’s that?”

Susan had said something to Ollie. Now she spoke louder, so McGuire could hear. “Who is this Diamond woman?”

“Flanigan never mentioned her name?” McGuire said.

“He just said he knew what Ross was up to now,” she said. “He never mentioned a woman’s name.” Susan lowered her voice. “I think he felt it was better if I didn’t know too much.”

“Maybe Flanigan found out she was a widow, which would start bells ringin’ and lights goin’ on,” Ollie said. “Flanigan shows up, ready to keep Myers away from his latest meal ticket, which is the widow Diamond. Maybe Flanigan wanted to play like you do, and come back with proof that he was scammin’ somebody.”

“He wanted to see Ross in jail,” Susan said. “He told me that. ‘He should be locked up for what he did to you,’ Orin said.”

“If Flanigan’s going to cut off Myers’s supply of cash to pay Myers’s bookies, then either Myers gets rid of Flanigan or he’s liable to find his kneecaps in a different place from the rest of him, right?” Ollie said. “For a guy like Myers, it was an easy choice. All he’s got to do is get Flanigan alone somewhere, bop him on the head, and hold him under water.”

“He puts Flanigan in the trunk of the car, drives to Boston, dumps him in the Charles, and gets picked up in Weymouth by the waitress.” McGuire was thinking of the dock at the rear of Christine Diamond’s house, and the salt water of Chesapeake Bay.

“Joe, be careful.” It was Susan’s voice, closer to the speaker phone.

“I’m meeting him out in the open,” McGuire said. “On the grounds of the State House. He won’t do anything there.”

“If he shows up,” Ollie said.

“Even if he doesn’t, I’ve got enough pieces to put the story together. I know where he got the name he gave me, calling himself Rollie Wade. That’s who I asked for when I came back that night, and the bar owner said he’s a good guy. Myers read the name off the beer distributor’s receipt, standing right in front of me. He’s doing something with Christine Diamond. She’s frightened out of her mind. And I know he’s around here, not down in Florida where Donovan’s looking. Although it sounds like he’s getting ready to move on. Whether he shows or not, I’m coming home tonight. I’ll turn everything over to Donovan and hope he’ll have sense to follow up on it. If he interviews the waitress, she’ll put Myers in Weymouth. That may be enough.”

“You still haven’t said whether he’ll show,” Ollie said.

“I’m betting he’ll come by to see what the offer’s about. He’s got nothing to fear from me. If he convinces himself there’s no trap, and he thinks I’ve got something that can help him, he might show. Maybe he’ll feed me something. Maybe not.”

“You just want to look the guy in the eye, is what you want to do,” Ollie said. “You’re not as upset about poor Flanigan as you are about the scumbag makin’ you look like a dummy, sendin’ you off to his lay of the day, who brushes you off.”

“Maybe,” McGuire said. Then: “You sure you’re okay?”

“Hell, yes. I got a marine sergeant to change my diaper and a good-lookin’ woman to laugh at my jokes. What the hell else does a man like me need?”