“You bastard,” Peters said, ignoring Hal’s hand. “Like I had a choice.”
“Sure you did. Just not a very good one. What are you going to do?”
“I’ve always thought it would be nice to live in Costa Rica.”
“What about Clara?” Hal asked.
“She’ll be all right. The house is in her name. If she’s careful, she won’t have to sell it. She might have to get a second job, though.”
“You’re a prince among men, Gord,” Hal said.
“You’d know,” Peters said churlishly.
“See you Tuesday,” Hal said, and walked to the car, heart hammering and sweat spilling down his sides. As he got into the car, he caught a whiff of himself. He didn’t like what he smelled.
chapter thirty-five
When Shoe lived in Toronto, bars weren’t open on Sundays. The current situation wasn’t an improvement, especially in the case of the Jane Street Bar and Grill. The only positive thing one could say about it was that it didn’t pretend to be anything but what it was — a drinking establishment. The décor was uninspired, to say the least, and the music was bland modern pop, played just loud enough to be annoying. The only customers that Sunday afternoon were four solitary men, ranging widely in age and dress, but all white and all drinking beer from the bottle. No sooner had Shoe settled onto a stool than the barman was in front of him, wiping the stainless steel surface of the bar with a damp rag. He was about Shoe’s age, with brown, thinning hair, sharp eyes, and a mouth that turned down at the corners. He wasn’t wearing a name tag. “What can I get you?” he asked, placing a coaster on the bar.
“I’ll have a club soda,” Shoe replied.
“You want that with a twist?” the barman asked.
“No, thanks.”
“Good. ’Cause we’re all out and I hate disappointing a customer.”
While the barman was drawing Shoe’s club soda, no twist, Shoe asked, “What’s your name?”
“Syd,” the barman said, placing the tall glass of soda and ice on the bar.
“Pleased to meet you, Syd. I’m Shoe. Is Dougie around?”
“Dougie who?” the barman asked.
“How many do you know?”
“You’d be surprised.” He half closed one eye, peered at Shoe sideways with the other. “I know most all the regular cops around here. You’re either new, visiting from downtown, or private. Which is it?”
“None of the above. I’m just a citizen.”
“Well, citizen, what do you want with this Dougie guy?”
“He’s an old acquaintance.”
“What makes you think you’re gonna find him here?”
“I heard a rumour he owned the place.”
“Oh, that Dougie. Why didn’t you say so? Sorry, he ain’t here. Most of the time he’s what you might call an absentee owner. Hardly ever in before eight or nine at night. If you’re an old friend of his, like you say, you’ll know where he lives. Try him there.”
“I did. He wasn’t home.” Neither was Janey. And Tim Dutton had been right, the place was a dump. Except for a small patch in the back, facing the woods, the yards were uncut and full of trash, decaying lawn furniture, rusting car parts, even the corpse of a discarded washing machine.
“Well, I ain’t his keeper,” the barman said. “I just work for him.”
“Were you working last Thursday night?”
“Might’ve been, maybe.”
“Was Dougie around that night too?”
“I thought you said you weren’t a cop.”
“I’m not.”
“Well, you sure ask questions like you’re a cop. If you’re not a cop, get lost. If you are a cop, get lost. I talked to enough cops today already. I got a very low tolerance threshold.”
Shoe looked him in the eye. He returned Shoe’s stare, not intimidated in the least. After a long moment, keeping his voice low and friendly, Shoe said, “I’m just trying to help out a friend who’s got himself into a bit of trouble with the law. I’m sure you can appreciate that. You seem to be a decent fellow.”
“Maybe I am and maybe I’m not, but I make it a point to keep my nose out of other people’s business. Especially if it involves Dougie Hallam. No offence, Mr. Shoe, but you got questionable taste in friends.”
“It’s just Shoe. And Dougie Hallam’s not the friend I’m trying to help. I’m hoping he might be able to help me help my friend.”
“Then you don’t know him as good as you think you do.” Syd thought for a moment, then said, “Okay, yeah, I was working Thursday night. Our other bartender quit and I’m workin’ double shift till Dougie finds a replacement. Wish he’d hurry it up. Dougie was here too.”
“Do you remember a man about five-six or five-seven, my age, long greying hair, getting a bit thin on top? He might’ve been pretty drunk.”
“The cops asked me about a guy like that this morning.”
“What did you tell them?”
“What makes you think there was anything to tell them?”
Shoe feigned disappointment. “Syd, Syd. And here I thought we were developing a rapport. I guess I was wrong. Or is it just general contrariness on your part?”
The barman smiled dryly. “Do you watch television?”
“Not much,” Shoe replied.
“Well, on TV it’s usually at this point that the guy asking questions — that’s you — takes out his wallet and offers the bartender — that’s me — a hunnerd bucks.”
“As I said, I don’t watch much television.” Shoe took out his wallet. “How’s fifty sound?”
“What? You’ll have to speak up.” He stuck a pinkie into his ear and jiggled it. “I got bad wax build up.”
Shoe rolled the fifty-dollar bill into a tight cylinder. He held it out. “Use this to clean it out.”
Syd took the rolled-up bill. “I hear you better now,” he said. He unrolled the bill, folded it, and tucked it into his shirt pocket. “Yeah, there was a guy like that, about as tall as me, but he looked older’n you. No question about him being drunk. Not that that’s so unusual around here. He was runnin’ off at the mouth about how him and Dougie were old pals from way back, tellin’ everyone how dumb Dougie was then, and wondering if was any smarter now. Talk about dumb, I thought Dougie was going to kill the silly fucker when he asked Dougie if he was still porking his sister. That’s when Dougie threw him out.”
“What time was this?”
“Eleven, eleven-thirty.”
“Did you see him after that?”
“You mean, did he come back in after Dougie left? Shit, no. He wasn’t that dumb — or that drunk.”
“How long after he threw him out did Dougie leave?” Perhaps Hallam had seen Joey later that night, Shoe thought hopefully.
“Half an hour, maybe,” Syd said. “He got a call from someone. I remember because it pissed him off. He was puttin’ the moves on some blonde he’s had his eye on for a while.”
“Did he leave alone?”
“No. She left with him.”
“Do you know who the call was from?”
“I didn’t ask. I ain’t his social secretary. A guy is all I can tell you.”
“How long was he gone?”
“An hour, maybe a little longer.”
“What kind of vehicle does he drive?”
“Big black Hummer. Windows tinted real dark. Keeps a mattress in the back. Sometimes he takes women to some local park in it — he’s got keys to the gates, apparently. Other times, he just takes ’em out back. He’s a class act, knows how to treat a woman right.”
A pair of men dressed in jeans and boots and western shirts, and sporting huge bellies and big silver and gold belt buckles, climbed onto stools at the far end of the bar.
“Be right back,” Syd said, and moved down the bar to serve the men. They ordered a pitcher of draft. Shoe sipped his club soda. The ice had imparted to it the stale flavour of refrigeration. Syd came back. “Anything else I can help you with?”
/> “How long have you worked here?”
“Ten years or so. Started working for the previous owner. Nice old guy. I didn’t think he was interested in selling — I’d’ve bought the place myself. Instead, I wake up one morning a couple of years ago workin’ for Dougie Hallam.” He shrugged. “Didn’t like him much when he was a customer and like him even less as a boss.” He tapped his shirt pocket, wherein nestled Shoe’s fifty-dollar bill. “The owner of a little pub up in King City says he’s thinking about retiring soon, so I’ll be moving on before long.”
“Do you know a woman named Marty Elias?”
“Marty? Yeah, I know Marty. Why?”
“How well did you know her?”
“Pretty good. She used to be a regular. Ain’t seen her lately, but around the time Dougie bought the place, she used to come in most every Friday night. She didn’t have to buy her own drinks, if you get my drift, but she usually did.” His eyes sharpened. “Why are you asking me how well I knew her?”
“If she was your friend, I’m sorry to be the one to tell you this,” Shoe said. “She’s dead. Her body was found this morning in the Dells.”
The man’s face drained of colour. “Aw, crap,” he said. He twisted the cap off a single-serving bottle of mineral water and drank. His colour improved somewhat.
“She was more that just a regular, wasn’t she?” Shoe said.
“We went out a couple of times,” Syd said. “She was good people.”
“She was,” Shoe agreed.
“You knew her?”
“Yes,” Shoe said. “A long time ago. She was my kid sister’s best friend. We almost grew up together.” He felt a sudden chill. “Was she in here last night, maybe asking about my friend?”
“No. Like I said, I haven’t seen her in a while.”
“How long is a while?”
“A year, more or less.”
“Was Dougie Hallam here last night?” Shoe asked, for no particular reason, except a tingle of curiosity.
“He’s here most nights.”
“Was he alone?” Where was his subconscious taking him? he wondered.
“When Dougie’s here, he’s never alone. He’s got lots o’ friends in this place. I think that’s why he bought it. It came with them built in.”
“Was he here the whole time?”
“He went out for while around ten or so.”
“How long was he gone?” “An hour, maybe a little less. He came back with the blonde. He left again around eleven, eleven-thirty, with the blonde and another guy.”
“This other guy, what did he look like?”
“Bit bigger’n Dougie, but soft. About fifty, fifty-five. Glasses. Short greying hair kinda lyin’ flat on his head.”
The description fit Hal to a tee, Shoe thought unhappily. The Jane Street Bar and Grill hardly seemed like the kind of place Hal would patronize. On the other hand, he added to himself, glancing at the big-bellied men at the end of the bar, overweight middle-aged men weren’t exactly in short supply.
“Did Dougie came back later?” he asked.
“Yeah, he was back by closing time. I don’t think he trusts me.”
“And the other guy?”
“Don’t remember seeing him later. This place is pretty busy on a Saturday night.”
Shoe stood up. “I appreciate your help. The police might be by again to ask you about Marty. I hope you’ll be as helpful to them as you’ve been to me.”
“I dunno …”
“Would another fifty help you to make up your mind?”
“Keep your money. I’ll tell the cops whatever you want. If Dougie and that other guy you’re lookin’ for killed Marty, they deserve what they get.”
“Just tell the truth,” Shoe said. “Thanks for your help.” He took out his wallet and dropped two twenties and a ten on the bar.
“I told you to keep your money.” “That’s for the club soda,” Shoe said.
Syd picked up the bills. “The next one’s on the house.”
chapter thirty-six
Through the glass wall, Shoe watched Janey Hallam conducting an aerobics class. At least, he thought it was an aerobics class. It might have been a martial arts class, as it involved a lot of kicking, spinning, and air boxing, except that it was being performed to the mind-numbing thud of techno-rock dance music. The average age of the class appeared to be about forty-five. Women outnumbered the men two to one. With a few notable exceptions, most of both genders were ten to twenty pounds overweight, some much more. And, with more or less the same exceptions, most were having a difficult time of it. They missed steps, floundered, staggered, recovered, only to miss another step, like marionettes operated by a drunken puppeteer. Shoe hoped they were enjoying themselves, but judging from their expressions, they didn’t appear to be. The majority looked as though they were in pain.
Janey was tireless, lean and muscular in bright, sweat-stained Spandex that fit her like scales on a snake. She wore a microphone headset, into which she whooped encouragement and shouted instructions as she kicked and punched and spun, and the music pounded. When she saw Shoe through the glass wall, she waved and held up both hands, fingers splayed. Shoe acknowledged with a nod, then retreated to a nearby waiting area, where he leafed through fitness magazines, the contents of which consisted mainly of ads for dietary supplements, complex exercise machinery, and expensive exercise clothing, until Janey’s class ended.
As her class headed for the showers, Janey came into the waiting area, mopping her neck and upper chest with a towel. She smiled up at him. “Hey, Joe.” Her colour was high and she was breathing deeply and slowly. An artery pulsed in her neck.
“Have you got a couple of minutes?” Shoe asked.
“For you, sure,” she replied. She paused, then added, “Did you hear about Marty Elias?”
“Yes,” he said.
“Can you believe it? What’s the world coming to?”
“I don’t know,” Shoe said. He’d heard a report of Marty’s murder on the car radio, but the police hadn’t released Marty’s name, “pending notification of next of kin.” How had Janey heard about it? He asked her.
“One of the girls in my exercise class is married to a cop who works out of the local station. It’s just around the corner.” He was relieved she hadn’t heard that he and Claudia Hahn had found Marty’s body. “Give me a minute to grab a quick shower and change,” Janey said. “Then I’m all yours for the price of a drink.”
She touched his arm, as if for reassurance that he was really there, then went back through the exercise room, where a slim young Asian man in a white judo gi with a black belt was arranging exercise mats. A group of about two dozen boys and girls between the ages of five and fifteen, wearing gis with belts of various colours, trouped into the room and began helping him. Shoe watched them work out for a few minutes, then felt a gentle touch on his back and turned. Janey was wearing a short skirt, flared slightly to accommodate her muscular thighs, and a snug, stretchy top with a scooped neckline. The tops of her breasts were dusted with fine freckles. Her hair was still damp from the shower and slicked back, emphasizing the shape of her skull and the starved-orphan gauntness of her face. Was there such a thing as being too fit? Shoe wondered.
“All set?” he asked.
“Yep,” Janey said. She slung a nylon sports bag over her shoulder and took his arm, pressing her breasts against him. The message couldn’t be clearer. “Where would you like to go?” she asked.
“Anywhere’s fine with me,” Shoe said, as they walked toward the exit. “As long as it’s not the Jane Street Bar and Grill.”
“God, no.” She ducked through the door as he held it for her. “Don’t tell me you’ve been there.”
“I was looking for Dougie.” He gestured toward his father’s car, parked in the lengthening shadow of the building.
“As good a place as any to start, I suppose.” In the car she said, “Head south. There’s a decent pub not too far from here. So,” she sai
d, when they were underway, “why are you looking for Dougie?”
“I want to ask him a couple of questions.”
“Nothing too hard, I hope.”
“Any idea where he might be?”
“It shouldn’t come as any surprise to you that I don’t keep track of his whereabouts. In fact, the less I see of him, the better.”
“Living in the same house must make that difficult.”
“Yeah, but fortunately he isn’t around much. Neither am I, between the gym, my bands, and my teaching gig.”
“You said yesterday you taught marketing,” he said. “I always imagined you doing something more adventuresome.”
“Such as?”
“When you graduated, you told me you’d got a job as an airline flight attendant.”
“I did? Really? I thought about it, I suppose — I guess it seemed like a cool job — but I ended up in advertising. Close to twenty-five years. Not exactly, um, adventuresome, but it had its moments. Had my own company until — well, it’s a long story and I don’t want to bore you with it.”
“Tim Dutton said something about losing your advertising business in a dispute with your partner.”
“I suppose you could call it a dispute,” she said. She sighed. “What happened was, five years ago my business partner, who I also happened to be married to at the time, ran off with his bimbo of an assistant, most of our clients, and what was left of our cash reserves after he’d talked me into upgrading our image and moving into a new space that was costing us ten grand a month. I divorced him, of course, and sued to recover the money he’d stolen, but by the time the dust settled, I’d lost all my clients and I was over two hundred thousand in debt. Don’t ever try to declare bankruptcy when you owe money to lawyers. It’s not a lot of fun.”
She pointed through the windshield toward the parking lot of a tidy little strip mall set back from the road. Shoe turned into the lot.
“Patty Dutton’s a snob,” Janey said, as Shoe manoeuvred the Taurus into a parking space. “But I feel sorry for her, married to Tim. He was fucking Marty, you know, right under his wife’s nose. Rumour has it his business isn’t doing too well, either, and he’s in hock up to his eyeballs. Wouldn’t surprise me if it went toes up soon.”
The Dells Page 21