The seventh commandment

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The seventh commandment Page 15

by Lawrence Sanders


  "Of course," Dora said. "It may turn out to be a false alarm, but it's worth following up. Did your Dallas friend say anything about Helene Pierce?"

  "Nope. He says this Thomas Powell was a handsome stud with a lot of women on the string, but no one special. And no one in Dallas knew he had a sister; they thought he was a loner."

  "Keep after him," Dora said, "and let me know if anything breaks."

  "You got it, lady," Pinchik said.

  Chapter 27

  The bistro was on 28th Street between Lexington and Third, and nothing about it was attractive. The plate glass window needed a scrub, the rolled-up awning had tatters, and one pane of beveled glass in the scarred door had cracked and was patched with adhesive tape. Inside, it was obvious the designer had striven for intimacy and achieved only gloom.

  Sidney Loftus strolled in and looked about curiously. He was wearing a tweed sport jacket and flannel slacks under his trench coat, and the Father Callaway collar was missing. Instead, a silk foulard square was knotted rakishly at his throat. He saw Helene Pierce seated alone in a back booth, lifted a hand in greeting, and sauntered slowly toward her. Only two of the dozen tables in the restaurant were occupied and, except for Helene's, the eight booths were empty.

  "Good evening, luv," Sid said lightly. He hung his coat on a wall hook and slid into the booth opposite her. "What an elegant dump. I can't believe you dine here."

  "I don't," Helene said. "Probably instant gastritis. But the drinks are big. I'm sticking to Tanqueray vodka."

  "Sounds good to me," Loftus said. He signaled a waiter, pointed to Helene's glass, held up two fingers. "I was surprised to hear from you," he said. "I figured Turner might call, but not you."

  "I thought we should get together," she said, looking at him directly. "In some place that Turner isn't likely to visit and where you wouldn't be recognized."

  "My, my," he said, "that does sound mysterious. Then Turner doesn't know we're meeting?"

  "No, he doesn't."

  "Uh-huh," Sid said, and didn't speak while the dour, flat-footed waiter served their drinks, placing the glasses on little paper napkins that had a black Scottie printed on the front.

  "Charming," Loftus said, holding up the napkin with his fingertips. "Real class. Well, whatever your motives, dearie, I'm happy to have a drink with you without Turner being present. Where is the lad tonight?"

  "If you must know," she said, "he's out of town trying to raise fifty thousand bucks: your finder's fee."

  Loftus sampled his drink. "Good," he pronounced. "Not quite chilled enough, but good. I can't believe raising fifty grand will be a problem. I'm sure the two of you have the funds available."

  "I don't think you fully understand, Sid," Helene said earnestly. "Those 'mighty profits' you mentioned have yet to be realized. I admit the potential is there, but so far the actual receipts have been anemic. Clayton pays my rent and he's given me a few pinhead diamonds, but that's about it. The business at Starrett Fine Jewelry will pay off eventually-no doubt about it-but right now the returns are practically nil. Don't get me wrong, I'm not pleading poverty, but Turner will have to get a loan to come up with the fifty G's. And that means heavy vigorish, of course."

  Sid took another sip of his drink and smiled bleakly. "Don't tell me you invited me to haggle over the price, Helene. Haggling is so demeaning, don't you think?"

  "No," she said, "no haggling. Turner will come up with the fifty thousand. We don't have much choice, do we?"

  "No choice at all," he agreed.

  "But Turner expects some of that to come out of my take," she said stonily. "I don't like that. Which is why I wanted to talk to you privately."

  "No disrespect intended, luv, but you don't mind if I have the teensiest-weensiest suspicion that Turner may have sent you to set me up."

  "Listen to my proposition first," she advised, "and then make up your mind."

  "I'm all ears," he said, smiling, and summoned the waiter for another round.

  They waited silently while their fresh drinks were brought and the waiter left. Then Helene leaned across the table. She was wearing a V-necked sweater of heavy wool in periwinkle blue, and as she leaned forward the neckline gaped and he could see tawny skin, the softness of her unbound breasts.

  "Tell me the truth, Sid," she said, "what do you really think of me?"

  He tried a smile that failed. "Why, I think you're an extremely attractive young woman. Beautiful, in fact. With all the equipment to make an old man forget his years and dream of pawing up the pea patch."

  "You're not an old man, Sid," she said impatiently, "and cut out the physical stuff. You've been around the block twice; what's your personal opinion of who I am and how I operate?"

  He started slowly and carefully. "I think you're a very shrewd lady with more than your share of street smarts. I think you have a heavy need for the lush life. Ambitious. Money-hungry. With the morals of an alley cat."

  She burst into laughter, tossed her head back; her long hair flung out in a swirl. "You've got me pegged," she said. "I plead guilty."

  "There's nothing to feel guilty about," he told her. "You're the female equivalent of Turner, or me, or any other shark in the game. It's just a little unusual to find those characteristics in a woman. But I'm not condemning you. Au contraire, sweetie pie." "As long as you know," she said. "Know what?" he asked, puzzled. "What my motives are. I told you I resent the fact that some of your finder's fee is going to come out of my poke. I don't like that. I've worked too long on Clayton Starrett to turn over my take without trying to protect it. I also know you have eyes for me. You proved that in Kansas City."

  "So I did," he admitted, "and you gave me the broom." "You still feel the same way?"

  He looked at her approvingly. "Could be. What's on your mind, luv?"

  "As long as you know it's not mad, carefree lust."

  "That's a laugh," he said.

  "It would be strictly a business deal," she said, looking steadily into his eyes. "My chance of getting back some of my contribution to your finder's fee. Shocked?"

  "Hardly," he said, returning her stare. "It's in character. You're a tough lady, Helene."

  "Tough?" she said. "You know any other way to survive?"

  "No," he said, "I don't. So what you're getting at in your oblique way is that you'd like a kickback from what Turner pays me. For favors granted. Have I got it right?"

  "You've got it right."

  "And what size kickback were you planning to ask for?"

  She leaned forward again. The sweater neckline widened. "I haven't even thought of it. I just wanted to try the concept with you. If you turned me down, that's it. If you're willing to play along, then we can work out the details. I'm a reasonable woman."

  He laughed. "And I'm a reasonable man. We're two of a kind, we two. It's an interesting idea, Helene. Dangerous but interesting. If Turner ever finds out, we're both dead."

  "You think I don't know that? But I'm willing to take the risk. Are you?"

  He looked down at his drink, moved it in slow circles over the tabletop. He looked up again at the slim column of her bare throat and caught his breath.

  "I might be willing to take a flier," he said. "But then we're faced with the problem of logistics. Specifically, where and when?"

  "I can hardly see us checking into the Waldorf, can you?" she said. "Or any other Manhattan hotel or motel. Either of us might be seen and recognized. And it can't be my apartment. I think Clayton is paying off the concierge to keep track of my visitors. I just can't chance it. That only leaves your place."

  "My place?" he protested. "It's an armpit."

  "I'm sure I've seen worse," she said, then finished her drink. "Let's go there now and clinch the deal. This one will be a freebie to convince you that you're making a smart move."

  "It's practically a monk's cell," he warned her.

  "That might be fun," she said.

  He surrendered completely. "It will be," he assured her.


  Chapter 28

  Arthur Rushkin had mentioned casually that after going over the computer printout, he had been "somewhat surprised" by the quantity of gold being traded by Starrett Fine Jewelry. Instead of being surprised, Dora thought grimly, he should have been shocked. But then the attorney hadn't spent a damp day doing research on gold in the public library, and he hadn't schmoozed with the shrewd jewelry merchants on West 47th Street.

  The reaction of one of them, a tub of lard in a tight plaid suit, was typical. Dora inquired if the average jewelry store could use the weight of gold Starrett was allegedly selling, and he looked at her as if she had just landed in a flying saucer.

  "Absolut imposs," he said in an accent she could not identify. "Total out of the ques, my lovely young miss. Never in a mill years or more."

  He then went on to explain in his fractured English that the average jewelry shop made none of the items they stocked, but depended on distributors and wholesalers to keep them supplied. If they did repair work, they might keep a small inventory of gold wire, chains, clasps, settings, etc. But these would be 14- or 18-karat alloys, not the fine gold Dora was talking about.

  "Then no jewelry store would need pounds or kilos of the stuff?" she asked.

  "Ridic," he said. "Utter ridic. You want to build a Stat of Liber, God bless her soul, of pure gold? With that much you tell me, you could do it. But for a small store, not even grains or ounces of the fine. I speak the trut."

  "I believe you," she said hastily, and other proprietors and salespersons she talked to told her the same thing.

  So on a bright morning she sat in her hotel suite staring moodily at the mess stacked on the cocktail table: the computer printout, her library research, and her spiral notebooks.

  She wondered where further investigation of Starrett's gold trading might lead. She questioned what, if anything, it had to do with the murder of Lewis Starrett and the beneficiaries' claim on his life insurance. That, after all, was her prime concern, and even if the gold trading turned out to be illegal but had nothing to do with Lewis Starrett's death, then she was just spinning her wheels.

  She was still pondering her wisest course of action when the phone rang.

  "H'lo," she said, almost absently.

  "Hi, Red," John Wenden said. "I've got good news for you. I think we can drop the Starrett case."

  "What?" she cried.

  "Because if we just wait long enough," he went on, "everyone connected with it will get knocked off."

  "John," she said, "what the hell are you talking about?"

  "It just came over the Department wire," he said. "Early this morning, Sidney Loftus, also known as Father Brian Callaway, was found murdered in the back room of the Church of the Holy Oneness on East Twentieth Street."

  "Oh my God," Dora breathed.

  "There goes your favorite suspect in the Starrett kill," Wenden said. "Sorry about that, Red."

  "Was he stabbed?" she asked.

  "Now how did you guess that? This case has more knives than Hoffritz. Listen, I don't know any of the details, but I'm on my way there now. Will you be in this afternoon?"

  "I'll make it a point to be."

  "After I find out what went down, I'll give you a call or maybe stop by for a few minutes."

  "Stop by," she urged. "I'll pick up some sandwich makings."

  "Sounds good to me," he said. "I'm in a salami mood today."

  "You'll get it," she promised.

  After replacing the phone, she went back to staring at the stack of papers, not seeing them. Her first reaction to the news of Callaway's death was dread at how the killing might affect Mrs. Olivia Starrett. That poor woman had already suffered through the murders of her husband and a close family friend. Now she would have to endure the "passing" of a man who might have been a swindler but who undoubtedly served as her spiritual advisor and, Dora supposed, provided solace and counseling. Callaway's motives might have been venal, but Dora was convinced he was a comfort to Olivia, something she could not obtain from husband or family.

  It was two o'clock before Wenden finally showed up, looking as exhausted and disheveled as ever. He stripped off a tatty mackinaw and flopped onto the couch. "I'm bushed," he announced, "and the day's hardly started."

  Wordlessly, Dora brought him a cold can of Bud and popped it for him. He drank almost half without stopping, then took a deep breath.

  "Thanks, Red. You're looking mighty perky today."

  "I don't feel perky," she said. "What happened?"

  "He was stabbed four or five times. Chest, stomach, ribs, abdomen. Then, for good measure, his throat was slit. Someone didn't much like the guy. The place was a butcher shop."

  "You think it was one of those dopers or derelicts his church feeds down there?"

  "No," the detective said, and stirred uncomfortably. "He was lying naked, faceup on his bed. And he was tied up."

  "So he couldn't fight?"

  Wenden stared at her. "He was spread-eagled. Ankles and wrists tied to the bedposts with silk scarves. Slipknots. He could have pulled loose. It was a sex scene, Red."

  She looked at him, expressionless.

  "A lot of guys go for that bondage stuff," John said, shrugging. "I've seen kinkier things than that."

  "You think he was gay and picked up some rough trade?"

  "That was our first thought, but now we're not so sure. It may have been set up to look that way. The crime scene guys are still working, vacuuming the whole joint. We'll know more when we get their report. Hey, I'm hungry. You promised me a sandwich."

  "I'm sorry, John. I got so interested in what you were saying, I forgot. The sandwiches are already made. Salami on rye with hot mustard. And kosher dills."

  "Oh yeah," he said, "I can go for that."

  She brought out a platter of sandwiches covered with a damp napkin, and the pickles.

  "You're not drinking?" he asked her.

  "Maybe a diet cola."

  "Will you stop it?" he said, almost angrily. "You've got this complex about being too fat."

  "It's not a complex; I know I am."

  "I don't think so," he said, and began to wolf down one of the thick salami sandwiches.

  "John," Dora said, nibbling, "how do you figure this connects with the Starrett and Guthrie homicides?"

  "I don't know that it does," he said, then looked up at her. "Do you?"

  "Not really," she confessed. "But knives were used in all three."

  "Different knives," he told her. "I can't say for sure until the ME does his thing, but I'd guess that the blade used on Callaway was different from the chefs knife that killed Starrett and the stiletto that finished Guthrie. A lot of shivs in this town, kiddo. The weapon of choice. They don't make noise."

  "But all three victims were connected," she argued. "They knew each other. All were part of the Starrett circle."

  He started on a second sandwich. "It could be a serial killer who just happened to pick three targets who were acquainted. I don't believe that for a minute. Or it could be someone with a grudge against the Starrett family and their friends and associates. So he's picking them off one by one."

  "Have you put guards on the Starrett apartment?" she asked worriedly.

  "Of course. But you know as well as I do how much good that will do. A determined killer can always find a way. And sooner or later, the guards will have to be withdrawn."

  "So you do think the same person, or persons, is responsible for all three murders?"

  "It's a possibility," he admitted. "Is that what you think?"

  "To tell you the truth," she said, "I don't know what the hell is going on."

  "You and me both," John said, and sat back, sighing. "That hit the spot. This is probably the only solid food I'll have all day."

  "Take the leftover sandwiches with you," she said. "I insist."

  "You'll get no argument from me," he said with a sheepish grin. "I can use the calories. Listen, after I leave here, I'm going back to Twentieth Street. Calla
way's murder wasn't my squeal, but I want to hang around the edges and see if the guys running it come up with anything."

  "Like what?"

  "They'll check all the trash baskets, garbage cans, and catch basins in the area to see if they can find the knife. And they'll brace all the neighborhood stores, bars, and restaurants-flashing a photo of the dear, departed Father-to ask if he was in last night, and if so, was he with someone."

  "John, that'll take days."

  "At least," he agreed. "Maybe weeks. But it's got to be done. Hey, you look sad. What's wrong, Red?"

  "I am sad," she said. "You know about what? I'm sad about Sidney Loftus, aka Father Brian Callaway. I know he was a swindler and con man. I know he was taking Olivia Starrett and other religious saps for every cent he could grab. He was bad. But I still feel sorry for him, dying that way."

  "That's a luxury I can't afford," John said. "Feeling sorry. I let myself feel and I'm no good to the Department."

  "I don't believe that."

  "Believe it," he insisted. "I'm like a surgeon. He goes to cut out a cancerous tumor, he can't feel sorry for the patient; it would interfere with his job. All he's interested in is if he's getting out the entire malignancy. He's got to think of the person under his knife as a thing. Meat. He can't be distracted by feeling sad or feeling sorry."

  "Is that the way you think of people-as things?"

  "Only the bad ones. Sid Loftus was a thing, so I can't feel anything toward him. I don't think of you as a thing. You know how I feel about you."

  "How?" she challenged.

  "All the time," he said, and she laughed.

  "You're a bulldog, you are," she said.

  "It sounds like a line, doesn't it?" Wenden said. "It's not. It's a very, very serious pitch. I think it would make us both happy. All right, so it would be a temporary happiness. Nothing heavy, nothing eternal. Just a great rush that doesn't hurt anyone. Is that so bad?"

 

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