by Ben Rehder
So this was one of the guys who drew those things. I had a fleeting thought. If I solved this case for Marvin Nickleson, maybe he’d be grateful enough to get me some auditions.
Very fleeting.
“O.K.,” I said. “So that’s the place I don’t go to. And I can’t go see you and I can’t call you. So how do we keep in touch?”
“Well,” he said. “I’ll have to call you.”
“How? I’ll be out on the road.”
“I’ll call you at night after you knock off.”
I shook my head. “No good.”
“Why not?”
“I only knock off at nine if nothing’s happening. Otherwise, I’m still on the job.”
“So? Then I’ll get no answer.”
“No, you’ll get my wife. I don’t want you calling my wife.”
Marvin Nickleson nodded. Apparently, he understood about wives. “So I’ll call you in the morning.”
“I won’t be here.”
“Where will you be?”
Where I’d be would be out working for Rosenberg and Stone. But that was none of his damn business.
“I don’t hang out here. I just come by to pick up my mail.”
“Like today?”
“Yeah. Like today.”
“O.K. I’ll call you when you pick up your mail. This when you come by? Ten o’clock?”
I shook my head. “No. Earlier.”
“When.”
“Nine o’clock.”
“O.K. I’ll call you at nine o’clock.”
I sighed. This was getting to be a real pain in the ass. “O.K.,” I said. “I’ll be here at nine o’clock. You call me then. If I haven’t heard from you nine-fifteen, I’m gone.”
“Fine. So whaddya say?”
I wanted to say no. It was fine for him. From my point of view, it sucked. If I took this draggy, distasteful job, I’d be committed to being in my office every morning at nine o’clock. Which some days would be fine, but some days would be a royal pain in the ass, seeing as how I would have to juggle all my duties to Rosenberg and Stone into my morning hours, unless I wanted the Marvin Nickleson case to dork me out of my steady employment.
Yeah, it was a drag, but then again what wasn’t? And time, fate, my lack of ambition, my lack of acting and writing talent, my sign in the lobby downstairs, and my bad teeth, had all conspired against me, and in one cosmic vin-dit, as Kurt Vonnegut would say, had suddenly thrust me into making an irrevocable decision, which I was sure I would instantly regret, that of taking on my first real paying client.
So I sighed, took a breath, and said the words I’d secretly been longing to say for quite some time.
“All right. Two hundred bucks a day plus expenses.”
3.
I MUST SAY I HAD severe reservations.
Which happens to me a lot. I’m basically insecure, and I always have doubts, even in the best of circumstances. And these circumstances were far from the best. Once Marvin Nickleson had laid ten twenty dollar bills on the desk, given his moustache a final tug and nodded his way out the door, I had time to stop and think things over. Frankly, I didn’t like what I thought. While Marvin Nickleson was there, I could talk to him and take his story at face value. Which was natural for me, ’cause I’m pretty gullible and I believe what people tell me.
But the minute he was gone, the whole thing seemed totally unreal. Come on, here’s a poor fucking graphic artist who wants his wife back, so he hires a private detective at two hundred bucks a day to get the goods on her so he can affect a reconciliation? Could that possibly be true? Not likely. Not with the guy wanting pictures. No, pictures smacked of adding fuel to the fire in a particularly messy divorce.
But that wasn’t my problem, was it? It wasn’t up to me if the Nickleson marriage survived or failed. I’d been hired to do a job, that was how I had to look at it. And if I did the job, if I did as the client requested, the result would be on his head, not mine. Wouldn’t it?
I leaned back in my chair, closed my eyes, and rubbed my head. Christ, now that Marvin Nickleson was gone, the whole thing seemed totally unreal. As if it had never happened. As if I’d just imagined it.
I exhaled and opened my eyes. There on my desk was the stack of twenty dollar bills. That was real enough. I’d wanted it, I’d accepted it, and now I had to earn it.
Next to it lay the picture of Monica Dorlander. I picked it up and looked at it again. Bright, intelligent, ambitious. A lean and hungry look. This was the woman whose life I was going to destroy.
Stop it, I told myself. Asshole. You can’t look at it that way.
A comic impulse seized me. I turned the picture upside down.
“Can I look at it this way?” I said aloud. My Groucho impression was poor, but then I’m a failed actor anyway.
That got me in a better mood. I turned the picture back right-side up. I fixed it with an eagle eye. Dorlander, your ass is mine. Think you’re stepping out on Marvin Nickleson, you got another think coming. Not with Stanley Gumshoe Hastings on the job.
The sound of my beeper brought me back to reality.
Tomorrow. That was tomorrow. I still had today to get through.
I shut off the beeper and called Rosenberg and Stone.
Wendy/Janet, Richard Rosenberg’s two-headed monster, answered the phone. Wendy and Janet were switchboard girls with identical voices, which made it impossible to ever know who you were dealing with. The only way to tell was by specifically asking, which, I had discovered, tended to piss them both off immensely. So I never did and I never knew.
“Agent 005,” I said.
“Stanley,” came the voice of Wendy/Janet. “I have a new case for you.”
She gave it to me. A broken leg in Far Rockaway scheduled for four o’clock that afternoon. That was fine for today, since I’d stalled Marvin Nickleson, but wouldn’t have done for tomorrow.
As if she read my mind, Wendy/Janet said, “And I have another sign-up for you for tomorrow.”
“Then it better be in the morning. I’m tied up in the afternoon. I have to be back in Manhattan by one.”
“Oh? No one told me.”
“I just found out myself.
“Oh. Well, it’s lucky. The appointment’s for twelve.”
“Where?”
“Coney Island.”
I squeezed my eyes shut, then opened them again. “I can’t do it.”
“Why not?”
“I told you. I have to be back in Manhattan by one. I can’t do a job way out in Coney Island at noon and be back in Manhattan by one.”
“Well, you have to. The client has no phone.”
“Then give it to someone else.”
“No one’s free. Rick’s got a case in New Jersey, and Mike’s got one in Queens.”
“Don’t either of those clients have phones?”
“Why?”
I took a breath and shook my head. Good lord, what was I doing? The Marvin Nickleson case had me so rattled I wasn’t thinking straight. Why was I trying to argue with Wendy/Janet? I knew from experience that was futile. See, aside from their voices, the only other thing Wendy and Janet had in common was their intelligence. Or lack of it. If the two of them had a combined I.Q. of over one hundred I’d have missed my guess. And here I was trying to reason with one of them, which didn’t say much for my intelligence.
“Never mind, I’ll talk to Richard,” I said, and hung up the phone.
I sighed. Yeah, like it or not, I was going to have to deal with Richard Rosenberg. Which, under the circumstances, shouldn’t have been that bad. After all, I’d done him a real favor a few months back, during the Rosenberg and Stone murders. Besides helping him clear the matter up, I’d been instrumental in keeping the name Rosenberg and Stone out of the papers. Adverse publicity could have just about shut down Richard’s business. As it was, Rosenberg and Stone was thriving. So by all rights, Richard should have been grateful.
But Richard is Richard. And while I grudgingly admi
t I admire Richard Rosenberg, I am well aware munificence is not one of his virtues. I hadn’t gotten a bonus. I hadn’t gotten a raise. I hadgotten a word of thanks, which I’m sure Richard felt adequately repaid the debt, and I couldn’t imagine his gratitude extending over a period of several months.
No, it wasn’t going to be easy. Even though I wasn’t asking for time off. Even though I wasn’t turning down cases. Even though all I really wanted was the flexibility to plan my own schedule, I knew damn well what Richard’s response would be.
Richard would chew me up and spit me out again.
4.
HE DIDN’T.
Richard Rosenberg was in a blue funk.
It totally blew my mind. I’d never seen Richard depressed before. As far as I knew, the man only had one mood: hyperactive. He always reminded me of one of those miniature dogs that are so purebred and high strung that they can’t hold still and are always bouncing off the walls and yapping all over the place and nipping at your heels.
Not today.
Richard was slumped down in his desk chair when I walked in. Richard was a little guy, not much taller than Marvin Nickleson, actually, and he was slight of build, but one never really thought of him as small. Because Richard had a real showman’s flair, and tended to dominate any group he was in.
But not today. Richard looked small and frustrated and unhappy.
“You wanted to see me?” Richard said. Even his high-pitched nasal bark seemed flat.
“Yeah. About my schedule.”
Richard grimaced and waved me to a chair.
I sat.
Richard sighed. “You know,” he said gloomily, “life’s a funny thing. You’re born. You live. You die. That’s it.”
Good lord. There was only one explanation. Richard had just been diagnosed with an incurable disease.
My mind was racing: Jesus Christ. So young. What was he? Not much more than thirty. What was it? Cancer? At his age? Or, Jesus, Richard was a bachelor and I knew nothing about his personal life and sexual preferences— could it be AIDS? Shit. The Nickleson case was off now. Tough luck, Marvin, but what can I do? I can’t ask for time off from this man now. Shit. There goes my two hundred bucks a day. My chance to pay off my bleeding gums. Asshole. That’s right, think of yourself. Poor Richard.
I wet my lips. “What’s wrong?”
He looked up at me. “Wrong?”
“Yeah,” I said. “What is it? Are you sick? Is something wrong?”
Richard drew himself up somewhat. “Sick? Why should I be sick?”
I blinked. Because if you’re not sick I just wasted a lot of false sympathy and got upset for nothing, was the thought that sprang to mind.
So what the hell was wrong? It had to be business, though I didn’t see how it could. I’d been pulling down my steady share of cases lately, and Richard at last count had two other investigators working and two more training, so how could business be bad?
It came in a flash. If Richard was getting the cases, business could only be bad if he was losing them.
The thought was staggering. Richard was so confident, self-assured and aggressive, a Rosenberg loss was practically an oxymoron.
“So how’s business?” I said. “You getting settlements?”
Richard snorted. “Settlements? I got nothing but settlements. I got settlements pouring in.”
His eyes flicked momentarily as he recognized a dangerous subject—perhaps I was working up to asking for a raise.
“Not that we don’t need it,” he put in quickly. “My overhead is tremendous.”
I nodded without enthusiasm. The ten bucks an hour and thirty cents a mile Richard paid me was top salary. His other investigators were making no more than that, and his trainees even less. And his office staff consisted of an underpaid Wendy/Janet, and an endless succession of college dropouts hired as paralegals at minimum wage. Though, I suppose to a man as tight as Richard Rosenberg that seemed like a tremendous overhead.
I wasn’t any closer to finding out the reason for Richard’s bad mood, and I realized Richard wasn’t going to tell me. I pressed on to the business at hand.
“Well,” I said, “the reason I came in here is I need to arrange my work hours.”
“How so?”
“I need to shift my case load into the morning hours and free up the afternoons.”
“Just tell the girls at the switchboard.”
I blinked again. No explosion? No arguments? No protestations?
The phone rang.
Richard picked it up and said, “Yeah…. O.K., put him on.” Then, “Rosenberg…. What case?… Felcher? I have a lot of cases, refresh my memory…. E-Z Wash Laundromat. Soapy water on floor, slip and fall, broken leg. Right…. Uh-huh…. I’ll get back to you.”
Richard hung up the phone and sighed.
“Insurance adjuster?” I said.
“Uh-huh.”
“Giving you a hard time?”
“Giving me a settlement.”
“Oh?”
“I’ll have to offer it to the client. They’ll take it, of course. Case closed.” He shook his head. “And I’ll have to recommend that they take it. It’s the math, you see. It’s not the most I could get—a jury would give me slightly more—but then there’s the time, the court costs, the nuisance value. It’s the percentages. I know them, the insurance adjusters know them. They’re not lawyers, these guys. They’re all mathematicians. It’s all computerized. Just plug the numbers into a formula and out pops a figure. More standardized and routine every day.”
Richard sighed and rubbed his forehead. “There’s more to life than just money. You gotta remember that.”
I stared. This coming from him. This to a ten buck an hour wage-slave.
“I have not been in court for three months.” Richard stuck his finger in the air for emphasis. “Three months. The cases come in, the summonses go out, the offers come back and we settle.”
Richard sighed and shook his head.
And the cause for his distress became clear. As a former actor, I recognized the syndrome. Richard the showman was out of work. Just like an actor, he was between jobs, a performer with no place to perform.
I would have liked to have been sympathetic, but quite frankly, I couldn’t. Not considering my present situation. Not with money so tight I’d taken on the distasteful Marvin Nickleson case. Gee Richard, that’s tough. Poor little rich boy. Nothing going for him but money. How sad.
But it did make my life easier. I left Richard sulking and went out to lay his tacit approval of my work schedule on Wendy/Janet.
Which wasn’t easy. First I had to sell them on the concept: me. In Manhattan. At one o’clock.
I had to conduct an impromptu math lesson on the formula, D = rt (distance equals rate times time). It went something like this: a man is in Coney Island at 12:55. He must be in Manhattan by 1:00. So time equals five minutes. Manhattan is approximately twenty miles away, so distance equals twenty. If he had an hour to drive twenty miles, he could average twenty miles an hour to get there. But he only has five minutes. That’s a twelfth of an hour. So the rate is twelve times twenty, or two hundred and forty miles per hour. Now at that rate, don’t you think it’s possible he might get a speeding ticket?
Out of the whole lesson, I doubt if Wendy and Janet got anything more than the sarcasm. If that. At best, they both wrote down that I was off work at one. How they would interpret that was anybody’s guess. And Wendy, whom I take to be the more astute of the two, if such a term is applicable, did understand the concept of having one of the other investigators change one of his other appointments so that he could handle the Coney Island one.
I thanked them, picked up my car, which I’d left at a meter on 14th Street, and drove out to Far Rockaway.
Driving out there, I played the game I always play when I do sign-ups: how bad is it going to be? You see, a lot of Richard’s clients aren’t particularly affluent, and some of the neighborhoods they live in are pretty b
ad. And when I go walking into one of those neighborhoods in my suit and tie, people tend to think I’m a cop. Or a suicidal lunatic. I have a horror of walking into a crack den, which I sometimes do, and being shot for a cop, or mugged for an easy mark, which hasn’t happened yet, knock on wood. But cowards die many deaths, and I’ve imagined the scenario many times. And on the way to an assignment I always speculate and fantasize and try to recall what I know, and generally drive myself nuts.
The client’s name was Paul Jeffries. Now that’s a neutral name, could be white or black. The address was Beach Channel Drive, that was the main drag, running all the way down the island. There were good and bad sections, like anywhere. I hadn’t been to Far Rockaway much, it being way the hell out there, so I really didn’t know.
The apartment number was a clue: 12H. So it wasn’t a slum. It was either a high-rise apartment building or a low-income housing project.
Experience prompted the fervent wish: please don’t let it be a project.
It was, but not that bad. No lock on the outside door, but at least the glass hadn’t been smashed. Both the odd and even floor elevators seemed to be working. The odd came first so I took it, even though I was going to 12, prompted by long experience—in a project, if an elevator shows up, you get in.
I took it up to 13, walked down a flight and found 12H. The door was opened by a woman with white hair, cold, crisp, efficient and severe, in the starchy white of the medical profession.
“Yes?” she demanded.
“Paul Jeffries?” I said.
“Who are you?”
“Mr. Hastings from the lawyer’s office.”
“Which office?”
“Rosenberg and Stone.”
She nodded grudgingly. “Yes. That’s who he called. All right. Come in.”
I did. She closed and locked the door behind me, then turned to lecture me as if I were a truant schoolboy.
“All right. You can see him. But make it short and try not to tire him.”
“What’s he got?”
“Cancer.”
“Of what?”
“Lungs, liver, colon, stomach. Just about everything.”