DEATHWATCH
She looked like one of those wide-eyed French mimes you see on the stage. Tiny, fragile,
vulnerable, terrified, and none of it an act, if I was any judge. This was a woman who was
running out of control. A stone in the road could throw her over the edge.
The DA excused herself and got out of the line of fire. Dutch and the Stick had moved back
down the ball, out of earshot.
“How is he is he all right?” she babbled, making one question out of two. Titan looked at me
as if I had bubonic plague. His nostrils flared like an angry mule‟s.
“Don‟t you ever light anyplace?” he growled.
“Jake, how is Harry?” Doe demanded, ignoring Titan.
I steered her into a small waiting room adjacent to the ICU. Titan scurried along behind us,
his cane tapping along the linoleum floor like a blind man‟s. I pushed the door shut behind
him. She stared at me with her saucer eyes, waiting.
“He‟s dead, isn‟t he?” she said.
“No, but there‟s very little hope,” I said.
“Oh, God,” she cried out. “Oh, God, I did this to him.”
“What are you talking about?” I said.
“That‟s pound foolish,” Titan added.
She started to sag. I took her by the shoulders and put her in a chair. She sat there with her
hands between her knees and began to shake.
“Better get a doctor in here,” I said to Titan, and he left to look for one.
“What did you mean, Doe?” I asked, kneeling in front of her.
“I do love Harry, I do. He‟s a fine person and he‟s been a good husband,” she said in a
whimper.
“I know it.”
“Maybe if I‟d been more honest…….
“You had nothing to do with it, Doe. Don‟t go off on some guilt tangent.”
“Why did this happen?” she asked as tears burst from her eyes.
“I don‟t know.”
“Was it something to do with the horses?”
“1 doubt it,” I said. “Did he tell you where he was going tonight when he cancelled out of the
party?”
She shook her head. “He called me from the track, told me about the accident, and said he
was staying in town.”
“He didn‟t say why?”
“No. It was fairly common—not the accident, his staying in town.”
“Look, we‟ll find out who did this, I promise you.”
She nodded but she was close to shock. Nothing was getting through to her.
“Where was he shot?” she asked.
“Down at the waterfront, in the Quadrangle.”
“Oh,” she sobbed, “his favourite place in the world.” She stared around as if expecting some
psychic cloud to drift into the room and erase her pain. “It was his idea. We donated the land
for it.”
I took her hands between mine and rubbed some warmth into them.
“Jake, I feel so... rotten.”
“Titan‟s right, that‟s pound foolish. Nothing good can come from that kind of thinking.”
But she wasn‟t listening. She began to rock back and forth and moan like an injured animal.
“How did Harry sound when he ca1led you?” I pressed on. “Was he angry? Sad? Confused?”
“He just sounded like Harry. He was funny about keeping things from me if he thought they
would be upsetting. My God, listen to me, I‟m talking like he‟s dead already. Oh, Jake, I‟m
so sorry.”
She lowered her head into her lap and started sobbing. A moment later Dr. Hanson and Titan
came in. Sam Donleavy was with them. She jumped up and rushed over to him.
“I‟m sorry. I just heard,” Donleavy said. “I‟ve been on the phone half the evening. I drove in
from Sea Oat as fast as I could.”
Doe turned quickly to the doctor.
“How is he?” she said, in a voice that was shrill and ragged at the edges.
He looked at me sternly and said, „May I speak with Mrs. Raines privately?”
“He‟s a friend,” she said.
He didn‟t like that very much but it wasn‟t the proper time to argue the point. He said, “Doe,
we‟re going to do the very best we can but I„m afraid that‟s not very much. Harry was shot in
the forehead. They‟ve done a scan and the bullet is lodged in the rear of the frontal lobe. It‟s
inoperable.”
She fell against him, her arms limp at her sides.
“I‟m going to give you something to relax you,” he said, but she started shaking her head
violently.
“No, I‟m not going to sleep through this. I‟ve been protected enough in my life. I‟m not a
child, George.”
“It won‟t put you to sleep, it will just take the edge off things a little.”
“I want the edge. I want to feel it all. Don‟t you understand? This isn‟t your problem or Mr.
Stoney‟s, it‟s mine. He‟s my husband and I will make whatever decisions are necessary here.
I can‟t do that stoned out on a cot.”
“Let her handle it her way,” Donleavy said quietly.
Hanson was uncomfortable. He patted her shoulder. “AS you wish,” he said.
“May I see him?”
“Of course,” Hanson said.
“I‟ll come along,” Donleavy said, and followed them into the ICU.
The minute they were out of the room, Titan turned on me, his teeth showing.
“Keep out of this,” he hissed, jabbing his finger in my face. “The one thing she don‟t need
right now is you.”
“That‟s up to her,” I hissed back.
“I‟m telling you, back off. Get out of her life. I blame all this on you, you and that bunch of
stumblebums of Morehead‟s. This never should have happened—”
“Forget it!” I barked back. “You can „t blame Morehead. Your mighty Committee screwed
up. That‟s how Tagliani got in here.”
“Damn you,” he said in a threatening whisper. “We ain‟t smart college boys like you hotshot
federals. So they got in! Morehead‟s job was to keep this element in line if they did.”
“Screw you, Titan,” I said vehemently. “You‟re just like the rest of these assholes who want
to pass the buck to somebody else.”
“I don‟t give a hoot owl‟s cross eyes what those wop bastards do to each other,” Titan said,
his voice rising to a shriek. “They want to kill each other off, that‟s goddamn good riddance, I
say.”
He was trembling with rage, the rage of a man whose power had been compromised.
“That ain‟t what I had to say to you, anyway,” he went on. “I‟ll try appealing to your sense of
honour, if you got any. Don‟t give the town reason to wag their tongues, doughboy. She
surely don‟t need such as that at this time.”
“Doe and I are old friends. Did it occur to you that I may be able to help?”
“Keep away from her!” he screamed.
“Mind your own fucking business,” I said softly, and left the room.
“What was that all about?” Dutch asked as I joined them.
“Titan got a little out of line,” I said.
“Titan doesn‟t get out of line,” Dutch said.
“Wrong,” I said. “He just did.”
We hung around for fifteen or twenty minutes. It was obvious that Raines‟ time was running
out, but the doctor was playing his prognosis close to the chest. Doe stayed in the unit with
Raines while Titan and Donleavy were knee to knee, palavering in the waiting room,
probably deciding who would replace Raines in the political structure. There were several
uniformed police hanging around and there was nothing further we could do, so we moved on
after I scribbled a brief note to Doe with some phone numbers on it and left it with a nurse.
It had cleared up outside. A warm summer wind had blown away the storm, leaving behind a
beautiful starry night. Dutch, Stick, and I drove back to the park in silence, each of us in his
own way trying to make sense out of what appeared to be a senseless holocaust plaguing
Doomstown.
There was still a light fog hanging over the Quadrangle, like a wisp of cloud, but I could see
across it to Warehouse Three, on the opposite side. Cobblestone walkways crisscrossed the
park like an asterisk, intersecting at its centre. One of them dissected the park and ran straight
to the river‟s edge; another ran between the bank and Warehouse Three.
Plainclothesmen and uniformed cops were still examining the scene and had extended their
yellow control ribbons around the entire park.
Raines had met his assailant about halfway between the back of the park, where Dutch‟s ear
witnesses were searching for the lost necklace, and the river. I stood next to the chalked form
on the walk and looked back and forth. Chip and his fiancée had been less than thirty yards
away when Raines was shot.
“I wonder what direction Raines was walking in and where he was going,” I mused aloud.
“His Mercedes is parked down behind the bank,” Stick offered.
I walked the fifty yards or so down to the river‟s edge. What had once been a dock had been
converted into a small fishing pier. The dark river swirled past its pillars, gurgling up small
black whirlpools. The river walk ran from River Road, where it turned and coursed up an
embankment to the highway above, along the river bank, and behind three warehouses that
had been converted into office buildings.
“Findley Enterprises is in Warehouse Three, next to the park, and Costello and Cohen have
their offices in One. That‟s three buildings down on the end,” Dutch offered.
I looked tip and down the river, then back toward the museum and the spot where Raines was
shot.
“Any ideas?” said Dutch.
I had a lot of ideas, all of them pure guesswork, none of them provable, and none I cared to
share at that moment.
“Not really,” I said. “How about you two?”
“Let‟s say Raines parked his car over at the bank and started across the pork toward the
Findley office,” Stick said. “That young couple was twenty, thirty yards away, talking. The
killer must have heard them. Seems to me whoever did the trick had to know the park pretty
well.”
“And knew which way Raines was coming, so he or she knew exactly where to wait,” Dutch
conjectured.
“And was pretty desperate,” I concluded.
“How so?” said Dutch.
“To shoot him down with witnesses a few yards away,” I said. “I call that taking a chance.”
We walked back toward the bank, looking on all sides of the walkways, but found nothing
else of interest. The locals had obviously worked the place over. I stood at the shooting site
for a moment or two more.
“Could‟ve been Nance,” said the Stick. “Could‟ve come down from Costello‟s office, waited
until Raines parked his car, started across the park, done the deed, and run back to Costello‟s
office.”
“Maybe,” I said. “A lot of maybes, as usual.”
“Why don‟t we talk this out over a piece of pie and coffee,” Dutch said. “This caught me in
the middle of dinner.”
“Suppose it wasn‟t Nance,” I said. “Suppose it was somebody who was so desperate they had
to take a chance and blitz Raines on the spot. What would they do?”
“Run in the opposite direction from the witnesses,” Dutch said. “Down toward the river.”
“Yeah,” 1 said. “And if they were real desperate, they might have ditched the weapon.”
“In the river,” Stick said.
“Exactly,” I agreed.
“George Baker,” both Stick and Dutch said in unison.
“Who‟s George Baker?” I asked.
“The best black-water diver in these parts,” said Dutch. “If there‟s a gun in the river, he‟ll
find it.”
“Think it‟s worth a chance?” I asked.
“Are you kidding?” said Stick. “George‟d leave a movie queen‟s bed to go diving. It‟s how
he gets his jollies.”
“Then let‟s get him,” I said.
“How about pie and coffee?” Dutch implored.
“Let‟s see if we can dig up Baker first,” I said.
64
BLACK-WATER DIVE
Stick found Baker at home watching television. The diver, excited by the prospect of finding the
murder weapon, promised to keep his mouth shut and be on the pier at first light. Coffee and pie
brought Stick, Dutch, and me nothing but endless speculation. We packed it in early and I went to bed
after checking the hospital and being told that Raines‟ condition was “guarded.”
At five thirty am. I was back at the park with Stick, huddled over the river‟s edge in fog thicker than
the previous night‟s, sipping black coffee from a plastic cup and listening to George Baker describe
what he and his partner were about to do. Baker was a big man with a barrel chest, hulking shoulders,
a neck like a spare tire, and black hair cut shorter than a buck private‟s. A telephone man by trade, he
was a black-water diver by avocation and an auxiliary policeman, whatever that was, for the hell of it.
“It‟s dark down there,” he said dramatically as he pulled on his wet suit. His patois, a blend of
southern colloquial and old English, was as descriptive as it was archaic. He sounded like the hawker
for an old medicine show.
“Yessir, dark and dangerous. Don‟t take much more‟n a Mexico minute for a man to perish under
these waters. A man cannot afford errors of the mind, for you don‟t make any miscalculations, least
not more than once. Why, sir, I dive in waters so dark, even a torch will hardly cut their swarthy
depths. The bottom is either sugar mud, which is shifty and quicksandy, or it‟s covered with old, rusty
cables, the likes of an octopus, and old boat propellers, tin cans, and other such various obstacles from
time past when this here was a pier for mighty ships of the sea. Why, say, at high noon, it‟s so dark at
the depths of fifteen feet, I must, by needs, do everything by the touch of these here fingers.”
He wobbled ten fingers at us, just in case we didn‟t know what a finger was, and stared at them
himself with awe.
“Yessir,” he said, „sometimes there ain‟t nothin‟ twixt me and the Almighty but a measly ol‟
fingerprint.”
The bottom, Baker told us, sloped away from the bank for about thirty feet, then dropped off sharply
into the channel. He would use what he called his “tender system,” a ball of twine that he ran from
pillar to pillar and used as a guide under water. His buddy diver, a scroungy-looking young man
identified only as Whippet, who I later learned was a bootlegger by trade, kept track of his progress
by means of a tie line around Baker‟s waist.
“If I get in trouble,” said the master diver, “Whippet will endeavour to pull me up, careful but sure, in
hopes that I will survive whatever calamity might befall me.”
Baker also had a theory, derived from looking for more than just a few murder weapons in his time.
“A man most likely will throw the gun out in the water, such as flingin‟ a baseball,” he said, “whereas
a lady, who don‟t normally have much truck with guns, will tend to just drop the weapon
straightaway, so as to get ii out of hand as quick as is possible. I will operate from the edge of the
channel in, thereby usin‟ the tide to my advantage.”
“If I were guessing,” I volunteered, „I‟d say he or she dumped the gun fast, as soon as they reached
the end of the walk. There were witnesses who heard the shot from fairly close by.”
“Thank you, sir,” Baker said formally. “I‟ll keep that in mind.”
Fully dressed with mask and tanks, he could have modelled for a Hollywood monster, an enormous
black bulk peering like an owl through his face mask. He clambered down the side of the fishing pier,
vanished into the fog, and a moment later splashed into the water fifteen feet below us.
“If you got somethin‟ t‟do, might‟s well get on with it,” Whippet said, stuffing snuff under his lip.
“This‟ll most likely take a while.”
Stick and I groped our way through the fog, found a coffee shop, and took on breakfast.
“1 got a crazy idea,” I said.
He started to laugh. “Is that supposed to surprise me?” he asked. “Shoot.”
“This is a real long shot, but how about checking the local gun shops. Start with the better ones. See if
Donleavy, Seaborn, Raines, Sutter, or Logan, owns a .38 or something close to it.”
“Raines?”
“He‟s got a wife,” I said, without looking up from my eggs.
“Cover all the bases, don‟t you old buddy?” he asked coldly.
“No one is immune,” I answered, just as coldly.
“I thought murder was off our beat.”
“Anything that relates is our beat,” I said. “Humour me on this, I‟ve got an idea.”
“Okay, you‟re humoured. Want to tell me what it is?”
I gave him the short version of the idea before we were interrupted.
Charlie One Ear arrived bringing with him the autopsy reports on all the victims up to and including
Tony Lukatis and Stitch Harper.
“The same gun killed Tagliani, Stinetto, O‟Brian, Harper,” he told us. “A .22. All of them shot to hell
and gone except for Lukatis. He was shot only once, back of the head, with a .337. A .223 removed
Stizano and his people.”
“Coup de grace,” I said.
“What?” Charlie One Ear asked.
“Just thinking out loud.”
“So what else do you think?” he said.
“What I‟ve always thought. We got an M-16, probably with a forty-millimetre grenade launcher
mounted on it, that takes care of the Stizano massacre and Draganata. We got an American 180,
sounds like a dentist drill, fires a hundred eighty rounds in six seconds, which takes care of the
Tagliani kill, O‟Brian, and the boys on the boat. The rope trick was used on Logeto and Della
Norman. And we got a .337 that was used to put the insurance shots into Stinetto, Tagliani, and
Lukatis. Not that big an arsenal for all the damage that‟s been done to date.”
“How about Harry Raines?” Charlie One Ear asked.
“We won‟t know for sure until they get the slug out. Dutch says it was probably a .38 or close to it
That means it could be .357 or even a nine-millimetre. They‟re all about the same diameter.”
“And Nance shoots a nine-millimetre Luger, right?” Stick asked.
“Nance didn‟t shoot Harry Raines.”
He looked at me with surprise.
“How do you know that?”
“Instinct,” I said. “Really, logic. First of all, he‟s not a contact killer. He likes to work from a distance.
Second, he‟s a planner. He wouldn‟t ice his mark in a fog with two people twenty yards away. It‟s too
risky. Nance is a pro, He‟s only made two mistakes that I know of.”
“What were they?”
“He missed me twice,” I said.
Dutch and our breakfast arrived at the table together. He had found us there to tell us that Harry
Raines was dead.
“About forty-five minutes ago,” the big man said, sinking into the booth beside me. “I been up all
night. It‟s a sad, sad thing. Doe Raines is a wreck and Stoney Titan is blaming everybody but the
President. Donleavy finally stepped in to make the arrangements.”
I listened but didn‟t hear any more. I was thinking about Doe and the devils that had shown
themselves to her in the hospital, devils that could twist her mind into a private hell if they were not
dealt with, and quickly. Strange how lovers and family always assumed the guilt of death. Both
DeeDee and Doe had lost loved ones in the same day and both were assuming guilt for the loss. I still
wondered if Doe knew or cared that Tony Lukatis was dead. She had bigger things to deal with now.
“Does Chief know yet?” I asked finally.
“I dunno, that‟s probably Mr. Stoney‟s chore,” said Dutch. The death of Harry Raines didn‟t seem to
spoil his appetite. He ordered a breakfast that would have given me indigestion for a week.
“I can‟t believe it,” Dutch said. “Sam Donleavy and I were talking about all this as it was happening.”
“What time did he call you?” I asked.
“I called him,” he said. “About five after eight.”
“Where?”
“He lives in the condos out on Sea Oat, just before you cross over the bridge to the Isle of Sighs.”
That gave Sam Donleavy an airtight alibi. I had talked to him at quarter to eight. Even the Stick at his
best could not have driven the distance from Sea Oat to town in less than fifteen minutes. To drive
both ways in twenty minutes was literally impossible.
“I‟ve got something for you, Jake,” Charlie One Ear said, breaking into my reverie. “Stick asked me
to check out the Tagliani bank accounts. Three of those companies are foreign.”
“Incorporated in Panama?” I said.
“Now, how‟d you know that?” asked Dutch.
“Protected corporations,” I said. “Which are they?”
“The Seaview Company, which owns the hotels; a company called Riviera, Incorporated, which does
maid and janitorial service for the hotels and other clients; and another called the Rio Company,
which is some kind of service outfit, although we couldn‟t find out much about it. The Thunder Point
Marina and the Jalisco Shrimp Company are both owned by Abaca Corporation, which is a local
company. The restaurant is a proprietorship.” “Bronicata the proprietor?”
“Yep.”
“Makes sense,” I said. “They need a few legitimate businesses as part of the washing machine.”
Charlie One Ear, encouraged by my enthusiasm, left to see if he could dig up more facts.
Dutch‟s beeper started bugging us and he went to check it out. He returned, both amused and
surprised.
“What now?” asked Stick.
“Everybody seems to be turning their cards up,” he said. “Nose Graves made a wreck out of the
Jalisco Shrimp Company not twenty minutes ago. Nobody‟s hurt but he spread the place all over the
county. What‟s left is burning.”
“Shit!” I said grimly. “It‟s starting.”
“What‟s starting?” said Dutch.
“What I‟ve been afraid of,” I said. “Open warfare. If it‟s not stopped, Harry Raines won‟t be the only
innocent victim. I‟ve seen a gang war up close, in Cincy. it isn‟t pretty. It‟ll make the Tagliani
massacres look like a harmless warm-up.”
That put a crimp in the conversation for a moment. Then Dutch reached in his pocket and took out the
tape recorder I had hung on Harry Raines‟ bed.
“I almost forgot,” he said. “I retrieved this for you.”
“Anything on it?” I asked.
“I haven‟t checked,” he said.
“Do you know Graves did the Jalisco job for sure?” the Stick asked Dutch.
“Absolutely. That was the Mufalatta Kid on the horn,” Dutch said. “Seems we did something right for
a change. The Kid was shagging Graves and watched the whole thing happen.”
He gathered up our checks. “I‟ll let the city pay for these,” he said. “Let‟s go have a talk with the
Kid.”
“Where is he?” asked the Stick.
“Baby-sitting on Longnose Graves‟ doorstep,” Dutch said, and his Kraut face broadened into the
biggest smile I had seen since I got to Doomstown.
65