chapter seventeen
AT 9:15 IN THE morning, I called the Public Charities Division at the Attorney General's Office and asked about Civil Streets. It was listed as a counseling and adjustment service for former prison inmates. The woman on the phone stressed that the description was submitted by the charitable organization and should not be construed as the AG's evaluation. There had been no complaints about the organization. The president was somebody named Carla Quagliozzi, with an address in Somerville. There was a long list of directors: she would be happy to send me a copy of it. I thanked her and hung up and called Civil Streets in Stoneham. No answer. I called President Carla and got a chirpy recorded message about her not being home and my call being important to her. I called Brad Sterling and there was no answer. Faced with rejection at every turn, I went to plan B. I swiveled my chair around and put my feet up and looked out my window. It was a lovely December day, brisk and sunny. Unfortunately it was the first week in April.
Usually when I was puzzled about someone's behavior, I would ask Susan about it. But who to ask when it was Susan's behavior I was puzzled about. Maybe it was time to cultivate another shrink. I thought about what Rachel Wallace had said. It explained why Susan was currently being so difficult. But that didn't mean it was so. Demonic possession would explain it equally as well. But if her theory were valid, it would also mean that Brad Sterling might be a worse guy than he seemed, or that Susan might have thought him so when he was Brad Silverman. She might have been wrong; she misjudged me. Or maybe she hadn't misjudged me. Or maybe Rachel Wallace was all wet.
Across Berkeley Street from my office the windows of the new office building above F.A.O. Schwarz reflected the sun in a blank glare. I thought about Linda Thomas who had once bent over her drawing board in the old building that this one had replaced. A large cloud moved across the sun, cutting the glare off the windows. I could see through them now, but the vista of offices was nearly as blank as the light reflection. The cloud moved quite slowly, and the sun was obscured for a while. But it was a white cloud and the day didn't dim much and after a while it was sunny again.
I checked my watch: 10:20. I called Brad Sterling's office again. No answer. I tried Civil Streets again. No answer. President Carla again. Same thing. I took my feet off the windowsill and put them on the floor and stood and got my coat on and went out.
I got a cup of coffee and a corn muffin on the way and ingested them while I walked up Boylston Street to the Prudential Center. A detective travels on his stomach. I went past the cityscape metal sculpture in the Prudential Building lobby and took the elevator to the thirty-third floor. The office was closed. The door was locked. The receptionist in the marketing company across the hall knew nothing about it. Neither did a bored-looking guy wearing a bad suit in the security office. Neither did I.
In Spenser's Tips For Successful Gumshoe-ing, Tip #6 reads: If nothing is happening and you haven't any idea what you're doing, go someplace and sit and look at something and await developments. Subparagraph A says that most good detectives bring some coffee and a few donuts with them. So I got my car and drove over to Somerville, got some coffee and donuts on the way, and parked in front of Carla Quagliozzi's condo overlooking the Mystic River. Ringing her doorbell got me less than ringing her phone had got me. At least her phone had an answering machine. I leaned on the bell long enough to be sure that if anyone were home they'd have heard it. Then I went back and sat in my car and looked at her house and had a donut while I awaited developments. After an hour or so it occurred to me that I could double the effectiveness of my plan, and I called the Harbor Health Club and asked for Henry Cimoli.
"I need to talk with Hawk," I said.
"Not here."
"Have him call me on my car phone."
"Car phone," Henry said. "You're turning into a fucking Yuppie."
"Quick as I can," I said.
"He know your car phone number?"
"Yes."
"I'll give him the message," Henry said. "You need anything else?"
"Where do I begin," I said.
Henry hung up. And in about twenty minutes Hawk called.
"Do you know what's going on?" I said.
"Almost never," Hawk said.
"Good. I was thinking you could help me not know what's going on."
"You going good on your own," Hawk said.
I explained Spenser's Tip #6, including subparagraph A. Hawk asked me to go slower so he could copy it down.
"I got two very insecure handles on this case," I said. "One is the question of the missing charity money. The other one is the sexual harassment issue."
"You call this thing a case?" Hawk said.
"Verbal shorthand," I said. "What I want you to do is go and sit outside Jeanette Ronan's house and await developments."
"Do I get a big fee?" Hawk said.
"No," I said.
"Do I get donut expenses?"
"Absolutely," I said. "Ask for a receipt."
"Ronans live on Marblehead Neck?"
"Uh huh."
"Might get noticed," Hawk said. "Not that many brothers hanging around out there."
"Dress like a butler," I said.
"Yassah," Hawk said and hung up.
In fact, I knew he'd manage, in ways only he understood, to blend into the scenery in Marblehead just as he did anywhere else. Hawk could infiltrate the Klan if he put his mind to it.
A woman showed up at about two in the afternoon driving a Mercedes sports coupe. She beeped open the garage door to the right of her condo and drove the car into the garage. The garage door slid back down. I waited a moment and got out and walked up her walk and rang the door bell. She still had her coat on when she opened the door. She left the chain bolt in place.
"Carla Quagliozzi, I presume."
"What do you want?" she said.
"I was interested in making a big donation to Civil Streets."
She stared at me without speaking. She was a fleshy young woman with a lot of red hair and a big figure, even with her coat on.
"May I come in?" I said.
"No."
"Are you the president of Civil Streets?"
"Who wants to know?" she said.
"My name is Spenser," I said. "I'm… " She closed the door. "A private detective," I said to the door.
I hate incompletion.
I leaned against her doorjamb for a time and thought about this. She had shut the door on me when she heard my name; I had never said what I was up to. So my name meant something to her. Which meant someone had been talking to her about me, and, given the door slam, warning her not to talk with me. This might be a clue, though I hadn't seen one for so long. I wasn't sure. But if someone had been warning her not to talk to me and I showed up at her door, what would she do next? I walked back to my car and leaned on it. I thought about calling her number to see if the line was busy, but she probably had the accursed call waiting and I wouldn't learn anything.
In about fifteen minutes a dark green Range Rover came around the corner off Mystic Ave and cruised down Shore Drive and parked in Carla's driveway. A guy got out of the driver's side and closed the door carefully behind him and walked to Carla's front door. As far as I could tell, he didn't see me, though he must have because I was standing about ten feet from the driveway. He was taller than I was, with a thin strong look. He was clean shaven. His dark hair was slicked back smooth. He wore a white turtleneck with a black blazer. His sand-colored slacks had a sharp crease in them and his loafers gleamed with polish. He rang the bell, Carla opened the door and let him in. I leaned some more on my car. The caller was in there for maybe twenty minutes and then he came out Carla's front door, closed it carefully behind him, and walked briskly down her walk to where I was leaning. He was a guy used to handling things.
"You're Spenser," he said.
"Yes."
"My name's Richard Gavin," he said. "What was it you wished to talk with Carla about."
"Civil Streets."
"Why."
"Because the AG's office has her listed as the president."
"Don't fuck around with me," Gavin said. "I meant, what did you wish to discuss?"
"Tell me why that's your business," I said.
"Because I've made it my business."
"Good answer," I said.
"Well?"
"I'm looking into a matter tangential to the Galapalooza fund-raiser that Civil Streets participated in last year."
"Yeah?"
"Tangential?" I said.
"What about tangential," Gavin said.
"Aren't you even a little impressed with my use of the word?"
Gavin sighed.
"Okay," he said. "You think you're a funny guy. All your friends think you're a funny guy. Well, I don't think you're a funny guy, you got it? I don't think you're funny even a little bit."
"I'll win you over," I said.
He shook his head.
"What do you want to know about Galapalooza?" he said.
"Civil Streets get any money from it?"
"I'm sorry, that's privileged information."
"The hell it is," I said. "You're a public charity."
"Well, let me be more specific," Gavin said. "That information is privileged to you."
"Just because you don't think I'm funny?"
"Sure," Gavin said. "That'll do."
"This is dumb," I said. "You know and I know that I can find this out. All you do by refusing to tell me is get me wondering why you're refusing."
"It would be in your best interest to leave this alone," Gavin said.
"Because?"
"The `because' could go two ways," Gavin said. " `Because you would get a nice bonus if you moved on,' is one way."
"And what would the other way be?"
"Because you could get killed if you don't."
"Ahh," I said. "The old buzz word."
"You're a small-time guy," Gavin said. "And you have put your foot in a big-time puddle. We don't mind. We like to do things easy, if we can. You can walk away from this with a nice piece of change. No problem. Just don't be foolish. Don't get yourself killed because you think you have to be macho man."
"How much?" I said.
"Five large," Gavin said.
"That's a nice bribe," I said. "The trouble is that I am macho man."
"You think you are," Gavin said. "We chew up macho men like M&M's."
"Peanut or plain?"
"Better you should take the money?"
"The thing is, Richard, I hope you don't mind if I call you Richard. The thing is that my entire corporate inventory is a few brains and a lot of balls. I sell that inventory and I'm out of business… for five grand."
"And your life," Gavin said.
"Well, sure, that sweetens the pot a little," I said. "But a lot of people have promised to take my life."
Gavin smiled, and put one arm across my shoulders.
"Spenser, I like your style. I really do. But we're a little different maybe than other people you've talked to.
"You going to do it?" I said.
He laughed and took his arm away.
"Well," I said, "it better be somebody better than the two clowns you sent the first time."
Gavin looked puzzled.
"Somebody talked to you already?"
"Big tall fat guy," I said. "And a short thick guy, no neck."
"Not ours," he said.
Gavin had no reason to deny it. And his look of puzzlement had seemed real.
I said, "You haven't seen Brad Sterling around, have you?"
"Who?"
"Just grasping at straws," I said.
"Sure," Gavin said. "So where do we stand?"
"We stand as follows," I said. "A, I'm going to find out what's going on with Civil Streets. And B, don't put your arm on my shoulder again."
Gavin stood and looked at me for a moment. I could see that he wasn't used to rejection. Then he simply turned and left. He walked straight back to his car, got in, started up, and drove away without looking at me again.
Sorehead.