âI know what you mean,' Meade confirmed.
âSo then he starts asking questions.'
âWhat kind of questions?'
âStuff like, “Have there been any guys in here tonight with money to burn?” That kinda thing.'
âAnd what did you tell him?'
âI didn't tell him nothin',' the snitch said, sounding offended. âI can't be seen talkin' to cops â I got my reputation to consider.'
âHe was a policeman?' Meade asked.
âYeah, he was. Didn't I say that?'
âNot that I recall.'
âOK, so I ain't sayin' nothin' 'cos of my rep, but there's this lowlife called Freddie Burns who ain't got my . . . what's the word?'
âScruples?' Blackstone suggested, with a half-smile on his face.
âYeah that's it,' the snitch agreed. âHe ain't got my
scruples
. So Freddie takes him into the corner, an' they're talkin' for a while. Then the cop gives Freddie twenty dollars for tellin' him just what I told you.'
âHe gave him
twenty dollars
!' Meade asked, disbelievingly. âDo you think I came here straight from Ellis Island?'
âAll right, maybe he give him five, the same as you give me,' the snitch admitted. âThe thing is, as the guy was headin' for the door, I managed to put a name to the face.'
âAnd are you going to tell us what it is â or would you like us to guess?' Meade asked, with growing irritation.
âI knew him from the old days, see. He wasn't like the other cops. He never took no bribes, an' he never did nobody any favours.'
âThe name!' Meade said.
âSeems to be that if you want the name so bad, it must be worth another five,' the snitch said.
âAnd it seems to me that if you don't give me the name in the next ten seconds, I'll be obliged to take back the ten bucks I've already given you, cuff you, and take you down to the nearest station house â where I'm sure they'll find a way to make you talk,' Alex Meade said.
âMy old mom told me never to trust a cop â an' she was right,' the snitch whined.
âTick tock!' Meade said.
âPeople used to call him the Frozen Mick, on account of he never showed his feelings,' the snitch said, in a sulky mumble.
âAnd what was his
real
name?'
âIt was Flynn,' the snitch admitted. âSergeant Flynn.'
SIXTEEN
I
t was mid-morning, and as he walked down Fourth Avenue with Meade at his side, Blackstone was playing the numbers game in his head.
Big Bill Holt's kidnapping had occurred early on Monday morning â say, fifty-three or fifty-four hours previously.
The kidnappers had demanded that the ransom be paid on Friday â which meant, roughly speaking, that they would expect it in their hands somewhere between forty-eight and fifty-two hours from that moment.
Fifty-four and fifty-two, repeated grimly.
He didn't have to be Isaac Newton to work out that more time had already gone than was now remaining. Nor did it take a great brain to realize that if as little progress was made in the fifty-two hours as had been made in the fifty-four, the Holt brothers would probably lose half a million dollars and their father would probably lose his life.
âWe're there,' Meade said.
Blackstone looked up.
The Wall Street Gentlemen's Club was not actually located on Wall Street itself, but it was close enough for all but the most bloated capitalist to reach on foot from their brokerage houses. Its portal was guarded by an impressively uniformed doorman, who looked at Blackstone's suit with disdain, and was probably on the point of telling him to push off when he noticed that the semi-tramp was accompanied by a younger â much more smartly dressed â man.
âMr Meade, sir,' he gushed, like an over-pressurized fountain. âWhat a pleasure it is to see you.'
âGood to see you, too, Alfred,' Meade replied. âIs there anyone inside who I might know?'
âI should imagine there'll be at least a dozen gentlemen who would count it an honour to be thought of as your friend,' the doorman said ingratiatingly. âAnd even if â by some unhappy chance â there aren't, there'll be at least a score more who hold your father in the highest esteem.'
You saw a different world when you went places with Alex Meade, Blackstone thought.
But that had nothing to do with the fact that he was an
American
policemen, rather than an
English
one â cops everywhere were regarded as little more than servants by everyone but the lower orders.
No, it was because his family had money, and â in a country still too young to have developed an entrenched inflexible aristocracy â they also had what passed for
class
.
He wondered if he would still have been a policeman if his father had been
Lord
Blackstone, instead of a private soldier who had been killed in battle even before he was born.
Yes, he decided, he would have. He could have been born into the royal family and still ended up a copper â because that was always what he was
meant
to be.
âIs there any chance you could bring one of the members who might know me to the door?' he heard Meade ask.
âNow why should you want me to do that, sir?' Alfred wondered.
âWell, this is a very exclusive club, and since I'm not a member, I'll need someone to sign me in,' Meade said, guilelessly.
The doorman laughed. âOh, I think we can waive the rules on this occasion, sir,' he said.
A different world, Blackstone reiterated to himself. A
very
different world indeed.
There had been occasions when, in connection with one of the cases he'd been investigating, Blackstone had been granted access to the gentlemen's clubs in London. What he remembered â standing there while the man he was questioning sat â was large rooms filled with worn, overstuffed leather armchairs which the merely prosperous would have thrown out long ago, but the very rich clung on to as if they were heirlooms.
The Smoking Room of the Wall Street Club could have been in one of these London clubs. In fact, he suspected it had been
copied
from those clubs.
But from what I've seen, the Yanks won't be copying us for much longer, he thought. Give it a few years, and
we'll
be copying
them
.
Meade scanned the room with his eyes.
âLooking for anyone in particular?' Blackstone asked, reaching for his cigarettes.
âYeah,' Meade replied. âSomeone who likes to gossip but also has a brain â and men with both those attributes are thinner on the ground than you might think.'
A club servant, dressed in the full penguin suit, appeared at Blackstone's side with such discretion that it was almost as if he had materialized there.
âI'm terribly sorry, sir, but while cigars are more than acceptable within the precincts of this establishment, the smoking of cigarettes is not permitted' he said â laying much the same emphasis on the word “cigarettes” as some people would have laid on “leprosy”. He held out an ash tray in his immaculately white-gloved hand. âIf you would care to stub out the offending article in this receptacle, sir?'
Blackstone stubbed out the offending article as requested, and the club servant instantly faded away into the background.
âYou can't take me anywhere, can you?' Blackstone asked Meade with a grin. âIt's like the old saying goes â “You can put a peasant in the best shabby second-hand suit that money can buy, but he'll still be a peasant”.'
A couple of days earlier, Meade would have come back with a sharp reply, but he was no longer as comfortable with Blackstone as he had been, and now all he said was, âI think I've found the man we want.'
He led Blackstone across the room to a group of armchairs arranged around a coffee table, where a solid white-haired man was sitting alone.
âMr Maxwell!' Meade said. âWhat a pleasure! Would you mind if we joined you?'
The man looked up through heavily hooded eyes.
âI don't mind at all, Alexander,' he said, âbut I do wish that you'd drop the act.'
âThe act?' Meade repeated innocently.
âThe delight you just displayed! The sheer joy you appear to feel at finding me here! This meeting is no happy coincidence, Alexander. You're here specifically because you want to talk to me â or someone very
like
me. Isn't that true?'
âPerhaps,' Meade conceded.
âThe bonhomie is totally unnecessary, Alexander,' Maxwell continued. âIf you want something from me â and we both know you do â you only have to ask.'
Meade grinned sheepishly. âThis is my colleague, Inspector Blackstone, from New Scotland Yard,' he said.
âAh, so that's who he is!' Maxwell said. âYour fame justly precedes you, Inspector.'
âI see you've heard about how he tracked down Inspector O'Brien's killer,' Meade said.
âI've heard, but that's not what I was referring to,' Maxwell said airily, brushing away, with a gesture of his podgy hand, the idea that a major murder investigation could be of much interest.
âThen what . . .?' Meade asked, puzzled.
âThere's any number of policemen who could track down a killer,' Maxwell said, âbut, as far as I know, Inspector Blackstone's the only cop who's ever made Captain Bull O'Shaugnessy jump through hoops â a feat previously considered nigh on impossible without the payment of a very large bribe.'
It was true that he
had
made O'Shaugnessy âjump through hoops' â or, at least, hit him hard in the wallet by pressuring him to temporarily close down a brothel â Blackstone thought.
But O'Shaugnessy had got ample revenge by âlosing' the prisoner who Blackstone had been sent over to America to collect â and pretty much condemned him to staying in the new world until that prisoner was recaptured.
âWhy don't you both sit down and tell me exactly what it is you want?' Maxwell suggested.
They sat, and though they did so with some care, the old leather chairs creaked in protest.
âI'm investigating the Holt kidnapping,' Meade said.
Maxwell nodded. âThere's been a ransom demand, I take it,' he said.
âThere has.'
âAnd what did the kidnappers say in their note?' Maxwell chuckled. âThat if those two sons of Big Bill's
don't
pay the ransom, they'll send him back home to them?'
âI take it you're not a great admirer of Holt's,' Meade said.
âNobody I've ever talked to is an admirer of Big Bill's,' Maxwell said simply. âTo know William Holt is to loathe him.'
âIs that right?'
âIndeed it is. I've been acquainted with all the wheelers and dealers in my time. Mellon, Gould, Morgan, I knew the whole bunch. They were, without doubt, some of most vicious, arrogant, unscrupulous men ever to walk on the face of the earth, but none of them could hold a candle to Big Bill in the son-of-a-bitch stakes. He ruined dozens of good men, but I think it's his sons I feel
most
sorry for.'
âHe was hard on them?' Meade asked.
âDamned hard. He wanted them to be just like him, you see â men of iron, who didn't mind the pain they inflicted on themselves as long as everyone else was suffering more.' He took a puff on his cigar. âLet me tell you one story I heard. When George was nine, Big Bill decided it was time for him to learn to ride. But he didn't get him a pony â that would have been too easy â he bought him a full-sized horse, and a bad-tempered one at that, by all accounts. Well, George fell off, and lay on ground, crying. Big Bill told him to get back on the horse, but he said it hurt too much. So Bill started kicking him â and kept on kicking until he eventually struggled back to his feet and mounted the horse again. When the doctor examined George later, he discovered he had two serious injuries. One was a broken leg, from falling off the damned horse â and the other was two broken ribs from the kicking his father had given him.'
So was it any wonder that the main reason the brothers wanted their father back alive was to protect the value of their shares? Blackstone thought.
And who could blame them for eating a hearty meal on the very day that monster of a father had been kidnapped?
If he'd been in their shoes, he'd have cracked open a dozen bottles of the best French Champagne.
âThe only way George survived was by working as hard as he could to become the man his father wanted him to be,' Maxwell continued, âand in many ways he's succeeded, though, of course, the old man isn't satisfied with the result, because he'd
never
be satisfied. Harold, on the other hand, was smarter than his brother, though I'm not sure whether what he did turned out to be
so
smart in the end.'
âWhat
did
he do?' Meade asked.
âHe pretended to be someone who he knew that his father would despise â someone Big Bill wouldn't bully because he
wasn't
worth bullying. The problem with that, of course, is that if you act a part long enough, you eventually
become
the part. You've met Harold, I take it?'
âWe have,' Meade agreed.
âNot much of a man, is he? But then, in quite another way, neither is George. If you could weld them together, you might just end up with a complete person, but even then, I wouldn't put any money on it.' Maxwell took another puff of his cigar. âWall Street's quite right to be jittery about this kidnapping. If Big Bill
does
end up dead, the company's finished. Maybe it won't happen next week, maybe not even next year, but, in the long run, it
is
doomed â because neither of those boys are anywhere near big enough to step into Big Bill's shoes.'