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Authors: R. D. Rosen

BOOK: Dead Ball
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“Listen, Bob,” Harvey said, “it’s completely fucking bogus.”

“Now you sound to me like you doth protest too much.”

Harvey felt his temper going. He jabbed a finger at Lassiter’s rosacea-riddled face. “It’s bogus, Bob. Stay away from it.”

Lassiter pushed Harvey’s finger aside. “So there
is
something going on?”

“Do I have your word, Bob?”

“Yes.”

“Because if you cross me, I guarantee you that Moss will never talk to you again. That would be a hell of a handicap for you.”

“I said yes, Professor.”

“There’s something going on.”

“That’s all you can tell me? I could use a scoop, Harvey,” Lassiter said with sudden emotion. “I’m dying a slow death at the
Pro-Jo.
I’d like to get one of those commentator gigs at Fox or ESPN. Like Pete Gammons. A scoop would make me more attractive.”

“Losing that stogie would make you more attractive.”

“You’ll let me have the story?”

“I’ll give you a twenty-four hour jump on it. Fair enough?”

“Shake,” Lassiter said with an eager brown smile, holding out his hand. “Maybe you could talk to Mickey Slavin for me, put in a good word at ESPN. I’ll send you clips. I did a little television back in the seventies. …”

Harvey was gone, headed for the WRIX radio booth further down the press box, ready to confront Coffman. But through the Plexiglas he saw only WRIX radio color man Jack Sadler sitting at the desk with the
Chicago Tribune’s
Don Kollisch. They both wore headsets, and Sadler was asking Kollisch a question. Harvey waited impatiently, watching the Comiskey groundskeepers drag the infield fifty feet below, until Sadler went to a commercial and both men removed their headsets. Harvey knocked, and Sadler motioned him into the booth.

“If it isn’t the Motivator,” he said with a smile when Harvey stepped inside.

“Hi, Jack.” Harvey nodded at Kollisch, whom he knew vaguely. “Where’s Snoot?”

“He’s not here,” Sadler said. “But he wants you to call him.”

“Where is he?”

“He had to go back to Providence. He had some sort of family emergency and flew back this morning.”

“He did?”

“So I’m doing the play-by-play, and Don’s going to play the role of me tonight. Snoot didn’t know how to get hold of you. He left his cell number for you. Here.” Sadler held out a card.

Harvey grabbed it and raced back through the press box. He found his brother standing at the buffet table.

“Harv, you got to try these burritos.”

He put his hands on his brother’s shoulders. “Norm, I have to go—”

“The game hasn’t even started.”

Harvey’s pulse felt huge in his chest. “I’ve got to get to Providence.”


Now?
Sometimes I wish I had your life, Harv. Anything I can do?”

“Yes. Move away from the buffet.”

Harvey stepped outside the press box to call the number on the card Sadler had handed him.

“Harvey!” Coffman said breathlessly. “Where are you?”

“Comiskey Park. Where are you?”

“Listen, I couldn’t find you. Where’ve you been?”

“I was out of town, Snoot. What’s going on?”

“You’ve got to get back to Providence. You’re not going to believe this.”

“Believe what?”

“Our friend Moss hit some bimbo a couple of weeks ago. One of those escorts. He had her at his house. He had a couple of them there. Jesus, Harvey, you’ve got to get here and help me.”

“Slow down, Snoot. How do you know this?”

“Okay, okay. Harvey, I’ve got a friend here, a criminal defense lawyer who’s got some mob clients. He called me in New York to say some guys—connected guys—are pissed, and they want to teach him a lesson by hurting his girlfriend. Moss has this white stripper he sees regularly, and this lawyer tipped me off to get her off the street before something happens to her. Her name’s Cherry Ann and I’m—I’m on my way to pick her up. I tried to get hold of you yesterday.”

“Marshall’s got my cell phone number.”

“I didn’t think of it. Listen, can you get here? You know, this is not exactly my line of work. I’d feel a lot better with you here.”

“Where’s Cherry Ann?”

“She’s waiting for me at Teasers. That’s where she works.”

“Where you going to take her?”

“I don’t know yet. I can’t exactly take her home. Cindy won’t go for it.”

“Okay, take her someplace safe. When I get to Providence, I’ll call your cell phone, and we’ll take it from there.” He gave Coffman his own cell number. “What’s this lawyer’s name?”

“Bartoli. John Bartoli. I don’t have the number on me. Listen, Harvey, I know this isn’t my job. I was just trying to help out, calling people I know.”

“It’s okay, Snoot. You done good. I’ll call you when I get to Providence.”

As Harvey raced down the Comiskey ramps, he got hold of Detective Josh Linderman at home. “I need you,” he said.

“What is it?”

“I don’t have time to explain it all, I’m in Chicago right now, but Moss Cooley’s got a girlfriend named Cherry Ann Smoler who strips at Teasers and apparently some wise guys have targeted her to get back at Moss for something he did to another woman. An escort. This goddamn busybody Snoot Coffman, the Jewels’ broadcaster, is on his way over to pick her up at the club, but I need you to get over there and take charge of her, okay? Just protect her until I can fly in to Providence tonight. Then I’ll call you. Here’s Coffman’s cell number, in case he beats you there.”

As Harvey raced down the ramps, his body was awash in adrenaline. It was as if someone had pushed the mute button on reality. The only sounds he heard were his own breathing and, for some reason, the barking of a single concessionaire: Get your red hots, get your red hots. He saw the two managers and the four umpires conferring at home plate, then disperse. The White Sox starting team sprayed from the dugout, and everyone in the ballpark stood for the national anthem.

He stopped in the aisle of the grandstand to call Cherry Ann on her cell phone, but she didn’t pick up. Instead, he left a message telling her he was on his way to Providence and to stay cool. Then he called Southwest Airlines and booked a seat on the last nonstop to Providence out of Midway Airport.

By the time Harvey got down to the wall by the dugout at field level, Art Ferreiras was at bat. Harvey got the security guard positioned at the corner of the dugout to get a message to Moss that he had to speak to him. Within seconds, Moss’s face appeared around the corner.

“What’s up?”

Harvey leaned over the wall to get as close as possible to Moss. “Tell me you didn’t hit an escort.”

“What the
fuck
are you talking about?”

“Snoot says he heard some wise guys are going after Cherry Ann for something you did to some escort from a mob-run escort service.”

“That’s absolute bullshit.”

A fan behind Harvey called out, “Hey, Moss, nice streak!”

“Moss,” Harvey said, “Snoot’s in Providence, and I’m going there as soon as I get to Midway.”

“Snoot? What is this bullshit? I thought you were looking for some guy in a lynching photo. Goddamn it, Bagel Boy—what’s going on?”

“Tell me again you’re not in some trouble you forgot to tell me about.”

Moss lowered his brow and said, “Look at me, Blissberg. I’m tired of your fucking suspicions. I did not do anything to any fucking escort.”

“Okay. Shit, Moss, I don’t know what’s going on. Call me on my cell phone in a few hours and try not to worry.”

“Don’t worry? What do you want me to do?”

“Pray,” Harvey said and was gone, running up the aisle of the lower boxes as Art Ferreiras topped a slow roller to third and beat the throw to first by a step. Moss Cooley climbed out of the dugout and trudged to the on-deck circle.

H
E GOT TO THE STRIP
club around eight, wearing a plaid cap, tinted glasses, and the little mustache he’d bought for a Halloween costume party a few years ago. He’d phoned ahead of time, so he knew she wasn’t starting until nine. Now the place had more strippers and bouncers in it than customers. What did he expect for a Monday night? Only two young guys in jeans in the seats by the runway, watching a coon girl give them the full monty. She lay on her back with her legs in a V, giving them time to inspect the unattainable merchandise, like a jeweler displaying his best diamond ring on black velvet for the impoverished groom-to-be. Three more strippers lounged on chairs in their ludicrous negligees and hot pants, smoking like their lives depended on it. One was keeping time to the horrible music by patting her thigh. He stood in the shadows against the wall.

The irony of it, finally finding out that Cooley was dating a stripper at Teasers. Where he liked to come and check out snatch once in a while himself, get a secondhand taste of what life had to offer.

All he’d wanted was to get his hands on the goddamn photo, and now he had to do a stripper.

He didn’t think he’d have to do the coon, because he was confident the coon would get the message. Underneath that uniform, Cooley was just another frightened nigger.

Okay, he thought feverishly, sipping his Seagram’s and Seven, I had thirty good years, thanks to Ed, a saint who kept his mouth shut, may he rest in peace. There was a stand-up guy, wouldn’t sell out his buddy. But goddamn, we were stupid. Fuck Connie, though, after all he’d done. You couldn’t count on women, anyway. His own daughter was dating a nigger! It was like a sick joke. You write the premise, and thirty years later God writes the punch line by having your seventeen-year-old show up with a coon whose father teaches biology at Brown! Everything was sucking him back into the past, where he didn’t want to be, but where he had to go to lay it to rest. Okay, so he’d had thirty years in the clear, so what if he had to do a little wet work to nail down the next thirty?

His right hand was shaking though, his drink sloshing a bit over the rim, so he switched the glass to his left. He’d gotten out of the business a long time ago, and he didn’t particularly like being in it again. He felt soft. What happened to the glib guy who’d do anything with a few drinks in him?

One of the lounging strippers got up and tried to engage him in conversation with a stupid cooing voice and a hand on his shoulder, the hand ending in purple press-on nails. The strobe was going now, making the whole scene look even less real than before. Maybe later, he mumbled, and turned from her. He walked toward the runway, then stopped, thinking these places all had to have hidden surveillance cameras, so he reversed course and left the curtained area, not looking any of the bouncers in the eye, and walked back out to case the parking lot again. He felt in his pockets for the little can of pepper spray.

He’d have to hit her with it while she was still in her car, before she got out. The parking lot was around the side of the converted brick building, away from the bouncer patrolling the entrance under the awning. He’d have to hit her and drive her out in her car.

He’d do her, but where? He had one idea that was too perfect. Once he got her in there, he’d have world and time enough to do what he wanted. The owner, as they say, was away. Of course, the owner would have an alibi. Still, who could deny that the presence of a stripper’s corpse in his bedroom would implicate him? There would be suppositions and inquiries, a smokescreen of hypotheses behind which he would sit, calmly doing his job.

He leaned against a cyclone fence in deep shadow, thinking what could be sadder than a strip club parking lot in Providence, Rhode Island, early on a Monday night. How the hell could this all end in a Providence parking lot? Of all the places he’d been—Nashville, Charlotte, Spartanburg, Philly—he’d never felt safer, further from his deed, than here in this ragged little white-bread corner of the country. Another of God’s jokes.

Well, he had a good one for God.

22

B
Y THE TIME HARVEY
had shown his investigator’s license and gun permit and surrendered his pistol at airport security for safekeeping during the flight, he barely made the plane. Drenched in sweat, he buckled himself into the already taxiing jet, his second flight of the day. Ten minutes later the plane was banking eastward, following the curved foot of Lake Michigan, its waterfront dotted with quiet steel mills. He pulled the Airfone from the seat back in front of him and dialed Linderman’s number.

“She never showed,” the police detective said, his voice crackling. “I got here just before nine, and no one has seen her. I tried Coffman’s cell, but got his voice mail. Where are you?”

“Over Gary, Indiana.” Harvey looked at his watch. It was almost nine—ten on the East Coast. “Look, he’s probably got her. He said he’d call me to let me know where he’d gone. I don’t know whether to thank him or kill him for getting involved. Just stand by, Josh, till you hear from me.”

The beverage cart docked next to his seat. Harvey drank his Scotch and pressed his forehead against the window, watching Indiana’s farms darken. He tried Coffman’s cell phone again and got his voice mail. He called Avis and arranged to have a rental waiting for him at the curb on his arrival. He tried to reach Mickey without success. He felt her out there somewhere below him, where one of the blazing bouquets of floodlights announced a baseball stadium.

For the next hour and a half, in the dim floating cabin, as respectful as a church, Harvey squirmed silently in his seat.

T. F. Green Airport at midnight was a harshly lit ghost town of shuttered kiosks through which a few weary travelers, drugged by distance, dragged their wheeled suitcases. Harvey clicked down the empty corridor past posters of far-flung destinations. He called Coffman again and couldn’t get through. Then he called Providence directory assistance and asked for the residence number of a John Bartoli, giving two possible spellings. There was one listed in Olneyville, not where you’d expect a mob lawyer to live. Anyway, it was almost midnight and too late.

Harvey snaked up I-95 in his rental car, troubled he couldn’t reach Coffman. He still had no idea where he was going. The assortment of buildings that passed for the Providence skyline slid into view ahead of him. In the distance, off to the right, the light towers of The Jewel Box stood at dark attention against some feathery moonlit clouds. On his left was the New England Pest Control building, on top of which a huge blue sheet-metal bug wearing an outsize Jewels cap crouched over the traffic like the first ominous sign of the alien invasion in a Japanese horror film.

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