Authors: Graham Masterton
Lacey first met Conor at one of the press conferences after the Forty-Ninth Street Golf Club trial, when she was filling in for NBC's regular trial reporter. They were literally pushed together by jostling and shouting pressmen, and he put his arm around her to protect her. She met him next at a formal cocktail party given by the Mayor at Gracie Mansion. That was after Conor's resignation, and hardly anybody would talk to him; not that he was ever an easy man to talk to. He looked sober and handsome that evening, in a snow-white shirt and a navy-blue suit. She wore a very low-cut dress of blue shot silk, with her hair pinned up. âYou remember me,' she introduced herself. âYou saved me from the baying mob.'
His only response was a smile. But Lacey persevered, even when he was silent, and the next day he called her up and asked her for dinner.
They explored each other that evening, talking for hours. She was fascinated by Conor's mixture of sly flirtatiousness and the unusual logic by which he lived his life. Every time she felt that she had opened up one door in his personality, there was another door, and another. He was romantic and occasionally sentimental, and he could take a joke, but she felt
that beyond the very last door there was a man who was capable of making very hard decisions indeed.
For his part, he had never met a woman so outspoken, but he was alarmed by her disregard for her own emotional safety. He didn't know how she could have stayed with a sadistic creep like Larry Elgar for so long. And she still blamed herself for provoking him into hitting her. âI should have known better. I was strong and he was weak.'
âNot too weak to crack two of your ribs.'
âSo what? Physical strength, that doesn't count for anything.'
He fell in love with her because she was driven and unusual and beautiful. But he fell in love with her most of all because she was vulnerable and he wanted to protect her â just like, ultimately, he wanted to protect everybody.
To protect and serve
wasn't just a slogan.
She walked in wearing a plain white linen dress. âDo you want another beer?'
âNo thanks. I could use a shower.'
âYou don't mind about the job?'
He shook his head. He
did
mind, but how could he tie her down? He had learned a long time ago that nobody owns anybody else.
While Conor was showering, Lacey sat on the edge of the bathtub and talked to him. He was very muscular, and she liked to watch the foamy water running down his chest. âSo tell me all the grisly details about the hearing.'
âThere's not much more to tell you. I can get to see Fay whenever Paula thinks it's convenient.'
âSo what does
that
mean? Convenient?'
âIn practice it probably means that I'm allowed to act as babysitter whenever she and that oily broker friend of hers decide they want to spend a long weekend upstate.'
âWhat are you going to do? Can you appeal?'
âI don't know what I'm going to do. I'm beginning to think that it might be better if I turn my back on the whole situation.'
âI don't understand.'
Conor came out of the shower, looking as tired as a marathon swimmer, his chest hair spread in a dark wide fan. âMeaning I may be prepared to wait to see Fay until she's old enough to come find me for herself.'
Lacey stood up and rubbed him with his towel. âYou've had a bad day. You don't want to make decisions like that, not until you've gotten over it.'
Naked, he held her close, and kissed her, and stroked her hair. She touched the star-shaped scar on his left cheekbone. It was kind of a code. It meant that she knew what hardships he had been through, and that she was prepared to share them.
The doorbell rang. âI'll get it,' said Lacey. âIt's probably Gina, wanting to borrow some coffee.'
Conor continued to towel himself while Lacey opened the door. In the steamed-up mirror over the washbasin, he didn't look like himself at all. Older, tireder. A man who had lost his mission in life.
The bathroom door was slightly ajar. He heard Lacey saying, âIt's OK ⦠I'll get him. Just hold on a minute.'
She came into the bathroom. It's Drew Slyman, and he's brought two uniforms with him.'
âSlyman? What the hell does he want?'
He wrapped the towel around his waist and went into the living room. Lieutenant Slyman was standing by the window. The pharmacy sign across the street made his face glow green. Two police officers stood beside the couch with matching Village People mustaches and self-satisfied looks on their faces.
âO'Neil â¦' said Lieutenant Slyman. âSorry to interrupt your ablutions.' He stepped away from the window, looking around the apartment and rubbing his hands together. âThis isn't quite what you're used to. But maybe, well ⦠let's not beat around the bush. Maybe that was your motive.'
âMotive? What are you talking about? My motive for what?'
âOh, come on, now. You didn't think we were that slow, did you? I don't exactly know yet what kind of a complicated stunt you've been trying to pull here, but believe me I very soon will.'
âI don't know what the hell you're talking about.'
âHey,' said Lieutenant Slyman, spreading his arms to appeal to his officers. âHe doesn't know what the hell I'm talking about? What did you think I was going to do, once we'd taken those safety deposit boxes back to Spurr's? Say: “That's it, fine, case closed, ex-Chief O'Neil has stitched everything up, we can all go home early?'”
âWhy not? None of the boxes was missing. I put them back into the strongroom myself. You saw me.'
Slyman came up close. His eyes were shining and
his mouth was even more Cupid-like than ever. âYes, I did. But you know me. I always like to be extra-specially thorough, cover my ass. I went through that list you gave me and I managed to contact nine of the fifteen lessees of those safety deposit boxes and tell them what had happened.'
âThanks a lot. That'll be great for business.'
âI invited all nine of them to come to Spurr's and check that their boxes were still
virgo intacta
, so to speak. Only seven of them live in the midtown area and only four of them were able to drop into Spurr's, but those four were enough.'
âI still don't know what the hell you're talking about.'
âThe boxes were
empty
, that's what I'm talking about.'
â
Empty
?'
âI'm still trying to work out how you did it. It's possible that you could have switched boxes, who knows â but there were no other boxes in that Brinks-Mat truck. My strongest suspicion is that they were empty even before those poor saps came in to steal them.'
âMeaning?'
âMeaning only one thing. That you had already cleaned out those boxes before your Brinks-Mat robbers got there.'
Conor shook his head in exasperation. âThis is ridiculous, Slyman, and you know it. I can't open the strongroom on my own. They give me only half the code and a senior member of Spurr's staff has the other half.'
Lieutenant Slyman took out his notebook and
flipped it open. âThat's right ⦠this week it was Darrell Bussman. Well, Darrell Bussman's still in a coma, and so he can't speak for himself, but I'd sure like to talk
to you
.'
âDarrell wouldn't steal from Spurr's. Give him a couple of years he's going to inherit most of it.'
âWell, this wasn't exactly stealing from the store, was it? It was stealing from its customers. And from what your people have told me, the contents of those safety deposit boxes could have run into billions. Hard to resist, especially for a young man with a taste for Ferraris and women and betting on the track. And even harder to resist for an ex-cop on a third of his previous salary and a whole lot of legal bills to pay.'
âYou're talking out of your ass.'
âAm I?' Lieutenant Slyman tucked his notebook back in his pocket and bared his teeth. âYou'd be surprised how often I've seen sons-and-heirs get too greedy and good cops turn rotten.'
âSo what's supposed to be missing?' asked Conor, trying hard to suppress his temper.
âHey, you're talking like you don't even
know
.'
âOf course I don't know. As far as I'm concerned, what people want to keep in their safety deposit boxes is their own business.'
âWell,
we
don't know either, not for sure. None of the four lessees would give me any specifics on what their boxes had contained, and only one of them said that he was covered by insurance. But you should have seen how worried they were. I mean they were practically filling their pants. It's my guess that those boxes contained some pretty compromising
material, and it's my guess that they'd all pay a whole lot of money to get it back.'
âYou're trying to suggest that I was going to blackmail them? Come on, Slyman, you're way off beam.'
âI don't think so, somehow. You know â you were my role model once. I really admired you. The way you broke the Baroccis, incredible. But you never knew what side you were on, did you, and you never knew when to stop. You had to go on to break the Forty-Ninth Street Golf Club, too, and the Golf Club were the only team of law-enforcement officers that ever put the fear of God into the goodfellas, ever.'
âThey were extortionists and murderers, Slyman, and you know it.'
âMaybe they were. But they were
our
extortionists and murderers. All you had to do was to turn a blind eye.'
âCouldn't do that, Slyman.'
âI know. You were always such a saint. But even saints can fall off their pedestals, can't they? You're under arrest for the theft of personal property from four sample safety deposit boxes lodged in the strongroom at Spurr's Fifth Avenue. Do you want me to read you your rights?'
Conor said, âYou bet. And I want my attorney present. And I'm not moving out of this apartment until he's here.'
Lieutenant Slyman shook his head. âI'm afraid you don't have the right to insist on that. You're charged with abducting a police officer, four counts of larceny, one count of grand theft auto, seven counts of dangerous driving and criminal damage. And
more, do you want the whole list? You're under arrest, O'Neil. You're coming downtown and you don't have any choice in the matter.'
âHe's a hero!' said Lacey, quaking with indignation. âHow can you arrest him when he's a hero?'
âMiss, in my book he was always a hero,' said Lieutenant Slyman. âThe trouble is, he wasn't always a hero for the right reasons.'
Conor said, âI have to get dressed. Lacey â will you put a call in to Michael Baer â he's probably gone home now but you'll get him on his mobile. Tell him we've got some kind of ridiculous misunderstanding here.'
Lacey picked up the phone. Conor walked toward the bedroom and one of the officers swaggered after him. âBack off,' Conor told him. The officer stopped, perplexed. Conor turned to Slyman and said, âNext time I want to be followed into my bedroom by an adolescent walrus, I'll call the zoo.'
âJust making sure you don't try to abscond,' said Lieutenant Slyman.
âFrom seven floors up?'
âI don't know. You might try to commit suicide.'
âAnd you'd care about that? You'd push me, if you had the chance.'
âJust leave the bedroom door open, will you? That'll do.'
In the yellow-painted bedroom with its big pine bed, Conor pulled on a fresh pair of shorts, a blue polo shirt and a pair of Calvin Klein jeans. In the comer, out of sight of Slyman and his men, he crammed more clean clothes into a small nylon bag, as well as a toothbrush and a razor from the washbasin.
He slung the bag over his shoulder.
Lacey came in. âMichael's attending a B'nai B'rith dinner. He's going to meet us at the precinct just as soon as he can.'
He put his finger to his lips.
âWhat?' she said. Then she saw the bag.
âYou can't
go
,' she whispered.
âI have to. I swear to God they'll kill me if I don't.'
âBut how can they?'
âAre you kidding me? They have a dozen different ways of doing it, once you're in custody.'
âBut how are you going to get out of here? It's so high up.'
âI'll go over the roof. I'll go to Sebastian's place.'
âBut you can't take heights. You know you can't.'
He held her close, and he kissed her. She smelled of Calvin Klein perfume and that warm natural biscuity smell of blondes. âI'll get in touch with you as soon as I can. Don't say anything to Slyman until Michael shows up. And I mean
anything
. Don't let these bastards bully you.'
âBut you didn't do it, did you? You didn't steal anything out of those boxes?'
âThat doesn't matter. They'll kill me, Lacey. If they don't kill me down at the precinct when they're questioning me, they'll make sure that I go to Attica, where they sent the rest of the Forty-Ninth Street Golf Club, and they'll kill me there for sure.'
âO'Neil!' called Slyman, just outside the door.
âGot your pants on yet? We don't have all night.'
âI have to go,' Conor whispered into Lacey's ear.
âI never wanted anything like this to happen to you
⦠but you'll be brave, won't you? I won't let them harm you, whatever happens.'
âCome on, O'Neil!'
Lacey gave Conor a smile that he would never forget. Then she positioned herself behind the half-open bedroom door so that her back was reflected in the cheval-mirror in the opposite corner of the room.
â
Trust me
,' she whispered. â
I love you
.' Then she reached behind her and tugged down the zipper of her dress, and let it fall open.