He looked down at her. “Why?”
“Just curious,” she said. They watched numbers flickering off the floor counter, and then she said, “When she came in, the way she looked at you, I thought you had a thing.”
“Nah . . .”
She shook her head; she didn’t believe him. Then the elevator doors opened and they stepped into a lobby identical to the one on the bottom floor: yellow-painted concrete block with a gray steel door set in one wall. Another video camera was mounted in a corner.
“Come in,” the disembodied voice said.
The steel door opened on Wonderland.
Lucas followed Fell onto a raised hardwood deck, shaped like a half-moon, overlooking an enormous room. Ten or twelve thousand square feet, Lucas thought, most of it open. Different activity areas were defined by furniture, lights and carpet, instead of walls. The kitchen was to the right; a blond man was peering into a stove, and the odor of fresh hot bread suffused the room. To the left, halfway back, a dark-haired man stood on a square of artificial turf with a golf club.
“Over here,” said the voice from the hallway, and the man with the golf club waved at them. Fell led the way,
a weaving route through what seemed like an acre of furniture.
A jumble of furniture, with no specific style, Lucas thought: it looked as though it had fallen off the back of a truck. Or trucks—different trucks, from different factories. A king-sized English four-poster bed sat on a huge Oriental carpet, and was covered with an American crazy quilt. A six-foot projection TV faced the bed, and three tripod-mounted video cameras pointed at it.
Behind the TV, a semicircular wall of shoulder-high speakers flanked a conversation pit; a marble-topped table in the center held an array of CD and tape equipment, along with a library of a thousand or more compact discs. The floor beneath the stereo area was hardwood, covered with animal skins: tiger and jaguar, stitched beaver, a buffalo robe, a sleek dark square of what might have been mink. Erroll Garner bubbled out of the speakers, working through “Mambo Carmel.”
Beyond the bed, and between the bed and the sports area, a glass shower stall stood out of the floor like an oversized phone booth. Two toilets sat next to it, facing each other, and on the other side, a huge tub.
Smith waited in the sports area, two thirds of the way to the back wall. The wall was pierced by three or four doors. So there were more rooms, Lucas thought . . . .
Smith, his back to them, waggled a driver, drove a golf ball into a net, shook his head, and put the club in a bag that hung from a wall peg. Behind him, a rank of unlit lights waited over what appeared to be a real grass putting green, built on a raised surface. Beyond the green, a stained-glass lamp hung over an antique pool table; and at the back of the room, a basketball net hung from a wall. Below it, a court was complete out to the top of the free-throw circle.
“Can’t keep my head down,” Smith said. He strode toward them, his golf shoes scuffing over the artificial turf. Smith was a short, barrel-chested, barrel-gutted man with a fuzzy mustache and kinky black hair. He wore a black golf shirt tucked into black pleated slacks, with a woven leather belt circling his waist. A gold chain dangled from his neck, with what looked like a St. Christopher medal. He smiled at Fell and stuck his hand out. “You’re the cop who was watching me last year . . .”
Fell ignored the hand. “We need to talk to you about this Bekker guy,” she said bluntly. “The guy who’s chopping up these people . . .”
“The freak,” Smith said. He took his hand back, couldn’t find a place for it, and finally stuck it in his slacks pocket. He was puzzled, his mustache quivering. “Why talk to me?”
“He needs money and drugs, and he can’t get them legitimately,” Lucas said. He’d drifted past the driving area to the putting green. The green’s surface was knee high, but dished, to provide a variety of contours. He reached down and pressed his fingers against it. Real grass, carefully groomed, cool and slightly damp to the touch.
“Now that’s a hell of a project, right there,” Smith said enthusiastically. He picked up a remote control, touched a series of buttons, and the lights over the putting green flickered and came on. “Those are special grow lights,” he said, pointing up at the lighting fixture. “Same spectrum as the sun. Joe over there, he knows all about different grasses, he set it up. This is genuine bent grass. It took him a year to get it right.”
Smith stepped up and onto the green, walked lightly across it, then turned to look at Lucas. Back to business: “So this guy needs money and drugs?”
“Yeah. And we want you to put the word out on your
network. Somebody is dealing with him, and we want him. Now.”
Smith picked up a putter that was leaning against the far end. Three balls waited in a rack, and he popped them out, lined up the first one, stroked and missed. The ball rolled past the cup and stopped two feet away.
“Twenty-two feet. Not bad,” he said. “When you’ve got a long lag like that, you just try to get it within two feet of the cup. You pretend you’re shooting for a manhole cover. That’s the secret to single-bogey golf. Do cops play golf?”
“We need you to put out the word,” Fell said.
“Talk into my belly button, said Little Red Riding Hood,” Smith said. He lined up another putt, let it go. The ball rolled four feet past the cup. “Fuck it,” he said. “Nerves. You guys are putting pressure on me.”
“There’s no wire,” Lucas said quietly. “Neither one of us is wired. We’re looking for a little help.”
“What do I get out of it?” Smith asked.
“Civic pride,” Lucas said. The pitch of his voice had dropped a bit, but Smith pretended not to notice, and lined up the last ball.
“Civic pride? In fuckin’ New York?” He snorted, looked up and said, “Excuse the language, Dr. Fell . . . . Anyway, I really don’t know what you’re talking about, this network.”
He walked around the green, squinting at the short putt. The blond man approached with a china platter covered with steaming slices of bread. “Anybody for fresh bread? We’ve got straight and garlic butter . . . .”
“Fuck the bread,” said Fell. She looked at Lucas. “We’re not getting to him. Maybe we ought to have the fire department check his . . .”
“Nah, political shit doesn’t work with a guy who’s
really connected,” Lucas said. “Mr. Smith sounds like he’s connected.”
Smith squinted at him. “Who’re you? I don’t remember you . . . .”
“I’ve been hired as a consultant here,” Lucas said. He wandered back to the driving net, speaking so softly that the others could barely pick up the words. He pulled a three iron out of the golf bag and looked at it. “I used to work in Minneapolis, until I got thrown off the force. I caught Bekker the first time, but not before he killed a good friend of mine. Cut her throat. He let her see it coming. Made her wait for it. Then he sawed right through her neck . . . . She was tied up, couldn’t fight back. So later, when I caught Bekker . . .”
“His face got all fucked up,” Smith said suddenly.
“That’s right,” said Lucas. He’d come back, carrying the iron. “His face got all fucked up.”
“Wait a minute,” said Fell.
Lucas ignored her, hopped up on the putting green, and walked toward Smith. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw Fell’s hand sliding into the fold of her shoulder bag. “And I didn’t worry about fucking him up. You know why? Because I’ve got a lot of money of my own and I didn’t need the job. I don’t need any job.”
“What the fuck are you talking . . .” Smith backed away, looked quickly at the blond.
“ . . . And Bekker got me really pissed,” Lucas said to Smith, his voice riding over the other man’s. His eyes were wide, the tendons in his neck straining at his shirt collar. “I mean
really fuckin’ pissed.
And I had this pistol, with this big sharp front sight on it, and when I caught him, I pounded his face with the sight until you couldn’t tell it was a face. Before that, Bekker’d been really pretty, just like this fuckin’ green . . . .”
Lucas pivoted and swung the three iron, a long sweeping swing into the perfect turf. A two-pound divot of dirt and grass sprayed off the platform across the pool table.
“Wait, wait . . .” Smith was waving his hands, trying to stop it.
The blond had set the china tray aside and his hand went toward the small of his back and Fell had a pistol out, pointed at his head, and she was yelling, “No, no, no . . .”
Lucas rolled on, swinging the club like a scythe, screaming, walking around Smith, saliva spraying on Smith’s black shirt. “Pounded his face, pounded his motherfuckin’ face, you believe the way we pounded his fuckin’ face.”
When he stopped, breathing hard, a dozen ragged furrows slashed the surface of the green. Lucas turned and looked at the blond man. Hopped down off the platform, walked toward him.
“You were going to pull out a gun,” he said.
The blond man shrugged. He had heavy shoulders, like a weight lifter, and he shifted, setting his feet.
“That really pisses me off,” Lucas shouted at him.
“Hold it, for Christ’s sake,” said Fell, her voice low and urgent.
Lucas swung the iron again, quickly, violently, overhead, then down. The blond flinched, but the iron smashed through the freshly baked bread and the platter beneath it. Pieces of china skittered across the floor, and he shouted, “And tried to fuckin’ bribe us . . .”
Then he ran down, staggered, turned back to Smith and pointed the club like a saber.
“I don’t want to be your friend. I don’t want to deal. You’re a goddamned dirtbag, and it makes me feel nasty to be here. What I’m telling you is, I want you to put the
word out on your network. And I want you to call me. Lucas Davenport. Midtown South. If you don’t, I will fuck you up six different ways. I’ll talk to the
New York Times
and I’ll talk to the
News
and I’ll talk to
Eye Witness News
and I’ll give them pictures of you and tell them you’re working with Bekker. How’d that help business? And I might just come back and fuck you up personally, because this is a serious matter with me, this Bekker thing.”
He turned in a half-circle, his breath slowing, took a step toward the door, then suddenly whipped the club into the kitchen like a helicopter blade. It knocked a copper tureen off a wall peg, bounced off the stove, and clattered to the floor with the tureen. “Never was any fucking good with the long irons,” he said.
On the way out of the building, Fell watched him until Lucas began to grin.
“Nuttier’n shit, huh?” he said, glancing at her.
“I believed it,” she said seriously.
“Thanks for the backup. I don’t think blondie would’ve done much . . . .”
She shook her head. “That was funny; I mean, funny-strange. I didn’t know Jackie Smith was gay until I saw this guy. That’s like dealing with spouses, only worse. You whack one and the other’s liable to come after you with a knife . . . .”
“Are you sure they’re gay?”
“Does Raggedy Ann have a cotton crotch?”
“I don’t know what that means,” Lucas said, laughing.
“It means yes, I’m sure they’re gay,” she said.
“How come he called you Dr. Fell?” Lucas asked. “Are you a doctor?”
“No. It’s from the nursery rhyme: ‘I do not love thee,
Dr. Fell; the reason why I cannot tell; but this I know, and know full well: I do not love thee, Dr. Fell.’ ”
“Huh. I’m impressed,” Lucas said.
“I know several nursery rhymes,” Fell said, digging in her purse for the pack of Luckys. “Want to hear ‘Old King Cole’?”
“I mean with Smith. Knowing the rhyme.”
“I don’t impress you, huh?” She flipped the cigarette into her mouth, her eyes slanting up at him.
“Don’t know yet,” he said. “Maybe . . .”
Barbara Fell lived on the Upper West Side. They dropped her city car at Midtown South, found a cab, and she said, “I’ve got a decent neighborhood bar. Why don’t you come up and get a drink, chill out, and you can catch a cab from there.”
“All right.” He nodded. He needed some more time with her.
They went north on Sixth, the sidewalk traffic picking up as they got closer to Central Park, tourists walking arm in arm along the sidewalks.
“It’s too big,” Lucas said, finally, watching through the window as the city went by. “In the Twin Cities, you can pretty much get a line on every asshole in town. Here . . .” He looked out and shook his head. “Here, you’d never know where it was coming from. You got assholes like other places got raindrops. This is the armpit of the universe.”
“Yeah, but it can be pretty nice,” she said. “Got the theaters, the art museums . . .”
“When was the last time you went to a theater?”
“I don’t know—I really can’t afford it. But I mean, if I could.”
“Right.”
In the front seat, the taxi driver was humming to himself. There was no tune, only variations in volume and intensity as the driver stared blank-eyed through the windshield, bobbing his head to some unheard rhythm. His hands gripped the wheel so tightly that his knuckles were white. Lucas looked at the driver, looked at Fell and shook his head. She laughed, and he grinned and went back to the window.
The bar was small, carefully lit, convivial. The bartender called Fell by her first name, pointed her at a back booth. Lucas took the seat facing the entrance. A waitress came over, looked at him, looked at Fell, said, “Ooo.”
Fell said, “Strictly business.”
“Ain’t it always,” the waitress said. “Didja hear Louise had her kid, baby girl, six pounds four ounces?”
Lucas watched Fell as she chatted with the waitress. She looked a little tired, a little lonesome, with that uncertain smile.
“So,” she said, coming back to Lucas. “Do you really freeze your ass off in Minnesota? Or is that just . . .”
Small talk, bar talk. A second drink. Lucas waiting for a break, waiting . . . .
Getting it. A slender man walked in, touched a woman on the cheek, got a quick peck in return. He was blond, carefully dressed, and after a moment, looked at the back of Fell’s head, said something to the woman he’d touched, then looked carefully at Lucas.
“There’s a guy,” Lucas said, leaning across the table, talking in a low voice. “And I think he’s looking at you. By the bar . . .”