"You heard about the ransom instructions," she said.
"I
was just on my way to draw the money from the Marlville Bank."
"Why don't you write him a check and give it to him next time he comes by the house?" I suggested.
She stepped back into the cool entry hall, and it was as if she'd stepped across time and aged twenty years.
"You, Darns, and his friend Enwood are in it together,"
I
said.
She turned and walked into the big room with the French furniture and powder-blue drapes.
I followed her. "You called me into it to make it look like an authentic kidnapping and give you an even better excuse not to call in the
F.B.I.
After all, you didn't have anything to fear if it went right. And at that point you thought everything had gone right."
She sat on the sofa and swayed slightly. The drapes were open, and a pitiless slanted light fell on her.
"You typed and mailed the notes to yourself,"
I
told her, "even the last ransom note. Larry Stein cared about you
enough to set out for a lonely meeting with only five thousand dollars when he was sure the extortionists would want something more. Only Larry was smart, and an angle-shooter. Somewhere along the line he ran into Harold Vinceno, contemplating suicide, maybe pumping up his courage over a few drinks. Larry talked Vinceno into delivering the five thousand, maybe offering to pay him a thousand for the job, and they exchanged identification in case the extortionists would check. And Darns and Enwood, who'd never seen your husband close-up, were not only interested in the money but in killing Larry."
"Billy made me do it," Emily murmured.
"No," I said. "He and Enwood wouldn't have killed Larry just for the five thousand dollars. When a married man is murdered, the wife is always at least initially suspected. You needed a cover, like a phony kidnapping scheme complete with notes, ransom money, and a bumbling gumshoe who wasn't much of a threat. Only the hundred thousand wasn't ransom money, it was the final payment to Darns for killing Larry. You probably never really loved Larry Stein, and half his money as he saw fit to dole it out to you wasn't enough." I watched her close her eyes, felt my own eyes brim as tears tracked down her makeup. "When did Larry come back?"
"Yesterday," she said, her eyes still clenched shut, "when he read in the papers about Vinceno being identified by his wife. That's the only time anything about the case got in the papers. Until then, Larry wanted to stay dead to the kidnappers. He was afraid for me."
"And you were afraid of Darns," I said, "afraid he'd think you double-crossed him and he'd want revenge. Darns found out the same way Larry did that he'd killed Vinceno â the wrong man. That's why Darns came here to
see you, to demand the hundred thousand, to continue with the original plan."
"I was afraid of him," Emily admitted, opening her eyes. "That's why I wanted you â nearby. I should have known you'd figure it out. You were always smart; you always saw things differently. This hundred thousand, Alo, it's only a fraction of what's left . . ."
"There was only one way you'd be able to mail that final note to yourself," I told her, "and only one more thing I have to know for sure before I phone Chief Gladstone."
She knew what I meant and something buckled inside her. But she had enough strength to stand and walk with me through the house and out the back door into the yard. She waited while I went into the garage and got a disturbingly handy shovel.
Despite everything, I found myself still admiring her. She had masterminded everything, from seducing Darns to hiring me on the recommendation of my noted lack of success. And but for Vinceno's impersonation of her husband, it all would have worked. In this or in any other world, I would never find another Emily.
She was leaning on me like a lover and sobbing as we walked to the dark churned earth of the now meticulously weeded garden, to where the freshly planted tomato vines were flourishing in the hot sun.
B
illy Edgemore, the afternoon bartender, stood behind the long bar of the Last Stop Lounge and squinted through the dimness at the sunlight beyond the front window. He was a wiry man, taller than he appeared at first, and he looked like he should be a bartender, with his bald head, cheerfully seamed face, and his brilliant red vest that was the bartender's uniform at the Last Stop. Behind him long rows of glistening bottles picked up the light on the mirrored backbar, the glinting clear gins and vodkas, the beautiful amber bourbons and lighter Scotches, the various hues of the assorted wines, brandies, and liqueurs. The Last Stop's bar was well stocked.
Beyond the ferns that blocked the view out (and in) the front window, Billy saw a figure cross the small patch of light and turn to enter the stained-glass front door, the first customer he was to serve that day.
It was Sam Daniels. Sam was an employee of the Hulton Plant up the street, as were most of the customers of the Last Stop.
"Afternoon, Sam," Billy said, turning on his professional smile. "Kind of early today, aren't you?"
"Off work," Sam said, mounting a barstool as if it were a horse. "Beer."
Billy drew a beer and set the wet schooner in front of Sam on the mahogany bar. "Didn't expect a customer for another two hours, when the plant lets out," Billy said.
"Guess not," Sam said, sipping his beer. He was a short man with a swarthy face, a head of curly hair, and a stomach paunch too big for a man in his early thirties â a man who liked his drinking.
"Figured you didn't go to work when I saw you weren't wearing your badge," Billy said. The Hulton Plant manufactured some secret government thing, a component for the hydrogen bomb, and each employee had to wear his small plastic badge with his name, number, and photograph on it in order to enter or leave the plant.
"Regular Sherlock," Sam said, and jiggled the beer in his glass.
"You notice lots of things when you're a bartender," Billy said, wiping down the bar with a clean white towel. You notice things, Billy repeated to himself, and you get to know people, and when you get to know them, really get to know them, you've got to dislike them. "I guess I tended bar in the wrong places."
"What's that?" Sam Daniels asked.
"Just thinking out loud," Billy said, and hung the towel on its chrome rack. When Billy looked at his past he seemed to be peering down a long tunnel of empty bottles, drunks, and hollow laughter; of curt orders, see-through stares, and dreary conversations. He'd never liked his job, but it was all he'd known for the past thirty years.
"Wife's supposed to meet me here pretty soon," Sam said. "She's getting off work early." He winked at Billy. "Toothache."
Billy smiled his automatic smile and nodded. He never had liked Sam, who had a tendency to get loud and violent when he got drunk.
Within a few minutes, Rita Daniels entered. She was a tall pretty woman, somewhat younger than her husband. She had a good figure, dark eyes, and expensively bleached blond hair that looked a bit stringy now from the heat outside.
"Coke and bourbon," she ordered, without looking at Billy. He served her the highball where she sat next to her husband at the bar.
No one spoke for a while as Rita sipped her drink. The faint sound of traffic, muffled through the thick door of the Last Stop, filled the silence. When a muted horn sounded, Rita said, "It's dead in here. Put a quarter in the jukebox."
Sam did as his wife said, and soft jazz immediately displaced the traffic sounds.
"You know I don't like jazz, Sam." Rita downed her drink quicker than she should have, then got down off the stool to go to the powder room.
"Saw Doug Baker last night," Billy said, picking up the empty glass. Doug Baker was a restaurant owner who lived on the other side of town, and it was no secret that he came to the Last Stop only to see Rita Daniels, though Rita was almost always with her husband.
"How 'bout that," Sam said. "Two more of the same."
Rita returned to her stool, and Billy put two highballs before her and her husband.
"I was drinking beer," Sam said in a loud voice.
"So you were," Billy answered, smiling his My Mistake smile. He shrugged and motioned toward the highballs. "On the house. Unless you'd rather have beer."
"No," Sam said, "think nothing of it."
That was how Billy thought Sam would answer. His cheapness was one of the things Billy disliked most about the man. It was one of the things he knew Rita disliked most in Sam Daniels, too.
"How'd it go with the hydrogen bombs today?" Rita asked her husband. "Didn't go in at all, huh?"
Billy could see she was aggravated and was trying to nag him.
"No," Sam said, "and I don't make hydrogen bombs."
"Ha!" Rita laughed. "You oughta think about it. That's about all you can make." She turned away before Sam could answer. "Hey, Billy, you know anything about hydrogen bombs?"
"Naw," Billy said. "Your husband knows more about that than me."
"Yeah," Rita said, "the union rates him an expert. Some expert! Splices a few wires together."
"Fifteen dollars an hour," Sam said, "and double time for overtime."
Rita whirled a braceleted arm above her head. "Wheee . .
Like many married couples, Sam and Rita never failed to bicker when they came into the Last Stop. Billy laughed. "The Friendly Daniels." Sam didn't laugh.
"Don't bug me today," Sam said to Rita. "I'm in a bad mood."
"Cheer up, Sam," Billy said. "It's a sign she loves you, or loves somebody, anyway."
Sam ignored Billy and finished his drink. "Where'd you go last night?" he asked his wife.
"You know I was at my sister's. I even stopped in here for about a half hour on the way. Billy can verify it."
"Right," Billy said.
"I thought you said Doug Baker was in here last night," Sam said to him, his eyes narrow.
"He was," Billy said. "He, uh, came in late." He turned to make more drinks, placing the glasses lip-to-lip and pouring bourbon into each in one deft stream without spilling a drop. He made them a little stronger this time, shooting in the soda expertly, jabbing swizzle sticks between the ice cubes and placing the glasses on the bar.
"You wouldn't be covering up or anything, would you, Billy?" Sam's voice had acquired a mean edge.
"
Now wait a minute!
"
Rita said. "If you think I came in here last night to see Doug Baker, you're crazy!"
"Well." Sam stirred his drink viciously and took a sip. "Billy mentioned Baker was in here. . .
"I said he came in late," Billy said quickly.
"And he acted like he was covering up or something," Sam said, looking accusingly at Billy.
"
Covering up?
" Rita turned to Billy, her penciled eyebrows knitted in a frown. "Have you ever seen me with another man?"
"Naw," Billy said blandly, "of course not. You folks shouldn't fight."
Still indignant, Rita swiveled on her stool to face her husband. "Have I ever been unfaithful?"
"How the hell should I know?"
"Good point," Billy said with a forced laugh.
"It's not funny!" Rita snapped.
"Keep it light, folks," Billy said seriously. "You know we don't like trouble in here."
"Sorry," Rita said, but her voice was hurt. She swiveled back to face the bar and gulped angrily on her drink.
Billy could see that the liquor was getting to her, was getting to them both.
There was silence for a while, then Rita said morosely "I
oughta
go out on you, Mr. Hydrogen-bomb expert! You think I do anyway, and at least Doug Baker's got money."
Sam grabbed her wrist, making the bracelets jingle. She tried to jerk away but he held her arm so tightly that his knuckles were white. "You ever see Baker behind my back and I'll kill you both!" He almost spit the words out.
"Hey, now," Billy said gently, "don't talk like that, folks!" He placed his hand on Sam Daniels' arm and felt the muscles relax as Sam released his wife. She bent over silently on her stool and held the wrist as if it were broken. "Have one on the house," Billy said, taking up their almost empty glasses. "One to make up by."
"Make mine straight," Sam said. He was breathing hard and his face was red.
"
Damn you!
"
Rita moaned. She half fell off the stool and walked quickly but staggeringly to the powder room again.
Billy began to mix the drinks deftly, speedily, as if there were a dozen people at the bar and they all demanded service. In the faint red glow from the beer-ad electric clock he looked like an ancient alchemist before his rows of multicolored bottles. "You shouldn't be so hard on her," he said absently as he mixed. "Can't believe all the rumors you hear about a woman as pretty as Rita, and a harmless kiss in fun never hurt nobody."