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Authors: Donald Westlake

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Chapter 12
Judson Blint entered names and addresses into the computer. He printed out labels and affixed them to the small cardboard boxes of books, along with appropriate postage from the Pitney Bowes stamp machine. He stacked the labeled boxes on the tall–handled metal cart and, when it was full, wheeled it out of the office to the elevator, then on down to the postal substation on the Avalon State Bank Tower lobby level. After turning the boxes over to the United States Postal Service, he used the tagged keys J.C. Taylor had given him to open Box 88, Super Star Music Co.; Box 13, Allied Commissioners’ Courses, Inc.; Box 69, Intertherapeutic Research Service; and Box 222, Commercial Attaché, Republic of Maylohda. Back upstairs, he put all the mail on his desk except the few items for Maylohda, which appeared to come from real countries and official organizations connected with the United Nations. After a discreet knock on the door to the inner office, he then brought the Maylohda mail in and placed it on the desk in front of J.C. herself, who was usually on the phone, sounding very official and occasionally foreign. Back at his own desk, he next entered the newly hooked customers into the database and prepared a deposit of their just–received checks into one of J.C.’s three bank accounts in the Avalon Bank branch, also on the lobby level, having first forged
J.C. Taylor
on each check, a skill he had picked up in no time.

If everything he did didn’t happen to be breaking some law or another — mail fraud, misuse of bulk rate, identity theft of the endorsements, plagiarism, sale of inappropriate material to minors, on and on — all of this activity would be very like a job. But it was better than a job. It was a world, a world he’d always believed had to exist somewhere, but hadn’t known how to find. So it had found him.

When he had assembled his fake job resume out on Long Island, he’d thought he was being brilliant, and in a way he was, though not in the manner he’d thought.

No wonder J.C. had caught on so immediately. When Judson, with his eyes freshly opened, studied J.C. Taylor’s businesses, she had done exactly the same thing for references. The police chiefs and district attorneys who’d endorsed the detective course, all dead or retired or otherwise unavailable. And the same for the music publishers, disc jockeys, and songwriters boosting Super Star, and likewise the psychiatrists, “medical professionals,” and marriage counselors urging the purchase of Intertherapeutic’s book of dirty pictures. (Was that J.C. herself in some of those pictures? Couldn’t be.)

Ultimately, though, what made the routine in office 712 of the Avalon State Bank tower so much better than an actual job was that the job hadn’t existed until he’d come along. J.C. had planned to shut down all three of these operations and had changed her mind only when she’d seen his brilliant résumé — seen
through
his brilliant resume, in a New York minute — and realized he was the perfect person to pick up the torch.

He would not fail her. She has faith in me as a con artist and a crook, he told himself, and I will not let her down.

At just after ten in the morning on the second day of his illicit employment, he was at his desk, busy with labels and Pitney Bowes, when the hall door opened. This was the first such occurrence, but he’d already been told what to say in such a circumstance — J.C. Taylor isn’t here, did you make an appointment, leave your name, go away — so he was already opening his mouth before the door was fully open, but then it turned out to be the man improbably called Tiny, who was presumably J.C.’s boyfriend, though the word had never seemed more inadequate.

“Oh, hello,” Judson said, since his mouth was open anyway.

“That’s a better getup, kid,” Tiny said, closing the door and waving a hand at Judson’s polo shirt and slacks, which were, in fact, a much better getup than the costume he’d worn while job hunting.

“Thank you,” Judson said, pleased. “Am I supposed to tell J.C. you’re here?”

“I’ll tell her myself.” Tiny seemed to consider for a minute, then said, “You got a credit card?”

Surprised, Judson said, “Sure. A couple.”

“One will do. This afternoon, rent a car. A full–size one, you know?”

“For you, you mean.”

“That’s right. Two o’clock, meet me at Lex and Seventy–second, northwest corner. When you get your credit card bill, I’ll pay you back in cash.”

“Oh, sure. No problem.”

“Don’t be
too
trusting, kid,” Tiny advised him. “I’ll square your absence with Josey. Two o’clock.”

“Seventy–second and Lex. I’ll be there.”

“So will I,” Tiny said, and advanced into the inner office, closing the door behind himself.

Whatever it is that’s happening, Judson thought, I’m getting in deeper. The thought made him smile.

Chapter 13
Silent as the tomb. When Dortmunder and Kelp walked into the O.J. a little before two that afternoon, even the floor didn’t creak. There seemed to be fewer regulars than usual, huddled together at the left end of the bar, as silent and miserable as kittens in a sack with the bridge getting close. The two watchful guys in the booth on the right were not the same as the two from last night, but they weren’t that different, either. Rollo had a newspaper folded open on the bar at the right end, far from the immobile regulars, and was bent over it with a red Flair pen in his hand.

Approaching the bar, Dortmunder felt the eyes of the guys in the booth on him, but ignored them. Then he saw that Rollo was not reading the
Daily News,
like a regular person, but the larger paper, the
New York Times.
And then he saw that what Rollo was reading in the
New York Times
was the want ads.

Rollo didn’t raise his eyes from the columns of jobs awaiting the qualified when Dortmunder and Kelp bellied up to the bar in front of him, but he was not unmindful of their presence. “Sorry, fellas,” he said, eyes down, pen poised. “Still no go.”

“Rollo,” Dortmunder said, “all’s we want’s a beer.”

“Two beers, in fact,” Kelp said.

Now Rollo did look up. He seemed wary. “Nothing else in mind?”

“What else?” Kelp asked him. “It’s a hot August day, the time seems right for a nice beer.”

Rollo shrugged. “Coming up,” he said, and went away to draw two.

While they waited, Kelp said, “I think it’s my round, John.”

Dortmunder looked at him. “What are you up to?”

“What up to? I feel like I wanna buy you a beer. It happens, we have another one, then
you
buy for me. That’s how it works, John.”

Dortmunder said, “What if we only have the one?”

“My feeling is,” Kelp said, whipping out his wallet and putting cash money on the bar next to the glasses Rollo was putting down in front of them, “some day we’ll be in a bar again.”

Dortmunder could only agree with that. “You’ll keep track, I guess,” he said, as Rollo took Kelp’s money away to his open cash register and rummaged around in there a while.

“No problem,” Kelp assured him, and lifted his glass. “To crime.”

“Without punishment,” Dortmunder amended, and they both drank.

Rollo came back to put crumpled bills on the bar in front of Kelp, who took a few, left one, and said, “Thanks, Rollo.”

Rollo leaned close over the bar. Very softly he said, “I just wanna say, this isn’t the best place right now.”

“We noticed that, Rollo,” Kelp said, and nodded, and smiled in an amiable way, inviting confidences.

“The thing is,” Rollo said, more sotto voce than ever, “there are people around here right now, what they are, they’re criminals.”

Dortmunder leaned very close to Rollo over the bar. “Rollo,” he murmured, “
we’re
criminals.”

“Yeah, John, I know,” Rollo said. “But they’re organized. Take care of yourselves.”

“Everything okay, Rollo?” demanded a nasty voice.

It was one of today’s organized men, come from his booth to stand at the bar in front of Rollo’s
Times.
His strange shirt was off–puce.

“Everything’s jake,” Rollo assured him. Scooping the loose dollar from the bar, he went back to his newspaper, while the puce, after one quick, dismissive look at Dortmunder and Kelp, headed back to his booth.

Dortmunder said, “You think everything’s okay in life, and then something different happens.”

Kelp gave him a look. “John? On one beer you’re turning philosophical?”

“It’s the environment,” Dortmunder told him.

Meanwhile, returning to his want ads, Rollo called toward the entrance, “Just put ‘em in back,” and when Dortmunder turned to look, a blue–uniformed deliveryman was wheeling in a dolly piled five–high with liquor cartons.

“Right,” the deliveryman said, and wheeled the dolly on by. The regulars didn’t even turn to watch.

Dortmunder and Kelp exchanged a silent glance as they sipped their beer. Soon the deliveryman returned, pushing his empty dolly, and Dortmunder stepped back from the bar to say, in a normal volume of voice, “I gotta hit the gents.”

“I’ll watch your beer,” Kelp offered.

“Thank you.”

Dortmunder circled the clustered regulars and went around the end of the bar and down the hall past POINTERS and SETTERS, noticing that beneath SETTERS was a thumb–tacked handwritten OUT OF ORDER notice, and past the entry–to–the–universe phone booth, and stopped at the open green door at the very end of the hall.

And there was the back room, where so often they had met in the past, and which was now transformed. It was so jam–packed full
of stuff
you couldn’t even see the round table in the middle of it any more, let alone the chairs around it. The bare bulb hanging from the center of the ceiling was partially blocked by all the materiel that had been introduced into the place. Liquor cartons were stacked everywhere, along with new barstools with their plastic wrapping still on them, at least half a dozen cash registers, a complete mini pool table, and boxes and boxes of pretzels and Slim Jims.

“Help you, Mac?”

It was Puce, following Dortmunder down the hall. He had an aggressive swagger in his shoulders, as though he felt it was a little past time to start sparring with somebody.

“Gents,” Dortmunder told him, calm about it.

“Pointers,” Puce told him, and pointed at it.

“Thanks,” Dortmunder said, and went into POINTERS, where the aroma immediately reminded him why generally he did not go into POINTERS. He stayed the minimum time plausible, flushed, washed his hands as the grimy sign said, and went out to the hall, which was now empty.

It wasn’t a surprise that the door to SETTERS was locked. Dortmunder headed for the bar, and on the way he passed the deliveryman, wheeling another quintet of cases, this one all rum.

Puce was back in his booth, muttering at his pal in plum, and Kelp was where he had been, at the bar. Dortmunder joined him, and Kelp raised an eyebrow as Dortmunder raised his glass. Dortmunder shook his head, drank, and the deliveryman came back, the dolly empty. This time he went around to extend a clipboard toward Rollo and say, “Sign it there, okay?”

“Sure.”

Rollo, in the manner of someone signing his own commitment papers, signed the form on the clipboard, and the deliveryman and his dolly went away.

Dortmunder finished his beer. “Maybe,” he said, “I’ll buy you that round next time.”

Chapter 14
“Make the left on Fifth,” Tiny said from the backseat. “Okay,” Judson said, stopped the rented black Lexus Dzilla at the traffic light, and signaled for the left.

This was their third time around the block, over Sixty–ninth Street, down Fifth, over Sixty–eighth, up Madison, over Sixty–ninth, on and on. And Tiny never said, “Circle the block”; he always just gave the next turn, as though he hoped Judson wouldn’t notice or remember the route.

Well, Judson did notice and remember the route, and he had even figured out what it was they were looking at. “Very slow here,” Tiny would say every time they made the left turn from Fifth Avenue to Sixty–eighth Street, and every time Judson watched in the rearview mirror to see what Tiny was focused on, and every time it was the first house on the right after the big apartment building on the corner. There was something about that house that interested Tiny a whole lot.

“Make the left on Sixty–eighth.”

“Okay.”

Waiting for the green light, Judson could look diagonally across at that house, an old town house with what looked like a more recent garage cut into it on the right. Glancing once more at Tiny’s reflection in the mirror, he could see Tiny frown at the house, as though something about it troubled or baffled him.

Green light. As Judson made the turn, Tiny said, “Stop on the right. At the driveway.”

Directly in front of the house, in other words. So this was something new.

Judson had to watch what he was doing when he parked, because this SUV was really big, but once he’d stopped, he could do his own frowning at the house. What was it Tiny was trying to figure out?

“I’ll get out here,” Tiny said, opening the right–hand door. “Go around the block and pick me up.”

“Okay.”

Driving on, Judson saw Tiny just stand back there, head cocked to one side as he looked upward at the house. Upward. At what?

By the time he’d circled the block once more, he’d worked it out. Tiny was on the other side of the street now, looking not at the house but at his watch. Fortunately, there was a fire hydrant on that side, so Judson slid in there, and as Tiny got back into the car, Judson told him, “You could boost me up.”

Tiny finished entering the car, shutting the door, adjusting himself on the seat, and only then did he look at Judson’s right ear and say, “To what?”

“The alarm box. That’s what you’re trying to figure out, isn’t it? How to reach the alarm box.”

“Drive on down and make the left.”

“Okay.”

It wasn’t until they’d made the turn onto Madison that Tiny spoke again: “Go up to Seventy–second and take the left. Why would I wanna reach any alarm box?”

“I don’t know, ”Judson said, stopping for the light at Sixty–ninth. He was beginning to think maybe he’d been just a bit too much of a smart–aleck. “I could be wrong.”

“You think so?”

“I dunno.”

The light turned green, and as Judson drove on, Tiny said, “One time, in the can, I knew a guy, said he knew how to break out, we could use the ductwork from the main boiler. I was too big and I didn’t like the idea, but this other guy said it sounded great, he’d go first, so he went first, only he went the wrong direction.”

“Did he get back?”

“Some ash did.”

Judson thoughtfully made the left on Seventy–second, and Tiny said, “We’ll go into the park.”

“Okay.”

“We wanted to get into a museum one time,” Tiny told him, as he drove slowly through the heavy two–way traffic of Seventy–second Street. “One of the guys said he’d go there in the afternoon, hide himself in the mummy case, come open up for us at four in the morning. We get there at four in the morning, he doesn’t show. Turns out, there’s no air in the mummy case, so first he falls asleep, then he falls dead.”

“Gee, that’s too bad,” Judson said, and stopped at the red light at Fifth.

“Wasted a night,” Tiny said. “I was with some people once, we were in a penthouse, the owners weren’t home. There was a power outage, that whole part of the city, this one guy said he could find the fire escape, he already counted the windows.”

With gloomy foreboding, Judson said, “He counted the windows wrong?”

“No, the floors.”

Judson nodded. “Mr. Tiny,” he said, “do any of your stories have happy endings?”

“Not so far. The light’s green.”

So they crossed Fifth Avenue into the park, with a stream of traffic. “Stay on the transverse,” Tiny said, when the option came to angle right northward toward the boathouse. They kept westward instead, Ramsey Playfield and then Naumburg Bandshell on their left, Bethesda Terrace with its fountain on the right. “Pull over to the right.”

“I don’t think I can,” Judson said, looking in the mirror at the traffic behind him.

“I think you can.”

So he did, and stopped half off the road, angry drivers de–touring around him. Swarms of people walked around the park in the August sun, many of them going up and down the broad stone steps leading down to the fountain and the lake beyond.

Tiny rolled his window down as he said to Judson, “Honk.”

So Judson honked, and two men who’d been loitering off to one side of the steps suddenly looked their way, then waved and walked over.

“One in front, one in back,” Tiny told them when they arrived, and after a brief, silent, unmoving struggle of some kind out there, the cheerful, sharp–nosed one got into the front seat next to Judson while the gloomy one got some of the seat next to Tiny.

“Drive on,” said Tiny. So Judson drove on, and Tiny said, “Dortmunder,” meaning the one in back, “and Kelp,” for the one in front, “this is Judson Blint. He’s Josey’s office manager now.”

“Harya.”

“Hello.”

Tiny said, “He says I can boost him up to the alarm. I didn’t ask him, he just says it.”

Judson felt many eyes on him, but didn’t dare look back at anybody. I’m being taken for a ride, he thought. No, I’m taking myself for a ride.

Kelp, the one in front, with a pleasant manner Judson didn’t at all believe, said, “Judson? You like to volunteer?”

“Oh, no,” Judson said. “No, I just thought — I don’t know, I must have been wrong.”

“I knew a guy wanted to volunteer once,” Tiny said. Judson sighed, and Tiny went on, “We were in a thing together where the cops took an interest, and he thought it would be a good thing if he rolled over first.”

Interested, half–turned around in the seat, Kelp said, “What happened?”

“He rolled off a roof instead,” Tiny said. “Keep going across Seventy–second,” he told Judson.

The red light at Central Park West was ahead. “As soon as the light changes,” Judson promised.

“Maybe he’s some kinda burglar.” That was the other one back there — Dortmunder.

“You think so?” Tiny asked. “Judson, is that it? You a burglar?”

“Not me,” Judson said, and drove forward under the green light.

He could sense Tiny looming behind him, larger than ever, but refused to look in the mirror. Lots of traffic to look at, two–way traffic. Very dangerous out here.

“Or maybe,” Tiny said, “it’s your idea
I’m
some kind of burglar.”

“Oh, no, sir.”

The one called Dortmunder said, “Tiny? What does J.C. think of him?”

“What, this driver here?” Tiny chuckled. “She thinks he’s a good scam artist.”

Kelp, still friendly and amiable, said, “That doesn’t make him a good burglar.”

Dortmunder said, “But what you’re saying is, J.C. trusts him.”

“In
her
business.” To Judson he said, “Head up for the Boat Basin.”

“Yes, sir,” Judson said, and over the next several minutes, while they kept on with their conversation, he traversed West Seventy–second Street, Broadway, and West Seventy–ninth Street, headed for the West Seventy–ninth Street Boat Basin, where you could launch your boat, or some people kept their yachts or their houseboats, or conceivably you could drop an unwanted volunteer into the river and let him drift out to sea. Judson drove well, breathed shallowly, and didn’t say a word.

“So I looked at this thing,” Tiny said, “and maybe so.”

“Good,” Dortmunder said.

“But first I wanna know,” Tiny said, “about the O.J.”

“Well,” Dortmunder said, “it’s a bust–out joint.”

“Shit,” Tiny commented.

“You should see it in there, Tiny,” Kelp said.

“Maybe I should.”

“No, you shouldn’t,” Dortmunder said. “It’s too late for anything like that. Tiny, they’re already muscling the customers out. The back room is
full
of merchandise. The ladies’ room is locked, so it must be full, too.”

“If they’re busting out,” Tiny said, “how come they don’t just do it?”

Dortmunder said, “You know those guys, Tiny, they’re greedy. One way or another, they got control of the O.J. —”

“Usually,” Kelp said, “the owner’s some kind of dumbass gambler.”

“Something like that,” Dortmunder said. “But they got their hands on this legit business, good line of credit, they’re not just gonna bounce in, bounce out, Tiny, they’re gonna use up that credit until it’s
gone.
Buy buy buy, fill the booths up next, lock the men’s room —”

“Not too soon for that one,” Kelp commented.

“No,” Dortmunder agreed. “But the thing is, Tiny, they’re not gonna move the stuff
out
until the bills start to come in.”

Kelp said, “They might not even have all the customers lined up yet.”

Tiny said, “But they will.”

“Sure,” Kelp said. “When your cost of doing business is zero, you can give real deep discounts.”

Tiny said, “So that’s it for the O.J.”

“Goddamn it,” Dortmunder said. “I don’t want it to be.”

Kelp said, “John, nobody wants it to be, but if they’re that far along, if they’ve already burned the credit rating and the customer base that much, there’s no getting it back, you know that. They’re in there now, they’ll strip the place, sell everything they ordered, disappear, the owner goes into bankruptcy, end of story.”

“There’s gotta be a way,” Dortmunder insisted. “If only we could make a meet. But we need the O.J. to do a meeting!”

Kelp, being kindly, said, “John, you’re pretty good at thinking things out. Think about this problem. We’ve still got maybe a couple days before they pull the plug. You come up with something to save the O.J., we’re with you. Right, Tiny?”

“The kid, too,” Tiny said. “If we decide to keep him.”

A very small moan escaped through Judson’s clenched lips. He drove slowly and carefully. He hoped he’d never reach the Seventy–ninth Street Boat Basin.

Dortmunder said, “All right, I’ll try. But I don’t know.”

“If anybody can do it, John,” Kelp said, “you can.”

“Here’s the Boat Basin,” Tiny said. “Kid, park somewhere.”

“Okay.”

There were parking places below the West Side Highway, with views over the Hudson toward New Jersey and, closer at hand, boats of various kinds, many of them occupied. I’ll be safe with all those people around, Judson thought, but didn’t believe it for a second.

Tiny said, “Leave the engine on, kid, for the A/C.”

“Okay.”

Kelp said, “I guess next on the agenda is this youth here.”

Tiny said, “I wanted you two to take a look at him. Josey thinks he’s okay, but that’s in her area. Us, I don’t know.”

“Let’s find out a couple things,” Kelp said, and offered Judson his untrustworthy smile. “Let’s just say,” he said, “batting these ideas around here, let’s just say Tiny
did
boost you up to that burglar alarm. Then what?”

“I dunno,” Judson said. “I figured, Mr. Tiny’d tell me what he wanted.”

Kelp cocked his head, the smile turning quizzical. “No idea? What, you figured you’d go up with a screwdriver, open the thing up?”

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