Authors: Robert K. Tanenbaum
Abe Lapidus looked at Marlene. There was a shadow in his eyes that hadn't been there before. He leaned over her and said, in the manner of a lawyer counseling a client at trial, “You want to know about Jerry? The whole
megilla
?”
“I think I have to, Abe.”
“You don't believe let sleeping dogs lie?”
Marlene said, “You know, Abe, as a matter of fact, I do. Unfortunately, this dog is up, awake, and tearing around growling and biting. People have been hurt already, including me, and more people are going to get hurt. That's what I think. What do you think, Abe?”
Abe sighed and said, “You get out of here, you call me. We'll have lunch, I'll give you some names.”
THEY KEPT MARLENE IN THE HOSPITAL for eight days, which in her opinion was at least three days too long. She felt fine, she told them, but they continued to probe her with the wonderful and expensive machinery of the modern neurological suite until they were satisfied that they were more or less tort proof, should she begin to imagine herself the Empress Josephine upon her release.
Karp came to take her home, and found her in her room, sitting on the edge of the bed, dressed in the clothes he had brought in the previous day, a black cotton shirt and trousers and a long, smoky silk scarf, which she had made into a turban around her cropped head. Marlene did not look good in a turban, or in the yellowing bruises that covered one side of her face, and, as her false eye was no longer shielded by a strategic fall of hair, her glance was curiously lopsided. And glum. It tormented Karp's heart to contemplate what he was about to do, but he chilled it down and said, “We have to talk about this business, Marlene.”
“What, now?” she asked, scowling.
“Yeah, now.” He drew a deep breath, released it, as before taking an important foul shot. “I need you to give me the whole story. On Vivian Bollano. And on whatever's happening out there in connection with the Chinatown murders. Whatever you know.”
She stared angrily at him, but his glance didn't falter, and after a moment her eyes fell and she asked coldly, “To whom am I speaking now? My husband, or the chief assistant district attorney?”
“Well, Marlene, the answer to that is âboth,' and the fact that this creates problems for us is not my doing.”
“What are you going to do?
Interrogate
me? Maybe I should have my attorney present.”
In one part of his mind, Karp saw himself pointing to the telephone and heard himself saying, “Maybe you should,” but what he did instead was to slump into a chair, catch her eye with his again, and say, “Marlene! Look at me! Listen to me! This is tearing me up. It's breaking my heart. I've already compromised myself six ways to Sunday getting you in here instead of the lock-up ward at Bellevue, but I can't just give you a free ride if I think you have knowledge constructive to three homicides. Which I do. God, I don't
want
to put legal pressure on you.
Legal pressure!
We're
married
, for crying out loud! I want you to tell me because you love me, because you trust me, and because I'm worried nauseous about our daughter, who's in danger because of something I think she saw and won't tell me about. Now, come on, Marlene! Talk to me!”
“And if not, what?” she asked, her voice neutral.
“Oh, shit! That's
not
the right answer, Marlene.”
She repeated it. He looked at her, closed his eyes, shook his head, sighed, and said, “Okay, if not, then there are a pair of cops down the hall who will take you in and process you just like any other person charged with assault. I'm out of the loop officially in any case; Tim Sullivan will handle the whole thing out of Felony. He's going to ask Roland what the story is, and Roland is going to say, because it's the truth, that you're hiding something, and Tim's people will bring that to the attention of the judge. Roland could also buy, or pretend to buy, the story that Bollano's people are putting out, that it was an assassination attempt on himâ”
“Do you believe that?”
“Oh, crap, of
course
I don't believe that, Marlene. That's the point, it doesn't matter what
I
believe. I'm supposed to be out of it.”
“But if I spill my guts here, then you're
in
it again, you smooth the way, get me through arraignment and bail, and I'm home all cozy and safe. Is that the deal?”
She was perfectly right. The thing stunk, a spaghetti tangle of legal and domestic business, an archetypal Karp family katzenjammer. Flat-voiced, he said, “Yeah, that's the deal.”
She nodded. “Okay, then here's my response to that deal. About Vivian Fein Bollano, I will say absolutely nothing. Everything that has passed between us is protected by attorney-client privilege, and I will so maintain to a judge when the time comes. About the other thing: you've probably come to the same conclusion I have, that either Lucy witnessed the Asia Mall killings or some of her friends did, or they all did. Lucy was out of circulation for a couple, three hours that afternoon at just the right time. You know about Lucy and Janice getting rousted by a couple of gangsters. Then she gets snatched last week. Tran believes that on both occasions the people involved were mainly interested in finding out what the girls knew and whether they'd told anyone else about it. He's turned up a name, Leung, a local hard boy, but clearly just a go-betweenâ”
“Why? Why just a go-between?”
“Because the Sings were big shots, triad guys. Somebody wanted them hit would have to have some serious muscle to back up the play. Leung's a small-timer. Tran says.” She summarized Tran's information about the Yee-Leung connection.
“But the cops say they sent in people from out of town,” Karp objected. “Why would they care if the girls saw who did it?”
“They shouldn't,” said Marlene. “The fact that they do argues against the foreign hit-team story.” She reminded him what Tran had told her earlier about triad politics and the likely results of the killings at the Asia Mall.
“In any case,” she went on, “neither Lucy nor Janice nor Mary is going to come forward as a witness because Janice and Mary are too vulnerable and Lucy is too loyal. The cops and Tran are looking for the Vietnamese who snatched Lucy, and when they're caught, we'll know a little more. Meanwhile, I don't judge that any of them is in serious danger, as long as none of them come forward as a witness.”
“You're
encouraging
Lucy to keep quiet here? You approve of this?” Karp could not keep the outrage out of his voice.
“Yeah, not approve exactly,” said Marlene forcefully, “but understand, appreciate where she is, where they all are. Like it or not, they come from a different culture, and our little honey has roots in that culture, at least partially. Given a choice, I'd rather keep her roots intact than tear them up in the interests of a judicial process. I respect your parental interest, believe me, but right now, with Tran watching her, she's as safe as we can make her, safe as the child she is is going to be. You understand what I mean, Butch? As the child she
is
, not the child you'd like her to be. I know you think I
designed
her to be this way and I'm a terrible mother and allâ”
“I don'tâ”
“You do, but believe me when I say I didn't do anything like that. I wish to God she collected stuffed animals and went to the Girl Scouts, but she's never going to be that kid. Deadly genes, and not only from me, by the way, darling, plus the usual shake of the dice, thank you, God. I love her to pieces and I know you do, too, and the chance that she's going to break both our hearts is very high.”
For a long while he sat there, saying nothing. He was reflecting on how much he had changed since he met this woman, how he would have reacted in former years, with his first wife, for example, had such a situation come up. There would have been broken furniture.
He said, “You know, it's funny: it goes against my every instinct, but I think you're right. But there's something else . . . I can put myself behind your eyes and see things the way you see them. It took awhile, but I can do it, because I really love you. I wonder if you can do that for me, see what this, this life we all lead, costs me, being who I am.”
“Oh, yeah,” she said. “That's what women do, and they do it so unthinking that everybody takes it for granted, they'll see the man's point of view. I'll give you an example. When I waded into that gunfight, what I was thinking, besides that I had to stop it before some innocent schmuck caught one, was you, that I didn't, I couldn't
kill
anyone in New York County because of what it would mean to you, and so, you know they teach you to aim for the center of mass and keep firing until they go down, but I'm a good enough snap shot that I could have popped both assholes in the face and moved on and even taken out Sally and his baby-sitter, and I would have walked on it, too, but what I did was I risked my life to disable those guys instead, and got my brains kicked in. That was very largely for you.”
“I don't know what to say,” said Karp after a hard swallow.
“I do. Let's get the fuck out of here before we both start sniveling.” She stood up straight, lifted her chin, and said, “Bring on your cops. I'm ready.”
“Lose the Joan of Arc routine, kid, it's only calendar court,” said Karp. “And I think I'll take you in myself.”
She smiled for the first time and said, “Oh, yeah? Think you can handle me, big boy?”
“As long as you're unarmed,” said Karp.
He turned his wife over to Clay Fulton at the courthouse, the detective having accumulated the necessary paper to bring Marlene back into the system, and then he switched his mind away from her and her fate and directed it to the problem of the Asia Mall killings, because Mimi Vasquez was supposed to be waiting for him at his office with Detective Wu in tow.
They were there as promised. Karp got them arranged around his small, round conference table and took a moment to examine the cop while the man chatted with Vasquez. A little under forty was his estimate, maybe five-eight and well proportioned, with a square, fleshy face that bore a genial expression. Detective Second Grade Wu was clearly satisfied with himself and with the world.
They talked casually for a while, making the easy comments about events and mutual acquaintances that must precede every business meeting between strangers. Karp learned that the detective was a first-generation Chinese American, whose father had done some service for the Allied cause in World War II and had thereafter been granted access to America. Wu had been born in Chinatown, educated in public schools, and having discovered no talent in himself for either scholarship or trade, had joined the cops fifteen years ago, to the lamentations of both parents.
“Why is that?” Karp asked, the thought of Lucy and what Marlene had said about culture popping unbidden into his mind.
“Old country Chinese and the police . . . the cops there were less than dogs, not just corrupt and brutal, but a matter of status, like caste. They're down there with the butchers and shit carriers.”
“Just like here,” said Karp, and they all laughed and, having gotten the man relaxed enough to laugh, Karp slid into the interview with, “So, Phil, when did you decide the Sing murders weren't worth serious effort?”
Wu's laugh turned to a kind of scowling snort. “Hey, wait a second, I put in as much effort as I could under the circumstances,” he said. “Ask Mimi here. The vics were strangers, it wasn't a robbery, we traced the whole thing back to Hong Kong. There were absolutely no leads locally.”
“You talked to Mr. and Mrs. Chen?”
“Yeah, sure,” said Wu warily. “What about them?”
“What about them? You think two big-time triad tough guys could hold a meeting in their storeroom back there without the Chens or their employees knowing about it? What did you get out of them?”
Wu shrugged. “The usual. I told you what Chinese people think about the police. Nobody saw nothing.”
“But somebody unlocked that door back there so the Sings and whoever shot them could get in. So somebody in there must have set it up.”
Wu looked uncomfortable. He hunched his shoulders and uttered what might have been a laugh if there had been anything amusing going on. “Okay, look. Here's the situation. You know about tongs? Okay, you know what
guanxi
is, connections? Okay, I know what went down, the Chens know I know, but it doesn't do us any good to rub their faces in it, you understand? I got to work that community every day. If I make the Chens lose face over something where I'm never going to get these guys, then when I catch a case where I got a fighting chance to nail the perp, I'm fucked . . . sorry, Mimi, I meant . . .”
The man was actually blushing. Vasquez said, “I've heard the word before, Phil. What you're telling us is that you think Chen set up the meeting as a favor for his tong, the tong doing a favor for these Hong Kong triad guys,
guanxi
, right?”
“Right. Happens all the time. But something went wrong. Instead of a meeting the guys got murdered. I asked Chen did he know that it was going to be a hit, and he said, no. I mean, what the hell else was he going to say?”
“So, naturally, you asked him who set up the meeting, and he says . . . ?”
“The head of his business association, Benny Yee.”
“And Mr. Yee said . . . ?”
“He got a call from Hong Kong.”
“And when you checked his phone records, you found what?”
The detective hesitated, licked his lips. Karp snapped his knuckles once on the table, a loud, startling sound, and spoke angrily. “Oh, come on, Phil, tell me a goddamn
story
here! Why do I have to drag stuff out of you? What's going on?”
Wu's golden skin darkened as if it were being toasted, except around the nostrils, where little patches turned white as parchment. Oddly his mouth still retained the dead ghost of his original smile. “Well, Butch, I'll tell you what's going on,” said Wu in a tight voice. “Mr. Yee is an important guy in Chinatown. He's extremely helpful to the police. We get any serious violence in Chinatown, we ask Mr. Yee about it, and a couple days later the perp knocks on the door of the precinct and hands over a neatly typed signed confession. So when Mr. Yee tells me something, I take his word for it, unless I got independent evidence he's lying, which I don't. You know what face is? If I call Mr. Yee a liar, like if I start to check his phone records, I guarantee you, I will not clear another case out of there as long as I'm alive. That's what's going on.”