âSo he went, after all?'
âYou knew?' Cross said.
âI know he wanted the name of a guide, but I didn't know when â or what it was all about, for that matter.
Though Shanahan probably wouldn't have minded Kowalski knowing, the younger detective knew the older one kept things to himself.
âWhat do we do now?' Kowalski asked, sipping a glass of bourbon.
âFind out who set me up.'
âIs that what you think happened?'
Cross nodded. âI don't know if it was personal. I mean I don't know if someone wanted to set
me
up. But that someone wanted to set someone up. It was good.'
Kowalski sat back, looked up to catch Harry's attention. He lifted his glass, indicating another. Cross still had half a beer.
âThink about it. They steal a car. Kill people. Put them in a car and park in the same spot they stole it from.'
âHow often do people check the trunk of their car unless there's an emergency?'
âUntil it smells,' Cross said. âEven then time has passed.'
Kowalksi nodded again, thanked Harry for the refill.
âYou coming along when you did was just a coincidence?' Kowalksi continued.
âWas it?' Cross shrugged. âI don't know. But if it was part of a plan, then they are even smarter. In addition to the clever plan to abandon the bodies, they set up a murder suspect. It forces the police in a direction other than the killer's. If nothing else, it complicates the case.'
âIs anybody that good?'
One of the bodies had been identified, Cross told Kowalksi. A Marshall Talbot, 26. He lived in Woodruff Place. The body of a young woman was not identified or just not revealed. The only other thing Cross knew was that the man whose car was repossessed was Wilbert Morgan. He worked as a bank guard and was one of several laid off after various buy-outs, consolidations, and bankruptcies. Because he lost his job, he was about to lose his car. And he wasn't the man who came upon Cross with the shotgun.
âLet me know if I can help,' Kowalksi said. âIn fact, just let me help.'
âI can't afford you.'
âOh I'm in it for the satisfaction, mostly. I'd like to find the bastards who killed a couple of kids.'
âYou said “mostly.”'
âYeah, well I got to keep you out of trouble. You could become expensive and you don't offer any fringe benefits.'
Cross took a sip of beer, surveyed the dark, empty bar. He needed to get out of there, get someplace cheerful or at least distracting. The thought he was about to share came out of the blue and he was ashamed that it took him so long to figure it out.
âJames?' Cross said.
âYes, dear.'
âThey knew it was me.'
âWhat?'
âThe guy was there. Waiting. Ready to set me up. He had to know I was coming.'
âMaybe he just knew someone was coming.'
âI'm the only one Edelman sends on repos.'
âWhy is that?'
âHe doesn't have that much work that he needs a posse. And we have a deal to keep it off the books. I don't report it as tax income. He doesn't have to go through all that reporting. I get some cash to pay someone like Thurman. I get a car off the lot. Works out well. So Edelman knew who was going to pick up the Town Car.'
There were things to do, but it was too late to do them. Tomorrow Cross would pay a visit to Edelman and to the man who owned the Town Car.
Shanahan thought there was something antiseptic about such trips â from the narrow impersonal space of the plane to the vast impersonal space of the airports. That set up the shock of the real, teeming world outside â the sudden overwhelming heat, the buzzing swarms of motor scooters, the toxic smell of exhaust. He could see the air. That couldn't be good.
âWe're here,' Maureen said cheerfully after a moment registering the impact of reality.
âWe are,' Shanahan said. He had arranged for a guide to meet them at the hotel and was told that he should take a taxi from the airport. âThe tuk-tuks are fun if you are twelve,' the man said. âThe taxis are air conditioned.'
A small orange Toyota with a Buddha dangling from the rearview mirror made itself available. Baggage was stuffed in the front and in the trunk and Maureen and Shanahan were stuffed in the back seat. Off they went, eventually entering an even greater density of humanity.
In maybe half an hour, Maureen and Shanahan were checking into a pleasant, very inexpensive hotel. A slender, well but comfortably dressed, fortyish man, who had lingered about the desk, introduced himself.
As Shanahan struggled with the name, the man smiled. âUse Channarong.'
âDeets,' Maureen said, pointing to Shanahan. Then to herself, âMaureen.'
âMaureen and Deets, nice to meet you. I am your guide if you like.'
âLet me find someone to get the bags upstairs and then we'll talk,' Shanahan said.
âYou going to tell the little lady to go sit by the pool,' Maureen said, âwhile you go do guy stuff?'
âI'm sorry, I thought you might like to freshen up?'
âDo I need to?'
âJust a question. Trying to be thoughtful.'
Maureen's eyes half shut and she grinned just a little. She nodded.
âI've just been played,' she said to Channarong.
He nodded, face giving away nothing.
âWe're going to grab a drink . . .' Shanahan looked at Channarong.
âTrolley's. Outside to the right. A couple of doors down.'
âThat the name of the bar or are you suggesting I go for a ride?' Maureen asked.
âName of the bar.'
A young man had put the baggage on a cart and he and Maureen headed for the elevator.
Shanahan followed Channarong back out into the heavy hot air. The noise of the city kept them from speaking until they were inside a bar â one that looked as if it could be back in Indianapolis. Clean, lots of wood, a wide-screen TV over the bar. Shanahan ordered a beer and got something in a green bottle with an elephant logo. Channarong drank water. Shanahan was perspiring, even after that short walk. Channarong wasn't.
âMr Kowalski speaks highly of you.'
âHe is a very interesting man,' Channarong said. âVery good to people. Getting someone out of a jail here is not so easy unless you know how to talk to people. Your friend picked up on local customs very quickly.'
âI take it you know the city.'
âAll my life.'
âThe rest of the country?'
âSome places better than others.'
âWhat is your relationship with the police?' Shanahan asked.
âI was an officer at one time.'
âNo longer.'
âNo.'
âWhy?' Shanahan asked.
âPolitical.'
âThey don't like you?'
âI have many friends as well as enemies. If I may ask, what are you doing here that you are worried about the police?'
Shanahan shook his head. âProbably no worries. Missing person.'
âDaughter, son?'
âBrother.'
Channarong nodded. âHe did something bad to you?'
âNo. Just trying to find him.'
âPardon me, but does he owe you money?'
âYou have good questions. No.'
âYou have a picture?'
âNo. Haven't seen him in sixty years. I have no idea what he looks like. Probably a little like me â maybe heavier, maybe not, maybe taller, maybe shorter.'
The guide smiled a mischievous smile.
âI know. We all look alike anyway.'
âI wouldn't have said that,' Channarong said.
âNo, I suspect you wouldn't have said it out loud.' Shanahan took a sip of his beer. The lighter Thai beer was perfect for the hot weather. âOne more thing, would you consider looking into something before tomorrow. Begin today, is what I'm saying. Can you?'
Channarong nodded.
Shanahan reached into his pants pocket, pulled out a folded piece of paper. He unfolded it, handed it to the guide. As he read it, Shanahan continued.
âI need to know what my brother was accused of smuggling and any other details you can find out about the case. Who did he hit? Who arrested him? Has he been brought up on charges since then? Is there a home address in there anywhere?'
Channarong nodded again, looked at his watch. âYes, I can probably find that out. I need to get started right away.' He took another sip of water and bowed slightly to Maureen who had arrived as he prepared to leave.
âI hope I didn't frighten him away,' Maureen smiled.
âHe couldn't withstand the power of your beauty.'
âThat must be it. I can barely stand it myself.'
FOUR
Howie Cross was a problem for the police. That was how James Fenimore Kowalski explained it to Cross as they headed for breakfast at Dufour's in Irvington. There wasn't enough to hold Cross, the attorney told him, but it was âplenty bad enough.' Not only were there bodies in the trunk of a car he was driving, it appeared he and his dead accomplice were trying to hide the victims in a garage at the back of a used car lot in the middle of the night. What the police really needed was to have a wall of evidence or a witness to the shooting or at least a clear motive to hold him because if he were found not guilty then Slurpy's sloppy death would be a dark cloud.
âSo,' Kowalksi said, âyou are under suspicion, deep suspicion, but are free to go.'
âAt the moment.'
âVery much at the moment. Did you know you're eating at an historic spot?' Kowalski said, reading the menu. âUsed to be a drugstore and it was robbed by John Dillinger in 1933 says here. Cross and Dillinger. This place is a real magnet for tough guys, it seems.'
Cross tried to smile, but the only thing that was about to brighten his day was the pancakes, eggs and sausage coming his way. Kowalksi ordered Mama Dufour's French Toast.
âWhat are you planning to do?' Kowalski asked.
âTalk to the guy who owned the Town Car, find out who was in the trunk and, I hope, what they'd done to get there.'
âWhere to?' Kowalski asked as they stepped out on to Washington Street.
âI need to get to a car. Can you drop me at the car lot?'
It was a straight shot east on Washington, the main east/west thoroughfare crossing dead center Indianapolis and a demarcation some saw as the real Mason-Dixon line. Though it didn't take long, and as exhilarating as it was, Cross was glad to be off the Harley. His legs were a little shaky. It was a little like riding a horse except for the weird buzz between his legs. And it was just a little too intimate for Cross.
Edelman was outside talking to a uniformed cop who stood by the area where the Town Car had been parked and where Slurpy met his end. There was yellow crime tape around an empty space. Someone was playing by the rules even if the rules made no sense, which was one of the reasons Cross was no longer a cop. Edelman glanced up, his face, below a strongly receding hairline, gave nothing away. If he was worried, or scared, or happy, or pissed, you'd have to deduce the mood from very subtle changes in his voice.
When Edelman turned toward Cross, the cop meandered away and eventually into a row of cars.
âWhat went down last night?' Edelman asked, his eyes following Kowalksi's loud Harley departure.
âYou tell me,' Cross said.
âDon't know. You were there.'
âI went where you sent me. So tell me, how did I end up driving a car with two dead people in the trunk?'
Edelman lit a cigarette and began walking toward an area in back of the office, maybe, Cross thought, to distance them further from the cop.
âLook, I call Wilbert Morgan about the payments. He says he can't. Says as soon as he gets back from Memphis or Chattanooga or something in a couple of weeks, he'll have something for me. I ask him when he's leaving. He says âtomorrow,' which was the next day. I want the car back before it gets lost in some fucking bayou somewhere. So I call you.'
Edelman took a hit off his cigarette, stared at Cross and continued.
âNow I stop knowing what happened and now you start knowing what I don't know.'
Edelman shook his head, flipped the burning ash with a finger and rubbed the end on the bottom of his shoe. He held the stub in his hand, no doubt to dispose of it in a proper receptacle.
âI need a car,' Cross said.
âUse the one you were using. The Audi.'
âThe police have it.'
âWhy?' Edelman asked, curtly.
âMaybe I shot two kids, put them in the Audi before transferring them to the Lincoln.'
âSo now,' Edelman said, âI don't have the Town Car. I don't have the Audi. And you want another car. That's three cars because of you. What's going to be left on the lot, sport?'
âYou have to be kidding,' Cross said.
âOur deal was one car at a time,' he said, as he turned to leave.
Cross grabbed Edelman's shoulder.
âDon't fuck with me,' Cross said, almost surprised at the harshness in his voice.
Edelman turned back. He looked a little taken, then wary.
âYou threatening me?' Edelman asked.
âLook, if it weren't for you I wouldn't be facing murder charges.'
Edelman's smile was bitter, but he said nothing.
âYou think I'm not serious? I'm facing two murder charges. What's one more?'
Edelman relented. âLook around. No Hondas. Take something nobody wants.' Edelman walked away, stopped and turned back squarely. âWhen this is all settled, you and me don't have any business anymore.'