Deep Pockets (9 page)

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Authors: Linda Barnes

Tags: #Cambridge, #Women private investigators, #Mystery & Detective, #Carlyle; Carlotta (Fictitious character), #Crimes against, #General, #African American college teachers, #College teachers, #Women Sleuths, #Cambridge (Mass.), #Large Type Books, #Fiction, #Extortion, #Massachusetts

BOOK: Deep Pockets
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“Her roommate committed suicide,” I said.

“We follow protocols here. Policies. Who are you?”

“Somebody who knows what a protocol is, thanks. You want to wait till you’ve got another suicide on your hands, fine with me. I’m sure Legal Services will be enchanted.”

Jo’s foot started tapping as soon as I mentioned Legal Services. I wondered what a shrink would make of that. I also wondered if Denali Brinkman had a fat file in one of the color-coded rows that lined the wall behind the gorgon’s counter.

When I finally got Jeannie into a chair in a psychologist’s office, things improved. Dr. Rona Kupfer was a total contrast to the waiting-room witch, a motherly forty-five with a comforting smile and seen-it-all eyes. She wore a floral shawl to cut the chill from the air conditioning. Jeannie took one look at her and started to sob.

I wondered how I could find out whether Denali had made use of Harvard’s psychiatric services. Then I wondered what the hell it had to do with blackmail. I pondered the fact that Denali Brinkman’s family was considering bringing a lawsuit against Harvard. If the family — and who exactly was the family? — knew that a professor had been having an affair with their darling, that would be one more nail in Harvard’s coffin.

Would Harvard protect Chaney? Or toss him to the wolves?

I gave Jeannie my card, not the one that says “Private Investigations,” but the one that gives name, address, and phone number. She promised she’d call and tell me when I could come get Denali’s trophy. I left her in Dr. Kupfer’s gentle care and kicked my way through the dusty plaza in front of Holyoke Center. A flock of pigeons circled, landed, and started hunting for crumbs in the dirt. I wished them luck.

 

Chapter 9

 

If Jeannie St. Cyr had Denali’s candy box,
she was wasting her time as a prospective psych major. She ought to be onstage at the Loeb Drama Center, a full-fledged member of the American Rep acting company.

I wished I could raise two fingers to my mouth, whistle, and get my car to speed over from Central Square like some Western hero’s stallion in a late-night TV rerun. The car was in one direction; my house, my computer, and Dowling’s Somerville address in the other. Dead center between the two was Thompson Hall. And both blackmail notes had been shoved under the door of Chaney’s Thompson Hall office.

Why push notes under an office door when the U.S. mail provides a beautifully anonymous delivery method? Nobody’s gonna catch you lurking by one of those million or so blue postboxes. There’s certainly a greater chance someone will notice you bending and placing a note beneath a door.

Logically, the blackmailer should be someone who would, in the ordinary course of events, be found in the school of education, a native who could credibly say, if caught stashing the note, “Look what I found!” That’s why I’d gone for Jeannie St. Cyr, registered student, over a boyfriend with no Harvard connection.

Chaney had a larger office across the river at a Harvard-affiliated research site and a cubby at the Med School. He owned a house off Brattle Street. Why not deliver the note to the Med School, the research site, the house? Did Mrs. Chaney open her husband’s mail? Do wives blackmail husbands? I smiled at the thought, rephrased it. Do they blackmail their spouses in such a literal way?

As I hurried up Mass Ave, I checked my cell, making sure the battery was charged. I knew Chaney should have the money by now, and I wanted to make sure he could reach me at any time. He was convinced the money drop would be the same as the first time, the faculty lot behind Thompson. I was pretty sure it would be different. The more times you go to the well, the more you expect the well to be guarded.

Hell, if I were the blackmailer, I’d choose a different well altogether. I walked faster, sneakers pounding the brick sidewalk. Late-afternoon sunlight slanted through the elms. Maybe my blackmailer was a creature of habit. Just because the scene of the crime was Harvard didn’t mean he was bright.

Harvard’s ed school looks a bit like a stepchild. Radcliffe Yard is nowhere near as grand as its big brother; even the grass is less well kept. The buildings don’t share the redbrick Oxbridge look of the Harvard Yard structures. Some seem more like weathered clapboard houses than halls of learning. The small crushed-stone parking lot to the rear of Thompson Hall had places for ten cars max.

Not such a bad place for a money drop after all — sheltered from the street by a tall yew hedge, from neighboring buildings by high brick walls. I took note of entrances and exits, auto and pedestrian, decided where I’d position myself when and if the drop went down here.

Thompson Hall is an undistinguished modern cement and glass rectangle. Query: How difficult would it be for an outsider to shove a note under Chaney’s office door? Building access should be easy enough; the ed school wasn’t some nuclear launch site under Cheyenne Mountain. There was an obvious main door, double-wide, up three shallow granite steps. I used a less notable side door, then gravitated to the main foyer, where a chart conveniently gave the location of Dr. Chaney’s second-floor office.

I passed unchallenged up the stairs. The building smelled musty, like old library books. Sunlight filtered through dusty casement windows on the staircase landing. The banisters were carved dark wood; the steps covered with institutional rubber tread. There was no visible security, just the sublime assumption that the people in the building were people who belonged. Everywhere I looked, heads were bent over tasks. No security guards, and what was there to secure? Desks and chairs? Educational philosophies?

At the door of suite 205, I hesitated. The numerals had been printed beside Chaney’s name on the chart, but the word
suite
hadn’t accompanied them. The door to suite 205 had a pebbled-glass half window, the look of a door that led into an outer office. I turned the knob.

“May I help you?”

She had fifties-style bouffant hair, sprayed to within an inch of its life. A pink sweater set stretched across her broad bosom, and, yes, her spectacles dangled from a chain. A veritable dragon lady.

“I’m looking for Professor Taubman’s office?” His was the next floor up.

“He has no office hours today. May I please see your ID?”

“You mean today’s Thursday? Shit. Excuse me. God, I thought it was Friday. Oh shit.” I held up my wrist and stared at my watch. “I’m late at the Faculty Club.”

I turned and moved, not so quickly that she’d think I was fleeing, which I was, but briskly enough that not one in thirty security-conscious secretaries would have pursued me.

So much for infiltrating Chaney’s office. I wondered when the dragon lady went home at night, how a Somerville townie could rely on easy access. Might he have an accomplice among Chaney’s teaching assistants, secretaries, colleagues, students?

I scribbled names and numbers while I walked back toward the car. The dragon lady’s nameplate identified her as Esther Cummings. The department chair, George Fording, had digs on the third floor. The window on the driver’s side of my Toyota was plastered with a city of Cambridge Day-Glo orange parking ticket. Exceeding the time on the meter. Damn.

At home, the dishes were still in the sink. No evidence that Roz was there, not that I planned to climb to her third-floor aerie to check. I yelled upstairs instead; I hate to go up there, because her artwork is scary. She does postpunk weird stuff and considers the third floor her canvas. The note I’d left for her on the fridge, asking her to sort through the Chaney Web references, appeared untouched.

I got a Pepsi to sustain me and sat down to play the keyboard, regretting the fact that I never took typing in high school because I wasn’t gonna be anybody’s coffee-fetching secretary. Made three errors entering Benjamin MacKenzie Dowling’s name alone. I typed in his Claremont Street address. With his name and address, courtesy of Officer Burkett’s incident book, I trolled for his birth date and Social Security number. Give me a name, address, DOB, and SSN, and I can find the rest.

Once I knew the golden four, I visited the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles site and discovered that Dowling drove a black ’99 TransAm. I got the plate number. I debated phoning my friend Gloria and asking her to summon up Dowling’s credit history. She owns the local cab company for which I sometimes drive, and she joined CBI, one of the largest credit-rating bureaus, at my urging.

The three major credit bureaus, CBI (aka Equifax,) TRW, and Trans Union are essentially off-limits to civilians. It’s illegal to nab credit status, but the FTC, no less, says it’s okay to access what’s known as “header information.” I decided to call up the header stuff on my own. Gloria likes to talk, and I wanted background on Dowling fast.

I punched keys. CBI was my first try, because they’re the largest and handle most of the East Coast. I went on to TRW, then Trans Union, a sinking feeling in my gut. No credit record whatsoever.

Maybe if I hadn’t suspected him of blackmail, I’d have shrugged it off, simply figured, Well, maybe Dowling hasn’t had much luck, hasn’t established himself financially. But the man drove an okay car. Who buys a car for cash on the barrelhead? I tried a dot-gov listing to see if Dowling had outstanding college loans. Nope. The lack of a credit history, any credit history, didn’t sit right. Who has no debt? Rich folks who pay cash. Crooks.

Call it a hunch, but it’s based on some of the oldest saws in the book. Criminals tend to start young; criminals are not that bright. They tend to get caught; they tend to repeat their bad behavior.

I dialed Gloria, but instead of asking her to run credit on Benjamin, I asked her to run a CORI, a criminal offenders record check. The Commonwealth of Massachusetts currently allows business owners to check the past criminal misdeeds of prospective employees. They finally got the message that cab companies don’t want to hire habitual DUI offenders, that schools don’t really want a rapist on the payroll.

As fast as I don’t type, that’s how fast Gloria does. Not that she’d devote her full attention to my request. I imagined her in her office, her wheelchair occupying its niche behind the phone console. Gloria’s skin is so dark, it glistens. From the waist up, she’s a whirlwind of activity, what with dispatching cabs, listening to the police scanner, eating junk food. I pressed the phone to my ear; sounded like she was munching Doritos.

My rookie pal, Burkett, hadn’t mentioned the fact that Benjy Dowling had a record, but cops tend to give what they want to give. I wouldn’t put it past even a rook to withhold information.

“Give me the DOB.” Gloria’s weight hovers at 325 pounds.

“Eleven/twenty-one/sixty-nine.” The man was over thirty. Chaney was over forty. The girl had had a thing for older men.

“Bingo.”

“What for?” Damn it, if Burkett had told me, I’d have homed in on Dowling like a hawk on a wounded chicken. Of course, I wouldn’t have found out about the impending lawsuit, wouldn’t have steered Jeannie toward needed help.

“A deuce for armed robbery. Concord sentence. Parole.”

That surprised me. They’ve cut back funding for the parole office so much, most cons serve their full term. “Give the name of the PO?”

“Garnowski, J.” She spelled it.

“Thanks a bunch, Gloria. I owe you.”

“You got that right, babe. When you gonna pull a shift for me?”

“I’m working a case.”

“Sam asked how you were.”

I don’t know how, but Gloria managed to load those five words with about a hundred shaded questions.
What’s going on with you and Sam? Did you dump him? Did he dump you? When are you going to get back together, and why did you split this time
?

“Thanks.” I pretended I hadn’t heard, then hung up. Gloria adores Sam; she’s his partner in the cab company, one of his few legal business ventures. I’ve never been sure how much she knows or wants to know about his mob involvement. Paolina adores Sam, too; she treasures the dream that Sam and I will marry someday, used to imagine herself trotting down the aisle in a pink dress, a flower girl tossing rose petals.

I seem to be the only one bothered by the fact that he recently caved in to his mob-boss father and agreed to take his place in the Gianelli hierarchy. Why can’t I accept the party line, that he’s not one of the goombahs, that he’s simply trying to move the mob’s money into legitimate enterprises? My hand was still grasping the phone, squeezing so hard, I was surprised the receiver didn’t snap in two. I breathed in and out, let my muscles relax, and brought myself back to Chaney’s problem.

Benjy Dowling was a con. Two years for armed robbery was real. It wasn’t like kiting checks or possession of marijuana. I marveled at Denali Brinkman’s luck. Against all odds, an orphan off an Indian rez gets into an Ivy League university. She sleeps with a prof and hooks up with an ex-con, behavior not recommended during freshman orientation. Made me wonder what lurked behind the blurred features in the grainy news photo. Some people attract disaster, thrive on a constant diet of argumentative scenes and lurid distractions. I wondered whether Denali was like that, a drama queen, or if things simply happened to her, if she was the calm center that summoned the storm.

 

Chapter 10

 

The flame was from a candle, a small
votive illuminating my hands and the hands of the man sharing my table. Leon’s hands, or Sam’s hands? And maybe the flame wasn’t from a candle, but the glowing tip of a cigarette. The tiny circle of flame grew and sparked, catching the whiteness of the tablecloth. The cloth flapped like a sheet as flame seared and devoured it, orange and blue, writhing and shuddering. Flames shot up like a geyser, catching the heavy curtains in the foyer, the old velvet drapes I’d tried to yank down to stop the flames, but there was no stopping them now. And then the flame changed and surged, and I knew the boats were burning, long, slender racing shells with their oars akimbo. The woman’s face was out of focus, but I thought it might be Jeannie’s, then my own, then the one in the photograph of Denali Brinkman. She was burning, too, and when I yelled for her to jump in the water, she nodded with that secretive smile still on her face, but she stayed in the boat, burning while I screamed that the cooling water was right beneath her, close at hand, so close.

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