3
In Parker's office at One
Police Plaza, Blake listened to the whole story. When the police
captain was finished, Blake nodded.
'I'd like to hear what Romano said from his own
mouth, then I'd like to see where it
happened.'
'Be my guest.' Parker picked up the telephone.
'Have my car at the front entrance in
five minutes.'
Shortly thereafter, still in the rain, that bad
March weather, they stood on the edge of
the pier with umbrellas and looked down
into the water covered with scum and flotsam.
'She was there by the steps,' Parker told him.
'The night watchman saw her. I happened to be walking
along.'
'And you pulled her in.'
'I couldn't leave her.'
Blake nodded. 'Let's go and see Romano.' He
turned and walked away.
At the morgue, Romano was in the chief medical
examiner's office, drinking minestrone
soup from a plastic cup and eating French bread. Parker made the
introductions.
Romano said, 'I'm really
sorry.'
'Just tell me what you told
Harry.'
Romano did.
'So she was murdered?'
'In my opinion, and for what it's worth,
yes.'
'But why?' Parker demanded. 'And what would a
nice middle-class lady with an apartment
in the Village be doing in Brooklyn
under these circumstances?' They sat silent for a moment. 'You never had any children, did you,
Blake?'
'No.' Blake shrugged. 'It wasn't possible. She
was sterile, so she concentrated on her
career, and I concentrated on mine. We
just kind of drifted apart. But though we got divorced, we never lost touch. We were always
concerned friends.' He turned to Romano.
'I'd like to see the body.'
'No, you wouldn't.'
'Yes, I damn well would.' At that moment Blake
looked every inch the Vietnam
veteran.
Parker put a hand on Romano's shoulder.
'George, I'd say we should indulge the
man.'
'Okay, let me phone down.'
She lay on one of the tables under the hard
white light.
There were enormous stitched scars where Romano
had opened her up, the same scar around
the skull.
Blake felt incredibly detached. This creature
had been the love of his life, his wife, his support in many bad
times, and now...
He said, 'I was never all that religious, but
human beings are pretty remarkable.
Einstein, Fleming, Shakespeare, Dickens.
Is this what it ends up as? Where's Kate? This isn't her.'
'I can't give you an answer,' Romano told him.
'The essence, the life force – it just
goes. That's all I can say.'
Blake nodded slowly. 'I'll tell you one thing.
She deserved better, and someone should
pay for this.' His smile was the most
terrible thing Parker had ever seen when he said, And
I'm going to see that they
do.'
Back at Parker's office, there was a message
for him to phone Helen Abruzzi.
'What's new?' Parker asked.
'Well, we checked out Katherine Johnson's
house, and it's been burgled.'
'Damn,' Parker said. 'Okay, we'll be right
there.' He turned to Blake and
explained. Blake said, 'Let's take a look.' Helen Abruzzi was
already there ahead of them when they arrived.
'There's no sign of forced entry, but the study
upstairs has been ransacked. It's hard
to tell what's been taken.' She led the
way, opened the study door, and entered. Thes cene of devastation was evident, videotapes scattered all
over the place.
Parker said, 'Anything in the
machinery?'
'Not a thing. No disks, no tapes, no copies,
nothing in the computer.'
'That smells, for starters.'
Blake said, 'Somebody was after something,
Harry, that's obvious, and probably found it. The thing is, what
and why?' He turned to Abruzzi. 'Have the crime scene people
finished here?' She nodded. 'Then could
you get your people to look at these
tapes littering the floor, Sergeant? You never know. You might turn
up something.'
'I'll see to it, sir.'
Blake started down the stairs, and Parker said,
'Now where?'
'Truth magazine. I
want to see Kate's editor, find out what
she was working on. You don't have to come. You've
got other cases on your hands, Harry. I can
handle this on my own.'
'Like hell you will/ Harry Parker told him.
'Let's get going.'
The editor of Truth magazine, Rupert O'Dowd,
was the kind of middle-aged journalist
who'd seen it all, been there, and done
that, and he had little residual faith in human nature. Nevertheless, sitting in his office in
shirtsleeves, he reacted with horror to the suggestion that
Katherine Johnson had been murdered.
'Please, tell me, what can I do to
help?'
'You can tell us what she'd been involved in
lately,'Johnson said. 'Was she working
on anything special, anything
dangerous?'
O'Dowd hesitated. 'Well, there's a question of
journalistic ethics here.'
'And there's the question of my wife being
murdered by the administration of a
massive heroin dose, Mr O'Dowd. So don't
play around or I'll make you wish you'd never been born.'
O'Dowd put up a hand. 'Okay, okay, you don't
have to come down hard.' He took a deep
breath. 'She was working on a big Mafia
expose.'
There was silence. Parker said, 'Isn't that old
stuff?'
'Only because the Mafia wants you to think
that. Let me explain. The ruling power
in the Mafia, the Commission, right? It
called a halt to mob killings in New York in 1992 because of the
bad publicity.'
'So?'
'So they started again last year. Five stiffed
in Palermo a month ago, three in New
York, four in London. But it's all
different, all back-room stuff you can't connect to them.
They've gone legit. They don't figure in
Forbes magazine, but they're easily the
biggest company structure in Europe. The drug market in America is
saturated, so they've moved to Eastern
Europe and Russia, but now they do it behind an elaborate
facade.'
'So what are you saying?' Blake
asked.
'That the days of men in gold chains have gone.
Now they wear good suits and sit next to
you in the Four Seasons or the Piano Bar
at the Dorchester in London. They are into construction, property development, leisure, TV. You
name it, they do it.'
There was a pause. Blake said, 'So where did my
wife fit in to all
this?'
'As I indicated, these days the new image is
everything. The most influential Mafia
group right now is the Solazzo family.
Don Marco is the old devil who runs things, but he
has an extraordinary nephew named Jack Fox.
Fox's mother was Don Marco's niece, so
the good Jack is half and half, though
he sounds very Anglo-Saxon. He was a young Marine in the Gulf, a
decorated war hero, Harvard Law School, and now he's the
respectable face of the Solazzos.'
'And how does this affect
Katherine?'
'She managed to get into a relationship with
Fox. She was intending to produce a devastating series, not only
for Truth magazine but also for our TV side.' There was silence,
then O'Dowd said, 'She wanted to get
behind that acceptable face of the Mafia
and expose it.'
'Which meant showing the reality behind Fox,'
Parker said.
'And he couldn't have that.' Blake nodded. 'So
now we know.' He stood up and said to O'Dowd, 'Play this
down. Trust me. Give us time and you'll
get the story Kate wanted.' He held out his hand. 'A
bargain?'
'It sure as hell is.'
On the way downstairs, Parker's mobile rang. He
answered and nodded. 'We'll be there.'
He turned to Blake. 'Abruzzi. She's
sorted out the videotapes. Wondered if you'd like
a look.'
'Why not?' Blake said.
The study at Barrow Street was much more
ordered now, the videotapes arranged
neatly on the shelves.
Helen Abruzzi said, 'I've put the movies on the
top two shelves, the language courses
and self-help tapes on the bottom two
shelves.' She turned to Blake. 'There is one that refers to you, sir. That's what I thought you'd
want to know.'
Blake said, 'What do you
mean?'
'The label says: Blake's
parents.'
Blake was silent for a moment. 'My parents died
when I was very young. I never knew
them. And my wife knew that better than anyone. I'd appreciate you
turning that tape on, Sergeant.'
He sat down, Parker stood behind him, and the
screen flickered.
'This is just a fail-safe, Blake, my darling,
in case anything goes wrong. As someone
who was the pride of the FBI and whatever you get up to there at the White House, I know
you'll find this one way or the other.' She smiled at him.
'These are bad people that I'm trying to
expose, the Solazzo family. Don Marco's
like Brando resurrected for Godfather IV,
cold, calm, and businesslike, even while he
seems like your favourite
grandfather.'
'Jesus!' Harry Parker said.
'But Don Marco is old-school. Jack Fox is
different. The genuine all-American hero and Wall Street golden
boy.You'd think he was some Boston blue
blood, but instead he's a cold-blooded
psychopath, the worst of them all. Get in his way and you're dead. Well, I'm going to get
him. Lull
him to sleep with the first article, then wham!
He'll never know what hit
him.'
Blake hammered a clenched fist on a coffee
table and Helen Abruzzi stopped the
tape.
'What in the hell are you
doing?'
'I'm giving you a chance to breathe deeply. I'm
also finding you a drink. Trust me, Sir.'
Parker put a hand on his shoulder. 'She's
right, Blake.' Helen Abruzzi returned
with a glass. 'Vodka, it's all I could
find. It was in the freezer.'
'That's what she liked, cold vodka.' Blake
drank it down. 'Okay, let's get on with it.'
The screen flickered again. 'I was real lucky.
I found a guy called Sammy Goff, who
used to do accounting work for Jack Fox.
Nice guy, very gay and very ill. AIDS, which is why Fox threw him out. I was having lunch with Fox in
Manhattan one day. He left early, and Goff came up to me.
"You look like a nice lady," he said, "so watch
it. He's not good for
you."'
A telephone sounded in the background and she
went to answer it and returned.
'Okay, Goff was dying and bitter. I cultivated
him, and with three martinis in him he
sounded off good, and what he told me
was special. Here's the lead. Fox is front man for
the family. Smart, very clever, but he's always
pushing for more. He's played the market
with family money and lost,particularly with the Asian crisis. How
much the Don knows about this is unknown to me. He's getting by
because he's responsible for the Solazzo flagship casino in London,
the Colosseum. The cash flow from that
is critical to him. He can't milk the
family's large interests, the drug market in Eastern Europe and Russia, for example, but he has
personal cash flow that helps keep him
afloat. There's a warehouse in Brooklyn
called Hadley's Depository. The one thing they store there is whisky. Cheap liquor. The booze is
watered down and then sold to the clubs
at a huge profit margin.'
Parker said, 'I can't believe the Don doesn't
know.'
Blake waved a hand and Katherine continued.
'Another sideline in London is he's been involved with some
heavy gangsters called the Jago
brothers. Armed robbery, that kind of
stuff, Sammy Goff said, always a source of instant cash.
Fox's bad investments in the Far East are
draining him. More serious, he's been into arms dealing, too,
specifically for the IRA. He helped somebody called Brendan Murphy,
a real hard-liner who didn't like the
peace process, not only to buy arms but
to build a concrete bunker in County Louth in the Irish Republic. There's everything there from
mortars to the kind of machine gun that
can shoot down an Army helicopter. Oh, and lots of
Semtex.'
'My God,' Helen Abruzzi said
softly.
'Goff told me there was also some link with
Beirut via Murphy. Arms for Saddam, that
sort of thing. He didn't have many
details on that. The other thing he told me was that Fox doesn't own a London house. He usually stays in a
suite at the Dorchester, but he does have an indulgence. An old
castle and estate in Cornwall, in England. Very rural, very remote.
Believe it or not, it's called Hellsmouth. Somewhere near Land's
End.'
A telephone sounded in the background again.
There was some confusion. She was off-screen, then back
quickly.
'It's a hell of a story, thanks to Sammy Goff.
However, although I'd like to expose it,
Blake, life is uncertain, and the other
day poor dying drunken Sammy was the victim of a hit-and-run driver. Now, was that an accident? I
don't think so. He just knew too
much.'
The screen seemed to jump and her voice
scrambled for a moment. Things returned to normal. She smiled
brightly.
'So there you are, my darling Blake. I'd like
to believe the good guys win, but life can be such a bitch. If
you're watching this, that probably
means that the bad guys won this time.'
The smile slipped for a moment, then came back, a little more tentative this time. 'Take care, and
remember, in spite of everything, I've
always loved you.'
Helen Abruzzi switched off. Blake sat there,
eyes dark. 'I'd appreciate you running
that back, Sergeant.'
'It's evidence, sir.'
'Just get the man a copy,' Parker told
her.
Blake got up and walked to the window. After a
moment, he turned. 'Okay, Harry, arrange
a meeting with the bastard.'
'I'll have to check with the District
Attorney.'
'Try the Pope if you like, but I want to face
Jack Fox.' 'Maybe you should take time,
sir,' Abruzzi told him. Blake took a
document from an inside pocket and unfolded it. 'You've never seen one of these. Sergeant. Harry has.
It's a Presidential warrant. You belong
to me, not NYPD, and so does he. Now let's get
moving.'
It was the following morning when Parker picked
up the Buick at the Plaza Hotel. The
woman in the rear of the police car was
very personable, around forty and smartly dressed, a briefcase on the floor beside
her.
Blake sat in front and Parker said, 'Assistant
District Attorney Madge
McGuire.'
She shook hands as they drove away. 'I
understand you're FBI, Mr Johnson.'
'Used to be.' He turned to Parker. 'Did you
tell her?' 'How could
I?'
Blake took out his Presidential warrant and
passed it across. Madge McGuire read it.
'Jesus Christ.'
She handed it back and Blake put it in his
pocket. 'So, what do you
think?'
'We're wasting our time. Dammit, Mr Johnson, we
all know the reality, but we can't prove it. You'll see – Fox will
be all sweetness and light: any way he can help, he
will, but when we finish we'll be no better off
than when we started. His attorney,
Carter Whelan, will be there, by the
way. That one is a serpent.'
"Fine by me.'
`Okay. I'm bound by that warrant, but let me do
my job, Mr Johnson.'
-'Be my guest.'
When they got there, Fox was sitting behind a
desk, wearing an excellent navy blue
suit, his hair swept back from his
handsome face. The man who sat beside him, Carter Whelan, was small, balding, and wore a black
suit.
'I'm Madge McGuire, Assistant District
Attorney, and this is Captain Harry
Parker.'
'Pleased to meet you, Miss McGuire. I'm sure
you know my attorney, Carter Whelan. And you are aware, I'm
sure, that I'm an attorney myself. May I
ask who this other gentleman
is?'
'Blake Johnson, also an attorney,' Blake told
him. 'I believe you knew my wife.'
Whelan said, 'He's no right to be
here.'
Fox cut in. 'I've no objection. I was
distressed to know of Katherine
Johnson's untimely end. You have my sympathy.'
Parker said, 'Evidence would suggest that Mrs
Johnson's death was no accident. Could
you assist us in that matter, Sir?'
Whelan said, 'Jack, you don't need to answer
any of this.'
'Why not?' Fox shrugged. 'I've nothing to hide.
I knew Katherine Johnson, gave her interviews, and she did an
article about me for Truth
magazine. It's in the latest edition. Quite
flattering, actually.'
'Except for the references to the Solazzo
family.' 'Just how well did you know
her, sir?' Parker asked. Fox said, 'I
knew her well.'
'How well?'
Fox seemed to struggle with himself. 'All
right, we had a brief affair. It only lasted a few weeks, and I
didn't want to mention it, because I
didn't want to damage her reputation in
any way. For God's sake, the lady is dead.'
It was an impressive
performance.
Madge McGuire said, 'Did you ever know her to
use heroin?'
Fox struggled with himself again, got up, went
to the window, turned, face working.
'Yes, once. I caught her at her
apartment. I was shocked, tried to remonstrate. She said
she'd only just started and promised to stop,
but ... I guess she
didn't.'
Whelan said, 'She was obviously not very
practised with it and must have
accidentally given herself too much, or had a particularly lethal batch.'
'Still, there are certain anomalies,' Parker
told him. 'Which have nothing to do with
my client.' Whelan turned to Madge
McGuire. 'Are we finished here?'
'Yes,' Madge said. 'That'll do for now. Thank
you for your cooperation.'
She stood up, and Fox said, 'Hasn't Mr Johnson
anything to say?'
Blake stood up, face pale, eyes very dark. 'Not
really. It's all pretty clear,' and he
turned and walked out.
In the car, Madge said, 'There's no case,
people. It's not even worth trying to
bring one. He just gave the explanation for the lack of track marks – she'd just started shooting
and didn't know what she was
doing.
''But if she'd shot
up before, wouldn't there be some
tracks?'
'If it was only a few times, not necessarily.
Whelan would laugh it out of court, Mr
Johnson. There's evil here and we don't
know the half of it, but there's nothing we can do,'
Madge told him.
'It gets harder the older I get.' Parker shook
his head. 'I've been a cop long enough to know when something
stinks, and this surely does.'
Blake lit a cigarette and leaned back. 'But
what about justice?'
'What do you mean?' Madge
asked.
'What happens if it isn't done, and the law
doesn't work? Is someone entitled to
take the law into his own hands?'
'Well, I know one thing,' Parker told him. 'It
wouldn't be the law they were
taking.'
'I suppose not.'
'What will you do, Blake?'
'Go back to Washington. See the President.
Arrange a funeral.' The car pulled in at
the Plaza. He shook hands with Parker and turned to Madge. 'Many
thanks, Miss McGuire.'
He got out and went up the steps to the hotel.
As the car moved away, Madge said, 'Are
you thinking what I am, Harry?'
'If you mean, God help Jack Fox,
yes.'
At the office, Fox waited for a computer
printout he'd ordered on Blake Johnson. It finally appeared and he
was reading through it when there was a knock on the door and
Falcone entered.
'Just checking, Signore. Is there anything I
can do?'
Fox passed him the printout. Falcone read it.
'Quite a record.'
'It sure as hell is. War hero, FBI, took a
bullet saving the President. But there's
a block there. What's he been doing lately? I'll have to get my top people to work on
it.'
'Is he a threat?'
'Of course he is. He didn't believe me for a
moment about his wife. Aldo, I've stared
at the face of the enemy in Iraq, and I know what I saw in Blake
Johnson's eyes. There was no rage in
them, only revenge. He'll be coming, and we must be
ready.'
Always, Signore.'
Falcone went out, and Fox went to the window as
a flurry of sleet brushed across
Manhattan. Strange, he wasn't afraid. He was excited.