“What woman?”
“She was a rookie. Maybe she didn’t know what was going on. She’s big shit in Baton Rouge. You know, what’s-her-name, Deshotel, she’s the attorney general now.”
That same evening Jim Gable told his wife he was going to cut his losses, take early retirement, and move the two of them to New Mexico. Dana Magelli had actually sicced IAD on him. Could you believe it? Two plainclothes picked him up in the mayor’s office and grilled him down at the district like a perp. A pair of polyester desk pilots who smelled like hair oil and made grade by jamming up other cops.
“What’s your association with Maggie Glick?” one of them asked.
“I don’t have one.”
“That’s not what she says.”
“Let me give you guys a short history lesson,” Gable said. “This used to be a good city. We knew who and where everybody was. People say they don’t like vice. What they mean is they don’t like it uncontrolled. We’d tell the dagos somebody was out of line and they’d throw him off a roof. Muggers got their noses broken with a blackjack. The whores didn’t spread clap through the tourist trade. That’s the way the old days were, boys. Go back to Dana Magelli and tell him to open a fruit stand.”
Jim Gable stood in his den, surrounded by his collection of ordnance, and drank from a glass of whiskey and ice. He opened a mahogany humidor and took a plump cigar from it and gingerly bit off the tip and lit it.
He could probably get around the IAD investigation. He was too high up in the department, too long term, and he knew too many secrets about the misdeeds of others to be a sacrificial offering now. When a police department got hosed, a few street cops and midlevel functionaries took the heat and did the time, if any indeed was ever forthcoming.
The real problem was this guy Johnny Remeta. How did he, Jim Gable, get mixed up with a psychopath, particularly one who could boost cars all over the state, smoke two police officers, and walk through walls as though he were invisible?
He didn’t like to think about Remeta. Perps and lowlifes were predictable as a class. Most of them were dumb and did everything in their power to get caught. They sought authority in their lives and attention from father figures and were too stupid to know it. Remeta was different. He brought both intelligence and genuine psychosis to his work, a combination that made Gable swallow unconsciously when he thought about it.
He picked up the jar containing the head of a Viet Cong from the table and set it on the mantel in front of the mirror. The head wobbled slightly in the yellow fluid and nudged against the glass, the slitted eyes staring up at Gable. It gave him a sense of comfort to be able to pick up the jar and move it wherever he wanted, although he wasn’t sure why. He looked out the window at the fall colors in the trees and the glitter of the sunset on the bay, and he wanted to wedge a revolver in the mouth of Johnny Remeta and blow the back of his head off.
His mood was broken by the sound of his wife dropping something in the bedroom.
“Dear, would you come in, please? I can’t bend over to get my cane,” she called.
He went into her bedroom and picked it up for her, then had to help her out of bed. She had not dressed that day and was still in her nightgown, and she smelled like Vicks VapoRub and sour milk. Her hand clung to his wrist after she was on her feet and in her slippers.
“Let’s have dinner out on the terrace. It’s such a lovely evening. I’ll order from the restaurant and have them bring it down,” she said.
“That’ll be fine, Cora.”
“Would you do a favor for me?” she asked, smiling wistfully. She wore no makeup, but there were gin roses in her cheeks and a merry light in her eyes. He nodded, then shivered at the prospect of what she might ask.
“Would you rub my feet? They ache terribly when the season changes,” she said.
But he knew what that meant. At first it would be her feet, then her back and neck, and at some point she would touch him on the cheek and let her fingers trail down his sternum and come to rest on his thigh. A visceral sensation washed through him and made his scalp tighten against the bone.
“I’m going through the accounts now. Can I fix you another drink and join you later on the terrace?” he said.
That was smart, he thought. She couldn’t expect him to perform romantically on the terrace.
But when he looked at her face, the pinched mouth, the eyes that were suddenly masked, he knew she had seen through him.
“I’ll call the restaurant now. But do fix me a drink, and bring my medicine from the cabinet, would you, please? I hate to be a bother. I am a bother, aren’t I?” she said.
He hated the tone in her voice. She was the cloying victim and martyr now, a role she was a master at. Her entire personality was a snake pit of neurotic aberrations. He never knew which one was going to slither out on the floor.
He took a bottle of vodka out of the icebox and placed it on a silver tray with a Gibson glass and a jar of tiny pearl onions and a demitasse spoon and set the tray out on the terrace. In the distance he could see a boat with a red sail disappearing over the horizon, and he wanted to be on the boat, the salt breeze in his face, a new life waiting for him somewhere in the Caribbean.
He just had to be patient. Every quart of gin or vodka she drank was like lighting a Chinese firecracker in her heart. She probably had over nine million in her portfolio at Piper, Jaffray. Even after he paid the tax on the capital gains, he could begin construction on his quarter horse track in New Mexico and still be able to live on a ranch in the high desert country and keep a cabin cruiser on the Texas coast.
Not bad for a working-class kid who actually walked a night beat in the Irish Channel.
He went back into the den and picked up his whiskey and ice and sipped from it. Through the window he heard Cora
on the remote phone, calling the restaurant for a delivery. He just didn’t know if he could bear another evening at home with her. He pulled open a side drawer on his cherrywood desk and removed an address book and thumbed through the names inside. He had entered only the initials beside the telephone numbers of the Mexican, Puerto Rican, and black girls who one way or another had come under his sway. There were over three dozen sets of initials in the book.