I read an article recently that stated the average man by age
forty-five has no male friends, just acquaintances. In our politically-correct
world, this stereotype plays out negatively against the backdrop of
women who have plenty of same-sex friends. Me? I’m still ahead of the game, but
not by much.
One male friend, Walter Wallace was having his usual
end-of-month card game, and I stopped at his house on the off chance that he’d
be in. I figured to pick up snacks for the game while I was out running errands.
I rang the bell, no answer. I nudged the unlatched door and the wind took it the
rest of the way open. I walked through the living-room into his white and black
Formica kitchen. Walter was on his stomach, on the floor, in a pool of black.
There were one wide arc of splattered blood against the wall as his spinning
body’s heart pumped, looking for a resistance that was no longer there. Its
coppery smell clogged my throat.
One less friend, one step closer to average. I returned to the
livingroom and pushed the front door shut with my toe. A giant
screen television dominated the corner. I’d seen the last Super Bowl from his
couch.
Even though the message count displayed zero, I hit the play
button on the answer machine. The nasal voice of his secretary blared, "Wally,
you up yet? Pick up, it’s me, Miranda. You there, honey?" The triple beep
signified the end.
There didn’t seem to be anything else to find, but then I had
no idea what to look for. I wiped my prints off the door knobs on the way out.
Wally, I thought. No one calls him Wally. And honey? Miranda
had a loser voice, but a winner body, and an above-average face. Walter was a
loser everything. My how our friends can surprise us.
The normal private detective might call the cops, but of late
my name wasn’t worth squat to them. Not so long ago I caught the cops
suppressing evidence for the city’s powers-that-be, and by methods unknown, that
evidence ended up with the media. Understand, no proof it was me, but they’re
not stupid.
So I was keeping a low profile, hoping everyone would forget,
but not really caring so much either way. In their gray world, cops want you to
follow their rules, even against common sense, or worse, against justice. They
know me, Mr. Black & White, they know I don’t work that way. Still, I like cops,
it’s only copdom I don’t particularly care for, copdom, and the self-serving,
self-protecting bureaucracy and politicians.
As I pulled out of Walter’s street onto the main drag, a
patrol car made the turn with its lights flashing, just missing my rear bumper.
I knew the cop at the wheel, but his attention was on the road. Just as well for
me.
* * * *
I ate a late lunch and spent some quality time thinking about
Walter. We were friends based on a single chance encounter. I met Wally at the
local minor league baseball game, he had the seat next to mine. We got to
talking about the game, and he pointed to someone in a green dress. I told him I
was color-blind. He said that was great, that I’d feel right at home in his
house, decorated in all black and white and gray since those were the only
colors he could match. He could see colors, but he had no sense of them. He
invited me to the poker game the next night. Later he decorated my office and
the apartment above it, same basic color-less scheme.
Walter’s a friend, for five years, and I didn’t even know
he was called Wally. What kind of friend is that? Well, it’s the kind of
friendships men make, not too deep, no commitments, no really personal stuff,
none of that let-me-share-your-pain girl-talk. Still, if he was your friend,
you’d probably let someone else deal with the inconvenience of his death. Friendship only goes so deep, right? Not me. I might not know everything
there was to know about Walter Wallace, but he was enough of a friend that I
wasn’t going to let anyone get away with his murder.
I wondered what it was Walter did for a living? I knew he
shipped stuff. He called them gray goods once. I’d joked, "Colors even I can
see, right?" He said it had nothing to do with colors, but he didn’t expand
further. I’m a guy, so I didn’t press.
I pulled up to his office in the Northwest, one of those
converted railroad properties near the old train station. I knocked and that
voice called, "The door’s open."
When I entered, she said, "Oh, it’s you. Walter’s not here
right now." We’d met once when she brought some papers to the poker game for
Walter to sign. She sat in on four hands and won three. We were glad to see her
go.
"When do you expect him back?" I asked.
She took on a confidential tone, "Well, to tell you the truth,
I don’t know. I thought maybe I should call his house, you know, because it’s
month-end, but hey, I’m only the secretary."
I debated on telling her Walter was dead, but decided against
it. She’d told me a lie, and I didn’t know why. "I’ll wait here. All right with
you, Miranda?"
She nodded. "Say, hey, no skin off my nose." She started
tapping the keys of her computer.
I interrupted her, "I thought you guys had a warehouse or
something?"
She gave me a I-don’t-like-being-interrupted smile through the
chewed-up dark lipstick which gave her mouth an uneven look around the edges as
it bled into the crinkles. "That’s what Walter wants everybody to think, but
it’s all gas. He’s a middle man. We move things from sellers to buyers. Never
get anything shipped here."
I kept up the friendly patter we were developing. "So what are
gray goods?"
"Gray? Oh," she smiled, "That’s what Walter tells everyone.
Gray stands for mysterious."
Before I knew it, we’d be friends. "So what were these
mysterious goods?"
"Don’t know," she said returning her eyes to the keyboard. "We
ship stuff with numbers. People call and order quantities of specific numbers.
Walter checks out the availability, then calls the shippers in China."
I tinged my voice with skepticism, "And you don’t know what
you’re selling?"
She turned angry eyes to me. "Hey, what’s with the
cross-examination. Walter told me the less I knew the better. I trusted Walter
to look out for my interests. When he said butt out, I butted out. You got a
problem with that?"
I noted the past tense. I told her I’d stop back later. The
door shut behind me with a light whoosh from the automatic closer.
"Look who’s here," the six-five, two-fifty, gray-headed
Detective
Dennis Doyle said to his short black partner.
"Yeah, city halls’s favorite PI. Maybe we should take him in
and score a few points. What do you think?"
"Nah." The big guy smiled, and even winked a transparent gray
eye at me. "He’d chew them up, spit them out sideways and we’d be the ones in
hot water." To me he said, "Don’t be going anywhere, Mr. Private Heat. What the
hell are you doing here?"
I put on my game face. "I’m waiting for Walter Wallace. We got
a poker game and I wanted to know what I should bring." Dredging up
thirty-second-old dialogue, I asked, "You got a problem with that, Detective?"
He pointed a thick finger at me. "You can forget the poker.
Wallace is dead." He studied my face for a reaction. "You’re one dangerous guy
to be around." He held the door open for me.
We all made our way back into the Walter’s office. The
detectives put on their game faces, and Miranda broke out in tears right there
at the keyboard. Seemed a bit forced to me, but who’s to say.
"It’s Walter?"
They nodded.
"Oh, poor Walter," she wailed.
The black cop stayed to question the tearful Miranda, and the
big cop took me to Walter’s office. We could see Miranda through the windowed
wall. It had all the reality of a television show, but without the fuzziness
that comes with color.
Doyle opened with a threat. "I
could take you downtown, and maybe you’d fall down, get some bruises. If the
captain finds out we had you and you just went walking, it’ll be hell to pay."
I was feeling a bit testy, but controlled it. "I’ve been
bruised before."
He opened the back door to the alley and motioned me out, then
let the door close, but not latch. "Yeah, well I’m not into bruising." He gave
me a look I’ll interpret as respect. "We all had some great laughs at the
station. You really pinned their ears back. For the first time I can remember,
the pols couldn’t blame everyone else."
Wrong and right, black and white, lies and truth, the currency
of my profession. I answered, "Too many years of getting off without the
consequences, you know, like what goes up sometimes comes down. Guess they found
out they can’t stop physics."
The cop laughed. "I don’t know about physics, but I do know
about pain, and they’re still smarting at City Hall. Some of us guys," he winked
again, "we watch out for you, on our own. Running a little interference, if you
know what I mean."
I was almost overcome. "Thanks."
The detective led me farther from the building. "But now, what
have you got to do with Wallace?"
"I told you the truth. We got our end-of-month poker game. I’m
in charge of the snacks. Miranda can probably verify that."
Doyle looked skeptical. "Don’t know anything else, like how
Wallace made a living?"
I shrugged my shoulders. "Haven’t the slightest. Sold gray
goods. You know what that means?"
Doyle was thoughtful. I saw his decision before he verbalized
it. "Wallace was a gun runner. The feds been monitoring him for years, keeping
track of terrorists and the like. Want to know what they’re buying, someone like
Wallace is good to watch. Got this from the FBI guy who got to the scene right
after the blue & white. He didn’t say it," he paused, then took the big dive,
"and you didn’t hear it from me, but I think Wallace may have been FBI himself,
deep cover. This much I know, the phones in his house were bugged. Probably the
same for the office. We ain’t ever going to hear those tapes."
* * * *
The guard had already made his rounds through the various
office complexes. I was parked two hundred yards down the street, next to the
railway tracks. The two bums who were eyeing my car after I disappeared into the
scenery, they knew I’d seen them, decided maybe I didn’t look like someone to
tangle with, ever.
It took about three minutes to pick the lock. It was a new
style Schlage, so it was slow going, but it wasn’t like there was anyone
watching. I guessed the surveillance equipment had been pulled, but once inside,
I opted for a minimum of noise. I left the lights off, just in case the guard
came by again. For most people, the world lit by flashlight looks eerie, devoid
of color, for me, it was just a dim version of normal, except the
grays tend to fade to black at the edges.
I started with Miranda’s desk, then moved to Walter’s, but
there was nothing. I moved to the files and looked through the order forms, some
with only Miranda’s handwriting on them. So much for it all being a mystery to
her. The lowest drawer was the receivables, payables, contracts and leases. I
looked for the phone company. I took the last six months billing statements and
vacated the premises for less risky environs.
In my office I scanned the reports into my computer, then
pared away the extraneous lines and pulled the phone numbers, dates and
durations into a simple spreadsheet, sorted by phone number. One number was
called every week, in Salem.
I blocked my caller id, then dialed. An answer machine came
on, a secretary’s soft Irish lilt, "You’ve reached Michael Murphy Enterprises.
We are unable to take your call at this time. Please leave a message."
I called for Dennis Doyle and got his voice mail. I pushed the
buttons to activate his beeper, hung up and waited. It took less than thirty
minutes.
Doyle was brusque, "Hello. You called my beeper. Who is this?"
"It’s your favorite private investigator."
I read irritation in his voice, "Hey, I complimented you, that
doesn’t make us friends. Okay?"
"Sure. Just wanted to know if you made any progress
on Wallace’s murder."
"What are you, a comedian? No, nothing." He paused, then, "But
you know that already. What do you want, shamus?" He laughed at the long
out-of-use moniker.
I laughed with him, like we were friends. "I want to know
about a man named Michael Murphy, lives in Salem."
There was a meaningful silence over the line. Would he tell
me? "I’m on your side, Doyle. I could use a little help here."
Another five seconds of dead line, then, "You ask a lot."
"It’s my job."
"Yeah, like mine’s telephone operator." But there was no anger
in it. "If it’s the guy I’m thinking of, Murphy is an IRA operative, big deal
lobbyist. Back and forth to Washington DC every week. He’s got some sort of
diplomatic immunity. This is more than I should be telling you."
"Hey, I’m almost done. You got anything on the secretary,
Miranda?"
"What, I do all the work, you take all the glory?"
I made a promise, "I’ve got no
client, I want no glory. Anything I learn, you learn. I just want to stop
Walter’s murderer."
"Okay, I’m a big boy, I’ll take my chances." I heard the
rustle of paper. "She’s got a record. Real name’s Moira O’Daly, told people she
was related to the Chicago politicians. She was born in Ulster, but came to the
states at three. Parents settled in the Bronx. That’s where she got the grinder
of an accent."
"So, what’s on the rap sheet?"
More rustling. "She was picked up twice for transporting cash
to Ireland, forty thousand the first time, two hundred the next time. Whoa!" The
silence was total, then, "Guess who posted bail both times?"
"Michael Murphy."
"Bingo!"
* * * *
The road to Salem was packed with travelers getting an early
jump on the weekend, if you can call Wednesday an early jump. I got into town
around four and found Murphy’s offices just outside the Capitol complex. It
seemed a long way from the business of the IRA.
The light was on in the office and the front door was open.
The secretary’s desk was unoccupied, so I called out, "Anyone home?" and an
Irish looking head peered out from the only office. "You Michael Murphy?" I
asked.
He came out and stood in front of me, six-four, eyes dead even
with mine. He had graying hair, probably mostly red in the colored world, thick
bushy eyebrows, deep-set light gray eyes, lined but mottled skin of a
drinker, thick, mud-gray lips. His hands were large and hairy, with cigarette
stains between two fingers of the right hand. Their rancid odor hung on him like
an overcoat.
He didn’t like me on first sight. "Yeah, I’m Murphy. Who the
hell are you?"
I leaned aggressively
towards him. "You ever hear about saying hi, how are you, maybe shaking hands?"
Nothing, no reaction. I was left having to fill the void between us. "I’m a
detective looking into the murder of Walter Wallace."
"Got nothing to do with me." He turned and headed back into
the office.
I followed him in. Cracking him with my incisive questioning
seemed like a losing proposition, so, "How’s the gun running business these
days?"
There was only a brief hitch in his step as he circled his
desk and flopped into the big black chair. "Guns? I’m just a lobbyist for
business interests in Ireland, Mr.?"
I ignored it. "Look, I don’t really care what you do for a
living. Walter was a gun runner. You were the guy he called the most. I know
you got your problems in Ireland, don’t mean a thing to me. Arm them all for all
I care, just have the last one standing turn out the lights."
His face clouded. "Last year, my wife and son died in a
bombing, from some really disagreeable people on my own side. Means something to
me."
I was pitiless, "Sounds like the cost of doing business to
me."
He said nothing, but he was getting angrier.
"So, revenge time?" I asked.
He shook his bushy head, then with regret, "No, he had too
many uses."
I believed him. "What about Miranda slash Moira?"
He eyed me with a bit more respect, but still thought some
before answering. "Moira was a hoodlum."
I dug a little deeper, "And your friends are the tooth
fairies?"
He laughed out loud. "I live in a world you can’t even
imagine, smart ass. Nothing is the way it seems, but who knows, maybe we’re just
fooling ourselves."
I nodded, but said nothing.
"No, she was just crooked. When the Feds caught her with the
two-hundred grand, she had a ticket for the Caribbean as well as Ireland. She
was going to skip, but I think she realized it wasn’t enough money. She changed
her mind."
"And ..."
He waved a hand dismissively as he reached for his jacket.
"And nothing. I got a plane to catch. Been great knowing you." He pushed me out
the door in front of him.
Without turning to face him, I said, "You know, Wallace was
FBI?"
He pulled on the corner of my shirt, turning me, real concern
marked his face.
I went on, making him sweat made me feel better. "Maybe your
friends already know. If I were you, I’d get my house in order." I made for the
parking lot.
* * * *
I ignored the crime scene tape and picked the lock to Walter’s
house. The smell of blood hung heavy in the air, but someone had washed it off
the floor and walls. I knew the cops had looked in all the obvious places, so I
just ambled around the rooms, thinking about where I would hide something I
wanted no one else to find, especially my handlers at the FBI.
I could see little impressions on the wall where they’d been
tapped with a hammer, and of course they’d used a metal detector. I got nowhere
for an hour, ending up down in the basement in a large laundry room with a
washer and dryer, a galvanized metal sink and a toilet. The wall behind the
toilet was painted two shades of white ... a thin gray line, maybe invisible to
the normal sighted. I opened the top of the water tank. There were the two
standard bolts into the wall, just above the water line. I got a wrench from
Walter’s pantry, turned the water off to the toilet, flushed it, then worked on
the bolts. As soon as the second one was a little loose, I felt the play in the
toilet. Once it was out, the toilet turned on ball bearings where the beeswax
ring would normally be. The tank swung away from the wall to expose a six inch
deep wooden shelf. I took the computer printout, and an envelope labeled 9633. I
put the toilet back in place and secured it to the wall.
The print was gibberish, but I knew Walter had a computer in
his bedroom. I turned it on and got comfortable. Using all the skills of my
pre-detective life, I was unable to find anything. I got into the Windows
Explorer, then located a string of normal letters in the printout. I did a
search for those and the machine slowly chugged along. Fifteen minutes later the
file was found. I tried to start it, and nothing. I copied it to an EXE file
name and tried again. This time it started and I had a blank white screen. None
of the keys seemed to work, then I entered 9633 and the spreadsheet filled the
screen.
It was all there, and I don’t mean Walter’s poker winnings.
He’d been skimming from his handlers, buying bearer bonds and stashing them in a
safe deposit box at The Third Bank of Portland. He had over three million. I
made some notes. I exited. First the program closed itself, then copied itself
over the file I originally found, erased itself, and then formatted the section
of disk where it had resided. I probably should have used the password before I
exited.
* * * *
The next morning I was at the bank when it opened. I showed my
credentials and asked if anyone had been in Walter Wallace’s safe deposit box
lately. The pretty young thing with the vice president title wouldn’t tell me
anything at first. I told her Walter was dead and the box would have to be
sealed, that I just wanted to know if anyone had been in it. She looked around,
then whispered that, yes, yesterday Walter had come with a woman, the
description fit Miranda.
I was back at Willie’s office. I started with the vendors
again, this time looking for a travel agency. I found it, ‘Been There, Done
That,’ located downtown.
A woman with a perky little-girl voice answered the phone,
"Been there, done that. How can we help you."
I said, "This is Walter Wallace. Were you people going to
deliver my tickets?"
I heard her shuffling paper. "No, Mr. Wallace. In fact,
Miranda just left with the tickets. I’m sure she’ll be there soon."
I ad-libbed, "I can’t wait, I’ve had a minor emergency and
won’t be in the office. Can you fax me the itinerary."
I waited for the document.
* * * *
Miranda was sitting pert as could be while she waited for the
plane. She was dressed in a white and gray flower-patterned summer dress, with
white pumps and bare legs. She had her hair pulled back into a ponytail, and her
makeup took her past the point of ordinary pretty. She must have had poor dear
Wally wrapped around her little finger, the two of them skipping away for a new
life in the tropics, although I’m sure the Bahamas wasn’t her final destination.
She’d have another passport, and she wouldn’t be on the island more than a day,
then Miranda nee Moira would be no more. The carry-on suitcase rested in the
seat next to her.
A man in a suit approached the line at the counter. He pushed
to the front and a man at the back yelled, "Hey Buster, get to the end of the
line."
The suit said, a little too loud, "What are you, the line cop.
Butt out, if you know what’s good for you."
The man in line looked like a fullback, and he got
belligerent. "Yeah." He puffed out his chest. "You just get the hell out of
here."
"Make me."
The big man stepped forward, grabbed the suit and threw him
rolling across the floor right in front of Miranda. As the fullback passed in
front of Miranda, grabbing for the suit, her eyes followed. I lifted the
suitcase and made my way to the exit. The commotion erupted into a full scale
fight as I turned the corner. Two security men passed me on a run, but I was
home free.
* * * *
I like cops, and if I’d gotten into this business at a younger
age, I’d’ve gone for the official side of the law, but that’s another story too
long for the telling. Cops are generally good people with the thankless job of
picking up after society, shoveling the crap the world shuts its collective eyes
to. They work in the bowels, society’s proctologists without gloves, and
sometimes the shit sticks.
Maybe worst of all, after dealing with a justice system
stacked against them, they start doing bad things for what they think are good
reasons, shoring up evidence that doesn’t exist as they take on the mantle of
judge and jury. It’s not intentional, but then we all know about the road to
hell being paved with good intentions. So, I don’t condone it, but I understand
it. Sometimes I think the only solution is to make everyone be a cop for five
years, like the Israeli military commitment. Long enough to learn what the
world’s really about, but not long enough to get dirty.
Like I said, I like cops. I put the bonds in a package and
mailed it to the policeman’s widows and orphans fund. It was my second
contribution. It would get impounded for a while, then released. I sent an
anonymous note to the Doyle, and the next day Miranda was pulled in for Walter’s
murder.
* * * *
Dennis Doyle was hunched over what looked like a whisky at the
bar. I pulled up a stool next to him. "How you doing, Detective?"
His smile was thin, "Okay. How’re you, shamus?"
I liked the title, it was a term of respect between us. "Been
doing all right. I’ve had a couple quiet weeks. Sort of like it that way."
"That was a nice touch, really appreciated."
I put a question on my face.
"Yeah, okay, it was still nice."
I shrugged my shoulders. "Have it your way."
Doyle turned his attention from his drink. "So, what do you
think of your friend, Walter, now that you know what you know?"
I ordered a beer. "I don’t have a lot of friends,
and it’s too late in life to be vetting them ahead of time."
He focused on his drink. "Well, you got one more, shamus.
I’m off to a card game right now. Maybe you can buy the snacks."
-the end-
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