“Holy Christ, I told you that when I talked to you!”
“You want to talk or listen, Kogan?”
“Okay, I’m listening.”
“He had a private kip arranged down below between piles of lumber. The watchman knew him and didn’t make a fuss. One night your pal witnessed a murder. He didn’t show himself, but when he saw the victim’s picture and name in the paper, saying that he was missing, that’s when he blew his cover. He told the wrong person about it, and that’s how he was murdered.”
“Are you telling me he told the wife that he saw the murder? He didn’t even tell me what he saw.”
“That’s what it looks like, Kogan.”
“She must of done it, right?”
“She denies any knowledge of Wally.”
“You can’t trust a bloody murderer! Why would she tell you the truth?” This was going to be one of those days when everybody knew more about my business than I did.
“Take it easy, Kogan. I didn’t say I believed her. But with Wally unavailable to make an accusation, what he told you is hearsay and about as useful in court as a movie ticket stub. To build a case you need evidence. And evidence is what we have least of.”
“So nothing Wally told me is any good?”
“Come on, Kogan. What did he tell you? He told you he was going to see Mrs. Geller, that they had business, and that you were eating your last can of cat food. You see, I remember.”
“Yeah, but Wally had that bottle of gin. The guy in the liquor store said he broke a fifty-dollar bill for him. Where’d that come from? You’re supposed to be the investigator!” Kogan screwed up his lined face so that it looked like an ordinance survey map. He was practically rubbing his hands together.
“Right,” I said. “He must have met her, got the fifty and made an appointment to meet her in the park later on, before going for the gin and finishing up the cat food. Why didn’t he spend some of the fifty on people-type tuna?”
“Wally was never one for sudden change.”
“Let me think. Wally figured he could turn what he saw down in the cellar of the building site into cash. He tried it out and it worked. Not only that, but there was promise of more to come. He must have recognized that the victim was Larry when the paper first did a story on his disappearance.” I chewed on that for a minute, but I couldn’t see how the cops would make more than mashed potatoes out of it. “Kogan, what we’ve got here is a lot of conjecture. It could have happened this way, but it could have happened other ways too. We can’t prove it happened one way over another.”
“So, what do we do? Here we are sittin’ twiddlin’ our toes and there she is smokin’ Mexican grass and laughin’ at us. There’s gotta be some way we can stop …”
“What’s this about grass? She was smoking marijuana? How do you know that?” I was getting a little excited, so I tried to calm down. I took a breath, then started in again. “Wally told you, right?” Kogan nodded proudly. “But you didn’t bother to pass it on. You didn’t tell me anything about his meeting with Mrs. Geller. What else are you saving? You going to gift wrap it and wait till Christmas?” Kogan’s smile went indoors. “What else are you saving for later bulletins? I have to know everything, Kogan. I can’t help you if I’m playing with only thirty-eight cards. I need the whole fifty-two.”
“I already told you everything. I forgot about the grass. He said she lit up right in front of him. He could tell it wasn’t a regular smoke by the smell.”
“What else did he say? Did he describe her? Was she short, fat, tall, cross-eyed, what?”
“He didn’t say nothin’ about that, except that she wasn’t hard to look at.”
“Kogan, we may be getting somewhere.” Kogan grinned. “We’ve just eliminated ‘fat’ and ‘cross-eyed’ from the description.”
“Well, I dunno. Wally didn’t hold much with women at all, so there’s no tellin’ what wasn’t hard to look at from his standpoint.”
“Welcome home ‘fat’ and ‘cross-eyed.’” I tried to picture Ruth Geller lighting up a joint and it didn’t work. That was not the Ruth Geller I knew. Instead, I saw another face and it wasn’t the face I wanted to see.
Then minutes later, I had given Kogan a couple of dollars for a cup of coffee and he gave me a dirty look by way of change. I left him at his usual stand, the corner of Queen and St. Andrew, with his hand out. I headed for the marble mausoleum that Tom MacIntyre used as an office. Ever since I’d borrowed the keys to the Woodland Avenue building from MacIntyre, I’d been meaning either to have them copied or to return them. I wasn’t sure what I wanted to do, but I was sure that I wanted to have a heart-to-heart with Larry Geller’s former landlord.
The redhead was at her desk surrounded by the cold marble of business trying to ape classic architecture. As long as the receptionist took the occasional breath or reached for the remaining half of her morning blueberry muffin, the room would never work. Replace the girl with a stone column and you might achieve an effect but whether or not you’d do any business was another question. I began by telling her that once again I didn’t have an appointment. With some badly concealed pleasure she told me that Mr. MacIntyre was not in the office and wasn’t expected until later in the day if at all. I figured she was telling the truth. If she was expecting her boss, the blueberry muffin on desk blotter would have been out of sight. I told her that MacIntyre wanted to see me. She looked suspicious but smiled with guile: “Then why did he tell you to come here instead of having you meet him at the boat? I don’t think you are telling the truth.” I looked hurt, and offered her my pack of Player’s. She fooled me and took one.
“Is that the one in the marina at Niagara-on-the-Lake?” I asked her as she held my hand steady for the match.
“I only know about the Port Richmond boat. If he has another, he hasn’t told me about it.”
“Well, if I miss him, you can tell him I dropped by.”
“Yes, Mr. Cooperman.”
The road to Port Richmond led to the north end, past my parents’ town house. The marina was bunched up into the funnel-like opening of the entrance to a lock in the old canal. It was a forest of aluminum masts each emitting a ping as loose cables hit the metal uprights. I parked the car across from the main street, which looked like the set for a western movie in the back lot of one of the old Hollywood studios. The view from the shaded balconies looked across to what locals still called the “Michigan” side, even though the Michigan Central tracks had been pulled up before most of them were born. From the wharf, where as a kid I remember the two lake steamers from Toronto used to tie up, I could see the two wooden lighthouses on the twin piers jutting out into the lake towards Toronto. A couple of huge trees, left over from the heyday of Lakeside Park, now sheltered only a few sunbathers. The beach had, of course, been condemned for swimming at the beginning of the month, but a few kids in bathing suits were beachcombing with an active fox terrier. I couldn’t see the skyline of the provincial capital in the summer haze, but remembered the CN Tower and a few other tall buildings standing out on frostier days than this one. I wanted to take my shirt off, or wander down the now vanished corridor of ride and refreshment stands. Only the old merry-go-round survived, and that in a new location.
I could see no activity on any of the boats from the wooden catwalks that separated the marina into berths for some hundreds of boats. The hatches were covered with canvas, the booms wrapped in coloured plastic. I watched and listened to the ping-ping-ping of the masts for a couple of minutes, but heard no other sound.
The antique store I went into for information looked pitch dark when I came in out of the sun. A woman on a ladder ignored me and spoke to the gnarled old man who’d just come in from the back of the store. “Mr. Helwig, I moved ‘God is Love’ down there. Hope you don’t mind.” I asked where the sailors went to eat. “You’ll find most of them drinking in the pub at the end of the road, but a few eat at Marie’s or Murphy’s.”