And if she was dead?
They couldn't admit it. Once they did there was no ransom. They were far from destitute, they'd taken four hundred thousand from Kenan less than a month ago, but that didn't mean they didn't want more.
Money was something people always wanted more of, and if they hadn't there would have been no first call, and probably no kidnapping.
It was easy enough to pick a woman off the street at random if all you wanted was the thrill of it. You didn't need to get cute.
So what would they do?
I figured they would probably try to brazen it out. Say she was out of it, say she'd been drugged and couldn't focus enough to respond to questions. Or make up some name and insist that was what she'd told them.
We would know they were lying and would be about ninety percent certain Lucia was dead. But you believe what you want to believe, and we would want to believe in the slender possibility that she was alive, and that might lead us to pay the ransom anyway because if we didn't pay there was no chance, no chance at all.
The phone rang. I snatched it up, and it was some jerk with a wrong number. I got rid of him and thirty seconds later he called back again. I asked him what number he was calling, and he had it right, but it turned out he was trying to call someone in Manhattan. I reminded him he had to dial the area code first.
"Oh, God," he said, "I'm always doing that. I'm so stupid."
"I got calls like that this morning," Yuri said. "Wrong numbers. A nuisance."
I nodded. Had he called while I was getting rid of that idiot? If so, why didn't he call back? The line was clear now. What the hell was he waiting for?
Maybe I had made a mistake, asking for proof. If she was dead all along I was only forcing it all out into the open. Instead of trying to bluff it through, he might decide to write the operation off and scramble for cover.
In which case I could wait forever for the phone to ring, because we wouldn't be hearing from him again.
Yuri was right. It made a person crazy, sitting, staring at the phone.
Waiting for it to ring.
ACTUALLY it took only twelve minutes over the thirty minutes I'd figured as an average. The phone rang and I grabbed it. I said hello, and Ray said, "I'd still like to know how you figure in this. You'd have to be a dealer. Are you a major trafficker?"
"You were going to answer some questions," I reminded him.
"I wish you'd tell me your name," he said. "I might recognize it."
"I might recognize yours."
He laughed. "Oh, I don't think so. Why are you in such a rush, my friend? Are you afraid I'll trace the call?"
In my mind I could hear him taunting Pam. "Pick one, Pam-mee.
One's for you and one's for me, so which'll it be, Pam-mee?"
I said, "It's your quarter."
"So it is. Ah, well. The dog's name, eh? Let's see, what are the old standbys? Fido, Towser, King.
Rover, that's always a popular favorite, isn't it?"
I thought, shit, she's dead.
"How about Spot? 'Run, Spot, run!' That's not a bad name for a Rhodesian Ridgeback."
But he would have known that much from the weeks of stalking her.
"The dog's name is Watson."
"Watson," I said.
Across the room, the big dog shifted position, pricked up its ears.
Yuri was nodding.
"And the other dog?"
"You want so much," he said. "How many dogs do you need?"
I waited.
"She couldn't tell me what breed the other dog was. She was young when it died. They had to put it to sleep, she said. Silly term for it, don't you think? When you kill something you ought to have the courage to call it that. You're not saying anything. Are you still there?"
"I'm still here."
"I gather it was a mongrel. So many of us are. Now the name's a bit of a problem. It's a Russian word and I may not have it right. How's your Russian, my friend?"
"A little rusty."
"Rusty's a good name for a dog. Maybe it was Rusty. You're a tough audience, my friend. It's hard to get a laugh out of you."
"I'm a captive audience," I said.
"Ah, would that it were so. We could have a very interesting conversation under those circumstances, you and I. Ah, well. Some other time, perhaps."
"We'll see."
"Indeed we will. But you want the dog's name, don't you? The dog's dead, my friend. What good is his name? Give a dog a dead name, give a dead dog a bad name—"
I waited.
"I may be saying this wrong. Balalaika."
"Balalaika," I said.
"It's supposed to be the name of a musical instrument, or so she tells me. What do you say? Does it strike a chord?"
I looked at Yuri Landau. His nod was unequivocal. On the phone, Ray was saying something or other but the words weren't getting through to me. I felt light-headed, and had to lean against the kitchen counter or I might have fallen.
The girl was alive.
Chapter 19
As soon as I got off the phone with Ray, Yuri fell on me and wrapped me up in a bear hug. "Balalaika,"
he said, invoking the name as if it were a magic spell. "She's alive, my Luschka is alive!"
I was still in his embrace when the door opened and the Khourys came in, trailed by Landau's man Dani.
Kenan was carrying an old-fashioned leather satchel with a zipper top, Peter a white plastic shopping bag from Kroger's. "She's alive," Yuri told them.
"You spoke with her?"
He shook his head. "They told me the dog's name. She remembered Balalaika. She's alive."
I don't know how much sense this made to the Khourys, who had been out on a fund-raising mission when the recognition signals were arranged, but they got the gist of it.
"Now all you need is a million dollars," Kenan told him.
"Money you can always get."
"You're right," Kenan said. "People don't realize that but it's absolutely true." He opened the leather
satchel and began taking out stacks of wrapped bills, arranging them in rows on top of the mahogany table. "You got some good friends, Yuri. Good thing, too, is most of 'em don't believe in banks. People don't realize how much of the country's economy runs on cash. You hear cash, you think drugs, you think gambling."
"Tip of the iceberg," Peter said.
"You got it. Don't just think of the rackets. Think dry cleaners, think barbershops, beauty parlors. Any place that handles a lot of cash, so they can keep an extra set of books and skim half the take out from under the IRS."
"Think coffee shops," Peter said. "Yuri, you shoulda been a Greek."
"A Greek? Why should I be a Greek?"
"Every corner there's a coffee shop, right? Man, I worked for one of them. Ten employees on my shift, six of us were off the books, paid in cash. Why? Because they got all this cash they're not declaring, got to keep the expenses in proportion. If they report thirty cents of every dollar goes through the register, that's a lot. And you know the frosting on the cake? Eight and a quarter percent sales tax on every sale, law says they have to collect it. But the seventy percent of sales they don't report, they can't exactly hand over the tax on that, can they? So it gets skimmed, too. Pure tax-free profit, every penny of it."
"Not just Greeks," Yuri said.
"No, but they got it down to a science. You were Greek, all you gotta do is hit twenty coffee shops.
You don't think they all got fifty grand in the safe, or stuffed in the mattress, or under a loose board in the clothes closet? Hit twenty and you got your million."
"But I am not a Greek," Yuri said.
Kenan asked him if he knew any diamond merchants. "They have a lot of cash," he said. Peter said a lot of the jewelry business was markers, IOUs that passed back and forth. Kenan said there was still some cash in it somewhere, and Yuri said it didn't matter because he didn't know anyone in diamonds.
I went into the other room and left them at it.