“That’s fine.”
“Thanks.” Her tone rang sincere. For whatever reason, this was important to her.
“It’s no problem.”
She laughed a little. “Don’t say that yet. You might think different when we talk.”
I doubted it. She could ask me to strap on a filet mignon vest and jump into the lion exhibit at the zoo, and I think I’d still be happy to have that conversation in person.
“I’m sure it’ll be fine,” was all I said.
“Well, we’ll see,” she replied. “See you a little after ten.”
“See you then.”
She hung up. I stood there like a fool for a couple of seconds before closing the phone. It chirped immediately. A little bit of a thrill shot through my stomach when I thought it might be her calling me back, like some junior high boy getting a note from the pretty girl in class.
CONNIE, the screen read.
I pushed cancel.
I spent the better part of an hour just walking and thinking. What could Ania want with me? It couldn’t just be me, because a woman like that could have any man she wanted. And clearly, she preferred thugs like my brother, for whatever fucked up reason. Probably the same reason women like Connie pick losers like Steve.
Only that wasn’t entirely true, was it? Steve and Jerzy were different. Steve was a bit of a poser. Jerzy was the real deal. A stone cold bastard. And that was the kind of guy Ania dug, apparently.
So what did she want with me?
I walked and I thought, but for the most part I realized I didn’t care. Most of the time, all I could think about was how those pale blue eyes saw straight into me.
I grabbed a dog from a vendor and leaned against a nearby building, munching it. Halfway through, my phone chirped again. I figured it was probably Connie calling a second time, but I was wrong.
It was Al.
“Yeah?”
“You anywhere near Union Station?”
“I can be.”
“Fifteen minutes. Canal Street entrance.”
“Make it a half hour,” I said. “I gotta hop on the train.”
Forty minutes later, I stood next to a newsstand, down a half block from the station entrance. I spotted Al waddling toward me long before he saw me. I wondered how in the hell he survived on the job if he was that oblivious to his surroundings.
“Hey,” he wheezed at me when he got close enough. He used his jacket sleeve to wipe away the sweat on his forehead.
I motioned toward the door up ahead of a small cafe named The Bastille. “You wanna go in?”
He shook his head. “Too quiet in there. Let’s walk.”
I thought about cracking wise that I didn’t figure he was up for much in the way of exercise, but decided not to. I wasn’t interested in any bullshit banter with this guy anymore. I just wanted to get my information and be quits with him.
We walked a block or so without a word. Then, as we passed the doors to a diner, Al stopped. “This’ll work. They’re busy.”
We went inside and found one of the last empty booths. A harried waitress appeared to take our order. I asked for coffee. So did Al, but he ordered a cheeseburger and fries to go with his.
When she walked away, he admired her ass. Then he looked at me. “Funny how the busiest places have the best service. You go into some half-empty place that’s slow and it never fails that the service sucks. Even though they can’t be that busy, right? But you come in here where they’re slammed and you get a waitress at your table before your ass has even warmed the seat. Why is that?”
I shrugged. “Don’t know.”
“Huh. I figured you’d be the expert on waitresses and diners and all that.”
A tickle of anger flickered in my gut. “I just worked the grill,” I said evenly. “I didn’t do a master’s thesis on diner service.”
“No?”
“No.”
“I see. What happened to your face, Mick?” he asked, pointing at my cheek.
“A leprechaun threw his shillelagh at me.”
Al’s expression remained tight and hard to read. We sat in silence until the waitress poured our coffee. Then Al made a big production out of putting his cream and sugar into his cup. I left mine sitting there. Only when he’d finally sipped his coffee and nodded his satisfaction did he turn his attention back to me.
“I looked into your situation, Mick.”
“I figured.”
“Yeah, well, it ain’t as easy as it used to be. Fucking computers with their logins and passwords and tracking and all that shit?” He shook his head. “Bigger job than I thought. I couldn’t get everything, so I had to piece shit together from what I could get.”
I didn’t reply. The how of it all was his problem.
“That don’t matter, though, ‘cuz I got the job done.” He raised his coffee cup to his lips and took another sip. Then he said, “I found Jimmy Kerrigan.”
I resisted the urge to smile. “Yeah? Where?”
“Fucker never left Chi-town. He works the parking lot at Comiskey during the baseball season.” Al shook his head in mild amazement. “Talk about hiding in plain sight. Off season, though, he’s like a hermit, never goes out. Lives just south of the ballpark in a shitty little apartment on the corner of West Pershing Road and Wells Street. He’s in Four B.”
“All right,” I said. “That’s it, then. We’re square.” I started to get up.
Al raised his hands. “Whoa, not so fast, Mickey.”
“What?”
“Jimmy ain’t got the necklace.”
I sat back down. “How do you know that?”
“Because we seized it when him and Speedo got picked up about three days after the theft.”
“The police have the necklace?”
“No.”
“You just said-”
“Shut up and listen,” Al said.
I didn’t like his tone. I thought about drilling him one right in his fat face, but decided it could wait. I settled for clenching my jaw.
Al smiled. There was a hint of cruel satisfaction in that smile and I wondered what he was up to. “Good. You know, that was always the best thing about you, Mickey. You knew when to keep your mouth shut.”
“Fuck you.”
He laughed. “Or maybe not. It doesn’t matter. Just listen.” He took another sip of coffee, then continued. “Jimmy and Speedo both got grabbed up a couple of days before your old man got popped for that stick-up in Wisconsin. He musta figured out the jig was up and decided to bolt.”
I nodded. That made perfect sense.
“The necklace went back to the Hungarian government about three months after that. Jimmy did a little bit of time on some outstanding warrants, but it was less than two years. Speedo did about eight months at county. No charges filed for this theft, though, on either one of them.”
I thought about that. Either the Hungarian government didn’t want to push the charges forward or someone cut a deal that eventually fell through. If Jimmy ratted out Speedo and the old man, why didn’t they charge either one of them?
“You work it out yet?” Al asked.
I shook my head. “It doesn’t make sense. Jimmy and Speedo get arrested together-”
“No. They were arrested the same day. Not together.”
I paused. Then I asked, “Who got arrested first?”
“Jimmy Kerrigan.”
“So he ratted out Speedo and the old man.”
“Looks that way.”
I turned my coffee cup in a slow circle, working out the likelihoods. “The cops get Speedo but the old man catches wind of it and lams it.”
“And stupid fuck that he is,” Al said, “he takes off a robbery on the way. Which lands him over at Columbia.”
I kept turning the full cup of coffee in a circle. “You know, Al, my old man was a bona fide career criminal who wasn’t hardly around for me at all. I’ve got no real love for the guy.”
“Who would?”
“The thing is, though, he was still my old man.” I smiled without any humor. “So watch how you talk about him, huh?”
Al sat and stared back at me. We watched each other across the table. The tickle of anger in my stomach had brewed into a crackling fire. I’d love nothing more than to bash Al one right in the beak. I’d like it if that were the way the new Michael Patrick Sawyer dealt with every problem. But I guess I was still smarter than that, because I settled for staring back at Al’s fat face.