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20

By Sunday morning, the storms were east of Cape Cod, the sky was empty and blue, and I was downtown, following Tom Neary through the darkened halls of Brill Associates. He led me through the high-rent client district, past mahogany-clad conference rooms, and down corridors lined with gilt-framed paintings, to a pair of metal doors. We went through and came out on the other side of the tracks: fluorescent lighting, dingy walls, threadbare carpeting, shabby cubicles, and- as a general rule- no clients allowed. Neary’s office was in a corner.

It was a good-sized room but spartan in its fittings, which consisted mainly of metal furniture and unsteady piles of paper. His office artwork was a whiteboard, covered by the faded arrows and boxes of an unintelligible diagram. I sat in a straight-backed chair in a big square of sunlight. Neary sat at his metal desk and put his sneakered feet up. He took the lid from a cup of coffee and blew the steam away.

“Getting fired twice in three days and by the same client- that’s impressive, even for you.” He sipped his coffee. “You may have hosed my weekend, but at least you’re entertaining.”

“Happy to oblige,” I said. “But I’m not sure the second time really constitutes a firing. It was more like a validation of her original decision.”

“I won’t split hairs,” he said. “Did Irene Pratt ever call you back?”

“Last night, to say she’d spent a couple of hours telling her story to the Pace security people and again to Turpin- who jumped to the same conclusions about the breakin that she had.”

“She see anything at her apartment?”

“Nope. No sign of the Grand Prix or the guy with the mustache.”

“Which doesn’t mean there wasn’t someone there.” Neary looked into his cup and then at me. “You hear from Turpin?”

“No.”

“You will.”

“You don’t think they’ll just call the cops?”

“Not over this,” Neary said. “They call the cops and they have to tell the whole Danes story. No way his management wants that attention- from the cops or the press.” He upended his coffee cup to get the last few drops, and looked at me. “You sure you want to do this?” he asked.

“I’m sure.”

Neary shook his head and smiled. “People who work for a living don’t do this shit, no matter how curious they are.” I nodded. “This is how people get the idea you’re a dilettante, you know? Not me, mind you. I don’t make a habit of turning away business, and I’d never bad-mouth a client- at least not to his face.”

“That’s where you and I differ,” I said. “That, and the fact that my professional discount is better.” I looked at my watch. “Think they’ll be here soon?” As I spoke, two men appeared at the office door. I recognized them both.

Juan Pritchard was about my height and half again as wide, with coffee-colored skin and black hair cut short. He had a broad friendly face, a square chin, and a mouth always set in a half smile. The impression of affability was tempered by his large calloused knuckles and by the scar that ran from his left temple to below his collar line and was dissipated completely by the look in his stony black eyes. He wore khaki gabardines, a black linen shirt, and sleek rimless glasses, and he nodded at me as he came through the door.

Eddie Sikes came in behind him, wearing wilted pants and a long-sleeved brown shirt. He was five-nine and wiry, and his black hair was long and unkempt. There was a gold hoop in his right ear and a day’s gray growth on his lean face. His pale eyes gave away nothing.

“Hey,” he said to Neary. His voice was a scratchy whisper. Sikes carried a white paper bag, and from it he produced two cups of coffee. He handed one to Pritchard and the two of them sat on Neary’s sofa.

“Got a couple more of those?” It was a woman’s voice and it was full of the Bronx. Lorna DiLillo was tall and dark and limber-looking. Her full lips were glossy, and there was a skeptical light in her brown eyes. She swept a wave of shiny black hair from her shoulder and took off her denim jacket. There was a black automatic holstered butt forward at her hip.

Victor Colonna was with her. He was small, fine-featured, and grave, and his smooth hair was precisely cut and combed. His white shirt was immaculate and bright against his skin. His eyes moved quickly around the room.

“Always got your back,” Sikes rasped, and he drew two more coffees from his paper bag. DiLillo and Colonna crossed the room to collect them. Pritchard held out a massive fist and DiLillo bumped it lightly with her own as she passed. Colonna sat next to Sikes and DiLillo leaned on Neary’s cluttered windowsill. She sipped her coffee and looked at me and then at Neary.

“Thanks for coming in,” Neary said, and he folded his hands on his desk. “You all remember March?” They nodded. “Well, he’s Mister March now, because now he’s a client, and actually paying for the privilege of fucking up your Sunday.” DiLillo snorted.

“For now, the job is surveillance, at four different sites. I’ve got fact sheets for you here.” Neary tapped a thin stack of paper on his desk. “But the short story is, John wants to know if anybody’s got these sites- these people- staked out. And if so, he wants to know who. So we want photos, names, plates, and affiliations if you can get them.”

“That’s for now,” Sikes whispered. “What comes after?”

“Can’t say at this point,” Neary answered. “We just have to wait and see. Read and react.”

DiLillo pushed herself off the sill and took the sheets from Neary’s desk. She handed copies to Colonna, Sikes, and Pritchard and started reading her own.

DiLillo looked at me. “You’ve got vehicle descriptions here, and something sketchy on one guy. Does this mean you’ve seen them?”

“I’ve seen some cars and a van, and one of their subjects- Irene Pratt- has seen the mustache guy.”

DiLillo scowled. “Which answers my question about how good they are.”

“Some of them clearly suck; maybe all of them do. And maybe there are some I haven’t seen that don’t.”

DiLillo nodded.

“This could take more feet on the street than just ours,” Pritchard said.

“I’ll give you more if you need them,” Neary said, “but get out there first and tell me.”

Sikes folded the sheet and tucked it in his breast pocket. “I’ll take Brooklyn.”

“I’ll take Mr. March’s place,” Colonna said.

DiLillo looked at Pritchard. “I’ll take the chick on the West Side. You take- what’s-his-name- Danes’s place, Juan. You got those Upper East Side rags for camo.”

Pritchard smiled at her and looked at Neary. “We on the clock now?” he asked. Neary nodded.

“You called the motor pool?” Colonna said.

Neary nodded again. “They’re expecting you. Call my cell when you’re on station.”

Sikes and Pritchard followed Colonna and DiLillo out.

Neary turned to me. “You know how this shit goes; it could take a few hours or a few days. I’ll call when I have something.”

It was still early when I left the Brill offices. The air was bright and clean, and a morning calm still lay on the city streets. Across Broadway, a shopkeeper hoisted a metal gate that made a noise like raucous birds. Up the block, at Duane Street, a single drunk moved carefully across an intersection and around a steaming manhole. A flight of taxis cruised by, headed south. They were off duty, and they moved slowly and with an odd dignity. Some Wallace Stevens lines ran through my head: Complacencies of the peignoir, and late Coffee and oranges in a sunny chair. Then the drunk stopped, opened his pants, and pissed on an office building. The poetry changed from Stevens to Bukowski and vanished altogether. I kept walking north and thought about what Tom Neary had said. p›

People who work for a living don’t do this shit, no matter how curious they are. He was right, of course, this was an indulgencethough not just of my curiosity. Certainly, I wanted to know who else was interested in Danes and what the hell was going on; you don’t get into this business without an itch to solve puzzles. I also realized that whoever had me under surveillance had no way of knowing that I’d been canned- and hence no cause to call off the dogs. I hated the feeling of being watched, and I wouldn’t rest easy until I’d had a little chat with whoever was holding the leash. But there was, I knew, more to it than that.