"No good without a direct link to the player who feeds her the information. She has a legal loophole. This bulletin board qualifies as public access, same as printing stock information in a newspaper. Now that's smart, very smart, and not Redwing's idea. You're looking for somebody with a brain, access to trading activity and organizational skills."
"Coffey's gonna love this."
"Yeah, right. Tell him it's a gift from the rookie. So, what have you got for me?"
"Kid, I gave you my wad," he said, and that was the truth. She turned away from him, not believing in him anymore.
Margot held the switchblade in her hand as she listened to the phone ringing endlessly, twenty, thirty times. She knew how to wait. He would answer. The switchblade had been cleaned for the tenth time and the blade gleamed, throwing its light on the walls. No answer. She continued to wait. It was what she did best. She had waited years for the man with the dancing knife. She looked down at the blade as it caught the light in a sliver of metal.
She had decided to keep the switchblade. The blood had been boiled away on the stove. It was safe. She would keep it. It might bring her luck. It hadn't been so lucky when it tumbled to the desk in the bank, but that was before she killed the bogeyman. Maybe she'd take it back to the bank. What was she going to do about the bank? Henry would know.
The phone continued to ring.
Maybe Henry would let her use his lawyer to get the advance money. Maybe she would just go back with the knife in her pocket. She was luckier today. A tourist had put a dollar bill in her cup and now there was enough in the cup for a slice of pizza and a subway token. It had amazed her how easily money could be had when one looked as she did and smelled as she did.
Thirty minutes later, she rounded the corner to Avenue C in that section of the East Village called Alphabet City. It was also called the war zone. This was where the law was not. And so it startled her to see a cop on the sidewalk talking to another cop in the car parked in front of her building.
So, the banker had turned her in. Bastard. She would get the little twit for that.
She turned around and headed back to the subway, picking a cup from a trash can as she walked along the sidewalk. Don't run, she told herself, running is a dead give-away. She panhandled her way down the street in the security that no one, cop or civilian, looked into the face of poverty if they didn't have to.
The VCR was set to loop endlessly, and so, Markowitz danced through the night. Mallory fell asleep to the lullabies of the Fifties, and he rock'n'rolled into her dreams. The dancing detective held Mallory in his arms. She was unconscious, and he was trying desperately to wake her. The dream ended with the dip. He bowed her body down until she lay upon the floor at the base of the cork wall. He was yelling at her. What was he saying? Why couldn't she understand?
She woke, lifting her head from the desk, eyes slowly adjusting to the images on the video. Markowitz danced off with young Helen, twirling away from the camera's eye, leaving Mallory alone in the dark. Her hands slowly rose above her head, curled into fists and came back to the desk as hammers.
Why had they left her all alone?
CHAPTER 9
Was it night? Was it day? Margot read the time off the passenger's watch but there was no way to know if it was eleven in the morning or eleven at night. How long had she been asleep, rolling along on the subway line, back and forth, uptown and down. The subway-car door opened and a passenger got on.
She watched him, her eyes doing a slow roll as he took the seat opposite hers. She stared at his mouth. It was distinctive in its cruelty, a harsh line that dipped low and mean on either side. She was not likely to forget it, ever. That mouth, that cruel twisted mouth. She had dreams about that mouth and the dancing knife. The train stopped. The man got off, and she followed after him from a small distance. It was him. He was the one. She followed him into the tunnel leading up to the next level. The knife danced out of her pocket. The blade clicked into the light.
He was the one.
Charles, a well-known figure at the public library, was on a first-name basis with the reference librarian in the periodicals section. John helloed him in passing. Library regulars from bums to academics recognized his nose from a distance of ten shelves, and smiled in anticipation of the inadvertently comical return smile. This time, he was hunting Fanny Evenroe instead of a book. He might have gone to the section of Who's Who books, but Fanny knew his quarry personally.
He found her standing at the shelves, lost in the pages of a thick volume. He approached her slowly, giving her all the time in the world to finish her perusal, and there was time to imagine the seventy-something dowager as she had once been. The remarkable bones were splendid and her back had not been bent in the least by age.
He always thought of her in the context of the first memory she had ever shared with him, her Washington DC debut as a seventeen-year-old girl in long white gloves and a ballgown, waltzing in a ballroom's soft glow of gaslight globes. Like all romantics of his own generation, he had missed his place in time, arriving too late for chivalry, too late for a waltz.
Fanny's face crinkled into a smile as she returned her book to the shelf and greeted him. She had the gift of making anyone believe they might be the center of her personal universe. She held out both her hands to be grasped in his, and she kissed his face on both cheeks, having to reach only a little. She was over six feet tall but would not be exact about her height any more than her date of birth.
"It's been ages, Charles. Who is she?"
"Pardon?"
"Something new has been added to your life and it shows."
"Well, a new problem certainly."
"And what do you call this problem?"
"I used to call it Kathleen. Just lately, I have to call it Mallory."
He brought her up to date on his new partnership as they lined up for coffee and croissants on the stone concourse between the flights of steps leading up to the formidable doors of the reference library. By the time they were seated under the shade of the table umbrella hi view of the stone lions and the street traffic of Fifth Avenue, he had just broached the subject of his investigation.
"Yes, it's the same man," she said. "I knew him well. He was very handsome when he was young, a senator's aide when I met him. I danced with him more times than I can say. He was one of the few men taller than I was. I was heartbroken when he returned to his home state to practise law."
"Did you ever see him again?"
"Oh yes, years later, and neither of us had married.
There were other dances. He came back to Washington as a Congressman this time. He was in the House of Representatives for two terms before he ran for Senator."
"Did he win?"
"Not the first time out or even the second, but finally he did. Then after he'd returned to private practice for a time he was appointed to the Court. It was an excellent appointment. He's a remarkable man. I follow his career with great interest."
"Did he ever discuss the boy with you?"
"Yes. That child was always with him."
"The case isn't mentioned in any of his published papers. I wondered if he'd simply put it behind him."
"Would you like to speak with him?"
"It's possible?"
"You're not suggesting he might have forgotten me, are you, Charles?"
"Certainly not." For she was one woman who could not be undone by time or the faultiest memory. When her name would be mentioned to the Supreme Court justice by his law clerk this afternoon, there would be no fumbling through history for her face.
When they parted company, he handed her into a cab and returned to the library to hunt down the third photograph on Edith Candle's mantelpiece.