“You saying that’s one way of doing it?”
“That’s the straight way.”
“What’s the other way?”
“It depends on what you want, Nick.”
I pulled another beer from the ice, uncapped the neck, and glanced into the amber bottle. “I figure Solanis is going to burn, sooner or later. But there’s something wrong when outsiders can come into this town and get rid of an innocent man, and there’s sure as hell something wrong when one rotten cop helps them do it.” I looked straight into Boyle. “You know what I want.”
“I figured that,” Boyle said, leaning forward. “So I set things up. I called Goloria this afternoon. I told him we wanted to meet.”
Drops of water fell from the glasses suspended in the rack above, darkening the mahogany of the bar. I finished the rest of my bourbon and dragged on my cigarette. Darnell pushed his hat bshefell from ack on his head. “What’d you tell him, Boyle?” I said. “Exactly.”
“That you knew about the arsons, and the murder. That you told me you knew. And that you wanted to see them and talk things over.”
“When?”
“I didn’t say. Goloria got all quiet when I laid it out for him, didn’t want to talk about it on the phone. But here’s a bet-that crooked bastard will be at that house in the woods tonight to discuss it, and so will Bonanno. And the others.”
I tilted the beer bottle to my lips, drank deeply, and wiped the backwash from my chin. A lull came in the tape, and the Spot grew quiet. I looked at Boyle and Darnell, and I wondered how it had happened that I had ended up with them, wondered what had brought us together like thieves in the night, in a shitty little bar in the southeast part of town. The thought of Tommy Crane crossed my mind, and how close I had come. But that thought passed. I felt my buzz swell, and I smiled, knowing then that it was done.
“What’s the plan, Boyle?”
Boyle butted his Marlboro. “You and me walk right into that house, start a fire under their asses, and make the arrest. From what you tell me, there’s enough there for a bookmaking charge straight away. But I think we got a shot at some confessions too. Once we get into it, let it develop.”
“How?” I said.
“You carry a gun, Stefanos?”
“I own a nine. I don’t carry it.”
Boyle reached down and pulled the gym bag up and placed it on the bar. He yanked back the zipper and put his thick hand into the bag. “A nine, huh?” Boyle dropped a nine-millimeter semiautomatic on the bar and spun it so the grip pointed toward me. “Then this ought to do. Beretta, ninety-two. Fifteen in the clip.”
I picked it up, hefted it in my palm, and released the magazine. It slid out, into my hand. I heeled it back in, checked the safety, turned, and lined up the front and rear white-dotted sights on the stereo system at the end of the bar. Then I lowered the pistol and placed it back on the bar.
“Where’d you get this?”
“From a suspect,” he said.
I nodded in the direction of the bag. “What about you?”
Boyle said, “I’m already heeled.” He pulled back the collar of his Harris tweed jacket, showing me the Python. Then he reached into the bag and retrieved a five-shot. 38 Special, slipping it into the empty holster below his left arm. “Now I’m real good.”
Darnell pushed away from the service bar, stood up, and cleared his throat. “You’ll be needin’ a driver,” he said.
I looked at Boyle. “That okay with you?”
“Yeah.”
I finished my befinm"› er, left the empty on the bar, and shoved the Beretta barrel down against the small of my back, behind the waistband of my jeans. Darnell shifted his shoulders into his overcoat, and Boyle buttoned his raincoat over his tweed. I switched the lights off from behind the bar. The neon Schlitz logo cast a blue light in the room.
Boyle said, “How ’bout grabbing a bottle, for the ride.”
I reached into the stock under the call shelf and pulled out a fresh bottle of Jack. Boyle raised his hand. I tossed the bottle over the bar, and he caught it by the neck. Then he broke the seal and had a drink.
Darnell gave me a sidelong look. “You sure about this, man?”
“He knows what he’s doing.”
“Goddamn right I do,” Boyle said. “It’s time for some fucking justice.” He ran a hand through his tight curly hair and slipped the bottle of Jack into his raincoat pocket.
I set the alarm and locked the door. The three of us walked out into the night.
TWENTY-NINE
We took the Dart northeast across town. Darnell kept the speedometer just over the limit and signaled at his turns. The radio stayed off. Boyle sat in the back, drinking steadily and asking me questions about the layout of the bungalow. I answered from the shotgun seat and drummed my fingers on the dash, staring straight ahead.
Darnell took Missouri to Riggs and dipped down onto South Dakota. After a few miles of that he cut left on Gallatin Street and drove along the edge of Fort Totten Park. We passed the break in the grove of trees and slowed a few hundred yards down the street, stopping in front of the row of brick colonials. Darnell cut the engine.
Few lights were on in the windows of the houses to our right. The street was dark and quiet, tucked in for the night. I heard the chamber spin and shut on Boyle’s Python, and the sound of gunmetal scraping against leather.
Boyle said, “We walk in, Nick, straight up the road and to the house. Okay?”
“Then what?”
“This isn’t going to be a surprise. They’re expecting us, though maybe not so soon.”
“How do we play it?”
“Like a shakedown, at first. Like we want a piece of what’s going on.”
“You start it off, Boyle.”
“Right.” I could hear the plastic cap unthread and the slosh of liquid as Boyle tipped the bottle to his lips. “You’ll catch the rhythm, as it goes. When I get a confession out of Solanis, I’ll draw down on ’em, make the arrest.”
“You deputizing me?”
“Fuck, no. You’re a witness. Don’t be afraid to pull that Beretta, though, if the shit starts raining down.”
I could see Darnell to my left, staring at me, trying to get my attention. I drew the Beretta, eased a cartridge into the chamber, and replaced the pistol behind the waistband of my jeans. Then I unlocked my door and spoke to him, looking away. “If you hear it start to fly apart, Darnell, pull the car around at the break in the trees. Got it?”
Darnell nodded. Boyle had another long drink, capped the neck, and dropped the bottle on the seat. He and I stepped out of the car and shut the doors. We walked down Gallatin toward the unmarked road, the wind blowing back our coats.
At the gravelly break in the trees, we turned right. I heard the slam of a car door, recognized the sound of it, and turned my head. Darnell’s reedy silhouette stepped across the field and vanished into the woods. I nudged Boyle, but he stared straight ahead. We continued down the road, toward the light of the house. The liquor still warmed me like an ember; it took the edge off the fear that was churning in my gut.
The Lincolns were parked out in the clearing, cast yellow under the light of the lamppost. On the porch of the house a figure moved toward the door. The door opened and a square of light spilled out onto the porch, and then the door closed again and the light vanished. The figure remained on the porch.
“You see that?” Boyle said.
“Yeah.”
“Whoever it is, he just put his head in and told them they had company.”
I adjusted my eyes to the light as we neared the house, gravel splitting beneath my feet. “It’s Frank Martin,” I said.
“Martino,” Boyle said. He chuckled and shook his head. “Martin. Fuckin’ goombahs and their names.”
We brushed past the Lincolns and moved toward the porch. I left my hands in the pockets of my overcoat as we walked up the steps. Frank’s arms hung loosely at his sides. His corduroy car coat was open, exposing the khakis and a dark blue shirt. The Airweight was in the nylon holster, unsnapped, tucked into the side of his khakis, and Frank made no effort to hide it. He touched his fingers to the grip, then let his hand fall back at his side. We stopped on the porch in front of him. Frank looked at me.