“By violence?”
“Yes.”
There was silence, then Jordan said, “Sometimes it almost seems the only way.”
“I know,” Perry said.
“I wonder if I could do it?” Jordan said.
“Fight?”
“Kill,” Jordan said, “for a cause I believed in.”
“Fortunately you probably won’t have to make that decision,”
Perry said.
“I don’t know,” she said. “This country. The way this country is going . . .”
“I know,” Perry said.
He sounded very soothing.
“Does Dennis talk about the bureau’s anti-terrorism operations?” Perry said.
“There’s something called Operation Blue Squall,” she said.
“But I don’t know much about it.”
“It would help us in our mission,” Perry said, “if we knew more.”
“I know. I’ll try. But Dennis and I don’t talk so much anymore.”
“Because of us?” Perry said. “He knows there’s something going on?”
“I can’t be here,” she said, “with you, and home with him. He knows I’m not there.”
“What else does he know?”
“He doesn’t even know what he knows,” Jordan said. “I told you he’s got his head down like a man in a sandstorm.”
“What if he decided to fi nd out?” Perry said.
“He won’t.”
“He’s an FBI agent,” Perry said. “He has resources.”
“Maybe,” Jordan said. “But none that will help him here.”
“I hope you’re right.”
“I’m right,” Jordan said. “I’ve lived with him for twenty-fi ve years. The poor bastard.”
“You feel sorry for him?”
“He’s so overmatched in this,” she said.
“So what do you think you should do?” Perry said.
“Right now,” Jordan said, “I think I should give you a blow job.”
“That’ll work,” Perry said.
I reached over and shut off the radio.
“You don’t want to listen to a BJ?” Hawk said.
“No.”
“Might be some more clues,” Hawk said.
“I got all the clues I can stand.”
We were quiet. The wind and rain kept coming.
“She find that bug in her purse,” Hawk said, “gonna matter more than we thought it would.”
“I know.”
“You working on a plan?” Hawk said.
“I am,” I said.
9.
How come i got to mug her?” Hawk said.
“Sell the mugging,” I said. “You’re a big scary black guy. People expect to get mugged by big scary black guys.”
“I too dignifi ed-looking to be a mugger,” Hawk said.
“It’ll be dark,” I said. “Besides, I don’t want her to recognize me later.”
“How about the guy? If he walks her to her car? What you want me to do with him.”
“After the evening he has spent, would you get up and get dressed and walk down to the garage?”
“Good point,” Hawk said.
“And she’s not going to raise a ruckus either,” I said. “She’s not supposed to be here.”
“Okay,” Hawk said.
Hawk pulled the car up to the corner and turned off the lights.
“Don’t want her copping the plate numbers,” he said. Hawk turned the collar up on his leather trench coat and got out into the downpour. He walked down the street away from me and turned into the garage. I punched the radio on.
“Until tomorrow,” Perry’s voice was saying.
“Yes,” Jordan said.
There was silence.
Then Jordan said, “I love you.”
“I love you too, my friend,” Perry said. “I love you very, very much.”
Too many verys, I thought. Insincere. The door closed. She walked to the elevator. It went down. She got out. I could hear her heels on the concrete floor of the garage. Then I heard her stop.
“I’ll take the bag,” Hawk said.
“Don’t hurt me,” she said. “You can have the bag. I won’t give you any trouble. Just don’t hurt me.”
“Car keys in the bag?”
“Yes. Take the car if you want.”
I heard Hawk rummage in the bag. His hand an inch from the transmitter.
“You take the keys,” he said.
I heard him walk away from her. In another moment he was out on the street. In another couple of moments he was in the car, the rain glistening on his shaven head. He plonked the bag in my lap, fastened his seat belt, and we drove away.
Then I shut off the radio, took the bug out, and switched it off. I put the bug and the tape recorder in a gym bag in the backseat.
“Easy,” Hawk said.
“Thinking of taking it up?” I said. “Some sort of regular basis?”
I took Jordan’s wallet out of her bag. There were two twenties, a driver’s license, a Concord College ID, and some credit cards.
“Augment my income,” Hawk said.
“You gave her back her car keys,” I said.
“Gentleman Mugger,” Hawk said.
There was a small emergency makeup kit in the bag, a small blue notebook, two ballpoint pens, an emery board, a packet of Kleenex, and a pair of reading glasses. The notebook was devoid of notes.
“Want to split the forty dollars?” I said.
“Split, hell,” Hawk said. “I done all the mugging.”
I handed him the two twenties.
“Fair’s fair,” I said.
10 .
Imailed Jordan Richmond’s wallet back to her, with an anonymous note saying I’d found it on the street. Then I called Doherty on his cell phone and said I needed to report, and he said he’d come to my office. He showed up ten minutes later wearing a camel-hair topcoat over a dark suit. He took the topcoat off when he came in and put it on Pearl’s couch, which stood against the far wall to the right of the office door. Pearl wasn’t visiting today, so the couch was empty.
“Whaddya got,” he said.
His shirt was very white. His tie was striped red and blue. His face looked stiff.
“Your wife is having an affair,” I said.
His face got stiffer.
“You got proof?” he said.
“Yes.”
“Lemme see it.”
“It’s a tape recording,” I said. “It’ll be hard to hear.”
“Play it,” he said.
“You don’t want to take my word?”
“Play the tape,” he said.
I nodded.
“Okay,” I said. “First some background. She’s been seeing a man after work every night. She went to his apartment several nights. One night before she went I was able to slip a bug in her tote bag.”
He sat motionless while I spoke. I had no way to know if he’d heard me.
“Play it,” he said.
“There’s a lot of silence and aimless noise on the tape,” I said.
“I edited it out.”
He stared at me. I took the tape recorder out of my desk drawer and put it on the desktop and pressed the play button.
“I can’t wait to get naked. . . . Do you think we’re oversexed?”
I stopped the tape.
“Enough?” I said.
“Play it all,” he said.
“You know already what you wanted to know,” I said.
“I want to know everything.”
I pressed the play button again.
“What if someone opened the elevator door? . . . We could say I was helping you look for your keys . . . A drink first? . . . Maybe a short one while I fl uff up . . .” The bag bumped on the fl oor . . . a sound that 38 might have been a shower . . . The sound of intimacy . . . Jordan screamed . . . and giggled . . . “What are you doing to me? . . . I think I should give you a blow job.”
I shut it off.
“That’s all there is,” I said.
Doherty was rigid. His face was flushed. He looked past me out the window. His eyes fi lled.
“ ‘I think I should give you a blow job,’ ” he said.
“Hard to hear,” I said.
“You ever hear anything like that?”