“I said you killed Ott,” Cawelti shouted.
“No,” said Blackstone. “It was an illusion.”
“It didn’t happen,” said Cawelti. “That what you’re telling me? We walk back in that ballroom and Ott is alive? That what you’re telling me?”
“No,” said Blackstone. “He is dead. The ultimate trick designed to create the illusion that I was the only one who could have killed Ott.”
Cawelti looked at the ceiling and then at the carpeted floor.
“If you’ll give me a little time, I’ll figure out how it was done,” said the magician.
“Like Sherlock Holmes?” asked Cawelti.
“Something like that,” said Blackstone, straightening the lapels on his jacket.
“And Cunningham, you didn’t kill him in that dressing room?” Cawelti hammered.
“I was onstage before more than a thousand witnesses,” Blackstone said. “I didn’t know the man and there are witnesses who saw the real killer.”
“You could have …” Cawelti began.
“Show’s over,” said Phil, standing.
Cawelti’s eyes turned toward my brother and then to Alexander at the door.
“Charge him, book him, and tell the reporters you arrested him,” said Phil. “And when we prove he didn’t do it, we tell the reporters that you are a pisshead which they already know.”
“I need to use the bathroom,” Shelly said behind me.
“Suffer,” said Cawelti, trying to stare Phil down.
“I am,” whined Shelly.
“Something was different,” said Gunther.
We all looked at him.
“Something was different?” Cawelti repeated, looking at Gunther. “What the hell does that mean?”
“The dead man,” said Gunther. “He did not look the same when we came back after chasing that young man. Something had changed.”
“What?” asked Cawelti.
“I’m not certain,” said Gunther. “But I am certain that something was different.”
“Very helpful,” said Cawelti.
I looked at Blackstone. He was looking at Gunther and I could see that the magician was beginning to get an idea.
“I’ve got to pee, really, “ said Shelly. “Now.”
“Oh for Chrissake,” said Cawelti with a sigh. “Go pee and get your ass back here in one minute flat.”
Shelly got up. So did Pancho.
“Where the hell are you going?” Cawelti asked.
“With him,” said Pancho.
“Sit down.”
Pancho sat as Shelly waddled toward the door. Alexander took a step to one side to let him pass.
“John,” I said.
“Detective Cawelti,” he corrected.
“I thought we were friends,” I said.
“Cut the shit Peters. Your client is burnt toast.”
“Why would he turn out the lights-and kill Ott, knowing that when they came back on he’d be the only possible suspect?” I asked.
“He didn’t know the lights would come back on so fast,” said Cawelti. “He pulled the lights-off trick earlier to be sure it would work. This time it didn’t work. Somebody turned the lights back on too fast.”
“Somebody?” I asked. “Who?”
“What’s the difference?” Cawelti said, looking at Blackstone again. “Who turned them out the first time, when you did that trick about getting across the room?”
“A young man in our show,” said Blackstone.
“How did you get across the room and back in less than a second?” asked Cawelti.
“If I tell you, the illusion is spoiled.”
“Fine,” said Cawelti. “You can tell it to a jury if it gets that far.”
“Unlikely,” came a voice from the open door behind Alexander.
Martin Leib, the best lawyer money can buy, filled the doorway. Marty was immaculately dressed in the best suit his clients’ money could buy.
Before Cawelti had shown up, I had called Marty’s number. He hadn’t been there, but his wife had taken the message and said she would find him.
Now Marty moved past Alexander gracefully, briefcase in hand, and said, “From what I’ve been able to gather, no one saw my client commit the crime.”
“No one else could have,” said Cawelti.
“That remains to be seen,” said Marty, moving to the table against which Cawelti was leaning.
He placed his briefcase on the table, opened it, and pulled out a cigar box. He held the box up, opened it, showed it to Cawelti and to all of us, closed the box, and handed it to Cawelti.
I thought I heard Blackstone let out a small chuckle at my side, but he said nothing.
“Open it,” said Marty.
“What the hell are you …?”
“Indulge me,” said Marty, adjusting his jacket.
Cawelti opened the cigar box. A white dove flew out and almost hit him in the face. The dove flapped its way around the room and came to rest on a small table at the back of the room.
“I can put you on the stand and make you swear the box was empty,” said Marty. “But, given what you have just seen, all you could honestly say is that you thought the box was empty.”
Marty looked at Blackstone, who nodded his approval.
“God, I’ve always wanted to do something like that,” Marty said. “I’d almost take on this case for nothing for the pure satisfaction of this moment. Almost.”
Gunther applauded. We joined him. Marty dropped his head in a near bow, and Cawelti turned bright red as Shelly came back through the door. The dentist was zipping his pants and pushing his glasses back on his nose.
“What did I miss?” he asked, looking around.
“Sit down!” Cawelti boomed.
Shelly hurried to sit, and Pancho whispered into his ear to explain what had happened.
“Would you like to see another one?” Marty asked.
“No,” shot Calwelti.
“So,” said Marty, “are you going to arrest my client? Put him in handcuffs? I’ll give you a hundred dollars to your ten that he’d be out of them in less than eight seconds. Was my client wearing gloves when all this happened?”
“What?” asked Cawelti.
Marty looked at us.
We all shook our heads.
“Well,” said Marty. “I’ve just been told by Joe Moark, one of your men, who’s in the ballroom, that there are no fingerprints on the murder weapon.”
“That son-of-a-bitch,” said Cawelti. “Blackstone could have dumped the gloves.”
“Where?” asked Marty. “Have you searched my client?”
Cawelti didn’t answer.
I thought of some place Blackstone could have dumped a pair of gloves, plus the missing black satchel.
“I’ll take that as a ‘yes.’” Marty looked at Blackstone, who nodded. “And you’ve searched everyone in this room?”
We all nodded “yes.”
“He dropped them somewhere in the confusion,” said Cawelti.
“Let me know when you find them,” Marty said, snapping closed the cigar box and returning it to his briefcase. He pulled a folded sheet of paper from the briefcase and held it up as if he were going to do another trick.
“Signed by Judge Froug,” he said, handing it to Cawelti.
Cawelti didn’t go down easily. He looked at the paper, refolded it, jammed it into his pocket, and said,
“In my office, tomorrow morning at nine.”
In the lobby, Blackstone moved to Marty’s side and said, “Marvin Morosco.”
“Marvin Morosco is right,” said Marty.
“Who’s Marvin Morosco?” I asked.
“The dove in the cigar box,” said Blackstone. “It’s one of his.”
“Ah, yes,” said Marty. “I borrowed it from Mr. Morosco. I came across him in the lobby before the show I did for Detective Cawelti. It will go on your bill for my services, of course.”
“Of course,” said Blackstone. “And what would you have done if Detective Cawelti had taken you up on your offer of a second piece of magic?”
Marty shrugged his shoulders.
“I would have resorted to the last refuge of a gifted lawyer, verbal prestidigitation. Nine, tomorrow. My office.”
He handed Blackstone a card and walked confidently away.
On the street in front of the hotel we formed a huddle, six mismatched penguins. If we had a tin cup and could carry a tune, we probably could have picked up some loose change singing Carolina In The Morning and doing a soft shoe with our hands in our pockets.