He came to a fork in the path. The men’s voices had stopped, the swamp deathly still. Which way should he go? He was left-handed, so that was the direction he chose.
He walked a quarter mile, then came to a dead end. He kicked at the ground in frustration, then heard a gunshot pierce the still night air.
Hicks retraced his steps, then went down the other path to a clearing. His flashlight found a figure lying on the ground. It was a man with a bloody hole in his back. Beside him was another man, blindfolded and on his knees.
Hicks got closer. The blindfolded man had been shot, and his arms appeared tied behind his back. Hicks circled him, just to be sure.
“Is someone there?” the blindfolded man said.
“Yes,” Hicks said.
“Is he dead?” the blindfolded man asked.
Hicks’s flashlight found Rico’s face. He gave him a good kick. Rico was as dead as a dog lying on the side of the road. Hicks stared at the blindfolded man with blood pouring down his face.
“Yes, he is,” Hicks said.
The man started to weep. Hicks considered untying him, then decided not to. For all he knew, the man was a criminal and would try to kill him.
“Please,” the man said, “call the police.”
Shaking, Hicks got behind the wheel of his car. He dialed 911 on his cell phone, then smelled sulfur. He looked at Mr. Beauregard, then the open glove compartment. Reaching in, he touched the pearl-handled revolver. It was warm.
A police operator came on the line. Hicks struggled to find his voice. He gave the operator his location and said there had been a killing. The operator said a cruiser was on 595 and would be right there.
“Thank you, ma’am,” he said.
Hanging up, Hicks tried to make sense of what had happened. If Mr. Beauregard had been following him, he would surely have picked up Hicks’s scent and followed his owner. Only he hadn’t. He’d gone looking for Rico. Had he somehow known another man’s life hung in the balance?
“I wish you could talk,” Hicks said.
A police cruiser appeared in his mirror, its bubble flashing. Digging a handkerchief from his pocket, he wiped down the pearl-handled revolver and replaced Mr. Beauregard’s prints with his own. The police would want to know exactly what had happened. Keep it simple, he thought. He started to get out.
Mr. Beauregard picked up his ukulele and became lost in his music. Hicks felt his eyes well up with tears, the song instantly familiar.
“I’ll be damned,” he said.
My Old Kentucky Home. It had been his granddaddy’s favorite.
46
“Let me guess,” Saul Hyman said. “You cut your ear off and sent it to a broad.”
It was ten days later, and Valentine stood in the foyer of Saul’s condo, glad to see that the old con man was strong enough to be in a wheelchair, the casts on his arms and legs not slowing him down.
“Can I come in?”
A black male nurse rolled the wheelchair backwards. Valentine entered the condo’s living room and stared at the sliver of ocean view. He felt bad for Saul; from the vantage point of his chair, he probably couldn’t see the water.
He sat on the couch, and the nurse rolled the wheelchair up so Saul was a few feet away. Then the nurse left.
“When I hit eighty, I want one of those,” Valentine said.
“Where’s your son?”
“Up in New York, selling his bar.”
“You going to let him come work for you?”
“One thing at a time,” Valentine said.
Saul smirked. “So how bad is the ear? You going to have a plastic surgeon make you a fake one?”
Valentine hadn’t come to Saul’s condo to talk about the shredded stump on the side of his head. He put a finger on the rubber wheel of Saul’s chair and brought the old con man a few inches closer. “Did you ever have an epiphany?”
“I don’t think Jews have those,” Saul said.
“I did. It happened while I was blindfolded and waiting for Rico to put a bullet in me. I thought I was going to die, and then I had one.”
“An epiphany?”
“Uh-huh.”
“What was it like?”
“Everything suddenly becomes clear.”
“Like Joan of Arc?”
“Did she have them?”
“In the movie, yeah.”
“Yeah, like Joan of Arc.”
“You going to share it?”
Valentine lowered his voice. The nurse, he guessed, hadn’t gone far, and he saw no point in spoiling the relationship. “You’re Victor Marks.”
Saul laughed like it was the funniest thing he’d ever heard. Valentine placed his hand onto the arm of Saul’s wheelchair. “I can’t believe I didn’t see it sooner. You’re in south Florida, so is Victor. All your scams used the mark’s money, so did Victor’s. And when Rico came here to kill you, you told Bill Higgins that you recognized Rico’s voice, even though he was wearing a stocking, and you’ve never met him before.”
The blood drained from Saul’s sunken cheeks. He began to look remorseful, and Valentine didn’t think it was an act. Almost dying brought out the best in most people.
“Out with it,” Valentine said.
Saul lifted his head. “Six months ago, Victor calls from Palm Beach. He tells me he’s got colon cancer, maybe two weeks to live. He says, ‘I’ve got a major scam going. I want you to take over.’ I said, ‘Why not?’ ”
“Was this the game show scam?”
Saul nodded. “I never made the kind of money Victor did, always got the crumbs. I figured it would be easy. So Victor checks out, and I dye my hair and grow a mustache, and I become him.”
“No one noticed the difference?”
“No one knew what Victor looked like, or his voice. And the staff at the Breakers turns over every few months. It was easy.”
“So you scammed Who Wants to Be Rich? and got hooked up with Rico.”
“Biggest mistake of my life,” Saul said.
“You didn’t know he was a killer.”
“No, no. I thought he just wanted to learn the rackets.”
“So you taught him.”
Saul leaned over and touched Valentine’s hand. “This is going to sound stupid.”
“What’s that?”
“I always wanted a son. A relationship like you have with your boy.”
“And Rico was that to you.”
“Yes.”
Valentine believed him. But it didn’t change the words that came out of his mouth.
“There’s going to be an investigation, and your name is going to come up. I can’t protect you, Saul. I know you’ve suffered, but the truth still has to come out. Other people’s reputations depend upon it.”
Saul took a Kleenex from the pocket of his robe and wiped at his eyes. He was crying, and Valentine took the Kleenex out of his hand. No onion inside. He rose from the couch. “My guess is, you’ve got a week, maybe longer, to hightail it out of the country.”
“In my condition?” Saul said belligerently.
“It’s up to you.”
“What about my condo?” Saul said. “And my clothes, and my car, and all my things? I can’t just leave them, can I?”
Valentine shrugged his shoulders.
“Why can’t you leave me out of it?” Saul said.
“It doesn’t work that way.”
“Still a damn cop, aren’t you?”
“You’ve got no one but yourself to blame.”
Saul gave him a murderous look. “For what? Giving a guy some advice and passing along a few pearls I learned during my lifetime? Is that a crime?”
Valentine crossed the living room and paused to glance out the window a final time. It wasn’t much of a view, the line of blue so small that he couldn’t even make out the waves, but it was still there. Waking up to it every day, Saul Hyman, a dirt-poor kid from Coney Island, had probably felt like the king of the world.