"Been yachting?" I said.
"Ah is in disguise," Hawk said. `"The Marblehead look. Blend right in."
"Boy, you certainly fooled me," I said. "How'd it work?"
Hawk shrugged.
"Been outside the Ronan place maybe an hour when two hard cases come along."
"Cops?"
"Naw. Tough guys. A tall fat one, and a short one with muscles, no neck that I could see."
"Well, well," I said.
"Sound familiar?"
I nodded. "What did they say?"
"They want to know what I'm doing there. And I say, `Who wants to know?' And they say, `We do,' and it go sort of like that for a while. And they say if I know what's good for me that I'll haul my black ass out of there."
"That wasn't very sensitive," I said.
"I told them that."
"And?"
"Apparently they hadn't intended it to be sensitive. So, I figured since they looked a lot like two guys braced you a while ago that maybe I might have run into a whatchamacallit…"
"A clue," I said.
"That's it," Hawk said, "a clue, and you being a great detective might know what to do with it. So I let them chase me away, and here I am."
"It's the same two guys," I said.
"I figure," Hawk said. "So whoever owns them not only don't want you nosing around, he don't want me."
"He or she," I said.
"That's right," Hawk said. "I was being insensitive."
"I got threatened again yesterday myself," I said.
"Astonishing," Hawk said. "And we so charming too."
"The thing is it was on a matter that Ronan shouldn't have anything to do with."
"You assuming the two stiffs I talked to work for Ronan."
"Yes," I said.
"Sonovagun," he said. "I thought so too, and I not even a great detective. Who threaten you yesterday?"
"Tall guy, sort of thin, strong looking, sharp dresser, drives a dark green Range Rover…"
"You got threatened by a guy who drives a Range Rover?"
"Embarrassing, isn't it? Said his name was Richard Gavin."
Hawk shrugged.
"So many assholes," he said. "So little time."
"So I try to find out a little about the alleged sexual harassment and get threatened," I said. "And I ask you to keep an eye on Ronan and you get threatened. And while I'm trying to look into the harassment charges, I find out that Sterling's big charity thing was a bust and nobody got any money. Except that I couldn't get in touch with anyone at a beneficiary group called Civil Streets. So I try to find out a little about Civil Streets because I just stumbled across it while I'm looking into the Sterling thing, and I'm a neat guy, and I like to be thorough, and because I don't know what else to look into, and I get threatened."
Hawk was sitting in one of my office chairs with his feet up on my desk. He was wearing blue suede loafers that matched the blazer.
"I a great detective I might think there was some connection."
"If you were a great detective you might explain to me why Brad Sterling isn't around."
"Gone?"
"I went by there and his office is closed. Nobody knew where he was."
"Secretary."
"Nope. Door was shut and locked."
"It appears," Hawk said, "that the plot be thickening."
"Christ," I said, "maybe you are a great detective."
"Want me to drift by his house, see if he there?"
"Haven't got his address," I said.
"You ask Susan?"
"Yeah."
Hawk nodded.
"Here's a trick," Hawk said.
He picked up the white pages from the top of a file cabinet and riffled through it, and paused and ran his finger down a page and stopped. He shook his head.
"No Bradford Sterling."
"What a shame!" I said. "Watch this."
I punched the speaker phone button and dialed a number and a voice said, "Reilly Research."
"Sean," I said. "Spenser. I need an address."
"Full name," the voice said, "last name first."
"Sterling, formerly Silverman, Brad, I assume Bradford."
"Location?"
"Greater Boston."
"Home or business."
"Home."
"Please hold."
Some Klezmer Muzak came on. "Klezmer Muzak?" Hawk said.
"Sean thinks it's funny," I said.
"He sounds like a funny guy," Hawk said.
The Klezmer stopped and the voice came back and read out the phone number and an address in Brighton.
"Brighton?" I said.
"Brighton."
I said thank you and the line went dead. I killed the speaker phone.
"Chatty bastard," Hawk said.
"He's a computer geek," I said. "He thinks it makes him seem businesslike."
I turned the speaker phone back on and called the number in Brighton. After four rings a machine answered.
"Hi, Brad Sterling. Sorry I'm not here right now, but your call is important to me, so please leave a message and I'll call you back as soon as I can."
I hung up.
"Why would he have an unlisted number?" I said.
"Everybody got unlisted numbers," Hawk said. "It's one of the ways you know you a Yuppie."
"I suppose you're in the promotion business you don't want people calling you at home," I said. "You in on this deal?"
"Uh huh."
"There's nothing in it for either one of us."
"Susan might like it," Hawk said.
"Not so far," I said.
"But she might," Hawk said. "Later on."
"Maybe," I said.
"Besides," Hawk said, "I made two hundred thousand last week in Miami, so I can afford to take a few days, and I don't much like people threatening me."
I did not ask him what he had done in Miami to earn the money.
"Okay," I said. "Let's go over and burgle Sterling's apartment."
"What you looking for?"
"I have no idea," I said.
"It's a start," Hawk said.
chapter twenty
STERLING'S APARTMENT WAS a second-floor walk-up on a middle-class street off Commonwealth Avenue, before you got to Washington Street, just this side of Brookline. Hawk was not impressed.
"Maybe Brad ain't as rich as he say."
We'd come properly equipped, which is a definite advantage for B&E, the pry bar and other things in a red Nike gym bag. It took us about ninety seconds to jimmy the door quietly enough so that nobody stuck their head out into the hall and said "hey"; and neatly enough so that when we closed it behind us the break-in wasn't obvious.
It was one room and sparsely furnished. Narrow bed, clean sheets, neatly made, table and chair, bureau, bath off one side, no kitchen. A long hook swung out from the back of the door for suits and sport coats to hang on, and a single window looked out on the air shaft. Hawk was even less impressed.
"Maybe Brad a lot less rich than he say."
"Maybe he simply prefers Thoreauvian simplicity," I said.
"Sure," Hawk said. "That probably it."
"Lucky Susan's not still married to him," I said.
"She don't prefer Thoreauvian simplicity," Hawk said.
"No."
Searching the place wasn't a challenge. Our only problem was that it was so small we got in each other's way. Brad was a neat guy. His socks were carefully rolled. His freshly laundered shirts were organized by color. His spare keys were in a small lacquer box, each key neatly labeled with little plastic tags. There was nothing very interesting about the labels. I put the keys in my coat pocket and put the box back in the drawer. Neckties lay on top of the bureau as neatly as in a haberdashery case. Three pairs of shoes were lined up under the foot of the bed. Under the head of the bed was a working flashlight, and a box which had once contained a pair of Rockport walking shoes. Now it contained a thick bundle of letters, still in their envelopes. Hawk dumped the box out on the bed and we each took a letter. The letters were handwritten in bright purple ink on lavender stationery in what I took to be a female hand. They were all addressed to Brad Sterling at this address. We each read our letter. The salutation was "My darling."
"If I wasn't such a dangerous and self-contained African American person," Hawk said, "I'd blush."