Life was just one damn widow after another.
15
Another note:
Are you going to phone
me, or aren’t you?
If you don’t want to
see me any more, just
say so.
I can take a hint.
It wasn’t signed, but it was on a résumé again, in lipstick again, and attached to the door with a false fingernail again, so Engel had a pretty good idea who it was from.
“Life is cruel,” he said aloud. He took the note down and went into the apartment.
It was ten after seven, and he spent the next forty-five minutes showering, changing, and generally getting ready for his evening with Mrs. Kane. After all, he told himself, she was at the funeral parlor today, and she knows Kurt Brock, and Kurt Brock was the next to the last one to see Charlie Brody, so I can look at it like I’m still working. There could be some connection between Margo Kane and Charlie Brody’s body.
There could? Engel, adjusting his tie before the one-way mirror (producer), looked himself in the eye and made a face at himself. What would a woman like Margo Kane want with a body like Charlie Brody?
Well, he told himself defensively, you never knew. That’s all, you just never knew.
Sure.
She arrived punctually at eight, coming in smiling and effervescent, wearing now a forest-green knit dress in which she looked almost — but not quite — too thin to be interesting. Her lipstick and nail polish were a less violent shade than before, and her raven-black hair hung in soft folds now around her face.
She came in saying, “I would have insisted on meeting you again if only to see your apartment once more. It’s just the most fascinating place I’ve ever been in.”
Engel felt his hackles beginning just slightly to rise. He didn’t know exactly why, but he had the feeling there was somehow a touch of mockery in her references to his apartment He said, “I’m ready to go if you are. Or,” belatedly, “do you want a drink first?”
She seemed surprised, whether by his tone or his offer he couldn’t tell. “We don’t have to,” she said. “We could have a drink at the restaurant.”
“Okay. Fine.”
They didn’t speak again until they were down in her car, the Mercedes-Benz sports car again, the top still down, once again parked in front of a fire hydrant. Then Engel said, “Don’t you ever get tickets, parking like this?”
“You mean those little green cards people put under the windshield wiper?” She laughed, and started the engine. “I have a drawer at home full of those,” she said, and pulled away from the curb.
She was a good driver, if a little too competitive. She jockeyed the Mercedes through the narrow Village streets, occasionally leaving shouters and fist-shakers in her wake, and eventually found a ramp up to the West Side Highway, heading north. Comfortably settled in the middle lane, she glanced at Engel and said, “You seem somehow withdrawn tonight. As though you had a rough day.”
“Yeah, that’s what I did all right. I had a rough day.”
“Gangster business?”
The phrase was meant to make him laugh, and he did. “Gangster business,” he said. “I’m looking for something that belongs to my boss.”
“Something stolen?”
“Lost, strayed, or stolen. I’ll tell you when I find it.”
“Was that why you were at the funeral parlor today? Looking for it there?”
Engel decided not to give her any sort of specific answer. A simple lie — that he’d been there to pay the Brody bill, for instance — would have ended the matter there and then, but he knew she meant to pump him for his reason for seeing Kurt Brock and it amused him to play it dumb but cozy, make her work for her misinformation. So he said, “Not really. I have all kinds of gangster business.”
“Oh, then it was gangster business that brought you there.”
“I wouldn’t say that. Listen, it’s too nice a night to talk about funeral parlors.”
“Of course,” she said, but she couldn’t hide the disappointment in her voice.
It was now fully night, a beautiful spring night in the only time of the year when New York City is habitable. At no other time is the air clear, is the sky clean, do the streets and buildings give any indication of personality and color beneath the all-embracing grime. Speeding up the West Side Highway, elevated above the crasser level of the truck-bound streets, the city on their right and the Hudson River and Jersey shore on their left, they were as close as human beings can get to the setting of a thirties movie musical.
There were, naturally, huge billboards boosting beer and trucking companies lining the route on their right, interrupting the view of the city, and across the river, in red neon letters quite large enough to be read from here, blinking slowly on and off, was the one word: SPRY. Women in passing automobiles, caught up in a drifting romantic dream, on seeing that word in the middle of the panorama of night, turned to their husbands and, “Remind me from now on,” they said, “to use Crisco.”
Mrs. Kane tried no longer on the drive to get information out of Engel. They talked casually, comfortably, about the weather and the city and the driving and other impersonal subjects, and when the silences came between topics they let them come without worrying about them.
At 72nd Street the West Side Highway became the Henry Hudson Parkway. No longer an elevated highway, it raced now amid landscaped greenery, bulky elderly apartment houses on their right. Ahead, gleaming across the river with all its lights, was the George Washington Bridge.
Engel had no idea where Mrs. Kane was taking him, and he didn’t worry about it. He sat back in the good car and relaxed. No more did he try to kid himself that he was working. He’d stopped working for today. Tomorrow was soon enough to worry some more about Charlie Brody.
At the bridge they left Henry Hudson and his Parkway, joined the Cross-Bronx Expressway for an elevated trip through some of the less attractive purlieus of New York, thence to the Hutchinson River Parkway north out of the city and out of the state. At the Connecticut line the name changed to Merritt Parkway, and at that point Engel said, “Where we going?”
“A little place I know. Not much farther.”
“We have to drive back, too, you know.”
She glanced at him again, amused. “Do gangsters have to get up early in the morning?”
“That depends.”
They left the Parkway at the Long Ridge Road exit, and drove north a few miles farther before at last she turned off the road and into the parking lot next to a one-time barn now converted into a restaurant called The Turkey Run.
Inside, The Turkey Run was determinedly rustic. Everything was wood, and none of it was smooth. Enough carriage wheels were suspended from the ceiling or hung on the walls or used as room dividers to keep the Conestoga Company in stock for a month. If the lamps on the walls and on the tables didn’t look like kerosene lamps it wasn’t the designer’s fault.
There would be, the mustachioed and absurdly-French waiter told them, a short wait for a table. Would they prefer to wait at the bar?
They would. Over a Scotch sour, Mrs. Kane became moody. “Murray and I used to come here so often,” she said. “It’s hard to believe we’ll never come here again. All that’s behind me now, that way of life.”
“It must have been a shock,” Engel said, because you had to say something in response to a line like that.
“And so — so silly,” she said. “So unnecessary.”
“Do you want to talk about it?”