Ryan waited for him to finish. “You mentioned something about more of an incentive.”
“Yeah… I was thinking maybe a percentage rather than an hourly rate or a per diem,” Mr. Perez said. “That is, if you locate him and I’m able to make a deal. Say, oh… ten percent?”
“Ten percent of what, the stock?”
“Yeah, the whole thing.”
“The stock’s only worth a buck a share, isn’t it?”
“In 1941 it was,” Mr. Perez said. “Its cash value now, I’d say, would be around a hundred and fifty thousand. We’d have to look into the accumulated dividends, so it could be several thousand more.”
Ryan saw the figure in his mind, fifteen grand, a clean round figure. But he wanted to be sure. “I get ten percent of a hundred and fifty thousand?”
“If you find him and if I make a deal, get him to agree.”
“Ten percent of the hundred and fifty,” Ryan said, still wanting to be sure. “Not ten percent of what you get.”
“Say fifteen thousand minimum,” Mr. Perez said. “I’ll draw up an agreement, give it to you in writing.”
“What do you think the chances are? I mean of you getting him to go along with it?”
“Four to one. I sign eighty percent of the people I locate,” Mr. Perez said. “Ah, but locating them, that’s the bugger. It comes down to a question of how much time to allow in relation to the potential gain. I can afford to put a little more time in on this one. I can afford to hire you and sit here and discuss a proposition. Otherwise, Mr. Ryan, I doubt we’d have sufficient reason to be talking to each other about anything.”
Mr. Perez spoke and revealed little glimpses of himself, what the real Mr. Perez thought and felt. That was fine with Ryan. It was a business deal. They weren’t going to the ball game together.
“So now I’ll ask you,” Mr. Perez said, “what you think your chances are of locating him.”
Ryan thought a moment. He almost told the truth and said he didn’t know, that maybe he wouldn’t even come close. But he didn’t.
He said, “I usually hit about ninety percent. As you say, time’s a factor. If I wasn’t concerned with that, I’d probably do better.” Ryan picked up his raincoat from his lap and draped it over one arm. He seemed about to get up, then sank back into the chair again.
“I almost forgot. You said something about a written agreement, didn’t you?”
Mr. Perez picked up the phone to call room service for his noon dinner, then changed his mind and placed a person-to-person call to Mr. Raymond Gidre in New Iberia, Louisiana. He took the phone over to the deep chair and sank down comfortably.
After a moment he said, “Raymond, how you doing, boy? I bet you got a big plate of crawfish in front of you and a glass of cold beer… What?” Mr. Perez laughed. “That’s just as good. You can’t get nothing like that up here… Uh-huh. Listen, Raymond? How’d you like to come to Detroit for a few days?… No, this one’s a little different. Man turns out, he likes to shoot people… I’m telling you the truth.” Mr. Perez listened, then began to grin. “Now you’re talking. We got one here, Raymond, I believe we can go all the way… You bet. You get ready and I’ll call you back, tell you when exactly I need you…. Fine, Raymond. Be good now, I’ll see you.”
Mr. Perez picked up the phone again and asked for room service.
“How you doing?” Mr. Perez said. “You got any crawfish?… No, I don’t want crayfish, I want crawfish… I didn’t think so. How about boiled shrimp?… With the shells on. You peel ’em, dip ’em in hot sauce… What? All right, I’ll call you back.”
Mr. Perez went over to the desk and shuffled through the papers and file folders. He opened the drawer then. There it was. Mr. Perez took the room-service menu back to his chair, looking at it.
Bunch of shit.
About all he could do was get this deal done and hope it didn’t take too long.
5
“THE THING THAT bothers me about him,” Ryan said, “here’s this businessman, investment consultant-he’s staying in this suite at the Pontch has got to cost him a hundred bucks a day-I tell him about Robert Leary, about the people he’s killed, and he grins and says, ‘Sounds like a mean bugger, doesn’t he?’”
“Maybe he was being cool,” Dick Speed said. “Trying to impress you.”
Dick Speed was driving an unmarked Ford sedan, turning off Saint Antoine now and heading out Gratiot Avenue, creeping along about twenty-five.
“I don’t think so,” Ryan said. “It was real, the way he sounded. See, it bothered me that it didn’t bother him, the idea of doing business with a homicidal maniac. Christ, a guy like that out on the street.”
“Maybe he is, we don’t know.”
“You don’t care, is what you mean,” Ryan said. “You only care about him if he kills somebody else.”
“Like you maybe, messing around with him.”
“Shit, I don’t even want to see the guy.”
“Well, I promise you this, buddy,” Dick Speed said. “Make you feel better. If he kills you, I promise I’ll get the son of a bitch if it’s the last thing I do.”
“Thanks,” Ryan said. “What I’d really like is if you could find out something about Mr. Francis X. Perez. How would you do that? Teletype Baton Rouge? New Orleans maybe?”
“I’d pick up the phone. You know, they think I’m working, all this shit I’m doing for you.”
“I appreciate it. Don’t think I don’t.”
“When do I get this big dinner?”
“You name it. Whenever you’re free.”
“I can see it,” Dick Speed said. “You call up say come on over, I got this tomato surprise shit.” He crept along the inside lane, his gaze on the storefronts and the people on the sidewalk. Most of them were black. “Tomato and fucking cornflakes or something.”
“I never tried that. Where’s the place?”
“Few blocks. He could be walking. I’ve never seen him drive.”
“How do you know he’ll be there?”
“I called. They said he’d probably be in. He’s due for his fix.”
Ryan said, “Listen, I don’t want to be taking up all your time.”
“Then what’re you doing it for?”
“I said I’d talk to the guy. You don’t have to come.”
“You talk to him, but he won’t talk to you,” Dick Speed said. “Not alone. Be looking over his shoulder all the time. Ask him what it’s like, being a police snitch. You’ll see him trying to act cool, but he’s scared shitless. There it is, next to the drugstore.”
Dick Speed coasted past the storefronts, the drugstore and the one with the show windows painted white and the posters Ryan couldn’t read from the car, and pulled into a parking place on the street, a few stores down in the block of fifty-year-old two-story buildings that were scarred and worn out before their time, some of them with collapsible iron grating over the display windows.
“I expected a sign,” Ryan said. “Methadone center.”
Dick Speed was watching the sidewalk, turning to look through the rear window at the painted storefront.
“They know where it is. The ones that need it.”
“This guy was a junkie?”
“He was everything, if you believe him. You got to weed out the bullshit.”
“What’s the guy’s name?”
“Tunafish.”
“That’s all, just Tunafish?”
“You got a name like that, what else you need?”
Ryan kept looking at his watch. When they’d been there thirty minutes he said, “Doesn’t look like he’s going to show, does it? Maybe we ought to come back.” He was antsy; he could never stand sitting around very long.