The first ten minutes were spent going back and forth to the kitchen, which was actually quite far from the living room, a fact Dortmunder had never noticed before. Finally, though, they all settled down, Dortmunder in his regular chair, Murch's Mom in May's regular chair, Tiny on much of the sofa with Kelp on the sliver of sofa that was left, and Stan on a wooden chair he'd brought from the kitchen.
"Now," Tiny said, "I know we're here because you people got something, but first I gotta know, what's with the O.J.?"
Dortmunder said, "Rollo wouldn't let us use the back room. He didn't look happy."
"He looked morose," Kelp said.
Dortmunder nodded at him. "The very word I was thinking."
"Also," Kelp said, "the regulars weren't saying anything."
Stan said, "What? The loudmouths at the bar?"
"Not a peep," Kelp told him. "They looked like they didn't wanna attract attention."
"That's the only thing they ever want to attract," Stan said, and his Mom said, "When Stan is right, he's right," and Stan said, "Thanks, Mom."
"Also," Dortmunder said, "there were two guys in the place, throwing their weight around."
With a little purr in his voice, Tiny said, "Oh, yeah?"
Kelp said, "Those were mob guys, John. You could smell it on them."
Tiny shook his head. "Mob guys in the O.J. Why don't they stick to the Copacabana?"
Dortmunder said, "I think something's going on in there that's linked up with the mob."
Kelp said, "You know how they like to kill one another in restaurants and bars? Maybe those guys were in there waiting for Mickey Banana Nose to walk in, and bang-bang."
"Then I'd like them to get it over with," Dortmunder said. "And not do any stray bullets into Rollo."
"That could be why he was morose," Kelp said, then held up the jelly glass into which he had poured from Dortmunder's freebie bottle. "You know, John?" he said. "Not to badmouth your apartment, but this stuff doesn't taste as good here as it does at the O.J."
"I noticed that myself," Dortmunder admitted. "I guess it doesn't travel."
Tiny said, "Whadawe gonna do about the O.J.?"
"Tomorrow afternoon," Kelp told him, "John and me, we'll go over, see what the story is, are they finished whatever they're doing over there. Right, John?"
"Sure," Dortmunder said. "Could we get to the actual topic now? The reason we're here?"
"If I'm gonna get back to Canarsie before my bedtime," Murch's Mom said, "we better."
"Good," Dortmunder said. "This opportunity comes to us courtesy of Arnie Albright."
"He's off in rehab," Stan said.
Dortmunder sighed. "No," he said, "he's back." And he then related, with footnotes from Kelp, everything Arnie had said to them in his apartment.
When he finished, Stan said, "This elevator goes up the outside of the apartment building?"
"Right," Dortmunder said. "And it's only got doors at the top and bottom."
"Something goes wrong up top," Stan said, "that sounds like maybe you're trapped."
Kelp said, "Stan, that's not the only way in and out. That's the best way, for us. But the apartment's got a front door, too, and a hall, and other elevators, and even staircases."
Murch's Mom said, "That part's okay, Stanley. What I wonder about is this seventy percent."
"That's not natural," Tiny said. "For a fence to take the light end of the seesaw."
Murch's Mom appealed to Dortmunder: "So what do you think, John? Did he mean it?"
"Well, in a way," Dortmunder said. "I think he meant he was that mad at the guy owns the apartment. He's still that mad at the guy, so that right now what he thinks he wants is revenge."
"I agree," Kelp said. "But this is before Arnie has paper money in his hand."
"Green beats revenge," Tiny said, "every time."
"The thing is," Stan said, "seventy percent of what? We give him, I dunno, a silver ashtray, he says I got a hundred bucks for it, here's your seventy. Whadawe know what he got for it? He doesn't deal with people where you're gonna have invoices, receipts."
"If Arnie ever saw a paper trail," Dortmunder said, "he'd set fire to it."
"So what it comes down to," Murch's Mom said, "we do the work, we take the risks, he gives us whatever he wants to give us."
"Like always," Kelp said. "It's trust makes the world go round."
"Tomorrow," Tiny said, "I'll go look at this place." To Stan and his Mom he said, "You wanna be there?"
They looked at each other and both shook their heads. "We just drive," Stan said. "You guys say it's good, we'll show up."
"Right," his Mom said.
"Fine." Tiny looked at Dortmunder and Kelp. "You two are going to check on the O.J.?"
"That's the plan," Kelp said.
"So where do we meet after?"
"Not the O.J., I don't think," Dortmunder said. "Not until we know for sure what's what." He looked around his crowded living room. "And maybe not here."
"It's daytime," Tiny said. "We'll meet at the fountain in the park. Three o'clock?"
"Fine," Dortmunder said, and they all heard the apartment door open. The others looked at their host, who stood and called, "May?"
"You're home?"
May appeared in the doorway, gazed around the room, and said, "You're all home."
Everybody else got to their feet to say hello to May and get likewise back, and then she said, "How come you didn't go to the O.J.?"
"It's a long story," Dortmunder said.
"We've all heard it," Tiny said, moving toward the door. "Night, May. Three o'clock tomorrow, Dortmunder."
12
JUDSON BLINT ENTERED names and addresses into the computer. He printed out labels and affixed them to the small cardboard boxes of books, along with appropriate postage from the Pitney Bowes stamp machine. He stacked the labeled boxes on the tall-handled metal cart and, when it was full, wheeled it out of the office to the elevator, then on down to the postal substation on the Avalon State Bank Tower lobby level. After turning the boxes over to the United States Postal Service, he used the tagged keys J. C. Taylor had given him to open Box 88, Super Star Music Co.; Box 13, Allied Commissioners' Courses, Inc.; Box 69, Intertherapeutic Research Service; and Box 222, Commercial Attaché, Republic of Maylohda. Back upstairs, he put all the mail on his desk except the few items for Maylohda, which appeared to come from real countries and official organizations connected with the United Nations. After a discreet knock on the door to the inner office, he then brought the Maylohda mail in and placed it on the desk in front of J. C. herself, who was usually on the phone, sounding very official and occasionally foreign. Back at his own desk, he next entered the newly hooked customers into the database and prepared a deposit of their just-received checks into one of J. C.'s three bank accounts in the Avalon Bank branch, also on the lobby level, having first forged J. C. Taylor on each check, a skill he had picked up in no time.
If everything he did didn't happen to be breaking some law or another — mail fraud, misuse of bulk rate, identity theft of the endorsements, plagiarism, sale of inappropriate material to minors, on and on — all of this activity would be very like a job. But it was better than a job. It was a world, a world he'd always believed had to exist somewhere, but hadn't known how to find. So it had found him.
When he had assembled his fake job resume out on Long Island, he'd thought he was being brilliant, and in a way he was, though not in the manner he'd thought.