Читаем Pale Kings and Princes полностью

I scanned the dial on the radio but the local stations all played either Barry Manilow or an unidentifiable sound which someone had once told me was heavy metal. I finally found a station in Worcester that called itself the jazz sound, but the first record was a Chuck Mangione trumpet solo, so I shut the thing off, electronically, and sang a couple of bars of “Midnight Sun.” Beautifully.

The “ah ha” had probably been overoptimistic when I followed the Rogers kid to Esteva’s, but compared to what I’d been coming up with before, it was a smoking pistol. It was a pattern. Coincidence exists but believing in it never did me any good.

The sun had set by the time I got to the Reservoir Court. I parked in front of the motel and went in. The desk clerk, a little pudgy guy with a maroon three-piece suit, smirked at me as I came in. He wore a flowery tie and his white shirt gaped out under his vest by maybe four inches.

“A gentleman wishes to see you in the lounge, Mr. Spenser.” He said it in the way Mary Ellen Feeney used to say, “The principal wants to see you.”

There were a couple of guys sitting near the front door with overcoats on not doing anything. I unzipped my leather jacket and went into the bar. Virgie was on station. There were a couple of people having late lunch or early supper down past the bar in the dining room, and at a round table for six in the bar sat three men. The guy in the middle was wearing a double-breasted white cashmere overcoat with the high collar turned up. At the open throat I could see a white tie knotted against a dark shirt. His face was shaped like a wedge with the mouth a straight line slashed wide across the lower part. His forehead was prominent and his eyes recessed deeply beneath it. It was not a Spanish face, it was Indian. The man to his left was tall and thin with long hair and a drooping pencil-thin moustache. He sat languidly back in his chair like a cartoon Hispanic. His green Celtics warm-up jacket was open over a T-shirt that said “Anchor Steam Beer” on the front. The other guy was squat and his body jammed into a green and blue wool jacket that seemed about two sizes too small. The jacket was buttoned up tight to his neck. His hair was thick and curly and needed cutting. On top of his head was a small flat-crowned hat with the brim turned up all the way. His nose was wide and flat and so was his face. His eyes were very small and dark and still.

“My name is Spenser,” I said.

The guy in the Celtics jacket nodded toward a chair. I sat down. The guy in the Celtics jacket looked at me. So did the guy with the cashmere coat. The guy with the hat didn’t look at anything.

I looked back.

After a while the guy in the cashmere coat said, “Do you know who I am?”

“Ricardo Montalban,” I said.

They looked at me some more. I looked back.

“I loved you in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan,” I said.

Cashmere glanced at Celtics Jacket. Celtics Jacket shrugged.

“My name is Felipe Esteva,” Cashmere said.

“I’ll be goddamned,” I said. “I’m never wrong about Ricardo. I saw him once outside the Palm on Santa Monica Boulevard. He was driving a Chrysler LeBaron and wearing a white coat just like that.” I shook my head. “You sure?” I said.

The guy in the Celtics jacket leaned forward over the table and said, “You are going to be in very big trouble.”

“Trouble?” I said. “What for? It’s an easy mistake to make. Especially with the white coat.”

Esteva said, “Shut up. I didn’t come to listen. I came to talk.”

I waited.

“Today you went to my house,” he said, “and you talked to my wife.”

I nodded.

“What did you talk about?”

“I asked her if she knew Eric Valdez,” I said.

“Why did you ask her that?”

“I heard she did know him,” I said.

“Who you hear that from?”

“A person who should know,” I said.

“Who?”

I shook my head. “It was in confidence.”

Esteva looked at the guy with the hat. “Maybe Cesar can change your mind.”

“Maybe Cesar can’t,” I said. Cesar never moved. His eyes didn’t shift. For all I could tell he hadn’t heard us.

“Don’t be foolish, Spenser. You think you are tough, and some people I know say maybe you are. But Cesar...” Esteva shook his head. Cesar remained silent.

“You ain’t as tough as Cesar,” the guy in the Celtics jacket said. He smiled when he said it and I saw that his upper front teeth were missing.

“Sure,” I said.

We sat some more.

“I don’t like you talking to my wife,” Esteva said.

“Don’t blame you, but it seemed a good idea at the time.”

“You think she got something to do with Valdez?”

“Maybe,” I said. “I was told that Valdez had had an affair with the wife of a Colombian and that he’d been killed by the husband.”

Esteva stared at me. Then he said something in Spanish and his two pals got up and went to the bar and sat on stools out of earshot.

“I maybe kill you for saying that,” Esteva said.

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Адвокат. Судья. Вор
Адвокат. Судья. Вор

Адвокат. СудьяСудьба надолго разлучила Сергея Челищева со школьными друзьями – Олегом и Катей. Они не могли и предположить, какие обстоятельства снова сведут их вместе. Теперь Олег – главарь преступной группировки, Катерина – его жена и помощница, Сергей – адвокат. Но, встретившись с друзьями детства, Челищев начинает подозревать, что они причастны к недавнему убийству его родителей… Челищев собирает досье на группировку Олега и передает его журналисту Обнорскому…ВорСтав журналистом, Андрей Обнорский от умирающего в тюремной больнице человека получает информацию о том, что одна из картин в Эрмитаже некогда была заменена им на копию. Никто не знает об этой подмене, и никому не известно, где находится оригинал. Андрей Обнорский предпринимает собственное, смертельно опасное расследование…

Андрей Константинов

Криминальный детектив