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Authors: Howard Engel

BOOK: A City Called July
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I tried to look him in his shaky eyes, but he was looking to the window where a starfish caught in a fish-net was silhouetted against the light. My last view of him, before I went out the door, was of a totally white figure pouring a stiff drink from a flask of Irish whiskey.

TWENTY-SEVEN

Steve Tulk worked for the telephone company. He was a big guy even in high school where he made a better captain of the football team than he did a Duke in
Twelfth Night.
I played Curio, and we had a scene together near the beginning. The scene goes like this:

 

CURIO: Will you go hunt, my lord?

DUKE: What, Curio?

CURIO: The hart.

 

After that I was ready for the showers, while Steve had the rest of the play and a curtain call. A few years later I was able to do him a favour professionally when his ex-wife disappeared with his two kids. He wanted me to snatch them for him, but I simply gave him the address in Barrie and let him do what he wanted himself. When I talked to him on the phone, I didn’t have to remind him of all this. In fact he sounded glad to hear from me. I was able to let him know that the time had come to return the favour without putting that short temper of his out of joint. We met for a beer and there, in the Men’s Beverage Room of the Harding House, I explained what I wanted him to do in Larry’s hideaway at 44 Woodland Avenue. Steve shrugged when I asked him if he could handle it, so I took it that the job was as good as done. Just the same, I arranged for him to call me at my office when the dirty deed was done. The call came a little after six.

An hour later, I presented myself at the front door of Debbie Geller’s house on Francis Street off Welland Avenue. It was a hot night, but I’d put on a jacket and tie just to show that I knew about the little things that divide society up the middle into those who know better and those who are comfortable. I heard the chime sound on the inside and saw a shadow approaching through the cranberry stained-glass windows that ran up either side of the door.

“Mr. Cooperman! This is a surprise. I was expecting Sid. You’re early for the minyan. Won’t you come in?” Debbie looked mildly shocked to see me, but spoke with a voice that was too tired to put much expression into her reading of the line. “It’s not Sid,” Debbie called ahead of us. “It’s Mr. Cooperman from the … It’s Mr. Cooperman.”

“Like a bad penny,” I said. She led the way through the vestibule and through an arch into the living-room. Instinctively, I found my eyes drawn to the spot where I’d last seen the tray of cold cuts. They had vanished, of course. Debbie’s sister, Ruth, was sitting in the centre of a large chintz-covered couch. The room looked bigger without a hundred people shoving their way towards the smoked carp and carved turkey. That was a funeral to remember. Now they would have to have one for Nathan’s brother Larry. Would anybody come? Two brothers within a week. I could see from the faces of the two women, as Debbie slipped into a Queen Anne chair nearest the archway, that they had been thinking along similar lines. Ruth hardly looked up. She was examining the pattern cut into the wall-to-wall broadloom. “I’m sorry for your trouble, Mrs. Geller,” I said, echoing both myself a few short days ago and Frank Bushmill, the neighbour who taught me this useful Irish expression of sympathy. I thought of adding about it being all for the best and another observation about how certainty beats uncertainty every time, but I couldn’t find the right words. I gave them a break and sat down and kept my mouth shut.

“As you can see, Mr. Cooperman,” Debbie said, “we are still stunned by the news. Even though he’s been away all these weeks, it’s still a shock.” Ruth raised her eyes from the floor and looked at her sister as though she was trying to see how close what Debbie said came to what she was feeling. Debbie went on: “I invited Ruth over here. I didn’t want her to be alone in that big house tonight. She’s going to be staying with me, aren’t you Ruthie?” Ruth made an inaudible response. “May I get you some coffee, Mr. Cooperman, or would you prefer a drink? Sid will be here in a few minutes. Maybe then we’ll all have a drink? In the meantime, coffee?” I nodded, and Debbie left the room. Ruth had returned to the pattern of the smokey-blue carpet. Sharing a silence with her was next door to sitting by myself. I couldn’t think of anything to say anyway, so I thought I could be building up points on tact by just keeping still.

About the same time I could hear crockery on a tray coming from the direction of the kitchen, a big car pulled up and parked in front of the house. Sid and Pia came in and Debbie greeted them, managing the coffee tray at the same time. Ruth got to her feet and Sid held her close with his arms around her for a long time. When they broke the clinch, both of them had tears in their eyes. Pia was the first to light a cigarette. It game her something to do. This couldn’t be easy for her. After the funeral all those people made for substantial insulation between herself and Debbie. As for me, I’d tried to make myself into a fly on the wall.

For the first few minutes, I don’t think anyone but Pia noticed me. Everybody but me got a hug from somebody. Pia was short-changed by Debbie, but she was still holding the tray. It was Sid who first took official notice of me. He didn’t sound unfriendly but his greeting needed more work before it could convince a drama critic. “So, Mr. Cooperman, bad news travels fast. No sooner is my brother found than you turn up. Have you started chasing ambulances in your old age?”

“Mr. Geller,” I tried to say in an even voice, “I’m sorry about your brother.”

“Which one?” He shrugged, which is hard to do with as short a neck as Sid had. “Did you come over here to ask more questions, Mr. Cooperman? Why don’t you let the cops handle this?”

“Sid has a point,” Pia put in. Even Ruth was nodding agreement. I sipped my coffee then replaced the cup on the saucer with a racket that sounded like a gunshot.

“Look, this might be as good a time as any to tell you that my involvement with this case is over,” I said. Debbie exchanged a look with her former husband. “I was brought into this by Rabbi Meltzer and Saul Tepperman. They had some idea that I could do something on behalf of the Jewish community. While there was a chance that Larry was alive somewhere, there was a chance that he might be persuaded to return the money he took and make good on his obligations. Now that we know that he can’t do that, there’s no way I can help Mr. Tepperman, the rabbi or the community. So, I’m bowing out. Since I guess I’ve bothered all of you most, I thought I should let you know in person. That’s all. End of speech. And if you need a tenth man for the minyan, I’m here.” I picked up my coffee and nearly choked taking a badly gauged swig. Sid pounded my back and I came back to life.

“I don’t get you, Cooperman,” Sid Geller said, as he took a seat beside his sister-in-law on the couch. “Just when the case has taken a big turn, you drop it. Why?”

“Well, in the first place, this is a case for the cops. I keep telling everybody that most cases are, but luckily some of them don’t believe me. As far as this one goes, the cops are now putting all available men on it. It’s no longer a matter of waiting for Larry to make a move down in Florida or try using a credit card in Paris. The cops have his passport and the name he planned to use in his new life. From that they can move on quickly. They’ll have the murderer before you know it.”

“That’s reassuring,” said Debbie, lighting up one of her menthol cigarettes and accepting a light from Pia’s familiar lighter. “But how long will all this take? You have no idea what this has done to all our lives. To think of it dragging on much longer, well …”

“I shouldn’t think it will take them a lot longer. I was talking with Staff Sergeant Savas earlier today, and he said that they are trying to locate an office somewhere here in town where Larry did the paperwork for his …” I didn’t know how to end the sentence with so many of his relations looking on, so I went back and ended it with “paperwork” and left it at that. “When they get there they’ll go over it with a microscope. If there’s a shred of evidence, they’ll find it. I was on a case a year ago where the husband I was trying to locate was found just by discovering information on the redial memory of his girlfriend’s telephone. You know, one of those cheap, made-in-Taiwan jobs. It shouldn’t take more than a day or so for them to find the hideaway, and then it will be very fast work to close the noose on the guilty party.” I’d ended with more of a dramatic flourish than I’d meant to, but I could see that all of the Geller relatives and friends were paying attention.

“What else have the police found out, Mr. C? You seem to be the first to hear what’s going on.” Pia Morley was smiling at me, but it wasn’t quite as friendly as I remembered her smile the last time we’d met.

“Well, it’s true,” I said. “They have told me a few things that the reporters at the
Beacon
don’t know about yet.”

“Sid, why don’t you get us all a drink. You know where the liquor is. There’s ice in the fridge under the bar.” Sid got up and moved past his former wife and current mistress to the dining-room, where the tinkling of crystal and the ping of ice-cubes could soon be heard. In the meantime, we waited. After what seemed long enough for a jury to make up its mind, Sid returned with drinks on a tray.

“I brought rye. Debbie’s out of Scotch,” Sid said.

“Idiot. You don’t know where to look for it, that’s all.” She got up and went into the kitchen.

“Rye’s fine with me,” Ruth said, trying out a smile.

“Sure,” said Pia, “just as long as it stings.” She collected a glass for Sid and herself. I took one of the remaining two glasses.

With the exception of Debbie, we were all sitting down again, watching the ice-cubes melt in our drinks. In a few minutes, conversation started up again. It was about Ruth’s kids in Toronto. She’d had a call from them, but hadn’t told them about the death of their father yet. Sid suggested that there was no need to rush to be first with the bad news. Soon Debbie could be heard in the dining-room. “Anyone for Scotch?” she called. “I had to go down to the rec room to find it.” There were no takers apart from herself. She appeared carrying her drink in a glass that matched the crystal of the orphan on the tray. “Now tell us,” she said, “if you haven’t told everybody already.” She settled herself back in her chair, leaning towards the rest of us in the group. She seemed like a fellow-conspirator waiting to hear the rest of the plot. The others, except for Ruth, were just as bad.

“Are you sure you want to hear this?” I asked. “It may not come out the way you expect. It may only raise more issues than it settles.”

“We want to know what’s been going on,” Sid said. “If you think you know so much, we want to hear it.”

“Well, I don’t quite know where to begin. I guess I’ll begin with Larry. His was the first of the murders. From the papers you know that he had been defrauding many of his clients over a long period of time. He had been illegally converting assets over to himself and … well, I won’t go into it. He further converted over two million dollars worth of these assets into commercial diamonds. What this tells us is at least two things: he wasn’t, as some lawyers are, temporarily embarrassed for funds and dipping into the trust accounts as a short-term stopgap. It was part of a carefully worked out plan. That leads up to the other item: he was intending to leave town, using the diamonds to finance his departure and subsequent settling down somewhere in a brand new life under a brand new name.

“We don’t know where he planned to end up, but his route went through Paris. We have a ticket confirmed on a flight from Toronto on the night he disappeared. The name on the ticket matches the name on the new passport he was carrying at the time of his death.”

I could feel that I had the audience, and I wished that I had lines as good as Steve Tulk had in
Twelfth Night,
but all I had were a handful of facts and a lot of conjecture. I took a sip of rye and put the glass down on the coffee-table harder than I intended. “From the plane ticket and a few other things we know that Larry was planning to leave town with somebody. Plane tickets were bought in the name of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Gosnold. We know that the woman appeared to be ready to run away with Larry. She may have encouraged, even masterminded, the whole scam. Larry’s legal friends all agree that when they first knew him, Larry was very serious about the law. It was only fairly recently that his attitude changed. Blame that on the lady. From what we know about her, she could be capable of anything. We don’t have a picture of her yet, but I’ve learned a few things about her. She double-crossed Larry. They arranged to meet at the Bolduc site where they’re building a new fire hall. Larry had used the construction shack there to hide his suitcase with the diamonds in it. It was on the way out of town. The perfect rendezvous.

“Only Larry didn’t expect that his partner had figured out that half of the diamonds was too big a fraction to lose. She pretended that everything was going as arranged until she slipped a knife between his ribs and dumped his body into a frame where footings for the fire hall were about to be poured the next day.

“What she didn’t figure on was the fact that the murder was seen by a down-and-outer by the name of Wally Moore. He was hiding in a nest he’d built safe from the wind and weather. Wally Moore was her next victim. Simply because he’d been foolish enough to try to get in touch with the wife of the victim. He was only trying to help out: the paper said that Larry was missing; he knew that he’d been murdered. Further, he knew where the body was. He went to see Mrs. Geller. Mrs. Geller gave him fifty dollars to keep quiet about it until she had a chance to hear the whole story. They arranged to meet in Montecello Park, where she knifed him too.”

“That’s a goddamned lie!” It was Ruth Geller. She was on her feet, her eyes wide with anger. “I told you it wasn’t me. I told you, but you won’t believe the truth!” She had walked to the centre of the room, with her eyes fixed on me. “You hateful, spiteful man, I despise you!” Sid got up and tried to put an arm on Ruth’s shoulder, but she brushed it off. “Why do you allow this man in your house, Debbie?” Ruth asked. “I really thought you had more sense.”

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