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The Last Private Eye Page 16


  He dialed Cresthill Farms. The maid answered the phone. She said, “Mr. Kingston isn’t taking any calls right now.”

  Rhineheart said, “You tell him that Rhineheart’s calling about Royal Dancer and that if he doesn’t get his ass on the phone in one minute he won’t have one.”

  Thirty seconds later Kingston came on the line. His voice was tight with anger.

  “I thought you had better sense than this, Mr. Rhineheart. I warned you what might happen if you continued to bother me.”

  “Listen to this.” Rhineheart played the tape for Kingston.

  “That’s interesting material you have there,” Kingston said, “but I don’t see that it alters the situation any. You make a move to distribute that tape, and it’s good-bye Jessica.”

  “I got a deal for you, Kingston.”

  “What kind of deal?”

  “Simple. I give you the tape. You let Jessica go.”

  After a moment, Kingston said, “How do I know I can trust you?”

  “I got the same problem, Kingston. We each want something badly. I guess we can trust that.”

  Kingston said, “You made yourself a deal, Mr. Rhineheart.”

  “We’ll have to meet someplace,” Rhineheart said. “Make the exchange. A public place.”

  “No problem,” Kingston said. “There’s a special thoroughbred auction at Keeneland tonight. In the sales pavilion. I’ll arrange a seat for you.”

  Rhineheart thought it over. “All right,” he said.

  “Bring the tape,” Kingston said, “and I’ll bring Jessica.”

  CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

  According to the catalog, the two-year-old in the pavilion sales ring was a son of Raja Baba out of a Neartic mare. He was a lean and spindly-legged dark bay who stood calmly in the center of the ring. The electronic boards on either side of the podium identified the colt as HIP No. 214 and flashed the figure $2,500,000 to the audience—three hundred and fifty people seated in a semicircle in a glassed-in amphitheater.

  From where Rhineheart sat—an aisle seat on a side row—the colt didn’t look like he was worth any two million five. On the other hand what the hell did he know. Or care, for that matter. If the audience, a black-tie crowd of the rich and the super rich—Arab sheikhs, American potentates, and British royalty—was willing to bid the horse that high, that was cool with Rhineheart. After all, it was their money.

  He was getting nervous. It was growing late, and the two seats to his right were still empty. There was no sign of Kingston. No sign of Jessica.

  He got up and walked to the back of the room and went out into the hallway that circled the amphitheater. He lit a cigarette and looked around. The hallway was crowded. People pressed up against the glass to see inside the amphitheater. There were loudspeakers in the hallway so that everyone could hear the bidding. The Raja Baba colt was now up to three million.

  He walked down the hallway. There were rooms with banks of phones marked for long distance and international lines. Most of the phones were in use. The babble of accents and languages made the place sound like a foreign bazaar. He went into the restroom and washed his hands and looked at himself in the mirror. He sure wasn’t much to look at. He left the restroom and walked back up the hallway. At the other end of the pavilion there was a bar and a glassed-in patio with some tables and chairs.

  The Kingstons were seated at one of the tables.

  They were alone. None of Kingston’s men were around.

  Rhineheart walked over to the table. Kingston looked nervous. Jessica had a grave look on her face. There was an empty drink in front of her.

  He sat down across from her.

  Kingston said, “You bring the tape?”

  “Are you all right?” Rhineheart asked Jessica.

  She nodded.

  He took the tape out of his pocket and set it on the table.

  Kingston reached across the table. His fingers closed around the plastic case.

  Borchek and the big bearded guy walked into the patio. They stood near the door, watching the table.

  Rhineheart said to Jessica, “It’s a tape recording of your husband talking to Carl Walsh. It’s evidence, but I had to give it to him. He threatened to kill you.”

  She nodded. “I understand, Michael.”

  “You can leave him now,” Rhineheart said. “He won’t hurt you. I’ll make sure of that. Come back to Louisville with me. I’ll take you wherever you want.”

  She shook her head. “I don’t think I can do that.”

  “You don’t understand,” he said. “He threatened to kill you. I gave him the tape so he’d let you go.”

  “Yes,” she said, “I know. I understand, but things are more complicated than that.”

  Kingston said, “He’ll take you wherever you want to go, Jessica.”

  “Be quiet, Duke.”

  Kingston stood up. “Why don’t you tell him the truth, Jessica?”

  “Duke—”

  He put his hand on her shoulder. “Tell him who you belong to.”

  She looked up at him. “You bastard.” Her voice was icy.

  Kingston looked over at Rhineheart. “You were one night in her life, mistah. Just like all the others. And you played the dupe. Right to the end. Without you, we never would’ve found the tape.” He turned to his wife. “You ready?”

  She spoke to Rhineheart. “I’m sorry, Michael.”

  “Sure.”

  She stood up. “I never wanted to hurt you.”

  “No,” he said. “Of course not.”

  “Come on, Jessica,” Kingston said, “you owe him a good-bye, but let’s not drag the farewells out.”

  Rhineheart stood up and turned toward Kingston.

  Borchek reached inside his coat.

  Jessica stepped between her husband and Rhineheart.

  “Good-bye, Michael.”

  She took Kingston’s arm and together they walked out. Rhineheart stood there and watched them leave. Borchek and the bearded guy followed them.

  Rhineheart sat back down. Kingston’s words came back to him—like blows to the face. You were one night in her life. Just like all the others. You played the dupe. Right to the end.

  He got up from the table and walked slowly over to the bar. A white-jacketed bartender slapped a fresh napkin down in front of him.

  “What’ll you have, sir?”

  “You got bourbon?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “That’s what I’ll have.”

  “Straight up? On the rocks?”

  “Yeah,” he said. “That’s right.”

  “Which one, sir?”

  “Bring me the fucking bottle,” Rhineheart said.

  “Yes, sir.”

  “And a glass.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  Rhineheart wasn’t sure how long he stayed there in the pavilion bar. He didn’t remember the drive back to Louisville. He forgot how many bars he hit or how many drinks he had. All he knew was that one time when he looked up from a drink, McGraw was sitting next to him. They were in a honky-tonk bar on Market Street.

  “What’s a person like you doing in a place like this?” Rhineheart asked.

  “Hunting for you, Rhineheart.”

  “Did you find me?”

  “I guess so.”

  “How am I?”

  “That’s what I want to know.”

  “I’m fine,” Rhineheart said. “I’m dying, but otherwise I’m fine.”

  “You’re dying?”

  “Maybe it just feels like it.”

  “How many drinks did you have?”

  Rhineheart thought that over. “Seventy-three.”

  “You’re drunk.”

  “I am?”

  “Uh-huh. You’re drunker than shit. And your knuckles are bleeding. And you got a big cut over your eye.”

  “How come?”

  “Waitress says you been in three fights since you been here. Says you threw one guy through a plate glass window. Says you keep tal
king about some woman who messed you up.”

  “Yeah? Well, that sounds like a crock of shit. That doesn’t sound like the Rhineheart I know. That sounds like some dumb-ass country song to me.”

  “What happened anyway?”

  “Walsh’s wife sent me a tape. It had Kingston’s voice on it. Talking to Walsh. It was evidence. I traded it to Kingston for his wife, only it was all bullshit. She was in on the thing the whole time.”

  “Oh shit,” McGraw said. “God damn!”

  “That’s what I say.”

  “You poor son of a bitch. You must be hurting.”

  “I’m dying.”

  “You’re not dying. You’re hurting and you’re drunk, but you’re not dying.”

  “It feels like I am.” Rhineheart squinted past McGraw’s shoulder. “Who’s that ugly son of a bitch sitting next to you?”

  “It’s Farns,” McGraw said.

  Farnsworth nodded and said, “You don’t look too good, kid.”

  “I’m sorry, old man.”

  “It’s okay, kid.”

  “Naw, it’s not okay. Don’t fucking tell me it’s okay. I know better. I blew it. I blew it bad. I broke the rules, old man. I fucked it up, and there ain’t no getting around that.”

  “Everyone fucks up once in a while, kid.”

  “Yeah, but not like this, old man. I had the evidence in my hand, and I give it to him.”

  “You didn’t make any copies?”

  Rhineheart shook his head.

  “That wasn’t too good a move,” Farnsworth said.

  “That’s what I’m telling you,” Rhineheart said. “It was a bad move. I didn’t make any good moves on this one.”

  “So what are you going to do about it?” Farnsworth said. “Sit around here and piss and moan and cry about it all night?”

  Rhineheart nodded. “Yeah, that’s what I’m thinking about doing.”

  “Well, forget it,” McGraw said. “You’re going home to bed, Rhineheart.”

  “Who says?”

  “We do.” McGraw got off the stool and came around and put her hand under Rhineheart’s elbow. “Get his other arm,” she told Farnsworth.

  “You betcha, girlie.”

  CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO

  When Rhineheart woke up the next morning he was lying fully clothed on his bed. His mouth tasted like a sewer and his head felt as if it were swollen twice its normal size. He felt more dead than alive. Otherwise, he seemed to be all right.

  He got up slowly and carefully, undressed, and put on his sweat clothes and running shoes. He went outside. It was a beautiful Saturday morning in May. Derby Day. He got into the Maverick and started it up and drove over to the cinder track at Bellarmine.

  He ran for two hours. He didn’t count the laps or the miles. He just kept running until he felt he had sweated all the booze and all the poison out of his body. When he was through he drove back home and took a long shower, shaved, and got dressed. A tweed sport coat. Gray slacks. Black, soft leather loafers. He put on his watch: it was 12:05.

  Out at the Downs they had opened the gates four hours ago. By now the infield was half full. The first race had already been run. On Derby Day they moved post time for the first race to 11:30 and set the races an hour apart. The Derby, the eighth race on the card, was scheduled to go off at 5:30.

  He went out to the Maverick and drove over to a Convenient store on Bardstown Road. He bought the Derby edition of the Daily Racing Form and a Derby program and a plant, a leafy green treelike plant that was set in a pot.

  On the way downtown he switched on the radio to the station that featured all-day coverage of the Derby. The reporter was interviewing a celebrity who was attending his first Derby. The celebrity was telling the reporter how nice it was to be able to get out and meet his many fans.

  Downtown, there were roadblocks at some of the main intersections. Most of the stores were closed and the downtown streets were empty of people. Everyone in town was either out at the track or at home having a Derby party.

  He parked in a no-parking zone in front of police headquarters and took an elevator to the third floor Katz was sitting behind his desk, typing up another report. He didn’t seem particularly glad to see Rhineheart.

  Rhineheart sat down in a chair next to the desk and told Katz the whole story from beginning to end.

  Katz sat there patiently and listened to everything Rhineheart had to say. When Rhineheart was finished Katz stood up and began pacing back and forth. He said, “Jesus, that’s some tale you got there, peeper. Three murders. One of the most prominent families in Kentucky. A plot to fix the biggest horse race in the world, no less. Big-time gamblers. Wonder drugs that can’t be traced. There’s just one problem.”

  “What’s that, Katz?”

  “Evidence,” Katz said. “You got no evidence. You saw this. You overheard that. I got your word this other thing happened. Somebody shot at you. You didn’t report it to the police. Someone else offered you a bribe. Only, it was in the form of a job offer, which as far as I know, Rhineheart, hasn’t been ruled illegal by any court I know anything about. You show me a syringe you could have found somewhere. You got an airport locker key you say you found in a motel room of a dead guy whose body you didn’t report—which is a fucking felony, by the way, not to mention you B and E’d the room.” Katz stopped pacing. “You tell me a story about some tape you say you don’t have no more. I take your story to my superior officer, you know what happens? They give me an early release from the department. Mental disability.”

  Rhineheart got to his feet.

  “I’m sorry, peeper,” Katz said. “I’d like to help you out. You’re a stand-up dude. You got balls. But I’m not crazy. I don’t go out of my way to fuck with people who got as much power as Duke Kingston and Calvin Clark. You better not, either.”

  On his way out the door, Rhineheart said, “I’ll see you around, Katz.”

  Farnsworth was asleep. His eyes were shut tight and he was snoring away, but when Rhineheart sat down in the hard chair across from his desk, the old man’s eyelids snapped open and he blinked a couple of times and said, “Kid, how’s it going?”

  “I bought a plant today,” Rhineheart said.

  Farnsworth gave him a funny look.

  “McGraw thought the office needed some color.”

  Farnsworth shrugged. “Well, maybe it does. Maybe it does. Hell, maybe this place could use some plants.” He looked around. “Nahh. This place is beyond help.”

  Rhineheart told Farnsworth about his visit to Katz. The old man shook his head and said, “I didn’t expect no different. Katz ain’t a bad guy, but he can’t stand up to people like Kingston.”

  Rhineheart took an envelope out of his pocket and handed it to Farnsworth. “There’s a check in there. I think it covers everything. You let me know if it doesn’t.”

  “Sure.” Farnsworth stuck the envelope in his pocket without looking at it. “You want to talk about the case, kid?”

  “I don’t think so,” Rhineheart said.

  “There ain’t much to say, is there?”

  “Except that it’s over. And we lost.”

  The old man nodded. “I been losing all my life, it seems like. Betting the slow horse, getting the bad card, taking the wrong case. In some ways all the cases are wrong cases. Being a private eye, kid, is a way of losing. So is life. The longer you stick around the more things you lose. And it doesn’t get any easier. This one was a loser right from the beginning. The fix was in. Only we never seen it.” The old man sighed. “I talk too goddamn much.” He looked at Rhineheart. “So what are you going to do this afternoon?”

  “I thought I might stop by the office,” Rhineheart said. “Check the mail. See who called.”

  “You want some company?”

  “Not today,” Rhineheart said. He stood up and walked to the door. “Old man, I’ll see you around.”

  “Kid,” Farnsworth said, “it was a pleasure working with you again. Gimme a call sometime
.”

  At the office McGraw was sitting behind her typewriter waiting for him.

  “Isn’t this your off day?”

  “I just stopped by for a few minutes,” she said. “How do you feel?”

  “Like shit,” he said. He squinted at her. “You and Farnsworth take me home last night?”

  McGraw nodded. “And poured you into bed.”

  “I appreciate it, babe.” Rhineheart set the plant down on his desk.

  “What’s with the plant?”

  “You were right the other day,” he said. “Place needs a little brightening up.”

  “That’s a Weeping Fig,” McGraw said. “Ficus benjamina.” She came over and picked up the plant and took it back over to her desk. “They like sunlight,” she said. “And a little water.”

  “I went to see Katz,” Rhineheart said.

  “How’d that go?”

  “Not too well.” He walked over and looked out the window. Outside were the same old streets.

  “Is it over, Rhineheart?”

  Rhineheart nodded. “It looks like it, yeah.”

  “They’re going to get away with it, aren’t they?”

  “Probably.”

  “You want to talk about it?”

  “Not really.”

  “Want me to hang around for a while?”

  Rhineheart shook his head. “I’ll be all right, babe.”

  McGraw picked up her purse and walked to the door. She stopped. “Guess what?”

  “Huh?”

  “Vogue has a good movie this evening.”

  “What’s playing?”

  “Grapes of Wrath.”

  Grapes of Wrath. Henry Fonda. Jane Darwell. John Carradine. The little Swedish guy. What was his name? Directed by John Ford. Written by John Steinbeck. Photographed by Gregg Toland, the same guy who shot Kane. “What time?” Rhineheart asked.

  “Seven-thirty. Plus, popcorn’s twenty cents to the first fifty customers.”

  “Sounds too good to pass up.”

  “Meet you out front.”

  “I’ll try to make it, babe.”