“No, but the shroud of mystery surrounding Jester, the secretive recording of this album, the disappearance of the tape almost makes it better. Plus it’s Baby Boomer music. Baby Boomers hate new stuff, but they will flock to buy anything from the old days. They spend millions on Dylan box sets, Elvis box sets, even Monkees box sets, for chrissakes! Material from the old days sells like mad. It would be like some yahoo discovering an unknown van Gogh in his basement. There’d be a bidding war for it, no doubt. iTunes might snap it up for the exclusive rights or the legacy record labels might flex their tired old muscles. A private collector with billions might want it for his or her own. And you know what happens when there’s only one of a thing and more than one person wants it.”
“You know a reporter named Ed Selko?”
“Asshole at The Globe? Yeah, man, I know him. Started back in the day at Rolling Stone as an investigative reporter. Guy makes me look sober and you like a nun.”
“That explains it,” Jesse said to himself, but loud enough for Niles to hear.
“Explains what?”
“Never mind. And to answer your question, yes, I think the master tape is about to resurface.”
“I’ll drink to that,” Niles said, pouring himself a glass.
“You’ll drink to anything.”
“But this isn’t just anything, man. This is history. The music world has something to celebrate.”
“Not yet, Roscoe.”
Niles put his glass back down on his desk. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Means we have to keep this under wraps for now. There’s been two murders committed in connection with this, and that’s what I’ve got to focus on.”
Niles held his right thumb and forefinger an inch apart. “Man, I came this close to reading that damned sonnet on the air. Instead, I played a set of Jester tunes every hour. You can’t keep this thing quiet forever and, truth be told, if the new owners were keeping me on, I probably would’ve read it on-air. As it is, I didn’t want to give those fuckheads the satisfaction.”
“Don’t worry, Roscoe, it won’t be too much longer before the world knows,” Jesse said, removing the gloves from his hands. “It’s already taking on a life of its own.”
After confirming with the girl at the front desk and the people in the office that no one had gotten a good look at the messenger, Jesse headed to his next stop in Boston.
60
For the second time in a week, Jesse found himself in the parking lot of the bowling alley out of which Vinnie Morris ran his operation. Of course Vinnie’s name didn’t appear on the deed to the building or the corporation papers. His name didn’t appear on any of the buildings or businesses that he owned. It had been the same with Gino Fish. Any smart man knee-deep in organized crime made sure never to leave a paper trail. Vinnie’s favorite four-letter word was cash. It’s why he’d lasted as long as he had. There were other reasons, too, like doing the occasional favor for the cops. That was the reason for Jesse’s visit. This time, he’d called ahead. So when Jesse asked for Vinnie at the front desk, he didn’t get the usual I’m-too-stupid-to-breathe routine from the counterman.
“He’s waiting for you at the bar,” the dull-eyed guy said, nodding toward the bar.
He hadn’t lied. Vinnie Morris was sitting at the bar, swirling a glass of ice cubes around with a splash of some amber alcohol or other.
“Stone.”
“Vinnie. What are you playing with?”
“Some flavored bourbon crap my liquor guy dropped off a sample of. Horrible stuff, but he tells me the kids like it. You want to try some?” Jesse shook his head at Morris. “I didn’t think so. Tony,” he said to the barman, “two Black Labels, rocks.”
Jesse thought about turning it down, but he didn’t think about it too long. It had been a hard day that wasn’t yet over. If this turned out to be the last stop of the night, which he hoped it wouldn’t be, he still had the drive back to Paradise to deal with. Vinnie had hinted to him over the phone that he might have some information for him, but like with everything else, Vinnie had been careful not to say too much over the phone.
“Cheers,” Vinnie said, raising his glass.
Jesse just nodded and drank. Sometimes scotch went down better than it did at other times. This was one of those times. It was magic, the way the chilled liquid burned at the back of his throat, how it warmed his whole body on the way down, and how it seemed to warm his face only when it reached his belly. It would have been so easy for him to have another and another and to lose himself, but no, that was his plight. That’s what no one else saw, not Molly or Tamara, not Suit, not anyone. Maybe only Dix knew. And what he knew was that because of the way Jesse was built, because of his self-containment, he couldn’t lose himself. That on the occasions he’d tried diving deep down into the bottle, like he had the other night, it never worked, and that the relief was only temporary and came at too high a price.
“So,” Jesse said, after the initial warmth had receded. “You mentioned you had something for me.”
“I said I might.”
“That’s what you said. You win.”
“This Bolton strunz you’re looking for.”
“Uh-huh.”
“I may have a line on him. Remember where you and me had our talk after Gino killed — after Gino died?”
“Dennis’s?”
“That place, right.”
“What about it?”
“Bolton walked in there the other day and left an address for one of my guys, a guy he did time with. My guy was out of town for the day and by the time he checked the address, Bolton had already split. He ain’t the brightest mutt in the world, but he’s smart enough to change his bed every night.”
“You think he’s still in town?” Jesse asked, finishing his drink.
“Sure. He reached out once. He’ll reach out again. When he does, you’ll hear about it.”
“Thanks for the info and for the drink.”
Vinnie laughed like a hyena laughed stalking prey. “Always glad to help the cops.”
“I got some bad news for you. WBMB-FM was sold and the Teacher will be no more.”
“Too bad. I love that drunk bastard. He brings me back to when I was a kid.”
“I have trouble picturing you as a kid.”
“Me too, Stone. That’s why I’ll miss Roscoe Niles.”
“Remember when we talked about the missing Terry Jester tape?”
“Sure. What about it?”
“You mentioned a PI who worked the case. You got a name?”
Vinnie laughed again. “Spenser. Know him?”
“We met once. Wouldn’t say I know him.”
“His office is on the corner of Berkeley and Boylston. Third floor. Need directions?”
“Thanks. I’ll manage.”
“Any particular reason you want to talk to him, Stone? Might help you pay back the favor.”
“You’re a smart man, Vinnie. Why do you think I want to talk to Spenser?”
Morris showed his white teeth to Jesse in a Cheshire Cat grin. Jesse wasn’t sure how Morris could possibly profit from knowledge of the tape’s reemergence, but Vinnie was clearly pleased. Mob guys, as Jesse was aware, were good at figuring angles that people on the straight couldn’t conceive of. That’s what Jesse was thinking about as he shook Morris’s hand good-bye.
61
Jesse wasn’t sure the PI would be in but thought stopping by his office was worth a shot. He might be able to get the same information from the man over the phone. The thing was, he always thought it was better to see a person’s face and body language. The phone robbed you of that. After he rapped on Spenser’s office door, Jesse heard a vaguely familiar voice telling him to come in.