He left the fluff there, repacked the currency, and closed the suitcase. Mike Mulligan, showered and shaved, came into the bedroom to dress. Ullman took the suitcase into the living room. Then he went into the bathroom and lifted the jar of glassine envelopes from the toilet tank. He took that into the kitchen and found a shopping bag under the sink. He put the cocaine in the bag and added his two bottles of champagne. He went back into the living room, poured himself a shot of bourbon, and sipped slowly.
They were ready to leave a half-hour later. Mulligan carried the shopping bag, and Ullman lugged the suitcase of cash. The banker carefully locked his front door, and then they waited for the elevator. The door slid open. Pearl and Opal Longnecker got out and stared with astonishment at the two men.
Ullman smiled at the sisters. "The party's over, ladies," he said.
45
They spent a quiet New Year's, recovering from the noisy party at the Palace Lounge the previous night. It was a gray, sodden day; there was no sunning on the terrace. They read newspapers and magazines, watched a little television, lunched on cold cuts and potato salad. Both were subdued, conversing mostly in monosyllables, until finally David said, "The hell with resolutions; let's have a Bloody Mary."
"Let's," Rita said, and they did.
After that they perked up and began discussing all the outrageous things that had happened at the New Year's Eve party. Frank Little had dragged Trudy Bartlett under the table, and Nancy Sparco had to be restrained by her husband from completing a striptease atop the table.
"Great party," David said. "I'm going to miss those people."
"Miss them? Are you going somewhere?"
"Eventually," he said, smiling. "And so are you." He glanced at his watch. "But right now I have a business meeting. Shouldn't be gone for more than an hour or so."
"You'll be home for dinner? Blanche made a veal casserole for us."
"I'll be back in plenty of time," he assured her.
"If you're going to be late," she said, "give me a call. The phones are working fine now."
"What was wrong-did the repairman say?"
"A short at the junction box, or so he claimed. Whatever it was, he fixed it and checked all the phones.""
"Good. Lend me your car keys, will you? The Bentley's low on gas and nothing will be open today."
He drove Rita's white Corsica. It was only five o'clock, but the waning day was gloomy, and he had to switch on the wipers to keep the windshield clear of mist. He had deliberately picked this particular day and this particular time, figuring the gang would be home recovering from the party. And when he walked into the Palace Lounge through the side entrance, he was happy to see only Ernie, behind the bar and washing glasses used the night before. David swung onto a bar-stool.
"Happy New Year, Mr. Rathbone," Ernie said. "I'm surprised you're still alive. I didn't think you'd wake up for a week."
"Happy New Year, Ernie, and I feel fine. Mix me the usual, please. That was a dynamite party."
"I should do that much business every night," the bartender said.
He went back to his chores. Rathbone reached into his inside jacket pocket to make sure the envelope was there. Then he lighted a cigarette and sipped his vodka gimlet. Now that the time had come, he found he was calm, acting normally, hands steady.
He had just started his second gimlet when two men came in through the side entrance. Rathbone inspected them in the bar mirror. They matched Bartlett's description of the Corcoran brothers: short and burly with reddish hair cut in Florida flattops. Both were wearing cotton plaid sports jackets over black T-shirts. They took a corner table, and one of them came over to the bar.
"Beer," he said curtly.
"They almost cleaned me out last night," Ernie apologized. "All I got left is Miller's."
The man nodded. "Two bottles," he said.
He paid, then carried the bottles and glasses back to the table. The brothers sat stolidly, drinking their beers, not conversing. Rathbone finished his drink.
"More of the same," he called.
When Ernie started mixing his drink, David slid off the barstool and went into the men's room. He checked both stalls. Empty. He glanced at himself briefly in the mirror over the sink, then waited, not looking in the mirror again. In a few minutes one of the Corcoran brothers entered. He stared at Rathbone.
"From Jimmy Bartlett?" David asked.
The man nodded.
"The guy should be here any minute. He'll come through the side door. He's tall, skinny, and may be wearing a black suit. He'll join me at the bar, and we'll have a drink together. I'll slip him a white envelope. He'll probably take off first, but if he doesn't, I'll take off and leave him alone. He drives an old pickup truck. It'll be parked outside in the lot."
"Our fee's in the envelope?" Corcoran asked. His voice was unexpectedly high-pitched, fluty.
"That's right."
Corcoran nodded again, stepped to a urinal and unzipped his fly. David left hurriedly, went back to the bar, took a gulp of his new drink.
It was almost fifteen minutes before Termite Tommy showed up. He saw Rathbone at the bar and came over to stand next to him.
"Hey, Tommy!" David said heartily. "Happy New Year!"
"Same to you. And many of them."
"What're you drinking?"
"Jim Beam straight. Water on the side."
"If you had the kind of night I had, you better have a double."
"Yeah," Tommy said, "it was kinda wet."
David ordered the bourbon and another gimlet for himself. "Sorry you had to make the trip today," he said.
"That's all right. You got the dough?"
"Uh-huh."
"Good. We make the payment on the machine, everything's copasetic."
Rathbone took the envelope from his jacket pocket and handed it over, making no effort to hide the transfer. In the mirror, he saw the Corcoran brothers finish their beers, rise, and leave.
"Ten K," he said to Tommy. "Legit hundreds."
"I appreciate it, David. Everything go all right at the banks?"
"No problems. I'll start withdrawing next week and give you a call when you can pick up the balance due. Listen, I've got to split. My lady is expecting me home for dinner."
"That's okay; I'm leaving, too. Got a long drive ahead of me."
Rathbone stood, took his new black ostrich wallet from his hip pocket as if he was about to pay the tab.
"Thanks again," Termite Tommy said.
"Keep in touch," David said lightly.
Tommy took a swallow of water, then left. David put his wallet back in his pocket and sat down again.
"Another, Ernie," he called.
The bartender shook his head. "You're a bear for punishment, Mr. Rathbone," he said.
When he brought the drink, he leaned across the bar. "Did you see those two guys?" he asked in a low voice.
"What guys?"
"At the corner table. They had a beer, then went out."
"I just glanced at them. Why?"
"A couple of hard cases," Ernie said.
"You're sure?"
"Sure I'm sure. Wasn't I a cop for too many years? You wouldn't want to be caught in a dark alley with those yobs, believe me."
People entered, stayed for a drink or two, departed. Others took their place. The Lounge was quiet, jukebox stilled, conversation muted. David knew none of the customers, which was just as well; he didn't want to talk to anyone. He had another drink. Another. Another.
He floated in a timeless void, the room blurred, Ernie wavered back and forth. He could not concentrate, which was a blessing, but stared vacantly at the stranger in the mirror and watched the glass come up, tilt, pour out its contents. The throat constricted, the stranger grimaced and gasped.