"I know."
We both were private people. Maybe even pathologically so. What we'd just done to Dessusdelit was close to rape. There'd been a point to it, though: We wanted to hurt her financially, beyond stealing her little stash. We wanted her angry, and a little frightened, and disposed to flex her machine muscle. We wanted her scraping for cash when a big opportunity came along.
LuEllen dropped the three stones into a Ziploc bag and put them under the passenger seat as we headed back to the Wal-Mart. "How much?" I asked.
"No way to tell," she said. "Everything depends on quality. If they're a good investment grade, anything between thirty and a hundred thousand."
"Not so good," I said. "There must be more somewhere."
We switched cars at the Wal-Mart, moving to the Continental, the twin to Ballem's car. Next we checked the City Hall. The parking lot was still full, and this time Duane Hill's personal Toyota pickup was in the lot.
"So we got him inside," LuEllen said. "Hope the meeting lasts."
"There's a public hearing. Marvel said it should be a couple of hours at least."
Ballem's car hadn't moved from the spot in front of his office. We stopped at a second public phone on the way to Ballem's house and made the call. When there was no answer, I nipped the phone receiver, and we started toward Ballem's.
"There's going to be hell to pay about those phones," LuEllen said, tongue in cheek. "We're fucking with Ma Bell."
Two blocks from the phone a cop car turned a corner in front of us, coming in our direction. As we passed, the driver lifted a hand in greeting. The Continental's windows were lightly tinted, so I doubt that he could see much, but I returned the wave.
"He thinks we're Ballem," I said.
"He's supposed to."
We went on another block when we saw the cop car's taillights come up.
"He's turning into a driveway," LuEllen said.
"Quite the trick. He should be on The Tonight Show," I said, the sudden tension forcing out a bad joke. LuEllen paid no attention.
"He's backing out; he may be coming back this way," LuEllen said.
"Do I turn or keep going?" I asked. The cop car was two blocks behind us, then two and a half, and I picked up his headlights.
"Go straight. Let's see what he does. We've got nothing in the car-"
"Except your bag with the wrecking bar and the zapper. And your coke."
"He's got no probable cause." But she dug into a shirt pocket and took out a half dozen red coke caps. If the cops got too close, they'd go out the window.
"This is the fuckin' Delta, LuEllen. That's probable enough." The lights were still back there but not closing. Then they swerved, off to the side of the road.
"He was looking at something else," she said, the relief warm in her voice. "Let's get out of sight."
Three minutes later, we were at Ballem's.
"Love those fuckin' automatic garage door openers," LuEllen said as the garage door rolled up. She broke another cap.
"Christ."
"Shut up."
I'm always tense when I work with LuEllen, and the cocaine made it worse. She loved it, the rush of the work and probably, I was afraid, the rush of the coke. She'd have done it all for free.
"Have you ever done a triple-header before?" I asked as we pulled into the garage and waited for the door to roll down.
"Not exactly. One time I went into a players' locker room during an NBA play-off game and hit every fuckin' locker in the place. That was about a twenty-header. if that counts." The door hit with a bump, and we sat, listening, and heard the phone. "Let's go."
Ballem was not like Dessusdelit. Dessusdelit kept her wealth hidden, and we didn't know where. Ballem put it on the walls – some of it anyway.
"Jesus," I said when we stepped into the living room. The floors were wood parquet, covered with rich maroon carpets. A floor-to-ceiling bookcase held knickknacks and books and framed a group of black-and-white prints. "Those are real."
LuEllen squinted at the signature on a lithograph of a young girl in a bonnet. "Cassatt?"
"Yeah." I took one off the wall and turned it over. A framer's tag was glued on the back panel, dated 1972. "Ballem would've gotten a great price on them way back then. Now they'd cost you an arm and a leg."
"Take them." She was in motion, headed for the basement. "Women hide stuff in the bedroom and kitchen; men hide it in the basement," she said simply.
I took the etchings. They all were American, by Mary Cassatt, Childe Hassam, John Sloan, George Bellows, Edward Hopper, Grant Wood, and even Stuart Davis and Mauricio Lasansky, which suggested that Ballem had either a catholic taste or an art investment consultant, I don't much care for black-and-white prints, but they all were good, and any one of them would pay for a year at Harvard. I was stashing the last of them in the car when LuEllen came back up. "We got a box," she said. "Come look."
The basement was half finished, with tile floors and painted cement-block walls. The ceilings were open.
"Over here," she said, and led me into a nook behind the furnace.
"It's not exactly a safe," she said, nodding at a foot-square steel door set into the concrete wall. A serious-looking combination dial protruded from the front of the door. "It's more of a fireproof box."
"Can you open it?"
"I don't know." She glanced at her watch. "We're at two minutes, forty-five." She walked away from the lockbox, looking at the tools hung on Ballem's basement wall, then around the basement in general. A moment later she ran back up the stairs. I followed, but by the time I got to the top, she was already coming back. She was carrying a maul and a wood-splitting wedge. "From the garage. I saw that firewood around to the side."
I followed her back down and said, "What?"
"Stand back." LuEllen lined up with the maul and gave the box a full-swing whack with the sharp edge. The blade didn't cut through, but it put a dent in it. The impact sounded like the end of the world, like a blacksmith pounding on an anvil.
"Jesus Christ," I whispered. "Somebody'll hear."
"Not in this neighborhood," she grunted, pivoting for another swing. "Everybody's got air-conditioning, and all the windows are closed."
She took another whack, put another dent in the box. "You do it," she said. "You're a big strong man."
"Fuck, LuEllen." Now I really was sweating.
"Hit it," she said.
I hit it. A half dozen blows distorted the door enough to see into it. LuEllen fitted the wedge into the seam of the door just above the lock, handed me the maul, and said, "One more time."
I hit it, and the door popped open. Breathing hard, I looked at LuEllen. She was standing with her arms crossed, waiting, not bored but not nervous either.
Inside the safe we found a leather-bound book of stamps, a freezer bag full of currency, and a metal box filled with American gold coins in sealed packages. The stamp collection wasn't much to look at – a few dozen fading squares of red, blue, and green, each in its own archival envelope. We took it all.
"Upstairs," LuEllen said. She looked at her watch. "Seven minutes, thirty-five seconds."
Ballem had an aging computer setup almost identical to Dessusdelit's. While I checked that, LuEllen tore apart the rest of the house. In the bedroom she found a collection of bondage and discipline magazines, both hetero- and homosexual, a new gun, a Smith amp; Wesson.357 magnum, fully loaded, and a flat metal box, like a safe-deposit box. Inside were a dozen gold Rolex watches, old but in perfect condition.
"We're killing this guy," LuEllen said enthusiastically.
"Good."
I was bringing the paint in from the garage when headlights swept the windows.
"Car," LuEllen said. She said it loudly, so I'd be sure to hear. I crouched and scuttled back into the house. LuEllen was against the front wall, peering out of a crack.
"It's the cops," she said. "The driver's coming up to the porch."
I heard him outside the door and slid over next to it. If he came in. I lifted the paint can above my head. I waited, and the doorbell rang.