She did that, looking faintly triumphant. “Can we talk this over now?”
I reached for my phone. “First you get to listen to the end of a brilliant career.”
Her tone mixed doubt and asperity. “What are you doing?”
“Just sit still.” My right hand throbbed as I dialed. It was my last shot.
A man and a woman answered together. I spoke to the man. “Mozart lived to be thirty-five, you idiot. I looked it up.”
Greenfeld sounded mildly astonished. “Chris? I thought something had happened to you.”
“No. Listen, I’m in a hurry. You still want the Lasko story?”
“Sure.”
Mary’s fingers gripped both sides of the chair. “I’ll meet you tonight,” I went on. “But let me run through it, quick, in case I get held up. That may help protect me. Got a pencil?”
“Yup. Go.”
“OK. Lasko’s company is cash poor. Lasko drove up his stock price to get extra money out of an offering. Your source is the testimony of Sam Green. Lasko took the one-point-five million and laundered it through a dummy corporation on St. Maarten, run by a Peter Martinson-”
“He was the guy with you yesterday, right?”
“Uh-huh. Martinson passed the money through a bank in Curacao and then Alec Lehman passed it through on July 28 to a vault at the Mariner Bank in Miami. I’ve got a memo from Lasko and bank records. The box was in the names of Lehman and Robert Catlow.”
“Jesus. Why? A payoff?”
“I figure they were going to make a ‘contribution’ to the President. The timing fits with your source’s story that the antitrust case almost settled. But our investigation held settlement up, so the money didn’t move from the second bank and I can’t prove it. Can you print this?”
I heard him exhale. “All except the bit about the President. It’s probably true, but the money never got there. You’ve got documentation or sources for everything else.”
“Good enough. Put me down as an additional source.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yup. Fame is the best way to keep me breathing. Listen, what do you see happening to Lasko and Catlow?”
“When we print this? The President will be forced to drop them, and Justice will have to prosecute on manipulation and embezzlement. And the antitrust case against Lasko will go to trial.”
I looked over at Woods. Still out. “There’s more. Two weeks ago Lehman’s lawyer called me to set up a meeting.” Mary leaned forward waiting to hear her name. “Jack Woods called Lasko to tip him off. Lasko had Lehman killed before he gave me the memo. A Boston cop, Lieutenant Di Pietro, is working on it now. This-and publicity-should light a fire under him. And that’s my way out.”
I could imagine Greenfeld scribbling furiously. “This is incredible,” he finally said. “Can you document the part about Woods?”
“Maybe.”
“That’s the one weak part.”
“I’ll work on that. Anyhow, I went out to Lehman’s place and found the memo from Lasko with the deposit box numbers on it. I hid it in my desk.” Mary tensed, as if holding her breath. I went on. “Woods found out about it and tried to jimmy my desk. He’s currently stretched out on my floor, where he fell after I hit him with an onyx bookend.”
“Goddamn, Chris.” He paused, mind racing. “What about McGuire?”
The courtship of McGuire was a link to the White House. But McGuire would never be a commissioner now.
“Chris, you still there?”
“McGuire’s not involved.”
“Certain?”
“Yeah, I’m certain. Listen, can you get this in the morning paper?”
“The later edition, if we move.”
“Fine. How long will it take you to get to my office?”
“Ten minutes.”
“Sure?”
“Yeah.”
“OK. Meet me in front. By the way, was that Lynette who answered?”
“Yeah. She’s back.”
“Amazing,” I said, and hung up.
Mary stared at me in stark disbelief. “Why didn’t you tell him about me?” she finally asked.
“I have reasons.”
Her face relaxed. I looked at my watch. 9:35. Greenfeld was due in nine minutes. I dialed again and got lucky. Di Pietro was in his office. He sounded surprised. “Did you get anything?”
“Lehman was handling the laundered money. I’ve got a memo from Lasko giving Lehman instructions and deposit box numbers. That’s what he was going to tell me. I’ve also got records from banks. Is that enough to indict Lasko for Lehman’s murder?”
“It’s what we need. Martinson came to this morning and gave a statement-everything he told you. And mug shots of the two guys who tried to kill you were identified by a carry-out boy at the shopping center, the one where they stole the car to run down Lehman. I’ll pick Lasko up tonight. Just lie low and you may be all right.”
“Great.” I checked my watch. 9:39. Greenfeld was due in five minutes. “I’ll send you this stuff.”
“Thanks, Christopher. You’ve done a nice job.”
“Thanks for everything, Lieutenant.” The phone clicked off.
I grabbed a notepad from my desk. “Check out Feiner,” I scrawled. “Market watch had Lasko stock pattern.” I initialled it CKP and stuck it in an envelope. I wrote “Attention-Joseph P. McGuire” on the envelope and put it in my coat pocket.
The time had done Mary some good. A smile flirted at the corners of her mouth. “You’re going to take care of everyone tonight, aren’t you?”
“That’s right.”
Woods moaned, but didn’t move. Mary glanced at him dispassionately. “You know, he was right. You can’t do to him what you’ve done to Lasko and Catlow.”
I shrugged. Her eyes were imploring now. “Chris,” she said urgently, “there has to be some way to make this better.”
I didn’t answer. Instead I looked at my watch. 9:43. Greenfeld should be out front in one minute. I picked up the phone and placed my last call.
An operator answered. “Police Emergency.”
“Yes. I’d like to report an incident. The address is the ECC Building on D Street, Northwest, third floor, room 327. I’ve just caught a man trying to burglarize my desk. I knocked him unconscious, possible concussion. I’ll need a couple of officers and maybe an ambulance.”
Mary bolted upright. The operator repeated the address. “We’ll have someone there within three minutes,” she said.
“Thank you.”
I put down the phone. Mary lunged for the door, half-tripping over Woods. I caught her by the wrist. She wriggled, then stopped. I pulled her to me. “OK, Mary, the cops will be here in about two minutes. I have to leave. I’m giving you a choice-stay or go.”
She stared at me furiously. “I want to leave.”
I forced myself to be very calm. “Choice one is to stay and tell the cops the truth. That Woods said he called Lasko about Lehman, that you called Woods tonight, and that after that he broke into my desk-”
“I didn’t know he was going to do that,” she interjected.
“And along with that you can do your Miss Innocence routine and try to wriggle out. Tell them you stayed as an act of civic virtue. If you can pull that off, I won’t stop you.”
Her eyes were black pools. “And if I leave?”
“Then I give your name to Greenfeld and you become as famous as Lizzie Borden.”
She clutched my shirt. “Do you know what that would do?”
“I figure disbarment at the very least. You’ve got about a minute to decide.”
She dropped her hand. “I’ll stay, damn you.”
“Good. Tell the cops I’ll be by in the morning.”
Woods was moaning and the blood had dried on his mouth. The memo still lay by his hand. I picked it up and turned to leave.
“You’re a bastard, Chris.” She said it in a clear, quiet voice.
I turned back. She was watching me, with a funny expectant look. “Greenfeld will be calling the police at exactly midnight to check your statement on Woods, for his article. If you change your story or tell the cops where I am, you’ll be reading about yourself tomorrow morning.”
Her mouth parted. I’d never seen her prettier. “It could have been worse, Mary,” I said quietly. “It could have been a lot worse.” I turned and walked out.