Blackstone and the Wolf of Wall Street (20 page)

According to Fanshawe, they already
had
stepped into his shoes, and all Big Bill did now was sign the paperwork, Blackstone reminded himself.
But then the butler had lied about other things, so why should he have been telling the truth about that?
‘Thank you for filling in some of the background on his sons, Mr Maxwell,' Alex Meade said politely. ‘I'm sure it will be very helpful to our investigation – but what we'd really like to hear about is some of the men that Holt ruined.'
A sudden chill filled the air around them.
‘You'd like to hear about some of the men that Holt ruined?' Maxwell repeated.
‘That's right,' Meade said. ‘Just for background.'
‘Bullshit!' Maxwell said. His hooded eyes closed for a second, and when he opened them again, he said, ‘The men he ruined are now either old, or broken in spirit, or both. Can you really see them carrying out a kidnapping?'
‘No,' Blackstone said, ‘but we could see them hiring someone else to do the work for them.'
Not quite true, he admitted to himself.
He
could see it. Alex, on the other hand, was still refusing to entertain it as a possibility. Yet despite that, Meade had agreed to go through this whole charade, and, for that, Blackstone was grateful.
‘You can see them hiring someone else, can you?' Maxwell asked. ‘Well, I sure can't. If Big Bill had ruined me, I'd have had no idea where to look for the men I would need to get my revenge.'
No, Blackstone thought, you probably wouldn't. But being the kind of man you so obviously are, you'd make it your business to
find out
.
‘I understand that you might find it hard to give us information on men who have probably been your friends and colleagues for years—' Meade began.
‘You're right, I would find it hard,' Maxwell interrupted – and now there was a hint of anger in his voice. ‘Damned hard – especially when you consider that what I'd really be doing is helping to save the skin of a snake like Bill Holt. Well, let me tell you, Alex,' Maxwell jabbed a podgy finger in Meade's direction to punctuate his words, ‘if Holt does turn up somewhere with a bullet in his head, I'm not about to lose a minute's sleep over that.'
‘I don't suppose many people will,' Meade said reasonably.
Alex had done all that could be expected of him for a cause he didn't believe in, Blackstone decided. If the young detective stood up and walked away now, the older detective couldn't really blame him.
But Meade
didn't
stand up and walk away. Instead, he leant forward, so that he was now closer to Maxwell.
‘Believe me, I do sympathize with your predicament,' he said. ‘But the problem is that Holt's not the only victim of the kidnapping. Two guards – two
good
men – had to have their throats slashed. And do you think it's right that their widows and children may never know who took their husbands and fathers away?'
Nicely done, Alex, Blackstone thought. Not strictly the truth – given that the Turners had no children, and Cody had been a bachelor – but nicely done anyway.
Maxwell was probably the kind of man who gambled a hundred thousand dollars without a moment's thought, but what Meade had said had hit home, and now he seemed uncertain of
what
to say.
‘I'll give you one name – and it's a good one,' he said finally. ‘One name – and that's it.'
‘I'm listening,' Meade told him.
‘Edward Knox.'
‘Oh, come on, Mr Maxwell!' Meade said exasperatedly. ‘Please don't treat me like a fool!'
‘How is that treating you like a fool? Holt ruined Knox, and Knox, out of all that bastard's victims, was the one man with enough balls to try and do something about it. Doesn't it seem likely that if anyone was going to get together a plot against Big Bill, it would be Knox?'
Meade sighed. ‘Except that Knox is in jail,' he said, ‘and it must be almost impossible to organize something like that from a prison cell.'
‘Who told you he was in jail?' Maxwell asked, surprised.
‘Nobody did. I just assumed that since he was guilty of attempted murder, he'd have been sent away for at least twenty years.'
‘Knox never went to jail.'
‘He was
arrested
, wasn't he?'
‘Of course he was arrested. After he'd failed in his murder attempt, George Holt knocked him out cold and then called the police. But he was never
tried
for the crime.'
‘Why, in God's name?' Meade asked.
‘I've no idea,' Maxwell admitted. ‘But if you want to find out, maybe the prosecutor's office will tell you.' His good humour was returning, and he chuckled again. ‘And if you get no answer there, you can always ask the captain of the precinct that Knox was taken to when he was arrested.'
‘Do you know which captain it was?' Meade asked.
‘Sure do,' Maxwell said. ‘It was Inspector Blackstone's old friend, Bull O'Shaugnessy.'
SEVENTEEN
T
he black mood, which Alex Meade had been drifting in and out of for the past two days, descended on him again as he and Blackstone sat at the back of the streetcar which was slowly making its way up Fourth Avenue.
‘If the NYPD was a
real
police force, we'd have Mad Bob and Jake the Snake in the holding cells by now,' he said morosely. ‘Hell, if it was a
real
police force, we'd have taken them both off the streets a long time ago.'
‘Have you got any leads on them at all?' Blackstone asked.
‘Not a goddam one. Sure, when I ask them, the patrolmen say they're keeping their eyes peeled, but—' He suddenly stopped talking, and tapped the shoulder of the man sitting in front of them. ‘Hey, you!' he said.
The man turned around.
‘Yes?' he said.
He was in his early twenties, but somehow had managed to maintain a look of boyish enthusiasm which made even the fresh-faced Alex Meade look grave and staid. He was probably a college student, who threw himself into his work with a joyousness which quite exhausted his professors, Blackstone guessed.
‘Are you listening to our conversation?' Meade asked aggressively.
‘Of course not!' the young man protested in a voice of deepest innocence, then he spoiled it all by adding, ‘Are you guys
really
detectives?'
‘You better believe it,' Meade said, producing his shield. ‘You want to move further up the car, before I arrest you?'
‘Arrest me? What for?'
‘I'll think of something,' Meade promised.
The young man rose heavily to his feet.
‘And they say this is a free country,' he complained.
‘
Who
says?' Meade demanded. ‘You tell me who they are, and I'll have them behind bars before you can say “Bill of Rights”.'
‘Feeling better now, Alex?' Blackstone asked, as he watched the young man move further up the car.
‘Yeah,' Meade said, automatically. Then he changed his mind, and continued, ‘No, I'm not. See Sam, what just happened
shouldn't
have happened. We're city officials, engaged on important city business, and we should have our own transportation.'
Meade's mood had very little to do with his current complaint, Blackstone thought, but if he had to blow off steam at something – and he clearly did – then transportation was a relatively harmless target.
‘So what you're saying you want is your own
personal
carriage?' he prodded.
‘No,' Meade replied. ‘I don't want my own personal carriage – I want my own personal
automobile.
Every police officer should have one – and it won't be long before we all do.'
He had seen one – or possibly two – automobiles in Manhattan that day, Blackstone thought, and there were days when he saw none at all – so the idea of every cop in the city driving around in one definitely qualified as one of Alex's more fanciful ideas.
‘You think I'm wrong, don't you?' Meade challenged, still looking for a fight.
‘Maybe, in time, every police officer who has a
private income
– like you do yourself – will have one,' said Blackstone, in a placatory tone, ‘but I certainly can't see them being anything like as widely used as you seem to—'
‘The price will come down,' said Meade firmly.
‘They're handmade, by professional carriage makers,' Blackstone pointed out. ‘It takes weeks, if not months, to—'
‘I met a guy called Olds, at one of my father's dinner parties,' Meade interrupted. ‘He's building a factory in Detroit, Michigan, which will use something he's invented called a “mass production technique”. He reckons he should be able to turn out five thousand automobiles
every single year
– and I believe him.'
‘Five thousand a year!' Blackstone repeated, incredulously. ‘Well, if you say so.'
‘I do say so!' Meade said, forcefully. Then he grinned, looked a little sheepish, and said, ‘Shall we get back to the case?'
‘If you're ready,' Blackstone agreed. ‘You were saying that you'd got no leads on Tate and Thompson.'
‘I've got no leads on Inspector Flynn, either. He's taken some leave he was owed, and has completely disappeared.'
‘Maybe he's gone on holiday,' Blackstone said.
But he didn't really believe that himself, because any man who'd been on the trail of Tate and Thompson no more than twelve or fourteen hours after the kidnapping wasn't going to get any rest until the whole thing was over.
‘Do you know what's got me puzzled?' Meade asked.
‘You're wondering why Captain O'Shaugnessy is willing to see us?' Blackstone guessed.
‘Damn straight,' Meade agreed. ‘The man hates your guts.'
‘It's because he hates my guts that he's agreed to the meeting. He wants to see me squirm.'
‘And will he?'
‘I'm not planning on it. In fact, I'm rather hoping that it will be the other way around.'
Precinct Captain Michael O'Shaugnessy sat in his office chair, his feet on the desk and his hands locked behind his bull-like neck. A cigar drooped from the corner of his mouth, and he had a smug expression on his face which Blackstone would very much have liked to rearrange with a ball-peen hammer.
Even in a police department which was justly famous for being rotten from top to bottom, O'Shaugnessy stood out as a shining beacon of deviousness and corruption. He had personally broken more heads than a boatload of invading Vikings, and he had amassed a larger fortune – through bribery and graft – than all but the most successful of the city's politicians.
‘Well, well, well,' he said, ‘what have we here? The Limey cop and his little buddy Detective Sergeant Meade. Remember when that prisoner of yours escaped, Inspector Blackstone?'
‘I remember,' Blackstone said.
He was not likely to forget. In fact, every day he spent in New York City was a reminder of it.
‘Yeah, that was some prison break,' O'Shaugnessy said, really enjoying himself. ‘Steel bars as thick as your arm, four men on guard – an' he still managed to get out.'
‘I thought your story at the time was that he escaped en route to your cells,' Blackstone said.
‘Maybe it was,' O'Shaugnessy agreed. ‘Maybe it was. It's kinda hard for me to keep track of
all
my lies an' deceits.' He took a puff on his cigar, and blew the smoke contemptuously in Blackstone and Meade's direction. ‘So just what can I do for you guys?'
‘We'd like some information,' Blackstone said.
‘Now, ain't that nice?' O'Shaugnessy said lazily. ‘And what do I get in return?'
‘The satisfaction of upholding the oath you've
sworn
to uphold, and of doing the job you're
paid
to do?' Meade suggested.
‘I was talkin' to the organ grinder, not his monkey,' O'Shaugnessy pointed out. ‘Well, Inspector Blackstone?'
‘You don't get anything,' Blackstone said.
‘Then I got nothin' to say,' O'Shaugnessy replied.
Blackstone turned to Meade. ‘That's five dollars you owe me' he said.
‘Have you boys been betting against each other?' Shaugnessy asked.
‘That's right,' Blackstone agreed.
‘So you bet five dollars that I wouldn't help you, and Meade bet five dollars that I would.' O'Shaugnessy turned to Alex. ‘You really are one
dumb
asshole, ain't you, Sergeant Meade?'
‘That wasn't the bet,' Blackstone told him.
‘No?'
‘No. It wasn't about whether you
would
help us or not – it was about whether you'd be too
scared
to help us.'
‘Scared?' O'Shaugnessy repeated. ‘Scared of what?'
‘That for all your boasting about how smart you are – and how
safe
you are – you're still worried that, if you say too much, a Limey and a humble detective sergeant from your own department might find some way to bring you down.'
‘Boy, you sure do live in some kinda dream world, don't you?' O'Shaugnessy asked, with a smirk.
‘In his position, that's what
I'd
say,' Blackstone told Meade. ‘I'd smile just like he is now, and I'd produce just the same line of bullshit – even if I was crapping my pants at the time.'
‘You got it all wrong, you Limey bastard,' O'Shaugnessy said, angry now. ‘I could tell you
everythin
' that goes on in this precinct. I could tell you exactly who pays the bribes an' exactly how much they pay. Hell, I could even give you the numbers of my secret bank accounts – and even with all that, you still wouldn't be able to bring me down, because this is New York City, an' I'm only doin' the same as every other captain.'

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