Authors: Campbell Armstrong
âHow are you?' she asked.
âI was having this dream we were in Fiji drinking coconut milk, only it wasn't milk, it was ink. You see any symbolism in that?'
âNo, not really. How's the pain?'
âNumbed,' he said.
âI've got a meeting with some person from Justice shortly.'
âAnd then?'
She didn't know how to answer. She said, âWe'll see.' She ran a hand lightly across his face.
âGet brochures,' he said. âGlossy ones from a travel agent â¦'
He closed his eyes, slipping into sleep. Ink and coconut milk, cave-writing on the walls of the unconscious. Rhees had hopes of blue distances and vacations, getting away from nightmares. She kissed his lips, then left the room.
Kelloway and Wom were waiting in the corridor.
âWe'll go up to my office,' Kelloway said.
They rode an elevator in silence. When the doors opened Kelloway ushered her out. The corridor was quiet. A sense of bereavement hung in the air. A few cops sat at their desks and shuffled paperwork without interest. Here and there, in doorways and around a water fountain, they stood in small sombre groups. The fact of Drumm's death had permeated the building and alerted officers to the notion of their own mortality.
Amanda felt the heaviness in the atmosphere. The only thing missing was Willie's body inside a coffin on a plinth surrounded by floral tributes.
Kelloway entered his office with Sonny Wom. He went behind his desk and vigorously rubbed his arm with the palm of his hand. Amanda sat, struggling against her tension. Relax. Somebody from Justice is coming, the world is going to be set right, explanations will be forthcoming.
There was a knock on the door.
Kelloway said, âCome.'
The door opened. Amanda didn't turn to look.
She heard a man say, âI'm on time, I trust.'
Kelloway moved out from behind his desk to welcome the visitor and Amanda changed the angle of her head and saw a man dressed in a black suit and white shirt with a black tie. Over one arm he'd slung a coat. His hair was white and sparse and he moved across the floor in a shuffling way, no elasticity in his muscles.
I'm on time, I trust
. Amanda had a sense of backtracking, rolling in reverse on some kind of memory monorail through a tunnel filled with echoes.
âChief of Police Kelloway?' the man asked.
âRight.'
âThis heat,' the man said and smiled. âHow do you cope with it?'
âYou get used to it,' Kelloway said. âAfter twenty years, give or take.'
The man sat. He set a briefcase on the floor beside his chair. Amanda stared at him. His eyes were watery. She was still travelling backwards, still trying to compartmentalize something that had strayed out of place. But what?
The man opened a wallet and held out his ID. Kelloway looked at it, nodding his head.
The man turned to Amanda and asked, âAnd you are?'
She spoke her name quietly. It had come back to her. It had come rolling all the way back to her.
She thought, This is wrong. This is out of tune.
64
Amanda asked, âYou just flew in from Los Angeles? Weather nice out there?'
The man said, âSunny like here, but less hot.'
Kelloway said, âWhat's the weather got to do with anything?'
âJust curious.' Amanda noticed the darkness under the man's eyes, the lack of colour in his lips. âWhat airline did you fly?'
âAmerica West.' His voice was like grit inside a cat-litter box, cinders rolling back and forth, and he breathed with difficulty.
Kelloway said, âMr Loeb hasn't flown in to discuss weather or airlines.'
âRalph,' Loeb said. âCall me Ralph.'
âLast time I was in LA, I stayed at the Marmont,' Amanda continued. âWere you staying in a hotel?'
âNo, with a friend in Westwood,' Loeb said.
Sonny Wom slipped out of the room quietly as if he'd received one of Kelloway's imperceptible signals. Kelloway was rising from behind his desk. His irritation was palpable. From the corner of her eye Amanda was aware of his bronze skin and white shirt.
âThis chit-chat's entertaining, I'm sure,' he said. âI'd like to see us get to the point, Scholes.'
Plain old
Scholes
now. Amanda ignored the cop and asked, âHow did you receive the message that brought you here?'
âCarrier pigeon,' Loeb said. He smiled thinly. âBy phone, of course.'
âIn LA. At your friend's house in Westwood.'
Loeb faced Kelloway and asked, âAm I under oath?'
âWhat's the point of these questions, Scholes?' Kelloway asked.
Amanda stepped a little nearer to Loeb. âWho was it that telephoned you in Westwood?'
âA colleague in Washington,' Loeb said with a certain patience. âLet me take you through the steps, Miss Scholes. Chief Kelloway contacted the Justice Department with an urgent request to meet somebody connected to the Witness Protection Program, and his enquiry was passed along to me because, A, I'm associated with the Program, and B, I was less than an hour away by plane. That answer your questions?'
âDoes this colleague have a name?'
Kelloway looked at Loeb and said, âI'm sorry about this, Ralph. Scholes was a prosecuting attorney until recently, which she thinks gives her a licence to come off like the Grand Inquisitor.' He turned to Amanda, and his stare was unpleasant, and just for a moment Amanda had the tiny flash of a feeling that Kelloway and Loeb weren't entirely strangers to one another. But the sensation was smoke, and it dissipated as quickly as it had arisen, blown out of her head by the sharpness of Kelloway's angry voice. âRalph isn't here to play Trivial Pursuit, Scholes, and this isn't a court of law, in case that had slipped your mind.'
âI asked a simple question â'
âAn irrelevant question,' Kelloway said.
Loeb smiled and said, âYou ought to have Miss Scholes fitted with an emergency brake, Chief.'
Kelloway said, âI think it's a muzzle she needs more.'
Amanda said to Loeb, âI can understand you might not want to tell us the name of your colleague at Justice. Confidentiality and so forth. What about your friend in LA? What's his name?'
Kelloway had his hand firmly on her elbow now. âOutside,' he said. âI want a word.'
She allowed herself to be led into the corridor, where she yanked her arm free of Kelloway's flinty grip.
âWhat the fuck are you playing at?' he asked.
âHe's not on the level, Kelloway.'
âHow do you figure that?'
âBecause I recognize his voice.'
âYou're losing me.'
âDansk gave me his private number to call in Washington. When I called it, I got an answering-machine, and the voice on the machine was Loeb's.'
âYou phone Dansk and you get Loeb's voice on a machine. What's the big deal?'
âThe big deal is they're in this together. Dansk and Loeb. They're
partners
, for Christ's sake. He's here to feed you bullshit. He'll tell you exactly what Dansk told me. He's going to talk about an in-house investigation of security leaks in the Program. He's going to tell you how they're in the process of being sealed. I've heard it before and it all sounds very plausible, but I'm not sitting through it again, thanks.'
Kelloway clenched a hand and tapped it like a mallet against the side of his leg. âSo you don't trust Loeb. Maybe you don't trust me either, huh?'
Amanda gazed along the corridor. A bubble rose inside a water-cooler and popped on the surface. She turned her face to Kelloway, whose sarcasm made her feel isolated.
Maybe you don't trust me either, huh
? Trust was fragile scaffolding and it swayed when you climbed it.
She said, âAll I'm telling you is that Loeb and Dansk are involved in this thing together, and Loeb's going to try and pass you off with pap. Christ, they've got it
sewn-up
, Kelloway. It's neat. They've got it nicely self-contained. Call Dansk and you get Loeb's voice. Messages for Dansk never go any further, they're always intercepted by Loeb.'
âSo what have we got here? Guys that have entered into some sinister compact to bury a couple of witnesses on behalf of Victor Sanchez?'
âExactly. Check Loeb's story. You can find out what flight he claims he caught from LA and the name of the friend he says he stayed with in California. My bet is he's covered his ass and you'll get nowhere. He can arrange well-rehearsed associates to back up anything he says. A flight attendant who seems to remember him, an old pal in LA who's going to tell you Loeb was his house guest.'
âCheck Loeb's story. This is your best advice?'
âIt's my only advice. This is a labyrinth. One wrong turn and you're lost.'
âDid you ever drop tainted acid back in the old days and every now and again you have weird flashbacks?'
âAcid scared me, so I left it alone.'
Kelloway rolled up a sleeve that had begun to slide down his arm. âYou should have stuck to that principle, Scholes: leaving things alone.'
Sonny Wom came along the corridor and said, âHe checks out. He's with Justice all right.'
âFine. Go back and keep him occupied, Sonny. I'll be with you in a minute.'
Amanda remembered Willie Drumm's speculation about Dansk.
He's got nothing to do with the Program. He's a freelance operator
. And somebody on the inside is feeding him information, somebody bought and paid for by Sanchez. Loeb.
It had to be. A sinister compact.
Kelloway said, âSo Loeb's the genuine article.'
âHe works for Justice, which doesn't mean he's on the â'
âHe's on the level until I find out otherwise, Scholes.'
âOK, OK,
OK
. Play it by your rules.'
âYou still don't want to hear what he has to say? You're walking away?'
âFirst I have to think of someplace to walk,' she said. âI don't like the idea of the streets. I don't know what's out there in all that sunlight.'
Kelloway said, âMaybe that's all there is, sunlight and nothing else.'
âI seriously doubt it.'
He was quiet a moment. âWhy don't you ask me?'
âAsk you what?'
âDon't go coy. You need a favour.'
He reminded her increasingly of a hawk hovering in the still air above hot canyons, scanning for soft prey. âI don't expect favours from you,' she said. âYou don't like me. The chemistry between us is like frozen tundra.'
Kelloway shrugged. âI have powers. You want to get out of here safely, don't you? And there's Rhees to think about.'
âThere's Rhees, sure,' she said.
âBut you don't like the idea of just walking away. Feisty lady prosecutor suddenly backed into corner, doesn't know who to trust. Injured man on her hands, serious limits to her freedom of movement.'
âYou want me at your mercy,' she said.
âIt's an appealing notion. The cops step in where the former angel of justice fears to tread.'
âYou're an asshole, Kelloway.'
âAssholes can be powerful.'
âPower comes and goes.'
âYeah, but right now I happen to have it, which is why you need me.'
âWhat are you offering?'
âYou believe you're in danger. OK, you need protection. I'm thinking of offering you Thomas Gannon.'
Protection. Kelloway was right about one thing: Rhees restricted her activities. But if she walked away, it meant leaving everything to Kelloway. He inherited it all.
âWhy the helping hand?' she asked.
âWillie Drumm thought the world of you. He talked about you like you were his favourite niece or something, and that counts where I'm concerned, because I liked Willie. Surprised?'
She tried to find a tiny kindness in his face at that moment, an underlying gentleness, but the face gave away nothing. It was all suntanned surfaces and hard angles. Whatever feelings he had were encased behind barbed wire, deep inside, where you couldn't get a glimpse of them.
âI'm wondering if you'll follow through,' she said. âOr if you'll just buy Loeb's version and let everything slide away into obscurity.'
He drew a hand across his face. âLet me explain something to you. When you say Willie was killed because this Dansk wanted him dead, I'd be remiss if I didn't look into your story, right? So that's what I'm doing: looking into your story. And meantime giving you protection. Doing my job.'
âI sit in the bleachers and you play the game,' she said. âAnd Gannon is my guardian angel. Which is also pretty convenient for you, because he can report on me if I decide to step out of line.'
âThat's what it comes down to. Pick a safe place.'
There was an echo here she didn't like: Dansk on their first meeting.
You agree to stay out of this business entirely, and in return I'll let you know the outcome
. Things had changed since then. Her world was haywire and she didn't have the resources to straighten it out on her own. A woman with a fractured lover: What could she do? Her boundaries had narrowed, her options diminished.
âWell?' Kelloway asked. âDo I hear a thank you?'
She was thinking of the forest and the estuaries of darkness, the howl of coyotes and the sorry little pipsqueaks of their victims. She wasn't in the mood for expressing gratitude because she didn't feel any. It was another feeling she had, a kinship with those creatures of the pines that lived in fear of nocturnal predators with a craving for easy blood.
65
Dansk parked on the side of the mountain where a paved road had been laid close to the edge. Up here, people who'd accumulated great wealth built houses with amazing views of the city spread below. This was a place where you could stand on your balcony and sip your freshly squeezed orange juice on sunny mornings and say, Thank you, God, I've arrived. And maybe you'd spare a thought for the peasants toiling in the city far below, street-cleaners and janitors and maids, all the peons and wetbacks who laboured down there so you could live up here just a little nearer to heaven.