Persuader
service, a short stack of pancakes with an egg on top, over easy. Plus a large pot of coffee, black. It was ordered for seven forty-five and delivered at seven forty-four and you paid cash and tipped the waiter three bucks."
"Did I enjoy it?"
"You ate it." Eliot snapped the locks on his briefcase and lifted the lid. Pulled out a stack of paper secured with a rubber band. The paper looked new but the writing on it was blurred.
Photocopies of faxes, probably made during the night.
"Your service record," he said.
I could see photographs in his briefcase. Glossy black-and-white eight-by-tens. Some kind of a surveillance situation.
"You were a military cop for thirteen years," Eliot said. "Fast-track promotion all the way from second lieutenant to major. Citations and medals. They liked you. You were good.
Very good."
"Thank you."
"More than very good, actually. You were their special go-to guy on numerous occasions."
"I guess I was."
"But they let you go."
"I was riffed," I said.
"Riffed?" Duffy repeated.
"RIF, reduction in force. They love to make acronyms out of things. The Cold War ended, military spending got cut, the army got smaller. So they didn't need so many special go-to guys."
"The army still exists," Eliot said. "They didn't chop everybody."
"No."
"So why you in particular?"
"You wouldn't understand." He didn't challenge me.
"You can help us," Duffy said. "Who did you see in the car?" I didn't answer.
"Were there drugs in the army?" Eliot asked.
I smiled.
"Armies love drugs," I said. "They always have. Morphine, Benzedrine. The German Army invented Ecstasy. It was an appetite suppressant. CIA invented LSD, tested it on the U.S. Army. Armies march on their veins."
"Recreational?"
"Average age of a recruit is eighteen. What do you think?"
"Was it a problem?"
"We didn't make it much of a problem. Some grunt goes on furlough, smokes a couple of joints in his girlfriend's bedroom, we didn't care. We figured we'd rather see them with a couple of blunts than a couple of six-packs. Outside of our care we liked them docile rather than aggressive." Duffy glanced at Eliot and Eliot used his fingernails to scrape the photographs up out of his case. He handed them to me. There were four of them. All four were grainy and a little blurred. All four showed the same Cadillac DeVille I had seen the night before. I recognized it by the plate number. It was in some kind of a parking garage. There were two guys standing next to the trunk. In two of the pictures the trunk lid was down. In two of them it was up. The two guys were looking down at something inside the trunk. No way of telling what it was. One of the guys was a Hispanic gangbanger. The other was an older man in a suit. I didn't know him.
Duffy must have been watching my face.
"Not the man you saw?" she said.
"I didn't say I saw anybody."
"The Hispanic guy is a major dealer," Eliot said. "Actually he's the major dealer for most of Los Angeles County. Not provable, of course, but we know all about him. His profits must run to millions of dollars a week. He lives like an emperor. But he came all the way to Portland, Maine, to meet with this other guy." I touched one of the photographs. "This is Portland, Maine?" Duffy nodded. "A parking garage, downtown. About nine weeks ago. I took the pictures myself."
"So who's this other guy?"
"We're not exactly sure. We traced the Cadillac's plate, obviously. It's registered to a corporation called Bizarre Bazaar. Main office is in Portland, Maine. Far as we can tell it started out way back as some kind of hippy-dippy import-export trader with the Middle East. Now it specializes in importing Oriental rugs. Far as we can tell the owner is a guy called Zachary Beck. We're assuming that's him in the photographs."
"Which makes him huge," Eliot said. "If this guy from LA is prepared to fly all the way back east to meet with him, he's got to be a couple of rungs up the ladder. And anybody a couple of rungs above this LA guy is in the stratosphere, believe me. So Zachary Beck's a top boy, and he's fooling with us. Rug importer, drug importer. He's making jokes."
"I'm sorry," I said. "I never saw him before."
"Don't be sorry," Duffy said. She hitched forward on the chair. "It's better for us if he isn't the guy you saw. We already know about him. It's better for us if you saw one of his associates. We can try to get to him that way."
"You can't get to him head-on?" There was a short silence. Seemed to me
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