CHAPTER 18
MOSTLY WHAT GRADY FOUND out in the bars he hit along Airline Highway was that the drinks were cheap and the reason was that there wasn’t much actual booze in them. And that if he wanted to get high or have sex with anything at all, living or dead, animal, vegetable or mineral, it would be easy to do. A couple of times an attractive woman or two gave him the eye and he knew it wouldn’t be hard to end up in bed if he gave half an effort, only he didn’t. He wanted to stay focused on finding out what he could about Kincaid.
He didn’t know what he expected to find out
anyway. The whole thing might be a wild goose chase. There was no
proof that Kincaid came back to New Orleans. So he was from
there
originally--he might be living in Canada for all he knew. And maybe
nothing was going down at all.
No. He was right about this, he knew. His instincts told him he was on the right course. Kincaid was back in New Orleans and he was planning something big.
What he did was hit as many spots as possible, showing Kincaid’s picture to the bartender and barmaids and customers. He ordered a real drink in about every third bar. The rest of the time he’d drink ginger ale and pass the photo aroun ask if anybody knew Kincaid. He offered money several times to no avail. Nobody seemed to know the guy or at least they didn’t claim to.
By midnight, he’d exhausted most of the places that looked promising. On the pretext of finding some “action” he was told by a guy in a titty bar to try the joints closer to New Orleans out on Jefferson Highway. It was while driving past the juke joints and fried chicken and seafood places that lined the highway that then he spotted a large red neon sign on a building that whispered “Beer” seductively. He could use a beer. Every time he got out of the car he figured he lost a pound, from the sweat that poured from his body.
He’d almost driven by the place. It didn’t look like much on the outside. One of the countless honky-tonks the cops in Dayton would have referred to as a “bucket o’ blood.” It was the name that drew him in. Sally’s.
When he walked through the door, the worst music he thought he’d ever heard assaulted his ears. The entire band was off-key, limping through a tortured version of “Faded Love.” The bar was directly to his left and every seat seemed to be taken by a cripple. Not a single person sitting there--all men--appeared to have their entire complement of body parts. One was missing an ear, several an eye, as evidenced by eye patches, and at least two were sporting hooks where their hands used to be.
So this is where the cast of M*A*S*H went after the show folded, Grady thought to himself, taking the only remaining seat, a stool with barroom polio--one leg shorter than the other three. It was at the end nearest the door. Even the furniture had infirmities, he noted, wryly. Perfect place for his own self.
Sally’s doors were never closed, he discovered in striking up a conversation with the owner who was also bartending at the time. Not in the last fourteen years. Sally turned out to be a man.
“Hell, I couldn’t close it if I wanted,” said
Sally, a short, barrel-chested Italian. “There’s no locks on the
doors.” Grady was surprised Sally was a man until he revealed his
given name was Salvatore Graziano. No relation to the former
middleweight fighter except that Grady’d discovered that all
Italians seemed to be
related--at least in their opinion. Sally turned out to be the most
helpful of anyone he’d met.
“I know this guy. Know who he is, anyway. Matter of fact, a pal of his comes in, I think. Eddie something. You want, I can ask my wife. She’d know.” He gave Grady a hard look. “You’re a cop, aren’t you?”
Grady was surprised. Not that the bartender made him, but that he volunteered so much upfront. Usually in a place like this, getting information was about as easy as root canal work.
“I’m a cop myself,” explained Sally. “Well, retired. NOPD, twenty and out. Walked the Quarter for my beat most of the time. That’s worth thirty years, compared to out in the parishes. Went in in uniform, went out in uniform. Never made a suit, though there were opportunities. Always figured the real work got done by the hoofers like me. Now? Now, they’re all in cars, wondering why the crime stats keep going up. I got no regrets though. I seen it all, brudda. You want an interesting beat, try the Quarter. More perverts per square block than anywhere else in the world. I include the tourists in that assessment, too. Something happens to people when they come down and I’m not talking just during Mardi Gras. It’s something in the air, maybe in the crab boil. Makes your pecker swell and your brain shrink.”
“So you got this bar,” Grady said. He decided to relax, have another Pearl. Sally kept his beer at the perfect temperature, just above freezing. One degree more and it would turneer slush. He felt he’d run into a kindred soul. He liked the ex-cop right away. There was something about the work, the things they faced, that bonded all cops, no matter how far apart the places where they worked. The scenery might be different, but the human animal was the same everywhere. Missoula, Montana got the same share of excrement as Chicago’s Loop.
“Yeah. So I got this bar. I couldn’t get out of the Quarter fast enough when my time was done. Liked it when I was there, hated it as soon as I walked away and realized what I’d been swimming in. Never go up there anymore. They got the beat cops on motor scooters! Can you imagine! I couldn’t do it. Next thing, they’ll have ‘em wearing those little caps with propellers, handing out gumdrops to the bad guys.”
Grady kept noticing the customers that walked in. If the patrons present represented suburban normality down here, he figured Sally was right about the Quarter being a pervert headquarters.
The bar was cavernous, arranged in two large sections. When you walked in the front door, the bar itself was on the left. There were tables right in front of you and a raised area in the back where the band set up. They were on a break. Must be the regular house band, he figured. The instruments that were on it looked as though they’d been there so long they were a permanent fixture. Around behind the bandstand he could barely make out another area, darkened, that looked like a bunch of tables set up. He guessed that Sally opened that up when the band played on key and the crowds demanded it.
He told Sally why he was in New Orleans, why he was looking for Charles Kincaid.
“Man-oh-man! So you think Reader Kincaid tried to kill your brother! Man, I’m sorry. Makes you crazy, don’t it? Listen, Fogarty, if I hear anything, I’ll let you know. I’ll ask Veronica when I go home. Leave me your number, someplace I can reach you. I’ll tell you this--you come to the right place. Most of the local outlaws come in some time or other. They know I run a clean bar, something that’s hard to get on this end of town. They figure it’s a safe place to be, won’t be no trouble at Sally’s. I keep things in line. Make a few bucks now and again, too. I keep in touch with the boys downtown. A lot of information comes my way so I make a little both ways. Know what I mean?”
When Grady hit the sheets that night at the Day’s Inn he did so with a mild buzz, but he felt he’d made some progress and counted the headache worthwhile. At least he’d made a valuable contact, someone connected to the criminal pipeline. Someone who knew Kincaid. What was better, Sally was one of the good guys. He’d been dying to ask the bartender to call his wife, wake her up and ask her right away what she knew about this friend of Kincaid’s, but he figured he better not. He didn’t think the man would do it anyway and he didn’t want to lose the only contact he’d made. He trusted Sally to call him as soon as he talked to his wife in the morning. Sometimes, you have to let things play out naturally, he thought.
He tossed and turned for an hour before sleep came and dozed fitfully for the rest of the night.
The next morning, Grady showered, shaved, got dressed and drove down to a coffee shop named Morning Call in Fat City that the clerk recommended. There, he got his second break. He was scanning the morning Times-Picayune while stuffing down a beignet and some of the best coffee in his life and was about to turn the page when a small item caught his eye.
It was an article quoting an Animal Control official who was outraged over an incident out at the lake near Covington. A German shepherd was blown up back in the swamps. Probably by a remote control device, the investigating sergeant had theorized.He didn’t have a theory why someone would go to all this trouble just to kill a dog unless it was some kind of satanic cult. The report went on to say that the Animal Control officer, a woman named Farver, was beside herself that anyone would do something like that to an innocent animal.
He’d dealt with cults before. There were kooks everywhere. Mostly kids who read too many comic books and not enough Mark Twain. That’s what piqued his curiosity as he read and made him think there might be something there. Grady’d never heard of an animal being sacrificed by explosion. They usually cut the poor creature’s throat. Occasionally they hanged them. Something wasn’t right about this. What really caught his eye was the speculation that a remote control device had been used.
Maybe if there was something else to go on he’d let it go, but any lead was precious. He decided to pay the Animal Control office a visit and see what information he could dig up. Maybe blowing up dogs was common in these parts. This was for sure a much more violent society than the Midwest. He’d soon figured that out as if he didn’t already know from years of hearing stories about the Big Easy.
***
“Are you with the New Orleans police? You aren’t a native, are you?”
Grady looked at the animals, mostly dogs but some cats and a monkey housed in the cages they were walking by.
“Who lost their monkey? Are those legal to keep? No, ma’am, I’m a cop...well, retired. I’m from Dayton. Ohio. I’m checking into an attempted murder.” He hesitated. “My brother’s.”
Whitney Farver was not what Grady expected. He didn’t know what he thought she would look like, but this wasn’t it. Twenty-five, twenty-six, long blonde hair and perfect white teeth which she flashed in frequent and thoroughly charming smiles. A beautiful woman. He thought she looked more like a model than somebody who chased stray dogs.
“I’m sorry,” she said, after a silent moment that stretched too long for comfort. “But I don’t understand. What’s a mutilated dog in New Orleans got to do with somebody’s attempted murder in Ohio? And, yes, monkeys are legal if you purchase them from a licensed dealer and if you apply for a permit and get them shots. Only there’re a lot around that aren’t legal. They’re a big headache. This is a seaport, if you haven’t noticed. A lot of sailors come through from off the tankers and other ships. This is one of the biggest ports in the country. Maybe the biggest. Most of the grain from the Midwest leaves for overseas from New Orleans. Drive out on River Road sometime. There’s an elevator out there you won’t believe. Not to mention gas and oil. We’re hurting--the oil business isn’t what it used to be, but it’s still got a pulse.”
She went on, explaining about the monkeys. It was evident she loved animals and loved her work. He guessed she was right where she should be. No matter how beautiful she was, somebody that dedicated would be wasted prancing down a runway in a Dior.
“Sometimes seamen bring them home. Monkeys. Not only monkeys. Lots of things. Endangered species, too. Parrots mostly. They think they’ll make great pets. Or maybe they try to sell them. They hear about all this big money people pay for parrots. Only they get them home and don’t know how to locate a buyer. You can’t run an ad like you’re selling your car. Then they either get tired of them, the animal gets sick, or maybe the jerk gets bitten or scratched. They dump them out on the road someplace, the ones they don’t outright kill. We get three or four a year like Chipper. If this little guy had a legitimate owner, he’d be in to claim him. We’ll give him to Audubon Zoo if nobody shows up in the nex day or two. You think monkeys are weird? You should have been here last week. There was an ostrich back in that last cage. That was a new one for me. You know what I did?”
He didn’t have a clue and said so.
“I checked the paper to see if Michael Jackson was in town!”
They both laughed.
He liked the way she gave a name to the monkey. He bet she named all the other ones too. A job like this must be hard on her when it came time to destroy an animal. He decided not to say anything about that.
“This thing probably hasn’t got anything at all to do with the guy I’m looking for,” he said, watching her begin to feed the dogs, ladling out scoops of dried dog food from a pail.
Grady paused, and—Whitney, as she’d asked him to call her--said, “But--”
“The article said the police said the dog was hooked up with a pipe bomb. And probably blown up by remote control. That’s what got my interest. My brother has an electronic store and whoever attacked him stole stuff like that, remote control equipment. You know, those gizmos that you use to control airplanes, cars, things like that.”
She stopped feeding the dogs and straightened up, giving him a quizzical look.
“Look, Miss...Whitney, I don’t know if there’s any connection or not, but I don’t have much to go on. And I’ve had something to do with satanic cults--I could tell you a story or two if you had time--but I never heard of any of ‘em blowing up their sacrifices. They usually--”
“I know,” she interrupted. “They usually use a knife, cut their throats. God! I wish--” The fury in her eyes was unmistakable. I wouldn’t want this woman mad at me, Grady thought, waiting for her to continue.
“Look, Mr. Fogarty, I’d like to help you, but I don’t know that I can. And I doubt if you can get much from the police who investigated it. They don’t put a lot of priority on dog mutilations.” Her tone was bitter.
Grady got up, prepared to leave.
“Wait!” she said, suddenly, going over to a desk and rifling through the mass of papers on top of it. “There’s something....here it is.”
She fished out a scrap of paper and handed it to Grady.
“This guy called in, thought it might be his dog that got blown up. Would this--”
“Help? I hope to smile,” Grady said, turning the paper around to read it. “What’s a ‘Chef Menteur’?”
Whitney smiled. “Not a ‘what,’ a ‘where.’ It’s a street. I’m going with you.”
She grabbed her purse.
“I was planning on talking to Mr. Pelkerson myself. Come on. You’ll never find it.”
***
She was right Grady would have had a hell of a time finding the house. It was in one of those subdivisions where all the homes look alike. A ranch, next to a two-story colonial, next to a ranch, next to a... The contractor had only used three colors for maybe a hundred or so houses. White, yellow and a salmon shade of pink. He saw a blue one that must have been repainted. The neighborhood rebel. The house he was looking for turned out to be one of the standard pink ones.
“I knew I shouldn’t have sold Fritz to that asshole.”
The man--Pelkerson he’d introduced himself as--no “Mister,” no first name, coughed horribly. The Camels he kept chain smoking couldn’t be helping, Grady thought, and he remembered the pack of Marlboros in his own pocket. He saw Whitneyr*s glance at Pelkerson and guessed she was a nonsmoker by the look on her face.
Pelkerson was telling them what had happened with his dog.
“It’s just...I...well, I don’t have long to go and I wanted Fritz to have a good home. I didn’t want him to end up in the pound.”
It would have been better if you had, thought Grady, but didn’t say so to the man. He looked at Whitney and could tell she was thinking the same thing.
“Is there anything you can tell me about the guy who bought your dog?”
“Naw. Wish I could. You on the case?”
Grady didn’t say anything, only nodded. Let Pelkerson assume what he wanted.
“Yeah, well, like I said, he never introduced himself. I don’t think. I don’t remember him saying his name. I can describe him though. Imagine a creep.”
Grady and Whitney both laughed at that. Grady said, “I could use a bit more than that.”
Pelkerson went into a coughing fit that lasted more than a minute and brought tears to his eyes. At the end of it he was bending over. When the coughing ended he stood up, took out another cigarette and lighted it.
“Fucking lungs,” he said, inhaling deeply. “Probably look like a couple of wharf rats got run over by a semi. I’m an organ donor, but I don’t think those’re the organs they’re gonna want.”
He took another drag and waved his cigarette, indicating they should follow him into the living room where he sank down into an easy chair. Grady noticed overflowing ashtrays everywhere, as well as a nearly empty vodka bottle on the coffee table. Pelkerson waved his hand with the cigarette in it at the couch and Grady and Whitney sat down.
“He was about medium build, skinny little asshole--brown hair, long, like a hippie.” Grady wondered how old the man was and wondered if he knew hippies were long gone from the contemporary scene. Like about twenty, thirty years maybe. He was writing on a notepad as Pelkerson talked.
“Oh. One thing might help. I knew this guy wasn’t a dog lover...I tried to catch him...drove off before...anyway...he wore these fancy shoes. Alligator. You don’t see those much. That’s when I went after him, only he drove off before...when I think about those shoes! Guy likes animals don’t wear shoes like that. He kicked him.”
“Kicked who?” Whitney asked the question, leaning forward.
Pelkerson went into another coughing spasm and predictably, when the spasm was over, lighted another cigarette off the one that was going. Grady felt an overwhelming urge himself and shook out a Marlboro medium, almost asking permission before he caught himself. When he saw the look on Whitney’s face, he wished he had.
“Kicked my baby. Kicked Fritz. That bastard!”
There wasn’t much else. He couldn’t remember the color of the man’s eyes or the make or year of the man’s car. Only that it was brown.
Out in Whitney’s car, she said, “Did you get much out of that?”
A few minutes later, they were back at the animal shelter and shaking hands goodbye.
“I’d like to see you again,” Grady said, self-consciously. As soon as the words were out of his mouth, he wanted them back. Damn! He felt like a friggin’ schoolboy, asking for a date to the junior prom. Somehow, this woman intimidated him and he couldn’t figure out why. All he knew was that he wanted to see more of her.
She surprised him.
“Okay,” she said. “I think I’d like that. Tonight? I get off at six. Eight would be perfect. Actually, it’d be nice to go out with someone who didn’t have a New Orleans accent for a change.”
At his surprised look, she told him she was a Yankee herself. Born and bred in New Hampshire.
When she said that, Grady almost said something about his and Jack’s dream to have a fishing camp in next-door neighbor Vermont, but didn’t. That was something he could save for later. Damn! He was a schoolboy! Already he was looking for nuggets of information to impress her with.
He decided to leave before he put his foot in his mouth and ruined what must not have been too bad a first impression.
***
Driving back to the motel, Grady decided he’d had enough of smelling his own sour perspiration. He wanted a shower and clean clothes. He quickly made a U-turn and headed over to Jefferson Highway, nearly sideswiping a beat-up pickup truck that looked like it had been in its share of accidents. That was the ticket. He was getting into the New Orleans driving rhythm. The guy in the pickup didn’t even blink. What was odder, when he considered it, was that he didn’t either.
His hunch was probably no good, but you never know. He’d solved cases on less.
“Sally in?” he asked. A huge woman was tending bar when he walked in who must have weighed three hundred pounds. Her arms looked like giant sausages. Only one customer at the bar. His head was down on the bar, apparently in the midst of a nap.
“Who’s asking?” she said, wiping a glass and giving him the eye.
“Tell him it’s Fogarty. We met last night.” Grady was surprised at the softness of her voice, considering her size.
“My wife,” Sally said when he came out. “Veronica, meet Grady Fogarty. Hey, wake Pete up and tell him it’s time to go home.” He nodded to the woman in the direction of the sleeping drunk and led Grady back to a table. Veronica came over with two beers, although neither he nor Sally asked for anything, and it was only one o’clock in the afternoon. She set them down and went to stand behind the bar. She stood there a minute, then reached out and pushed the sleeping man’s head. He fell back, seemingly in slow motion and landed sprawled in a heap on the floor. Veronica looked over the top of the bar, shrugged and went back to polishing glasses.
“She’s Italian,” Sally said, turning back to give Grady his attention, eyes twinkling. “Everybody wonders, I guess. She’s a great gal, the apple of my eye. So she gained a few pounds? I love her. What’s on your mind.”
Grady felt embarrassed. Did it show in my face, he wondered. Still, I’d like to know the story behind this relationship!
“Sally, I got a description of somebody that might be the friend of the guy I’m looking for.” He gave it to him. Hair color, eyes, height, that stuff.
“That could be about six hundred guys,” Sally said, taking a swig and wiping his mouth with the back of his hand. “Look around, take your pick.” It was true. There were maybe four guys in the bar at the moment that loosely fit the description.
“There’s something else,” Grady said. “This guy said the man wore alligator shoes. That mean anything? I figure, down here where they grow ‘em, about a million people wear alligator shoes.”
“No,” Sally said. “Only one I know. You’re gonna like this. The only guy I know wears alligators is that guy I was telling you about. The guy that was in the other night. What’d I say his name was? Eddie? Yeah, that’s it, Eddie something. Hold on a minute.”
He signaled for his wife to come over.“Veronica, tell Grady what you can about that Eddie character. I don’t know if I mentioned it, but Grady’s a cop too, retired, same as us. Oh, yeah,” he said when Grady’s eyebrows shoot up, “Veronica was a cop, too. Worked vice mostly. Used to pose as a prostie.”
Man, thought Grady. That was all. Man.
“Veronica, you know that guy comes in once in a while, drinks Stingers--remember you were talking about him acting like a tourist or something--guy with the alligator shoes and those other shoes he’s always wearing--snakeskins--shit like that.”
“That’s easy. You’re talking about Eddie Delahousie.” Grady leaned in closer to hear her. The longer Veronica talked the lower her voice became. “Wears those goddamned shoes pimps wear. Stacy-Adams, I think they are. There’s a store up on Canal all the pimps go to. Lives over in Fat City in one of those apartments down on Arnoldt. You know, drug central. Boozer. Punk. I’ll get his rap sheet for you tomorrow, if you want.”
She got up and left.
“Well? There you go, Fogarty. She was a good cop. She never used to miss much. Still doesn’t.”
When he left, the drunk was still laying on the floor.
Grady was exhilarated on the drive back to the Day’s Inn. A solid, bona fide lead! He was getting somewhere.
After he’d finished soaping down, he gradually decreased the hot water until it was totally cold and he stepped out and pulled on his pants after wiping off with a towel.
“Fuck it,” he said aloud to the room. “I wonder how long it takes to get used to this godawful heat!” He dreaded having to go back outside. Once dressed, he checked his piece and got two extra clips from the suitcase, slipping them into his pocket. He spread out a city map he’d gotten from the front desk and opened the phone book.
He was in luck.
There were only two Edward Delahousies listed and one with the initial E. Checking out the addresses on his map he found one with a Metairie address. Locking the door of his room behind him, he went out and got into his car, burning his fingers on the steering wheel.
“Christ,” he muttered, turning the key. “A shower six minutes ago and I’m wetter than I was before.” The frosty air of the air-conditioning felt wonderful. He kicked it all the way up and let the Freon go to work.
Finding the apartment was easy, but Eddie Delahousie wasn’t in. He considered picking the lock and looking around, but decided against it. It was enough for the moment that he knew where the man lived.
As he was leaving, a blue Caprice turned in behind him from the cross street. He just caught a glimpse of the man behind the wheel and something jarred in his mind, but he couldn’t figure out the source until he was a few blocks away. Reader. That had been Reader. For a minute, he considered going back, but then discarded the notion. Not now. He didn’t want the man to see him and get suspicious. He was reasonably certain this was a guy who noticed everything.
***
The man in the Caprice hadn’t noticed him, but, as it turned out, he didn’t need to. Reader received a phone call from his old friend Bobby that tipped him off.
“Reader?”
“Yeah. What’s the problem?”
“I thought you might like to know there’s a guy asking around town about you. He’s got your picture and everything. Funny thing. This guy’s a Yankee.”
“A Yankee?” Christ. He should have taken care of that waitress.
“Yeah. I got his license number. Looks like a rental. That help any?”
“That helps more than you know. I owe you, Bobby. I owe you big.”
After he got the guy’s description, he called another friend.
“Lionel,” he said. “I got something I want you to trace.”
***
After he returned and after his second shower of the afternoon, Grady lay down on the bed with only a towel around him and enjoyed the delicious frost of the air-conditioning on his moist body. The phone rang.
“Mr. Grady Fogarty, please.”
“Dr. Lyons?” He recognized the voice. “How’s my...” Grady paused as it hit him why the doctor was calling him. He sat up and his towel fell to the floor.
“He didn’t make it, did he?”
After he hung up, he just sat there staring at the floor for long moments, until he noticed he was naked. He dressed, putting on each article of clothing on slowly and methodically. His mind refused to function at first and then the magnitude of what the doctor had said overcame him and he lay face down on the bed and his body shook as he wept silently.
***
He wanted a drink in the worst way. What he did instead was to pick the phone back up and call Whitney.
“I don’t think I’ll be very good company tonight,” he said. He told her why.
“Oh, Grady! I’m so sorry! You poor darling. I’m coming over.”
He tried to talk her out of it but she wouldn’t take no. He hung up the phone and walked around with his head in a daze.
After what seemed like hours, there was a knock on his door. It was Whitney. Without saying a word, she stepped over the threshold and put her arms around him. Gently, she led him back to his bed and sat him down, sitting next to him, her arms around him, her head on his shoulder.
After a while, he turned to her and started to kiss her but buried his head in her neck. She sat there, patting his head, not saying a word. At last, he lay back on the bed and Whitney got up and went to the closet and got out a blanket and put it over him. They still hadn’t spoken a word, either of them. She went to sit in the only chair in the room and just watched him.
In a little bit, his eyes closed and he went to sleep. Whitney sat there for hours, never moving except to go to the bathroom or get a drink of water. She just watched him, the only light a bit of moonlight peeping over the curtain in the lone window.
Along about three in the morning, Grady stirred, sat up and looked around and saw Whitney sitting in the corner.
“What time is it?”
She told him.
“I’m sorry,” was all he could think of to say.
“It’s all right. Come on.”
“Where?” he said. She was looking through his closet for something.
“Here.” She came out with a light brown sport coat. “This one looks right. Put it on.”
“Where are we going?”
“A little coffee shop I know.”
On the way, he looked at her and said, “You’re one of the good guys, aren’t you.” She didn’t reply, only put her hand on his and squeezed.
At the coffee shop, she took charge, ordering both of them steaming mugs of cafe au lait. Then she mde him talk. About his brother.
He told her everything. When he was done, a different crew was coming on and the sun was coming up.