Part 17 (1/2)
”Well, if he's ready to do it like at a moment's notice,” Moran said, ”why don't you spook him? Turn in some kind of false alarm.”
”Yeah?” Jiggs said.
”He runs with it and you're waiting for him. Saves tearing his house apart.”
Jiggs didn't say anything for a moment.
”That's not bad, George. That's not bad at all. Sounds to me like you're in the wrong business.”
”Or maybe I could tell fortunes,” Moran said. He picked up his beer gla.s.s and gazed at it. ”I see a guy murdered in his house. I don't see anything about him being robbed, no money in the picture. But wait a minute. I see the police have been given information about a suspect. Ah-ha, guy runs a motel and is a good friend of the victim's wife.” He looked at Jiggs. ”That how it works?”
Jiggs said, ”George, I offer you the stairway to happiness and all you gimme back're ideas. I'm telling you, you're in the wrong business.”
13.
SOMETIME BETWEEN 12:45 and 1:00 A.M. an explosion blew the boat dock at 700 Arvida Parkway into Biscayne Bay.
The charge took out the wooden surface of the dock, the heavy planks, the steel davits, ripped out a section of the cement retaining wall, sheared off the pilings to leave splintered stubs that barely cleared the surface of the water, and shattered a sliding gla.s.s door on the sundeck of the house. Fortunately Mr. de Boya's $350,000 yacht, El Jefe El Jefe, was moored at Dinner Key where Mr. de Boya had picked up guests, business a.s.sociates, earlier in the evening and had returned there to drop them off at the time of the explosion. It was heard in downtown Miami.
Coral Gables Police called Dade County Public Safety and a bomb squad was at the scene by 1:30. They picked up pieces of wood and metal strewn over the lawn and would find out through gas chromatograph tests of residue the explosive used was C4 plastique. A Coral Gables detective said, ”The f.u.c.kers are at it again.” He put 700 Arvida on the computer to see if it was a hot address, if it had ever been used as a ”safe house” where marijuana and cocaine were off-loaded, and found no reference. Andres de Boya's name went into the computer and came out clean. They didn't notice the graffiti, spray-painted in red on the cement pillars in front of the property, until daylight. They thought about calling in the Bureau but decided to wait. Dope or political, it was still within their jurisdiction and the graffiti could be either. Some kind of Latin dramatic effect that said, on all four of the cement pillars:
MUERTE A DE BOYA.
When Corky pulled up to the Jordan Marsh entrance to Dadeland the doorman was on the spot. He offered Mary his hand and slammed the door as Corky said, ”Wait! ...Mrs. de Boya?” She stooped a little to look at him through the dark gla.s.s, almost invisible behind the wheel of the Cadillac. He was gesturing as he said, ”I'm suppose to go in with you. Wait, please. I have to park.”
Mary said, ”That's all right. I'll see you here in about an hour.”
She heard Corky say, ”What? Wait, please!”
213.
”Tell him, will you?” Mary said to the doorman. She tried not to run entering the store. But once inside restraint gave way to eager expectation; it hurried her through Jordan Marsh and down the length of the Dadeland Mall to an entrance near the east end. She sprinted now, out into sunlight, saw the old white Mercedes waiting and almost cheered.
”I'm late,” Mary said, catching her breath now, inside the car, as Moran drove through the crowded parking area toward an exit.
”Five minutes. Boy, you look great.”
”I'm perspiring.”
”Good. We'll take a shower. You know we haven't taken a shower yet?”
She seemed surprised. ”Where're we going?”
”A new place. Change our luck.”
They drove up Dixie to the University Inn across from the U of M campus where Moran had already got a room and iced the wine, just right, waiting for them. He poured gla.s.ses as she slumped into a chair, legs apart, flattening her tan skirt between her thighs on the seat.
”Here.”
She took the hotel-room gla.s.s of wine and drank half of it down before her shoulders sagged and she began to relax.
”You better love me, Moran.”
”Look at me, I'm dying.”
”I mean you better be be in love with me.” in love with me.”
”I am am,” Moran said. ”Listen, if it was just getting laid there a lot easier ways.” He'd better soften that and said, ”You bet I love you. Boy, do I.”
She said, ”Do you, really?”
He wondered how a woman like Mary could have doubts about herself. He came over in the pale light and pulled her up gently, wrapped bare sun-brown arms around her and told her how good she made him feel and how he thought about her and couldn't be without her. She said again what she had told him before, ”I don't want to lose you.” He told her it wasn't possible. He told her they couldn't lose each other now. He paused. Was he holding back? No, he was running out of words. He told her they couldn't be pried apart with a crowbar or cut apart, they were sealed together for good. He believed it with the feeling she did too, now. Everything was all right; even with Corky waiting they could make slow love and lie in silence after, looking at each other. Save conversation. What more was there to say?
They talked while they were getting dressed.
She told him the police were in and out of the house all day yesterday investigating the explosion, questioning her, the help, Andres, mostly Andres. Their tone wasn't suspicious but their questions were, trying to find out what Andres was into, if Dominican revolutionary or anti-government fac 215.
tions had ever threatened him before. Moran let her tell what she knew, Mary standing at the mirror brus.h.i.+ng her hair.
Then he told her about Jiggs Scully in the Mutiny Bar, and she put the brush down and stood very still. Moran ended with a flat statement.
”He knows Andres has at least a couple million hidden in the house. He wants us to tell him where it is. If we do he'll go in, take the money and he'll kill Andres, as a favor.”
She said, ”A favor favor,” wide-eyed.
”We sail off into the sunset and live happily ever after.”
The room was as silent as he could remember a room being silent, going back to when he was a little boy lying in bed during his afternoon nap, wide awake. Mary walked to a chair but didn't sit down; she turned to Moran again. He was sitting on the side of the bed with a tennis shoe in his hand.
”I have to tell him,” Mary said.
He gave her time.
”You understand that, don't you? I have to.”
”The only thing I'm sure of,” Moran said, ”somebody's trying to use us. A guy talks to me out of the side of his mouth like I'm one of the boys. Why? As far as he knows I'm a decent, law-abiding citizen. It's true you and I happen to have something going-”
”That's quaint, George. Something going.”
”Something special, soon to be-you know- out in the open, aboveboard. Let me just tell you the rest, okay? The question is, first, why would he think we'd go along?”
”That's right, he'd be taking a chance,” Mary said.