“Oh, no. We found patterns,” Mallard said. “All kinds of patterns. We just didn’t find her pattern. We’ve looked at several hundred people, and we’ve got nothing.”

  “She always works for pay?” Sherrill asked.

  “We don’t know what she works for. Some of the hits have been internal Mafia business—but some of them, maybe half, look like straight commercial deals. We just don’t know. Twenty-seven murders, and there’s never been a conviction,” Mallard said. “There have been a couple of situations in which wives were killed, and we suspect the husband was involved, but there’s nothing to go on. Nothing. In none of the cases was it even remotely possible that the husbands were present for the killing: they were always in some well-documented other place.”

  “Can we get your files on her?”

  “That’s what I’m here for,” Mallard said. He reached into his coat pocket and took out a square cardboard envelope, and slid it across the table at Sherrill. “Duplicate CDs: everything we’ve got on every case where she’s been involved. Names, dates, techniques, suspects, photographs of everybody and all the crime scenes. The first file is an index.”

  “Thanks.”

  “Anything you get,” Mallard said. “No matter how thin it is, please call me. I want this woman.”

  • • •

  LOUISE CLARK DECIDED that she could talk to Carmel only after Hale Allen convinced her it was okay. “I’m a lawyer, Louise,” Allen said. “It’s all right to talk to Carmel—the cops are just busting our balls.”

  “If you’re sure,” Clark said anxiously. She was a thin, mousy woman with lank brown hair, a fleshy nose and nervous, bony hands. “It’s just that the police said . . .”

  Clark did not look like any sex machine Carmel had ever seen; but, she thought to herself, you never know. “He’s sure,” Carmel said abruptly. They were sitting in Denny’s and had been talking for ten minutes and the woman had started whining. Carmel didn’t like whiners. She looked at Hale Allen. “Why don’t you take a walk around the block. I want to talk to Louise alone.”

  So Hale Allen went for a walk, his hands in the pockets of his light woolen slacks, wearing a great blue-checked sport coat over a black t-shirt. The coat emphasized the breadth of his shoulders, and both women watched him as he held the door for a woman coming into the restaurant with a child; the woman said something to Allen, who gave her the great grin, and they had a little conversation in the doorway.

  After a few seconds, Allen continued on his way; and Carmel and Louise had their talk.

  C ARMEL HAD a king-sized bed with two regular pillows and a five-foot-long body pillow that she could wrap her legs around when she slept. Although she told people that she slept nude—all part of the image—she actually slept in an extra-large Jockey t-shirt and boxer shorts. With the shirt loose around her shoulders and her legs wrapped around the pillow, she lay in bed that night and reran mousy Louise Clark.

  For the most part, Clark’s story was the same ol’ story. She and Allen spent time alone, in their work. They shared a lot of stress. His wife didn’t understand him. They developed a relationship based on mutual respect, blah-blah-blah-blah. They fell into bed at the Up North Motel. Then the Mouse stuck it to Carmel.

  “The first time I saw him naked in the motel there, it was afterwards. Really, after we made love, he was just so . . . beautiful. He’s a beautiful man.” Then her eyes flickered, and she added, girl-to-girl, a little giggle, a half-whisper, “And he’s really large. Beautiful and really, really large. He filled me up.”

  Carmel squeezed the pillow between her legs and tried to squeeze the image out of her head. Hale Allen and the Mouse. Large.

  T HE ALARM WENT OFF at seven o’clock sharp. Carmel pushed out of bed, slow and grumpy, robbed of her usual sound sleep. Large? How large? She scratched her ass, yawned, stretched and headed for the bathroom. A half-hour later, she was drinking her first cup of coffee, eating her second piece of toast, and checking the Star-Tribune for leaks about Allen and Clark, when the phone rang.

  “Yes.”

  “Miz Loan? This is Bill, downstairs.” Bill was the doorman.

  “What?” Still grumpy.

  “We got a package for you, says Urgent. I was wondering if we should bring it up.”

  “What kind of package?”

  “Small one. Feels like . . . looks like . . . could be a videotape,” Bill said.

  “All right, bring it up.” Bill brought it up, and Carmel gave him a five-dollar bill and turned the package in her hand as she closed the door. Bill was right: probably a video. Plain brown wrapping paper. She pulled the paper off, found a note written with a ballpoint pen on notebook paper. All it said was, “Sorry.”

  Carmel frowned, walked the tape to the media room, plugged it into the VHS player and brought it up.

  A woman’s image came up, and Carmel recognized it immediately. She was looking at herself, sitting in the now-understandably bright light of Rolando’s kitchen, just a little more than a month before.

  T HE ON-SCREEN C ARMEL was saying, “Only kind I drink.” And then, “So you made the call.”

  A man’s voice off-camera said, “Yes. And she’s still working, and she’ll take the job.”

  “She? It’s a woman?”

  “Yeah. I was surprised myself. I never asked, you know, I only knew who to call. But when I asked, my friend said, ‘She.’ ”

  “She’s gotta be good,” the on-screen Carmel said. The offscreen Carmel decided that the camera must have been in the cupboard, shooting through a partly open door.

  “She’s good. She has a reputation. Never misses,” the man’s voice said. “Very efficient, very fast. Always from very close range, so there’s no mistake.” A man’s hand appeared in the picture, with a mug of coffee. Carmel watched her on-screen self as she turned it with her fingertips, then picked it up.

  “That’s what I need,” she said on-screen, and she took a sip of the coffee. Carmel remembered that it had been pretty good coffee. Very hot.

  “You’re sure about this?” asked the man’s voice. “Once I tell them yes, it’ll be hard to stop. This woman, the way she moves, nobody knows where she is, or what name she’s using. If you say, ‘Yes,’ she kills Barbara Allen.”

  The on-screen Carmel frowned. “I’m sure,” she said. The offscreen Carmel winced at the sound of Barbara Allen’s name. She’d forgotten that.

  “You’ve got the money?” the man asked.

  “At the house. I brought your ten.”

  The on-screen Carmel put the mug down, dug in her purse, pulled out a thin deck of currency and laid it on the table. The man’s hand reached into the picture and picked it up. “I’ll tell you this,” the voice said. “When they come and ask for it, pay every penny. Every penny. Don’t argue, just pay. If you don’t, they won’t try to collect. They’ll make an example out of you.”

  “I know how it works,” on-screen Carmel said. “They’ll get it. And nobody’ll be able to trace it, because I’ve had it stashed. It’s absolutely clean.”

  “Then if you say, ‘Yes,’ I’ll call them tonight. And they’ll kill Barbara Allen.”

  Carmel, offscreen, had to admire her on-screen performance. She never flinched, she just stood up and said, “Yes. Do it.”

  The tape skipped a bit, then focused on a black telephone. “I’m really sorry about this, but you know about my problem. I’m gonna have to have twenty-five thousand, like, tomorrow,” the man’s voice said. “I’ll call and tell you where.”

  THE TAPE ENDED. Carmel took a long pull on her coffee, walked into the kitchen, poured the last couple of ounces into the sink, and then hurled the cup at one of the huge plate-glass windows that looked out on her balcony. The cup bounced, without breaking. Carmel didn’t see it; she was ricocheting around the kitchen, sweeping glasses, dishes, the knife block, a toaster, silverware off the cupboards and tables and stove and onto the floor, kicking them as they landed, scattering them; and all the time she grow
led through clenched teeth, not a scream, but a harsh humming sound, like a hundred-pound hornet.

  She trashed the kitchen and then the breakfast area, and finally cut herself on a broken glass. The sight of the blood flowing from the back of her hand brought her back.

  “Fuckin’ Rolo,” she said. She bled on the floor. “Fuckin’ Rolo, fuckin’ Rolo, fuckin’ Rolo . . .”

  FIVE

  For the rest of the day, Carmel worked her way through alternate rages and periods of calm; fantasized the painful end of Rolando D’Aquila. And finally admitted to herself that she was in a corner.

  She called Rinker, left a number and said, “This is really urgent. We’ve got a big problem.”

  The next day, a little after one o’clock in the afternoon, Rinker called on Carmel’s magic cell phone. She didn’t introduce herself, she simply said in her dry accent, “I’m calling you back. I hate problems.”

  Carmel said, “Hold on: I want to lock my door.” She stuck her head out into the reception area, said to the secretary, “I need ten minutes alone,” stepped back inside and locked the door.

  “All right . . .” she began, but Rinker cut her off.

  “Is your phone safe?”

  “Yes. It’s registered under my mother’s name—she’s remarried, and has a different last name. Like the Volvo. It’s good for . . . special contacts.”

  “You have a lot of those in your job?”

  “Enough,” Carmel said. “Anyway, I’m calling about Rolando D’Aquila, who is the guy who put me in touch with you.”

  “What happened?” Rinker asked.

  Carmel explained, quickly, then said, “I would have thought the people on your side would have been warned against this. You push somebody into a corner . . .”

  “What? What would you do?” Carmel could feel the warning edge on the other woman’s voice.

  “I’m sure as hell not going to turn you in, or talk to the police, if that’s what you’re worried about,” Carmel said, defensively. “But there has to be some kind of resolution. Rolo’s a junkie. If I give him every dime I’ve got, he’ll put it up his nose. When he’s got every dime, he’ll still have the tape, and he’ll start looking around for somebody to sell it to. Like TV. Then I’m gone—and you, too. The cops will put Rolo through the wringer before they give him any kind of immunity, and you can’t tell what’ll come from that.”

  “Maybe nothing,” Rinker said. “He’s off there on the edge of things.”

  “Bullshit. Sooner or later, he’ll give them the guy he called about you,” Carmel argued. “Then they’ll squeeze that guy. You know how it works. This is murder we’re talking about; this is thirty years in the state penitentiary for everybody involved. That’s a lot of squeeze. And believe me, I’m well enough known in the Cities that there’d be a hurricane of shit if this got out. This is not something the cops would let go.”

  “When are you paying him off? This Rolo guy?” Rinker asked.

  “I’m supposed to meet him in the Crystal Court tomorrow at five o’clock. I put him off as long as I could, told him it’ll take time to get the money together. The Crystal Court is this big interior court . . .”

  “I was there,” Rinker said.

  “Okay. Anyway, I give him the money, and he gives me the tape. I insisted that he show up, personally. But the best he’ll do is give me a copy of the tape. He says there’s only one, but he’s lying. He’ll want to come back for more money.”

  “You’re sure about that?”

  “He’s a fuckin’ dope dealer, for Christ’s sake.”

  After a couple of seconds’ silence, Rinker said, “There’s a flight into Minneapolis tomorrow morning. I can be there at eleven fifty-five.”

  “I don’t know . . .” Carmel started. Then, in a rush, “I don’t know if I want to see your face. I’m afraid you’ll have to kill me.”

  “Honey, there’re a couple of dozen people who know my face,” Rinker said. “One more won’t make any difference, especially when I know she paid me for a hit. I’d rather you not see me, but we’ve got to fix this thing. You’re gonna have to help.”

  Carmel didn’t hesitate: “I know that.”

  “The thing is, we’re gonna have to talk to him about where the tape is,” Rinker said.

  “Yes. Talk to him privately,” Carmel said. “I’d figured that out.”

  “That’s right . . . Why’d you insist that he meet you in person?”

  “Because I thought you might want in . . . at that point,” Carmel said.

  Rinker chuckled: “All right. You ever kill anybody?”

  “No.”

  “You might be good at it. With a little training.”

  “Probably,” Carmel said. “But it doesn’t pay enough.”

  Rinker chuckled again and said, “See you at eleven fiftyfive. Bring the Jag. And wear jeans and walking shoes.”

  • • •

  CARMEL HADN’T KNOWN what to expect. A tough-looking, square-faced hillbilly with bony wrists and shoulders, maybe—or somebody beefy, who might have been a prison guard at Auschwitz. The next day, at noon, she looked right past the first passengers getting off the plane from Kansas City, looking for somebody who fit the assorted images she’d created in her mind. When Rinker’s voice came out of a well-dressed young woman with carefully coiffed blondover-blond hair and just a slight aristocratic touch of lipstick, Carmel jumped, startled. The woman was carrying a leather backpack, and was right at Carmel’s elbow.

  “Hello?”

  “What?”

  Rinker grinned up at her. “Looking for somebody else?”

  Carmel wagged her head once and said, “It’s you?”

  “It’s me, honey. I checked a bag.”

  As they started up the concourse, Carmel said, “God, you really don’t look like . . . you.”

  “Well, what can I tell you?” Rinker said cheerfully. She looked past Carmel to her right, where a tall, tanned man was angling across the concourse to intercept them. “Carmel,” he said, dragging out the last syllable.

  “James.” Carmel turned a cheek to be kissed, and after James kissed it, asked, “Where’re you off to?”

  “Los Angeles . . . My God, you look like an athlete. I never suspected you had jeans or Nikes.” The guy was at least six-six and looked good, with a receding hairline; like an athletic Adlai Stevenson. He turned to Rinker and said, “And you’re cute as a button. I hope you’re not a raving leftwing feminist like Carmel.”

  “I sometimes am,” Rinker said. “But you’re cute as a button your own self.”

  The guy put one hand over his heart and said, “Oh my God, the accent. I think we should get married.”

  “You’ve been married too often already, James,” Carmel said dryly. She took Rinker’s arm and said, “If we don’t keep moving, he’ll drown us in bullshit.”

  “Carmel . . .”

  Then they were past him and Rinker glanced back and said, “Nice-looking guy. What does he do?”

  “He’s an accountant,” Carmel said.

  “Hmm,” Rinker said. Carmel caught the tone of disappointment.

  “But not a boring one,” Carmel said. “He stole almost four million dollars from a computer software company here.”

  “Jesus.” Rinker glanced back again. “They caught him?”

  “They narrowed it down to him—they figured out that he was the only one who could have pulled it off,” Carmel said. “He hired me to defend him, but he never seemed particularly worried. Eventually, the company came around and said if he gave the money back, they’d drop charges. He said that if they dropped charges, and apologized for the mistake, he’d tell them about the software glitch that they might want to patch up before their clients started getting ripped off, and they found themselves liable for a billion bucks or something.”

  “They did it?”

  “Took them aweek to agree,” Carmel said. “They hated to apologize—hated it. But they did it. Then he insisted on a contract
that would pay him another half-million for isolating the bug. Said it was severance pay, and he deserved it. They eventually did that, too. I guess they got their money’s worth.”

  Rinker shook her head: “Don’t people just work for money anymore?”

  Carmel didn’t want to think about that question. Instead, she said, “Um, listen, what do I call you?”

  “Pamela Stone,” Rinker said. “By the way, do you know how to get to South Washington County Park?”

  “No, I don’t think so.”

  “I’ll show you on a map,” Rinker said. “We gotta get my guns back. Can’t fly with them, you know.”

  CARMEL KEPT looking at Rinker as they headed out of the airport to the parking ramp; looking for some sign that she could be an executioner for the mob. But Rinker wasn’t a monster. She was a chick, chattering away about the flight, about an airline-magazine article on body piercing, and about the Jaguar, as they pulled through the pay booths: “I drive a Chevy, myself.”

  Carmel listened for a while and then Rinker put a hand on Carmel’s forearm and said, “Carmel, you’ve gotta relax. You’re tighter’n a drum. You look like you’re gonna explode.”

  “That’s because I don’t want to spend the next thirty years locked in a closet like some fuckin’ squirrel,” Carmel said.

  “They’re locking squirrels in closets now?” Rinker asked.

  Carmel had to smile, despite herself, and loosened her grip on the steering wheel. “You know what I mean.”

  “Ain’t gonna happen anyway,” Rinker said. “We’ll get this Rolo fellow in a quiet place, explain the situation to him, and get the tape.”

  “And kill him?”

  Rinker shrugged. “Maybe he’s made three or four copies. If he tells us about two of them, and the third one is hidden somewhere . . . maybe if he’s gone, it’ll never be found.”

  “We can’t take the chance that there’s a third one. We have to make sure we can get them all before we do it. Kill him.”