“My father left Yale to become a carpenter in New York. He was also a member of the Communist Party for a little while.” He watched the four men exchange glances.
“How little a while?” Harley asked.
“A couple of years. His family disowned him, and my mother’s family disowned her for marrying him.”
“She was a Stone?”
“Yes, Matilda.”
Don looked up from his sandwich. “She a painter?”
“Yes.”
“My wife was a painter; she thought your mother was the greatest artist since Rembrandt.”
“My father thought so, too.”
“Where’d you go to school?”
“New York public schools, then NYU, both undergraduate and law.”
“You ever run into Sam Bernard there?”
“He taught me constitutional law.”
Harley looked at Rawls. “I’m surprised Sam didn’t recruit him.”
“He tried, but Stone preferred the NYPD,” Rawls replied.
“That was dumb,” Harley said.
Stone couldn’t help laughing. “It was pretty good, actually, until I took a bullet in the knee.” That wasn’t all of it, but it was as much as he told people.
“I heard that wasn’t all of it,” Mack said.
Stone suppressed another laugh.
“We’re careful people,” Rawls said, “by nature and by training. We do our homework.”
“What did you hear?” Stone asked.
“I heard you were a pain in the ass to your superiors, particularly on that last homicide you worked, and they took advantage of your injury to bounce you.”
“That’s a fair description,” Stone said. “Did you also hear I was right about the homicide?”
“I heard you were a little right,” Mack replied, “but that your partner had to save your ass before it was over.”
“That’s fair, too, I guess,” Stone admitted.
Mack turned to Rawls. “I guess he’ll do,” he said.
Stone felt lucky: the approval of the yacht club, the golf club and the Old Farts, all in one day.
THAT NIGHT, he slept with Rawls’s shotgun on the floor next to his bed.
Chapter 18
STONE WAS WORKING on Dick’s estate when the phone rang. “Hello?”
“This is the Dark Harbor Shop. We have a package for you. Can you come pick it up?”
So much for overnight delivery, Stone thought. “Sure. Be right over.” What the hell, he had to pick up a newspaper anyway. He drove into the village and to the shop.
“Heavy,” the girl commented, handing the package to him. “You got guns in there?”
Stone smiled. “Just shoes with shoe trees in them.”
“Feels like guns,” she said, returning to her work at the soda fountain.
Stone bought a paper and went back to the house. He unwrapped the package, put his golf shoes with his clubs in the garage and the new loafers in his dressing room upstairs. He took a few hundred in cash from the money Joan had sent and put the rest in the safe. She had also sent a light, Italian cotton windbreaker, which would be useful for covering the gun as well as for the cool Maine days. Trust Joan to think of that.
He loaded the three magazines she had sent, put two in the little magazine pouch, then slapped one into the beautiful little custom-made Terry Tussey.45, with its Damascus steel slide, black anodized lightweight frame and mother-of-pearl handle. Small guns were a specialty of Terry’s, and this one weighed only twenty-one ounces, tiny for a.45.
He took off his belt and threaded the two by two-inch gun belt through his trouser loops, adding the magazine pouch and the gun holster at the appropriate points. With the belt tightened and the gun in its Mitch Rosen holster, everything felt secure, with the gun lying flat against his side and at an angle. When he slipped on the light windbreaker or a sweater, or left his shirttail out, everything would be concealed. He drew the.45, worked the slide, put on the safety and added another round to the magazine. With the pistol loaded, cocked and locked, ready for use, he felt better.
Stone called Ed Rawls. “My equipment has arrived. May I return your shotgun without getting blown away?”
“Come ahead. Blow the horn three times as you reach the gate, and I probably won’t kill you.”
Stone followed Rawls’s instructions to the letter and pulled into the clearing before the little house without incident. Rawls came out to meet him, and Stone handed him the shotgun. “There’s still one in the chamber, and the safety’s on,” he said.
“Come on in,” Rawls said. “Coffee?”
“Sure.”
Rawls poured him a cup from a Thermos and handed it to him. “So what are you packing?”
Stone removed the.45 from its holster, popped out the magazine, ejected the cartridge in the chamber, locked back the slide and handed it to Rawls.
Rawls thumbed the slide catch, aimed it out the window and squeezed off an imaginary round. “Sweet trigger,” he said. “Who’s Tussey?”
“A guy out in Carson City, Nevada. I saw something of his in a magazine, and we talked on the phone a couple of times. I’ve got a couple more of his guns, too.”
“I never had any need for a gunsmith,” Rawls said. “Tech Services supplied what we needed. It didn’t have pearl grips, but it always worked good.” He handed back Stone’s gun.
Stone picked up the ejected round, reloaded the pistol, cocked and locked it and returned it to its holster.
“I had a call from Lance a minute ago,” Rawls said. “He tried you first, but I guess you’d already left the house.”
“What news?”
“Bad news: The two Russians Dick’s source overheard at the poker game are very bad actors named Gorky and Rastropov, former KGB. Like a lot of their colleagues they discovered that there was money to be made when the Soviet Union crumbled, and their training and experience, combined with their sociopathic tendencies, make them very dangerous. The Berlin station is looking for them now, but they’ve gone to ground, and it won’t be easy to find them. The word’s out, though, and you never know. If they buy a pack of cigarettes in the wrong shop, they’re toast.”
“So what do we do?”
“Use the burglar alarm and sleep lightly,” Rawls replied.
“Will do.”
“You’ve got a very secure house, you know. Did you ever take a close look at the front door?”
“No. I’ve noticed it’s heavy.”
“Take a look at mine,” Rawls said, beckoning him to the front door. He opened the door and showed Stone the edge. “It’s two one-inch-thick sheets of mahogany with a half-inch of steel plate sandwiched between. The door frame is steel, too, and it’s bolted to eight-by-eight posts set in concrete. It’s hanging on eight hinges.”
He turned the thumb bolt on the inside, and three extra-large bolts slid out of the door, one each at the top and bottom of the door and the third in the traditional spot.
“That’s very impressive,” Stone said. “What about the rest of the house? The windows, for instance?”
“They’re all steel-framed, and the glass is armored and an inch thick. Dick’s house has the same.”
“None of it seemed to work for Dick.”
“He made a mistake; everybody does it sooner or later. If he’d had the Kirov call promptly, nobody would ever have gotten into the house alive. I’m surprised you didn’t find any weapons in the house.”
“I looked in all the cupboards,” Stone said. “I couldn’t find anything. I figure Dick kept the Keltec at his bedside. He heard something in the night, put on his pants and went downstairs. Somebody disarmed him, sat him down at the desk and shot him with his own gun, then went upstairs and shot his wife and daughter. He was wearing only trousers when they found him.”
“Sounds right,” Rawls said. “I don’t think anybody rang the doorbell; that would have woken the girls. I think what happened was, Dick didn’t lock up right and didn’t set the alarm system. By the way, the system isn’t monitored locally. If somebody set off a motion detector or something, an alarm at Langley would go off.”