"It was dark." Pellam tried to sound as frustrated as they were.
"And there was a lot of glare," the Italian added. Sarcastic? Pellman couldn't tell.
"Officer Buffett said he saw you talking to whoever was in the car."
"I told you, I wasn't having a conversation with him… or her." Pellam saw, in the distance, the curtain in a window of Sloan's van pull aside for a moment. A black gap was visible and in that gap Pellam imagined he could see the two tiny, paranoid eyes of an impatient visionary director. He said to the WASP, who though bigger seemed more reasonable, "Look, I'm very busy just now. This is a bad time for this."
The blond cop just repeated, "Officer Buffett said you were talking to the driver. What are we supposed to think about that?"
Pellam sighed. "I was mad. I was just talking to let off steam. I don't remember what I said. I was muttering."
"Why were you mad?"
"The guy I told you about, the one who got out of the car, bumped into me and I dropped a case of beer."
"Why did he do that?"
"It was an accident. He didn't do it on purpose."
"If it was an accident," the WASP asked slowly, "why were you so mad you were talking to yourself?"
The Italian cop offered," 'Muttering,' you said."
"Okay, that's it. I've got nothing more to say." Pellam started away, tensing his muscles, ready for another vise grip.
Neither cop followed, but the blond said, "There's two dead people and a cop shot in the back."
His partner offered, "People sometimes get scared. They don't want to volunteer, to be witnesses. You don't have to be worried. We can protect you."
"I didn't see anybody get shot. All I saw was some guy who nearly knocked me on my ass."
"We're more concerned with the person in the car. We think he's the one who ordered the hit."
"Sorry. Now, if there's nothing else…" Pellam lifted his hands like a TV preacher confronted with more sin than he can absolve.
"Will you at least help us do a sketch of the man you saw?"
"Yes. Sure. But not now."
The WASP cop shifted his weight like an impatient college boy. He was no longer reasonable. "He's not going to cooperate."
"Cooperate?"
The WASP said to his grimacing partner, "Let's go. He's a GFY." The cops put their notebooks away.
"What's a GFY?' Pellam demanded.
"An official term we use about reluctant witnesses."
"I'm not reluctant. I didn't see anything."
When they got to the perimeter of the set, the Italian cop turned suddenly and said, "Look, mister, a lot of local people cooperated with you so you could shoot this damn movie here. They aren't going to be too happy to hear you're not so cooperative in return."
The WASP cop waved his arm. "Aw, he's a GFY. Why bother?" They walked off the set.
In Sloan's trailer, the curtain fell closed.
The indictments against him read:
Counts 1-2: Conspiracy to sell controlled substances.
Counts 3-32: Criminal federal income tax fraud.
Count 33: Conspiracy to interfere with civil rights.
Count 34-35: Perjury.
Count 36: Extortion.
Counts 37-44: Criminal violations of the Racketeering-Influenced Corrupt Organizations Act.
Peter Crimmins did not exactly have the words memorized but this-the paraphrase-he knew, the essence of the government's case against him.
Crimmins (the name was his father's impulsive recasting of Crzniolak) was fifty-four. He had a body like a pear, a face like a potato. His hair was combed forward in bangs, Frank Sinatra style, over his high forehead, on which a single dark mole rested above his left eyebrow like a misplaced third eye. He was presently sitting in his office, which overlooked the parking lot of his trucking company and, through windows in the opposite wall, a large room filled with gray desks, filing cabinets, overhead fluorescent fixtures and a dozen office workers who appeared simultaneously bored and anxious.
Peter Crimmins had a thousand business decisions he should be making but it was the words of the indictment that kept running through his mind. And they made him furious. Oh, several counts were nonsense and had been thrown in by an eager runt of an assistant U.S. Attorney. The civil rights thing, ridiculous. Conspiracy, ridiculous. The drug counts were absurd. He had never sold an atom of any controlled substance. The extortion, well, that was somewhat true but only a little. But what infuriated him were the counts that were accurate-the RICO charges.
Peter Crimmins thought of himself as a blue-collar philosopher and had decided that there were simple rules in life you could figure out without anyone's help. Not the Ten Commandments, which were a little too simple-minded even for a good Russian Orthodox like him to buy. But rules like: A man's dignity should be respected, take care of those who cannot take care of themselves, do your duty, support your family, don't hurt anyone innocent…
You live your life by those rules and you will do just fine. So here he was, doing his duty, supporting his family, not hurting anyone (anybody innocent, at any rate), making a living, going to church occasionally-and what happens? He runs smack into another set of rules. And these rules made no sense to him at all.
They were pure idiocy.
The problem was that they were collected in Title 18 of the United States Code. And if you happened to break these rules, people would come after you and try to put you in jail.
But what was the most frustrating of all was that he was wrestling with these forty-four indictments solely because of a single mistake, which was that he had hired a maniac, Vincent Gaudia, now deceased, gunned down the day before.
The two men were contrasts. Crimmins had noticed this immediately, at their first meeting, in a German restaurant in Webster Groves, Missouri. Crimmins was unflashy. He had years of experience as a labor negotiator before he left the union and opened his own business. He drank vodka in moderation and smoked Camels and wore boxer shorts and white shirts and combed his hair with Vitalis every day and he loved playing pool and boccie with friends he had known for years. He was faithful to his wife of thirty-three years and he served on the planning and zoning commission of his suburban hometown. Crimmins was a controlled man, a disciplined man, a solid man.
Gaudia, on the other hand, was a man controlled by his appetites. He wanted women's bodies and wet food and sweet drinks with straws. Gaudia's primary organs were his tongue and his penis.
Still, Crimmins had been in business long enough to know that other peoples weaknesses can be your strengths.
He had noted Gaudia's lusts and hired the man immediately because Gaudia was more than a minor hood with a busy tongue. He was one of the best-connected people in eastern Missouri and southern Illinois. Crimmins checked around and got a feel for the labyrinthine network Vince Gaudia was hooked into. It was inspiring. The pipeline did not reach to Washington and, curiously, Gaudia could not fix a parking ticket in St. Louis. But hundreds of those in between-court clerks, judges, councilmen, county executives, banking commissioners, administrative agency workers, in St. Louis, Jeff City and Springfield-were all snug in his pocket. And his skills went beyond knowing who. They extended to how. He had a feel for the ethics: who would take a case of J &B but resent a gift of money, who would take a junket, who a job for their kid, a P &Z decision reversal, a co-op in Vail.
Gaudia was an expert at bartering and the product he dealt in was influence.
Crimmins, who had established the most complicated and high-volume money-laundering operation in the Midwest, decided Vince Gaudia could make a major contribution to his company.