stopped and the mug slammed down on the table. “Are you crazy?” he yelled.
A few people at nearby tables turned and gawked. Attention was the last thing Morgan wanted.
“Quiet down,” he whispered gravely. He waited a moment until the stares went away and Wallerman put the beer back where it belonged, at his lips. Another long guzzle slid down his throat. The tension melted from his face—Morgan was amazed at how fast a shot of booze calmed him. He leaned forward and asked Lew, in a low voice, “My guess is we’re talking because you have a grudge against Jack, right?”
“We didn’t part on the best of terms.”
“Be more specific.”
“He walked off with all that money, and I stayed in a lousy, crumbling firm. Less than a year later, the CEO and CFO died, and all the air went out of the place. I was stuck in a dead end with no way out.”
Morgan stroked his chin and thought about that. He took a stab and asked, “You think Jack had anything to do with their deaths, too?”
It didn’t seem like a question Wallerman had considered before. It did seem to intrigue him, though. “You think he arranged the plane crash?”
“Just an idea I’m throwing out.”
“I don’t know anything about that.”
“From what I hear, Kyle and Sullivan suspected him. They put a PI firm in Europe on his ass. Their deaths were awfully convenient for Jack.”
“It does sound like Jack’s style. He’s meticulous that way. But like I said, I don’t know anything about it.”
“Did you ask Jack to cut you in?”
The slits of Wallerman’s eyes grew narrow. After a hesitation he admitted, “We might’ve had a conversation along those lines.”
“And he refused, right?”
“Basically, and not politely either.” Another long gulp of beer, then he smacked his lips. “He told me to screw myself. It was very big money and I would’ve been content with only one or two million. He could afford it. It was no way to treat a friend.”
“Don’t you want to pay him back?”
“We’re still talking aren’t we?”
“Okay, look, it’s simple. I need proof Jack did it. If you could—”
“And I need cash,” Wallerman interrupted before Morgan could complete that thought. Screw the details, let’s talk money his face was saying. The second stein of beer now sat on the table, empty. Lew was leaning back in his seat, arms crossed tightly across his chest.
“How much?” Morgan asked, his eyebrows pinching together.
“It won’t be cheap. There’s a lot to consider.”
“For instance?”
“For one, Jack’s a dangerous man. There’s his history to consider. Delta, war hero, and he obviously killed Edith. He’s not squeamish about erasing problems.”
“How much?” Morgan repeated.
“I’d have to quit my job and run. It would mean the end of a lucrative, quite promising career. I’d need enough to live on.”
Morgan strangled the urge to burst out laughing. Whatever had become of Wallerman’s career, profitable or promising didn’t enter the picture. He was a sorry lush and a loser. He didn’t even have enough money to purchase a decent suit. The best thing that could happen to him was to scrap it all and start over. Morgan should charge him for the opportunity.
“Just tell me how much,” he repeated, more insistently.
“Only two million,” Wallerman answered, making it sound like an extraordinary bargain.
“Bad joke. How much?”
“I’m not budging. Know why? There is no evidence, zilch, nada, none. Jack is smart. After he left, I went through everything. The records of his transactions with Edith, bank transfers, everything. I even went through the hard drive of his old computer one night after everyone went home. You won’t find a thing, Morgan, not without me.”
“So what are you offering?”
Wallerman’s eyes were glued on a skinny little thing with a cocktail in her hand, leaning against the bar. Morgan forced himself to look twice before he believed she was real. Long, bony legs on full display, a ridiculously purple pageboy haircut, a thick tattoo of barbed wire around her neck, wearing an outfit that looked like it was designed by a sociopath.
She looked barely old enough to be potty-trained, much less purchase alcohol.
Wallerman finally tore his eyes away from her and stared hard at Morgan. “Let’s cut the crap, okay? My guess is you’re not a federal agent, you’re a hired thug. You’re being paid to burn Jack, and you need help.”
This was stated quite factually and Morgan weighed for a moment whether it was worth trying to bluff or lie his way through.
As though reading his mind, Wallerman