Lionel lies.
"Are you married, Mr. Farnsworth?"
"No," he said. "Not at the moment."
He smiled a big, open, engaging smile at me.
"Between gigs," he said. "Sort of."
I knew people often didn't brag about hiring prostitutes, but if he were single, he had less reason to lie, and there was serious money kicking around in this deal, and he might get some of it if he helped April to get hers. I almost smiled. My story was so good I was starting to believe it. A guy like Farnsworth would have sniffed around this situation. He didn't. And that was odd.
"Between gigs can be good or bad," I said.
He gave me a warm between-us-guys smile.
"At the moment, it's pretty damn good," he said.
"Congratulations," I said.
After we had shared our male moment, I stood.
"Thanks for your help, Mr. Farnsworth."
"Sorry I wasn't more useful," he said. "How'd you happen to come across that Allenwood thing?"
"Routine investigation," I said. "It won't even be in my report."
"Good," he said. "I could explain it but it's a bother."
"Don't give it a second thought," I said.
He smiled and nodded. We shook hands. As I left, I brushed against his right side. There was a gun in his righthand jacket pocket.
"Oh," I said. "I'm sorry."
"No harm," he said.
"God," I said, "I'm clumsy."
"No problem," he said.
I went out of the lobby and passed the doorman. He watched me closely. I crossed with the light. The doorman was still watching me, and continued to watch me until I crossed into the park.
In Farnsworth's defense, it hadn't felt like a very big gun.
23
Frank Belson and I had breakfast at the counter of a joint on Southampton Street, not far from the new police headquarters.
"Nice call," Belson said. "Ollie DeMars done time, for assault at MCI Concord 1990 to '92, and in the federal pen at Allenwood in 1998. So he was there the same time as your guy."
"Lionel Farnsworth," I said. "What was the federal charge?"
"Him and another guy were stealing pension checks from mailboxes. Ollie rolled on the other guy and got off with a year, easy time."
"That's our Ollie," I said. "Stand-up guy."
"Standing up for Ollie," Belson said. "I called the prison. Both of them were in the minimum-security part. Guy I talked with said it would be surprising if they didn't know each other."
I had a bite of corned beef hash. Belson drank coffee.
"What do you know about Ollie?" I said.
"I don't know him myself," Belson said. "But I asked around. Talked to OC squad, couple detectives in his precinct."
"Ollie qualify for organized-crime attention?"
"Not really. He's not that organized. But a lot of the organized outfits use him. He's got a sort of loose confederation of street-soldier wannabes that he'll rent out for strongarm work."
"He needs to hire better help," I said.
"To deal with you? Hawk? Sure he does. But his people are fine for slapping around some no-credit guy from Millis, borrowed money to open a restaurant and is behind on the vig."
"Ollie do any of his own work?"
"Mostly he runs things. But he's tough enough to run them. He can keep the wannabes in line," Belson said.
I ate some more hash. Belson's breakfast was an English muffin and coffee. No wonder he was lean.
"He's not necessarily a loyal person," I said.
"Guy in the mailbox deal is probably still in Allenwood, doing Ollie's time," Belson said.
I finished my hash. Frank took a bite out of his English muffin. I looked at his plate. He was still on the first half of the muffin.
"Is that all you eat for breakfast?" I said.
"I drink a lot of coffee," Belson said.
"That's nourishing," I said.
"I'm never hungry much," Belson said. "I eat enough to stay alive."
"Me too," I said.
The counter man cleared my plate. I ordered more coffee and a piece of pineapple pie. Belson put some grape jelly on his remaining half a muffin.
"Fruit," Belson said.
"You healthy bastard," I said.
"Ollie ain't a major leaguer," Belson said. "Because he ain't the brightest bulb on the tree. But people who know say he's got a big ego, and he's pretty crazy, and most people don't take him on if they don't have to."
"I may have to," I said. Belson nodded.
"Speaking of ego," Belson said.
"I like to think of it as self-confidence," I said.
"I'm sure you do," Belson said.
"He's annoyed Tony Marcus," I said. "It is an article of religious faith with Tony that whore business is black business."
"Tony believes that about any business he's in," Belson said.
"His faith is flexible," I said.
"Tony would win