Chain of Fools - Stevenson Richard (читать книги без TXT) 📗
I looked at Dan, and he glanced at me, and he knew I knew he'd been in on it from the beginning. I said, "It's over, Dan. It's all coming out now. There's no way it can't"
Dan looked away into the woods. Maybe he still thought he'd spot a diamond.
Arlene said, "What's he mean by that, Dan?" He wouldn't look at her or me. She said, "What else is there to come out? What's Don talking about?"
There was a silence, and then Dan said, "Arlene, I need to talk to Strachey privately I know you're going to be pissed off—"
"I sure as hell am gonna be pissed—"
"But take my word for it, Arlene, you'll be better off if you don't know certain things. It's for your own sake, goddamn it!"
"What things don't I know? What? What?" she yelled, eyes blazing.
I said, "About Eric's murder. Dan knows all about Eric's murder, and he's going to tell me about it, Arlene. Aren't you, Dan?"
Arlene looked aghast and said, "No."
Dan sat there and said nothing.
Arlene screamed, then said it again. "No!"
Dan looked at her and said, "I killed Eric."
"You did not!" Arlene shrieked.
"I did, Arlene! I killed Eric!"
"Dan, you've gone over the edge!" Arlene cried out. "You couldn't have killed Eric, and you know it! You were with me the day Eric was killed, and we were in the city picking up a delivery for Liver!"
"No, of course I didn't actually kill him with my own hands!" Dan moaned. "But I might as well have, for chrissakes. I was—I was trying to control everything, and save the paper for Mom and Eric and Janet and me, and—I fucked up, goddamn it."
I said, "So now it's all got to come out, Dan. It's too late to save the paper for the family. The chances are slim that you'll ever find those diamonds in these woods. And even if you did, word is out now, and the jewels would have to be returned to their owners. The best deal you're going to get from now on is, the board votes next month and the paper goes to the decent Griscomb chain and not to god-awful Info-Com."
He said simply, "I know that."
Arlene was rocking on her seat and said, "I can't believe this. I just fucking can't believe this, Dan. You never told me those diamonds had anything to do with Eric. I thought they were just some oil profiteer's wife's jewelry, and the fucking diamonds were going for a good cause that would benefit the people!"
"Arlene," I said, "two people died in that robbery, one of them a working man, a member of the international proletariat. Letting that guard live the rest of his life would have been a good people's cause."
"Sure, that sucked, that guard getting killed," Arlene said, "and I'm not saying that two wrongs make a right. But the Herald stands up for people like that dead guard, and if the Osbornes lose control of the paper, then it'll start standing up for assholes like big corporations that want to poison the rivers and cut all the trees down. So I agree with what Dan was trying to do. Especially since he didn't even know about the robbery until after it happened."
Another awkward silence. I looked at Dan, and then Arlene did too.
Dan said, almost inaudibly, "I knew about it, Arlene." Then, more loudly: "Of course I knew about it. Come on, Arlene, are you really that naive? I mean—Jesus!"
Arlene slumped and said nothing.
"Was the robbery your idea?" I asked.
Now Dan's face contorted with grief. He said, "No."
Arlene went white and said, "Was it Eric's?"
Dan guffawed once. "God, no. Eric? Don't be absurd."
I said, "What happened, Dan?"
Again another long silence in the woods. "This is the end," Dan finally said. "I'm relieved."
"A lot of people will be."
"I won't," Arlene said, but Dan ignored this.
He took a deep breath and in a shaky voice he said: "Stu Torkild-son first came to me last summer and told me the Herald would not survive as an Osborne family paper unless we could somehow pay off the Spruce Valley debt. He said the resort project was eating the paper alive. He had already refinanced twice, he said, but the company was only falling further and further behind, and Stu had exhausted all legal means for saving the paper."
When Dan said "legal," he gave us a meaningful look. "Stu said to me," Dan went on, "that I, better than all the other Osbornes, understood how 'questionable means'—his term—are justified by good ends. He mentioned as an example something he knew about that I'd done back in the Movement days in sixty-eight. And then when I agreed to listen to what he had to say, he told me bluntly that he thought Craig would be willing to pull off some moneymaking caper that would rescue the paper.
"Craig's motivation would be getting even with his father by bolstering the position of the liberal Osbornes who controlled the paper. Stu said I shouldn't mention his involvement to Craig because Craig knew Stu and Chester were friends, and that would make Craig suspicious."
I said, "Torkildson actually proposed a jewel robbery?"
Dan laughed sourly and said, "Hell, no. Do you think Stu Torkildson of the Glens Falls Torkildsons is a common criminal? What Stu had in mind was a multimillion-dollar drug deal. He said I had friends in Cuba, and he knew from reading The Wall Street Journal that Cuban officials deal coke big-time. This was Stu's idea of keeping the deal respectable."
"So you and Craig would be risking your necks, and Stu would— what?" I asked.
"Stu would do nothing and risk nothing. He told me straight out that if the deal were ever exposed, he would deny any knowledge of it. He
only wanted to save the Hera Id for the Osbornes, and he had to save himself for that noble pursuit."
"Right," I said. "The way he saved the Herald with the Spruce Valley project."
Arlene blurted out, "And you listened to that flaming asshole, Dan? I can't believe this shit! I just can't believe it!"
"Well, goddamn it, Arlene, how else was I supposed to save the Herald? You tell me!"
She shook her head and muttered something inaudible.
I said, "Whose idea was the jewel heist? Craig's?"
"He had this buddy," Dan said, "who'd worked for the hotel and who swore it would be easy to hold the place up in the middle of the night. Nobody would get hurt," Dan said, his pale eyes suddenly full of anguish. "And one job, if they hit the right night, could net over a million in cash and jewels, which I would then fence with my Cuban contacts. Nobody ever guessed that the one robbery alone would produce a haul worth an amount more than equal to the Herald's entire debt. And nobody guessed either that the hotel security man would turn up in the middle of the robbery. According to Craig's buddy, the guard was supposed to be in some other part of the hotel at that hour."
"Did Stu know about the robbery in advance?" I asked.
Dan shrugged. "Only after the fact. He still thought it was going to be a big drug deal, with the laundered cash arriving at the Herald by way of a so-called 'loan' from a bank in the Caymans. When he heard that Craig had been arrested for robbery and murder, he wasn't too wild about the news. It was obvious that Stu's going out on a legal limb to save the Herald was really to recoup his own battered reputation after the Spruce Valley debacle. A 'world-class' drug deal—that's what Stu said he had in mind—was one thing, but armed robbery was something else, and Stu was on the edge of freaking out when he heard about it."