As I was driving back to
my apartment, I suddenly realized that I still didn’t know the name of Revkin’s
client who had hired him to watch Brittany. I told myself that this is
something I need to know.
I wondered if I should go
back to Revkin’s apartment and get councilman McCutchen Smith to squeeze the
information out of him, but decided against it. There’s no sense in giving
councilman McCutchen any more information than is necessary.
The good thing is that I
was near the offices of the Pinkerton’s
Investigation Agency. I wondered if I should risk trying to get the information
for myself from their office. This, of course, would mean breaking into their
office. I was convinced that it should be fairly safe to do it at this hour of
three o’clock on a Sunday afternoon. I decided to take a chance and do it.
I parked my car down a
side street. I opened the trunk and took out a tyre lever and screw driver,
making sure to conceal them in the pocket of my rain coat. I then walked
quickly to the block of offices where the Pinkerton’s Investigation Agency was
housed.
I immediately noticed
that the front entrance was shut and locked. I expected to see that, naturally.
So, I went around to the back of the building, my plan being to enter through
the janitor’s entrance, assuming that it was open. I was right: I found that
the janitor’s entrance door was open. I
walked into a lobby full of trash containers filled with soda cans and
empty milk bottles. I paused to listen, but I didn’t hear anything. I made my
way quietly up the stairs to the first floor.
I found the Pinkerton’s
Investigation Agency at the far end of a hallway. The agency’s section of the
house consisted of just six rooms. I was glad that no light showed through the
frosted panels of the doors. To make sure there was no one in the office, I
went from door to door, knocking on each and waiting. No one answered my knock.
I decided to proceed with
my plan immediately. With my heart beating very heavily, I took out my tyre
lever and inserted it in between one of the doors and the door post. I counted
one, two, three, and then put a little pressure on it. The lock broke without
any alarming noise, and I pushed the door open. Entering the empty office, I
closed the door and looked around.
I noticed that the office
belonged to one of the agency’s executives. So, I went into the second office
by walking the communicating door. It wasn’t until I reached the fourth office
that I found a row of filing cabinets
along the wall, which was what I was actually looking for. I selected the file marked ‘M’, and managed
to force the lock and get it open with the aid of my screw driver and tyre
lever.
I spent about ten minutes
going through the mass of folders in the file, but I did not find one with
Brittany’s name on it. I stood back,
confused. I knew it would be an impossible task for me to go through all the
files in the drawers because there were many of them. It then occurred to me
that there was a chance that Revkin had kept Brittany’s file away from the rest.
I decided to go into the fifth office.
On entering the office, I
found that it contained three desks and that one of them was Revkin’s. I knew
this because I saw the notes on the ‘in-tray’ addressed to him.
While sitting at the
desk, I went through the drawers. One of them, the third one down on the right,
was locked. Since I have my tyre lever with me, I was able to force it open and
I was glad to do so because the only thing in it was the file I was looking
for.
Taking this file from the
drawer, I laid it on the desk and opened it. I examined it for a few minutes,
then shoved back the chair, reached for my Marlboro cigarette and lit one
stick. I knew now who had instructed Revkin to watch Brittany, and I was
completely blown away by this discovery.
Revkin’s file began:
Acting
on the instruction of my client Mrs. Susan Waters, I have today arranged with
Luis and Nicholas to keep a twenty-four hour watch on Ms. Brittany Waters…
Susan Waters!
So she was behind all
this time! I flicked through the pages of the report until I came to the one
headed with the name “Harry Robertson”, which is my name. There were ten pages
given up to my association with Brittany. At the top of the page was the
following:
Copy
of report sent to Mrs. Susan Waters, Waldorf Hilton Hotel, London, on 24th
of August.
The report contain all
the details of Brittany’s plan to rent a vacation house in Atlantic City, of
her suggestion to me that we should go there as Mr. and Mrs. Graham Reed, that
she should arrive at Atlantic City on the 28th and I would join her
on the 29th.
I sat back, and started
sweating profusely. It was obvious that at some
time Revkin had planted some type of buy or listening device in Reverend
Waters’ house at Victory Villa, which was where Brittany was staying at the
time. This is the only was he could have learned all these details. It was obvious too that Susan Waters had
known I had gone to Atlantic City to be Brittany’s lover when I first met her
at the Atlantic City International
Airport. Then why hadn’t she told her husband, Reverend Waters?
While thinking about
this, I folded the file and put it away in my pocket. I told myself it is time
to leave the office. I don’t want to take the chance of being seen by the
janitor who might want to take a walk around the office.
I put my tyre lever and
screw driver in my pocket, then after peering cautiously down the long hallway
I made my way quickly down the stairs and out into the street.
I drove back to my
apartment. As soon as I entered my sitting room, I took off my raincoat, sat
down and again went through the file. I discovered that it was by far more
detailed and complete than Revkin had led me to believe. I mean, not only were
the telephone conversations recorded, but also my conversations with Brittany while
I had been with her. There were conversations between her and other men also
recorded that revealed shocking information about Brittany’s way of life. In
fact, the file was bulging with evidence that proved beyond reasonable doubt
the kind of rotten lifestyle Brittany had lived. Every one of these reports had
been sent to Susan Waters, either to Trenton or to London.
Why hadn’t she used this
information? Why hadn’t she given me away to Reverend Waters? Why hadn’t she
warned him of the life Brittany was living? I was completely confused, and had no answer to
these questions. My head started hurting, so I locked the file away in my desk.
I looked at my watch and
saw that it was now after five o’clock. I put a call through to Tim Jenkins.
“Is that you, Harry?” Tim
asked when he came on the line. “Jesus! Who’s paying for this call?”
“Never mind who’s paying,
Tim. What have you got for me? Have you managed to dig up anything on McCutchen
Smith yet?”
“You won’t believe this,
Harry,” he began. “McCutchen Smith, who’s supposed to be a ‘Mr. Integrity” as a
city councilman, has a dark side that nobody knows about.”
“I know that already,
Tim,” I said. “What else do you know about him?”
“Well, I guess you also
know he’s now in your territory, as a councilman in Baltimore City. Now, listen
to this: McCutchen Smith left with Vito Roselli when they ran Vito out of this
city.”
“O yeah?” I said.
“That’s right. McCutchen
Smith is Vito Roselli’s son – he got him
from one of his mistress, who’s an African-American. Nobody knows where she is
at the moment. Anyway, I discovered that he is not only his son, but he is also
his gunman and lieutenant.”
Vito Roselli’s gunman!
This is a dynamite. I already knew that he is Vito Roselli’s son. But, his
gunman and lieutenant? That part was news to me. At last, some of the pieces of
this jigsaw puzzle were falling into place.
Tim began speaking again,
“Look Harry, but for you, I would have gone public with this information. I
could win a Pulitzer price if I publish…”
“Oh no, Tim,” I cut him
off. “Don’t go to the press or to the police yet. There’s an ongoing
investigation on this now. As you know, Reverend Waters suspects that his
daughter was murdered, and I think McCutchen Smith is somehow connected to it.
So I’m investigating this on the orders of Reverend Waters. Also Lieutenant Jim
Ludlum of Middle River Homicide Department and the guys at Atlantic City Police
are investigating this too. They don’t know about McCutchen Smith’s connection
to the case yet. That’s why I don’t want you or me to go to the press or to go
public with this until I gather all the pieces. So, hold your horses, you
hear?”
“Sure, you got it,” he
said. “Have you run into him in Middle River?”
“Yes,” I said. “And I
also found out that he’s hooked up in heroin-smuggling racket. I wanted to get
a check on him.”
“His father, Vito
Roselli, ran heroin business here before he’s kicked out. He’s in Baltimore
area too, isn’t he?”
“So I hear,” I replied.
“Look Tim, I can prove that councilman McCutchen Smith rode a train from
Baltimore to Trenton two days before Aquiles Gomez was knocked off, and he
returned to Baltimore the day after.”
“Phew!,” he exclaimed.
“That’s something, Harry. I’ll pass the information to Captain Purser. He may
be able to use it. That may be the link he’s been looking for. He was so sure
either Vito or McCutchen knocked off Aquiles Gomez, but both of them had
cast-iron alibis at the time Aquiles Gomez died. They had a flock of witnesses
that put them in a gambling joint in Atlantic City.”
“That’s interesting,” I
said. “But I’m surprised he didn’t alert Baltimore Police of Baltimore City
Government about McCutchen Smith’s background when he was campaigning to be a
city councilman. Don’t we do background checks any more in this country?”
“Don’t be naïve, Harry,”
he said. “Everything about McCutchen Smith’s background was hushed because
Reverend Waters endorsed him. His endorsement basically washed away McCutchen
Smith’s sins. I can’t blame the Reverend
though. He was just trying to give a young fellow black man a second chance.”
“Well,” I said.
“Before you talk to Captain Purser, be
sure to convince him not to go public with the information yet. If you can’t
get him to do that, then don’t talk to him. And, thanks for the information you
gave me, even though I knew some of them already.”
“The pleasure is mine,
Harry,” he said.
I hung up and began to
pace the room while I turned over this new information. It looked as if my
theory that McCutchen Smith had killed Aquiles Gomez and that Brittany had
tried to blackmail him was right. But the evidence I have so far on this will
not convince a jury. However, even though it was all theory, I was convinced
that I was moving in the right direction.
I was tempted to go to
Lieutenant Ludlum and tell him the whole story. There was a chance that he
might get at the truth with this theory as a lead, given his organization. But,
I resisted the temptation, and was glad that I did. The moment councilman
McCutchen Smith learned that I had been
to Lieutenant Ludlum, he would produce his mass of evidence against me and that
would fry me for good. So I concluded it wasn’t the time yet to tell Lieutenant
Ludlum the truth. I had to have some real concrete evidence first before going
to him.
I spent the rest of the
evening going through Revkin’s report again and brainstorming for angles. My
hope now, I decided, was to concentrate on councilman McCutchen Smith. When I
got to Atlantic City, I would go out to the vacation house built in the hill
face, which, I am now convinced, belonged to either Grace Roselli or her dad
Vito Roselli, and see if I could turn up anything there.
END OF EPISODE XXIX
P.S. Episode Thirty
will be published here next Monday.
This is why I hate politics. With the excwptiob of a chosen few (looking at yiu Obama), NOTHJNG GOOD EVER COMES OUT OF POLITICS!
ReplyDeleteEnjoying the story so far, Sandra?
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