a snowdrift of makeup. âCould you tell me about the last time you saw your husband? I know it will be tough to talk about. Remember, thoughâwe want to help you. We want to find whoever did this.â
She nodded, once, and drew a Marlboro from the pack I offered her. It took her a couple tries to get it to her lips.
âYesterday,â she said, once she had taken a drag, âJohnny came home about six.â
I nodded encouragingly. Watching her suck on the cigarette was making me crave a smoke myself, but I forced my attention onto the possibilities the heisen was throwing at me. The more Kittyâs story varied between universes, the more likely it was that she was making it up as she went along; the more similar, the more likely she was telling me the truthâor that the story had been carefully rehearsed. Shadows of those possibilities stretched out on either side of us, rows of doppelgangers interviewing and being interviewed, as though Kitty and I were caught between two mirrors.
ââ¦and he went out again at around seven thirty,â Kitty said. âHeââ
ââsaid he needed to go back to his officeâ
ââwouldnât tell me where he was going. Said it was nothing to do with meâ
ââdidnât say a word when I asked him where he was off toâ
ââand he left. By eight oâclock I was getting worried. By nine I was imagining all these terrible things that couldâve happened to him. By eleven ⦠I got a cab over to his office on West 21 st . Heard a gun go off as I was getting out.â
âDid you see anything?â
She stubbed her cigarette out in the ashtray on the desk and twisted her handkerchief around her finger.
âA man,â three Kittys said in unison. âRunning down the street. I didnât see his face. He mightâI think he was wearing a hat.â She glanced up at me. âAfter that IâI went into Johnnyâs office and I sawâI found himâlyingââ
She pressed the handkerchief to her mouth. Her shoulders shook.
âTake as long as you need.â
âI ran all the way to a callbox on 20 th ,â she said, âand called the cops. I didnâtâI couldnât believe it. Him just lying there, I mean. He never meant no harm, Detective, I swearâ¦â
I poured her a glass of water. She was just a kid, when it came down to itâeighteen, nineteen; easily young enough to be my daughter. Too young to be married to some dead gangster.
âHere.â I held the glass out to her.
âThanks.â
âthe water falls into her lap: for a second, the young woman drops her guardâ
I jerked my hand back as Kittyâs fingers closed around the top of the glass. The rim slipped underneath her thumb and the whole thing dropped into her lap.
âAh, darn it, Kitty, Iâm sorry ⦠here.â I drew my own handkerchief from my pocket and knelt to dab at her dress. I felt her slim legs tremble through the fabric.
âIt was my fault,â she said, and looked at me with wet, red eyes, like a child. The glass rolled along the floor and stopped at my knee.
âKitty,â I said seriously. The handkerchief still rested on her thigh. âDo you have any idea who might have wanted Johnny dead?â
She sucked her cushioned bottom lip. âIââ She dropped her eyes to her lap. âTwo men came to see him a while back. Months ago. I donât know what they wantedâJohnny made me leave the room as soon as he saw them. But there was one fella the size of a truckâfair-haired, scar on his neckââ
Big Dakota. Moore reckoned our boys on the east side had already ruled him out.
ââand another guy, dark, a little heavy; I think the other fella called him âQuine.ââ
That would be Vincent Quine, I guessedâanother Montagnio tough, and a first-rate slimeball.
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