Anthony DePaul Copyright  2005 by Anthony DePaul



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Chapter Thirteen


Il Segreto believed that mankind invented God to put an end to the need to think about the reason for man’s existence. Accept that there is a power greater than you and that you are powerless to transform human nature or explain away the vagaries of fate and you can find peace of mind. The concept of God that holds man accountable is the great enabler. Kill for God and all is forgiven. The terrorist Bin Laden exploited Muslim youth as did the Christians in the Crusades. The acolytes paid for their devotion in blood. Death cleansed their souls. Each infidel they killed in God’s name brought them closer to heaven.

Donate money in God’s name. Pay a tithe or a mulct and whatever you do in God’s name, lie, bribe, steal or cheat, is acceptable for your profits fill the Church’s coffers.

Feel guilty if you offend God. Feel dirty if you are embarrassed by your behavior. Subjugate your will to the rule of religion. Sacrifice your personal freedom to atone for not doing God’s will. Pay for your transgression or suffer the wrath of God’s people who will shun you or banish or burn you at the stake.

Shameless men and women were free from blackmail. They could not be coerced or humbled. Their strength lay in the ability to thumb one’s nose in the face of authority. They feared nothing and bowed to no one. Dorian was such a man. His wealth and utter disregard for authority freed him. A self-actualized man does not need a priest or rabbi or mullah to direct him. He acts and thinks on his own accord. Dorian had to be dealt with in the surest of ways. He had to be killed.

They had Alice under their control. She’d escaped once many years ago at Penn. But Talarico had covered her in shame. She would be an asset for years to come, especially if Dorian were eliminated. The key was to kill him in plain sight with no culpability to the Triangle.

The rainstorm whipped the city into an icy submission. Cars were stranded. Few braved the raw winds and slippery roads. Most favored the warmth of a fire as early man shivered in his cave. Il Segreto called Talarico’s room at the airport Marriot.

“Hello.”

“Ciao Antonio. I’m sorry the weather is so severe. Perhaps in a few days you can escape to the beaches of Bova Marina and lie under the Mediterranean sun.”

“A pleasant thought. What do I have to do to earn my ticket?”

“Go to the hotel manager. Open an email account and wait for my instructions. Do not go out of your room.”

“As you wish. Is the woman I recently met well?”

Il Segreto had seen the video-twice.“Oh she is quite cured. You are just what the doctor ordered.”

“May I make another house call?”

Il Segreto roared, “Animal! We act to take control not to take pleasure.”

“Scusa! Io molte piacere. Io non vorrei.”

“Speak English! I want you to stay put. No more thoughts of a sexual nature. She will become one of us soon enough. Ciao!”

Il Segreto placed the phone down gently. It is not good for a leader to show too much anger to a subordinate. It gives them strength. The desire to please the god figure is the greatest motivator of all. That and the fear of not pleasing the god figure drive men to commit homicide.

Il Segreto needed a plan for if Estelle told Dorian too much, the Triangle may be exposed. She was a weak woman who should have collapsed under the pressure of being charged with her husband’s murder. The pregnancy gave her a reason to fight. She knew too much. But if they kill Dorian, her savior, and make her a deal, her will to fight will melt like yesterday’s ice.


Dorian wanted the meeting with Estelle to go smoothly so he bought a half dozen bagels, her favorite way to ingest carbs. She’d like the cream cheese too. Policemen Hennessey and Groome blocked the entrance to the Miles home.

Dorian opened his topcoat and spread his arms wide in anticipation of a frisk. He held a brown bag with a half dozen bagels. “It’s okay, Officers. I am part of the defense team,” said Dorian. “If you want, I’ll toast a rye bagel for each of you.”

Hennessey patted him down roughly while Groome snatched the bagels and peered into the bag as he circled him, scowling behind the stub of a cheap cigar. “Don’t eat bagels,” said Groome.

Hennessey twirled Dorian around. “Don’t squeeze too hard. They’ll talk about us,” said Dorian.

Hennessey waved the blackberry he found in Dorian’s coat pocket. “What is this gizmo?”

“It’s a business machine for email. It’s harmless.”

Hennessey grunted. “Damn things freak me out. It’s like witchcraft, I say.”

Kelly opened the front door. “Good morning, Dorian. Let Mister Wilde come in,” said Kelly.

Dorian took back the bagels. “Next time I’ll bring Krispy Kremes.”

Estelle hugged him. She looked refreshed in her jump suit. The touch of lipstick brightened her smile. “I’ll get you coffee.”

“Toast one of these carb carriers too, please. Very dark,” said Dorian.

“Me too, please,” said Kelly.

She opened the bag. “Bagels and cream cheese! You know how to treat a woman,” she said and headed to the kitchen.

Yellow crime scene tape blocked the steps to the second floor. The blanket draped over the arm of the sofa indicated that Estelle spent a night on the sofa.

“How’s she holding up?” asked Dorian.

Kelly checked to make sure she was out of earshot. “She’s as well as can be expected. She’s still vague about that night. I’m not sure how they doped her up. That bastard Pocky or his pushed in faced partner must have slipped it to her.”

Dorian shed his leather jacket. The morning sun poured through the bay window. Outside, Groome walked across the lawn. His shadow eclipsed the light.

“Do you think this place is bugged?” asked Kelly.

Dorian cracked a smile and sniffed the air. “Bet on it. We’ll use your laptop and my blackberry.”

Estelle laid a tray of toasted bagels, cream cheese, butter and jelly on the coffee table. “The goodies are hot off the press or oven. Whatever! How’s Alice?” asked Estelle.

Dorian purposely raised his voice while he put a finger to his lips. “Alice and I broke up a week ago. It’s final. We are each seeing someone else. I saw some guy leave her house at six in the morning the night Linc was killed.”

Estelle turned whiter than ivory. “I’m sorry to hear that. I hope she doesn’t take it out on me.”

Dorian tore off a piece of bagel, spread cream cheese on it and smiled. “Alice is a professional. She’ll give you a fair shot. Mmm! The bagel is great.”

He typed in a message on the blackberry. “What do you have on Marian that could make her afraid of you?”

Estelle sipped her coffee. Before she typed in, “I am sworn to secrecy I only mentioned what I know to scare her.”

Dorian wrote back. “Your life depends on my proving you innocent. What do you have on her?”

Estelle started. “He’s at the window.”

Arms folded across his chest, Hennessey glared from the side window. Kelly tore out of his seat. He pulled the shade tight. “He’s gone!”

Estelle’s hands shook first. Then her arms and shoulders shook. Then her whole body convulsed. “The police are ML’s men. They did it to me. They are not here to protect me. They never sent a matron to be with me. They’re here to kill me.”

Dorian embraced her and rocked her slowly. “I’ve got you. I’ve got you.”

Kelly dialed ML McLain’s office. “I’ll demand a change of officers. I’ll get a private investigator to stay with her. This is bullshit!”

Dorian eased her onto the sofa. Her sobs wet his shirt through to the skin. “Sit down right here. Here, try some coffee.”

“No coffee. Give me a moment,” she said.

Dorian closed all of the shades and drapes while Kelly screamed at ML McLain. “You get these goons off this duty. I want a female officer assigned to the detail. I want privacy when I talk to my client. I am asking Dorian Wilde to debug this home. If you do not cooperate, I will charge you with obstruction of a criminal investigation. I will call every Federal Officer I know to investigate your Department! What did you say? Fuck me? Well fuck you McLain and your Storm Troopers. You’re a disgrace to the Department.”

Kelly hung up. You could roast marsh mellows on his forehead.

“Fucking asshole! I am sorry about the foul language Estelle but when someone plays with my client’s welfare, I lose my Irish temper.”

Kelly sat down in a heap. “Okay. Let’s go back to work.”

Estelle took the laptop and typed in capital letters. “SHE KNOWS WHO REALLY KILLED JERRY STERN AND WHY. LINCOLN KNEW THAT THE BOY ML SHOT WAS INNOCENT.”

Kelly and Dorian exchanged glances as they caught their collective breath.

“Holy shit!” said Kelly.

“My thoughts as well,” said Dorian.

Kelly typed in, “You don’t understand. I knew Jerry Stern. He was a stand up guy. When he got killed, I cried. Estelle, what do you know?”

Estelle put her index finger to his lips. “Loose lips sink ships is the old saying.”

She typed in. “Two summers ago, Marian and I were at a sorority reunion. We had enough wine in us to sink two ships. She tried to get chummy but I told her I was married. It was the anniversary of Jerry’s murder so I changed the subject to Jerry. I told her the City was better off without gang people. She laughed and said that the gang that killed Jerry was far more dangerous than that poor black kid ML shot. I reminded her that they found Jerry’s ATM card on the boy. She smirked. You know her nose crumples up and her eyes narrow when she feels in charge. She said the card would have exonerated the kid.”

“How?” asked Kelly aloud.

“I don’t know,” she answered.

“I’ll find out,” said Dorian. He typed in, “Kelly, get to Alice. I need the files on Jerry I asked her for ASAP.”

“Will do,” said Kelly. “Now please inspect these premises and find the bugs so Estelle can live in privacy.”

Dorian’s nostrils flared at the scent of chasing Jerry’s killer. It’s time to hunt the hunter.

“I’ll fumigate this establishment faster than you can say Orkin.”

“Thank you,” said Estelle.

She looked a foot taller and ten years younger.

It took Dorian ten minutes to locate six bugs. He dropped them down the toilet.

“Listen to the sewer rats squeak,” he said.

He put on his coat. “You are bugless and I have work to do.”

Estelle embraced him at the waist. “You’re a good man, Charlie Brown.”

Kelly escorted him to the front door and asked, “What next?”

Dorian opened the door and said loudly so the policemen could hear him. “I like exterminating bugs. I’ll get the big cockroaches next, starting with ML McLain.”

Kelly shook his hand. “Good luck!”

“Thanks! I’ll need it.”



Chapter Fourteen


Alice did not expect Mayor Grace Lord to join her and Marian for the strategy session called by Marian for the morning after the arraignment. The previous night had been a restless night. She fell asleep after convincing herself that the house was secure and that the twenty-two pistol that her father left her gave her ample protection in case Talarico returned. She had not fired it in years so she spent part of the night cleaning it and part of the night wishing he would return so she could use it. The well-oiled gun was loaded and concealed in her laptop carrying case.

She laid the case on the mahogany table in the main conference room. Marian looked frazzled beneath an uncombed mop of grey brown hair. The bags under her eyes sagged like they were tea bags that had been dipped in water for an hour.

On the other hand, Grace looked like she fell off the cover of Cosmopolitan. Every hair was in place. Her tailor-made charcoal grey suit outlined her figure skater body. It was hard to believe they were contemporaries or one-time soul mates. No wonder Estelle escaped from the love triangle.

Still, she thought it odd that Marian connected with the older, ungainly Joseph Goodway. It was one thing to go into the closet but at least hide with a good-looking man.

Lab reports, manila folders, and brown case folders packed with notes from the police and Crime Scene Unit covered half the table. The drawn curtains and muted lighting cast the usually well-lit room in a secretive, cave like atmosphere. The aroma of coffee hinted that civilization was not far away.

Alice reached for a cup and the pot on the adjoining server. “Good morning Ms. Mayor and Marian. I hope you slept better than I did.”

Marian passed her cup to Alice. “I’ll have a refill, thank you!”

“Sure Boss. And how about you Ms. Mayor?”

Grace folded her hands on the yellow lined pad in front of her. “Nothing. I have water and that is all I need. Please call me Grace. I don’t like titles especially one I got by someone’s death.”

Alice disliked titles and the last authority figure she recognized was her father. But she no more believed Grace’s self deprecation than she’d buy a used lottery ticket. At the sorority house, the older members called her, “Lord Grace”.

Alice sat across from the two of them. Grace’s water bottle was nearly empty. They’d been meeting for a while. “Grace it is. Looks like Estelle is going to put up a fight. That surprises the hell out of me. But you two knew her a long time. Are you surprised too?”

Marian pointed a shaking finger toward the stacks of paper. “Grace always was a romantic but this time she has gone way beyond reason. We have enough hard evidence to convict everybody on the State’s death row twice. She is behaving foolishly. She shot her husband and she has to pay for it.”

Grace put a hand on Marian’s arm. “We have a political firestorm on our hands. The black people don’t know if she is a white OJ who is being railroaded by the police because she married a black man or a white bitch that killed one of their own. We need closure from her, not more controversy. We won’t get a confession so we need a deal now!”

Alice snapped her fingers. “I have an idea. Let’s burn her at the stake in City Hall Courtyard as a combination witch and martyr then both sides will get what they want.”

Grace smacked the table. “This is no joke.”

Alice gave a thumbs-up. “Right on! Maybe we should just follow the law and the evidence and let a jury decide. Any deal we make will only piss off both sides. We do have a judiciary system, don’t we? Let it work.”

Grace leaned forward and spoke in a clear, low voice. “This is no time for civics lessons. Kelly can plead that she acted out of extreme emotional distress brought on by a bad marriage to an abusive husband. He will demonize Linc to save her. Smear the victim to clear the perp. You know that drill.”

Marian added, “Grace is right. Besides, it would be hard to prove premeditation given the fact that she and he were on drugs. Smear and clear will win out many times over hard evidence especially with a pregnant mother, a sympathetic Judge and a town already racially and politically divided. We need to get Kelly to take a deal. Just so you are aware, Kelly filed a petition to review the case file on Jerry Stern’s murder. It is an obvious attempt to muddy the water. I will resist the request on the grounds that the case is closed and his search is an out and out wild goose chase probably spearheaded by Dorian.”

Alice let the words slip out. “Okay. I will do as you wish and take the heat. But I doubt if my ex-boyfriend will let go of the case. Two days ago, ML and his boys kicked his ass in City Hall Courtyard. Dorian will want payment in blood. Plus he’s pissed at me for breaking off with him and some gang called Camorra for killing his friend in Italy.”

Marian and Grace exchanged glances that chilled Alice as though they’d stuck a Popsicle down her throat. “We’ll deal with Dorian,” they said in unison.

Alice hid her shudder by standing up. She slung the laptop over her shoulder. “Okay. I will call Kelly and see what he has in mind.”

Grace put out her hand. “Thanks. We knew you were on our team.”

Alice squeezed but Lord Grace’s grip was stronger than most men. “Yes Master. I am here to please.”

Grace and Marian nodded to each other. They certainly speak their own language.

She left to call Kelly. Dorian had them on the run but it was a track that would lead to a head on collision.
Talarico paced the hotel room. He’d hardly touched his breakfast. The hour or so of sleep he’d had left him more anxious, more edgy. Il Segreto, the all knowing one, had clearly misjudged the woman Estelle. She had resisted when stronger women would have run away. Il Segreto never made this kind of miscalculation of human nature. “People are predictable beasts,” he’d told Talarico.

“Spaventa is a mule. He will plod through quicksand but never stop. So you must put an end to his slogging. The mule must die in the mud.” But killing the mule unleashed the lion named Wilde. And when they killed the black man, they may have unleashed a city of avenging lions. He felt small and somehow humbled like child who is told to fight a grown man.

The thunderclap of a jet taking off rang like a bell calling him to go home. Italy was warm and friendly and safe. Am I a coward?

He threw on jeans, boots, and a brown turtleneck sweater, took his phone off the hook, and attached the plastic “do not disturb” sign to his doorknob. He walked through the lobby and into the terminal. He skipped on to the moveable sidewalk. The automatic pathway led him past shops amid throngs of people rushing in many directions. He walked swiftly up terminal A until he came to an open café where he ordered a double espresso and a pastry and sat at a Formica table with a view of the jet way. The pastry was stale and the coffee as bitter as acid. There was no reason for his angst. It was more of an animal impulse like when the tsunami crushed over three hundred thousand people in Asia in one hour. Only their survival instincts saved the beasts. The children were left to drown or to be swept away by smugglers.

He wondered why he killed for a living. Was it to show his power or to mask his fear?

He’d had bouts with anxiety his whole life. He’d brood his way through this one too. Still hungry, he headed back to the room. He passed a Catholic chapel, paused and went inside. The pews lay empty. Christ hung on a white marble cross, a crown of thorns circling his head as it hung limply on his emaciated chest. To the right of the altar, a wrought iron, three level rack of votive candles flickered in front of a portrait of the Madonna and the Christ Child. Pale, her countenance sad and dour mood contrasted with the plump, smiling baby with bright blue eyes. The child seemed to gaze at a far horizon while the mother gazed inward to her sorrowful fear of the future.

He dropped a coin in the box, lit a candle for his father and sat in a pew. He was grateful for the silence and the loneliness. No Il Segreto to order him to kill people. No women to tempt him. No wine to douse his senses. He felt pure.

For a half hour, he did not move, except to rest his head on the side of the pew. He slumped onto the hard, wooden seat. His tension oozed from his neck, back and shoulders. His mind went blank. His fear dissipated like incense. A peace came over him. He awoke a half hour later to the boisterous clatter of Latino boy jimmying the moneybox.

“Arreste!” shouted Talarico.

The boy wore an Eagles sweat suit, the hood pulled up. He flashed a smile that showed contempt under his thin mustache. “Arreste my ass Papa! I need money. Go to sleep or pray or go fuck yourself.”

Talarico put up his hands as if to surrender. “Piano mio amici.”

The boy pulled a switchblade. “Back off, old man.”

He held the knife with his palm up, the blade pointed straight ahead.

Talarico looked into the boy’s coal black eyes. They were blank and yet alert. They were his eyes, the eyes of a born killer.

The boy moved closer. His smile scrunched into a grimace. The eyes lilted at the corners as they narrowed into piercing laser beams that cut through the candlelight.

“Give me your money old man or I’ll slice you!” he said.

Talarico raised both hands above his head. “Please. Do not stab me. I will give you my wallet.”

The boy edged closer. “Say a prayer I don’t cut you.”

Talarico kicked the knife out of the boy’s hand so hard it land over the railing in front of the Madonna. Talarico yanked the boy off his feet. The boy’s jaw dropped for a second. But he regained his cocky sneer. “Ah, you are a man to be respected. It is the first time a man took a knife from me. Who are you, hombre grande?”

“I am your future and my past. Take your knife and go. Pronto before I forget I am in god’s house and cut your nuts off and feed them to you.”

The boy left the knife and backed away. “The dinero is all yours. The blade too. Hasta Luego, Senor.”

Talarico sighed and picked up the knife using a hanky to preserve the boy’s fingerprints. He’d use the knife to kill Dorian.

The room was quiet. He replaced the phone grateful that the message light wasn’t blinking. He set the tray outside and ordered room service. He spread a street map of Philadelphia across the coffee table. He circled the location of Dorian’s condo and his office. Like any good hunter, he had to learn the terrain so he could track and kill his prey.



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