doesnât she?â I said. âDoesnât she?â
âIâll get you something tomorrow. I swear to God, Artie, Iâll help you on this case.â Momo sized me up, figuring if he should part with information. âIâm going to give you someone to meet. Somebody who might know about this type of beating, this signature.â He scribbled a name and address on one of his cards. âCall her tomorrow. Say I told you.â
âA cop?â
âNo.â
âPersonal?â
âYes.â
âShow me Lilyâs paperwork.â
âI canât.â
âThen forget it.â
Gourad was walking some kind of tightrope and it was stretched very thin.
âListen, I appreciate your help, Momo. I really do. So weâll talk. OK?â
He maneuvered the car into an empty space outside McDonaldâs. I opened the car door. He put out his hand and I shook it. Something made him hesitate.
I said, âWhat is it?â
âThere was someone.â
âWho?â
âSomeone who maybe had a piece of the action, or we heard anyhow, and maybe his outfit was a front. A model agency that was a front for whores. Part of a network. They moved girls that way, a lot of them, sometimes they could do it legally, get them visas. But we could never prove it. Maybe itâs connected, the little girl that got murdered. Lily.â
âWhat was his name?â
âItâs classified information. The model agency looked legit on the surface. Weâre legally restrained from making it public. Thereâs no decent evidence at all. You canât use what Iâm telling you. Ever.â
âFine.â
âI only mention it because he was American. He was part French, he had a French name, but he lived in America most of the time. It was a long-distance relationship.â
âWhere in America?â
âCalifornia,â he said.
âTell me his name.â
âThis is my ass, Artie, I mean weâre talking my fat ass on the line if this gets out. You met my boss. Heâs a pompous putz, as you say in New York, who wants to hang me out to dry very very slow.â
âIt wonât get out. Tell me his fucking name, please,for Chrissake. Lilyâs lying there in that hospital. She could be dying.â
He didnât answer and I got out of the car again. I was sick of the games. Gourad got out too, and leaned on the roof.
âHis name,â Gourad said slowly, âhis name was Levesque.â
I was halfway to McDonaldâs. As offhand as I could manage, I turned around and walked back to Gouradâs car and leaned on it, facing him. I pretended my interest was casual.
âSo where is this Levesque? Itâs a common name?â
He said, âWhatâs that have to do with it?â
âIs it a common name?â
âHeâs dead. Levesque is dead. Itâs just a hunch.â
âHow longâs he been dead?â
âThatâs where the problem is. Heâs been dead a long time. Around four years.â
âHe had a wife?â
âWhat?â
It was a woman who had tried to cash Levesqueâs check, so I asked Gourad, âDid Levesque have a wife?â
âHow the fuck should I know if he had a wife?â
âFind out for me, OK? Just do it. Please. OK, Momo? Get me this information.â I was leaning over the car roof. The snow made it cold and slick. âWhat was his first name?â
âWho?â
âLevesque.â
âHis first name was Eric. He was Eric Levesque,â he said. âI have to go.â
8
Trying to light a cigarette, I stood on the pavement where Gourad dropped me and he leaned out of the car and called, âHey, Artie, you OK, man?â but I just waved and tossed the match into the gutter.
Eric Levesque. My head was pounding with the information. The attack on Lily had been my fault. Because of my case. Somehow, it was
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