hair too daring, a shade too clever and complex. And he kept thinking of Frank Meyers: the way the big man lived, the way he dressed, the desperation in those bright blue eyes
He took a roll of Life Savers from his jacket pocket, peeled away the foil from the top, popped a lime-flavored circlet into his mouth.
Finally the telephone rang.
"Clitus?"
"You're throwing in with Frank Meyers, aren't you?" Felton asked, a playful note in his voice.
"That's right."
"I knew you would," the old man said. "He's a damned good man, a real pro."
Tucker tongued the candy wafer to the side of his mouth. "Maybe he once was."
"Oh?" Felton said guardedly. "What's wrong with him?"
"For one thing, he's living in a dive. He doesn't clean up after himself anymore-nearly has the roaches tamed. He's sloppy, tired, and nervous. He's a man on the edge."
"Why?"
"He says he let a woman take all his money away from him, and now he's broke."
Felton sighed, a hollow ahhh that echoed down the line like the call of a spirit. "It's happened to better men."
"But I don't believe that's what's wrong with him," Tucker said, swallowing lime saliva. "I want you to ask around over the weekend. Contact anyone who's worked with him recently. See if you can turn up anything."
"Like what?"
"I don't know," Tucker said, wishing that he did. "Anything that might help explain why he's let himself slide."
Felton cleared his throat. "Well
I'll try, Mike. But it's probably just a waste of time. If there was anything I should know about Frank, I'd already know it." The old man respected Tucker, knew him to be one of the best in the business. At the same time, he thought he knew Frank Meyers; if not Tucker's equal, he was at least a sensible and reliable man.
"One other thing," Tucker said, shifting his weight from one foot to the other, switching the receiver from left to right hand. "I'm going to need someone who's good with safes. I'd like to have Edgar Bates. He's here in the city somewhere, isn't he?"
"Sure," Felton said.
"Get hold of him for me. Set up a meeting between us for tomorrow at the Museum of Natural History."
"What time?"
"Let's say-noon. In the room where they have all of those Eskimo totem poles."
"If I can't get hold of him?" Felton asked.
"I'll know it when he doesn't show up tomorrow," Tucker said. "I'll call you again on Monday to see what you've picked up on Meyers. Good-by, Clitus." He hung up. He crushed the thinning Life Saver between his teeth and swallowed the tiny sugared fragments. The scent of sweetened limes rose in the back of his nostrils.
In front of the Americana he caught a taxi and was just as surly with the driver as the driver was with him. The ten-minute ride home required twenty-five minutes in the sluggish traffic-which gave him too much time to worry about Frank Meyers. He went through three more Life Savers.
At his apartment building on Park Avenue in the eighties, he was greeted by a minimally liveried doorman nearly twice his age. "Beautiful day, isn't it, sir?"
"Just fine, Harold."
"September and October are the only good months in this city," the doorman said. On his black uniform the small brass buttons gleamed with early-October sunlight.
Inside, the hall man also wanted to talk about the weather. And the elevator man thought that autumn was his favorite time of the year in New York. Tucker smiled, nodded, and agreed with both of them while he thought about Oceanview Plaza
He entered his nine-room, tenth-floor apartment to the strains of Beethoven's Minuet in G as interpreted by the Philadelphia Orchestra and Eugene Ormandy. The music was like a cool liquid spilling over him. Some of his concern about Meyers-and the slight but constant fear that was with him