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I took Larson to lunch at Grill 23. I was quite sure that Hawk would make Larson nervous, so he had a sandwich at the bar while Larson and I took a table against the Stuart Street wall.

“Things have changed,” I said. “Several people have died. I’m going to need some truth here, Larson.”

“I’ll try to be forthcoming,” he said.

“You’ll need to be more so than you have been, I think.”

I gave him the hard eye. Larson looked around the room.

“How did you come to know Mary Smith?” I said.

Larson ate a shrimp from his shrimp cocktail. He leaned back a moment to savor it, breathing in as if there were a bouquet to experience. I waited.

“Oh, I’ve known Mary forever,” he said after he’d experienced his shrimp sufficiently.

“How long would that be,” I said.

“Oh.” He paused and sipped a small swallow of ice water and experienced that for a while. “Twenty years or so.”

Since Mary was thirty that meant he’d known her as a child.

“You from Franklin?”

He didn’t answer for a while. I waited. He couldn’t stand the silence.

“Yes.”

“You went to school with her?”

Again the pause. Again the wait. Again he capitulated.

“Grammar school, middle school, high school. Then I went on to college and she stayed in Franklin.”

“Friends?”

“Oh yes. Tight. Buddies, really. Franklin wasn’t the easiest place to grow up.”

“There may not be any easy places,” I said.

Larson carefully dabbed a little horseradish into his cocktail sauce. It bothered me that I hadn’t come across his name.

“You know her other friends?” I said.

He smiled. Apparently he’d decided that frank disclosure might relieve tension.

“Sure,” he said. “Roy, Pike, Tammy? Sure.”

“How about Joey Bucci?”

Larson had ordered a glass of Chablis with his appetizer. He sipped a small sip of it, savored it self-consciously, and smiled at me.

“Why do you ask about Joey Bucci,” he said.

“He was described as part of her group,” I said. “Nobody mentioned you.”

Larson had another shrimp. He looked thoughtful, but it might have been just his savoring look. He took in some air and let it out slowly.

Then he said, “I used to be Joey Bucci.”

“You changed it,” I said.

“I just didn’t feel like a Joey Bucci,” he said.

“You felt like a Larson Graff?”

He smiled. “In my business more Larson Graff and less Joey Bucci is a good thing,” he said.

“Mary says you came to her through her husband.”

“Only indirectly,” Larson said. “He called and said Mary was looking for a public relations advisor and had asked him to call me. That’s how I met him.”

His shrimp cocktail was gone, leaving him more time to fully examine the remaining Chablis. It was his third.

“Through Mary?” I said.

My head was beginning to hurt.

“Yes.”

“And you became friends independent of her?”

Larson smiled and tilted his head.

“We shared a common interest,” he said.

“Young men?” I said.

“S. You know about Nathan?”

“I do.”

“Poor old queen,” Larson said. “Still deep in the closet in this day and age.”

I nodded. He sipped his wine.

“Pathetic, really,” Larson said.

“Mary says she met her husband through you.”

He laughed. “That’s Mary. She can’t string five words together and make sense. She probably said it backwards from what she meant. I met Nathan through her.”

I nodded. Old Mary. Dumb as a flounder. As opposed to me, the brainy crimebuster, who seemed to be losing brain cells every day he was on this case.

“If Nathan was gay, what do you suppose Mary did for a sex life?”

Larson laughed again. Having committed to the conversation, he seemed to have jumped in feet first.

“Some of us can go both ways,” he said.

“Was Nathan one who could?”

“I don’t think so,” Graff said, a little singsong in his voice.

“So did Mary have any other possibilities for a sex life?”

“I hope so,” Graff said.

“And if she did, would you have any candidates?”

“For fucking Mary?” Graff said. “Hard to narrow it down.”

“She was promiscuous?”

“Oh,” Graff said. “I don’t know, really. I was being facetious.”

“So when you’re not being facetious,” I said, “who would be a good candidate to, ah, help Mary out.”

“I’d say,” Larson almost giggled, “I’d say the fickle finger of suspicion points at Roy.”

“Roy Levesque?” I said. “The former boyfriend?”

“Maybe once and future,” Graff said.

“Any dates and places?” I said.

“No. Just a guess.”

“Okay. You know anything about Smith’s banking business?”

“No.” Larson was working on his fourth glass of Chablis. “That’s not the business he and I shared an interest in.”

“Soldiers Field Development?” I said.

Graff shook his head.

I said, “Marvin Conroy? Felton Shawcross? Amy Peters? Jack DeRosa? Kevin McGonigle? Margaret McDermott?”

“I don’t know any of those people,” he said. “Conroy and Shawcross sound familiar. They might have been on Mary’s invitation list. The others…” He shrugged, putting a lot into it.

“You have any idea,” I said, “who killed Nathan Smith?”

“None,” he said.

He stood. So I stood.

“Thanks for lunch,” he said. “I really do have to get back to the office.”

We shook hands. I watched him go. I thought of Jay Gatsby. Somewhere back there, when he was a kid, Joey Bucci had invented just the kind of Larson Graff that a kid was likely to invent, and to that invention he was remaining faithful. I paid the check and when I left, Hawk eased off his bar stool and left with me. Which was comforting.

CHAPTER FORTY-SIX

Hawk and I reported in to Rita Fiore. Actually I was reporting to Rita, Hawk was along to help keep me from getting shot. Rita didn’t mind. I knew she wouldn’t. Hawk fascinated her. Among other things he was male, which gave him a running start on fascinating Rita.

“I think I want a raise,” I said.

“And you don’t want to take it out in trade?” Rita said.

“Perhaps my associate,” I said.

Hawk smiled serenely.

“You think?” Rita said.

“One never knows,” Hawk said. “Do one.”

“Keep me in mind,” Rita said, and to me, “Why do you need a raise?”

“Wear and tear on my brain,” I said. “Every time I turn over a rock, there’s three more rocks.”

“I’ll help you,” Rita said. “Tell me about it.”

She sat back in her big leather swivel chair and crossed her admirable legs and listened, while I told her about it. As far as I could tell, when she slipped into her professional mode, she banished all thoughts of sexual excess.

“Okay,” she said when I finished. “Obviously there’s something going on between Pequod Bank, and Soldiers Field Development, and Marvin Conroy.”

“Yep.”

“And there’s probably something going on among Larson Graff, and Mary Smith, and the boyfriend, whatsisname.”

“Roy Levesque.”

“And maybe Ann Kiley is in there somewhere.”

“Or maybe she’s just Conroy’s girlfriend and loved not wisely but too well,” I said.

“Don’t we all,” Rita said. She looked at Hawk. “Except maybe you,” she said.

Hawk smiled at her. Rita swung her crossed leg thoughtfully. She was wearing a red suit with a just barely street-legal skirt. The suit went surprisingly well with her red hair.

“You’ve got a bank and a development company in some sort of uncertain relationship,” I said. “That raise any flags?”

Rita nodded. “I’ll talk with Abner Grove,” she said. “He’s our tax and finance guy. See what he can find out.”

“It may not help your client,” I said.

“If I am going to put up the best defense I can, I need to know as much as I can. I’m not obliged to use it all. What you can do is come at this from the other end.”

“Mary, Larson, and Roy,” I said.