Quicksilver (Nameless Detective)

Quicksilver (Nameless Detective) by Bill Pronzini Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Quicksilver (Nameless Detective) by Bill Pronzini Read Free Book Online
Authors: Bill Pronzini
secret admirer who was sending her presents in the mail.
    It must have sounded silly to McFate; it even sounded a little silly to me, the way I explained it. He gave me a look that was half patronage and half watered-down pity. “The detective business must have fallen on hard times,” he said, “if that’s the kind of case you’re taking on.”
    “You take what you can get these days,” I said evenly.
    “I understand Eberhardt is going into business with you,” he said. “Soon, isn’t it?”
    “Next week.”
    “He would have been better off if he’d stayed on the force.” McFate smiled as if to take the sting out of the words and then added, “If you don’t mind my saying so.”
    I let it blow by. Assholes pass bad wind all the time; that was what you had to remember in dealing with them.
    He said, “Do you know where Yamasaki lives?”
    “No. He’s not listed in the phone book.”
    “Did you know Simon Tamura when he was alive?”
    “No. I never even heard of him before today.”
    “And you’ve had no recent case involving the Yakuza?”
    “I’ve never had any case involving the Yakuza.”
    “So be it,” McFate said. “Why don’t you go sit with your lady friend for the time being. I may have more questions a little later.”
    “Sure. As long as we can get out of here before midnight.”
    I left him and went back into the reception area and plunked myself down in the rattan chair next to Kerry. She said, “What’s the matter? Why are you scowling?”
    “Something McFate just told me,” I said. “The dead man back there was Yakuza.”
    “What’s Yakuza?”
    “Japanese gangster outfit. Sort of like the Mafia.”
    “Oh God,” she said.
    “Take it easy. It’s not as ominous as it sounds.”
    “No?”
    “No. I don’t know much about them, but they’re big in Japan and East Asia and they’re starting to get a foothold over here. Prostitution, extortion, that sort of thing. But they only prey on other Japanese—merchants and tourists, mostly.”
    “Oh. Then the dead man ... do you know his name yet?”
    “Simon Tamura. He ran this place, I imagine.”
    “Then he was killed by other Yakuza? One of those underworld execution things?”
    “Looks that way,” I said. “The Yakuza are supposed to believe that they’re descendants of samurai warriors. And Tamura was murdered with a samurai sword. A ritual killing, maybe, to avenge some breaking of the Yakuza code.”
    “Well, thank God you’re not mixed up in it, for a change. It’s bad enough that you had to find the body. And that I had to be here with you.”
    “No argument about that.”
    “One murder case after another ever since I’ve known you,” she said. “One of these days ...”
    “One of these days what?”
    “You know what I was going to say.”
    “Yeah. But I’ve lived this long; I intend to go on living a good while longer.”
    “I hope so. Sometimes ... damn it, sometimes you scare hell out of me.”
    “Sometimes, babe,” I said, “I scare hell out of myself.”
    We lapsed into silence, but it was all right between us because Kerry reached over after a few seconds and took hold of my hand. Her fingers were dry and chill—unlike the room itself, which was as warm as Tamura’s office. It started me sweating, and I stood up finally and fumbled with the knob on the radiator until I got the heat shut down.
    Cops went in and out, and what seemed like a long time later two white-outfitted interns clumped in with a body bag. Almost immediately after they disappeared toward the office, McFate reappeared and headed toward Kerry and me. We both got on our feet.
    “Tamura was definitely Yakuza,” McFate said without preamble. “He had one of their tattoos on his chest—a samurai warrior battling a dragon. And his desk is full of incriminating evidence. He was a local mizu shobai kingpin.”
    I had no idea what that last meant, but I was not going to give him the satisfaction of admitting it. I figured he’d

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