… I… you…’ he stumbled once more to a halt. ‘You earned it. You trying to tell me you’re now going to tear it all down – pull all the houses down, to use your words – by going to the SEC or whoever to put the gun into your own mouth and pull the trigger?’

At that moment Carver wasn’t sure what he was telling anyone and certainly not what he was being told. ‘We’re involved with organized crime! The Mafia!’

Northcote took a long time to reply. Finally he said: ‘I’m handling it.’

‘You going to be able to give me an unbreakable assurance that by Friday it’ll all be over?’ What was he saying? Why was he accepting it?

‘Dead and buried,’ insisted Northcote, at once. ‘Who I’m seeing tonight is their representative…’ He looked at his watch. ‘And I’m already late.’ There was another brief smile. ‘I telephoned, to warn him. He’ll be waiting.’

‘I want to come with you,’ announced Carver.

Northcote snorted yet another dismissive laugh. ‘It began and it ends with me. Only me. The protection for this firm – and for you – is your knowing nothing, your meeting no one.’

‘I do know!’

‘You’re staying away. Out of it.’

‘You said you were staying over tonight?’

‘Yes?’

‘We have to talk tomorrow. I need a lot more guarantees.’

‘You’ve got them.’

‘Tomorrow,’ insisted Carver. ‘Tomorrow we talk specifics.’

‘Lunch,’ agreed Northcote. ‘It’ll be our own farewell celebration.’

Nothing had emerged the way it should have done. The way he’d wanted. What he’d wanted – fervently hoped for – was booming-voiced offence and a provable, point-by-point, figure-by-figure denunciation of his every suspicion. What he’d got instead amounted to a confirmation – a near-immediate admission – of fraud and false accounting and involvement in organized crime – which meant Mafia – and criminal conspiracy and criminal complicity and probably a lot more indictments he couldn’t, and most certainly didn’t want, to think of.



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