Magic Hour Susan Isaacs (best books to read for self development txt) đ
- Author: Susan Isaacs
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âBest way to be.â
âThe incident Iâm investigatingââ
âI know what kind of an incident. They told me you were on the Homicide Squad. You need a whole department out there on Long Island just for homicide, huh?â
âYeah. The victim was Bonnieâs ex-husband. He was shot with a .22. The perpetrator was a good shot. Iâd like to rule out Bonnie.â
âWhat are you asking me?â
âIâm asking you whether you have any idea if she could shoot a .22.â
âI donât know.â
âYour best guess.â
âMy best guess is, a girl like Bonnieâa tomboy kind of girlâwhose family owned a sporting goods store and whose dad was probably the damn finest shot in OgdenâŠI used to go up to Wyoming with him and a couple other fellas, hunting elk. Well, she was the apple of her fatherâs eye.
Possible he or one of her brothers taught her to shoot a .22.â
âThank you.â
âWell now, you expect me to say she couldnât have done it, donât you?â
âI wouldnât be surprised if you did.â
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âWell, I wonât say it. She left Ogden. Went to Hollywood, then New York. Canât issue any guarantees under those conditions, right?â
âRight.â
âBut just between you and me, Detective Brady? You may be from Noooo Yorrrk and think youâre pretty wily, saying youâre trying to rule out Bonnie Bernstein. Sounds to me like youâve got it in your head that she shot her former husband.
With malice aforethought. Maybe.â He took a long and very slow breath. âBut if the girl you suspect is anything like the nice, smiley girl in my boy Eddieâs Mutual, you know what I think? I think you got yourself one lousy theory. You get me? I think youâre pissing into the wind.â
Robby Kurz placed his bet: âFat Mikey LoTriglio. Okay, never convicted of anything, but his name has been linked with two mob hits. All he has to do is raise his fat finger, and someone dies.â
âNo way,â I said. âBonnie Spencer. Motive. Opportunity.â
Ray Carbone added his twenty to ours. âWhoâs left?
Lindsay Keefe? All right. She may have felt cornered, her job, her reputation on the line. And she probably has a la-cuna of the superego. It would be too much like a movie if she did it, but Iâll go with her anyway.â
Charlie Sanchez was about to retire and didnât care enough anymore to join the pool. He wrote down our bets, folded the money and slipped it into the pocket of his beloved suede vest.
The interrogation room we were in at Headquarters was better than a naked light bulb and a chair, but it wouldnât win any awards for design excellence. Headquarters itself had originally been a county social services agency, and in the heart of the soft green
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and brown fields of Yaphank, the building rose up, uncom-promisingly ugly. Inside, it was full of gray asphalt tile and orange plastic furnitureâjust to remind the meek that while they might be in line to inherit the earth, their actual lives were shit and likely to remain that way.
Four of us sat around the fake-wood table. Charlie, whoâd been with the department for twenty years and was within weeks of becoming head of security for a shopping center in Bay Shore, stroked the vest his girlfriend had given him for his forty-second birthday. He wore it inside and outside, even in ninety-five-degree heat. He loved the vest almost as much as he loved his girlfriend. (His wife had given him a snow-blower for his birthday, probably in response to the electric pencil sharpener heâd given her for hers.)
âWe got a missing-one-thousand-bucks situation,â Charlie began. Heâd been doing background on Sy. âHereâs what I found out. At fourteen minutes past eight on Friday morning, Sy was at the cash machine at the Marine Midland Bank over in Southampton.â
âHis secretary in New York said he told her heâd be getting cash for his trip to L.A.,â Ray added.
Charlie went on: âSy had one of those preferred-customer cards, so he could withdraw up to a thou. Well, thatâs what he withdrew. Did any of you guys come across a thousand bucks?â
Robby shook his head. âNo. There wasââRobby checked his notebookââa hundred and forty-seven bucks in his wallet.â
I closed my eyes, concentrated. Then I said: âHey! Hold on! Listen to this timetable. Sy went to the bank at eight-fourteen. He got to the set in East Hampton eight thirty-five, eight-forty, which is about what it takes from Southampton to East Hampton if you donât make any stops. When he got there, he stayed pretty much in his trailer, talking to people.
Right?
MAGIC HOUR / 163
That Gregory kid was around a lot, and we talked to everyone else who talked to Sy. Did anyone say anything about any cash changing hands? No. The people he was seeing were mainly technicalâa special effects guy who was doing a fire and some gunshots, Nick Monteleone and his makeup lady. Spent a few minutes with Lindsay, but she was being fitted for a dress, so a seamstress and the costume design lady were there the whole time. He wasnât talking to union guys or local cops or politiciansâpeople he might pay off.
You with me?â Robby and Ray nodded. Charlie caressed his vest some more. âOkay, assuming he didnât slip anyone a wad of cash, he leaves the set about eleven-fifteen with a thousand bucks in his pocket. Doesnât stop at Bonnieâs this time. Instead, he seems to have gone straight home; he was there at ten of twelve. We have the cookâs word on that, because he asked for a green salad and bread for lunch, ASAP.â
âThatâs lunch?â Charlie shook his head. âCan you believe it? A guy has a cook all to himself and he says, âGive me a salad.â New York faggots, I swear to Christ. Makes me sick.â
âWhat does all this add up to, Steve?â Ray demanded.
âIt adds up to that after he got home, Sy saw only one person besides the cook:
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