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The Day After Tomorrow_ A Novel - Allan Folsom [146]

By Root 1204 0
drawl loudly from outside the door. It was followed by a woman’s voice flailing in French.

“Wrong room, honey. Believe me. Try upstairs—maybe you got the wrong floor!”

French spat back, angry and indignant.

Then there was the sound of the key in the lock. The door opened and McVey came in. He had a dark-haired girl by the arm and a rolled-up newspaper sticking out of his jacket pocket.

“You want to come in, come in,” he said to the girl, then looked at Osborn.

“Lock it.”

Osborn closed the door, locked it, then slid the chain lock across.

“Okay, honey, you’re in. What now?” McVey said to the girl, who stood in the middle of the room with a hand on her hip. Her eyes went to Osborn. She was probably twenty, five foot two or three, and not the least bit frightened. She wore a tight silk blouse and a very short black skirt with net stockings and high heels.

“Fucky, fucky,” she said in English, then smiled seductively, looking from Osborn to McVey.

“You want to screw the two of us. Is that it?”

“Sure, why not?” She smiled and her English got a lot better.

“Who sent you?”

“I am a bet.”

“What kind of bet?”

“The night clerk said you were gay. The bellman said no.”

McVey laughed. “And they sent you to find out.”

“Oui.” And pulled several hundred francs from the top of her bra to prove it.

“What the hell’s going on?” Osborn said.

McVey smiled. “Aw hell, we was just funnin’ with them, honey. The bellman’s right.” He looked at Osborn. “Want to fuck her first?”

Osborn jumped. “What?”

“Why not, she’s already been paid.” McVey smiled at her. “Take your clothes off. . . .”

“Sure.” She was serious, and she was good at it. She looked them in the eyes the whole time. One and then the other and then back again, as if each piece as it came off was a special show for him alone. And slowly she took it all off.

Osborn watched open-mouthed. McVey wasn’t actually going to do it? Just like that and with him standing there? He’d heard stories about what cops have done in certain situations, everybody had. But who believed it, let alone thought they’d be firsthand party to it?

McVey glanced at him. “I’ll go first, huh?” He grinned. “Don’t mind if we go into the bathroom, do you, Doctor?”

Osborn stared. “Be my guest.”

McVey opened the bathroom door and the girl went in. McVey went in behind her and closed the door. A second later Osborn heard her give a sharp yelp and there was a hard bump against the door. Then the door opened and McVey came out fully clothed.

Osborn was dumbfounded.

“She came up here to get a look at us. She saw me in the hall, it was all she needed.”

McVey tugged the newspaper from his jacket pocket and handed it to him, then went over to gather up the girl’s clothes. Osborn unrolled it. He didn’t even see which paper it was. Only the bold headline in French— HOLLYWOOD DETECTIVE SOUGHT IN LA COUPOLE SHOOTING! Beneath it, in smaller type, “Linked to American Doctor in Merriman Murder!” Once more Osborn saw the same Paris police mug shot of. himself that had been printed earlier in Le Figaro and beside it a two or three-year-old picture of a smiling McVey.

“They got that from the LA. Times Magazine. An interview on the everyday life of a homicide investigator. They wanted gristle, they got boredom. But they ran it anyway.” McVey put the clothes into a hotel dry cleaning bag and unlocked the door. Carefully he checked the hallway, then hung the bag outside.

“How did they know this? How could they even find out?” Osborn was incredulous.

McVey closed the door and relocked it. “They knew who their man was and that he was tailing one of us. They knew I was working with Lebrun. All they had to do was send somebody down to the restaurant with a couple of photographs and ask, ‘Are these the guys?’ Not so hard. That’s why the girl. They wanted to make sure they had the right Mutt and Jeff before they sent in the firepower. She probably hoped she could get a look, make up a story and walk away. But obviously she was prepared to do whatever she had to if it didn’t work.”

Osborn looked past McVey at the closed bathroom

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