The Burglar Who Met Fredric Brown: Bernie Rhodenbarr, #13
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About this ebook
Suppose you're Bernie Rhodenbarr.
You've got a dream job, running your own cozy secondhand bookstore, complete with Raffles, your caudally challenged cat. It's in Greenwich Village, and your best friend's dog grooming salon is two doors away, and the two of you lunch together and meet for drinks after work.
And you've got another way to make a buck. Every once in a while you put your conscience on the shelf and let yourself into someone else's residence, and you leave with more than you came with. You're a burglar, and you know it's wrong, but you love it.
And you're good at it. You've got two ways to make a living, one larcenous, the other literary and legitimate, and you're good at both of them.
Nice, huh?
Until the 21st Century pulls the rug out from under you. All of a sudden the streets of your city are so overpopulated with security cameras and closed-circuit TV that you have to lock yourself in the bathroom to have an undocumented moment. And locks, which used to provide the recreational pleasure of a moderately challenging crossword puzzle, have become genuinely pickproof.
Meanwhile, internet booksellers have muscled your legit enterprise into obsolescence. The new breed of customers browse your bookshop, find what they're looking for, then whip out their phones and order their books online.
Wonderful. You had two ways to make a living, and neither of them works anymore.
But suppose you keep on supposing, okay?
Suppose you wake up one morning in a world just like the one in which you fell asleep—but with a couple of differences.
The first one you notice doesn't amount to much. The Metrocard in your wallet has somehow changed color and morphed into what seems to be called a SubwayCard. That's puzzling, but you swipe it at the turnstile same as always, and it gets you on the subway, so what difference does it make?
But that's not the only thing that's changed. The Internet's up and running, as robust as ever, but nobody seems to be using it to sell books. Doors are secured not with pickproof electronic gizmos but with good old reliable Rabson locks, the kind you can open with your eyes closed. And what happened to all those security cameras? Where'd they go?
All of a sudden you've got your life back, and your bookshop's packed with eager customers, and how are you gonna find time to steal something?
Well, just suppose one of the world's worst human beings has recently acquired one of the world's most glamorous gems. When the legendary Kloppmann Diamond is up for grabs, what can you possibly do but grab it?
And what could possibly go wrong?
Lawrence Block
Lawrence Block is one of the most widely recognized names in the mystery genre. He has been named a Grand Master of the Mystery Writers of America and is a four-time winner of the prestigious Edgar and Shamus Awards, as well as a recipient of prizes in France, Germany, and Japan. He received the Diamond Dagger from the British Crime Writers' Association—only the third American to be given this award. He is a prolific author, having written more than fifty books and numerous short stories, and is a devoted New Yorker and an enthusiastic global traveler.
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Reviews for The Burglar Who Met Fredric Brown
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- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This was really interesting and very enjoyable. Thanks to LB for such a thought provoking book.
Book preview
The Burglar Who Met Fredric Brown - Lawrence Block
The Burglar Who Met Fredric Brown
Lawrence Block
Copyright © 2022, by Lawrence Block
All Rights Reserved.
Cover by Jeff Wong
Production by JW Manus
Lawrence Block LB LogoA LAWRENCE BLOCK PRODUCTION
~
More by Lawrence Block
THE BERNIE RHODENBARR MYSTERIES
BURGLARS CAN’T BE CHOOSERS • THE BURGLAR IN THE CLOSET • THE BURGLAR WHO LIKED TO QUOTE KIPLING • THE BURGLAR WHO STUDIED SPINOZA • THE BURGLAR WHO PAINTED LIKE MONDRIAN • THE BURGLAR WHO TRADED TED WILLIAMS • THE BURGLAR WHO THOUGHT HE WAS BOGART • THE BURGLAR IN THE LIBRARY • THE BURGLAR IN THE RYE • THE BURGLAR ON THE PROWL • THE BURGLAR WHO COUNTED THE SPOONS • THE BURGLAR IN SHORT ORDER • THE BURGLAR WHO MET FREDRIC BROWN
THE MATTHEW SCUDDER NOVELS
THE SINS OF THE FATHERS • TIME TO MURDER AND CREATE • IN THE MIDST OF DEATH • A STAB IN THE DARK • EIGHT MILLION WAYS TO DIE • WHEN THE SACRED GINMILL CLOSES • OUT ON THE CUTTING EDGE • A TICKET TO THE BONEYARD • A DANCE AT THE SLAUGHTERHOUSE • A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES • THE DEVIL KNOWS YOU’RE DEAD • A LONG LINE OF DEAD MEN • EVEN THE WICKED • EVERYBODY DIES • HOPE TO DIE • ALL THE FLOWERS ARE DYING • A DROP OF THE HARD STUFF • THE NIGHT AND THE MUSIC • A TIME TO SCATTER STONES
KELLER’S GREATEST HITS
HIT MAN • HIT LIST • HIT PARADE • HIT & RUN • HIT ME • KELLER’S FEDORA
THE ADVENTURES OF EVAN TANNER
THE THIEF WHO COULDN’T SLEEP • THE CANCELED CZECH • TANNER’S TWELVE SWINGERS • TWO FOR TANNER • TANNER’S TIGER • HERE COMES A HERO • ME TANNER, YOU JANE • TANNER ON ICE
THE AFFAIRS OF CHIP HARRISON
NO SCORE • CHIP HARRISON SCORES AGAIN • MAKE OUT WITH MURDER • THE TOPLESS TULIP CAPER
NOVELS
A DIET OF TREACLE • AFTER THE FIRST DEATH • ARIEL • BORDERLINE • BROADWAY CAN BE MURDER • CAMPUS TRAMP • CINDERELLA SIMS • COWARD’S KISS • DEAD GIRL BLUES • DEADLY HONEYMOON • FOUR LIVES AT THE CROSSROADS • GETTING OFF • THE GIRL WITH THE DEEP BLUE EYES • THE GIRL WITH THE LONG GREEN HEART • GRIFTER’S GAME • KILLING CASTRO • LUCKY AT CARDS • NOT COMIN’ HOME TO YOU • RANDOM WALK • RONALD RABBIT IS A DIRTY OLD MAN • SINNER MAN • SMALL TOWN • THE SPECIALISTS • SUCH MEN ARE DANGEROUS • THE TRIUMPH OF EVIL • YOU COULD CALL IT MURDER
COLLECTED SHORT STORIES
SOMETIMES THEY BITE • LIKE A LAMB TO SLAUGHTER • SOME DAYS YOU GET THE BEAR • ONE NIGHT STANDS AND LOST WEEKENDS • ENOUGH ROPE • CATCH AND RELEASE • DEFENDER OF THE INNOCENT • RESUME SPEED AND OTHER STORIES
NON-FICTION
STEP BY STEP • GENERALLY SPEAKING • THE CRIME OF OUR LIVES • HUNTING BUFFALO WITH BENT NAILS • AFTERTHOUGHTS 2.0 • A WRITER PREPARES
BOOKS FOR WRITERS
WRITING THE NOVEL FROM PLOT TO PRINT TO PIXEL • TELLING LIES FOR FUN & PROFIT • SPIDER, SPIN ME A WEB • WRITE FOR YOUR LIFE • THE LIAR’S BIBLE • THE LIAR’S COMPANION
WRITTEN FOR PERFORMANCE
TILT! (EPISODIC TELEVISION) • HOW FAR? (ONE-ACT PLAY) • MY BLUEBERRY NIGHTS (FILM)
ANTHOLOGIES EDITED
DEATH CRUISE • MASTER’S CHOICE • OPENING SHOTS • MASTER’S CHOICE 2 • SPEAKING OF LUST • OPENING SHOTS 2 • SPEAKING OF GREED • BLOOD ON THEIR HANDS • GANGSTERS, SWINDLERS, KILLERS, & THIEVES • MANHATTAN NOIR • MANHATTAN NOIR 2 • DARK CITY LIGHTS • IN SUNLIGHT OR IN SHADOW • ALIVE IN SHAPE AND COLOR • AT HOME IN THE DARK • FROM SEA TO STORMY SEA • THE DARKLING HALLS OF IVY • COLLECTIBLES • PLAYING GAMES
~
Contents
1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 • 16 • 17 • 18 • 19 • 20 • 21 • 22 • 23 • 24 • 25 • 26 • 27 • 28 • 29 • 30 • 31 • 32 • 33 • 34 • 35 • 36 • 37 • 38 • 39 • 40 • 41 • 42
About the Author
Bernie Rhodenbarr Series
~
For
ROBERT SILVERBERG
1
It was around a quarter to five on a Wednesday afternoon in October when I marked my place in the Fredric Brown paperback I’d spent much of the day reading. I tucked it in my back pocket, then went outside and retrieved my table of bargain books from the sidewalk. This was a good fifteen minutes earlier than usual, but when you’re the store owner you can do this sort of thing on a whim. That’s one of the nice things about being an independent antiquarian bookseller, and there are days when it seems like the only nice thing.
This was one of them.
I typically start to shut down for the day around five, and usually manage to clear the last customer from the premises by five-thirty. Then I do what tidying up needs to be done, freshen Raffles’s water dish and put some dry food in his bowl, draw the steel window gates shut, and lock up. The Bum Rap, where Carolyn and I have a standing appointment with a bottle of scotch, is just around the corner at Broadway and East Tenth Street. It’s a five-minute walk, and I generally cross the threshold within a few minutes of six o’clock.
I have to pass Carolyn’s establishment, the Poodle Factory, in order to get to the Bum Rap; it’s almost always closed when I do, and she’s almost always at our usual table by the time I arrive.
But not today, because I was out the door at Barnegat Books by twenty-eight minutes after five. (I don’t know why I checked the time, or why I still remember it. But I did and I do.) The Poodle Factory is two doors east of the bookshop, and Carolyn Kaiser was sweeping dog hair out the door when I got there.
Bernie,
she said. Oh, don’t tell me. You haven’t got time for a drink tonight.
Why would I tell you that?
Well, I don’t know,
she said. Personally, I always have time for a drink, but something could have come up. A chance to examine and possibly buy a promising collection of books. The opportunity to have drinks and dinner with a personable and attractive woman.
You’re a personable and attractive woman,
I pointed out, and I’m about to have drinks with you. I don’t know about dinner, but it’s certainly a possibility.
A woman,
she said, with whom the possibility exists of a romantic encounter. You know what I mean, Bern.
At the moment,
I said, you’re the only woman in my life.
Then I don’t know what it would be. A dental emergency?
A dental emergency?
Well, people have them, though mine are always on weekends. The last toothache I had hit me on a Friday an hour after my dentist went home to Mamaroneck, and all I could do was stay drunk until Monday morning.
The sacrifices we’re called upon to make.
Don’t I know it? But you’re not canceling our date, so why am I trying to figure out the reason?
She’d been running through her usual chores, and now she drew the door shut and turned the key in the lock. Next stop,
she said, the Bum Rap.
Not yet.
Oh?
That’s why I wanted to catch you before you got out the door,
I said. There’s someplace I’d like to go first. It’s maybe four or five blocks from here, and I thought we could walk over there together.
Four or five blocks? I don’t see why not. It’s not like I’m wearing high heels.
No.
I mean, even when I was seeing that woman who tried to turn me into a lipstick lesbian, I never even thought about heels.
Carolyn occasionally claims to be five-foot-two, although she’d have to be standing on something for that to be true. Or, say, wearing three-inch heels. She is, however, my best friend in the whole world, and I kept the thought to myself.
scene breakThere,
I said.
We’d walked the half block to Broadway, turned to the right and headed downtown. We passed Two Guys from Luang Prabang, the restaurant that had supplied the excellent Laotian food we’d lunched on a few hours earlier, and we passed the Bum Rap, and we walked another block to Ninth Street and turned left. Two more blocks and we were standing across the street from a very tall and very narrow building that was all steel and glass.
Damn,
Carolyn said. What’s that doing there?
Occupying space,
I said, though not very much of it in terms of its footprint. Given the size of the lot, it ought to be seven stories tall, maybe twelve at the most.
I could count windows,
she said, but looking straight up gives me an ice cream headache. How tall is it?
Forty-two stories.
I read something about buildings like this, Bern. They call them splinters.
I think it’s slivers.
Same difference. Either way they get under your skin. What the developers do, they buy a building, maybe two buildings, and evict all the rent-controlled tenants and knock everything down. What do you figure happened to the people who used to live here?
Maybe they’re at Bowl-Mor,
I said, bowling a few frames and knocking back a couple of beers. Oh, wait a minute. They can’t be there, can they? Because the glass-and-steel people knocked down that building, too.
Bowl-Mor, which it won’t surprise you to learn was a bowling alley, had been a going concern for years before I became the owner of Barnegat Books. It was part of the local landscape, and I passed it every morning when I walked the few blocks from the Union Square subway station to the bookstore. That changed a year or so ago when developers acquired the building that housed it and replaced it with an oversized office building designed to house software developers and others of their ilk.
That’s been standard operating procedure on the island of Manhattan ever since the Canarsie Indians sold the place for twenty-four dollars and walked away congratulating themselves on their cunning. Buildings come and go, but the move to create Silicon Alley ran into opposition from the strong Greenwich Village preservationist movement. While those blocks of University Place lie outside the official Greenwich Village Historic District, you could argue that they were very much a part of the Village, and more than sufficiently historic to remain untouched.
And so it was argued, by some very earnest and public-spirited people, and financial considerations tipped the scales, as they do most of the time. And that was the end of Bowl-Mor.
It still bothers you,
Carolyn said. I mean, I sort of get it, Bern, but when did you ever do more at Bowl-Mor than give it a nod as you walked on by?
We went bowling,
I said. Don’t tell me you don’t remember.
I remember. It was fun.
Right.
At first I couldn’t keep the ball out of the gutter, but then I started to get the hang of it. I can even see where it could become a lesbian thing, like softball. And maybe it is, for all I know. In Cleveland, say.
If they have lesbians in Cleveland.
We are everywhere, my friend.
She sighed. Bowling. You and I bowled once and we never went back.
But we could have.
And now we can’t.
Exactly. And many’s the time after lunch when I thought about letting the store stay closed for an hour while I bowled a couple of frames. And no, I never actually did this, but the point is I thought about it, and it was something I could have done.
Coulda woulda shoulda, and now you can’t, and here we are standing in front of a sliver or a splinter or whatever the hell it is. They kicked the tenants out and then they bought air rights from everybody on the block and built something that reaches halfway to the moon. I didn’t know there were any slivers in this part of town.
I think the Innisfree is the first.
Is that what they call it? Who lives here, Bern?
Hardly anybody.
They couldn’t sell the apartments?
Oh, they didn’t have any trouble selling them,
I told her. They were all sold before the building was completed. But most of them are empty.
She thought for a moment. Foreign buyers,
she said.
Mostly, yes.
Looking to launder money and have a secure investment in New York when things go to hell in Moscow or Minsk or Budapest or Istanbul, wherever they were playing King of the Hill. Oligarchs, Bern? Is that the word I’m looking for?
It’s a word you hear a lot these days,
I allowed, but I don’t know the exact definition, or how many of the buyers fit it. I think there’s a better term.
Oh?
Rich bastards,
I said. That pretty much covers it, and it’s not limited to foreigners. Because there’s at least one Innisfree resident who’s about as foreign as apple pie. He was born right here in the USA.
Who’s that?
Something kept me from uttering the name. If it wouldn’t give you an ice cream headache,
I said, I’d suggest you tilt your head back and look up at the very top floor. Not that you could see much of anything from this angle, but if you could, and if you were equipped with Superman’s x-ray vision, you’d see something pretty remarkable.
A rich bastard?
That too,
I said, if he happens to be home now. But you’d also see the Kloppmann Diamond.
The Kloppmann Diamond,
she said. It’s here, Bern? On top of the Innisfree?
That would put it on the roof. But it’s a few feet down from there, in the penthouse.
I remember when the Museum of Natural History announced they were planning on selling it. They used a different word.
Deaccessioning. They made the difficult but essential decision to deaccession their most valuable gem.
I remember a lot of people got upset.
There was a flap,
I said. You’d have thought the Louvre was putting the Mona Lisa on the auction block.
Smile and all. I remember somebody on New York One suggesting that Mike Bloomberg and Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk and Bill Gates should each kick in an eight-figure sum, outbid all comers, and give the diamond back to the museum. But that idea never seemed to get anywhere.
Gee, I wonder why.
Maybe because the four billionaires had the same thought I did, which was that the museum would say ‘Thank you very much,’ and wait a few years and then put it up for sale again. But they went through with it and sold it?
At Sotheby’s,
I said. The week before last.
I raised my eyes forty-two stories, but I didn’t keep them there long. There was nothing to see, just glass and steel, and the sense of vertigo I experienced made even that a blur. I lowered my gaze, all the way down to street level, and noted once again the security cameras mounted on the front of the building, and on the smaller and far less prepossessing buildings on either side.
And, indeed, on almost every building on the block, which made this a block like any other block in the city I call home.
Carolyn was asking about the sale, and the hammer price, and the identity of the winning bidder. And you said he’s an American, Bern?
I did, didn’t I?
Like apple pie.
More like school shootings,
I said. Or lynching.
As American as lynching. But who is he?
Something kept me from supplying the name. I’d say he was the worst man in the world,
I said, but that covers a lot of ground, and there’s no end of predatory pedophiles and serial killers who might very well argue the point. But I get the feeling we’re going to get a glimpse of him right now.
A gleaming silver limousine, long enough to accommodate an entire high school cheerleading squad on prom night, was pulling to a stop in front of the Innisfree.
A door opened. A man emerged, his pink head the size and shape of a bowling ball, and every bit as unencumbered with hair. He was wearing a suit he’d bought from the Big & Tall Shoppe, but he’d done some squats and pushups since his final fitting, and he looked as though he might burst out of it.
Is that him, Bern? What’s a guy like that going to do with the Kloppmann Diamond? Wear it for a pinky ring?
Another of the limo’s doors opened, and another man got out, and if he wasn’t a twin of the first hulk he was at the very least a brother from another mother. Same size, same gleaming skull, same suit that had failed to keep up with the hypertrophy of his massive upper body.
There’s two of him,
Carolyn said. You’d think one would be enough.
More than enough,
I agreed, but neither one looks like the man who bought the Kloppmann. My guess is they’re his bodyguards, and the body they’re guarding is in the rear seat of the limo, waiting for one of them to open the door for him.
That was what happened, but from our point of view it was anticlimactic, because one of the bodyguards opened the rearmost curbside door, and the limo blocked our view of the man who got out of it. He was halfway to the Innisfree’s entrance by the time it drove off, and we caught a glimpse of him from the back, flanked by his two guardians, even as the liveried ostiary made a show of throwing open the door for him.
In no time at all he was through it, and it had swung shut behind him. So much for Orrin Vandenbrinck,
I said. Let’s get out of here. I need a drink.
2
By the time we got to the Bum Rap, someone was sitting at our usual table. Some two, I should say, the pair consisting of a man around forty with a tweed flat cap on his head and a woman who’d been badly served by her hairdresser, and whose expression showed that she was aware of this, and would not soon forgive or forget. And that’s all you have to know about them, because we never saw either of them again, and I only mention them because there they were, sitting at our table.
Not that it mattered, because one table at the Bum Rap is every bit as good as another. The only reason we sit at the same table each time is because it saves deciding where to sit. And if the table’s taken, as it sometimes is, we find another.
What’s important isn’t the table. It’s what’s on the jukebox, and what’s in one’s glass. Kris Kristofferson was on the jukebox, looking for his cleanest dirty shirt, and that’s always a plus, but I still needed a drink.
When we walked in, Maxine was delivering a glass of beer to a man on the far side of the room, but it didn’t take her long to get to our side. Thank God you’re here,
Carolyn said. I’ll have my usual scotch on the rocks, and Bernie’ll have the same, except he may want it with water. Or even soda.
Why don’t we ask him?
I suggested. If we do, we might find out he doesn’t want scotch at all.
I looked at the ceiling. It’s one of those old-fashioned stamped tin ceilings, and if you’re going to look at a ceiling you could do a lot worse, but I was just pretending to give the matter some consideration. A martini,
I pronounced. Very dry, very cold, and very soon.
Carolyn: Gin or vodka?
Gin,
Maxine said, because if it was vodka you’d say ‘Vodka martini.’ But nobody says ‘gin martini.’ That’d be whatchamacallit.
Huh?
Oh, you know. Like baby puppy or crooked politician. There’s a word for it.
Redundant,
I said.
There you go. Any particular kind of gin?
I shook my head and she went off to fetch it, and brought it in a stemmed glass with an olive for garnish. I figured straight up,
she said, because if you wanted it on the rocks you’d have said so.
Good thinking.
Same thing if you wanted a twist instead of an olive. Like gin and straight up and olive are the default mode, you know?
Exactly,
I said, and she went away beaming, having set our respective drinks before us, and we raised our respective glasses but didn’t bother clinking them together, or trying to think of something to toast. Carolyn had a swig of scotch and I hesitated for perhaps a hemisemidemiquaver of a moment, then took a long drink of cold gin. I don’t know if it had been shaken or stirred, and why on earth would anyone care?
Carolyn was holding her breath, watching me, and let it out when she saw me swallow.
I asked her what was wrong.
Wrong? We’re in the Bum Rap, winding down after a long day of washing dogs and selling books—
Mostly not selling books,
I said.
Selling, not selling, whatever. We’re here, and there’s booze in our glasses and we’ve just transferred some of it to our tummies, and what’s that line you like about malt and Milton Berle?
I had to unpack that one. Not Milton Berle,
I said. John Milton, the poet.
That’s who I meant, and what’s the line he wrote?
"He wrote Paradise Lost, I said,
among other things, but it was A. E. Housman who wrote the line you’re thinking of. ‘Malt can do more than Milton can / To Justify God’s Ways to man.’"
That’s it. And whatever malt can do, Bern, scotch can do it quicker.
She took another sip. I feel better already. How about you?
I feel fine,
I said, and drank some more of my martini. The last martini I could recall was one I’d had before lunch with Marty Gilmartin at his club, The Pretenders. That had been in the spring, I seemed to remember. Call it April, and now it was October, so that was