D’Agosta paused about ten feet from the man and pulled out his notebook. He flipped it open and wrote, Bullard. October 20. Then he waited.
He expected Bullard to look up and acknowledge him, but he didn’t. Instead, the man leaned farther over the green baize, his face in shadow, and tapped another ball. He chalked his cue with a swift twist of the wrist, came around the table, hit again. The table was like no pool table D’Agosta had ever seen: much larger, with smaller pockets and smaller balls in just two colors, red and white.
“Mr. Bullard?”
The man ignored him, moving to make yet another shot. His back was huge, his shoulders broad, and the silk fabric of his suit strained taut across them. All D’Agosta could clearly discern was the glowing stump of a huge cigar and two great knotted hands that were thrust into the circle of light, the veins on their backs as thick and rolled as blue earthworms. One of the hands sported two immense gold rings. The man tapped, moved around, tapped again.
Just as D’Agosta was about to say something, the man abruptly straightened, turned, pulled the cigar from his mouth, and said: “What do you want?”
D’Agosta didn’t answer right away. Instead, he took a minute to observe the man’s face. Quite possibly there wasn’t an uglier man on God’s earth. His head was huge and swarthy, and though the body it was perched on seemed as massive and thick as a grizzly’s, the head still appeared oversize. A lantern jaw, anchored by popping muscles, rose toward a pair of undulant earlobes. Centered between them were dry fleshy lips white against the dark skin: a particularly unpleasant combination. Above stuck out a thick, pitted nose. Massive, beetling brows jutted far over a pair of sunken eyes. From the bushy eyebrows above, a squat forehead led upward to a bald dome, its skin covered with freckles and liver spots. The impression the man gave was of enormous brute strength and self-assurance in both mind and body. When he moved, the blue silk that clad his frame rustled, and his movements were as heavy and deliberate as those of a well-muscled draft horse.
D’Agosta licked his lips. “I have a few questions for you.”
Bullard looked at him for a moment, then shifted the cigar back into his mouth, leaned over the table, and gave one of the balls a little tap.
“If it’s too distracting in here, we can always do this downtown.”
“Just a minute.”
D’Agosta checked his watch. He glanced back, saw the mincing attendant watching them from the far side of the room, his hands clasped in front of him as if he was an usher in church, smirking faintly.
Bullard now put his back to D’Agosta, leaning far over the table, the silk stretching and hiking up, exposing a crisp expanse of white cotton shirt and a pair of red suspenders. Another faint tap, more rustling silk.
“Bullard, your minute’s up.”
Bullard jerked his cue up, whisked some chalk on the tip, bent back down. The motherfucker was actually going to take a few more shots.
“You’re pissing me off, you know that?”
Bullard took the shot, rounded the table for another. “Then maybe what you need is a course in anger management.” He eased the cue back and forth and then, with the softest little push, sent the ball all of three inches so that it kissed another.
That did it. “Bullard, one more shot and I’m cuffing you and leading you out the front door, past the porter and anyone else who happens to come by. I’m going to march you down along Central Park South to Columbus Circle where I parked my squad car. And then I’m going to radio for backup and keep you standing at the curb at Columbus Circle, hands cuffed behind your back, through the ass end of a Saturday afternoon, until that backup arrives.”
Bullard’s hand paused on the cue stick. Then he straightened up, jaw muscles tight. He slipped his hand into his suit coat and began punching a call on his cell. “I think I’ll just tell the mayor how one of his finest has just threatened me with four-letter expletives.”
“You do that. In case you hadn’t noticed, I’m Southampton P.D. and could give a flying fuck about your mayor.”
Bullard raised the phone to his ear and inserted the cigar in his mouth. “Then you’re out of your jurisdiction, and threatening me with arrest is misrepresentation.”
“I’m an assigned liaison with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Southern District of Manhattan Field Office.” D’Agosta opened his wallet, pulled out one of the cards Pendergast had given him, tossed it onto the pool table. “If you want to complain to the supervisor, he’s Special Agent Carlton and his number’s right there.”
That finally penetrated. Bullard slowly and deliberately snapped the phone shut. Then he dropped the cigar into a sand-filled spittoon in the corner, where it continued to smoke. “All right. You’ve managed to attract my attention.”