Her eyes got round. “So
“That’s correct.”
She gestured to the young fellow standing next to her. He was wearing a blue nylon duster, a red bowtie, and a thrilled look. “This is Brant. He helped that…that…
“Full name?” Agent Granger asked the kid in the blue duster. He opened his notebook.
The stockboy’s adam’s apple went up and down like a monkey on a stick. “Brant Romano. Sir. That guy was driving a Ford.” He named the year with what Sterling deemed to be a high degree of confidence. “Only it wasn’t blue, like it says in the paper. It was green.”
Sterling turned to Moldow. “What did this man buy, ma’am?”
She actually laughed a little. “My laws, what
“Do you have a complete list?” Granger asked.
“Of course. I never suspected he was up to something awful. He actually seemed like a nice enough man, although that dented place in his forehead…that
Granger nodded sympathetically.
“And he didn’t seem terribly bright. But bright enough to fool me, I guess. He said he was buying things for a little nephew, and silly Nan believed him.”
“And he was big.”
“My laws, a
“How big?”
She shrugged. “I’m five-feet-four, and I only came up to his
“You probably won’t believe this,” said Brant the stockboy, “but I thought he had to be, like, six-seven. Maybe even six-eight.”
Sterling prepared to ask a final question. He had saved it for last because he was almost sure it would lead to a dead end.
“Mrs. Moldow, how did this man pay for his purchases?”
“Cash,” she said promptly.
“I see.” He looked at Granger. It was the answer they had expected.
“You should have
“Spent most of it,” Brant said. “He tipped me five, but by then the cupboard was mostly, like, bare.”
Sterling ignored this. “And since it was a cash purchase, you don’t have any record of the man’s name.”
“No. No record. Hager’s will get around to putting in security cameras in a few years, I suppose —”
“Centuries,” said Brant. “This place is, like, cheap to the max.”
“Well, then,” Sterling said, flipping his notebook closed, “we’ll be going. But I want to give you my card in case you think of anyth —”
“I
They both turned back to her.
“When he opened his wallet to take out that big stack of money, I saw his driver’s license. I remember the name partly because that kind of sale is a once-in-a-lifetime thing, but mostly because it was such a…a
“What was the name?” Sterling asked.
“Clayton Blaisdell. In fact, I think it was Clayton Blaisdell,
By five-thirty that evening, they had their man tabbed. Clayton Blaisdell, Jr., aka Blaze, had been popped twice, once for assault and battery against the headmaster of the state home where the kid was living — a place called Hetton House — and once more, years later, for bunco and fraud. A suspected accomplice, George Thomas Rackley, aka Rasp, had gotten off because Blaze wouldn’t testify against him.
According to police files, Blaisdell and Rackley had been a team for at least eight years before Blaisdell’s fall on the bunco rap, which had been a religious con just a little too complex for the big boy’s limited mental talents. At South Portland Correctional, he had taken an IQ test and scored low enough to be placed in a category called “borderline restricted.” In the margin, someone had written, in big red letters: RETARDED.
Sterling found the details of the con itself quite amusing. In the gag, there was a big man in a wheelchair (Blaisdell) and a little guy pushing him who introduced himself to marks as the Rev. Gary Crowell (almost certainly Rackley). The Rev. Gary (as he styled himself) claimed to be raising money for a revivalist swing through Japan. If the marks — mostly old ladies with a little stashed in the bank — proved hard to convince, the Rev. Gary performed a miracle. He caused the big guy in the wheelchair to walk again, through the power of Jesus.
The circumstances of the arrest were even more amusing. An octogenarian named Arlene Merrill got suspicious and called the police while the Rev. Gary and his “assistant” were in the living room. Then she walked back to the living room to talk to them until the police arrived.
The Rev. Gary smelled it and took off. Blaisdell stayed. In his report, the arresting officer wrote, “