Page 91 of The House of Wolves
“I am who I am.”
He stood up then.
“You ready to do this?”
“As ready as I ever could be. Not like it was something I studied at Stanford.”
We got into his Porsche and made the short ride across town to the studio.
She was waiting for us outside.
“Hi,” she said, smiling and extending her hand to me. “I’m Oprah.”
Sixty-Four
CANTOR COULDN’T BELIEVE ITwhen Jenny called to tell him where she was and who she was with and what she was about to do in Montecito.
“You never felt the urge to give me a heads-up that this might happen?” Cantor said.
By now they were talking on the phone most nights. Even though the closest they’d come to being a real couple was when they’d kissed in front of his house the night they’d had dinner at Fogata, before she got into her car and drove off.
“I didn’t believe this was going to happen until it was actually happening,” Jenny said.
“Now the Wolfs have really turned into a royal family,” Cantor said.
“Except ours is even more messed up than theirs is,” she said, and told him she would call when the interview was, mercifully, over.
He went back to his notes then, and his notebooks, spread out in front of him on the kitchen table. Two murders. Father and son. Looking for common denominatorsotherthan the two of them being related. One man, he was certain, had been thrown over the side of a boat. The other man, Cantor was even more certain, had been thrown out the open window of a suite, his own, at Wolves Stadium as part of a staged event.
Ben Cantor did not believe in coincidence. No good detective did. Two members of the family, what he’d just called the royal family of football in San Francisco, dying like this, this close together—well, what were the odds ofthat,Detective Cantor?
He’d told Jenny he’d find out what happened to her brother. But Cantor never lost sight of the fact that he’d come into this because of her father, who, he knew, had plenty of enemies. All guys like Joe Wolf made enemies. Cantor was still trying to figure out if the most dangerous enemies of all were in Wolf’s own family.
He opened the notebook closest to him. Found his notes on a conversation—a bombshell one at that—he’d had just that afternoon with a guy named Patrick Tate, one of Thomas Wolf’s childhood friends, who’d been with him in the suite the night Thomas died. An old drinking and drugging buddy who told Cantor that he was another one who’d finally taken what he called “the cure.”
Tate had talked about how geeked up Thomas had been that night, more antic than he’d been since rehab, but Tate had just written it off to the Wolves coming back and winning the game the way they had.
Before they’d finished the interview, Tate had said he wanted to ask Cantor a question.
“You find out who offed Joe yet?”
Cantor told him he was still working on it.
“Thomas hated himsomuch,” Tate said. “You know that, right? It doesn’t make any difference to either one of them now, obviously, but he told me one time, back when we were in high school, that he fantasized about throwing his father off the Golden Gate Bridge.”
“The father must have treated him pretty badly,” Cantor said.
“The way he treated everybody, far as I could ever tell,” Tate said. “I figured Thomas just let all that anger go finally. Part of his getting the cure. The ‘let go and let God’ thing from the program. But he always used to say that he wished the world knew what a criminal his father was.”
“Kindly old Joe Wolf?” Cantor said.
“Thomas even told me one night when we were partying pretty hard that he thought his father was the one capable of murder if it meant finally getting full control of the team,” Tate said. “You know, getting the other half from the original Tommy Wolf. Thomas’s uncle.”
“He died in a car accident,” Cantor said.
“Thomas never mentioned it again,” Tate said. “Hey, it was probably the vodka talking that night. But he sure didn’t seem convinced it had been an accident.”
Sixty-Five
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