BOOKS BY JEFFERY DEAVER
The Devil's Teardrop
The Coffin
Dancer
The Bone Collector
A Maiden's Grave
Praying for Sleep
The Lesson
of Her Death
Mistress of Justice
Hard News
Death of a Blue Movie Star
Manhattan Is My Beat
Bloody River Blues
Shallow Graves
JEFFERY
DEAVER
WRITING AS WILLIAM JEFFERIES
BLOODY
RIVER BLUES
For
Monica Derham
"All you need for a movie is a
gun and a girl."
—JEAN-LUC
GODARD
ONE
All he wanted was a case of beer.
And it looked like he
was going to have to get it himself.
The way Stile explained it, "I
can't hardly get a case of Labatts on the back of a Yamaha."
"That's okay," Pellam said into
the cellular phone.
"You want a six-pack, I can
handle that. But the rack's a little loose. Which I guess I owe you.
The rack, I mean. Sorry."
The motorcycle was the film
company's but had been issued to Pellam, who had in turn loaned it to
Stile. Stile was a stuntman. Pellam chose not to speculate on what he
had been doing when the rack got broken.
"That's okay," Pellam said again.
"I'll pick up a case."
He hung up the phone. He got his
brown bomber jacket from the front closet of the Winnebago, trying to
remember where
he'd seen the discount beverage store. The Riverfront
Deli was not far away but the date of his next expense check was and
Pellam did not feel inclined to pay $26.50 for a case even if it had
been imported all the way from Canada.
He stepped into the kitchenette
of the camper, stirred the
chili and put the
cornbread in the small oven to heat. He had thought about cooking
something else for a change. Nobody seemed to notice that whenever
Pellam hosted the poker game he made chili. Maybe he would serve it on
hot dogs, maybe on rice, but it was always chili. And oyster crackers.
He didn't know how
to cook much else.
He thought about doing without
the beer, calling back Stile and saying, yeah, just bring a six-pack.
But he did the calculation and decided they needed a whole case. There
would be five of them playing for six hours and that meant even a case
would
be stretched pretty thin. He would have to break out the mezcal
and Wild Turkey as it was.
Pellam stepped outside, locked
the camper door and walked along the road paralleling the gray plane of
the Missouri River.
It was just after dark, an autumn weekday, and by
rights ought to be rush hour. But the road dipped and rose away from
him and it was deserted of traffic. He zipped his jacket tight. Pellam
was tall and thin. Tonight he wore jeans and a work shirt that had been
black and was now mottled gray. His cowboy boots sounded in loud,
scraping taps on the wet asphalt. He wished he had worn his Lakers cap
or his Stetson; a cold wind, salty-fishy smelling, streamed off the
river. His eyes stung, his ears ached.
He walked quickly. He was worried
that Danny—the scriptwriter of the movie they were now shooting— would
show up early. Pellam had recently left a ten-pound catfish in Danny's
hotel room bathtub and the writer had threatened to weld the Winnebago
door shut in retaliation.
The fourth of the poker players
was a grip from San Diego
who looked just like the
merchant marine he had once been, complete with tattoo. The fifth was a
lawyer in St. Louis, a hawkish man with jowls. The film company's L.A.
office had hired him to negotiate property and talent contracts with
the locals. He talked nonstop about Washington politics as if he had
run for office and been defeated because he was the only honest
candidate in the race. His chatter was a pain but he was a hell of a
good man to play poker with. He bet big and lost amiably.
Hands in pockets, Pellam turned
down Adams Street, away from the river, studying the spooky, abandoned
redbrick Maddox Ironworks building.
Thinking, its damp, it may rain.
Thinking, would the filming in
this damn town go much over schedule?
Would the chili burn, had he
turned it down?
Thinking about a case of beer.
"All right, Gaudia is walking
down Third, okay? He works most of the time till six or six-thirty but
tonight he's going for drinks with some girl I don't know who she is."
Philip Lombro asked Ralph Bales,
"Why is he in Maddox?"
"That's what I'm saying. He's
going to the Jolly Rogue for drinks. You know it? Then he's going to
Callaghan's for the steak."
As he listened, Philip Lombro
dipped his head and touched his cheek with two fingers formed into a V.
He had a long face, tanned. The color, though, didn't turn Lombro
bronze; he was more silvery, like platinum, which matched his mane of
white hair, carefully sprayed
into place. He said,
"What about Gaudia's bodyguard?"
"He won't be coming. Gaudia
thinks Maddox is safe. Okay, then he's got a reservation at
seven-thirty. It's a five-minute walk—I timed it—and they'll leave at
quarter after."
Ralph Bales was sitting forward
on the front seat of the navy-blue Lincoln as he spoke to Lombro. Ralph
Bales was thirty-nine, muscular, hairy everywhere but on the head. His
face was disproportionately thick, as if he were wearing a latex
special-effects mask. He was not an ugly man but seen straight on his
face, because of the fat, seemed moonlike. Tonight he wore a
black-and-red striped rugby shirt, blue jeans and a leather jacket.
"He's on Third, okay? There's an alleyway there, going west. It's real
dark. Stevie'll be there, doing kind of a homeless number."
"Homeless? They don't have
homeless in Maddox."
"Well, a bum. They've got bums in
Maddox," Ralph Bales said.
"Okay."
"He's got a little Beretta, a
.22. Doesn't even need a suppressor. I've got the Ruger. Stevie calls
him, he stops and turns. Stevie does him, up close. I'm behind, just in
case. Bang, we're in Stevie's car, over the river, then we're lost."
"I'll be in front of the alley
then," Lombro said. "On Third."
Ralph Bales didn't say anything
for a moment but kept his eyes on Lombro. What he saw was this: a hook
nose, kind eyes, trim suit, paisley tie ... It was odd but you couldn't
see more than that. You thought you could peg him easily as if
the silver hair, the tasseled oxblood loafers polished spit-shine, and
the battered Rolex were going to explain everything about Philip
Lombro. But no, those were all you could come up with. The parts and
the parts alone. Like a People magazine photo.
Lombro, who was calmly looking
back into Ralph Bales's eyes, said, "Yes? Do you have a problem with
that?'
Ralph Bales decided he could win
the staring contest if he wanted to and began to examine the swirl of
hair on the back of his own hand. "Okay, I don't think it's such a good
idea, you being there. But I told you that already."
"Yes, you did."
"Okay, I still don't think it's a
good idea."
"I want to see him die."
"You'll see pictures. The Post-Dispatch'll
have pictures. The Reporter'll have pictures. In
color."
"I'll be there from
seven-fifteen."
Ralph Bales was drumming his
fingers on the leather seat of the Lincoln. "It's my ass, too."
Lombro looked at his watch. The
crystal was chipped and yellowed. Six-fifty. "I can find somebody else
to do the job."
Ralph Bales waited a moment.
"That won't be necessary. You want to be there, that's your business."
"Yes, it is my business."
Without response Ralph Bales
swung the car door open.
That's when it happened.
Sonofabitch...
A thud, the sound of glass on
glass, a couple of muted pops. Ralph Bales saw the man—a thin guy in a
brown leather jacket—standing there, looking down, a sour smile on his
face, a smile that
said, I knew
something like this was going to happen. Foamy
beer chugged out of the bottom of the cardboard case, which rested on
its end on the sidewalk.
The man looked at Ralph Bales,
then past him into the car. Ralph Bales slammed the door and walked
away.
The man with the rueful grin
said, "Hey, my beer..."
Ralph Bales ignored him and
continued along Adams.
"Hey, my beer!"
Ralph Bales ignored him.
The man was stepping toward him.
"I'm talking to you. Hey!"
Ralph Bales said, "Fuck you," and
turned the corner.
The tall man stood staring after
him for a moment, his mouth twisted and indignant, then bent down and
looked into the window of the Lincoln. He cupped his hands. He tapped
on the window. "Hey, your buddy. .. Hey . . ." He rapped again. Lombro
put the car in gear. It pulled away quickly. The man jumped back. He
watched the Lincoln vanish. He knelt down to his wounded carton, which
was pumping beer into the gutter like a leaky fire hydrant.
*
* *
Maddox Police Department
Patrolman First Class Donald Buffett watched the last of the beer
trickle into the street, thinking that if that had happened in the
Cabrini projects on the west side of town you'd have a dozen guys
lapping it out of the gutter
or knifing each other over the unbroken
bottles.
Buffett leaned against a brick
wall and watched the guy—Buffett thought he looked like a cowboy—open
up the case and salvage what he could, like a kid picking through his toys. The cowboy
stood up and counted what looked to be maybe
twelve, fifteen surviving
bottles. The cardboard box was soaked and disintegrating.
Buffett had expected him to take
a swing at the man who stepped out of the Lincoln. There was a time,
before the service, before the academy, when going for skin was what
Buffett himself would have done. He watched the cowboy lining up all
the good bottles in the shadow of a Neuman furniture warehouse, hiding
them. He must have been planning to go back to
the store. He dumped the
box in the trash and wiped his hands on his pants.
Buffett pushed off from the wall
and walked across the street.
"Evening, sir," he said.
The cowboy looked up, shaking his
head. He said, "You see that? You believe it?"
Buffett said, "I'll keep an eye
on them, you want to get a bag or something."
"Yeah?"
"Sure."
"Thanks." He disappeared down the
empty street.
Ten minutes later, the cowboy
returned, carrying a plastic shopping bag, which held two six-packs. He
also carried a small paper bag, which he handed to Buffett.
"I'd offer you a Labatts but they
probably got rules about you being on duty. So it's a coffee and
doughnut. A couple sugars
in the bag."
"Thank you, sir," Buffett said
formally, feeling embarrassed and wondering why he did. "Didn't have
to."
The cowboy started to pick up the
beers and loaded them in the shopping bag. Buffet did not offer to
help. Finally the
cowboy stood up and said, "John Pellam."
"Donnie Buffett."
They nodded and didn't shake
hands.
Buffett lifted the coffee into
the air, like a toast, and walked off, listening to beer bottles clink
as the man headed toward the river.
At seven-twenty that evening,
Vincent Gaudia looked down the low-cut white dress of his blond
companion and told her,
"It's time to eat."
"What did you have in mind?" she
asked breathily, smiling tiny crow's-feet into the makeup that was laid
on a few microns
too deep.
Gaudia was addicted to women like
this. Although he viewed them as a commodity he tried not to be
condescending. Some
of his dates were very intelligent, some were
spiritual, some spent many hours volunteering for good causes. And
though he
did not pursue them for their minds or souls or consciences
he listened avidly as they spoke about their interests and he did
so
with genuine curiosity.
On the other hand, what he wanted
most from this girl was to take her to his co-op, where he would tell
her to shut the hell
up about spirit guides and climb onto her hands
and knees, then lift her garter belt with his hands and tug on it like
reins. He now eased a strategically placed elbow against her breasts
and said, "For the moment, I'm talking about dinner."
She giggled.
They left the Jolly Rogue then
crossed River Road and walked up Third Street, toward downtown Maddox,
past
foreboding warehouses, storefronts filled with blotched and
decaying used furniture, groundfloor offices, dingy coffee
shops. The woman squeezed closer to him against the cold. The chill air
reminded Gaudia of his boyhood in Cape Girardeau, when
he would walk
home from school shuffling leaves in front of his saddle shoes, working
on a toffee apple or Halloween candy. He had pulled some crazy stunts
at Halloween, and he could not smell cold fall air without being
stirred by good memories. Gaudia asked, "What'd you do on Halloween?
When you were a kid?"
She blinked then concentrated on
her answer. "Well, we had a lot of fun, you know. I used to dress up
mostly like
princesses and things like that. I was a witch one year."
"A witch? No way. You couldn't be
one if you tried."
"Sweetheart... And then we'd go
for tons of candy. I mean, like tons. I liked Babe Ruths, no, ha ha, Baby
Ruths best, and
what I'd do sometimes is find a house that was
giving them out and keep going back there. One Halloween I got twelve
Baby Ruths. I had to be careful. I had a lot of zits when I was a kid."
"Kids don't go much anymore. It's
dangerous. Did you hear about that guy who put needles in apples?"
"I never liked apples. I only
liked candy bars."
"Baby Ruths," Gaudia remembered.
"Where're we going? This is a
creepy neighborhood."
"This is a creepy town. But it's
got the best steak house in the state outside of Kansas City.
Callaghan's. You like steak?"
"Yeah, I like steak. I like surf
and turf." She added demurely, "But it's expensive."
"I think they've got surf and
turf there. You want surf and turf, order it. What you want, you can
have."
Ralph Bales stood on the street
corner, in the alcove of Missouri National Bank, watching the couple
stroll under a dim streetlight, three of the four bulbs burnt out. The
girl was glued on to his arm, which probably was more a plus than
anything, because if Gaudia was carrying a weapon she'd tie up his
shooting hand.
Philip Lombro's dark Lincoln Town
Car, boxy as an aircraft carrier, exhaust purring, sat across the
street. Ralph Bales
studied the perfect bodywork, the immaculate
chrome. Then he looked at the silhouette of Lombro behind the wheel.
That
man was crazy. Ralph Bales could not understand his wanting to
watch it— watching the act of the shooting itself. He knew some guys
who got off on doing people, got off on it in some scary sex way. He
sensed, though, that this was something Lombro felt he had to
do, not something he wanted to do.
A voice fluttered over the cool
air—Stevie Flom, Ralph Bales's partner, was doing his schizoid homeless
routine. "There's
what it is, I mean, there's it! I read the
papers ... I read the papers I read them forget what you read forget
what you read..."
Then Ralph Bales thought he
heard Stevie pull the slide on the Beretta though that might have been
his imagination; at
moments like this you heard noises, you saw things
that were otherwise silent or invisible. His nerves shook like a
dragster waiting for the green light. He wished he didn't get so
nervous.
Tapping, leather soles on
concrete. The sound seemed very loud. Tapping and scuffing along the
wet, deserted sidewalk.
Giggling.
Tapping.
Light glinted off Gaudia's feet.
Ralph Bales knew Gaudias reputation for fashion and figured he would be
wearing five-hundred-dollar shoes. Ralph Baless shoes were stamped
"Man-made uppers" and the men who had made those uppers had been
Taiwanese.
The footsteps, twenty feet away.
The murmur of the Lincoln's
exhaust.
The beating of Ralph Baless heart.
Stevie talking like a crazy
drunk. Arguing with himself.
The blonde giggling.
Then Stevie said, "A quarter,
mister. Please?"
And son of a bitch, if Gaudia
wasn't stopping and stepping forward with a bill.
Ralph Bales started across the
street, holding the Ruger, a huge gun, barrel-heavy in his hand. Then:
the woman's shrill scream and a swing of motion, a blur, as Gaudia
swung her around as a shield putting her between him and Stevie's. One
pop, then two. The blonde slumped.
Gaudia was running. Fast. Getting
away.
Christonthecross. . .
Ralph Bales lifted the heavy gun
and fired twice. He hit Gaudia at least once. He thought it was in the
lower neck. The man stumbled onto the sidewalk, lifted a hand briefly,
then lay still.
Lombro's Lincoln started away,
accelerating with a sharp, gassy roar.
Silence for a moment.
Ralph Bales took a step toward
Gaudia.
"Freeze!"
The scream came from only five
feet away. Bales almost vomited in shock and the way his heart surged
he wondered if he was having a heart attack.
"I mean you, mister!"
Ralph Bales's hand lowered, the
gun pointed down. His breath flowed in and out in staccato bursts. He
swallowed.
"Drop the weapon!" The voice
crackled with a barely controlled hysteria.
"I'm dropping it." Ralph Bales
did. He squinted as the gun fell. It didn't go off.
"Lie down on the ground!" The cop
was crouching, holding his gun aimed straight at Ralph Bales's head.
"Okay!" Ralph Bales said. "Don't
do anything. I'm lying down."
"Now!"
"I'm doing it now! I'm lying down
now!" Ralph Bales got on his knees then lay forward on his stomach. He
smelled grease and dog piss.
The cop circled around him,
lacking the Ruger away and talking into his walkie-talkie. "This's
Buffett. I'm in downtown Maddox, I've got a 10-13. Shots fired and two
down. Need an ambulance and backup at—"
The Maddox police and fire
central radio dispatcher did not find out exactly where Donnie Buffett
needed the backup and ambulance—at least not at that moment. The cop's
message ended abruptly when Stevie Flom stepped out of the alleyway
and
emptied the clip of the Beretta into his back.
Buffett grunted, dropped to his
knees, and tried to reach behind him. He fell forward.
Ralph Bales climbed to his feet,
picked up the Ruger. He walked over to the unconscious cop and pointed
the big gun at his head. He cocked it.
Slowly the heavy blue muzzle
nestled itself in the cop's damp hair. Ralph Bales covered his eyes
with his left hand. His heart beat eight
times. His hand tensed. It relaxed. He stepped back and turned away
from the cop, settling on one head shot for Gaudia and one for the
blonde.
Then, as if they were a couple of
basketball fans eager for some beers after the game, Ralph Bales and
Stevie Flom walked briskly to a stolen black Trans Am with a sporty red
racing stripe on the side. Stevie fired up the engine. Ralph Bales sat
down in the comfortable bucket seat. He lifted his blunt index finger
to his upper lip and smelled sour gunpowder and primer smoke. As they
drove slowly to the river Ralph Bales watched the aura of lights rising
up from St. Louis, to the south, thinking that all he would have to do
now was take care of the witness—the guy with the beer—and that would
be that.
TWO
Yellow light fading in and
out, going to black, black to yellow, motion, shouting, more blackness,
deep
deep pain, can't breathe can't swallow . . . The fragments of
yellow light. There they go, slipping away . . .
Don't leave, don't
leave me ...
Donnie Buffett focused for a
moment on Penny's terrified face. Pale and framed with dark hair. The
sight of her terror
terrified him. He reached for her
hand. He passed out.
When he opened his eyes again his
wife was gone and the room was dark He had never been so exhausted.
Or so thirsty.
After a few minutes he began to
understand that he had been shot. And the instant he thought that, he
forgot everything—Penny, the sickening loose feelings in his back and
guts, his thirst—and he concentrated on trying to remember something.
One word. A short word. The one word that gave purpose to his entire
life.
The Word. What is the Word? He
slipped back into, unconsciousness. When he woke again he saw a
Filipino nurse.
"Water," he whispered.
"Rinse and spit," she said.
"Thirsty."
"Rinse and spit." She squirted
water into his mouth from a plastic bottle. "Don't swallow."
He swallowed. He vomited.
The nurse sighed loudly and
cleaned him.
"I can't feel my legs. Did they
cut my legs off?"
"No. You're tired."
"Oh."
The Word. What the hell was
it? Please, dear Mother of our Lord, let me remember ...
He fell asleep trying to remember
the Word and when he awoke a short time later he was still trying to
remember it. Sitting across from him were two men in rumpled suits.
When he looked at them he smiled.
"Hey, he's smiling." The man who
said this was blond and square-jawed.
'Yo, Donnie," the other man said,
"I won't ask how you're doing, 'cause your answers gonna be: what a
dumb-ass question—
I feel like shit." He was dark-complected, with
short, slick hair. He looked at Buffett with real affection. He gripped
Buffett's hand warmly.
"They got me from behind. There
was another one behind me."
Bob Gianno, the dark-complected
detective, continued, "The mayor's coming down to see you. He wants to
wish you luck."
Luck? Why do I need luck? I've
been lucky, I don't need luck. What I need is to get out of
this bed.
Buffett's lips were rising and
falling.
"What's that?" Richard Hagedorn,
the blond detective, leaned forward.
"Why can't I ..." He shook his
head and said indignantly, "I had my body armor on."
"He got you below it. That's what
they said at the press conference."
"Oh." Press conference? There
was a press conference about me?
Gianno said, "We met your wife,
Donnie. She's really pretty."
Buffett nodded blankly.
The detective continued, "Guess
you know why we're here. What can you tell us about the hit?"
The periphery faded fast, dissolving again into a million black dots. Yellow light, white light. His organs seemed to shift. Floating. He felt deep pain that was all the more terrifying because it did not seem to hurt. He tried to remember the word.
The Word. The WORD. The
answer lies in
the Word.
"I. .." His voice ended in a
rasp. He inhaled hard.
"Maybe we should—" Hagedorn began
but Buffett wiped sweat away from his face with the blanket and said,
"All I saw
was one perp. Cauc, balding, dark hair. Back was to me, I
didn't make the face. Thirty-five maybe." A pause. The air hissed
in
over the dry tissue of his mouth and burned like alcohol on a cut.
"Make him five ten, eleven. Weighed one ninety.
Wearing a dark jacket,
shirt, jeans, I think. I don't remember. Had a big gun."
"A .44."
"Forty-four," Buffett said
slowly. 'The other one, the one shot me ..."
"You make him at all?"
Buffett shook his head no. Then
asked, "Who was the hit?"
"Vince Gaudia and some squeeze."
"Man," Buffett whispered
reverently. "Gaudia." He closed his eyes and shook his head.
"Peterson's gonna be pissing red."
Hagedorn said, "Hell with
Peterson. We're gonna get the scumbag that did you, Donnie."
Buffett said, "I didn't see the
third one, either."
"Third one?" Hagedorn asked. He
and Gianno exchanged glances.
'The guy in the Lincoln."
"What Lincoln?" Gianno was taking
notes.
"Dark Lincoln. It was parked
across the street. I didn't get tag numbers or make." Buffett coughed.
"I want some water."
Hagedorn went into the John and
got a glass.
He handed it to Buffett, who
hesitated then said, "I might puke."
Gianno said, "I seen worse than
cops barfing."
Buffett didn't puke, though, and
he handed the empty glass back to Hagedorn with triumph. "Best thing I
ever had in my mouth."
The men laughed; there was no
need to say aloud any of the three punch lines that materialized
simultaneously in three
different minds.
Gianno asked, 'The guy in the
Lincoln. Was he getaway?"
"No, he drove off by himself.
Maybe it was somebody who had to ID the hit."
"Naw," Gianno said, "everybody
knows what Gaudia looks like. He's a cover boy. Well, looked like."
Buffett said, 'Well, maybe it was
the guy who hired baldy."
"Some big fish? I wonder. Donnie,
you got any idea who was inside?"
"No, but I saw a guy who did."
"There's a witness?"
Buffett told them about the beer
incident. 'This guy was talking to the driver, saying something."
"Fantastic." Hagedorn smiled.
Gianno turned to a blank page in
his notebook. "What's he look like?"
Buffett was about to give them a
description, and that's what did it. The Word came back to him. The
magic Word.
Buffett beamed. He whispered,
"Pellam."
'Tell him?" Gianno asked and
looked at Hagedorn with a frown.
"His name's Pellam." The smile on
Buffett's face glistened and grew.
"You got his name?" Gianno nodded
enthusiastically. "He live around there?"
"Dunno." Buffett shrugged, which
sent a stab of pain through his neck. He remained very still for a
moment, frozen as the
pain slowly receded.
"We'll find him," Gianno said
reverently.
The smile slipped off Buffett s
face as he tried to shift his leg and found he was unable to. The
sheet, he guessed, was rucked
in too tightly. He absently pulled at the
bedclothes and smacked his thigh. "Gotta get the circulation going.
I've been on my
butt too long."
"We're gonna go find this guy,
Donnie." Gianno slapped his notebook shut.
"One thing," Buffett said, "you
know witnesses. When it's a hit like this? He's gonna get amnesia. Bet
you any money."
Gianno snorted. "Oh, he'll talk,
Donnie. Don't you worry about that."
*
* *
Apparently some trouble with the
chili.
The beer and whiskey were gone
completely, but the whole pot of chili was pretty
much untouched.
Danny and Stile remained behind
in the camper after the other poker players had left and they helped
Pellam clean up. Danny, with his thick nose, twenty-nine-year-olds
smooth complexion, and shoulder-length black hair, resembled a Navajo
warrior.
"What'd you do to the chili?"
Danny said to Pellam, crinkling his nose, then emptied some ashtrays
into a trash bag. Although
he often said blunt things to people they
rarely took offense.
The chili?
Stile slipped Labatt's bottles
into another bag and twirled his bushy mustache. Although Pellam was
descended—so the family story went—from a real gun-slinger, Pellam
thought Stile was a dead ringer for the ancestor in question, Wild Bill
Hickok. Stile was lanky and had a droopy Vietnam vet mustache the shade
of his dark blond hair. He reflected, "I remember this western I worked
on one time ... I forget whose. I was falling off a cliff. I think it
was an eighty-foot cliff . . . and the compressor broke, so they
couldn't inflate the air bag as much as the unit director wanted to."
"Hm," Pellam muttered, and
stepped into the kitchenette to look at the chili. He'd eaten two
bowls, piled with onions and slices of American cheese. Seemed okay to
him.
"No," Stile reflected. "It was a
hundred-and-thirty-foot cliff."
Bored again, Danny
said, "Got the
point." An Oscar-nominated scriptwriter, Danny sat in deluxe hotel
suites in front of an
NEC laptop computer and wrote scenes that sent people like Stile off
hundred-and-thirty-foot cliffs; he was not impressed.
Stile: "Man, there we were in the
middle of this desert, in a very Native American frame of mind, you
know what I'm saying?"
What's wrong with the chili?
Pellam tried another spoonful.
Yup, burned. It reminded him of Scotch, the smokiness. But there wasn't
anything wrong with it. It could have been intended, as if he
had tried a new recipe. If it tasted like mesquite, for instance,
nobody would have said anything, except maybe "Damn good chili, Pellam."
He piled dishes in the tiny sink,
rinsed some of them in the dribble of the water from the faucet.
"Anyway, when I landed I went
down so far, my belt loops made an impression in the mud beneath the
bag."
"Uh. That happens sometimes,"
Danny said lethargically.
To air out the camper Pellam
opened the front door. Chili smoke was only part of it. The lawyer from
St. Louis had been lighting one cigarette after another. Pellam had
noticed that midwesterners did not seem to know this habit was bad for
you.
Danny and Stile argued about who
had the riskier job—Stile falling off high cliffs or Danny having to
pitch his stories to producers and development people. Stile said that
was an old joke, and tried to convince Danny to go base-jumping with
him sometime.
"To Live and Die in L.A.," Stile
whispered reverently. "Awesome scene. The jump from the bridge."
Pellam, still at the front door,
squinted. He saw a large, boxy shadow in the grass not far from where
the camper was parked. What was it? He squinted, which didn't help. He remembered seeing
that area in the daylight—it was a field full of crabgrass and weeds.
What would be sitting in the middle of a lousy field this time of
night? Funny, the shadow looked just like . .. The shadow began to
murmur.
... a car.
It accelerated fast, spraying
dirt and stones, nosing quickly out of the grass, grinding the
undercarriage as it went over the
sharp drop to the highway.
Probably lovers, Pellam thought.
Necking. He could not remember the last time he necked. Did people
still do it? Probably
in the Midwest they did. Pellam lived in Los
Angeles and nobody he'd ever dated there necked.
It was only when he turned back
to the camper that he realized that the car had not turned on its
lights until it was far down River Road; because of this, the license
plate was not illuminated until it was too far away to be read. Odd...
"Wish I'd seen it," Danny said
emphatically.
"Was just a car," Pellam
muttered, glancing toward the disappearing taillights.
The other two stared at him.
"I meant," Danny said, "the base
jump off that bridge."
"Oh."
Danny thanked Pellam for the game
and the company but not the chili. After he left, Stile stepped into
the kitchenette and
began doing the dishes.
"You don't have to."
"Not a problem."
He washed everything but the
chili pot.
"Man, black-bottom chili. You're
on your own there, buddy."
"I got diverted on my way back
from the store."
Stile asked, "How long you in
this hellhole of a town for?"
"Till shootings done. Tony's
reshooting every other scene."
"He does that, yup. Well, if
we're here next week, come over to the Quality Inn for a game. I've got
a hotplate there and I'll whip up Philly cheese steaks. With onions. By
the by, I'm getting the Hertz tomorrow. You can have your bike back
then."
Stile had been in town three
weeks and had already burned out the transmission of his rental car.
Rental companies should
ask for occupation and not rent their vehicles
to stuntmen.
Pellam walked him to the door.
"When you got here, d'you see a car parked over there?"
"Where? There? That's just a mess
of weeds, Pellam. Why'd anybody park there?"
Stile stepped outside, inhaled
the air. He whistled a Stevie Wonder tune through his gunslinger
mustache as he walked in
long strides to the battered Yamaha with the
rack dangling precariously from the back fender.
*
* *
"Was it him?"
"I couldn't tell."
"He get a look at the car?"
"If I couldn't tell it was him
how could I tell if he got a look at the car? And if you cracked that
transmission case, boy, you're paying for it. You hear me?" Ralph Bales
was speaking to Stevie Flom. They had abandoned the Pontiac and were
in Ralph Bales's Cadillac, Stevie driving.
Flom was twenty-five years old.
He was north Italian blond and had gorgeous muscles and baby-smooth
skin. His round face had never once been disfigured by a pimple. He had
slept with 338 women. He was a cargo handler on the riverfront though
he took a lot of sick days and for real money he ran numbers and did
odd jobs for men who had the sort of odd jobs few people were willing
to do. He was married and had three girlfriends. He made about sixty
thousand a year and lost about
thirty thousand of it in Reno and at
poker games in East St. Louis and Memphis.
"Drive," Ralph Bales instructed,
looking back at the camper. "It's like he was looking at us."
"Well, was he?"
"What?"
"Looking at us?"
"Just drive."
The night was cloudless. Off to
their left the big plain of the Missouri River was moving slowly
southeastward. The same water that had looked so muddy and black
yesterday, when he was planning the hit, tonight looked golden—lit by
the security floods of a small factory on the south shore.
Ralph Bales had thought that
locating the witness would be easy. Just find the store where he'd
bought the beer and trace him from there.
But he'd forgotten he was in
Maddox, Missouri, where there was not much for the locals to do except
be out of work and drink all day, or do muscle labor for Maddox
Riverfront Services or stoop labor for farmers and drink all night.
Ralph Bales, checking the yellow pages, found two dozen package good
stores within walking distance of where he'd collided with the witness
as he climbed from Lombro's car.
So they'd ditched the Trans Am,
sent the Ruger to sleep forty feet below the choppy surface of the
Missouri and sped home
to change clothes then returned here in Ralph
Bales s own car. He had shaved off the mustache, donned fake glasses, a
rumpled Irish tweed cap, a pressed blue shirt open at the neck, and a
herringbone sport jacket. Pretending to be an insurance company lawyer
representing the cop who'd been shot, he walked from store to store
until he finally found a clerk who remembered selling a case of beer to
a thin man in a bomber jacket at around seven that evening.
"He said he's got a camper parked
over at Bide-A-Wee."
"It's that. . . What is it?"
Ralph Bales asked.
"You know, that trailer park? By
the concrete plant?
"One thing," the clerk had warned
solemnly. "Don't ask him for a part in the film. He don't take to that."
Film?
Ralph Bales and Stevie had then
cruised down to the river and parked in the weedy lot outside Bell's
Bide-A-Wee. They could look through the camper's small windows, but
Ralph Bales had not been able to see clearly if it was the beer man or
not. Then the door had opened and Stevie had gotten it into his head
that he was calling in a description of the car to the cops and had
burned out of there, Ralph Bales shouting, "Be careful with the
transmission case," and Stevie Flom not paying any attention.
They now cruised through the
night, at fifty-five m.p.h. even, away from Maddox.
Tomorrow morning, let's pay him a
visit"
"But maybe he'll give the cops a
description of you tonight."
Ralph Bales considered this. He
shook his head. "He doesn't even know about the hit. Christ, he had a
party going on in there. A guy's a witness to a hit, he isn't going to
have a party. I mean, wouldn't you think?"
Stevie said he guessed and put on
a Metallica tape.
At seven the next morning they
started with the sledgehammers on the Winnebago door.
The interrupted dream was about
old-fashioned cars driving slowly in circles around a movie set.
Someone kept asking
Pellam if he wanted a ride and he did but whoever
asked didn't stop long enough to let him get in the car. Pellam had
grown very bored waiting for a car to pick him up.
It wasn't a great dream, but at
least he was asleep when he was having it and when the sledgehammers
started he became awake. Pellam sat up and swung his feet over the edge
of the bunk in the back of the camper. He found his watch. Pellam
had
often been up at seven but he had rarely wakened at that hour.
There was a big difference between the two.
The hammers pounded.
He stood up and pulled on his
jeans and a black T-shirt. He looked in the mirror. He'd slept in one
position all night—on his stomach like a baby—and his black hair had
gone spiky. Pellam smoothed it and rubbed at the welts that the
crumpled sheet had left across his face. He went to see who was
swinging hammers.
"Hey, dude," Stile said, walking
into the kitchen past him. "I was sent to collect you."
Pellam put a kettle on. Stile
stood beside the camper's
tiny dining table, still
covered with cards and Pellams meager winnings. He looked at the chili
pot and tapped the black crust with his fingernail. He foraged in the
miniature refrigerator. "You got
zero food in here."
"Why are you here?" Pellam
mumbled.
"Your phone. It's not turned on."
Stile found an old bagel and broke it in half. He lifted the other half
toward Pellam, who
shook his head and dropped two spoonfuls of instant
coffee into a Styrofoam cup. "Coffee?" he asked Stile.
"Naw. I got my wheels. You can
have the cycle back. It's in the trunk. There's a little teeny dent on
the fender. Otherwise
it's in perfect condition. Well, it's muddy.
Well, the rack, too."
Pellam poured water into the cup
and sat heavily on the bench. Stile told him his hair was all spiky.
"What are you doing here?" Pellam
asked again as he smoothed his hair.
"Tony needs you. He's like
apoplectic—is that the right word?—and you shut your phone off."
"Because I wanted to sleep later
than seven o'clock."
"I been up for an hour." Stile
did tai chi at dawn. He ate the bagel thoughtfully. "You know, John, I
got to admit I was a little curious why you're working for Tony."
Pellam took three sips of
scalding coffee. That was something about instant. It tasted terrible
but it started hot and stayed hot. He rubbed his thumb and index finger
together, designating money, in answer to Stile's question about Tony.
Stiles grunt equaled a shrug, as
if he suspected there was more to it. On the other hand, Stile was a
senior union stuntman
and even at the
Screen Actors Guild's contract minimums, would be well paid. But he was
also a stand-in for one of the leads, and because of this and because
of his experience, his agent had negotiated an overscale contract. He
understood all about
the motives for being attached to a big-budget
project.
"Well, Herr Eisenstein has
summoned you and I'm delivering the word." He finished the bagel.
"He tell you what's up?"
"He wants to blow up an oil
refinery. For the final scene."
"What?" Pellam rubbed his eyes.
"I swear to God. He's going to
build this mock-up of an old DC-7 and tow it behind a chopper, then—"
Stile mimicked a
plane diving into the stove "—Ka-boom ..."
Pellam shook his head. "He's out
of... You son of a bitch. You eat a man's last bagel and you rag him
all the while you're
doing it and here it is not even dawn."
Stile laughed. "Damn easy to pull
your chain, Pellam. Up and at 'em. Rise and shine. Our master calls."
*
* *
Bell's Bide-A-Wee contained two
tents, the Winnebago, which was parked in the row closest to the road,
and a Ford Taurus, from whose trunk a yellow motorcycle protruded.
The camper was surrounded by
unoccupied spaces dotted with short galvanized steel pipes and junction
boxes for utility hookups that stretched away toward the river like
slots in a miniature drive-in movie theater.
Stevie Flom had turned off River
Road and driven a half block through a stretch of boarded-up one-and
two-story houses
and stores. He had started to park nose-out in an alley between two
deserted shops. Ralph Bales had told him not to get fancy—just parallel
park on the street and read the paper or something—only leave the
engine running.
Ralph Bales walked down to River
Road. It was morning, but he saw lights on in the camper. Then he saw a
man's silhouette walking around inside. Ralph Bales stepped into a
phone booth, whose floor was covered with the tiny blue cubes from its
four shattered windows. Three tall weeds grew up through this pile. He
picked up the receiver with a Kleenex and pretended
to talk while he
studied the camper.
He looked beyond the Winnebago to
the river. This morning it looked different still—not silver-gray, not
the golden shade
of last night. Now the surface had a rusty sheen to
it, mirroring a redness in the sky that came, Ralph Bales believed,
from garbage pumped into the air by refineries outside of Wood River,
across the Mississippi. The wind was steady and it bent
grass and weeds
on the riverbank but hardly lifted any ripples from the ruddy water,
which plodded southward.
Ralph Bales remembered a song
that he hadn't thought of for years, a sound-track song from
twenty-five years ago, the
Byrds' closing number in Easy Rider. He
heard the music in his head clearly but could not recall the lyrics,
just snatches of words about a man wanting to be free, about a river
flowing away from someplace, flowing to the sea...
The door to the camper opened.
Yep, it was him. The beer man,
the witness. He was followed by a tall, gangly man with a droopy
mustache. Together they stepped to the back of the Taurus and wrestled
the motorcycle out of the trunk.
The Colt appeared from under
Ralph Bales's coat, and he looked around him slowly. A mile away, a
semi downshifted with
a silent belch of smoke. A flock of gray birds
dotted past. In the middle of the muddy river a scarred and patchy tug
fought
its way upstream.
The two men were talking,
standing together over the cycle. The mustached man pointed to what
looked like a dent in the mudguard, then he jiggled the chrome rack.
The beer man shrugged, then wheeled the motorcycle toward the road.
Ralph Bales was waiting for the
friend to get in the Taurus and leave but then decided he should kill
both of them. He lifted
his Colt and rested the square notch of the
sight on the beer man's chest. The silver truck approached. He lowered
the gun.
It roared past, engulfing the men in a swirl of papers and
dust.
Ralph Bales lifted the gun once
more. The road was empty now. No trucks or cars. Nothing between him
and his targets thirty feet away from the phone booth and its floor of
shattered glass.
He climbed onto the battered,
muddy yellow motorcycle and fired it up, then gunned the engine several
times. Pulling on a black helmet, he popped the clutch suddenly and did
a wheelie, scooting a precarious ten feet before the front tire
descended again to the street. He skidded to a braking stop and
returned to his mustached friend.
Ralph Bales steadied the gun with
his left palm and began to apply the nine pounds of pressure required
to release the hammer.
The beer man pulled on
dark-framed sunglasses and zipped up his jacket—for one slow moment he
sat up completely straight, perpendicular to Ralph Bales, offering a
target that was impossible to miss.
At this moment Ralph Bales
lowered the gun.
He squinted, watching the man sit
forward and tap the bike into first gear with his toe. It skidded away
on River Road with a ragged chain-saw roar of the punchy engine. His
friend shouted at him and shook his fist, then leapt into the Taurus
and, with
a huge spume of dust and gravel, roared over the curb and chased the cycle down River Road,
laying down thick tire marks.
Ralph Bales eased the hammer down
onto an empty cylinder and slipped the gun into his pocket. He looked
up and down
the road, then turned, jogging back into the murky shadows
of the riverfront streets. He walked up to the Cadillac. He
rapped on
the driver's window.
"Jesus, I didn't hear it!" Stevie
shouted, tossing the paper in the backseat, the sheets separating and
filling the car. He flipped
the car into gear. "I didn't hear the shot,
man!" He glanced through the rear window. "I didn't hear it!"
Ralph Bales casually flicked his
fingers toward Stevie.
"Let's go!" the young man shouted
again. "What do you mean? What are you doing?"
"Move over," Ralph Bales mouthed.
"What?" Stevie shouted.
"I'll drive."
Stevie looked back again, as if a
dozen Missouri Highway Patrol cars were racing after him.
Ralph Bales said, "Put it in
park."
"What?"
"Put the car in park and move
over," he responded with exasperation. "I'll drive." He climbed in and
signaled and made a careful, slow U-tum.
"What happened?"
"Have to wait."
"You didn't do it?"
"Excuse me?" Ralph Bales asked
with mock astonishment. "You just said you didn't hear any shots."
"Man! Scared the living crap out
of me. I mean, bang, bang, bang, on the window. I thought you
were a cop. What the
hell happened?"
Ralph Bales didn't answer for a
moment. "There were a bunch of people around."
"There were?" They now drove past
the deserted campground. Stevie protested, "I don't see anybody."
"You wanted me to do it right in
front of a dozen witnesses?"
Stevie swiveled around. "What was
it, like a bus drove past or something?"
"Yeah. It was like a bus."
*
* *
Samuel Clemens once stayed in the
town of Maddox, Missouri, and supposedly wrote part of Tom Sawyer here.
The Maddox Historical Society implied that the caverns outside of town
were the true inspiration for Injun Joe's cave, despite evidence—and
the assertion of a more credible tourist board (Hannibal, Missouri)—to
the contrary. Other claims to fame were pretty sparse. In 1908 William
Jennings Bryan gave a speech here (standing on a real soapbox to do
so), and Maddox was cited by FDR in a Fireside Chat as an example of
towns decimated by the Depression. One of the now defunct metalwork
mills in town had the-distinction of fabricating part of the housing
used in what would have been the third atomic bomb dropped in World War
II.
But these honors aside, Maddox
was essentially a stillborn Detroit.
Unlike Jefferson City, which sat
genteel and majestic on gnarled stone bluffs above the Missouri, Maddox
squatted on the rivers muddy banks just north of where the wide water
was swallowed by the wider Mississippi. No malls, no
downtown rehab, no landscaped condos.
Maddox was now a town of about
thirty thousand.
The downtown was a gloomy array
of pre-1950 retail stores and two-story office buildings, none of which
was fully occupied. Outside of this grim core were two or three dozen
factories, about half of them still working at varying degrees of
capacity. Unemployment was at 28 percent, the town's per capita income
was among the lowest in Missouri, and alcoholism and crime were at
record highs. The city was continually in and out of insolvency and the
one fire company in town sometimes had to make heartbreaking decisions
about which of two or three simultaneous blazes it was going to fight.
Residents lived in decrepit housing projects and minuscule
nineteenth-century bungalows hemmed in by neighbors and uncut grass and
kudzu, amid yards decorated with doorless refrigerators, rusted
tricycles, cardboard boxes. On every block were scorched circles, like
primitive sacrifice sites, where trash—whose collection the city was
often unable to undertake—was illegally burned.
Maddox, Missouri, was a dark
river beside the darker rust of storage tanks. Maddox was rats nosing
boldly over greasy, indestructible U.S. centennial cobblestones, Maddox
was wiry grass pushing through rotting wooden loading docks and BB
craters in plate glass and collapsed grain elevators. Maddox was no
more or less than what you saw just beyond the
Welcome To sign
on River Road: the skeleton of a rusted-out Chevy one-ton pickup not
worth selling for scrap.
But for John Pellam, Maddox was
heaven.
A month earlier, he had just
finished scouting locations in Montana. He had been sitting outside of
the Winnebago, his brown Nokonas stretched out in front of him and
pointing more or less at the spot where George Armstrong Ouster's ego
finally caught up with him. Pellam had been drinking beer when his
cellular phone had started buzzing.
He hadn't more than answered it
before the speaker was barraging him with a story about two young
lovers who become robbers. A machine gun of facts, as if the caller and
Pellam were resuming a conversation cut short minutes before by an
ornery mobile phone. Pellam believed the name of the man with whom he
was having this animated talk had passed his way
a moment before, but
he'd missed it in the onslaught of words.
"Uh, who's this again?"
'Tony Sloan," the surprised,
staccato voice fired back.
"Okay." They had never met.
Pellam knew Sloan, of course. But then, so did everyone who read Premiere
or People or Newsweek. A former producer of TV
commercials, he had directed last year's Circuit Man, a
computer sci-fi political thriller, a megahit that had snagged Oscars
for best special effects and best sound and had grossed thirty-six
million dollars its first weekend against a total budget of
seventy-eight million.
Pellam had seen the first two of
Sloan's films and none of the rest. He preferred not to work for
directors like Tony Sloan—special-effects directors, he considered
them, not people directors—but that day in Montana he had listened to
the man with some interest, for two reasons. First: After his recent
hit Sloan could write very large checks to those he hired and never be
questioned by his studio. Second: Sloan was explaining with a gravity
surprising for a child of television that he wanted to make a movie
with some meat on it. "Artistically, I want to expand. A Badlands tone,
you know what I mean? Minimal. Essential."
Pellam had liked Badlands and
his favorite films were minimal and essential. He felt he should hear
Sloan out.
"John, I've asked around. People
say you been all over the country. They say you're a walking site
catalog."
Perhaps not. But Pellam did have
many scrapbooks filled with Polaroid snaps of quirky, cinematic locales
just right for the sort of feature film that Sloan was describing.
Moreover, Sloan had less location experience than most directors
because his flicks were usually soundstage setups and computer graphics
transfers. To make his movie he'd need a solid location manager.
"Keep talking," Pellam said.
"They're bank robbers," Sloan was
explaining. "Young bank robbers. It's a vehicle—for like Aidan Quinn
and Julia Roberts before she was Julia Roberts. I don't want to go with
anybody who's been on the cover of People. Nobody bankable.
It's got me scared, but I need to make this change. Between you and me
I'm suffocating under the system. You know what I'm saying?"
Pellam did and he told Sloan so.
"They're not understood, this
couple. They're angry, they're disaffected—"
Listening to Sloan back then,
Pellam had seen what he believed were the Black Hills. They weren't
black at all, but were dark blue. They were very far away, but in the
awesome, undisturbed sky towering above, they looked both regal and
unsettling.
"It sounds vaguely familiar,
Tony."
"I know, you're thinking Bonnie
and Clyde," Sloan said.
Ah, right. That was what
Pellam had been thinking.
"This's different," the director
continued. "It's called Missouri River Blues. You hear about
it? Orion was kicking it around a few years ago before it was belly-up
time. These characters are real. They live and breathe.
Dunaway and Beatty were . . . Dunaway and Beatty. What can I say? Good
movie, one of my primal influences. But I'm going beyond it.
Okay, Ross, that's the boyfriend, he's in prison and going crazy. He's
going to loll himself. He can't take it anymore. We open on these
incredible shots of a lock-down. That's when .. . See, in prison—"
"When they close up the
maximum-security cellblock for the night."
"Right. How'd you know that?"
'Tell me about the film, Tony."
"I've got the DP working on a
special micro lens. Angles on the insides of the locks and bars
clanging shut. It's beautiful. So
we get a sense of confinement.
Everything closing around him. Well, Ross escapes, and he and Dehlia—"
"Dehlia?" "'
"... he and Dehlia drive around
the countryside, robbing armored trucks mostly. They're highwaymen,
modern highwaymen. Ross's driven by his fear of the lock-down. She's
driven by the social convention that forces women to be homemakers.
Claustrophobia. The script plays off the risk of freedom versus the
fear of imprisonment. Which is worse? Prison with its security, freedom
with its dangers?"
"It sounds a lot like Bonnie
and Clyde."
"No, no, the characters are all
different. Also the freedom of love versus its confinement. Oh, and the kids're concerned
about the
environment." He added significantly, "This's the early fifties.
They're concerned about A-bomb testing."
"A-bombs," Pellam said. "That's
very socially conscious." Sloan completely missed the irony and Pellam
asked, "Set in Missouri, I presume?"
"Medium-sized town," Sloan said.
"The postwar boom has passed it by. That sort of town."
"Bonnie and Clyde was set
in Missouri," Pellam pointed out. "Part of it anyway."
"It's not like Bonnie and
Clyde," the director said icily.
Pellam flipped through his mental
Rolodex of locations he knew in the Midwest. "I did a job in Kansas a
few years back.
Small town on a river. How's Kansas?"
"I want Missouri. The title, you
know."
Pellam asked, "Could you tell
Kansas from Missouri?"
"I grew up in Van Nuys. I can't
tell Ohio from Colorado. But that's not the point. I want Missouri."
"Got it."
Sloan now paused. "The thing is,
John, I've got some timing problems here."
The tail of the sentence wagged
silently.
"Timing."
"You know, I've had nothing but
headaches with the project. You know the Time article about
me? Last year?"
"I missed it," Pellam said.
"When they called me the
'High-tech Visionary'?"
Pellam said that whatever they
had called him, he'd still missed the article.
"I mean, Sony or Disney would
have written a check for the GNP of France if I'd made the sequel."
Son of Circuit Man, Pellam
thought, then reconsidered. He said, "Circuit Man Rewired."
"Ha, John. Very good. Very funny.
But Missouri River? It was a battle to get the green light.
It's an action film, but it's a
period action film, and it's
an intelligent period action film. That scared people."
Perhaps competing with Kurosawa
and Altman and John Ford—and Arthur Penn, the director of Bonnie
and Clyde—
scared people, too.
"So what are you saying, Tony?"
"I'm saying that I'm in a bind. I
got the go-ahead yesterday and I need locations in two weeks, absolute
maximum.
Pellam laughed a laugh that
terrifies producers and directors. It means: Not only are you asking
the impossible but I don't
need the job nearly badly enough to put up
with the crap I know I'm going to have to put up with to do what you
want.
"Six," Pellam said. He was, in
fact, ready to leave that night—-just as soon as the Black Hills turned
truly black and he
finished his beer. But two weeks was impossible to
find sites for the hundreds of setups in a full-length feature.
It was the moment when one of
them would say, "Four weeks" and they would shake hands, remotely, on
the compromise.
Tony Sloan said, "You find me
locations in two weeks and I'll pay you twenty-five thousand dollars."
Pellam felt heat flow from his
black hair down into his throat. He believed his skin was flushed.
"Well—"
'Thirty-five."
Thirty-five thousand?
"I'm a desperate man, Pellam. I'm
not going to bullshit you."
After a pause, Pellam asked,
'Tony, tell me, does a Texas Ranger track them down in the end and
machine-gun them to death?"
"It is a goddamn different movie,
Pellam."
"Deal. Express Mail the script to
me care of Kansas City GPO."
Four days later, Pellam drove
over the city limits into Maddox, Missouri, braked the Winnebago to a
stop, and knew he'd
just earned himself some big money.
MISSOURI RIVER BLUES
SCENE 34—-EXTERIOR EVENING,
STREET IN FRONT OF BANK
MEDIUM ANGLE ON Ross and
Dehlia, dressed up as if they were "out for an innocent stroll" They
are supposed to be casing the job, but Ross is introspective. He stops.
ANGLE ON REAL ESTATE OFFICE,
ROSS'S POV
CU OF LISTING SHEETS OF
ONE-FAMILY HOUSES
ANGLE ON Ross's face
ANGLE on Dehlia's face,
looking at him:
TWO SHOT OF both of them.
The bank-robbing lovers in the
film come upon a small midwestem river town filled with abandoned
factories and characters whose lives have been ruined by rampant
capitalism. They decide to make one last heist then follow the lead of
all the
returning World War II veterans: buy a house in the 'burbs and
raise babies.
More than even minimal or
essential movies, Pellam loved good movies. He was not convinced that Missouri
River Blues
was a good movie. The script contained a number of
time bombs—long speeches, shoot-outs, car chases and stylish camera
directions. But a script is merely a promise. What Sloan would make of
it, nobody, perhaps not even Sloan himself, could know at this point.
It was not Pellams job, in any
case, to career-counsel visionaries. He did what he'd been hired to do.
He read the script ten times, got a sense of what it was about, did his
outline of the scenes, blocked them out, consolidating similar ones to
minimize travel between locations. Then he clocked seven hundred miles
on the Winnebago as he threaded through Maddox and environs, shot sixty
packs of Polaroids, met with the mayor and the city's insurance
company, then wrote up his report and shipped it off.
Within a day Sloan and the
director of photography flew to St. Louis and drove north, where Sloan
approved most of the locations. They jetted back that night to finish
casting.
For the next week Pellam helped
the key grip with site preparation and deciding what cranes and other
equipment would be needed for the shooting. Sloan and the cast and crew
had arrived in a swirl of frenzied excitement. Grip trucks, camera
cranes, Winnebagos,
location vans. This movie was
bigger news in Maddox than FDR and William Jennings Bryan combined.
As on most sets, the atmosphere
was boisterous in the first few days of shooting. Pellam had had some
fun. Because scouts
are often first on the scene, newly arrived
personnel ask them for tips on places to eat and things to see. A young
hotshot
actor, playing one of Ross's gangsters, asked Pellam bluntly
where he could get laid and how much would it cost.
Pellam thought for a bit, then
remembered an ad he had seen not long after he arrived in Maddox.
"It'll be cheap but you've
got to drive a ways." He gave the actor
elaborate directions that sent him ten miles into the boonies. He
returned an hour later, fuming, and stormed onto the set, where Pellam
and the crew greeted him with high-pitched squeals and calls of
soo-eee!
Pellam had sent him to the St.
Charles County Hog and Ham Museum.
But that had been a month ago,
and now the time for jokes was over. Missouri River Blues was
badly over-schedule and vastly overbudget. The producer from the studio
financing the film had sent a representative— Sloan referred to him,
openly,
as "the stoolie"—to goose things along. The problem, in Pellam's
view, was that while Sloan could entice performances from characters
fighting to the death with lasers or changing themselves into charges
of electricity he did not know what he wanted
in less apocalyptic
scenes: love, betrayal, friendship, longing ... So the introspective
scenes were gradually replaced by more shoot-outs and chases and
extreme close-ups of guns being loaded and dynamite bombs being
assembled and armored truck locks being picked or blown apart.
And all the while Sloan shot more
and more film. He averaged ten thousand feet a day—almost two hours
worth of film from which to distill out about two minutes of real
screen time.
"It's an asshole picture," the
lean, balding key grip complained to Pellam. Meaning the movie was not
being made here, as it was filmed, but would be cut and pasted together
at the back end of the whole process— in the editing room. Desperate
Tony was shooting as much footage as he possibly could, out of which he
would hammer together his movie. ("Hitchcock
didn't work that way," the
grip whispered.)
After principal photography
started Pellam thought that he would have plenty of time on his own.
The bulk of a location manager's work would normally be finished at
this stage. He had merely to oversee paying site rentals on schedule
and keep track of permits and insurance binders. But more and more
frequently he found himself waiting for calls from an increasingly
anxious Sloan—such as this morning, which summons now had him racing at
seventy miles an hour through the bleak and abandoned streets of
Maddox, Missouri, which might have been a businessman's nightmare but
was at least a motorcyclist's dream.
FOUR
Pellam put a twelve-foot skid
mark from the curb to the catering table on the set of Missouri
River Blues and hopped off
the Yamaha only to find the dusty Ford
Taurus braking to a stop six inches from his thigh.
Pellam shrugged and Stile emerged
from the Ford out of sorts. He had lost the race because he had stopped
for a red light
that Pellam had ignored.
"Didn't know we weren't playing
by the rules," Stile grumbled, wandering off toward wardrobe. "I'll
gitcha next time."
Pellam walked to the scaffolding
that rose above that mornings setup.
Tony Sloan was a hawkish man,
muscular, very lean in the face, which was why he sported a black
beard. He was wearing blue jeans and a faded green T-shirt. His black
hair, dusted with gray, was pulled back in a short ponytail.
Occasionally he talked frantically. Other times, not at all. His eyes,
perhaps reflecting his thoughts, would either dart about or lift slowly
and hover before descending momentarily onto the face of the person he
was speaking with.
These eyes now landed hungrily on
Pellam.
"John, gotta get that phone
fixed. Listen, I've been rethinking the ending. I want them to get that
house, you know." He
fidgeted with his beeper.
"Ross and Dehlia?"
"I've got an image of what they
should have. I can see it. You find me one? A fifties sort of house.
You know, a bungalow maybe." Sloans gaze rose, did a few slow circles,
and returned to Pellam, who was trying to recall the most recent ending
for the film.
"That's instead of what?"
"The bus depot," Sloan answered.
"We don't need the bus depot anymore."
"Okay. That's easy. You want a
house. You want to do interiors there?"
"I don't want to, no."
Sloan's voice was exasperated. "Why would I want to?"
"I didn't mean want to, Tony.
I meant are you going to?"
The eyes rose. "I want to
build a set. On a sound-stage. I don't want to have to cram all the
damn equipment into a twelve-by-fourteen-foot living room. But I don't
have any choice."
"You want a bungalow with a
twelve-by-fourteen living room."
"Well, I want bigger. If
you can get me bigger."
"I'll—"
The voice was very close to
Pellam's ear. "Excuse me." He started in surprise.
They turned.
"One of you John Pellam?"
Pellam smiled a greeting.
"I'm Detective Gianno, this's
Detective Hagedom. With the Maddox Police Department."
Pellam saw ID cards and gold
badges and immediately forgot their names. An Italian detective,
dark-complected and short. And a WASP detective, blond, athletic, tall.
He had a very square jaw. Pellam smelled after-shave. Something dry. He
had been close to cops a few times in his life and could not recall
smelling aftershave on a law enforcer.
Sloan said, "What's this all
about?" His eyes now alighted on the Italian detective's and remained
fixed.
The cop asked in response,
"Who're you?"
'Tony Sloan." When they
registered no response he added, "I'm the director."
The WASP turned away from him.
"If you'll excuse us we'd like to talk to Mr. Pellam here."
"If there's some problem, I'm in
charge of—"
"There won't be a problem, sir—"
he glanced at Sloan as if he were a nagging panhandler "—if you'd just
give us a few
minutes alone with Mr. Pellam here."
Sloan gave him an astonished
glance then turned to Pellam, who shrugged. "I'll get you that house,
Tony."
The director wandered off to a
motorized camera crane, a Chapman Apollo, the boom extended and the
camera platform nearly ten feet above the ground. Sloan paused in the
shadow of the boom and glanced back at the two men now standing
on
either side of Pellam. Several grips and gaffers noticed Sloans frown
and stopped what they were doing to watch the
three men.
The WASP stepped closer. The
scent of lime was very strong. "The Post-Dispatch did a story
about this film." He spoke
with the same stilted formality that marks
conversations between cops and civilians all around the world.
"It's a crime movie? About bank
robbers?" The Italian detective said this as if people would not think
of breaking the law if movies didn't put the idea into their heads.
"Armored car robbers," Pellam
corrected.
"We've never had a movie made in
Maddox," he added solemnly. "I hope you portray the town in a good
light. We've had
our share of trouble but that's not our fault."
"No, it isn't," said the WASP.
"What exactly," Pellam asked, "do
you want?"
"Last night there was a shooting.
We're wondering if you could give us some information about it."
"Around here?"
"It happened on Third, near the
river."
He tried to remember if he had
heard anything. He couldn't recall but with the tape deck playing and
the Cardinals on TV
and the noise of five men playing poker, a lot of
sound outside would get missed. Pellam shook his head. "I'm sorry. I
don't think I can help you." He started to walk away.
The WASP detective put a firm
grip on Pellams shoulder and laughed in surprise, like a schoolteacher
insulted by a student. "Hey, hey, hold up there a minute. We're not
through yet."
Pellam shrugged the hand off and
turned around. "I can't help you."
"Well, we think you can, sir. A
policeman was shot and critically injured and two people were killed.
Vincent Gaudia and a Miss Sally Ann Moore."
"I'm sorry. That doesn't mean
anything to me." *
"People are killed and you don't
care?" the WASP asked. His hands, palms up, rose at his sides.
"I don't mean that. I just mean I
don't know who they are.
The Italian was saying, 'The car?
The Lincoln? Does that ring a bell?"
"No. I ... Oh, wait. There was
this guy got out of a big car, maybe it was a Lincoln. I didn't
really notice. I'd bought some beer. He bumped into me."
"Could you describe him?"
"Was he the guy who was killed?"
"Description?"
"Not too tall, stocky, balding, a
beard or mustache, I think. Mid or late thirties."
"Race?"
"White."
"Any scars or markings?"
"I don't remember any."
"What was he wearing?"
"A jacket, I think. Jeans. Dark
mostly."
"He was alone in the Lincoln?"
"No. There was somebody else.
They drove off after a while."
"They?"
"Well, he."
"Could you describe him?"
"I didn't see him."
The detectives didn't exactly
exchange glances but their eyes swung like slow pendulums toward each
other.
Sloan called, "Pellam, you gonna
get me that house, or what?"
The Italian detective called
back, "This is official police business, mister."
Oh, brother. Pellam
cocked his head helplessly at Sloan and said, 'They're just
asking me a few questions."
Sloan continued to stare for a
moment, eyes no longer flitting with artistic distraction but now
boring angrily into the cluster
of men from the shadow of the crane.
"The thing is, Mr. Pellam," the
Italian cop continued, "the officer who was shot..."
"He was shot a number of times in
the back," his partner said.
"God, that's awful."
". . . said he saw you talking to
someone in the car. He—"
"He was the one got shot?
That policeman? Danny? What was the name?"
"Donnie Buffett."
That's terrible. Yeah, I was
talking to him. Is he going to be okay?"
They don't know," the Italian cop
said.
In the thick silence that
followed they stared at him. Pellam felt guilty under these gazes. "I
didn't see him. The driver, I mean. I looked. I looked into the car but
I wasn't really talking to him. I was just saying things. It
wasn't like a conversation."
"How did you know it was a man?"
Pellam didn't speak for a moment.
That's a good question. I don't really. I just assumed it was."
"You seem pretty sure it was a
man," the WASP said. "You said him."
"I was assuming it was a man."
The Italian cop said, "It'd just
be kind of strange, wouldn't it, you're standing a few feet from
someone? not to at least see
what they were wearing? What their sex
was? Whether they were black or white?"
"I don't know what's strange or
not, but that's what happened. It was night—"
"Adams is lit up like Gateway
Park," the Italian cop said.
The WASP detective looked at his
partner. "All those car accidents. That's why they put in sodium
vapors."
"There was glare," Pellam said.
That was one of the problems. On the windows. I was blinded."
"So the fact it was night wasn't
the problem," said the WASP. "I mean, you said it was night as if you
meant it was too dark
to see anything. But now what you're saying is it
wasn't dark at all. It was too bright."
"I guess," Pellam said.
"What kind of Lincoln was it?"
"Black."
"What kind?"
"How do you mean?"
Town Car? Continental?"
"I didn't notice. I wish I had
but I only remember it being big and black."
"You're sure it was black?"
"Well, it was dark. Navy blue
maybe."
They asked about license plates,
dents, scratches, damage, bumper stickers ...
Pellam couldn't help them.
The cops fell silent.
"Do you think I'm lying?"
"It's just kind of strange is all
we're saying."
"What's strange?" Pellam rocked
on his boot heels.
"Being so close and all and not
seeing anything," the WASP said. That's strange."
"It was dark." Pellam tried to
sound as frustrated as they were.
"And there was a lot of glare,"
the Italian added. Sarcastic? Pellman couldn't tell.
"Officer Buffett said he saw you
talking to whoever was in the car."
"I told you, I wasn't having a
conversation with him ... or her." Pellam saw, in the distance, the
curtain in a window of Sloan's van pull aside for a moment. A black gap
was visible and in that gap Pellam imagined he could see the two tiny,
paranoid
eyes of an impatient visionary director. He said to the WASP,
who though bigger seemed more reasonable, "Look, I'm very busy just
now. This is a bad time for this."
The blond cop just repeated,
"Officer Buffett said you were talking to the driver. What are we
supposed to think about that?"
Pellam sighed. "I was mad. I was
just talking to let off steam. I don't remember what I said. I was
muttering."
"Why were you mad?"
"The guy I told you about, the
one who got out of the car, bumped into me and I dropped a case of
beer."
"Why did he do that?"
"It was an accident. He didn't do
it on purpose."
"If it was an accident," the WASP
asked slowly, "why were you so mad you were talking to yourself?"
The Italian cop offered,"
'Muttering,' you said."
"Okay, that's it. I've got
nothing more to say." Pellam started away, tensing his muscles, ready
for another vise grip.
Neither cop followed, but
the blond said, "There's two dead people and a cop shot in
the back."
His partner offered, "People
sometimes get scared. They don't want to volunteer, to
be witnesses. You don't have to be worried. We can
protect you."
"I didn't see anybody get shot.
All I saw was some guy who nearly knocked me on my ass."
"We're more concerned with the
person in the car. We think he's the one who ordered the hit."
"Sorry. Now, if there's nothing
else . . ." Pellam lifted his hands like a TV preacher confronted with
more sin than he can absolve.
"Will you at least help us do a
sketch of the man you saw?"
"Yes. Sure. But not now."
The WASP cop shifted his weight
like an impatient college boy. He was no longer reasonable. "He's not
going to cooperate."
"Cooperate?"
The WASP said to his grimacing
partner, "Let's go. He's a GFY." The cops put their notebooks away.
"What's a GFY?' Pellam demanded.
"An official term we use about
reluctant witnesses."
"I'm not reluctant. I didn't see
anything."
When they got to the perimeter of
the set, the Italian cop turned suddenly and said, "Look, mister, a lot
of local people cooperated with you so you could shoot this damn movie
here. They aren't going to be too happy to hear you're not so
cooperative in return."
The WASP cop waved his arm. "Aw,
he's a GFY. Why bother?" They walked off the set.
In Sloan's trailer, the curtain
fell closed.
*
* *
The indictments against him read:
Counts 1-2: Conspiracy to sell
controlled substances.
Counts 3-32: Criminal federal income tax fraud.
Count 33: Conspiracy to interfere with civil rights.
Count 34-35: Perjury.
Count 36: Extortion.
Counts 37-44: Criminal violations
of the Racketeering-Influenced Corrupt Organizations Act.
Peter Crimmins did not exactly
have the words memorized but this—the paraphrase—he knew, the essence
of the government's case against him.
Crimmins (the name was his
father's impulsive recasting of Crzniolak) was fifty-four. He had a
body like a pear, a face like
a potato. His hair was combed forward in
bangs, Frank Sinatra style, over his high forehead, on which a single
dark mole rested above his left eyebrow like a misplaced third eye. He
was presently sitting in his office, which overlooked the parking
lot
of his trucking company and, through windows in the opposite wall, a
large room filled with gray desks, filing cabinets, overhead
fluorescent fixtures and a dozen office workers who appeared
simultaneously bored and anxious.
Peter Crimmins had a thousand
business decisions he should be making but it was the words of the
indictment that kept
running through his mind. And they made him
furious. Oh, several counts were nonsense and had been thrown in by
an eager runt of an assistant U.S. Attorney. The civil rights thing,
ridiculous. Conspiracy, ridiculous. The drug counts were absurd. He had
never sold an atom of any controlled substance. The extortion, well,
that was somewhat true but only a little. But what infuriated him were
the counts that were accurate—the RICO charges.
Peter Crimmins thought of himself
as a blue-collar philosopher and had decided that there were simple rules in life you could figure
out without anyone's help. Not the Ten Commandments, which were a
little too simple-minded even for a good Russian Orthodox like him to
buy. But rules like: A man's dignity should be respected, take care of
those who cannot take care of themselves, do your duty, support your
family, don't hurt anyone innocent...
You live your life by those rules
and you will do just fine. So here he was, doing his duty, supporting
his family, not hurting anyone (anybody innocent, at any rate), making
a living, going to church occasionally—and what happens? He runs smack
into another set of rules. And these rules made no sense to him at all.
They were pure idiocy.
The problem was that they were
collected in Title 18 of the United States Code. And if you
happened to break these rules, people would come after you and
try to put you in jail.
But what was the most frustrating
of all was that he was wrestling with these forty-four indictments
solely because of a single mistake, which was that he had hired a
maniac, Vincent Gaudia, now deceased, gunned down the day before.
The two men were contrasts.
Crimmins had noticed this immediately, at their first meeting, in a
German restaurant in Webster Groves, Missouri. Crimmins was unflashy.
He had years of experience as a labor negotiator before he left the
union and opened his own business. He drank vodka in moderation and
smoked Camels and wore boxer shorts and white shirts and combed his
hair with Vitalis every day and he loved playing pool and boccie with
friends he had known for years. He was faithful to his wife of
thirty-three years and he
served on the planning and
zoning commission of his suburban hometown. Crimmins was a controlled
man, a disciplined man, a solid man.
Gaudia, on the other hand, was a
man controlled by his appetites. He wanted women's bodies and wet food
and sweet
drinks with straws. Gaudia's primary organs were his tongue
and his penis.
Still, Crimmins had been in
business long enough to know that other peoples weaknesses can be your
strengths.
He had noted Gaudia's lusts and
hired the man immediately because Gaudia was more than a minor hood
with a busy tongue. He was one of the best-connected people in eastern
Missouri and southern Illinois. Crimmins checked around and got a feel
for the labyrinthine network Vince Gaudia was hooked into. It was
inspiring. The pipeline did not reach to Washington and, curiously,
Gaudia could not fix a parking ticket in St. Louis. But hundreds of
those in between—court clerks, judges, councilmen, county executives,
banking commissioners, administrative agency workers, in St. Louis,
Jeff City and Springfield—were all snug in his pocket. And his skills
went beyond knowing who. They extended to how. He had a feel
for the ethics: who would take a case of J&B but resent a gift of
money, who would take a junket, who a job for their kid, a P&Z
decision reversal, a co-op in Vail.
Gaudia was an expert at bartering
and the product he dealt in was influence.
Crimmins, who had established the
most complicated and high-volume money-laundering operation in the
Midwest, decided Vince Gaudia could make a major contribution to his
company.
The match looked heaven-sent and
although they were temperamental opposites, Gaudia and Crimmins hit it
off extremely
well. Crimmins's laundering was making bold inroads into
Kansas City and he had an eye on Chicago. He pioneered the use
of
not-for-profit organizations as money-laundering vehicles and was
probably the only person in the world, certainly the only Christian,
who cleaned money through both an Orthodox synagogue in University City
and a Nation of Islam mosque in East St. Louis, both unwitting
cocon-spirators. Crimmins's business, with Gaudia as his lieutenant,
would have become one of the major profitable enterprises in the
metropolitan area if it were not for the coincidental occurrence of two
things.
The first was a network TV news
expose—60 Minutes, no less—about a problem in the office of
the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Missouri. There had been
a string of bungled drug cases. Well, putting bad guys away is not
easy, and the good guys get cut a lot of slack from judges but these
slipups were so egregious— and so lip-smackingly exposed on nationwide
TV—that the attorney general himself took action. He called the U.S.
Attorney for the Eastern District, Ronald Peterson, and brought him to
Washington for a talk about the botched prosecutions. Peterson kept his
job by a thread and returned from D.C. with a renewed sense of devotion
to put away people like Peter Crimmins.
The second coincidence was that
Vince Gaudia slept with the wrong woman.
He would not have described her
that way, probably. She was a sullen brunette with long, icy red nails
and disks of green
eyes. She talked in a little-girl singsong voice
that made his mind glaze over instantly but forced his cock to attention just
about
as fast. They had only one date, during which they became wildly drunk
and made love for four hours. She claimed
later that he proposed she
come live with him in his riverfront co-op. Gaudia did not remember
saying that. Nor, when she finally tracked him down after a week of not
returning her phone calls, did he remember her name.
She apparently had a much better
memory than he did, however, and in a letter to U.S. Attorney Peterson,
described
almost verbatim many of the secrets a drunken Vince Gaudia
had shared with her.
U.S. Attorney Peterson saw a
chance to redeem his career and wired an FBI agent, who posed as an
administrative hearing judge. He met with Gaudia in a bad Italian
restaurant near the Gateway Arch. After a little soft-shoe the agent
accepted five thousand dollars in exchange for agreeing to overlook an
EPA violation by one of Gaudia's clients. One minute later Gaudia was
arrested and about an hour after that a deal was struck: In exchange
for a probation plea recommendation Gaudia would hand over Peter
Crimmins's balls on a fourteen-karat gold plate.
But now Gaudia was dead as a rock
and Peter Crimmins knew that U.S. Attorney Peterson had yet another
count he wished to add to those forty-four indictments: Crimmins's
murder of a government witness.
Crimmins was lost in thought
about this situation when the outer door to his office opened and his
lawyer entered. They shook hands and the man sat. The lawyer was beefy,
with an automatic pilot of a smile that would lack in at any time for
no seeming reason. He played tennis on powerful legs and drove a
Porsche. He said things
like, "Pete, my man, I'd
look at that deal with
a proctoscope." And "As your counselor and as
your friend I'd advise you ..."
Crimmins had never told the man
he was his friend.
The lawyer now asked bluntly,
"Where were you Friday night?"
"What are you asking?"
"I gotta know, Pete. Were you
with anybody?"
"You think I killed Gaudia?"
Crimmins asked.
"I don't ask my clients if
they're guilty or not. I want to establish your alibi, not your
innocence."
"Well, I'm telling you," Crimmins
said. "I didn't loll anybody."
The lawyer tightened the titanium
knot of his silk tie. "Did you hint to anybody—?"
Crimmins raised his voice. "I
didn't do it."
The lawyer looked sideways and
clearly did not believe this denial. "It's not what I think.
It's what the U.S. Attorney is going to think. And I'll tell you, with
Gaudia gone, Petersons got you by a lot less short hairs than he did
two days ago."
Crimmins knew this, of course.
"You think the indictment won't stick?"
"Peterson's a whore pup. Your
conviction is his ticket to D.C. He believes in his soul you killed
Gaudia and he's going to turn you fucking—"
"I don't like those words you
use," Crimmins muttered.
"—inside out. Your case gets
thrown out, he's going to lose his media defendant."
"There are plenty of defendants
to go around."
The lawyer was losing patience.
"But he wants you. You're the one he told the world he was
going to get. You're the one he had. He'll be a
bitch in heat. Mark my words."
"This is selective prosecution."
Crimmins believed he knew enough law to be a lawyer himself.
"I've got your closing statement
all prepared, Pete. I don't need to hear your version of it."
Why was Crimmins putting his
life—well, his liberty and pursuit of happiness, at least—into the
hands of this slick man with a resonant belly and a vicious backhand?
"If-—for the sake of
argument—you had to have an alibi—"
"Humor me, Pete. If, if, if you
had to have an alibi for the time that Gaudia was shot, would you have
one?"
Crimmins did not answer.
The lawyer sighed. "All right.
What I'm going to do is ask around some. See who knows what. See what
Petersons going
to do about this. I've got some friends're cops. They
owe me. Supposedly there's a witness nobody's found yet."
"A witness?"
"It's just a rumor. Some guy who
saw the shooter."
The lawyer stood up. "Another
thing: They think the getaway car was a Lincoln."
Crimmins was silent for a moment.
He said softly, "I drive a Lincoln."
"A dark-colored Lincoln is what
they said."
Peter Crimmins had selected
Midnight Blue. He found it a comforting color.
The lawyer walked to the door,
pulling his short-brimmed hat on his bullet-shaped head.
"Wait," Peter Crimmins said.
The lawyer stopped and turned.
This witness. I don't care what
you have to do. What it costs..."
The lawyer was suddenly very
uncomfortable. His hand went to his belly and he rubbed the spot where
presumably his sumptuous breakfast was being digested. "You want me to—"
"Find out who he is."
"And?"
"Just find out," Peter Crimmins
whispered very softly as if every lampshade and picture frame in the
room contained a microphone.
FIVE
"He's lying," Donnie BufFett said
into the telephone.
Detective Bob Gianno said, "No
doubt about it."
"What he did," Buffett continued,
"he bent down and looked into the car from just three feet away... No,
not even. One foot away. If he says he didn't see anything he's lying."
Gianno said, "All he's gotta do
is talk and the case's a grounder. Nothing to it. A hose job."
Buffet said, "You'll keep on him?"
"Oh, you bet, Donnie boy. You
bet."
They hung up. Buffett's stemach
was growling regularly but he didn't feel hungry, They were giving him
something from a thick plastic bag, a clear liquid that dripped into
his arm. Maybe glucose. He wondered if that was a good idea, because
glucose
was sugar and before the shooting he had been meaning to lose a
few pounds.
He thought about the doughnut and
coffee Pellam had brought him. Was it just last night? Two nights ago?
It could have been
a week. Why was Pellam lying about seeing the
killer's partner? Afraid probably.
The door pushed wider open and a
doctor came into the room. He was a compact man, about forty, with
thick black hair. Trim, with muscular forearms, which made Buffett
think that he was an orthopedics man. Buffett loved sports, all kinds
of sports, every sport and he knew jock docs; they were always in good
shape. He pulled a chair close to die bed, sat down
and introduced
himself. His name was Gould. He had a low, pleasing voice.
"I guess I met you before,"
Buffett said. "You operated on me?"
"I was one of the neurosurgeons,
yes."
Gould lifted the chart from the
rack and flipped it open. He skimmed it, set it down. He leaned forward
and, with a penlight, looked into Buffett's eyes. He asked the
policeman to watch the doctors finger as it did figure eights then to
extend his arms
and touch his nose.
Donnie Buffett did as he was told.
The doctor said, "Good." Which
did not mean good or anything else, then he asked, "How you feeling,
Officer?"
"Okay, I guess. My shoulder
stings."
"Ah." He examined Buffett's chart
again and he examined it for a very long moment, it seemed to Buffett.
"Doctor....?" Buffett's voice
faded.
The doctor did not encourage him
to continue. He closed the metal cover of the chart and said, "Officer,
I'd like to talk to
you about your injury, tell you exactly what
happened, what we did. What we're going to do."
"Sure."
"You were shot in the back.
Several slugs hit your
bullet-proof vest. They were
small—.22-caliber—and shattered right away. A third
bullet hit the top side of the vest. It was deflected but it
grazed your scapula, your shoulder blade. That's the
pain you feel there. It's a minor wound. We removed the
bullet easily. There's some risk of sepsis—that's
infection—but the odds are
that won't happen."
Gould was taking out a pen, a
fancy gold and lacquer pen, and was drawing what looked like the lower
half of a skeleton on the back of a receipt.
"Donnie, three of the bullets hit
you below the vest. They entered here, that's where the lumbar region
of the spinal cord joins the sacral region. One shattered and stopped
here." The pen, top replaced, was now a pointer. "The other two lodged
in your intestine but missed the kidneys and bladder. We removed all
the pieces of lead. We've repaired the damage with sutures that will
absorb into the tissue. You won't need any further surgery, unless we
have a sepsis situation."
"Okay," Buffett said agreeably.
He squinted and studied the diagram as if he'd be tested on it later.
"Donnie, the bullet that
shattered—it entered your spinal cord here."
Buffett was nodding. He was a
cop. He had seen death. He had seen pain. He had felt pain. He
was totally calm. His injury couldn't be serious. If it were he'd be
hooked up to huge machines. Respirators and jet cockpit controls. All
he had was a tube in his dick and an IV that was feeding him fattening
sugar. That was nothing. No problem. He felt pain now, a wonderful pain
that ran through his legs, playing hide-and seek. If he were paralyzed
he wouldn't be feeling pain. "Donnie, we're going to refer you to a Dr.
Weiser, one of St. Louis's top SCI
neurologists and therapists. SCI, that's spinal cord injury."
"But I'm okay, aren't I?'
"You're not in a life-threatening
condition. With upper SCIs, there's a risk of respiratory or cardiac
failure .. . Those can be very troublesome."
Troublesome.
"But your accident was lower SCI.
That was fortunate in terms of your survival."
"Doctor, I'll be able to walk,
won't I? The thing is, my job, I'm a cop. I have to walk." He
lifted his palms as if he were embarrassed to be explaining somediing
so simple.
"Uhn, Donnie," the doctor said
slowly, "your prognosis is essentially nonambulatory."
Nonambulatory.
"What does? ..." Buffett's throat
closed down and he was unable to complete his question. Because he knew
exacdy what
it meant.
"Your spinal cord was almost
completely severed," Gould said. Buffett was looking directly into his
eyes but did not see any
of the intense sympathy that was pouring from
them. "With the state of the art at the present time I'm afraid there's
nothing
we can do about it. You won't walk, no."
"Oh. Well. I see."
"Officer, you're very lucky. You
could easily have been killed. Or it might have been a quadriplegic
situation."
Sure, that's true.
Gould stood up. The chart got
replaced on the bed, the doctors nifty pen went back into his shirt.
"Dr. Weiser is much more competent to talk about your injury than I am. You couldn't
ask for a better expert. A nurse will be coming by to schedule an
appointment later." He smiled, shook Buffett's hand. "We'll do
everything we can for you, Officer. Don't worry about a thing."
It was several minutes later that
Donnie Buffett said, "No. I won't," and only then realized that the
doctor was no longer in
the room.
* * *
Philip Lombro had this habit. He
would polish his shoes at least twice a day. He kept a big horsehair
brush in his desk at
work and a smaller pig-bristle brush in his
attache case, along with chamois squares. Sometimes he would polish the
shoes three, four, five times in a single day. He used Kiwi a lot. His
favorite, though, was Meltonian Creme a chaussures.
He had no obsession over the
shoes themselves—he owned only seven pairs—and he did not have a foot
fetish. (He was
not even sure what a foot fetish was or what somebody
with a foot fetish did.) What he liked was shiny shoes and the
process
of getting them that way. Putting your feet into newly polished shoes
was a regal feeling.
This morning he sat in the office
of Lombro & Associates in downtown Maddox and absently ran the
brush over his
oxblood wing tips.
The office was in the shadow of a
huge redbrick building that had started life as Maddox Omnibus and
Carriage Company
and had become, through the generations, Maddox
Electric Automobile Company, then -the Maddox Clutch Company,
and
recently the Maddox Machinery Division of Fujitomo Limited.
Several stiff brush bristles
became dislodged from the brush and fell to the floor. Lombro bent down
and picked them up,
then flicked them into the waste-basket. He wiped
his fingers with a spit-moistened Kleenex. Outside the window, a piece
of newspaper floated past and vanished. Lombro stared at the sides of
the Maddox Omnibus Building. Lombro remembered, from ten years ago, the
Reporter photo of a young man who killed himself by jumping off
one of the factory's huge smokestacks. Wearing a suit, he had died
crumpled in the roof of a delivery truck. It enfolded him like a
blanket.
This was what the Maddox Omnibus
and Carriage Company Building signified for him: death. And this
thought, in turn, led
to Ralph Bales.
Lombro had met Ralph Bales at the
wedding of his sister's daughter. Lombro, never married, regretted that
he'd never been
a father; nieces and nephews in St. Louis area became
surrogate children. He doted, he spoiled them, he took them on outings.
He was more astonished than their parents to see them become adults.
When his brother-in-law could not pick up the tab for the girl's
wedding Lombro himself paid for the function.
One of the guests had been Ralph
Bales and what caught Lombro's attention was that Ralph Bales had
brought a gun to the wedding.
Late in the evening, Lombro,
standing at the urinal in the men's John of Orsini's restaurant, was
aware of someone entering behind him and going into a stall. He then
heard a clunk of something falling and glanced under the door. A hand
was quickly retrieving a pistol. Lombro washed his hands quickly and
left the men's room. He
waited outside, hiding
behind a plant, to
catch a look at the intruder. A few minutes later
Ralph Bales emerged, slicking back his thinning hair with damp hands.
Lombro didn't know what to do. A friend of a friend on the groom's
side, Ralph Bales had been invited, true, so he probably was not a
robber. On the other hand, Lombro felt responsible for the safety of
his four hundred guests.
Finally, after an agonizing half
hour of indecision, Lombro had walked up to Ralph Bales and, as the
children were cutting the cake, struck up a conversation. He learned
that Ralph Bales had grown up in St. Louis. He was orphaned young — as
Lombro had been — and had made a career of various riverfront jobs.
They talked careers, real estate, making money, losing money. Ralph
Bales mentioned, vaguely, unions and shipping companies and waterfront
services and Teamsters. He lived in a house not far from Lambert Field.
He enjoyed working in his garden. Lombro did, too, he said, though he
hated the sun.
Ralph Bales said he loved the
sun. Lombro was satisfied that the man represented no danger and said
good-bye. Ralph Bales touched him on the arm in a special way and
offered his card. "You say you're in real estate," he said with
ambiguous significance. "If you ever need any security consulting, let
me know."
So the card, Ralph Bales,
Consultant, was filed away in Lombro's Rolodex. He thought he
might have a need for a
consultant at some point.
A month ago, he had.
And now, as he put the shoe brush
away in his bottom drawer and vacantly watched the papers blowing
outside
the
windows of his office,
he foresaw that the transaction that arose out of that wedding might
have been the only serious
mistake he had ever made in his life.
"Okay, kind of a problem," Ralph
Bales now said.
Philip Lombro listened, his head
immobile, eyes moving slowly around the face of his visitor.
"He snuck up on us, the cop."
Lombro said, 'There was nothing
you could've done?"
Ralph Bales was deferential to
clients. He didn't roll his eyes or sigh. He said, "No, he came up out
of the blue."
Lombro opened his desk. He pulled
out a thin envelope containing $25,000. He handed it to Ralph Bales.
Ralph Bales said, "Thank you."
Lombro nodded.
Neither man seemed grateful, or
pleased, by the exchange.
"How much of a problem is it?"
Lombro sounded reasonable. Men like him tend to stay calm when they
have problems.
Ralph Bales chewed on the thin
lip that was cut into his round, padded face. "Well, you don't want to
shoot a cop.
Whatever happens, you don't want to do that."
Lombro's eyes settled on Ralph
Bales's naked upper lip. He realized the moustach was gone.
"I'm not being, you know, cute,"
Ralph Bales continued. 'The cops don't get mad when you kill a DA
witness because witnesses are scum. When the cops get mad is when you
shoot a cop."
"And?"
"And there's some things we have
to do."
"Such as?"
"Okay, we've got to find the guy
that saw us." "Who?"
"The guy walked into me when I
got out of the car. The one with the beer."
Lombro lifted one ankle to his
other knee and touched his heel absently then rubbed it.
"He saw me," Ralph Bales said.
"And he saw you."
"They might not find him, the
police."
"No, that's—"
Lombro continued an argument that
seemed to reassure him. "Why would he volunteer? Why would anyone do
that?"
"He might not," Ralph Bales
agreed. "But some people are funny. They do weird things."
Lombro said, "The way you're
talking, it sounds like you've decided something."
"Excuse me, it isn't really a
decision. I mean, we don't have a choice, okay?"
Hit Man Shoots Cop in Back. The
newspaper sat prominently on Lombro's desk. Ralph Bales had been wrong.
There was
no photo of Vince Gaudia's body. Just the shot policeman's
wedding picture.
"I don't like this at all."
"With all respect, Mr. Lombro,
when you—" he looked for words that weren't too incriminating "—take on
a project like
this there are potential downsides. Okay? Like you buy a
building and find out it's got termites or something. It just happens.
You can't run away from it."
'The woman, too. You killed the
woman."
"Stevie tells me that was an
accident. Gaudia pushed her in front of him."
Lombro was nodding. "I don't care
much about her. She knew
the kind of bastard she
was getting involved with."
Outside the window a blackbird
settled on the top of a brick facade. The bird's nervous, glossy head
flicked about. It shot
into the sky in a gray streak.
Ralph Bales said, "We did the job
for you and there was a glitch. But the fact of the matter is, I don't
live here and Stevie
Flom don't live here but you do. And so this
glitch, it's sort of your problem."
Lombro considered this speech
unemotionally. "What are you proposing?"
"I can drive out of here now and
you can take your chances. Or you can pay me to take care of this guy,
too."
"No, absolutely not."
"Then . . ." Ralph Bales let the
word float through the room like a puff of cigarette smoke. "There's
another option."
"What? Go on."
"Maybe I could find him. Threaten
him. Scare him a little."
"Would that work?'
"It usually does. But I don't
want to do it. It's a lot riskier than just, you know, taking care of
him."
"You want more money. Is that
what you're saying?"
"Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
It's just a question of risk. Ten thousand and he's gone. Twenty
thousand and I find him, put pressure on him."
"Twenty?"
"What do you want me to say?
Nineteen ninety-five?"
Lombro did not speak for a
moment. He gazed at the newspaper, then closed his eyes and flipped his
hand forward in a gesture of frustration. "All right." He looked at Ralph Bales. "But I
want your word that you won't hurt him."
Ralph Bales frowned. "You didn't
say you didn't want him hurt."
"I mean," Lombro said, "you won't
kill him, will you?"
Ralph Bales nodded and, looking
straight at Lombro, said, "Of course not. I told you I wouldn't." He
had found that when
you look somebody in the eye, they will believe
anything you tell them.
*
* *
The car cruised past the camper
slowly. By the time Pellam was out of the kitchenette and at the window
it had turned off
of River Road and was gone. He remained at the
window, looking out through the blinds, which he now noticed could use
a good cleaning.
Maddox offered no night parking
and Pellam was forced to keep the camper in this pathetic trailer park.
The owners, Annie and Fred Bell, advertised fifty hookups and during
some prior vacation seasons they might all have been used. But that
would have been before the cement plant went in next door and gouged
out five hundred yards of idyllic riverfront grassland,
replacing it
with bunkers and steel docks. The Bide-A-Wee trailer park was currently
occupied by John Pellam's Winnebago and two clusters of tenters who
were obviously—and understandably—tired of the picturesque view of
Ochner Cement & Stone and were packing to leave.
At first Pellam had not much
cared about the emptiness. But that was before he was a
witness in a murder case. Well, a
sort-of witness. Now he wished for a
little more anonymity. He
looked at his
watch. It was only 11:00 A.M. but he had
already seen or heard four—no,
make that five—cars slow as they cruised past the trailer court. He
suspected the occupants were not checking out the Bide-A-Wee for
upcoming vacation sojourns in Maddox but were more interested in him.
Another car now stopped directly
in front of the trailer. It was a beat-up old sedan, its fenders
attached with gaffer tape.
The driver was a shadowy form behind a
grease-stained window. The condition of the car told him that this was
not the
cops come a-calling again.
Pellam, who had been hacking away
at the impossible crust of burnt chili, dried his hands and walked to
the front of the Winnebago. He opened a map compartment beside the
front door. This tiny space did contain maps, probably thirty
of
them, all limp and seam-torn. It also contained a Colt Peacemaker
.45-caliber pistol. It had a steel barrel and rosewood
grips. He lifted
the gun out and thumbed open the cylinder cover.
Pellam put the pistol on
half-cock, loaded five of the six chambers, then eased the hammer down
on the empty slot. He
slipped the gun into his waistband, pulled on his
bomber jacket and left the camper, striding toward the car.
Why did everybody in Maddox have
somber cars?
The driver—Pellam did not
recognize him—was a man of about forty with a square face, eyes staring
evenly at him. Pellam
had hoped that he would see Pellam coming to
confront him and burn rubber to escape.
The man shut off the engine and
got out.
Pellam's hand casually went to
the zipper of his jacket.
The intruder was huge. He slammed
the door with a loud bang. He kept staring at Pellam. Then he started
across the street.
He had a crew cut and folds of skin hung over his
eyes.
Pellam unzipped his jacket and
stood by the roadside. His hand rested on his belt and he rubbed the
buckle. With an index finger he touched the wood grip of the gun.
When the man reached the shoulder
of the road, twenty feet away, he stopped. Looking straight into
Pellam's eyes, he said, "You need any young men?" Pellam squinted and
cocked his head. The man repeated, "Young men?"
"I'm sorry?"
"Look," the man said stiffly, "I
know you hear that a lot of folk aren't happy to have you all in town
because you're saying
things about Maddox in your movie that aren't so
nice. Well, you won't hear that from me. I don't feel that way at
all."
"Uh-huh, good."
"Now," the man continued his
recitation, "my boy Larry's seventeen and was most recent in a play. I
mean a serious play without music. I Remember Mama. He was
good—I'd say that even he wasn't my son—but he'd be top-notch in a
movie where you get to say your lines over and over again and they take
the best one. I mean top-notch."
"Well, sir, I don't do any casting."
"He'll do it real reasonable. You
know, just to get his foot in the
door, so to speak. Could do manual labor, too, till
an acting part
comes 'round. He's strapping."
Pellam shook his head.
"He's taking
classes."
"Sorry." Pellam zipped up his
jacket. "I wish I could help out but I can't."
The man stood, shoulders drooping
and face bright red. Behind him was a decrepit house that at one time
was a marvel of Victorian excess. It had been abandoned halfway through
a futile make-over. He said in a stiff voice, "I've been out of work
three years now. Was a deckhand for a inland tow company. I'm about at
the end of my rope."
"I'm sorry."
"I don't want sympathy. I'd work
if there was any work but there ain't. Larry's 'bout the only chance
we've got for some income."
Pellam shook his head. "Wish it
were different."
"Sure." The man stood for a
moment longer. "Thanks for your time." He turned silently and walked
back to his car. He
looked at the camper, then started the engine.
Pellam watched the car roll away,
followed by the bubbling sound of a
rust-shot muffler.
He trudged back to the camper,
disarmed himself and hung up his jacket. He returned to the kitchenette.
A half hour later he was sitting
at the tiny table, flipping through his Maddox location file, which was
filled with Polaroid snapshots. As Tony Sloan had requested, he'd taken
a number of shots of empty houses—nearly every other house in certain
parts of town—and he had narrowed the bungalow search down to four: two
of them cute and two run-down. He was checking the addresses against a
tattered map of Maddox.
That was when he heard the
hesitant footsteps on the gravel walk. Pellam's hands froze on the
report.
Had Larry's dad returned for
another audition?
Pellam stood and walked to the
rear of the camper, peering out. No, it was a different car. A dark red
sedan.
The sort the Italian and the WASP
detectives would drive.
It turned out not to be the two
cops, however. Without knocking, a dark-complected man in his
mid-thirties stepped inside
and looked around, orienting himself. He
wore a trim, double-breasted charcoal gray suit and reflective blue
sunglasses.
He said, "I know what you're
hoping for but give it up. You're not getting out of here." The door
swung shut and he slowly pulled his sunglasses off and slipped them
into his breast pocket.
SIX
Pellam pursed his lips together.
He shook his head.
"What?" the intruder asked.
"It's 'I know what you're
thinking. But it's too late. You're not getting out of here.'"
"No." The man frowned. "I'm
sure." He propped a briefcase on the driver's seat and opened it.
"Anyway, I've decided to cut the
dialogue. Do it in visuals. Want coffee? It's instant."
A script appeared from the
briefcase and the man began thumbing through it. "Aw, no. Pellam. Don't
cut it. It's a great line.
'But give it up.' It's very—what's the
word?—anachronistic. Oh, you're right." He read the script carefully.
"The line's gone."
"Take a pew," Pellam said and put
the kettle on the flame.
Marty Weller easily settled his
lanky frame into the dining banquette. A yoga practitioner, he
possessed the sort of physique that could comfortably handle a camper
environment. He had an airbrushed tan and muscles in places where only
a Nautilus machine could put them. Where his trimmed eyebrows ended
above his nose there appeared California creases—two short,
vertical furrows, the result of a lifetime of squinting. Tea. Herbal."
He tapped the script. "I must have been thinking of the first draft. Or
the second. Or one of them. You rewrite a hell of a lot, John."
"Lipton?"
Weller looked about, as if he
might spot a box of Celestial Seasonings chamomile hidden nearby.
"Okay," he said with reservation. Then: "Honey?"
"Domino."
"Well, this is middle
America." Weller smiled slyly and asked,
"So?"
"Yes?"
"You know what I'm asking. What's
the scoop? On Sloan."
Independent producer Marty Weller
was as much a gossip sponge as anyone in Hollywood—though he was not
sufficiently powerful to use much of the gossip he absorbed. He had
done a string of offbeat films that were lukewarm hits. This opened
doors for him but did not automatically get his pictures made. Still,
gossip about Tony Sloan, while not particularly useful to Weller, was
platinum gossip. One wanted it the same way one wanted Taittinger or
beluga.
Yet Weller's presence here in
small-town Missouri now reminded Pellam of L.A. protocol and, cognizant
of his obscenely
large fee, he recalled the rule: Assume anything you
say, even in strictest confidence, will immediately be transmitted to
the Hollywood Reporter and attributed to you. Pellam gave
Weller a diluted version of the film's production woes.
"Word is he's cindering in the
upper atmosphere,3 Weller said with a frown that did
nothing to mask his delight.
Pellam shrugged. "Okay, Marty,
don't keep me in suspense. Go or no go?"
Weller picked up the battered
black-covered script he had just misquoted. The title was Central
Standard Time. "We're close, John. Damn close. I've got maybe
eighty percent of the financing in place." He fell silent for a minute
and riffled the pages. In his former Me— which in Hollywood meant only
a few years ago— Pellam had both written and directed independent
films. Central Standard Time had been the film he'd been
working on when his career had been derailed in a
big way.
No one had been interested in the
property until immaculately tanned Marty Weller had appeared on Pellam
s doorstep and told him, with as much sincerity as a Hollywood producer
could muster, that he was going to get Pellam's "vision" turned into
a
dark art-house classic.
Finally, he said delicately,
'There were some questions about what happened before." He looked up
uncomfortably.
"You were actually in production?"
"We were two weeks into principal
photography."
Weller did not look up but
intently read what happened to be the blank back cover of the script.
"When he got sick, you mean."
Got sick. Pellam said,
That's right."
Tommy Bernstein—the leading man
in Central Standard and Pellam's best friend—had not "gotten
sick" at all but had died
of a cocaine-induced heart attack during
principal photography, which had brought the production to a halt and
Pellam's life
as he'd lived it to a shattering conclusion.
Weller was flipping through the
script and sending a stale breeze up into the air.
"Somebody . . . I'm just explaining why it's taking so long. This is
bullshit, I know. But somebody talked about a jinx."
Pellam laughed. "Like the Exorcist
stories, that old crap?"
"People are more superstitious
about money than about their lives. More producers fly on Friday the
thirteenth than write
checks, you better believe it."
"Well, nothing I can do about
that."
"And you directing, that's still
carved in stone?"
Pellam noted that the cautious
tone in the man's voice was not going away. He said firmly, "Yep."
"The thing is, John . . . Well,
you've been out of the loop for a long time."
"I direct or they don't get
property. It's a deal-breaker."
"And they're saying if they don't
get to pick the director, leads, and DP, we don't get the money.
They'll—"
"Mexican standoff."
'They'll let you coproduce. I
think they'll even go gross points since you wrote it."
"Producing means nothing to me—"
"It means a shitload of money is
what it means. Look, John, the budget is seven million." He tapped the
script. "It's got 'film
noir cult classic' written all over it. We're
going to shoot in black and white, for God's sake. This is going to
make money.
It cannot not make money—"
"Marty," Pellam said patiently.
Weller's momentarily wide eyes
shrank to a more sober size. "Forgive me, I know not who I bullshit.
Okay, think about this alternative: Can you get up two hundred, two
twenty?"
"What if I can?"
"We cut back to four million,
finance it ourselves, shoot with unknowns, and pucker up at the sight
of every distributor's backside. You can direct."
Pellam realized the teakettle was
filling the small kitchen with steam. He made himself coffee and Weller
a cup of tea, while he was mentally adding a second mortgage on his
house, selling his old Porsche and adding in the fee for Missouri
River Blues.
"One twenty, one fifty, maybe I
can do."
Weller performed his own
calculations. "I'd have to make some phone calls but I think if you
come in with that, we can get
it done. For that, you can direct but you
don't get points. You'd work for scale and maybe have to kick some
back."
"I want this film made. I've
never wanted to get rich."
"You always were a crazy
sonofabitch, Pellam." Weller sipped the hot tea, holding it inches
above the table and lowering his mouth to the rim. "I should tell you
one thing, though. Never rains but it pours. Paramount's interested in
a property I optioned last year. Terrorist hijacking thing. Cliche,
cliche", cliche, I know. Mea culpa. Budgeted at forty-five. It's not
going to happen but I've still got to go to London to meet with some
people about it."
"What if it does happen?"
"I want to do your film,
John." For a moment the passion beneath the silken tan seemed real. In
his obscure way Weller was explaining that he would rather be a
producer who was a cult artist and rich than one who was commercial and
excessively rich.
Hollywood, Pellam knew, is a
crucible of trade-offs.
"Next step?" he asked. He took a
sip of coffee then poured
it out. His gut was wound
up. Not often is one offered the opportunity to direct his own picture
and to go hopelessly into debt at the same time.
"I leave tomorrow night for
London. Let me get on the horn now and see what I can do. But I give
you my word, if we can work it, I'm doing Central Standard. It'll
be a bitch, but I'd tell Paramount so long, bye-bye. I don't care how
many effing zeros they wave in my face. Does that shock you, John? Does
it?"
It did, but Pellam said, "No,
Marty, it impresses me."
*
* *
The bungalows wouldn't work. The
interiors were too small for a Panaflex and lights'and actors all at
the same time. Sloan
had wanted a complicated tracking shot where the
camera on a doorway dolly starts in the yard and follows a character's
point of view into the living room. But he finally agreed with Pellam
and the key grip that the scene would have to be edited together. They
would shoot the exteriors of the bungalows (the most decrepit of the
four) and the interiors in the parlor and living room of a two-story
colonial next door.
Pellam left Tony Sloan barking
instructions to the gaunt key grip, whose resilient humor from the
first several weeks of
shooting had vanished completely under the
weight of tasks like this one: completing in six hours a setup that
would normally take two days. Pellam hopped back on his cycle and drove
to the bank that held the deeds on both houses. The banker, wearing a
pastel green suit, had carefully read the standard location release and
signed it, accepting the six-hundred dollar check with an
air of embarrassment.
"Most money them houses've made
in two years."
"Times're rough round here, looks
like."
"Yessir, that they have been. I
just wish this recession would hurry up and get done. We'll get through
it, though."
Pellam returned to the bike and
fired it up. As he drove through town he noticed a car following,
keeping the same distance behind. Two people in the front seat, he
believed. Pellam made two unnecessary turns. The car took the same
route. He braked the cycle to a stop and pretended to look into a
storefront window of dusty antiques while the driver of the car
stopped
and pretended to look at a map. Eyes still scanning the window of the
store, Pellam suddenly popped the bike into
first and squealed away
from the stop, turning down a narrow walkway between two deserted
buildings, a space just wide enough to leave about an inch on either
side of the handlebar grips. He could touch neither the front brake nor
clutch without leaving knuckle skin on brick.
When he emerged from the alley he
braked to a fast stop and saw the car was skidding to a halt at the far
end of the alley. Pellam made a sharp turn down a one-way street and
aimed toward a strip of brown river. After he had driven for a block
he
felt a strong sense of deja vu and slowed, dropping down into first
gear. The car was nowhere around him and, guided
by instinct, he turned
right and parked. He was on Third Street, next to a series of low
factories and warehouses.
From here he could see what had
at one time probably been Maddoxs budding riverfront scene. Now it
contained only
empty storefronts, uninspired antique stores, bars and
Callaghan's Steak House.
This was also the place where
Donnie Buffett had been shot. Pellam noticed something beside his booted foot. Bloodstains,
he believed,
though they may have been nothing more than antifreeze or chocolate
milk.
"I'll keep an eye on them, you
want to get a bag or something. "
"Yeah?"
"Sure."
"Thanks."
Pellam parked the bike and found
a phone booth. The phone worked, which surprised him. Upon calling
directory
assistance, he also was surprised to learn that the address
he sought was only a block away.
Pellam did not care for the smell
of the place.
Something about antiseptics, that
sweet cheap-perfume smell of chilly stuff that gets dabbed on your skin
before they cut
or stick.
Also the design was depressing:
aluminum, bright vinyl, linoleum. For some reason, orange was very
popular. Orange and purple. Pellam had been in old hospitals, where you
really got a sense of Medicine—dark woodwork and brass and pale
green. As if somebody were discovering anesthetic or penicillin behind
one of the gold-stenciled doors.
Maddox General was like life and
death in Kmart.
Pellam signed in. The nurse
pointed him down the hallway. Pellam walked past a cop stationed at the
head of the corridor.
He eyed Pellam carefully. "Hold up there, sir."
"I'd like to see Officer Buffett."
"You're the witness." The cop's
stony face remained immobile; his eyes painted Pellam up and down.
"I just want to see how he's
doing."
"Open your jacket."
"I-"
"You want to see him, open your
jacket." Pellam opened his jacket. The cop frisked him roughly and
motioned toward
Buffett's room.
On the TV was a game show. The
sound was low; everything but the loudest applause was inaudible. The
reception wasn't very good and there was a thick band of distortion
through the center of the screen. The host and the contestants were
smiling
a lot. Buffett wasn't.
"How you doing?" Pellam asked and
identified himself.
"I remember you."
Pellam walked to a gray chair. He
stood as if deciding whether or not to sit. "I brought you this." He
put a book, a recent best-seller, on the table. "It's a mystery. I
don't know if you like them." Buffett kept staring at him.
Pellam cleared his throat. The
silence filled in again. He said, "I didn't know if you'd like a
bottle. What d'you drink anyway? Beer?"
"I got shot in the back."
"I
heard. How you feeling?"
"How do you think I feel?"
Silence again. Pellam decided
there wasn't going to be any lighthearted banter and joshing. He stood
back from the chair
and crossed his arms. "Look. I'm sorry about what
happened. But I'd like to ask a favor. Your buddies in the police
department, a couple detectives particularly, are giving me a pretty
hard time. You know, following me. They think I saw
this guy who was in
the car—"
Buffett, eyes on the TV screen,
blurted, "Well, you did."
"I didn't see him,"
Pellam said evenly. "I know you think I did. But I didn't."
Buffett kept staring at the tube.
His eyes were dark, agitated. He licked the corner of his mouth with
the tip of his tongue.
This made him seem like a cornered animal. "How
could you help but? He was in the front seat."
"There was glare."
"The hell
there was glare."
Pellam's face flushed. "You think
I'm covering up something? I'm not. I described the guy who bumped into
me."
"Oh, that's mighty brave of you.
I saw him. We don't need his description. Anyway, he's
rabbited. He was just the hired gun and he's back in Miami or Chicago
by now."
"Do you think they paid me off?"
"I think you're like everybody else.
You don't want to get involved."
Pellam sighed. "I better be
going."
"I think when you look in the front
seat of a car, you fucking
see somebody. I think'when you move your mouth, you're
talking
to somebody!"
"I wasn't—"
"You saw him! I saw you look
right into his face."
"If you saw so damn much why the hell
didn't you
see him?"
"How much did they pay you?"
"I
didn't—"
"Listen, mister," Buffett blurted
viciously, "you're gonna have cops on your ass every minute of the day! They're going to
stay on you.
They're not going to let you crap until you tell—"
Pellam waved his hand in
frustration and walked to the door.
"You son of a bitch!" Buffetts
face was livid, tendons rose in his neck, and flecks of spittle popped
from his lips. His voice choked and for a moment Pellam feared he was
having a heart attack. When he saw that Buffett was simply speechless
with rage he himself stormed out of the door.
And walked squarely into a young
woman as she entered.
"Sorry," he muttered.
She blinked and stepped aside
timidly. "Oh, I'm sorry."
The woman was thin, blond, late
twenties, dressed unflashy, like an executive secretary, looking shy
and embarrassed.
Pellam assumed she was the cop's wife and thought he
was lucky to be married to someone so pretty. He also thought
she was
going to have to put up with pure hell for a long, long time.
She said, "I'm looking for Dr.
Albertson."
Pellam shook his head, shrugged
and walked past her.
In the hall he heard Buffett
shouting to him, "Sure, so just leave. Just like that! Go ahead, you
son of a bitch!"
The voice faded as he proceeded
down the corridor. The cop on guard said something, too, something
Pellam didn't hear, though from the snide smile on his face, he guessed
it was no friendlier than the cop's farewell. Then he was at the
elevator, kneading his hands and feeling his jaws clench with anger. He punched the down button seven
times before he realized it had
lit up and the car was on its way.
A woman's voice startled him.
"I'm sorry. I didn't mean to barge in."
He glanced back and saw the blond
woman walk up, looking at the floor indicator.
Pellam's mouth tightened. "No
problem."
"He looks familiar." She glanced
back up the corridor.
"Who?"
"Well, your friend. The man in
the room you were just in."
"Don't you know him?"
She explained that she didn't.
She was looking for her mother's doctor and the nurse had sent her
there. She nodded toward the room. "Who is he?"
Pellam said, "He's the cop, the
one that got shot."
"Oh, sure! The Post-Dispatch.
They ran his picture. What's his name?"
"Donnie Buffett."
"He's your friend?"
Pellam waved his hand. "What you
heard back there ... I don't think you'd call him much of a friend."
The elevator arrived. They both
stepped in. Behind them stood a man in a dressing gown, his hand
grasping a tall IV bag
on wheels like a chrome hat rack.
"The doctors left for lunch
already." She grimaced. "I was supposed to meet him here about Mother.
Now I've got to come back in an hour."
"Your mother's a patient?"
"Hysterectomy. She's fine. Well,
she's complaining nonstop but that means she's fine."
The elevator, slowly filling with
her fruity perfume,
arrived on the ground floor.
"So," he said as they walked outside
into the cool air of the spacious
lobby.
"Well."
"My name's John Pellam."
She took his hand. "Nina
Sassower."
They walked out the front door of
the hospital and Nina surveyed the street. She had a great profile; the
lines of her face
were . . . What came to mind? Unencumbered.
Then he smiled ruefully to
himself. Unencumbered. Too much movie talk, too much artistic
vision. No, she's sensuous,
she's pretty. She's sexy.
Pellam looked at his watch. He
had a lot to do and not much time to do it in—getting the insurance
binders for the
bungalows, running his daily check on the dozens of
shooting permits to make sure they hadn't expired during this elongated
filming schedule, calling his bank in Sherman Oaks about the mortgage
to finance his own film, Central Standard Time,
seeing what
other markers he had that he might call in—and all the while dodging
cops.
What he did, though, was none of
these things. Instead he asked, "You interested in lunch?"
And, as it turned out, she was.
*
* *
At three that afternoon Pellam
was in the camper, about to ride to the set, when his phone buzzed. He
snagged it and
propped it between his shoulder and his cocked head as
he pulled on his leather jacket. '"Lo?"
"Dinner
tomorrow."
"Okay.
Is that you, Marty?"
"Here's the
deal. You
ready? ... Telorian."
Telorian and Pellam had spent an
evening together several years ago, drinking and talking about Claire
Trevor and Gloria Grahame and Robert Mitchum and Ed Dmytryk. They
argued vocally and with white knuckles around their thick glasses of
ouzo.
The reason for that meeting
several years ago was Telorian's other avocation—producer of low-budget
films. He had read Pellam's Central Standard Time and was
interested in optioning it. This happened to be at a time when Pellam
had not
wished to have anything to do with film companies, except
location scouting. A generous offer of option money was rejected and
Telorian had huffed away from the meeting. Pellam had not thought about
him since then. He now felt his pulse increase a few tempos as he
asked, "He's in Maddox?"
More likely to see Elvis hustling
for a table at the Hard Rock Cafe.
"He happened to be in Chicago. My
secretary tracked him down. You kind of blew him off a few years ago,
he says."
"I blew everybody off a few years
ago."
"It's not like he's taking it
personally. Not too personally. He still thinks Central
Standard can be a hit. He's got to be home day after tomorrow but
I got him to agree to stop over in St. Louis to talk to you."
"What does he feel about me
directing?"
"Not a problem. He just wants to
know how you'd do it. Times aren't as flush as they used to be. He's
interested in hits.
He doesn't mind a grainy film. But it has to be hit
grainy film. Got it?"
"When's his plane get in?"
"Whenever he tells his pilot to
land. Meet us at eight at the Waterfront Sheraton. Lobby bar. You know
where it is?"
"I can find it."
"About forty, fifty minutes from
Maddox."
"He's got the treatment? The
script?" Pellam asked.
"He's got everything. All you
need to bring is as much Tony Sloan gossip as you can dig up."
*
* *
In the floral-wallpapered
entryway was a white Formica table. On it rested a Lucite pitcher
filled with plastic flowers. To the left, through an arched doorway,
was a parlor. The furniture in the rooms was mostly 1950s chain
store—kidney-shaped tables, blond wood chairs, wing-backs and love
seats upholstered in beige, a lot of plastic. Plastic everywhere. In
the corner
of the parlor was a young woman in a white blouse and black
pedal pushers, struggling through a Chopin Etude. A young, muscular man
in brown slacks and yellow short-sleeved shirt leaned against the
piano, smiling at her and nodding slowly.
"When I first saw you, you know,
it was the night of the dance. It was—"
"I remember." She stopped playing
and looked up.
"It was hot as a in-line block.
You were across the room under that Japanese lantern."
"That lantern, it was the one
that was busted."
"Sure, it was busted and the bulb
shone through that paper and covered you in light. That's when I knowed
you was the girl
for me." He put his hand on hers.
A heavyset man appeared slowly in
the doorway. He lifted a Thompson submachine gun. The couple turned to
him. Their smiles vanished,
"No!" The woman screamed. The man
started forward toward the assailant. The gun began its fierce
rattling. Pictures, vases, lamps exploded, black holes popped into the
wall, bloody wounds appeared on the bodies of the couple as they
reached toward each other. As the magazine in the submachine gun
emptied and a throbbing silence returned, the couple slowly
spiraled to
the floor, their slick, bloody hands groping for each other's. Their
fingers touched. The bodies lay still.
None of the fifteen or so sweaty
people standing in the room around the immobile, bloody bodies said a
single word. No one moved. Most of them were not even staring at the
couple but were looking instead at the bearded man in jeans and green
T-shirt who leaned against a reflector stand, his red eyes dancing
pensively around the room. Tony Sloan paced over the
spent machine-gun
cartridges. He was shaking his head.
The man in brown sat up, wiped
blood off his nose, and said, "Come on, Tony. It works."
"Cut," came the shout from behind
the camera.
The bloody actress jumped to her
feet and slapped her sticky palms on her hips. "Oh, Christ," she
muttered viciously.
Sloan stepped closer to the
carnage, surveying it. He spat out "It doesn't work.'"
The machine gunner pulled cotton
out of his ears and said, "What's he say?"
The actress grimaced. "He says it
doesn't work."
The killer shrugged.
Sloan motioned to Danny the
script writer and the assistant director, a young blond woman in her
early thirties. The three of them huddled in the corner of the room,
while wardrobe and grips spread out onto the set, cleaning up. "We
gotta shoot it outside," Sloan said.
The assistant director's golden
ponytail swaggered as she nodded vigorous approval.
"Outside?" Danny sighed.
According to the Writer's Guild contract, he was paid a great deal of
money every time he revised Missouri River Blues. The fun of
making that money, however, had long ago worn off.
"It's not, you know, dynamic
enough," Sloan mused. "We need a sense of motion. They should be moving.
I think it's important that they move."
Danny pulled his earplugs
out. "If you remember the book and if you remember the shooting script,
they escaped. I didn't
kill them in the first place."
The director said, "No, no, no, I
don't mean that. They've got to die. I just think they should get
killed outside. You know,
like it suggests they're that much closer to
freedom. Remember Ross's fear."
"Fear of the lock-down," the
assistant director recited, shaking her stern blond ponytail. It was
impossible to tell if she was speaking with reverence or sarcasm.
Danny wound his own ponytail, the
color of a raven's wings, around stubby fingers, then touched from his cheek a fleck of
red cardboard
from the blank machine-gun shells. He looked as exhausted as Sloan.
'Tell me what you want, Tony. You
want them dead, I'll make them dead.
You want them dead outside, I'll make them dead outside. Just tell me."
The director shouted, "Pellam?
Shit, did he leave?"
Pellam, who had not been wearing
earplugs but had been sitting on the front hall stairs thirty feet away
from the shooting,
stood up and walked into the living room. He dodged
bits of pottery and glass and stepped over two arms assistants in
protective gear who were removing several of the explosive
gunshot-impact squibs that had failed to detonate.
Sloan asked him, "What about a
road?"
"Why do you want a road?"
"I'd like them to die on a road,"
Sloan said. "Or at least near a road."
The actress in pedal pushers
said, "I don't want to get shot again. It's loud and it's messy and I
don't like it."
"You've got to die," Sloan said.
"Quit complaining about it."
With a bloody finger she pointed
to the cartridge of film the assistant photographer was pulling off the
Panaflex camera.
"I'm dead. It's in the can."
The director stared at the
ground. "What I'd like is to find a road going through woods. No, a
field. A big field. Maybe
beside a school or something. Ross and Dehlia
are planning one last heist. But it's an ambush. The Pinkerton guys
stand
up in the window suddenly, out of the blue—"
Pellam began to say something.
"Will you stop with that Bonnie
and Clyde shit already, Pellam?" Sloan snapped. "This'll be
different.
Everybody thinks they're
going to get shot—I mean, the audience is thinking Bonnie and
Clyde. They're thinking they've
seen this before. But uh-uh. Here,
the lads get away. Maybe the guns don't go off and—"
Danny said, "Neither of
the guns go off? There are two agents."
"Well, one gun jams and the other
guy misses."
"So now you want them to live?"
Danny asked brightly.
"No, no, no. I want them to
escape then get killed, maybe in a freak accident. I've got it! They
drive into a train."
The actress said, "If I don't get
shot again I don't mind."
Pellam said, "Somebody else did a
train crash ending. Who was it? That's very seventies. Elliott Gould
might've driven a car into a train once. Or Donald Sutherland. Sugarland
Express" He wondered why he was getting so riled. Missouri
River Blues wasn't his movie.
The stoolie from the studio, a
young man with curly hair not tied in a ponytail, lit a cigarette and
said to no one in particular, "You know what it costs to rent a train?"
Sloan started to speak, then
reconsidered. He said, "I could go with a tractor-trailer maybe."
Pellam said, "Why don't you
rename the film and call it Daughter of Bonnie and Son of Clyde?"
Danny slapped Pellam's palm, five
high.
The director ignored them.
"Daniel, rewrite it and let's get John a copy. I want it to look like
they're going to get blasted
but then something happens and they escape
and there's a freak accident."
Exasperated, Danny said, "What?
What happens? Tell me. Give me a clue."
The director said, "Surprise me.
I want it like Man can't touch them, but Fate can. Fate or nature, or
some shit." Pellam asked, "You want any particular land of road?"
"A
road . . ." His eyes began to fly again. "I want it near the river and
I want a big field on one side. I want the car to careen into the
river."
The river. Pellam
grimaced. It was often impossible to get permits for scenes like that
nowadays—no one wanted gas and
oil and random car parts filling up
their bodies of water. Many of the car crash setups were guerrilla
shots—without a permit,
in and out before the authorities found out,
the evidence left at the bottom of the river or lake. Pellam guessed
that if Sloan
insisted on launching Ross's Packard into the Missouri
River, it would have to be a guerrilla shot.
Sloan said, "I'm going to look at
rushes." He hurried toward the door. Before he could leave, though, the
sound of arguing voices rose from the hallway. A security guard was
backed onto the set by two tall men in light gray suits. They walked
steadily toward him, speaking low and pleasantly but insistently. One
of the men looked at Pellam. He said-to his partner, "That's him." They
turned from the flustered, red-faced guard and strode onto the set.
"Hey, hey, hey," Sloan said.
"What is this?"
"John Pellam?"
Before Pellam could answer, Sloan
said impatiently, 'This is a closed set. You'll have to leave."
One said in a high, contrite
voice, "I'm sorry for the"" intrusion. This won't take a moment." He
turned to Pellam.
"You're John Pellam?"
"That's right."
Sloan looked at Pellam with a
mixture of perplexity and anger in his face. "John, who are these guys?
What's going on here?"
Like the cops the day before,
these men ignored Sloan and said to Pellam, "We're with the Federal
Bureau of Investigation." IDs appeared.
And like the day before, when the
cops had shown up, everyone on the set stopped working and turned to
watch.
"I'm Special Agent Monroe and
this is Special Agent Bracken. Would you mind stepping outside with us?
We'd like to ask you a few questions." The agents ignored the bloody
actress. Perhaps they had seen a lot of machine-gunned bodies in their
day.
"About what?"
"A crime you may have been a
witness to. If you have a few minutes now?"
"I really don't."
'Yessir," Bracken said. Monroe,
with his razor-cut hair and tidy mustache, looked like an FBI agent.
Bracken was scruffy
and had a wrinkled suit. He looked like a thug.
Maybe he worked undercover. "It won't take long."
"He's very busy," Sloan said.
"We're all very busy."
Bracken spoke to Pellam, as if he
had uttered this protest. "Well, sir, the thing is, if you continue
not to cooperate we'll have
to take you to St. Louis and—"
Sloan strode over to them. "I
don't know what this is all about, but you can't just walk in here. Go
get a warrant or something. John, what the hell is going on here? What
are they talking about?"
"Well, we can get a warrant, sir.
But that'll be to arrest Mr. Pellam here— "
"For what?"
"Contempt and obstruction of
justice. Now, if that's how you'd like us to proceed ..."
"Jesus," Sloan whined, closing
his eyes. He sounded more upset than Pellam. "Talk to them, John." He
waved his hand fiercely as if scaring away a bee. "This is not a problem
I want. You understand me?"
"Maybe if we could just step
outside, Mr. Pellam," Monroe said. "It shouldn't take long."
Sloan lifted impatient eyebrows
at Pellam and told the agents, "He'd be happy to."
Pellam preceded the two agents
out of the house, past a row of location vans, dollies, and generator
trucks, then down the street. They kept motioning him along the
sidewalk, away from the curious eyes of the cast and crew and the crowd
of locals, who stared with fascination at the equipment and
occasionally waved—some timidly, some like relatives—at the cast.
One middle-aged man pointed at
Pellam and whispered something to the woman by his side. Their faces
seemed to darken
and they stared, unsmiling, as he walked out of sight
behind a row of shaggy hedges. When he turned, as directed, into an
alley between two empty houses he could glimpse the couple again. They
still stared with apparent hostility, and several
others had joined
them.
Halfway through the alley, which
Pellam thought led to the agents' car, the two men stopped, one on
either side of him.
"We can talk here."
"Here?" Pellam stepped back to
put some distance between him and the agents. He brushed against the brick wall of one
of the houses.
He turned and found himself hemmed in.
Pellam turned back to Bracken.
"Couldn't we—"
"Shut up," barked the unscruffy
Monroe.
Bracken pointed a stubby finger
at Pellam's chest and pushed him hard against the wall. "We know he got
to you. We
know he's pulling your dick." Though they both shaved,
Bracken had done the sloppier job of it. He smelled of sweat. No
after-shave for these boys.
Grim-faced, Pellam waved his arm
in the air and started toward the mouth of the alley. "You can go to
hell."
Two huge fists suddenly grabbed
his shoulders and slammed him back into the wall. His head bounced
against the window, which cracked under the impact.
"We're not getting through to
you," Monroe said.
An unlicensed pistol in his
waistband, Pellam did not want to be frisked. He lifted his arms
unthreateningly, palms outward. "Why don't you just tell me what this
is all about."
"A witness to a federal crime who
refuses to testify or who fabricates testimony known to be false can be
guilty of contempt, obstruction of justice and perjury." Bracken wore a
thick gold bracelet on his hairy wrist, which seemed unbecoming on an
agent of the federal government.
"As well as conspiracy if a link
can be shown between him and the primary perpetrator."
Bracken lowered his face into
Pellam's, "I'm talking about if you haven't got the balls to tell us
what you saw that night we're looking at you as an accessory."
"Are you arresting me?"
"No, sir."
"Then this is harassment. I think
it's time I called my lawyer."
Braken took him by the lapels
again and shoved him back against the wall. Pellam remembered to keep
his head tilted forward so he wouldn't break any more windows. "We know
you saw Crimmins in the Lincoln and we want you to identify him."
"I don't even know who you're
talking about."
"The man who's paying you off?
You don't remember him?"
A surveillance photograph
appeared from Monroe's pocket. It had been lifted from a videotape and
the time and date were visible in the right-hand comer. The picture
showed a heavyset man with a broad, Slavic face and receding hairline.
His mouth was open and he was turning his head to speak to an unseen
person walking behind him.
"I've never seen him."
"Look again, Pellam. That's Peter
Crimmins."
"I do not—"
"Look again, Pellam,"
Monroe said. "He's the man who was in the Lincoln. He's the man
responsible for the death of
Vincent Gaudia and for the shooting of a
Maddox policeman. He's the man you saw. All we need is your
confirmation."
"I can't confirm what I didn't
see."
"You're not going to cooperate?"
Bracken barked.
"This is cooperation — listening
to you two. In fact, it's beyond cooperation. I'm leaving."
*
* *
It had been a long, long hour.
Peter Crimmins was sweating. His
Sea Island cotton shirt
was wet in the small of his
back and under the arms. The sweat would bead on his chest hair, and
when he moved, would press, cold, against the skin. Sweat was gathering
too in the deep folds of fat where his waist met his chest. It trickled
down his back.
Crimmins knew that at any time he
could have asked the agents to leave and then they would either have to
let him go or
arrest him. But if they arrested him— which they might
easily have done—that meant he would have to have his friend and
counselor present.
That was something Crimmins
didn't want. So he had consented to the questioning. He waved the men
into seats in his
office, sandwiched between the parking lot and the
room of dark desks, and rested his fingertip on the mole above his eye.
The barrage of questions lasted for an hour. They were handsome black
men and looked more like recent business school graduates than federal
agents. They seemed Wee many of Crimmins's clients (both the legitimate
ones and the less so)
— clever, polite, reserved.
But underneath: the personalities
of a Midwest dawn in January.
One asked the questions. The
other alternated between staring calmly at Crimmins and taking notes.
"Could I ask you where you were last Friday night, sir?"
He hated the sir. The way it
fell like
a fleck of spit off the end of the sentence showed their contempt for
him. But what
could he do? That was an old rule in negotiations—never
say anything that can be quoted against you later. If he later
claimed
harassment, the agent would say, I never called him anything but
"sir"... Look at the transcript.
"I was at my office most of the
night."
"Until when?"
"About ten. Quarter to, maybe."
"By yourself?"
"Yes. My secretary leaves at
five-fifteen every night. I stay late a lot of times."
"Is there a guard?"
"We got guards, sure. But I
didn't see any of them that night when I left."
"Is there any way of confirming
your whereabouts?"
"You really think I killed Vince
Gaudia?" Crimmins asked, exasperated.
"Is there any way of confirming
it, sir?" the agent repeated.
"No."
"Do you own a Lincoln?"
"Yes. And a Mercedes wagon. A
diesel."
"What color is the Lincoln?"
Crimmins rubbed the bump of his
third eye. Why did they hate him so? "Dark blue. But you know that
already, don't you?"
"What's the license number?"
He gave it to them
"Where was that car on the night
we've been talking about?"
Crimmins was hungry. He had bouts
of low blood sugar. If he didn't eat regularly—sometimes five meals a
day—he would have attacks. He thought with some pleasure that Vince
Gaudia never got to eat his last meal the night he died. "I drove it
into the city."
"And parked it where, sir?"
"The place I always park it. The
garage near the Ritz."
"And that's a Lincoln
Continental?"
"I told you that already."
"Actually, no. We don't know what
model. Is it a Continental?"
"It's a Town Car."
"Now tell me again where you were
on that night."
Crimmins asked, "Where I was
sitting, you mean?"
"You were in your office, you
claim."
"I'm not claiming. I was there. I
told you that. Didn't he write it down? I saw him write it
down."
"Why wasn't your secretary there?"
"She leaves about five-fifteen
every day. I told you that too."
The interview went on and on and
on and the agents picked over every word that Crimmins said.
Finally the men stood. They
flipped their notebooks closed and gathered their raincoats. Suddenly
they were gone.
He now sat at his desk, staring
at the familiar nicks along the side, running his finger over them,
feeling the bulge of his gut against his belt. '
The phone rang.
His lawyer was on the line.
Grimmins decided not to tell him about the visit from the FBI. It had
been worse than expected,
but if he told the lawyer, the man would have
a tantrum that he had spoken to the agents alone. But the issue didn't
come up; the lawyer wanted to talk, not listen.
"Pete, I've got some news. Call
me on a safe phone, will you?"
Crimmins grunted and hung up. He
walked down- * stairs and up the street to the Ritz Carlton parking
garage. Without proffering a ticket, he nodded to a young attendant, who scurried off
to retrieve the Lincoln. Crimmins looked at it sourly as
it rolled up.
He gave the boy a bill then got inside and drove out onto the broad
street. He lifted the receiver of the car phone, the number of which
was changed so frequently that he was 95 percent sure it was a secure
line.
"News, you said." Crimmins drove
leisurely, well under the speed limit.
"The witness," the nonfriend and
counselor said.
"Yes."
"The witness to the Gaudia hit."
"I know that's what you
mean. What about him?" Crimmins snapped, angry because there
was a 5 percent chance the line
was not secure.
"I found him."
"How?"
"I called some favors in."
Called in favors? Nonsense.
Nobody owes a leech any favors. "Who is it?"
"A man with this movie company
that's up in Maddox."
"Movie company? I never heard
about a movie company."
'They're shooting some gangster
film up there." His voice was bright with an irony that Crimmins didn't
wish to acknowledge.
"Well? Tell me about him."
The man said, "They know he saw
who was in the car. Both Maddox police and the FBI. So far, he's been
too scared to testify."
"What did he see?" Crimmins asked
slowly.
"They're sure he saw the driver,"
the lawyer said, then added, "There's something else I should tell you.
I heard from
somebody in the
Justice Department that Petersons going after him. He's going to jump
on this guy with both feet. He's
going to jump on him until he burns
you."
A sigh. "What's his name?"
"John Pellam."
"Where's he staying?"
The lawyer hesitated—pehaps at
Crimmins's sudden interest in details. Then he said, "He's got a
trailer. You know, a camper. He parks it different places but mostly
he's staying at the old trailer camp by the river in Maddox. Near the
cement plant."
"I thought that was closed."
"Maybe for the movie people they
opened it."
"It's deserted around there,
isn't it?"
Now the hesitation grew into a
long silence. The lawyer managed to ask, "Why do you want to know that?
Tell me, Peter."
Crimmins said, "I don't need
anything more from you for the time being."
*
* *
"Line it up for me, Nels," said
Ronald L. Peterson, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of
Missouri.
He sat in a large office, done up
in functional sixties design. The furniture was expensive. The desk was
solid teak, but you could not tell by looking at its top, which was
covered with a thousand pieces of paper. On the bookshelves, filling
three
walls, were dark, wilted volumes. Moore's Federal Practice
Digest. Federal Sentencing Guidelines. Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure. Case reporters, law reviews, ABA Journals.
Young Nelson, sandy-haired,
solid, a purebred preppy,
opened a file stuffed full of
scraps of yellow foolscap and began
pulling out sheets and organizing
them.
Peterson, forty-four, was wearing
a Brooks Brothers navy suit, about one-fifth as old as he, a white
shirt, a yellow tie with black dots on it (a summer model technically,
but this was his good-luck tie, having been around his neck when he put
seven Cosa Nostra leaders into prison, and so he wore it when—as now—he
felt he needed luck). Peterson was a solid man, with thick hands and a
smooth face. Balding. A roll of belly and midriff that showed taut and
pinkish under the thin white shirts he always wore. He was the sort of
man whose face revealed exactly the boy he had been at thirteen. And in
other ways, too,
he was much the same then as now: confident,
vindictive, smart, determined, prissy. And manic.
Ronald Peterson s approach to
this job, as well as his approach to the practice of law, was
characterized by an almost charming simplicity. He was the chief U.S.
lawyer in a major judicial district for the same reason he had worked
in the Justice Department for the past nine years: because he thought
that people who did bad things ought to go to jail.
Years ago, in law school,
troubled about what kind of practice to go into, Peterson had heard one
of his Harvard Law professors say that the best lawyers make the worst
judges. Meaning that the practice of law provides its own
morality—lawyers do not need to make terrifying judgments about right
and wrong; they just apply the rules. This observation was an epiphany
for him, and that summer he took a job as an intern in the same U.S.
Attorneys office that he now headed.
He had been applying the simple
rules ever since. He went
about this task with the devotion
of a fundamentalist Shi'ite—with whom he shared a sense of
righteousness and an ecstatic appreciation of the abstract.
The man who was the focus of
Petersons present jihad was Peter Crimmins. This campaign
actually had less to do with the infamous 60 Minutes program
skewering his office than one might think. No, what Peterson resented
so much about Crimmins was what the prosecutor had identified as a
serious problem in America—a legitimate businessman's cool, conscious
decision to move into illegal activities. Crimmins, like the insider
traders whom Peterson also loathed, had simply found the profits at his
trucking businesses not up to his greed and had expanded into money
laundering and other crimes as if that were the next logical step in
market expansion
Nelson, an assistant U.S.
Attorney, had reviewed all the sheets of foolscap. He looked into his
boss's adolescent eyes. "It's dicey." His voice stopped abruptly and he
immediately regretted the word. Peterson continually told his people
not to give
soft assessments. He wanted specifics. Yeses and nos.
Peterson was renowned for his tempe"r tantrums. But today he was
not in
the mood to beat up anyone for casual lapses like this. He drank more
of his coffee and asked, "What do we know about Crimmins the night of
the hit?"
"He denies it all but hasn't got
an alibi. We didn't have a tail on him. But there were no phone
intercepts in or out for two
hours on either side of the shooting. He
does have a Lincoln."
"Match?"
"Circumstantial. Both the getaway
and Crimmins's are
dark-colored. But there's no
tag or other ID. Not yet."
"Crimmins's got that bodyguard,
doesn't he?"
"Yep. But he doesn't match the ID
of the gunman."
"What about earlier wiretaps?"
Peterson wondered. "Was there a syllable that might be taken
to suggest Crimmins was ordering a hit? Was there some talk of accidents?
Anything about, oh, cleaning house?"
There had not been, Nelson
reported, as he stroked his young, pink cheek, under which several
teeth seemed to chew nervously on his tongue. He added, "But you know
how tough surveillance has been. Crimmins makes half his calls from
the
park and his car phone..."
A serene Peterson spun in his
functional 1960s chair and licked a smear of coffee off the side of his
cup. Losing the star
witness on whom he had pinned so much hope had
been such a blow that it transcended simple rage. Besides, a measure of
such anger as Peterson might feel had no target other than himself— for
acquiescing to Gaudia's flippant request to keep the U.S. Marshals out
of his hair.
The U.S. Attorney breathed slowly
as he looked out over the city. But would Crimmins really have been
present at the hit? Why? Maybe they had been meeting. Maybe Crimmins
was trying to cut a deal with Gaudia and the talks had turned sour.
Peterson patted his thighs. He
was on a diet. (One of the things that irked him was that he looked
like Peter Crimmins, only Crimmins had more hair.) His head turned
slowly but powerfully as if it were geared at a very low ratio. "What
about the witness? What's his name? Pellam?"
'The cops aren't sharing anything
with us."
"Pricks," Peterson spat out. He
slapped his leg, feeling the fat reverberate. "One of theirs gets shot
and the mayor and commissioner sit on the witness. You know why they do
that. For the Post-Dispatch. That's why they do it. Who's on
him?"
"Monroe and Bracken. Rousted him
good. But he's not talking."
"You're sure he got a peek?"
"Yep. No way he could've missed
him. Impossible."
"I think it's a pay-off."
"I think so, too," Nelson said,
though he in fact did not. What he believed was that Crimmins had said
simply, "If you talk, I'll kill you."
And Pellam had been struck dumb.
Peterson said, "Move on it big.
Find out everything you can about him."
"Who, Crimmins?" Which Nelson
realized to his dread was an immensely stupid question. He said
quickly, "Oh, you mean Pellam."
"Uhm."
"Then tell them, Monroe and
Bracken . . ." Peterson mused, absently gazing at a Avind-up toy on his
desk. "Have them
beat him up."
"What?" Nelson whispered.
Peterson's eyes flickered and
landed on his assistant's troubled face. "Figuratively," he added
casually. "Keep on him, I
mean. You knew I meant that, didn't
you?"
"Figuratively," Nelson said.
"Sure, I knew."
Pellam realized suddenly that he
had known Nina Sassower for twenty-four hours and had no idea what she
did for a living.
"I'm unemployed actually," she
said in response to his question. She was blushing and suddenly
appeared very embarrassed. Pellam told her that he'd been in films more
than ten years and the majority of that time he'd been unemployed.
They were walking through what
was left of downtown Maddox. They had finished lunch and were moving,
at Pellam's tacit guidance, away from the park where Tony Sloan was
choreographing the murders of two Pinkerton men who stumble on Ross's
hideout; Nina's narrow eyes darted uncomfortably at the sound of the
gunshots. They were make-believe but still troubling. Pellam touched
her arm to direct her toward the river.
Today she wore a bulky orange
V-neck sweater. The matching orange skirt was billowy and a brisk wind
snapped it like
a ship's sail. Her shoes were tan and she carried a
raincoat that was the same shade. An improbable outfit on Santa Monica
Boulevard, but in Maddox, Missouri, it was quite becoming.
When they had put some distance
between them and the gunfight, she relaxed. "Before I got laid off, I
was a school counselor, grade school."
Pellam had taken those tests. His
teachers, in the Catskill town where he grew up, were encouraging, but
the tests revealed
he had relatively little aptitude for any of the
listed careers. (Because Pellam liked to read, the counselor suggested,
"Book salesman." Because he liked to go to movies, the man offered,
"Usher, then with hard work, theater manager.")
"Not a guidance counselor—more
of a therapist."
"A psychiatrist?"
"Psychologist. But budget
cutbacks . . . Illinois, too. All over the country, I guess."
"Surprised they even have schools
left in Maddox."
"Well, I really live in Cranston,
which isn't as bad off as here. Closer to St. Louis. But we still
aren't doing well. Anyway,
I guess if you're the one laid off, it
doesn't matter if unemployment is one percent or twenty."
"Guess not."
They looked straight down this
broad street and saw the gray slab of river a quarter mile away.
Despite a heavy network of overhead power and telephone cables, the
street seemed very nineteenth-century— like a deserted frontier town's.
It would look perfectly natural for the road to be filled with muddy
mule teams and drovers and ponies and river workers slogging through
the muck toward the docks. Pellam noticed a couple of scabby,
atmospheric buildings, right out "of 1880. "Let me
take some snaps.
Hold up a second."
A battered Polaroid camera
unfolded and he took four
pictures. He stuffed the
undeveloped, moist squares into his shirt,
then continued on, Nina
beside him.
"Are those for your movie?"
"Not the one they're shooting
now. I have a catalog of buildings and places that directors might
want. Keeps me from reinventing the wheel every time I get a call."
"You work for the studio? Or do
you have your own business?"
"Freelancer. Like most everybody
here. Nowadays the studios just finance and distribute. Everybody else
is hired as an independent contractor. Used to be different. In the
thirties and forties the studios owned your soul—if you had a soul,
that is."
She didn't laugh but seemed to be
memorizing this lesson in Hollywood enterprise, and so he decided not
to make a casting couch joke. Not yet. He turned back to the old
buildings and Nina watched him take more pictures.
"What's that?"
"Your catalog of locations."
Pellam stored the binders in a
file box under his bed in the camper. He said, "That can be arranged."
They continued up the street.
"Let's go in, can we?" Nina
nodded at a store. Although Pellam was extremely aware that he owed
Sloan a big field, he said sure. They walked into a huge warehouse,
filled with scavenged relics from buildings. Nina said she was
interested in columns and mantelpieces. They found a couple of scabby
wooden columns, stripped down carelessly; you could still see blotches
of paint and nicks and the scorch marks from the blowtorch. Nina liked
them but thought at four hundredeach, they were too pricey.
Pellam agreed. He also did not think they would fit into his California
contempo bungalow on Beverly Glen. "And dangerous," he added, "in the
camper."
She smiled at this, then stopped
in front of a dark, flaking mirror, framed in ancient oak. She flicked
her hair with her ringers.
Pellam asked, Tell me about
yourself."
She blushed and gazed at a brass
coal bucket with a face embossed into it.
"A cherub," Pellam commented, not
pushing the deflected question.
"I always thought that was a
cigar. Like the kind Clint Eastwood smoked in those Italian westerns."
"Isn't that cheroot?"
"Could be. I'm always getting
things mixed up."
After a pause she said in a
dogged voice, "So, tell you about myself. Well." She had apparently
steeled herself for the response. "You'll probably find it pretty
boring. I grew up in Maddox. Went to Mizzou—that's the University of
Missouri—in St. Louis, studied English lit, which gets you nowhere. I
got a job in a library and didn't like where it was going. So I got a
master's
degree in psychology. Then moved over to Cranston, nice safe
distance from Mom and, at the time, Dad. Hobbies?
Astrology, shiatsu—"
Massage? He thought quickly. Was
it too early in their courtship to make a thigh reference? Probably. He
opted for back.
He said, "I have this problem in my back." Then added,
"My lower back."
She parried with feigned
disappointment. "I don't do lower backs."
"You specialize. I see." He
waited what he thought was the proper amount of time. "No boyfriend?"
"Boyfriend." She considered and
he wondered if she was tailoring a lie. "There's this guy I see off and
on. A lot off and not much on. You know how it is. When I was younger I
dated a lot but, I don't know, something about me—I was kind of a
jerk
magnet. What rocks those boys crawled out from under..."
"Ever been married?"
"No. You?"
He was a veteran, Pellam admitted.
"See, I'd rather not get married
than be married and have to go through the pain of divorce."
"Well," Pellam said, "without
pain, there's no appreciation." They both considered that while they
stared at a ninety-dollar spittoon. He said, "You're thinking that was
a stupid thing to say."
Nina was nodding. "Uhm, yeah, I
think it was." She laughed and they paused at bins filled with old
albums, selling for fifty
cents each. Pellam liked the scratchy sound
of LPs. He didn't own a CD player. He sunk a lot of his listening money
into records. When he got home he'd record them on cassettes for the
tape deck in the Winnebago. He began going through
the jazz bin. "You
like music?"
"Oh, yeah, music is the best,"
she announced, and looked over his shoulder at the album cover he was
reading.
"Who's that?" she asked.
"Oscar Peterson." Who's that?
"Sounds familiar."
"Oscar Peterson," Pellam said
again.
"Uh . . . I'm land of into soft
rock, you know. Light FM. It's relaxing."
Oh.
"It's jazz," he said.
"Like Stevie Wonder?" Nina asked
sincerely.
"Sort of," Pellam said. "They use
the same notes."
Outside, the voodoo of Tony
Sloan's paranoia caught up with Pellam. He explained that he had to get
back to work. When
he leaned forward to kiss her cheek, to say
good-bye, she responded with firm pressure on his hands and even leaned
into
him. A semihug. He glanced down and got a clear vision of the
plunging neckline of her sweater. He was staring at her pale
skin when
they separated and she caught his downward-looking eyes. He said
quickly, "I was admiring those earrings.
They're interesting."
"A present," she said, perhaps
choosing not to believe him.
He slipped on his sunglasses and
smiled. "You interested in searching for a field with me sometime?"
Nina nodded. "Sure. I'd like
that." She touched his arm and looked serious. "But I'd like to say
something."
The boyfriend who wasn't a
boyfriend. The girlfriend who was a girlfriend. I don't like men with
film companies.
Lips that touch liquor...
"Yup?"
"I want to tell you why I picked
you up."
"How's that?"
"I mean, not that I don't like
you."
"No."
"See, I heard that when the film
company came to town they were hiring people. I mean, it's not the only
reason I started talking to you." '
"Is there any way I could get a
job?"
Well, he should have known. This
was hardly the first time
it had happened. She must
have seen the flicker in his eyes.
The Ray-Bans were not all that dark.
"I'm sorry." Her eyes went
straight to the ground. "I shouldn't have asked. It's just—"
"I don't mind."
"It's just that I've been out of
work for six months. I haven't even been able to find a job
waitressing."
He touched the incredibly soft
orange alpaca over her muscular arm. "The thing is, shootings almost
over. All the extras
have been cast and they don't make much money
anyway."
"No, no, no." Her face had turned
pink "I wouldn't want to act. I don't even like movies. I
think they're stupid."
She doesn't like movies?
"Oh." Everybody likes
movies... "Well, what did you have in mind?"
"I don't know. I see so many
people in town from your company..."
Thirty-seven cast members from
Hollywood. Sixty-two local extras. Seventy-one L.A.-based crew members,
sixty-seven
from St. Louis, twelve stuntmen, eight drivers, two
producers, two caterers, two animal wranglers, one stoolie from the
Coast, one high-tech visionary director.
One location scout.
"Is there," Pellam asked,
"anything you can do?"
Nina considered this for a
minute. The blush was gone and so was her bashfulness. He suspected
that beneath the wan
Julia Roberts face was a ball-buster of a school
counselor. "I can't really do anything other than coach girls'
gymnastics
and talk to students."
Pellam squeezed her arm again.
"And," he said, "you can make yourself beautiful."
She sniffed a laugh. "You're
flirting."
"No, I have something in mind,"
Pellam said. Then he added, "In addition to flirting."
MISSOURI RIVER BLUES
SCENE
180A—INTERIOR DAY,
ROSS'S GETAWAY CAR, cont'd
ROSS
When 1 first saw you, you
know, it was the night of the dance. It was—
DEHLIA
(holding wounded arm) I
remember.
ROSS
ANGLE ON Dehlia, hair flying
in the breeze. She looks back with LOVE in her eyes.
DEHLIA
(gasping) That lantern, it was
the one that was busted.
ROSS
Sure it was busted and the
bulb shone through that paper and covered you in light. That's when I
knowed
you was the girl for me.
"Ouch. That's terrible. Don't
read anymore, Pellam." Stile and Pellam sat on a river bluff
overlooking the Missouri.
Pellam was looking down at the
revised script. He recited emotionally, " "You was the girl for me.'"
"Pellam," Stile said, wincing.
"Please."
"That's what they say just before
they skid into the river. Don't you think that's purty? The hole in
the-lantern's a metaphor
for freedom."
"You know what's a metaphor? To
keep the cows in. In this
case—" Stile nodded
toward the script "—it's where the
bullshit is."
"I'll bet in the final scene the
cops find the car but not the bodies." Pellam flipped to the end and
read. "Damn damn damn,
I'm right. Gimme five."
Stile and Pellam slapped palms
and the stuntman limped over to the Yamaha. He had spent the afternoon
getting shot with
a .45 at close range and tumbling down a flight of
stairs. Thirty gunshots and fifteen falls. Then Sloan had changed his
mind
and decided Stile should fall through a window after getting shot.
But the stunt coordinator insisted they postpone the scene
till
tomorrow and gave Stile the rest of die day off. He had joined Pellam
and together they spent the afternoon driving around
on the cycle
looking for Sloan's big field. "Who was that squeeze I saw you with?"
"Nina Sassower." Pellam joined
Stile at the cycle.
"Well, that's a name and a half.
I haven't seen her around."
"That's because this is her first
day on the set. I got her a job doing makeup. She's pretty good at it."
"She's also pretty good at
kissing and throwing her arms around you."
It was true, she had been.
"Casting couch is one thing,
Pellam. If you get laid 'cause you got somebody a job as a makeup
artist while I fall out of tall buildings and have to content myself
with ring around the rosy at night there is no justice in this world."
Pellam was not, however, thinking
of Nina Sassower and her embracing arms. He was obsessed with getting
the field. The houses and buildings for the film had been easy,
Maddox's economic condition being what it was. The field was another story.
It needed a border of dense trees, a road, a river, and a school in a
stand of bushes. Also a small cliff for the dramatic crash.
The best they had found was a
small overhang beside a weedy pumpkin patch. To reach the bluff for its
dramatic fall, Ross's Packard would have to crash through deep thickets
of forsythia and juniper and maple saplings.
"Very vegetative place, this
Missouri," Pellam observed, "and oddly short on fields."
"I still don't see why you're
working for Sloan. Even a whore's got principles. Sort of oil and water
is what I'm saving."
Pellam wiped beads of dew off the
face of his Casio. Six P.M. He had to meet Marty Weller and Ahmed
Telorian in two hours. "Let's have a beer, call it quits." He sat in
the saddle of the Yamaha. Stile pocketed the Polaroid and climbed on
behind.
The wind rose up in sudden chill
bursts. The rain had mostly stopped but the streets were flecked with
its aftermath—bits of bark and branches—and the air was very damp. A
dog with fur spiked by an earlier downpour walked up to them, sniffed
belligerently then fled as Pellam kicked over the engine. They sped
onto the asphalt.
"I called Hank," Pellam shouted
over the roar, referring to the card-playing attorney retained by the
film company. "He said there's nothing I can do about it."
"Those FBI guys, you mean?'
"They can interview whoever they
want, they can stop production, they can look at all our permits. They
can go to Delaware and Sacramento and look at everything the company's
ever filed."
"Wooee, Tony's gonna roast your
nuts, boy."
"He'd just fire me is what he'd
do," Pellam said.
"I don't think he can fire you
for not testifying. I'll bet you can sue him if he tries."
"Yeah, right."
Pellam motioned toward the river.
A mule team of barges slapped through the water beside them. The wind
was up and sailors were huddled on the pushing tug. Deckhands stood on
the front of the barge, wearing orange vests and speaking into
walkie-talkies— presumably to the captain, who stood, three football
fields behind, in the pilot house. He wore a suit and tie.
Stile watched it and shouted, "I
love riverboats, yessir. Eighteen fifty-three. The Altona made
the run from St. Louis to Alton
in one hour and thirty-five minutes.
See the lights? That's Alton."
"How do you know this
stuff?" Pellam shouted back over the rattle of the engine.
"Nobody beat that record for a
while. Well, the Robert E. Lee could've, of course. Or the Natchez.
Watch the curve there."
Pellam looked back at the road
just in time to make the curve with a skid that didn't even make Stile
flinch. They turned off River Road and shot toward downtown. The lights
were gassy and brilliant in the mist. "See," he shouted to Stile,
"glare everywhere. How could I see anything?"
Pellam pulled into the discount
package store and killed the engine.
They walked into the
green-neon-lit store, went to the cooler, and began fighting it out
over Canadian or American beer. Pellam lost the toss and Stile snagged a six-pack of Bud, plunking it down
into Pellam's hands. "Gotta take a leak."
Pellam paid for the beer and
wandered outside. He opened a can and sat on the Yamaha, sipping. He
looked over at the
flat black strip of the river.
He softly whistled a few bars
from "Across the Wide Missouri."
The siren remained silent until
the car was directly behind him, then it burst into an huge electronic
howl. The spotlight came on simultaneously. Pellam was so startled, he
dropped the beer, spilling a good portion on his jeans. "Goddamn!" He
spun around and looked at the car. The doors were opening and two men
were coming toward him like G-men about to gun down Dillinger.
The WASP detective and the
Italian detective. Oh, no-----Them again.
"Look what you did," Pellam
lifted an arm, showing them the drenched Levi's.
The Italian cop ignored the spill
and grabbed Pellam's arm. He cuffed bis wrist.
Pellam stared at the silver
chain. "What—"
The other wrist got cuffed, too.
"—are you doing?" *
"You have the right to remain
silent. You have the right to an attorney." It was the Italian
detective speaking.
"If you can't afford one," his
partner took over, "one will be appointed for you. If you waive your
right to remain silent,
anything you say can and will be used against
you in court."
"Do you understand each of these
rights?"
Pellam thought they somehow knew
about the' unregistered .45 that was sitting below his butt in the
toolbox of the Yamaha.
"Do you understand these rights?"
"Sure, I understand them. What am
I being arrested for?"
The WASP cop said, "Sir, we take
drunk driving very seriously in our community."
Pellam closed his eyes. He shook
his head.
"We'll have to give you a
Breathalyzer test," the Italian detective said.
The WASP said, "But I'm afraid we
don't have it with us."
The Italian said, on cue, "We
better take him downtown."
"What's going on here?" Stile,
chewing on a piece of beef jerky, walked out of the store.
"I'm—" Pellam began.
"Just stay out of this, mister,"
the WASP cop said ominously to Stile.
"—being arrested."
"For what?"
"For bullshit," Pellam called. He
looked at his watch. It was six-twenty. "Look, I have a very important
meeting at eight.
I can't—" .,
"Quiet."
"No, look, I've got to meet a man
in St. Louis—"
They roughly dragged him to the
squad car and, with a furry Italian hand on his head, pushed him inside.
Pellam called, "Stile, you gotta
make a call for me. You gotta call Marty—"
"All right, that's enough out of
you." The door slammed shut. Pellam kicked the front seat furiously.
"He's a hairsbreadth away from
resisting," the Italian cop said to nobody.
"Where's the station?" Stile
asked. "I'm coming down there."
The cops climbed into the front
seat. One of them said, "It's in the phone book. Look it up."
They drove off leisurely, leaving
Stile with a strip of beef jerky in one hand and five cans of beer in
the other.
"Listen," said Ralph Bales.
Stevie Flom was listening.
"Okay, the man is not happy."
They sat in a chain restaurant on
Big Bend Boulevard in St. Louis. Stevie drank decaf. Ralph Bales was
drinking tea,
bleached by two wedges of lemon. It was All You Can Eat
Don't Be Shy Spaghetti Night. Around them, fat families sat hunched
over mounds of food.
"Not very happy at all."
Stevie was a punk and rarely gave
a shit who was happy and who was not, except that this particular
unhappy person
owed him a lot of money.
"So it's my fault?" Stevie said,
his voice shrill. The table rocked as he leaned forward and he
whispered, "What, I was supposed to let a cop take you out?"
Ralph Bales held a finger to his
lips. "I'm not complaining. Lombro isn't, you know, rational.
He thought you should've
shot the cop in the leg or something so they
wouldn't be so concerned about it. Not the back."
"Yeah, right, shot him in the
leg. Like it's night and I've got a pussy gun and I shoot him in the
leg and he feels a little
bee
sting and
turns around and explodes my head with hollow points. Bullshit. I mean,
bullshit!"
The men did not know each other
well. They moved in different circles. Ralph Bales was older, fifteen
years. He was well connected on the riverfront and probably could have
been more of a mover except he ran into some trouble in Chicago,
working for the Giancana family. Some money that was supposed to find
its way from Cicero up to Oak Park had not made that short journey.
Ralph Bales remained alive to pay it back, out of his salary, but his
name was suspect in Chicago ever
after. So he returned broke to his
hometown of St. Louis and found his way into riverfront services and
cargo and trucking
and finally became a consultant.
Ralph Bales had in fact been
doing some security consulting when he met Stevie Flom. A mutual friend
needed some
partners to help some expensive Scotch fall off a truck and
to move the cases after they touched down. The job went
smoothly,
though Ralph Bales had been irritated by arrogant Stevie. He found,
however, that another person resided inside
the young man— Desperate
Stevie, who had worked up such incredibly large debts giving his money
to casinos and to poker players and to the skirts he humped (nightly,
it seemed) that he would do whatever he was told to, provided he was
paid for it.
"Its my fault, you're saying.
Suddenly it's all my fault!"
"You're not listening," Ralph
Bales said. "I'm just telling you."
The weather was cold and wet but
Stevie wore a sleeveless tank top. He had good muscles; he liked to
show them off.
"We've got to handle Lombro—"
"Handle him," Stevie
exploded again, though the detonations were softer because he was
lifting his coffee to his lips.
"What the hell does that mean?"
"First, what it means is we don't
get paid."
"Don't get paid?" Back to the
high decibels. "Lombro was in the audience too! He should've been
looking out for heat, he shoulda honked the horn or something. Fuck!"
Several parents, worried about
their chubby offspring, glanced ominously toward the table.
Ralph Bales leaned forward.
"Look..."
" 'Listen, look.' You sound like
a crossing guard."
"This man is nobody to fool
around with."
"Well, you look. I'm out
five thousand dollars. Which—I've been asking around, all right?—and I
find is pretty on the low
side for a hit."
Ralph Bales had told Stevie that
Lombro was paying them ten thousand—not twenty-five—to split between
them. He looked at the young man with steely eyes. "Who've you been
talking to?" he asked in a menacing voice.
Stevie stopped exploding. He
looked down at his cup and poured more cream into it. "Nobody. I mean,
I was just asking around, you know. But I didn't mention anything
specific."
Ralph Bales sighed. "Jesus. Don't
say anything to anyone ever. Anything. Anyone. Ever. Lombro has
connections you
wouldn't believe."
"Deals . . . connections." Stevie
rolled his eyes. He was speaking softly now, though. The look in Ralph
Bales's eyes had spooked him.
"Okay, here's the arrangement. We
take care of the witness
and Lombro'll pay us
everything, plus twenty-five percent."
"Well, why didn't you just finish
it the other day? By the river? We could've waited."
"Okay, think about it," Ralph
Bales said slowly.
"Well..."
"Think about it."
Stevie was too cool and too much
of a punk to show admiration, but his smile blossomed. "I get it. You
wanted to, like,
goose Lombro for more money."
"You just, you know, go ahead and
do things," Ralph Bales lectured. "I thought it out."
"Twenty-five percent?" Stevie
tried to figure the , numbers. What was one quarter of five thousand?
Fifty percent is
twenty-five hundred. Then half of that? He got lost.
Ralph Bales said, "Means you walk
away with close to seven thousand bucks. Not bad for two days' work."
Close to seven? Stevie
smiled. He didn't want to but he grinned.
Ralph Bales smiled, too. "Hey,
does your buddy Ralph take care of you right? Okay?"
Stevie said, "I guess it's all
right. When?"
"When what?"
"When do we do it?"
"Well, I was thinking about that.
I think we ought to wait a day or two. Make Lombro think that we're
earning the money.
I'll call him from time to time and tell him we're
close. Like, we've almost found him but we aren't sure."
Another grin of near admiration
on Stevie's face, aimed down into the beige coffee. Then it faded and
Stevie said, "But what
if, you know, the asshole decides to talk to the
rucking cops, what if—"
"Excuse me, gentlemen." A shadow
loomed over them. A large man, his gray hair close-cropped, muscular
shoulders in a starched plaid shirt, gazed somberly at the men. He
looked exactly like an undercover detective. Ralph Bales's doughy face
burned and he felt the exact spot where his Colt rested on his hip. His
hand eased toward it as he scanned the three or four dozen families
surrounding them. His heart began to pound and it pounded faster when
he saw Stevie Flom looking up at the man with a belligerent grin on his
face.
Oh, man.. .
Grim-faced, the man said, "Like
to ask you a question."
"Would you now?" Stevie tossed
the words at the tall figure. "What'd that be?"
Don't do anything stupid,
Stevie....
"I got my children over there."
He nodded toward a nearby table. "Would you mind watching your language
a bit. I don't
know where you're from but we don't talk hat way around
here."
Stevie's grin vanished and his
eyes flared. His hand disappeared under the table, where he undoubtedly
lad his .25.
Oh, Jesus, Lord.. .
Ralph Bales's face popped out in
sweat. He leaned brward suddenly, reaching for Stevie's arm.
But the young man's hand emerged
with his napkin. He wiped his mouth carefully and said, "I'm mighty
sorry, mister. Been
a hard day. Terrible trouble on the job."
"That's all right now. For
myself, I don't care. It's the kids I was thinking of."
He turned away. To his back
Stevie commanded, "Wait."
The man turned.
Stevie paused a moment, then
said, "My friend, he'll apologize to you, too." Grinning, he looked at
Ralph Bales, who held Stevie's eyes for a minute, then said to the
gray-haired man, "Accept my apologies."
"Surely do."
*
* *
The swing of the car door. The
reflection of a streetlight hitting him in the face. The momentum of
the case of beer as he tried to grab it. The heavy crash of glass on
glass. The grimacing face of the half-bald guy, saying, "Fuck you."
Bending down and looking in the car, seeing himself in the window of
the car, the beer hemorrhaging at his feet... The Lincoln pulling away.
That's what Pellam told the
detectives.
One thing he couldn't tell them
was the one thing that could have gotten him sprung instantly and on
the way to the meeting
with Marty Weller and their potential
partner—the description of the driver of the Lincoln.
How far away was the Sheraton?
Pellam wondered. How long would it take to get there? Forty minutes, he
seemed to recall. Not that it would matter at this point. The time was
now nine-thirty.
He sat in a small room in the
Maddox police department. Across an unsteady table were the two
detectives. This tiny room, like the rest of the office, stank of age:
old wood, Lysol, mold, sour paint. The walls were sickly green, and
shaded incandescent bulbs hung down from the cloudy, grimy ceiling on
black wires. In the main office of the station were a dozen desks. Only
two of them were occupied, and only three others showed any signs that
they were used.
The drive to police headquarters
seemed to take forever. Pellam now decided he
shouldn't have told them about his meeting; he was sure the cops had
intentionally driven ten miles out of their way to take him to the
station and make sure he'd be late.
When he'd been led in, cuffed and
scowling, the four cops in the room looked up with eight resentful
eyes. The Italian
detective had crouched down in front of a cabinet,
opened the doors and begun pulling things out, a Sears catalog, empty
flowerpots, a shotgun in a plastic bag, stacks of memos. "Nope. Can't
find it. Charlie, where's that Breathalyzer got to?"
"Dunno."
They had searched for a few
minutes more, but it was a halfhearted exploration and they couldn't
locate the machine.
"We're going to have to get one from the Highway
Patrol. Shouldn't take more'n an hour. You'll have to wait here till we
do."
When they'd said that, the time
had been 8:05.
"It is absolutely vital I get to
my meeting," Pellam had growled.
"Well, when people get arrested
they don't always get what they want."
"I. Am. Not. Drunk. Book me or
release me."
This had prompted them to take
Pellam into the tiny canister of a room where he now sat. They asked,
as long as they had some time, what did he remember about the Gaudia
hit. They told him he could make a phone call if he'd give them one
fact—just one—about the man in the Lincoln.
'This is a setup."
"Well, whatever you want to call
it, it's all completely legal," the WASP said indifferently. "So why
don't you just put on your thinking cap?"
"That's it? That's what you told
us before."
"My lawyer," he said.
"You aren't being charged with
anything. We can't charge you with anything until you take the
Breathalyzer test. You just—"
"I want a lawyer."
"You just'll have to wait." The
Italian cop was angry at Pellam's impatience.
The WASP cop looked like he had
an idea. "Maybe as long as he's here, he could do that picture."
"I don't know," Pellam offered.
"I'm probably too drunk."
"Ha. Give it a shot, why don't
you?"
He tried to do an Identikit
composite of the man who had knocked into him. As he spoke, he
gazed blankly at the words on the Suspect Description form. Hair,
kinky, afro, fade, cornrows, caesar, processed, scar, tattoo words
only, tattoo unknown type, limp, pimpled, pocked, harelip, left-handed,
bushy eyebrows, muscular, stocking cap, cowboy hat, applejack, turban ...
No one was impressed with his
composite drawing and the cops decided he was still being recalcitrant.
The H cop said, "You
know, nobody's come forward. You're the only one who can help."
Pellam was trying to remember
their names. Who was the H cop? Hilbert, Hanson, Hearst?
"... we've done a tag
check—"
"Tag?" Pellam asked.
The Italian cop, the G cop, said,
"License plates on other cars in the vicinity that night."
"Oh. Your supervisor? I want to
see him right now."
The WASP continued, "... and it
came up zip. We've got no other witnesses."
Hellman, Harrison?
The G cop asked somberly if
Pellam knew how many people were killed annually by drunk drivers.
Pellam didn't know if he was supposed to answer or not.
Hagedorn! That was it.
Now he just had the G cop to worry about. Giovanni?
Pellam said wearily, "Let me talk
to my lawyer."
"You can't talk to a lawyer," the
G cop said.
"I have a right. It's in the
Constitution. Confront my accusers." Which Pellam regretted
immediately. He sounded prissy and obnoxious—like the bald, spineless
CIA director Tony Sloan had cast as the villain in his first movie. The
cops looked at
each other, then back to him. They seemed to be rolling
their eyes, although their pupils didn't move from his face.
The G cop said, "That's only if
you're the defendant."
"If I'm not a defendant then what
am I doing here?"
"Not very much," the G detective
said bitterly. "Not very much at all."
Pellam slammed his open palm on
the desktop. It hit with a sound that surprised even him. The cops
blinked but neither of
them moved. "Are you going to arrest me for
standing nearby a motor vehicle and having a sip of beer or not? If you
can't
find the killer . . ." Pellam felt his heart sprinting. "You
can't find any leads, so you're blaming me."
"Hey—"
Through clenched teeth Pellam
said, "You go to your boss and you say, 'It'd be open and shut, except
there's this witness
who hasn't got the
balls to help us. He's a GFY.' Whatever the hell that is."
Hagedom said, "Is somebody paying
you off?"
The Italian cop said, "That's a
crime, sir. A serious crime. And you'll do hard time for that."
Pellam knew about good cop,
bad cop from some films he'd worked on. This was a variation: bad
cop, really bad cop.
Another officer, a young uniform,
stuck his head in the door. "Can't find that Breathalyzer anywhere.
Sorry. And MHP
don't have one to spare."
"Well, this is your lucky day,
Pellam."
"I've spent three hours in this
hellhole. That's not lucky."
"Well, sir, you could've been in
our lockup all these three hours, which is a lot less pleasant than
here."
Pellam walked past them into the
main room. He asked the desk officer, "Was there a guy here? Tall,
blond hair, mustache?"
"Yeah, but he left. Sorry."
"He left sorry," Pellam s voice
rang out in a singsong.
"We had a little mix-up. My
fault. I heard them boys talking about the Highway Patrol and, not
seeing you, I thought they'd taken you there. I sent your friend to the
troop HQ. It's over on 1-70 a good piece. Forty, fifty miles or so."
The voice added unemotionally, "Sorry about that."
Pellam closed his eyes and rubbed
them. "Could you give me a ride back to my camper?"
"Afraid not, sir. Since you're
not a suspect or a witness or anything that'd be against regulations."
"Well, could you call me a cab,
at least?"
"Cab?" the officer laughed. He
was joined by chuckles
from other cops in the room.
"The last time Maddox had a cab company was in, what was it, Larry?"
"Oh, I'd guess it must've been—"
"That's okay," Pellam said, "I'll
walk."
"To your camper?" one cop called.
"Say, that's a long walk."
Another said, "Couple miles,
easy."
He found a pay phone outside a
closed deli and finally got the front desk.
Yessir, Mr. Weller had waited in
the lobby until nine, then left with another gentleman. They were going
to dinner. Would
this be Mr. Pellam by any chance?
"Yes. Did he leave a message for
me?"
Weller had. Pellam was to meet
him at the Templeton Steak House at nine-thirty.
An hour and a half ago.
"Where is that?' ''
According to the young man's
blithe directions, it was a half hour from Maddox.
"I'm calling from a pay phone.
You wouldn't happen to have their number, would you?"
"Well, I do. Were you thinking of
having the steak?"
"What?"
"I was wondering if you were
going to eat there or if you were going to meet Mr. Weller. Because if
you were going to meet Mr. Weller, he was leaving the restaurant at
ten-thirty. He had an eleven o'clock flight out of Lambert Field."
"He's checked out?"
'That's right. Believe he
mentioned a trip to London."
Pellam sighed. "And the other
gentleman? Mr. Telorian."
"I believe he was flying to Los
Angeles tonight. I should say, sir, Mr. Weller was pretty anxious to
see you. He asked a
number of times at the desk if you'd called."
Pellam was staring at the number
pad on the phone.
"Hello?" the pleasant desk clerk
asked.
"Still here."
"Don't be too fast to pass up
Templetons. For my money, best T-bone in the county. You still want
that number?"
Pellam declined.
He dug another quarter out of his
pocket, made a call and sat down on the curb.
A half hour later the headlights
of Stile's Taurus swept around a curve, and the car braked to a stop
beside him. It was the
first car he had seen on this road all night.
"What you're experiencing is
called phantom pain."
"Like Ghostbusters," Donnie Buffett
said. The
woman smiled.
Buffett shook his head as he
laughed at his own tiny joke. Mostly, though, he was studying her. All
right, she was a doctor
and she was a woman. Well, Buffett
knew better than to think it was weird that Dr. Weiser, this famous SCI
specialist,
wasn't a man. But he could not get over what kind of
woman she was: young, early thirties, a sleek, pretty face, short,
punky auburn hair, a pug
nose, a chin dimple. Fingernails
painted glossy white. Lipstick red as a stop sign. Under a white lab
coat
was a silk blouse printed with red and green and blue geometric
shapes. And—in addition to dark stockings and black ankle boots that
had hooks, not eyes, for the laces, she wore a black leather skirt.
Almost a miniskirt.
When she'd entered the room, the
woman had stuck her hand out, firmly shook his, and said, "Wendy
Weiser. Your SCI doctor. You're the cop, right?"
Buffett had cocked his head,
brushed off the surprise, and said, "Hope you don't mind if I don't
stand up."
"There you go," she had said.
"Today's men. No chivalry to speak of."
Then Weiser had plopped down in a
chair and started right off talking, flashing her green eyes at him.
She repeated a lot of what Dr. Gould had said. She didn't use the word
"nonambulatory," though her message was no better than his.
She explained the pain he had
been feeling in his legs was common in SCI trauma and was called
"phantom pain." That's
when he had made the Ghostbusters comment.
Now, as Buffett studied
her'outfit, Weiser suddenly hopped up. She strode to the dotir and
swung it closed, then returned. "There are rules, but.. . what's life
without risks, huh?"
"I'm a pretty safe man to be in a
closed room with, wouldn't you say? I mean, I can't exactly chase you
around the room.
When I get a wheelchair you better watch out."
"You and me, we'll race someday."
She examined him * with a curious smile. "Sounds like the gunman didn't
get your sense
of humor."
"Hey, Doctor." Buffett looked
overtly grave. "If you're gonna help me I'm gonna help you. I'm gonna
teach you to speak cop."
"I say something wrong?"
"Shooter."
"I'm sorry?"
"Not gunman."
"Oh. You don't say gunman?"
"On TV they say gunman. We say
shooter. Or perp."
"Perp?"
"Perpetrator. Perp."
"That's great." Her eyes widened.
Buffett did not for a minute believe this enthusiasm but he appreciated
it anyway. She
added, "I'll have to use that sometime. Perp. Would a
perp also rob somebody? Like a burglar?"
"Yup. Perp equals bad guy."
"So my ex-husband is a perp."
"Could be," Buffett said. "And,
while I'm giving you a lesson. He doesn't shoot. He smokes them. Or
dusts them. Or he lays
the hammer on somebody. And if he tolls them, he
offs them or ices them or whacks or does them."
"You have to learn all this in
cop school, huh?"
"It's more your postgraduate
work."
"Officer.. ."
"Donnie."
"And I'm Wendy. Everybody calls
me Wendy." She looked at him with mystified, amused eyes. "Donnie, I've
got to say
that most people aren't quite so chipper after they've been
through what you have."
He waved his arm vaguely toward
his feet, signifying his injury. "This goes with the job description.
You're not willing to
accept it you
don't sign on in the first place. Doesn't mean I like it."
Could he really call her Wendy?
She was a doctor. Then again, she was wearing earrings in the
shape of tiny hamburgers.
Weiser opened her purse and took
out a pack of cigarettes; a lighter was stuffed efficiently into the
cellophane wrapper of
the pack. "You mind?"
"No."
She asked, "You want one?"
"No."
"Don't tell," Weiser said.
"I don't work vice." Buffett
realized he hadn't shaved since he had been in the hospital. He guessed
he looked like shit.
Well, that was her problem. He didn't
have to look at himself.
Weiser pulled the gray chair
closer, inhaled deeply on the cigarette several times. She crossed her
legs and bent down to
stub out the cigarette on her boot heel. She
dropped the butt in her pocket.
"Evidence," she said. She
straightened up, put both feet on the floor.
"Doctor—"
"Ah . .." She cocked an eyebrow.
"Wendy," he corrected. "It seemed so real."
She raised an eyebrow. "The
pain."
She stood up and opened the
window, to air the room out, and returned to the chair. He felt the
cold air on his arms and
face. But he didn't feel it on his legs. She
said, "It's both psychological and physiological. Amputees have the
same sensation. It's real in the sense that pain is a subjective
experience and what you're experiencing is just like any other pain. But
it's phantom because you aren't feeling a pain response to stimuli at
the nerve endings. Say, wasn't your wife going to be
coming by?"
"She was. A while ago. She'll be
back tomorrow." He tried to picture Penny Buffett and Wendy Weiser
chatting at a
barbecue or PBA picnic. It was impossible to imagine this
scene.
Weiser nodded. "Well, next time.
This is mostly a social visit, Donnie. We've done a lot of tests and
we're going to do a lot more. I'll be talking to you more specifically
about the results of those tests in the next couple days. What I'd like
to do now
is just talk with you about your injury in general."
He looked away. She shifted her
chair casually so that she was closer to his line of vision. He glanced
at her and he felt compelled to hold her gaze.
"I want to tell you what I'm
going to do, as your doctor, and talk to you about what you're going to
do for yourself."
"Fair enough."
She said, "First, I want to do
something I don't do with all my patients: I'm going to tell you what's
going to be going on in
your mind over the next several months. This is
sort of like—what's that they say on Wall Street?—insider information.
Normally this is what we doctors keep in mind as we work with our
patients but you seem like somebody who's got a good handle on himself.
You look skeptical. Donnie, I've had SCI patients that won't even let
me in the room for the first month
after their trauma. I've had vases
thrown at me. See this scar? It's from a dinner tray. I've had patients
who don't seem to see me. They watch TV while I'm talking to them. It's
as if I'm not even in the same room. They don't acknowledge me, they
don't acknowledge their injury. You're in a different league from them."
"I can't ignore a woman in a
leather skirt. It's in my genes or something."
"I think we're going to be a
great team." She then grew serious. "There are several stages of
recovery— I'm speaking of emotional recovery—in a trauma like you've
experienced. The first is shock. It's numbness, emotional blockage.
It's similar
to what happens to the body with physical injury. Shock
insulates die patient. That can last up to two or three weeks after
the
incident. I'm amazed but you seem to be out of this stage already. That
kind of snappy recovery is rare. I'd guess you're already in phase two,
which is realization of what's happened. You'll start feeling anxiety,
panic, fear. A real bummer."
"Bummer."
"My daughter's language."
"You have a daughter?"
"Twelve."
"Don't believe it."
She deflected this with a polite
smile. "What you're going to experience is that you're not real present.
We say that you'll be, quote, unavailable psychologically."
"And what would your daughter
call it?"
Weiser considered. " 'Zoned out,'
probably. A defense mechanism because you're going to start to feel
awful. But with
you, I have every reason to believe that it'll be
short-lived."
She pronounced it with a long i.
Short-luived. That sounded weird so he figured it was probably
right He also guessed
that between the punk earrings was a very, very
smart brain.
"So that was the second phase,"
he said. "What's the third quarter going to be like?"
"What we call 'defensive
retreat.' You're going to believe that you can cure yourself. Or that
you've come to accept your
injury and it doesn't bother you. You'll
miss therapy sessions, you'll do everything you can to avoid thinking
about the
accident. Oh, by the way, you'll probably become an
insufferable son of a bitch. You'll want to blame somebody for what's
happened. You'll have a lot of anger in you."
"Kid I knew got hurt once, bad.
We was diving off the docks, and this kid from the neighborhood—"
"Which is?"
"Alton."
"No kidding," Dr. Weiser said,
"I'm from Wood River."
"Ha, Land of Lincolners in the
Show Me state." Buffett snorted.
"When I was married—he was a
professor at Wash U—we lived in Clayton. God, I was glad to get out of
there, move
back to the country... You were telling me about this
friend of yours?"
"Just a kid. He dived in the
water . . ." Buffett wondered if dived was the right word. Dove?
He wished he'd said jumped. "
. .. and you know how high
some of those piers are. He hit a board he didn't see. We got him out
right away so he didn't drown but what happened was he went blind. He
hit the back of his head or something. He tried to beat me up. He said
I should've seen the board. He accused another kid of pushing the board
under him. Finally he moved away. He never came back or called."
He wondered what the point to the
story was. He looked for
something
concluding—something to tie it into what she was saying—and fell silent.
Weiser said, "We're used to
behavior like that. It's part of recovery. You may get some of it right
back from me. I grew up
with three brothers. I've got kind of a short
fuse myself sometimes." She retrieved her cigarette from her pocket and
broke away the crushed part. She lit it again and drew three times then
went through the extinguishing routine once again. "The
fourth phase is
where we get the work done. You're going to come to understand what's
happened. The defenses—whether
it's anger or denial or
rationalization—will crumble and you'll confront it."
"I never did understand that
word. Confront. Like deal with. Those aren't words
that mean a lot to me."
"You're not there yet so you
can't expect them to. You'll be in heavy-duty physical therapy
throughout this phase. Finally . . . You're looking skeptical again.
Are you listening? The final phase is the coping phase. In effect, you
accept what's happened and you reorganize your life around the way you
are.""
Buffett laughed again. "Yeah,
yeah, I'll be able to play the violin after the operation."
Weiser's smile faded and she
leaned forward. For an instant he was wholly unnerved by the eye
contact but was compelled to return her gaze. He felt electricity
between them. His scalp bristled and his heart suddenly pounded like a
snare drum.
He felt a twitch of pain. Well,
phantom pain. When he spoke, it was not his own voice that he heard but
one that was lower and more mature and calmer. "Doctor, I don't want
you to think I've got a swollen head or anything but I'm a survivor. I
don't lose. At anything. Ever. Getting into the police academy,
getting onto the varsity basketball team, yeah, even at five ten.
Everything I've ever set my mind to do, I've done. Well, what happened
to me is crap, sure. But I'm alive. I got friends. I got family." His
right hand curled into a fist. "And I'm going to get through this."
Weiser sat back, her pine green
eyes neither cautious nor inspirational, but immensely pleased. It
seemed as if by delivering
his monolog he'd passed a test of some sort.
"It's going to be a real pleasure working with you, Donnie."
They shook hands and made an
appointment for their next session.
When the door closed, Donnie
Buffett exhaled slowly and said a short, silent prayer of thanks. If
Weiser had turned inches to the right she would've seen the hypodermic
syringe that a harried orderly had accidentally left on the bedside
table just before the doctor entered the room—the syringe that had been
virtually the only thing in Buffett's thoughts during the doctor's
entire visit. He gripped the head of the bed with his large hands and
tightened his ample biceps. He moved up one inch. Sweat broke out.
Another huge flex, another inch. He felt as if he were dragging the
weight of ten men with him. He reached for the syringe.
No, not yet. Six inches to go.
He inhaled deeply and gripped the
bed once more. Another inch, then another.
He kept at it, two more inches,
closer and closer. A half inch. He paused for a minute, wiping the
slick sweat from his eyes
and feeling his heart slam fiercely from the
immense effort. Donnie Buffett figured this exertion was good. It was
perfect. Because when he
injected the air into his vein,
the course of his racing blood would speed the bubble straight to his
heart and jam it stopped like a swollen piston, sending his whole body
to join his legs in a sleep that was cold and deep and forever.
"Howdy." John Pellam stepped into
the hospital room.
He startled the cop, who dropped
something on the floor. "Hell," Buffett snapped. "You scared me."
"Sorry." Pellam walked past the
flowers, looking around. Dozens of bouquets, wreaths, plants. Pellam
wondered if the
nurses got irritated, having to water all this foliage.
A pale, pretty face appeared in
the doorway. Pellam motioned her in. 'This is Nina. Donnie Buffett."
She said hello.
"How you doing?" came Buffett's
muffled voice. He was contorted sideways, bending down trying to pick
up something
from the floor, struggling. His face was red and slick
with sweat.
"You okay?" Pellam walked around
the bed. Buffett was reaching for a pen he had dropped . . .
No, not a pen, a syringe.
"Here, I'll get it." Pellam bent
down, retrieved the needle, and stepped over to a plastic box that said
Used Syringe Disposal Only.
"No!" Buffett shouted.
Pellam paused, and he and Nina
looked at the cop curiously.
"I've got to give myself a shot."
"You?" she asked. "Don't the
nurses do that?"
Buffett stared at the needle for
several seconds. He
cleared his throat. "I'm, you
know, a diabetic. I can give them to myself."
Pellam shrugged. "It was on the
floor. I'll ask the nurse for a clean one." He dropped it in the
disposal box. "I don't mind."
Buffett's eyes clung to the
disposal box, looking heartsick. Pellam reached for the nurse call
button. Buffett barked,
"I'll do it myself later."
"No trouble."
Buffett snatched the button away
from him. "I said I'd do it myself."
A difficult silence arose. Nina
and Pellam simultaneously asked him how he was feeling, and he
answered, "Fine. I'm fine." More silence. Nina turned to the flowers,
examined them and refilled several of the vases with water. Buffett
seemed angered by this but he said nothing and she didn't seem to
notice that he was out of sorts.
Pellam studied Buffett for a
moment and decided he looked pretty good, all things considered. Apart
from the red face and sweat, he seemed to be a healthy man lying in
bed. The only evidence of injury: He was dressed in a white, blouselike
gown speckled with small, pale blue dots.
"Something you wanted?" Buffett
asked.
Pellam did not know how to
respond. He wasn't expecting this constant level of hostility. He said
the first thing that came
into his mind. "You need anything?"
"No. I'm doing fine." When the
silence filled the room again Buffett relented and made conversation.
"I get kind of bored,
you know. I got TV." He motioned broadly at the
old set as if they couldn't spot it themselves.
Pellam said, "I guess I came by,
one of the reasons, I was a little hotheaded the other day."
Buffett was being forced to
apologize and he didn't want to. He watched a silent CNN news broadcast
for a moment. Tankers unloading in some foreign port. Pellam was just
starting to wonder if the cop would clam up and that would be that. He
was glancing at Nina when Buffett said, "I started it. You were just,
you know, reacting. All this ... It's got me kind of shook up."
"I read in this magazine one
time," Nina said. "Glamour. No, Mademoiselle, 1 think.
That if you have a serious accident, it's like you're a whole different
person for at least six months afterwards." She abruptly stopped
speaking, perhaps worried that Buffett would think he was doomed to a
half year of mental anguish.
But Buffett was laughing. "Well,
it's got me a shitload of flowers. You want any, go right ahead."
Nina shook her head. "Oh, I
couldn't, no."
Buffett glanced at Pellam. "And
the mayor came by to visit me. Which isn't as exciting as, say, the
mayor of LA., since our guy also has the Buick dealership out
on 104. He's that kind of mayor, you know." There was a manic edge to
Buffett's voice. Maybe he was being cynical, maybe he was really
impressed that the mayor had come to visit him. Pellam couldn't tell.
Buffett broke the silence that followed this by saying, "It's just so
damn boring. TV sucks, you know that?"
"I don't own one," Pellam said
with more enthusiasm than he intended. "I've got a monitor, but it
doesn't receive. It's just hooked up to a VCR."
Buffett sighed and began clicking
the gray box of the remote control through a series of stations. An old
movie came on.
He shut the set off. "I should probably get some sleep.
I'm still in shock No, really. Spinal shock, it's called. Not like, ha,
normal shock. Sleeping's a good thing."
The script in Pellam's mind now
called for the cop to ask what he had come here to ask: Could Buffett
please call up his detective buddies and ask them to stop ruining his
life.
But he coulnd't ask. Pellam
wondered what stopped him. He believed it was not the fact that Pellam
was going to leave in a moment with a pretty woman beside him and go
back to his job. Nor was it Buffett's face, which no longer looked so
healthy as Pellam had thought— mouth hanging loose, eyes darting,
filled with a fear that he perhaps thought he was concealing.
No, what stopped Pellam was
simply that he stood and Buffett lay.
As simple as that.
"We better be going," Pellam
said. "Just wanted to stop by."
"Yeah." Buffett nodded. "Good
seeing you."
"What do you read?' Pellam asked.
"I'll bring you a magazine next time I stop by."
"I don't read. I don't like to
read." The mystery that Pellam had brought on the first visit sat
prominently unopened under the bedside table.
"You got any hobbies?"
"Yeah, I got hobbies."
"What?"
Buffett looked from the square of
the TV screen to the box where Pellam had pitched the hypodermic
needle. "Basketball, softball, jogging, and hockey. Those're my
hobbies."
At the main desk of the hospital,
downstairs, Pellam remembered that he had met Nina when she was
visiting her mother.
He now asked if she wanted to see the woman.
She shook her head. "I visited
her this morning. Twice a day is a little much. She can be a dear,
but..." They stepped outside. The day had grown overcast and chill. She
asked, "Your parents both alive?"
"Just my mother. She lives in
upstate New York. I don't see her that often. We run out of things to
talk about after three days."
Nina took a scarf from her
pocket, a long one covered with blotches of brilliant green and yellow.
She began to tie it around her neck. He watched the flimsy cloth cover
the pale skin at her throat.
She said, "I'm really enjoying
that job you got me. Everybody's really nice."
"Making movies is fun at a
certain level. You get much higher up than location work or makeup and
it's a pain in the ass."
"The only yucky part is special
effects. All that fake blood and those gunshot wounds." She closed her
eyes and shivered.
"Why does Mr. Sloan make such violent movies?"
"Because many, many people pay
money to watch them."
"Why," she asked, "are you
looking around so much?"
"Am I?"
"Yeah. Its like you think
somebody's following you."
"Naw. Always working. Looking for
locations. In fact, that's where we're going right now. Find a big
field. 1 need the help
of a local."
"I'm not a local, remember. I'm
from Cranston."
"You're more local than I am."
"Is that the reason you want me
to come along?" A faint smile on her frosted pink lips.
"Well, scouting isn't as easy as
it looks. I sense you're a natural at it."
"Me?"
"I need a big field next to the
river. And a road running through it. How would you go about
finding one?"
"Well, I don't know. I guess I'd
just drive along a road beside the river until I found a field.
"See what I mean. You're a born
location scout."
They both laughed.
"All right. But I have to be back
at seven. I've got a call then. See, I can talk movie. Call. Oh,
I didn't want to ask on the set but what's the difference between a
gaffer and a grip?"
'The most-asked question in the
movie business. Gaffer's an electrician and lighting guy. Grips are
workmen who do rigging
and other nonelectrical work."
They approached her car.
"Another question."
Pellam preempted her. 'The best
boy is the key grip's first assistant."
"No," Nina said, tossing him the
keys. "I was going to ask if you knew any casting couch
stories."
*
* *
Peter Crimmins was a member of
the Ukrainian Social Club in St. Louis.
He could easily have afforded to
join the elite Metropolitan Club or, although he was a bar-sinister
Christian, the Covington Hills Country Club. Yet this was the only
social organization he belonged to. The club was in a shabby, two-story
building, greasy-windowed and grimy, nestled between vacant lots filled
with saplings strangled by kudzu. The inside, smelling of onions and
cigarette smoke and mold, was one large room, filled with broken tables
and chipped chairs. The club seemed locked in
a time warp dating to the
year it had opened—1954.
This afternoon Crimmins was
sitting at a table with Joshua, his driver and security chief. They
drank tea that had been brewed in a cheap samovar. There were four or
five other men in the club who would have liked to sit with Crimmins
but who tended not to when Joshua was with him. The bodyguard's
presence made them uncomfortable. They, of course, knew all about
Crimmins. They read the Post-Dispatch as well as the Ukranian
Daily News, which reported, respectively, on his criminal
activities and on his social, ethnic, and professional endeavors. The
latter did not interest them in the least; any fool can give away
money. But a successful criminal is hot stuff. So they sat around him,
basking in his dangerous presence. Crimmins gave them status. John
Gotti had gone to his social club in Little Italy in New York; Peter
Crimmins went here. They believed the nearby streets were safer because
of him.
Crimmins and Joshua had been
drinking tea for ten minutes when a broad-shouldered man wearing a blue
denim jacket and jeans entered. His shirt was dirty. He was squat,
though he moved with a certain elegance. Crimmins did not approve of
the common clothes, but this sort of man might be a foreman or
carpenter in addition to being what Crimmins was now hiring him
for.
Joshua said, "Tom Stettle. Mr.
Crimmins."
"How do you do, sir." Stettle's
eyes swung one way then the other, settling on Crimmins s mole of an
eye for a moment.
"Stettle, is it?'
"Yeah," the voice said. "Yessir."
"Sit down."
He did. The Samsonite folding
chair creaked under his weight. Crimmins let the silence run up for a
moment. Rather than
feeling uncomfortable, Stettle grew more at ease
and gazed back at Crimmins pleasantly.
Finally Crimmins said, "Joshua
talked to you?'
"Yessir."
This was not the safest way,
meeting Stettle face-to-face. The identification issue later, if it all
went sour, but Crimmins liked
to see the people who worked for him. You
could have a better conversation with someone when you knew what he
looked like. You could pick up on his mannerisms, match them to his
words. That helped you decide if he was telling the truth, if he was
dependable, how much he could be bought for.
"You've been following him?
Pellam?"
Stettle nodded.
"The police have been, too, I
know. Have you seen anyone else? Anyone from Peterson's office?'
"Some. Off and on. It's funny.
It's like, hey, we got the budget for it today but not tomorrow.
They're not there more than they're there."
Crimmins had an urge to remind
the man that he was making fifteen thousand dollars for this job. But
he said nothing.
Another of his basic rules, like providing for the
family, was: Don't jerk leashes until you need to.
"Stick with him."
"This being the country, pretty
much, it's harder, you know what I'm saying? In the city, with a lot of
people around, there are more ways to get away, like cabs and subways.
You can set up things a lot faster." The measured and respectful tone
of Stettle's reply made Crimmins feel comfortable. He was pleased that
Stettle was giving a frank appraisal. Crimmins himself would have
guessed it was easier to do this sort of thing in the country.
"All right. Keep at it. Joshua
knows where to get in touch with you?"
Both men nodded.
"Thanks for stopping by. You want
some tea? Some pastry?"
"No, sir."
Stettle left the club, glancing
around him with studious eyes. Crimmins supposed he was surveying the
shoddy paneling job
and thinking he could do better.
Crimmins said to Joshua, "Is he
good with it?"
"With what?"
Crimmins forgot that some people
did not think as quickly as he did. "A gun."
"That's not really the question.
All's I know is he's got one and he doesn't mind using it. Maddox's got
a mandatory sentencing thing and a lot of guys have a problem with
that. He doesn't."
Crimmins rose and poured both
Joshua and himself two more glasses of tea.
"S'il vous plait, est-ce que
vous avez un . . . guest, Monsieur Wetter?"
The crackling of the eight
thousand miles of cables and airwaves filled the phone.
"Non, monsieur."
"Well, est-ce qu'il a une
reservation?"
The crash behind Pellam nearly
made him drop the cellular phone. He spun around. He saw the fist knock
on the camper door again. Pellam leaned forward and looked outside with
a sinking heart. Them. For some reason he could remember the
names of the FBI agents more easily than he could those of the Italian
cop and the WASP cop. Bracken and Monroe.
"Just a minute!" he called. "I'm
on the phone." More knocking. "Just a minute. I'm on the phone to
Paris. Repetez? S'il vous plait . . . He's not? Okay. I mean, merci."
Damn.
Marty Weller had left London six
hours ago, supposedly bound for Paris. He was not, however, at the
Plaza Athenee—
where he always stayed (or where he told everyone he stayed)—and Pellam
had no idea where he might be. Pellam was
trying to make nice for the
missed appointment with Weller and Telorian.
He dropped the phone in its
cradle and opened the door. He nodded solemnly but did not invite them
in.
"How you doing, sir?" Monroe said.
Silence.
Bracken, looking much less
scruffy today, asked, "Mr. Pellam, you mind if we come in?"
"I think I would mind that, yes."
"It won't take very long."
Pellam asked, "I really don't—"
"We'd just like to ask you a few
more questions. Our discussion—"
"Discussion?"
"—the other day wasn't very
productive."
"Last night I told the cops in
Maddox exactly what happened. For the second time. Maybe the third.
Don't you people talk
to each other?"
Monroe remained as pleasant and
persistent as a door-to-door salesman. "We apologize for the other day.
We've been
under incredible pressure. You know how it is."
Pellam waited a few seconds and
said, "Come in."
Inside, both agents sat on
chairs, scooting forward to keep their posture perfect. The cuffs of
their light-colored slacks
were hiked high above their ankles. It was
funny, Pellam thought—they didn't have the frisky presence of the city
cops.
There was something anonymous about them.
They complimented him on the
tidiness of the camper and Bracken said enviously he hoped to get a
Winnebago himself
one day. Drive up to Minnesota for muskie and pike.
So far the game was good cop,
good cop.
'The fact is Maddox hasn't been
cooperating with us. They don't much care for federal officers."
Wonder why.
"We'd really appreciate it if you
could tell us whatever you can remember. You've got to understand, Mr.
Pellam,
Mr. Gaudia's death means that two years of work could be in
jeopardy."
Pellam wanted to reward them for
being polite. He told them the facts one more time. In as much detail
as he could remember. The beer, the Lincoln, the guy who bumped into
him, bending down and looking through the window, the car pulling away,
the cop. Pellam was getting pretty good at telling the story by this
time.
The agents were unemotional. No
eyes were rolled, much less lapels grabbed and windows broken. They
just nodded and
did not complain. And they didn't call him a GFY
either. They just asked questions.
Finally Pellam realized that they
had been here for an hour. He was growing bored. He felt like a hooked
pike. He almost mentioned this to Bracken the fisherman.
"Tell us again . . . just one
more time. Promise, just one.
"Okay. Once more." Pellam recited
the story.
Monroe wrote it down. Pellam
wondered what they were getting paid and how much tax money was being
spent to record
an incident of car window glare.
Then they began to ask questions
that seemed to have nothing to do with the killing. Why was he going to
get so much beer? Tell them about this poker game, would he? Did he
know who Vincent Gaudia was? Had he ever seen the policeman before?
"Was it true that you gave
something to the policeman just before the shooting?"
"Well," Pellam said, "I did."
"You seemed surprised just then.
Why were you surprised?"
"When I gave him the bag?"
"No. Just now. When we mentioned
it."
"Well, I didn't think anybody
knew I gave him anything."
Their eyebrows perked. "And what
was it?"
"You think it was a bribe?"
"We'd just like to know what it
was."
"It was a doughnut."
"A doughnut?"
"Whole wheat," Pellam offered.
"It seemed healthier."
"Yessir."
More questions, another half hour
passed.
"Did the driver," Bracken asked,
"have a cup caddy?"
"Are you serious?" Pellam asked.
He looked at his watch.
Finally they stood up, in unison,
as if his answer to their question ("Did you know Vince Gaudia before
he was killed?" "No.") was the exit cue.
He walked them to the door. They
thanked him for his time then Bracken turned to him and said, "You
weren't thinking of leaving town soon, were you, sir?"
There was something in the tone.
He was not a bad cop yet but he was no longer a good cop either. "I'm
staying until the
film's finished. But—"
"How long will that be?"
"A week, tops."
"Well, you should know—we have an
intelligence report that Peter Crimmins—the main suspect in the Gaudi
killing—has
been speaking to associates out of state. Chicago, we
think."
Pellam didn't know what to make
of this news bite.
"That often happens," Bracken
continued, "when a mob boss is going to hire some muscle. They don't
like to use anybody local."
"Oh."
"I just say that so you'll know
to be careful."
"Right. Well, I appreciate you
telling me that."
As they walked out the door,
Monroe thanked him again and added, "You know, sir, we have men at all
the local airports."
"All the airports?"
"Amtrak, too."
And they left him to wonder if
that meant they'd be looking for hit men or that Pellam himself should
book a seat on
Greyhound if he wanted to escape the long tentacle of
the law.
* * *
The nurse noticed his bloody
thumbnail.
"What?" she asked. "Whatsat?"
She was Filipino, short and
broad. She had kind eyes but the wispy mustache and broad purple lips
made her face look dirty, which in turn gave her an impression of
cruelty or, at best, indifference.
The nurse pulled two clear
plastic gloves off a roll. She put them on and lifted his hand,
studying the red stain distastefully.
"I don't have AIDS," he said
miserably.
She held his hand in a solid grip
and twisted it as she
examined the digit. God, she was
strong. He detected a meaty smell coming from her.
"Where you do it?
"What do you mean?"
"Where you stick yourself?"
Abruptly she yanked the sheet and
blanket off of him and began with his midthigh, probing her way up,
turning him, pushing
his numb legs. Buffett thought of dough. Bread
dough, kneading it. This made him want to cry.
"I'm all right. Could you just
leave me alone, please?"
"You make it worse. You people
make it worse."
Fingers he could not feel were
searching along his skin. He closed his eyes. He made it a test— even
now, in his humiliation
and anguish, he tried to sense the fingers. He
thought he could tell where she was probing but when he opened his
eyes, her hands were not near where he had imagined her touch. He
couldn't feel a thing.. . .
Then she saw the tissue, stuffed
in his boxer shorts. She lifted it out, the wadded Kleenex, blotched
with dark blood.
Buffett's face burned. Sweat broke out on his face.
The nurse's cruel or indifferent
mouth tightened. She dropped the Kleenex into the wastebasket and bent
and spread apart
his pubic hair. She studied the small gash next to his
penis. It wasn't long or deep but it had bled a lot. The hair was
matted
and there was a red stain on the catheter. The nurse sighed then
took short, shiny scissors and trimmed the thick hair back.
She washed the cut and put gauze over it, then taped the gauze to the
spot with
white adhesive tape. She pulled the gloves
off and threw them out.
"I'm sorry," he said. "I just..."
Her dark lids lowered knowingly.
"You wanted to see if you could feel something." Her tongue clicked.
"People like you. . . . You make it worse. You make everybody's job
worse."
Buffett watched her go. His eyes
then slipped to the medical waste box, where his precious syringe had
been. He looked up
at the blank TV screen, hands in his lifeless lap,
and stared at the ceiling, waiting for tears that never came. Finally
he reached up and in fury began tugging at a jump rope, which was hung
over a traction bar above his bed. After he had spent the entire
morning—7:00 A.M. to noon—having tests done Buffett had asked an
orderly to rig a rope over the bar so he could work
on his arms. He
would grip the handles hard, pulling against himself, first letting the
right arm be the weak one, then the left.
The orderly watched him with
approval. "Man, I ain't gonna arm-wrestle you."
Buffett now began the workout
again. He was counting down from sixty. When he exercised, he always
counted down,
rather than up, because it was harder to quit if your
goal was to reach zero.
Fifty-eight, fifty-seven,
fifty-six . . .
If you did quit before
you got to your goal, that was the worst. Something terrible would
happen.
Like, for instance, the Terror
would get you.
Forty-seven, forty-six,
forty-five . . .
Sweating.
Pull, pull, pull.
On diirty-three Wendy Weiser
strolled into the room.
"Hey, Donnie."
"Yo, Doctor."
"How you feeling today?"
"Nifty." Buffett kept a nifty
smile on his face.
Phantom pain, phantom smile.
Fair enough, huh?
She pulled up the chair in that
way of hers and dropped into it, like she was sitting on her boyfriends
lap. He thought of it as charming. He was not quite sure if that word
fit or how someone can sit charmingly but that's what he thought. He
had been here two or three days now and he'd had five dreams about her
already. Sometimes, when he was awake, he fantasized about her, he
thought about the way she sat down, the way she kept her legs spread
slightly when she sat, the way she slouched, which hid the shape of her
breasts, the way her panty hose would rustle, the lab coat would fall.
. . He did not let the fantasies get beyond that point.
Dr. Weiser was the only thing
that troubled him about killing himself. He hoped she wouldn't be the
one to find his body.
"You want something to drink?"
"Scotch. Glenfiddich. Aged twelve
years. Neat."
Snappy Dannie, snappy jokes.
"OJ?"
"I'll pass." She opened his
chart.
"I see we've got you lined up for more tests over the next couple days.
There still isn't much
to report. Spinal shock is slowly subsiding."
Weiser then did some poking and
probing of her own and went through the same neuro exams that Gould had
done a few
days before. When he touched his nose she said, "Good," the
same way Gould had, and though he wished her version meant something
more than His, it clearly didn't. She made a notation on his chart, sat
back, then lit a cigarette.
"You cut yourself," she said.
He nodded, avoiding her eyes. He
pushed a dangling handle of the jump rope out of the way.
"I. .." His words stopped.
"I know how anxious you are to
find out about your recovery," she said kindly. "But until the shock
subsides, all you can do
is hurt yourself doing something like that.
You could get a bad infection. Hospitals are filthy. They're full of
bacteria."
"Sepsis," Donnie whispered
desperately.
"Sepsis." She studied him for a
moment then said, "You want to know about sex."
"I want to ..." He nodded, then
confessed, "I wanted to see if I could feel anything. Down there."
She told him it was too early to
know much. But she agreed to tell him a few things. Weiser added, "I
don't have much time now. I'm going away for a couple days."
His heart choked. She was leaving
him.
The Terror at least was pleased
at this news and pawed Buffett mercilessly as he sweated and clung to
the gingham jump rope.
"Where you going?" he asked, to
take his mind off the Terror's maul.
"I have place at Lake of the
Ozarks."
"You married?"
"I'm divorced."
He remembered she had mentioned
that.
Weiser added, "I have a
boyfriend."
"I go down there some. Horses. A
lot of horses, I remember . . . And trees." A vague memory came to him,
then vanished.
"Unfortunately, Donnie, there are
no short answers to the sexual aspects of SCI."
" 'Aspect' . . . You doctors use
funny words." For an instant his facade cracked. She paused as she
noticed the blip of anger
in his face. His smile returned.
"You worry about it a lot?"
"What the hell else is there to
do?" He grinned. "I stare at Vanna White's tits all day long."
Weiser laughed. "We know from the
location and nature of the trauma that you won't be able to walk again,
Donnie. At least not with the state of the technology now. But sexual
dysfunction is still an open question in this stage of your recovery."
Dis function, dis function ...
Buffett was hugely disappointed
in her. She was bull-shiting him. Partnership? A good team? Crap.
"Even in the worst case there's a
lot we can do."
As she talked his thoughts
wandered. Down at her summer place, how often would she fuck her
boyfriend? Would she tell
him about Buffett? Would she lie underneath
him and whisper to him that she had spent the morning talking about
pricks
and come to a eunuch? Would that make her boyfriend hump her
harder?
". . . two concerns. The act
of intercourse. And second, siring children .. . Now, a man ..."
She probably made love to her
boyfriend four, five times a week. She probably had shuddering orgasms,
she probably took him into her mouth ...
". . . two types of
erections. Reflexogenic and psychogenic. Reflexogenic are caused by
some stimuli to the genitals,
the penis, of course, primarily, but also
to the prostate or bladder. You don't need your brain to participate
in order
to have this kind of erection."
Ping. Sweat sprang to Buffett s
skin.
The Terror was having a ball.
Buffetts armpits itched. He felt
sweat appearing where it never had before—his cheek, his ears, the
backs of his hands. Jesus God Almighty, his wrists were sweating! As if
the moisture were crawling out of his flawed body, escaping.
"You wake up in the morning
with an erection, that's reflexogenic. Psychogenic is the type of
erection in response to fantasies, visual stimuli—thoughts that
turn us on."
Weiser paused to ask, "Are you
okay?"
"Hot in here."
She stood up and opened the
window. She turned her back to him, and the silk skirt was taut against
her butt. He saw the outline of her panties. Donnie swallowed.
She sat down again. Lit a
cigarette, drew on it deeply three times, then crushed it out.
"I'll give you an exam.
We'll find out if your lesion is upper-motor neuron or lower-motor
neuron. If it's upper, you'll
be able to have reflexogenic erections..."
What is she talking about?
"If it's lower-motor neuron,
that will mean your sexual activity will be what we call areflexic..."
"Psychogenic?" Buffett tried to
concentrate. He hated words like that, big words, Doctor words. The
Terror ate them up.
They gave the Terror strength—ha, a hard-on! It
stirred and stepped over his pain, the phantom pain, the betraying
pain, and slid into his gut. Then the Terror moved through his chest.
Buffett clenched his teeth and tightened his stomach muscles to keep it
from oozing into his heart, where he knew it would kill him.
He kept his eyes locked on to
hers and he pulled at the jump rope hard. Arm wrestling with the Terror.
"There are four possibilities.
You could be complete or incomplete reflex, or complete or incomplete
areflex. The
most severe is complete areflex—that means no
reflex activity and no brain involvement."
Here is Donnie Buffett, six feet
away from a beautiful woman, with sparkling green eyes, talking to him
about hard dicks . . .
He glances down at the small, motionless bump at
his groin and feels the Terror dig an inch closer to his heart.
"Usually, in the case of
gunshots, the lesion isn't complete. In the case of areflexic patients
with incomplete lesions, three-fourths of them have intercourse, and
more than half have ejaculations and orgasms."
But I'm not going to be one of
them. A girl in a tight leather skirt talks to me about coming and I
can't feel a thing...
"It may not be necessary—it
probably won't be—but you might want to consider a prosthetic."
Buffett thought that meant
artificial leg.
". . . There are a couple
different kinds of penile implants."
The Terror was really up for
this, carousing, squirming, swimming on its fucking back. The sweat
poured. Buffett swallowed.
"Now, on the question of
siring children, spinal injury generally results in a decreased sperm
count, but many people without SCI have problems conceiving, and there
are a number of techniques..."
A son? What about a son?
And, that was it—bang, the Terror
got him.
Donnie Buffett shook like an
antelope in a lion's jaws.
Her eyes were narrowing a little,
squinting, as he wiped the sweat off his face. "Donnie— "
He looked at her and swallowed.
"I'm sorry." He tapped his shoulder. "I've still got a hell of a lot of
pain. You know, where
I got shot here. It's really a bitch sometimes."
"Do you want something for it?"
"No, I just get these twinges.
Makes me sweat like a pig. Keep going." A smile. "Please."
He could say that only because he
was dead. The Terrors fangs had shredded his heart. He was gone. He was
as polite as
a corpse at the wake.
She continued for a few minutes
then offered some conclusion. Something cheerful, something snappy. He
nodded and had
no idea what she had said. She said she was sorry she
had to leave. They'd talk again soon. He thanked her. Looked her right
in the eye and said, "This's been real, you know, reassuring. I
appreciate it." They shook hands. Buffett told her to have a nice
weekend.
When she was gone he picked up
the phone and called Bob Gianno at the Maddox police station. They
talked about nothing for a while and when Buffett could wait no longer
he asked the detective for a phone number. There was silence for a
moment and then Buffett heard the numbers. He memorized them. He asked
Gianno, "This is one of those cellular phones, right?"
"Yeah, it's in his Winnebago."
"And I just call it like a
regular number?"
'That's all you have to do."
Through his closed eyes, Donnie
Buffett was aware of a shadow over him. He hoped it was not Penny.
He particularly hoped it wasn't
her parents.
The nurse changing the urine bag
would have been okay.
The nurse changing the Foley's
wouldn't have been.
He was pleased to see that it was
John Pellam.
BufFett said, "Hey, chief, it's
you."
Pellam nodded and walked into the
room.
"You got more flowers. Looks like
a nursery."
"Yeah. I don't like flowers so
much, you know. She said she didn't want them, that girl of yours. But
you ought to take
some to her. What's her name? Tell her you bought
'em."
"I'm glad you called. I was going
to stop by."
Buffett waved to the chair. "Why?
You in the mood for more abuse?"
Pellam laughed.
"I was feeling bad, you know. I
was a real shit."
"No problem," Pellam said.
"I kind of go crazy. I didn't—"
"I understand. You doing okay?"
Buffett nodded, and laughed. "I'm
fine. I was, I think the doctor called it, 'resisting.' I was resisting
what happened to me.
If you go with it you feel better."
"Good."
"A little therapy. I'll get a
wheelchair. There're a lot of laws. Wheelchair access. Go to the
Cardinals games, they gotta have ramps. You can get practically
anywhere."
"I saw they have sports for ...
you know." Pellam was hesitating, maybe not sure whether to say
"paraplegics" or "handicapped." What he said was, "Wheelchair sports. I
saw it on the ESPN."
"Yeah, basketball. Wheelchair
basketball. And some guys do the marathon. I guess you can coast
downhill. Man," he said, smiling, "that's me—doing a marathon sitting
on my ass. Hey, you want something to eat?"
"Thanks a ton. Hospital food?'
"Naw, I got some good stuff here.
Ruffles, dip. Cookies."
Pellam shook his head. Buffett
ate half a cookie and stared into the cellophane bag for a moment. He
rolled the top of the
bag tight. Set it on a tray.
Pellam did a tour of the
greenhouse by the window. He said, "So how long you been on the force?"
"Close to seven years."
"You say that? Force?"
"Sure, you can say that."
"And you walked a beat, like in
the old days?"
"Some neighborhoods aren't so
good anymore. Mad-dox's really gone to the dogs. So you make movies?"
"Not me. I just find locations."
"How'd you get into that?"
"Fell into it, I guess. I like to
travel."
"You meet any Hollywood honeys?
You must, huh?"
"I stay clear of the Coast. Not
my scene, really."
"Then why're you in movies?"
"Why're you a cop?"
Buffett shrugged.
"Oh, I forgot." Pellam lifted the
stained bag he carried. "It's beer. Can you drink it?"
"Hell, yes, I can drink it."
Pellam sat down on the sturdy
gray chair. They opened two cans and drank them down. "You know,"
Buffett said, "all these guys I work with? Mean sons of bitches some of
them, it's like they turn into pussies when they come to see me. They
bring
me flowers. They bring me magazines. Nobody's brought me any
beer. A lot of guys don't come. I think they're nervous or something
about seeing me, about what they're going to say."
Pellam stood up and slipped two
fresh cans in the water pitcher next to the bed. He filled it with cold
water. The lid did not close completely. "If you got a spacey nurse,
maybe you can get away with it."
'"Predate it, chief."
Pellam sipped his beer. He waited
a moment, then said, "I guess I wanted to say this last time, but,
well, you looked pretty upset and I held off."
"Say what?"
"I'm really getting hassled. Your
buddies—and the FBI now—they're really on my case. They've been on the
set and it's messing up the film. I'm worried about my job. I can't
afford that right now."
Buffett shrugged. "If you didn't
see anything, you didn't see anything."
"Yeah, but they don't
feel that way and they're all over the place. The FBI's talking about
looking into the company's tax returns and corporate documents." Pellam
made a helpless gesture with his hands.
"Oh, the feds're pricks from the
git-go," Buffett said as if explaining something as basic as gravity.
Then he nodded. "Ron Peterson—he's the U.S. Attorney—he's a maniac." He
explained about Gaudia and Crimmins and the 60 Minutes program.
"Peterson's going to get Crimmins and nothing in this world is going to
stop him."
Pellam continued, "I want to
help. I don't want to be a GFY but—"
This brought a spark to Buffett's
eyes. He started to laugh.
"What's so funny?" Pellam was
irritated.
"Somebody called you a GFY?"
'Your friends. The detectives."
"Gianno and Hagedorn." Buffett
laughed again. "Nobody told you what that means?"
"They told me it meant a
reluctant witness."
"Pellam, believe half of what
cops tell you. It means, go fuck yourself."
"Very funny. Very goddamn funny."
Buffett continued to laugh.
After a moment, Pellam's mouth
curled upward and he laughed loud. "GFY. That's good, I gotta admit."
"Listen, Pellam, I got a deal for
you. I want you to do me a favor. You do it and I'll tell the
department to lay off. I can't do anything with the Bureau but they'll
listen to me at Maddox Police."
"You'd do that?"
"You got my word."
"What's this favor?"
"No big deal. There's something
in my house I want you to get for me."
"Me?"
"If you wouldn't mind."
"No, I guess not." Buffett saw
Pellam's eyes flick to Buffett's wedding ring. He asked, "Why not have
your wife bring it
when she comes to visit?"
'The thing is," Buffert said, as
his determined and cheerful eyes moved from Pellam's face to the fuzzy
TV screen, "it'd upset her."
*
* *
It was a small neighborhood of
bungalows set on postage-stamp-size lawns five minutes from downtown
Maddox. Both the dark brick houses and the grass were well tended and
trim. Pleasant. Pellam believed he had cruised along this street on his
quest for the perfect Tony Sloan bungalow. The traffic from a nearby
expressway was an irritating sticky rush that filled the
air and yellow
haze from a half dozen brick smokestacks hung thick over the yards.
Pellam climbed off the Yamaha. He
paused in front of the house and checked the address. There was a white
Nissan in the driveway and behind it a brown Mercury station wagon with
Illinois plates.
The small garden in front held
the corpses of flowering plants. Stalks mostly. Bleak. Pellam knew
nothing about gardening but
if this had been his lawn, he would have
added some evergreens. He walked up the winding brick path to the small
porch.
One other thing he noticed: There were no tricycles or other
toys here as there were in all of the other yards.
He pressed the bell. There was no
answer. He opened the screen door and banged a large brass knocker. A
moment later
the door opened. He was looking at a thin brunette with a
long face, cautious and nondescript. Late twenties. She had
flawless
skin. Every time he glanced away from her he forgot what she looked
like.
"Mrs. Buffett?"
"Yes?" She held the door as far
open as the thick brass chain would allow. A sickening sweet scent—
maybe air freshener, maybe cheap perfume—flooded out.
"I'm John Pellam."
A blink. Then understanding.
"Right right right. Donnie said you were coming by." A formal smile.
She didn't offer her first name. Buffett had told him it was Penny.
"I have to pick up a few things."
"That's what he said."
The door closed then opened, the
chain unhooked. She motioned him inside. He saw two other people. Her
parents, he guessed. The woman was what Penny would be in twenty years:
thin, white-haired with beautiful skin. And very cautious. Penny's
father was in his late fifties, with a businessman's paunch under his
pink, short-sleeved shirt. They both stared at
Pellam. He introduced
himself.
"Stan Brickell," the man said.
"I'm Penny's father. This's my wife, Ruth." The woman nodded.
It occurred to him that if he
said, "I'm sorry" by way of general sympathy, they might think Buffett
had died. He asked,
"You live in the area?"
"Carbondale."
Pellam nodded. "I just saw him an
hour ago. Donnie. He looked pretty good."
"You on the force with him?"
"I'm a friend."
Penny said, "Donnie's mentioned
you a couple times."
He had?
"What do you have to pick up?"
"Some forms for the office."
Penny said, "I could take them."
"I have to stop by the Criminal
Court building. It's pretty grim down there, Donnie said." This was the
lie that Buffett had coached him on.
"I would, though. If he wanted me
to take them there, I would." She said this with great sincerity.
It was then that Pellam noticed
the burning candle. It was a funny thing. Red, thick, about three feet
high, with charms stuck onto it. It had been burning for a long time;
there was a slick puddle of wax in the black saucer the candle rested
on, two burning sticks of incense angled out of the shaft. That's what
was stinking up the house. Sandalwood or something. It
reminded him of
high school—black lights, the Jefferson Airplane, peace symbols that
meant peace and tie-dye that was fashionable, not nostalgic.
He looked around the living room.
The candle was a hint but it did not prepare him for the collection of
paintings, statues,
and icons. All religious, mostly crudely done.
Pellam wondered if Penny had made them herself. There were pictures of
native Africans, thin black men and women, with intense, euphoric
gazes. There were wooden crosses, spattered with dark red paint.
Posters of pentagrams and star charts and crystals. A large glass
pyramid, inside of which was a shriveled-up brown and
flesh-colored object. It looked like a dried apricot. Like many of
these objets d'art the pyramid was covered with dust.
"Would you like some coffee?"
Ruth asked,
"Oh, sure, coffee?" From Penny.
"No, thanks."
Ruth said, "No trouble."
"No, really. I can't stay long.
If you could just show me Donnie's office."
Penny pointed the way.
The office was really a bedroom
slowly becoming a den. It was small. On the walls were sheets of thin
paneling of light-
stained wormwood—with tiny black holes like miniature
cigarette burns. Donnie had probably done the work himself. Half of the
sheets still showed the nailheads. A six-foot piece of unstained crown
molding had been mounted where the panel joined the ceiling. A half
dozen other pieces of molding sat in the corner. It was going to be a
long time before the work got finished, Pellam thought with sadness.
He opened the bottom drawer of
Buffett's desk. He moved aside the box Donnie had told him about and
found what he was looking for. He slipped the thick envelope into his
pocket.
As he stood he heard a woman's
voice eerily droning: "Ommmm..."
Pellam returned to the living
room, where sat three people whose only bond seemed to be this tragedy.
Penny was in front of the candle, her voice solid and strong like a car
in low gear. Nothing was going to stop it. Tears were in her eyes. She
sat Japanese style, on her haunches. She hummed faster and faster.
"Ommmm ..."
Ruth was sitting back on the
couch, tracing the yellow herringbone pattern of the upholstery with a
short, unpolished nail.
Stan said to her bluntly, "Get me some coffee.
And a sandwich. Watch the mayonnaise. You gave me too much last time."
Penny's eyes were closed and from
her lips came the melancholy drone of her prayer.
Pellam said good-bye to no one.
He opened the door and let himself out.
He was going to wait until he got
to the Yamaha to take the envelope out of his pocket. But he stopped on
the walk and
lifted it out. He saw what was irritating his leg. The
hammer of the Smith & Wesson pistol had worn through the paper.
Pellam covered it with Maddox Police Department Aided Report forms and
walked to the motorcycle.
A fleck of dust pedaled through
the air of Gennaros Bakery. Philip Lombros eyes followed it for a long
moment then turned back.to Ralph Bales.
"You're not eating your cannoli."
"It's good. I like it," Ralph
Bales said. For a stocky man, a man who loved steak and pasta and
hamburgers, he had a curious dislike for desserts. He wondered why it
was he was always ended up sitting in restaurants eating sweets and
drinking coffee and tea on deals like this. "I'm a slow eater. My wife—"
"You're married?" Lombro asked,
surprised.
"Was married. She'd be finished
with her veal and I'd still have most of it left. It's healthier to eat
slower. You should chew
your food, each bite, I mean, fifty times. I
don't do that, but you're supposed to."
The bakery was not very
authentic, Ralph Bales noted. Not like the ones he grew up near. It
was, for one thing, very clean,
and the girls wore yellow and brown
waitress uniforms, and the miniature pastries in the spotless glass
cases were like the
rings and necklaces in the Famous Barr jewelry
department. He didn't like it. A bakery should be dark and full of wood
and the pastries should be behind dirty, cracked glass. The room should
be filled with the smell of yeast and they shouldn't charge three
seventy-five for a damn piece of cannoli.
Lombro was nodding with little
interest. "My brothers wife makes these. They're better than this one.
I think they fill these ahead of time here. You're not supposed to do
that. You were telling me you found the man who was the witness."
"Yes."
"What's his name?'
Ralph Bales had anticipated this
question. "Peter James." There were twenty-seven people named Peter,
Pete, or P. James
in the St. Louis phone book. Also, it was a name that
someone might mix up. Was that James Peters? Jim Peters?
Lombro examined his napkin and
replaced it on his lap. "And you've talked to him?"
"Okay. We had a long talk," Ralph
Bales said in a low voice. He recited his next line. "He was pretty
damn scared when he saw me coming. But he's agreed to play ball with
us."
"Play ball."
'That means—"
"That means he wants
some money
and he won't identify me."
'That's what it means, yeah."
Lombro sipped his coffee, sitting
back, ankle on knee, looking like a Mafia don. "Do you trust him?"
"Well—"
Lombro said, "I mean, if he takes
the money will he keep his word?'
Ralph Bales thought for a minute
and said, "You're never sure about these things—" He had not rehearsed
this but he liked
the lines. "—but I got good vibes from him. He's not
a pro. He's scared and I think he'll keep his word."
"What does he do?'
This was a question
that Ralph Bales had not anticipated. He spent a long time shrugging
and sipping coffee. "Works some
kind of job in St. Louis. I don't know.
Computers or something."
"And what exactly has he got to
sell?'
"He described you. To the letter.
He said he looked through the window and got a complete description."
Lombro touched the silvery hair
at his temple as if this news gave him a headache. "Why didn't he tell
the police?'
Another foreseen question. "He
was scared like I said."
"Did you threaten him?'
Ralph Bales poked at his pastry.
"Did you?' Lombro repeated
sternly.
"Okay. I made it clear that we
weren't happy. I told him we were willing to go to extremes if we had
to. I was trying to,
you know, negotiate it down. But I told you—I
didn't hurt him."
"Did it work?'
"Negotiating."
"Not much, no."
"How much does he want?'
Ralph Bales stopped poking and
took a bite of pastry. "Fifty thousand."
"Uhm."
Ralph Bales counted to twelve, as
his script called for. Then he said earnestly, "I know you don't want
my opinion but
there's a way I'd rather handle it." This was to make
the fifty thousand more appealing.
"No more killing. I forbid it."
Forbid it. Ralph Bales
tried to remember the last time he had heard someone use that word. Not
his father. Maybe a priest
at school. Forbid. It was a word
that belonged in an old-time movie.
"I'm just telling you your
options."
'That's not an option."
With one square of paper napkin,
Philip Lombro wiped the flecks of pastry from his lips and when he was
through doing so
he took another square and wiped the heel of his shoe.
Then he asked another question, one that Ralph Bales had not
anticipated, though it was one of those questions that did not really
need an answer. "I suppose he wants us to pay him in
small bills,
doesn't he?"
"Hey."
Donnie Buffett opened his eyes.
John Pellam stood looking at him.
Buffett inhaled slowly. "Hi,
chief."
"You okay?" Pellam's eyes
flickered with concern.
"Yeah. I was ... There's
this
exercise. It's supposed to calm you down. It doesn't work too good."
"Well, some beer'll calm you
down. You want another beer?"
"Yeah, I want another beer."
In addition to a damp paper bag
Pellam was holding a thick white envelope. Buffett looked at it first
and the bag second.
Pellam closed the door. Buffett
said, 'They got a rule against that."
"Yeah? What're you, a cop?" He
opened two pint Fosters.
Buffet looked at the blue and red
logo. "Oh, yes! That stuff really gives me a buzz. Is that a kangaroo
on there?"
"It's not going to hurt you, is
it? I mean, like with medicine you're taking?"
Buffett drank down three good
swallows. "Oooo," he said slowly. "Jubilation."
Pellam sat down in the chair. He held the envelope in one hand. Buffett stared at it.
"Donnie ... Uh, your wife?"
"She say anything about that?" He
nodded toward the envelope.
"She didn't see it."
Buffett drank more of the ale. He
wasn't looking at Pellam.
"She was kind of chanting when I
left."
The cop studied his beer. "Yeah,
she does that some. It's like a, you know, hobby."
"We get a lot of that out in
California."
"She's real sweet. Good kid. And
a cook. You want to talk pasta? Penny's the best. She cooks all kinds.
She makes white clam sauce. You know anybody else who's ever made white
clam sauce?"
"I met Stan and Ruth."
"Yeah. They're all right."
Buffett looked around the room. "We don't have a whole lot to talk
about. Stan's a good guy."
"Seems that way. Your wife okay,
Donnie?"
"What do you mean okay?"
"It wasn't just the chanting. She
had this candle burning ..."
Buffett laughed—though he guessed
his eyes did not join in. He said, "She's kind of superstitious. Like
with Reagan, remember? Nancy had an astrologer. A lot of people are
into that kind of stuff now. Crystals." He reached over to the table
and lifted up a clear green stone. "Green's supposed to make you well
again. Penny got it for me." His voice caught and he swallowed. "I'm
supposed to wear it. But I figured my Blue Cross goes out the window if
they find out I'm getting treated by spirit guides." He laughed again.
The sound turned into a shallow cough. "I'm supposed to keep turning.
Otherwise, all this shit settles in my lungs." His face went dark and
still. "I'm working out, too." He nodded to the jump rope. "I'll be
back in shape in no time."
"Wheelchair basketball."
"I'll whup your ass."
"I don't even play basketball,"
Pellam said.
Buffett was looking at the
envelope. "You found it okay."
Pellam handed it to him. "Its
pretty beat-up. That's what Maddox issues you?"
Buffett shook the gun out of the
envelope and held it lovingly. He clicked it open and looked at the
shells inside. He read the engraved, circular word Remington five
times. He did not seem to hear Pellam's question but a moment later he
said, "It's a cold gun."
"What's that?' Pellam asked.
"A gun with the registration
filed off. Untraceable. Sometimes you go into a drug bust, there're a
lot of cold guns around. So you pick up one and keep it."
"Like for a backup?"
Buffett spun the cylinder then
said, "Well, I use them for backup. Lotta cops use them for something
else. Like for when
there's some asshole coming at you in an alley and
you tell him to stop but he doesn't." Buffett stopped speaking as if
this
were explanation enough.
Pellam shook his head.
Buffett whispered, "You see what
I'm saying? You take him out with your service piece then slip a cold
gun in his hand. When they have the shooting hearing, you tell them you
had to shoot him because he had a piece." He found he was sweating and
wiped his face. "That happens a lot?"
"Some. They know it goes on. The
thing is, if you die with something in your hand the muscles tighten up
on it right away. So
it's a hassle to get the guy's prints on it. The
shooting board always suspects but unless it happens to the samfe cop a
lot they'd rather come down on our side." He looked up. "Thanks for
doing this."
"You really think there's a
chance the killer'll come back? Try to hit you here?"
"I just feel a whole lot better
with a piece." He nodded at the gun.
"I hear you." Pellam finished his
Fosters. "Should've brought some peanuts."
Buffett set his ale down.
"Stomach must've shrunk. Used to be a time when I could drink three of
these."
"You'll still be able to—"
Buffett s eyes flashed. "Don't do
that. I hate it."
"What?"
"Making it sound like
everything's gonna be fine. Everything's going to be hunky-dory. That's
what my mother used to say. Hunky-dory. And peachy."
Pellam shrugged. "You're the one
bitching and moaning about your capacity to chug. I'm just telling you
it's—"
"Well, don't tell me,
okay?"
"Sure, you want."
"Yeah, I want."
There was a long moment of
silence. Buffett said finally, "Look, Pellam, I'm sorry. You're too
easygoing. You ought to tell
me to fuck off. You ought to slug me."
"I never hit a man with a gun."
"I'm tired. I think I need some
sleep. I'll make some calls like I said. Tell the guys to lay off you."
"Thanks. I gotta go anyway. I got
a date."
"Date?"
"That local girl you met. The
blonde."
"Pretty damn clever, Pellam. You
promise 'em parts in the film and then, wham bang, they get a part they
weren't expecting. You Hollywood guys."
"Not quite. This one hates
movies."
"Hates movies? What's her name
again? Nancy?"
"Nina."
"One good-looking woman."
"She's here," Pellam said,
nodding toward the corridor. "Her mother had an operation or
something." He looked at the Smith
& Wesson. "I've got a Smittie at
home. I do some shooting sometimes."
Buffett nodded but he
was
distracted. He kept looking at the gun, imagining what it would feel
like when the
bullet entered his brain. How
long would he continue to think? What would he see? He thought: Fuck
you. Terror. Buffett looked up. "Sorry?"
Pellam had been talking about his
famous ancestor and he now repeated the story.
Buffet's eyes showed momentary
amusement. "Wild Bill Hickok? Bullshit."
"Well, that's the story. Even if
it's not true, it got me interested in American history. And started me
collecting old guns."
"What'd he shoot, a .45?"
"Wild Bill? Nope. Gun of choice
was an 1851 Navy Colt. Thirty-six caliber. What's that? Three
fifty-seven?" Pellam nodded toward the Smith & Wesson in Buffett's
hand.
"This? No. Standard thirty-eight
special."
"Could I heft it for a minute?"
Buffett handed it to him butt
first and as Pellam studied it the cop said, "Pellam, one thing. When
you saw my wife did you
tell her anything about me?"
"I don't remember. I guess I told
her you seemed to be doing okay."
"Did you? Thanks."
Pellam put the gun in his pocket.
Buffett looked at the outline of
the pistol. "What are you doing?"
Pellam said, "I think I'll hold on to it for a while."
Naw, naw, give it here." Buffett
thought Pellam
was joking.
"I don't think so."
"What're you, nuts? Give it here!"
Pellam said, "I was thinking
about it, you know, and it just doesn't make a lot of sense.
There's a twenty-four-hour cop up
the hall, hospital security guards at
the front door. I don't think the killer'd be stupid enough to try to
come back—"
"Well, who the hell are you to
risk my life?"
"I think I'm saving your
life, Donnie."
Another blink.
Pellam said, "What were you
really going to do with the gun?"
"Give it here!"
"What were you going to do with
it?"
"Give me my fucking gun!" Buffett
shouted. Then he spat out viciously, "I could slash my wrists. I could
take an overdose."
"Well, do it. I'm just not going
to help you."
"It's my gun!" Buffett
cried. "Please." Tears began. He wiped them away angrily. His arms
slumped and his hands fell to his lap.
"It's gotta be tough," Pellam
said. "But you don't want to do that." He touched his pocket.
"You don't understand," Buffett
whispered. "I'm never going to walk! I'm never going to fuck a woman
again in my life. Never. I'll never have any kids. You don't
understand!"
'The way you feel now isn't—"
"The way I feel?" Buffett
shouted. "How do you know what I feel? How could you possibly
know?"
Pellam exhaled slowly. After a
moment of enduring the hopelessness in the cop's face, he said, "I'll
be in town for another week. You still want the gun when I leave, I'll
give it to you then."
"Yeah, what's going to be
different in a week?" Buffett snarled. "I'll still be lying on my ass
with bedsores, I'll still be pissing
into
a rubber, I'll have a wife talking to the stars and friends who're
embarrassed to come see me."
"One week."
"Give it to me!"
Pellam opened the door and
stepped out. One week."
This was not a place he would
have chosen to be buried in. Philip Lombro would have preferred more
variety: trees, hills,
large rocks rising out of the ground like
Stonehenge. But he decided this was a foolish thought. How could you
have a
cemetery with tree roots, uneven ground, stone? Cemeteries were
like any other real estate; death had to be financially practical.
The cemetery outside of Maddox
resembled the acreage around a prefab midwestern grade school. Beyond,
he could see
a development of pastel houses, all similarly styled. In
each yard were two small maples, crowned with colored leaves—
webby,
like the sponge of HO-gauge trees in the scenery sets he bought for his
nephews.
Lombro parked on the side of the
cinder drive and got out of the Lincoln. He walked slowly through the
trim grass. Several
of the graves were caved in at the corners. He felt
queasy as he looked down into these tiny, dark pits, and he wondered if
with a flashlight one could see the coffins themselves. This terrified
him. He hated this place and he was angry at his brother
for buying plots here, instead of Mount
Pleasant, where their parents were buried.
The day was milky-sunny and hot.
Indian summer, he supposed, though he never knew exactly what that
meant. Could it be
a metaphor for the Indians' attempting a final
assault after they had been conquered by the settlers? But that seemed
too lofty and dark for such an innocent phrase. His feet bristled
through lawn stubbly with crabgrass, and he noticed his shoes were
dusty from disintegrating yellow leaves. He bent down and stroked the
grass. It was unpleasantly tough; the stem of a
dandelion was the only
softness his fingers touched. He stood and continued toward the
gravesite.
Lombro wore a dark suit and he
was sweating. He would not take off his jacket. The dead, he believed,
deserve all our respect.
The cemetery was not crowded. The
hour was early, on a weekday, and only dedicated mourners were present.
Two
elderly women, locked arm in arm, stood nearby over an old grave,
which was not marked by a monument but by a small,
dark metal plate.
Lombro remembered that every veteran was entitled to a marker like
this and he wondered if the women were standing above a father who died
in Verdun, a husband at Normandy, or a son at Da Nang.
When he arrived at the grave, he
did not have the reaction he believed he would experience. He did not
cry. He felt numb, hardly touched at all, the way a shy man freezes in
front of a very beautiful woman. He looked down at the turned-over
earth. He knew they used bulldozers to dump the dirt into the graves
and he was glad he did not see any tread marks on the clayish
earth. The gravestone was gray
marble and polished so smooth, it reflected the dark, wilted flowers.
A breeze disturbed the green
tissue enfolding the flowers that he held. He had forgotten they were
in his hand. He set them
on the dirt then decided the paper would shred
in the rain and look bad. He pulled it off and stuffed it into his
pocket.
He turned and walked back to his
car. As he did, it occurred to him that all his life he had been a man
who was not afraid to act. Being this way had made him very wealthy, a
linchpin in his family, respected and—in certain circles—held in awe
and
fear. Yet now he believed that what he had done—killing Vincent
Gaudia—had altered him. Altered him fundamentally. Not because it was
violent but because it was an act beyond his world of experience. He
had put in motion people and forces that were behaving in ways he could
not control, in ways he could not even predict.
The gun that had fallen in the
tile bathroom of Orsini's—Ralph Bales s gun—and had put the two men
together had been the first link in a long, horrible chain reaction of
those forces, which had the effect of making him feel small and
powerless.
Lombro leaned against his car.
The wind was gentle and filled with crackling, dry heat. Lombro saw
Ralph Bales driving up
the road now, his squat head through the gray
glass of the car. Lombro reached into his pocket and pulled out the
yellow envelope that contained fifty thousand dollars. He wanted the
meeting to be over with as soon as possible.
He wished there were no witness.
He wished he had never met Ralph
Bales.
But most of all Philip
Lombro
wished that the dead all around him, lying in their
still beds of level, root-and rock-free earth, would all at once rise
and begin to laugh and talk as if they were not dead at all but had
merely been lulled into a light sleep
by the glorious peace of an
unseasonably warm afternoon.
After hours of cruising up and
down the riverbanks of the Wide Missouri and the Big Muddy, Pellam at
last found the field
that would be the site of Ross and Dehlia's
catastrophic last heist.
Driving and stopping, then
driving on, he had been close to giving up hope. State parks, private
yards, railroad easements, pastoral grass rolling toward the water,
boggy grassland, long stretches of revetments of crushed gray and black
rock.
Nothing that would work for the film.
Sitting on the campers dashboard
was a note from the key grip, pleading for a location within
twenty-four hours, and sitting
in the seat beside him was the reclining
figure of Nina Sassower. Pellam, forcing himself to ignore both, had
turned a bend, driven through a stand of dense oak and maple and braked
the camper to a squealing halt. '
"I think this is it."
The field was a lush five acres
defined by dense rows of trees, just starting to color—some leaves
would have to be spray-painted or draped with green netting. (The film
was set in June.) A church facade would have to be constructed.
(Sloans
wish to have the shoot-out involve schoolchildren had given way to his
slightly more tasteful burst of inspiration—
the innocent victims would
be churchgoers.) But those were the only necessary modifications.
The grass was high. An asphalt
road stretched timidly between the field and the riverbank, which was a
ten-foot-high stone incline that dipped into the soupy water of the
Missouri River.
He stepped outside and took two
dozen Polaroids, then returned to the cab. He started the campers
engine and sped back toward town.
"Why," Nina asked with curiosity,
"is that field any different than the other ones? Because there's less
junk?"
"Uhm," he began and decided he
couldn't explain.
"I mean, it is a nice field and
all," she said quickly, perhaps taking his silence as disappointment at
her reaction.
Pellam noticed that Nina's
interest in film had grown considerably. Perhaps this was due to her
employment. She was by all reports an excellent makeup artist. Perhaps
it was also due to her reading Pellam s copy of the final revised
shooting script for Missouri River Blues. It looked like a
student's end-of-term notebook, stuffed with smudged, limp sheets— all
different colors, indicating the various drafts of Danny's rewrites. It
required diligent shuffling to proceed from start to finish. But the
script had held her interest all afternoon.
And, more than that, had even
brought her to tears.
Driving in silence, heading back
to Maddox, Pellam glanced at her again, noting her damp eyes.
She closed the script. "I'm
sorry. It's so sad."
John Pellam had not cried for a
long time and he could not remember the last time he had cried watching
a movie. Nina
looked ahead, unseeing, at the road. "I lost a relative
not too long ago."
Pellam muttered condolences. "Who
was it?" he asked.
Lost in thought, she had not
heard his question and he repeated it.
"An aunt. She was elderly, but
... A car accident."
Her voice faded.
Danny's new ending was a
slow-motion angle of Ross's Packard tumbling into the river.
"After she died, I had this urge
. . . no, not an urge, this need to put what I felt into
words."
People tended to share things
with Pellam and to confess secrets to him. It happened everywhere he
went, it happened at the unlikeliest of times. He supposed this was
because he was always just passing through. They could unburden
themselves and then he would vanish, their confidences safe.
"I looked through some of my
books and I found a poem. Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night. It's
funny about
poetry back then, isn't it? I mean, it was all stiff and
formal, but I could understand it."
"It's a nice poem." Pellam knew
the poet was Dylan Thomas. He couldn't remember a word of the poem. "
Pellam let the traffic -lights
guide him. He was lost, but he figured that the stoplights would be
denser closer to downtown Maddox, where he could get his bearings. He
steered toward the red and green and yellow.
"Did you read it at her funeral?"
"Yes. I was surprised, it went well. Real well. I thought I'd cry and
spoil it. But I didn't. Have you ever done that? Read something at a
funeral?"
Pellam thought back to the most
recent memorial service he
might have been a
featured speaker at. It had been seven years ago in Santa Monica. The
deceased had been his closest friend the actor Tommy Bernstein. Pellam
had not attended the service.
She didn't say anything more and
they drove in silence for ten minutes, then cruised into downtown
Maddox. He parked, with the engine still running, near Tony Sloan's
trailer, Sloan would be at the three-monitor Kem editing machine now,
reviewing work prints. He would not tolerate being disturbed. Pellam
left the Polaroids and a brief location report with Sloan's poor,
jittery, ponytailed assistant director and returned to the camper. They
drove along Main Street and parked beside a small grocery store.
Wishing to change the relentlessly somber mood, he said suddenly,
"Watermelon. Let's get some watermelon."
"In October?"
"Sometimes you just get this
craving. Come on."
Inside a small grocery store he
bought a plastic container of chunks of watermelon.
"It's not real red," she said.
Pellam asked the salesgirl,
"Where do you get watermelon in October?"
"Oh, from up north."
Pellam said to Nina, "It's Eskimo
watermelon."
"Farmers' Market," the girl said,
pointing in a direction he assumed must be north.
Pellam asked for two forks and
napkins.
Outside, they walked up the
street spitting seeds into their hands and sticking them into the dirt
in the big concrete planters along the street.
"Next year," Nina said,
"we'll
have to come back and harvest the crop."
Pellam didn't really think about
Nina in terms of next year.
A dark car cruised past slowly
and Pellam had the vague impression of eyes staring at him. The fork
stopped halfway to his mouth and he watched the car as it sped up and
continued on.
They wandered out of downtown.
Nina stopped and stared in the
window of a store that sold shoes encrusted with costume jewelry—
stones, glitter, fake gold. Why on earth would anyone in Maddox buy a
pair of shoes like this?
"Wicked Witch of the North," he
said.
Nina said, "It was the West."
Maybe she does like movies
after all.
"Oh," Pellam said. "I only like
the tornado scene."
"When I was a little girl, I used
to think it was 'wicker' witch. We had a wicker patio set. I wouldn't
sit in it. I thought it,
I don't know, was made out of witches."
Pellam smiled. She took his arm
and brushed her cheek against his shoulder.
"I finally outgrew it. I' still
don't like wicker, though. You get splinters in your butt."
He said, "You look good when you
smile."
Which seemed to be just the words
to deflate it. But she brought a facsimile back to her mouth and said,
'Thank you."
That was when they found the
factory.
Pellam noticed a redbrick
building set back a long ways from the road. The grounds were filled
with overgrown trees, brush, and rampant kudzu so thick you could only
see the top of the tall, square building. It had high, gracefully
arched windows decorated with iron grillwork. The setting sun was
visible through them and lit the interior with broad shafts of ruddy
illumination.
Pellam started up the path. Nina
followed.
The Maddox Machinery and Die
Company had been abandoned for years. The building had an odd regalness
about it, something castlelike, complete with parapets and a dip in the
surrounding ground that was probably a collapsed septic system but
could pass for a moat. The bottom six or seven feet of the outer walls
were marked with halfhearted graffiti, and the metal door was thickly
posted with several generations of No Trespassing signs. Metal
Art Deco designs, in the shape of lilies and vines and the company's
name were set in concrete around the door.
Nina walked up silently behind
him. She looked up at the facade. "What a neat old building."
Pellam tried the front door. The
lock was long broken though the double wooden panels were chained. He
pushed inward as far as he could, separating them by two feet then he
worked his way inside underneath the chain.
"Do you think you should?" Nina
asked as his boot vanished into the doorway. She timidly followed.
Inside, Pellam paused on the oak
floor, worn wavy by years of workers' boots and hand trucks. To the
right were the darkened factory offices. Banisters and windows were
done in streamlined aluminum, and in faded murals muscular laborers
towered high above them. To the left through an arched doorway was a
huge, cavernous space, now lit red by the intense
sun glowing on the
yellowed, greasy windows. The ceiling was nearly forty feet high.
Nina walked up behind Pellam.
"This is too good to pass up," he
said. "I thought the field was all you needed." "This'd be for another
film I've got in mind.
I'll get the Polaroid. Be right back."
After Pellam ducked out of the
chained door Nina walked to the back wall, where she had seen in the
shadows what she believed was an antique calendar and some other
artifacts that might be worth swiping before the movie crews descended.
It was not a calendar, though,
just a poster of the Bee Gees, which would have been dated circa 1975.
She guessed some
lads had used the building as a clubhouse years ago.
She found an old, empty tin of cat food. A dozen beer bottles, burnt
matches. Nina walked into a large, windowless office in which rested a
piece of sleek green machinery like a huge sewing machine. She squinted
into the darkness and poked around in drawers and cabinets for ten
minutes. She found a beautiful antique orange crate but it was too big
to get through the chained door.
Clouds suddenly obsdured the sun,
leaving Nina in gray shadow. She felt a chill and, with it, a sense of
uneasiness. She started walking quickly back to the front of the
factory. She stopped. In the dust on the floor in front of her Nina
could see her own footsteps, leading back to the poster and the machine
room. And there were Pellams sharp-toed boot prints retreating through
the arched front doorway.
She saw another set of prints too.
They disappeared into the back of
the building, through the offices. They had been made very recently.
Nina gasped in fear and looked at
the arched doorway, beyond which was the chained front door. One
hundred feet away. And fifty or sixty of those feet led past darkened
doorways.
"John?" she called.
There was no answer.
The panic zipped along her spine
and seized the back of her neck. Tears popped into her eyes. Step by
step, slowly, to keep the fear at bay, she started toward the door. Her
jaw began to quiver.
Ten feet, fifteen. Twenty.
She heard a noise, perhaps a
footstep.
"John?" The terrified echo of her
own voice came back to her from three directions, and it seemed as if
there were a trio of ghosts in the room, mocking her. The tears came
more quickly. She forced herself with all her will to walk slowly.
Then Nina was almost at the front
door arch. Beyond it she could see the glint of the chain on the door.
This reassured her
and the terror diminished. Pellam would be returning
any minute.
She could—
The hand slipped around her mouth
and held her firmly. She tasted tobacco and salt. Another arm curled
around the chest and yanked her off her feet. The man threw her to the
ground, the air knocked from her lungs. She uttered a painful moan. Her
breath came in small gasps. Then he was kneeling beside her, his face
very close to hers.
FOURTEEN
She lay on the floor, on wood as
cold as iron. The narrow door admitted only reflected light from the
main room and she
was in shadow. She smelled garbage and urine and mold
and tasted her own metallic tears.
"Please!" she cried.
The man stood and walked to the
outer door. Only a part of her rational mind was working and this
portion believed that
he'd simply taken her purse and was leaving. She
saw his dark silhouette at the front door, the chained door, looking
out.
Then he slowly turned and walked back to her. He crouched down and
a band of pale light fell across his face. He was wearing rose-colored
sunglasses. She saw his face clearly beneath his trim hair. He was
young, he was handsome, he was white. All of these surprised her and
lessened her fear slightly. On his cheek was a large, oval birthmark or
discoloration. The light startled him. He had not expected to be seen.
Her fear returned. He was going
to kill her because she had seen him. . . . Whatever else he did, he
was going to kill her afterwards.
He ran his hand along her pale
cheek. "Put your hands under you."
She did not understand and he
repeated the words calmly. When she still did not comprehend this
instruction, he illustrated, lifting up her hips and shoving her hands
beneath her buttocks. Maybe he wanted her hands pinned so she could not
scratch him.
He bent down, kneeling, and put
his mouth next to her ear. Nina twisted her head away, wincing and
expecting to be kissed. She felt the heat of his breath.
"Please," she cried, "don't."
"I have a message for your
friend."
She did not hear this. "Please."
"Listen! .. . Are you listening?"
She nodded, crying again.
"Mr. Crimmins knows that your
friend saw him in the car that night. You tell him that if he
testifies, I'll come back. You understand what I'm saying?"
"What—?"
"Did you hear me?"
Nina said, "Mr. Crimmins . . ."
"And if I come back—" he touched
her cheek again "—you're not going to like it."
Nina's body was racked with
sobbing.
He said, "Don't move for a half
hour. Stay right where you are." He stood up. She heard no footsteps,
nor did she hear the rattle of the chain on the front door. Because of
this she believed he was still there, watching her, perhaps hidden in
the shadows only ten feet away. She stared at the distant square of
greasy glass, lit by the sun and the thin auras encircling it, the
rings of red light that her tears created.
He found her sitting curled up,
outside the factory, staring down at the branch-cracked sidewalk at her
feet. "Nina?"
She did not look up. Not for a
moment. When she did it was with eyes full of tears. He sensed she had
been assembling herself—forcing herself to be placid.
"John ..." Her voice broke with
sobbing. She was shivering.
"What is it?" He crouched next to
her.
Her arms hugged him hard and she
was shaking hysterically. "There was a man."
Pellam stiffened. He took her by
the shoulders. "What happened?"
Sobbing again. He had to wait. He
wanted to shake it out of her, force her to tell him. But he waited.
Nina pulled away and roughly
wiped her ear—where the attackers mouth had been—as if scraping the
skin clean.
"He didn't... do anything. He just knocked me down."
"Let's call the cops." Pellam
started to stand.
"He said .. . He told me tb tell
you something."
"Me?"
"He said he worked for the man
you saw, the man in the Lincoln. And if you tell the police he'd come
back and .. .
Crimmins, he said the name was."
His hands began to quiver in
rage, then his neck. He couldn't control it. Then his jaw and head,
shaking uncontrollably. He blinked. His eyes watered with the fury. His
jaw suddenly cramped and he realized his teeth were jammed together.
"John—" *
"Let's call the police."
She shook her head. "No."
"What? We have to."
"No, John. Please. He didn't hurt
me. Not really. But I'm scared of him. He said he'd come back." She
looked at him with frightened, wet, round eyes. "Please. Just take me
home."
Pellam looked around the field
and brush surrounding the factory. He thought back to the dark car that
had cruised past
while they were on the street. All his enemies in this
town were faceless. Where were they? Pellam thought momentarily of
his
distant ancestor Wild Bill, who fought it out with gunfighters
face-to-face and no more than a dozen feet apart (except, of course,
for the last one, the one who shot him in the back).
"This guy, what did he look
like?" Pellam asked.
She described him as best she
could, the hair, the youthfulness, the pink glasses. She thought for a
moment and described his pants and jacket. She could not remember his
shoes or shirt.
'There's something else about him
..."
"What?" Pellam helped her to her
feet.
"He had a red mark on his cheek.
Like a big birthmark. It looked like that red spot on Jupiter." She
touched her own cheek.
"Jupiter."
"The planet," Nina said. "Will
you please take me home now?"
"I don't need a goddamn
appointment."
Pellam shoved the door open. It
swung into a bookshelf. A precariously balanced volume tumbled to the
bare floor with the sound of a gunshot.
He stopped. Four people gazed at
him. Three were astonished. U.S. Attorney Ronald Peterson looked calmly
at Pellam as
he walked farther into the room. The others, two
men and a woman, were young. Their eyes danced between the intruder
and
Peterson. Pellam ignored them and said, "I want to talk to you. Now."
"Ten minutes. You mind?" Peterson
asked his coterie.
Even if they had, he was
obviously their boss, and the only debate they were presented was
whether it was better protocol
to take their files or leave them. The
papers remained where they were and the youngsters walked silently out
of the room.
Pellam put his hands on the
cluttered desk, knocking ; aside a windup set of dentures. He leaned
forward. "I want protection for myself, my friends, and for
everybody with the film company. A friend of mine was just attacked. I
want an agent at her apartment now! She lives in Cranston,
on—"
"Have a seat, Mr. Pellam."
Pellam remained standing,
glancing from the windup toy collection into the man's serene olive
pits of eyes. The U.S. Attorney motioned to a chair. "Please."
Pellam sat down.
"You say she was attacked, this
friend of yours?"
Pellam told him about the factory
and the man with the birthmark.
"Crimmins." Peterson's troubled
eyes scanned the colorful foliage outside his window. He spat out,
'That son of a bitch."
'Your agents told me he'd hired
some hit man in Chicago or Detroit or something. This's him. This is
the guy. I want protection."
"Protection?"
"Agents," Pellam exploded. "You
know, bodyguards."
"U.S. Marshals? That's a lot of
taxpayers' money to devote to protecting someone."
"You've got this witness
protection ..."
"Ah, the keyword. Witness."
Pellam said, "Look, you're
playing a game. You know his name. Crimmins. Go arrest him."
Peterson said, "I'm confused. If
you didn't see him, why would he threaten you?"
"Well, he doesn't know I
didn't see anything. Why are you hesitating? You want Crimmins. He's
just threatened me and assaulted my friend. Go arrest him."
"The attack that you say—"
Pellam was on his feet. "I say?...
My friend—"
Peterson held up a hand. "Excuse
me. My mistake. I apologize. Please—have a seat."
Pellam sat down.
The U.S. Attorney said, "What
exactly do you want?"
"I want protection. I keep saying
that."
"I suppose we could put one man
on it for a while. But what happened to your friend isn't a federal
crime. It's an assault. There's no federal jurisdiction—"
"You mean it's not a crime to
threaten a federal witness?" His voice faded in reverse proportion to
Petersons smile.
"We come back to that again. See
what I'm saying? You're not a witness. No jurisdiction.
There's nothing we can do."
Pellam's voice was soft. 'That's
the kind of technicality you people like to use."
Peterson paused a moment, maybe
wondering which category the you people described. The point
is, even if we got a
conviction for this
attack, the best we could do is put him away for a year, tops. He'd be
out and after you again twice as
mad. Or after your friend."
"Bullshit."
Peterson pressed an intercom
button. A middle-aged woman in a white blouse and tan skirt appeared in
the doorway. "Yessir?"
"Bring me the Crimmins file,
please."
"All of it, Mr. Peterson?"
"No, sorry. Just the background
file. The first Redweld." He looked at Pellam. "You really don't know
who Peter Crimmins
is? Well, let me tell you. Second-generation
Russian. Ukrainian, I mean. I suppose we have to be careful with that
nowadays. He made a lot of money in the trucking business and we know
that he's built up a huge money-laundering operation. It was some
people that work for him got into a battle with a Jamaican street gang
in East St. Louis."
Pellam pictured the windup toys
strolling off the edge of the desk and some young assistant attorney
scurrying to retrieve
them from the floor. "What exactly—"
'Twelve people were killed."
Peterson frowned but did not seem to be particularly shocked or
mournful.
"What's that got to do with me?"
" 'Massacre.' That's what the Post-Dispatch
said. Not exactly hyperbole. Seven of them were bystanders."
"Tough luck in an election year."
Peterson was immobile for a
moment. He lifted a very white finger to his earlobe and stroked it
absently three times. When
he spoke his voice was temperate. 'The
office of U.S. Attorney is an appointed position."
Pellam gazed at him skeptically.
"I have no aspirations to be
mayor of this city. Or governor of the state or senator. I have yet to
understand why anyone
would want to be a representative."
The secretary appeared and set a
large, bartered red-brown file folder on Peterson's desk. The U.S.
Attorney opened the
file and pulled out a number of stacks of papers
and clippings. He upended one stack on his lap and began flipping
through
it, squinting.
The pictures spun out, flying
like Frisbees. Pellam glanced at them. He was surprised they were in
color. For some reason he had assumed police photographers used
black-and-white film. He was surprised at how bright the blood was. He
had seen bodies before; blood in real life seemed darker.
"Those were ten-year-old boys.
Though it's hard to tell after what happened to them."
Pellam picked up the glossy
photos and tossed them back to Peterson. One fell on the floor. The
U.S. Attorney picked it up and stared at it. "Two years ago, we were
very close to indicting Peter Crimmins on several racketeering counts.
We had a material witness. A young woman, a secretary, who could
implicate Crimmins. There was a freak accident. Somehow a pot of
boiling water fell off the stove. Third-degree burns on her groin and
thighs. She said she was cooking." Peterson s voice rose into an eerie
wail. "Third-degree burns. Her skin was like cooked steak!"
The eyes glowed. "But you know what was odd, what was very odd? The
accident happened at midnight." Peterson lifted his palms. "My wife
doesn't cook at midnight. Do
you know anybody who cooks at
midnight?"
Pellam was silent. Petersons head
bobbled with rage. Slowly he calmed. He took a Kleenex and wiped his face. "The
woman recanted her
testimony before trial."
"So what you're telling me is
that Crimmins is a bad man who has a track record of scaring witnesses."
"Mr. Pellam, there is no doubt in
my mind that he was the person who killed Vince Gaudia. He had the
motive. He does not have a convincing alibi. He has ordered people
threatened, beaten and killed in the past. Look what he did to your
girlfriend. The fact is that the RICO charges I've got against Crimmins
are nothing without Gaudia. He'll get three or four years at the most."
Pellam saw more sweat on the dome of Peterson's head. He saw the finger
and thumb rubbing together compulsively, trembling.
Pellams voice was patient and
tired. "I can't help you."
Peterson came back to earth. He
opened another file folder and, preoccupied, dug inside.
Pellam asked, "What about
protecting Nina?"
"I think she'd be safer if she
left town. There isn't much we can do."
"I know some reporters," Pellam
said ominously. "They might be interested in this story. You refusing
to protect people
unless they testify for you."
Peterson slipped an utterly
good-natured smile into position on his egg-shaped face. "Oh, I don't
think that'd be a very
good story."
"You never know."
Peterson lifted several pieces of
paper out of the file. "The problem with reporters," he said, flipping
through the sheets,
"is that they like the lowest denominators of any
situation. This witness story of yours isn't really a grabber."
Pellam waved an arm in
frustration and started toward the door.
"This story," the U.S.
Attorney said with a smile, "would be much better."
The bulletin left Peterson's hand
and floated down to the desk. The California bear seal was in the upper
left-hand corner
and in the center of the white, wrinkled sheet were
two photos and several brief paragraphs.
The photos weren't of Peter
Crimmins or of live gangsters or dead bystanders but were of John
Pellam himself.
He looked exhausted, puffy-eyed,
unshaven. They showed him from two angles—straight on and in profile.
Beneath them were words in slightly uneven lines, suggesting that they
were typed by a cheap typewriter. Among these words were Pellam's name,
vital statistics, the date the photo was taken and the names of several
Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department deputies. At the bottom of the
bulletin was this information: Charged with: murder, manslaughter,
sale/possession of controlled substances.
FIFTEEN
"Does your boss know you did
time?"
Pellam lowered his hand from the
doorknob. He returned to Peterson's desk and sat down. He stared at the
picture.
Turn your head . . . We want a
profile. Turn your head. . . Him? Yeah, he's the one killed
that actor. Yep, sure is."
Peterson said cheerfully, "You
know, I seem to remember something of surety law. Wouldn't your film
company's bond get lifted if an ex-felon was on the payroll? Especially
with a drug charge?"
"I was acquitted on the drug and
murder charges."
"Don't quibble, Mr. Pellam. The
victim died because you delivered two ounces of cocaine to him, didn't
you? This Tommy Bernstein, the young man in question."
The best friend in question.
Pellam reached forward and
touched the photo of himself.
"Put this here jumpsuit on,
then we cuff you and take you downstairs. You hassle us, we hassle you
and we got
batons and you don't, you know
what I'm saying? Now, move."
The reason that he had not been
able to attend Tommy's memorial service was that he was in a Los
Angeles County Sheriffs Department holding cell, pending arraignment.
Pellam, staring at his own gaunt
image, was long past feeling the need to explain, to shake his head
with a grim, tight mouth and tell how Tommy had begged him for the
stuff, crying. Please, just this once, John, help me, help me, help
me. I can't work without it. I see the cameras, man, and I freeze. I
mean, I fucking freeze. You gotta help me . . . Tommy Bernstein,
lovable madman and brilliant actor, leaning on Pellam's shoulder, tears
in thick streaks shooting down his doughy face, pathetic and looking
just like the child that, in the core of his soul, he was and would
always be—the child that Pellam should have recognized.
No, he wouldn't explain this to
the sour, cold man he now sat in front of. He said only, "It was a
long time ago."
Peterson regarded him coolly. "An
ex-felon is an ex-felon. You can't ever take that away."
"No, you can't."
Peterson repeated. "Does your
boss know?"
"No."
"It's purely a civil matter. I
don't have any legal duty to tell him. But I do feel a certain sense of
moral obligation. He would
fire you in an instant, I imagine."
"I imagine he would. And if I say
that I saw Crimmins in the car you'll forget to mention it."
"You've had some conversations
with a Marty Weller in the past week."
"Marty? How do you know about
Marty?"
"Some conversations about a movie
project you're putting together?" Pellam was silent, and Peterson
continued, "Following those conversations, you started looking for some
money. Your bank in Sherman Oaks, some car dealer who wasn't
interested
in an apparently less-than-perfect Porsche you happen to own ..."
"You tapped my phone illegally."
"Not at all. We talk to people.
That's all. We introduce ourselves and we ask questions. Most people
usually cooperate."
"What's your point?'
"You apparently need some money,
some big money. And you need it rather desperately."
"And you think Crimmins is paying
me not to testify."
"Yes. That's exactly what I
think."
Anger sputtered into Pellam's
face. He stood up and leaned forward, his eyes wild and uncontrolled,
his right fist balled.
Papers and toys cascaded to the floor.
They remained locked in a gaze
for a long moment, while Peterson mastered his fear, and Pellam, his
anger. Pellam was
close to hitting the man.
Peterson whispered, Please. I say
this for your sake. I don't think you want to add to your list of woes
at the moment, do
you really?"
Pellam finally stood upright and
walked not to the door but to the window. For a long moment, as if he
were debating something furiously, he looked out over an expanse of
green. St. Louis was a very verdant place, even in October. The
important aspects of his life in jeopardy, Pellam noticed small
details. Like the colors of foliage and the shape of trees. He nodded
suddenly, but whatever decision he came to, he kept to himself,and walked out of Peterson's
office without saying
a word.
The ribbed ball rolled along the
small grass rectangle.
"You lose," the old man told
Peter Crimmins, who smiled and nodded to the other players and then
stepped over the black-painted railing. He stood in a small park in a
suburb of St. Louis, squinting toward a huge complex of redbrick
apartments. He wondered how much money it cost to build the place. He
had never been in real estate. He considered it
too Jewish. But he had
lately been thinking about building something. He wanted some legacy
and he thought he would like
to sink some of his vast funds into
something that might be named after him.
Joshua stood nearby, leaning
against a lamp pole with the tough serenity of middle-aged bouncers and
Secret Service agents.
A broad-featured woman in a blue denim cowboy
suit talked into a public phone and gestured wildly. Her fat fingers
mauled
a cigarette.
Crimmins, wearing dark slacks and
sandals and a white dress shirt had been playing boccie for an hour. At
one time the largely Italian park would probably have been crowded on a
pleasant afternoon h'ke this, though even Crimmins, who had lived all
his life near here, could not recall when. Perhaps the year of the St.
Louis Exposition. An era when the town still retained some of its
Confederateness. Why, there were even homeless people camped out near
swing sets! Crimmins did not approve of homelessness. He thought such
people should pick themselves up and get a job as those in earlier eras
would have done.
"Bootstraps" was a word Peter
Crimmins used often.
He surveyed the park now. Lots
of Negroes, prowling slowly on their bicycles or walking in that
fast lope of theirs. Puerto Ricans. White teenagers in leather and
greasy denim, with their Frisbees and skateboards and guitars. A few
professional people. Women jogging while they pushed babies in
strollers that had three huge, cushioned wheels.
And then there were the Chinese.
While Crimmins disliked Jews and
feared Negroes and Puerto Ricans, he loathed the Chinese.
Crimmins was now looking at four
or five Asian families as they picnicked. Crimmins was aware of the
tide. Real estate and electronics. Shipping soon.
And money laundering not long
after that.
A boy on a skateboard snapped
past him in a surfer s crouch. As if drawn by the youngster's wake, a
dark-complected man suddenly stepped up to Crimmins. "Hold up there."
Just as suddenly, Joshua was
between them, appearing from nowhere, hand inside his jacket.
"Police, big fellow," the man
said. "Unless you're feeling yourself up, get your fucking hand out
where I can see it."
Shields and ID cards appeared.
"I'm Gianno, Maddox Police.
That's Detective Hagedorn over there."
"Maddox," Crimmins spat out.
Hagedorn stood nearby. His jacket
was unbuttoned. Gianno said, "We'd like to ask you a few questions."
Crimmins nodded to Joshua, who
retreated. He stopped fifteen feet away and stood watching the three
men.
"A woman was attacked not long
ago."
"Someone I know?" Crimmins was
concerned.
"Well, not a friend of yours,
that's for sure. She was apparendy reluctant to file a report. We got a
notice of. the assault
from the FBI."
Why would an assault be a federal
issue? thought Crimmins, reciter of indictments and an expert in
federal law. Then he understood. "I see," he said wearily. "And you
think I was behind this attack."
"She gave us a statement that the
attacker said he worked for you."
Crimmins blinked. "Me?"
Gianno gave him a description of
a young man with the birthmark.
"I don't know anyone who looks
like that. Besides, I wouldn't threaten anyone."
"No." Gianno laughed. "Of course
not."
"Where have you been today?"
Hagedorn piped up.
"Home, then I came here."
"Had to make some phone calls
that nobody could hear, did you?" Gianno nodded toward the public phone.
Crimmins rubbed his finger and
thumb together in irritation; the thumbnail turned white under the
pressure.
"Are you arresting me?"
Hagedorn said, "Will you give us
a list of all your employees?'
"I don't think I have to do that."
"We hoped you'd be cooperative,"
Gianno said.
"It would look better," his
partner offered.
"I don't really care what
anything looks like. I—"
Gianno said to Hagedorn, "Let's
get out of here. This guy's no help. We'll follow up with Pellam—"
The blond detective wagged a
subtle finger and his partner stopped speaking as if he had caught
himself at a social blunder. They looked for a moment at Crimmins, who
kept his face blank. The two policemen then walked away.
When the detectives had turned
the corner, Crimmins walked along the street, away from the phone
booth, motioning Joshua after him. When the bodyguard caught up with
him, there was a crown of sweat on Crimmins's forehead and his face was
white. These were not the symptoms of physical exertion.
"Find me Stettle," Crimmins
growled in a furious whisper. "I don't care where he is, what he's
doing. I want him now."
*
* *
The river was muddy today.
The water seemed no more
turbulent than on any other day—the wind was brisk but it still hadn't
broken the surface into whitecaps. But some disturbance was churning up
clayish mud and staining the wide water from shore to shore.
John Pellam stretched out in the
driver's seat of the camper and tried Nina's number once more. Her
machine answered and
he hung up without leaving a message. They had had
a brief conversation earlier during which she assured him she was fine.
She simply wanted rest. Could he call the head of Makeup and
explain?... Of course he would. Was there anything else he could do?
Did she want company? No, she'd visited her mother at the hospital and
asked the woman's doctor for a couple
of Valium for herself. Pellam
could hear the slurred words and he hung up to let her get some sleep.
He had just now replaced the
phone when a very distraught Tony Sloan called and said the final shoot
was about to go down. Pellam knew this and had planned on attending.
What was ominous was that Sloan had summoned him so adamantly. He
couldn't possibly be thinking of new locations, could he? The key grip
had let slip the information that Sloan had fifteen straight days of
film—that was twenty-four-hour days of celluloid—to boil down
into a 125-minute movie. Pellam, thanking the Lord he was not Sloan"s
film editor, promised he would be there before the last blank gun shot
was fired. He stood up and adjusted his Abel Gance Napoleon poster,
the only decoration in the camper. He slipped the Colt into the inside
pocket of his bomber jacket and was about to leave when his phone
buzzed again.
"Nina?" he asked.
"Are you sitting down?" The voice
was a man's.
"Hello?"
"Sitting down?"
"I can hardly hear you, Marty.
Where are you?"
"I'm in Berlin."
Pellam pressed the cellular phone
hard into his ear, as if that might improve the connection from the
state of Missouri, in which -Winston Churchill coined the term Iron
Curtain to the place that had once been behind it.
"I tried to get you in London and
Paris," Pellam shouted. "Look, I'm sorry about the other night."
"You don't have to shout. You
break up when you shout. I can hear you fine. What?"
"I'm sorry I missed you. I had an
accident."
"Well, it was a damn expensive
accident. Telorian was interested
but he got
pissed because you blew him off a second time. What's the trouble,
John, some Freudian thing against Iranians? Excuse me, Persians. You
should've called. Are you sitting down?"
"What do you mean?"
"I've got some Hungarian money
lined up."
"What?"
"I know. It's weird. Paramount
balked at the last minute on the terrorist script. It's totally cratered.
So it's a green light for Central Standard Time. This guy in
London put me in touch with these investors in Budapest. They're a real
East Village
duo. Young guys. I pitched you sort of as a Jarmusch."
Hungarians financing a cult film
noir flick set in Wisconsin. So this was the New World Order.
"Well, I'm happy about that,
Marty. What do we do now?"
"You can get a hundred fifty?"
"If I hustle."
"Well, hustle, boy."
'They understand I'm directing?"
They're all for it. They know all
about you, John . . . It's not a problem." His voice filled with
transatlantic sincerity.
"You know what I'm saying?"
The death of Tommy Bernstein was
what he was saying.
"They like your work. They like
you. Or who they think you are. Don't disappoint them."
"Who are these guys?"
"Their names, you mean?
Unpronounceable. Funny marks over the letters. Who cares? Get your
money. I'm having my
shyster in New York put together the partnership
agreement. Let's try to sign it up by the first of the month. Is it
doable?"
"It's doable. It's very doable .
. . Listen, Marty . . . thanks. You know what this means to me."
The broken connection mercifully
cut short the gratitude and Pellam found the conversation was over.
Outside he kicked a piece of
dried mud off his Nokonas and walked to the Yamaha.
SIXTEEN
"We saw your advisory about the
assault on that Sassower women."
Ronald Peterson cocked an eyebrow
at Bob Gianno. And?
"We talked to Crimmins."
Neither of the Maddox cops
noticed Petersons eyes flick with minute satisfaction toward Nelson,
who could not restrain
the less subtle smile.
Hagedorn continued, "He denied
having anything to do with the assault, of course. What did you expect?'
What indeed?
"But naturally we didn't care
about that. We just wanted to flush him. We mentioned Pellam's name. We
pretended it was a slip. You should have seen his eyes."
Peterson said, 'That was a clever
move."
"We thought so. He'll do
something now. Either try to hit Pellam directly or just spook him.
Either way, we'll move on him."
They sat in Peterson's office.
The cops had noticed the toy collection and each seemed to be trying to
think of something
witty to say about it and came up blank.
Peterson was oh so happy with
their immense discomfort.
"Keeping the pressure on Pellam.
That's good." Peterson took a long moment to read a low-priority report
that had nothing
to do with this meeting. He dashed a note in the
margin and dropped it on the desk. "You know Pellam did time."
"What?" Hagedorn laughed.
"Manslaughter. San Quentin."
"Damn. San Quentin," Gianno said.
"Hard time. How 'bout that."
Peterson watched the local
detectives stew a bit as they were poked by guilt that they themselves
hadn't unearthed this information. He asked, "Can you use that?" He
himself had considered Pellam's criminal record and concluded that
local
police couldn't do much with it.
Hagedorn and Gianno looked at
each other. The blond, good-looking cop—more handsome than most of the
FBI agents who worked for Peterson—lifted his hands and scrunched his
lips together in reflection. Finally he said, "I don't see how. Film
permits are already issued. I mean, I don't think a prior conviction
has any bearing on that. But what about parole?"
"Parole?"
Hagedorn continued, "Did he break
parole by leaving the state?"
This was something Peterson had
not thought of. A microscopic frown crossed his brow. Being outthought
by this smarmy shit-town cop. Peterson decided that Nelson would twist
in the wind a few revolutions for missing this. "Given the dates
of the
crime and his traveling-man career, I doubt that's an issue but I'll
have my associate check into it.
Now, I think we've agreed that Crimmins knows Pellam reported him for
the assault on the girl, and—thanks to the clever thinking of our
friends from Maddox here—he may make some overt move against Pellam.
We'll monitor that. But I think we need to step up the pressure too."
"Any ideas?" Gianno asked glumly,
suspecting sarcasm but unable to identify it.
Peterson responded, "I have one,
yes. Two of my agents were on the movie set the other day and they
found something interesting. I'd like to ask them to stop by and tell
us about it."
MISSOURI RIVER BLUES
SCENE
179E—EXTERIOR DAY—ROAD BETWEEN FIELD AND RIVER
This is a narrow road between
the field and the river. There is a small, one-story CHURCH an the
river side road, surrounded by B USHES and TREES. Past the bushes the
road continues through the field, open space
on either side.
MEDIUM ANGLES OF BOSS'S
PACKARD parked fifty feet past the church. DEHLIA dabs FAKE BLOOD
on her forehead and stretches out in the front seat of the car with the
door open. Ross and the three GANG MEMBERS take their MACHINE GUNS and
hide in the bushes, waiting for the armored truck. Ross stops
and runs
back to Dehlia. He gives her his FAVORITE PISTOL.
ROSS
In a half hour, little love,
we're gonna be across that river and we're gonna be free.
DEHLIA
If anything happens. . .
TWO SHOT of Ross touching his
finger to her lips to shush her. They KISS long and then he stands up,
cocks
the MACHINE GUN, and runs to the bushes.
"Finale time, everybody! Let's
try to bring it in under a hundred takes." Tony Sloan took his
position, standing in the shadow
of a big thirteen-ton Chapman Titan
motorized crane. He surveyed the battlefield to be.
Sloan, the second-unit director
the DP, the ever-nervous ponytailed assistant director and the stunt
coordinator had just finished trooping through the weeds and grass and
scrabbling over the revetment of stone down to the yellowish water,
blocking out the climax of the movie. This was the armored truck
attack. The owners of the transport company, tipped that
the truck
would be hit by Ross's gang, had replaced the shipment of cash with
bags of cut-up newspaper and substituted Pinkerton agents for the
regular guards. Dehlia would be reclining, supposedly injured, helpless
and beautiful at the scene
of the fake car accident, bringing the
armored car to a stop.
But before Ross could slip a
smoke grenade into one of the trucks gunports, the guards were to come
out blazing. Pious citizens, just leaving a church at the wrong moment,
became pious victims as they walked into the middle of the carnage.
Ross and Dehlia would then escape. But they would drive only a half
mile down the road before a young boy—whose father Ross had
accidentally killed fifty scenes before—darted in front of them. Ross
would swerve and the car would sail into the river. (Pellam had suggested
they rename the film The Postman Always Rings Twice for the Wild
Bunch.)
More than one hundred crew
members and thirty actors and extras tested lights, oiled dollies,
adjusted hydraulic lifts,
plugged in cables, mounted film magazines,
prefocused cameras, took light readings, positioned microphones and
read and reread scripts.
But the man of the moment was
none of these. Nor was he the lean, wild-haired director of photography
or even Tony
Sloan himself.
The center of this afternoons
particular universe was a thin, balding fifty-one-year-old man of quiet
demeanor, wearing
neither period costume nor Hollywood chic but dark
polyester slacks, a neatly pressed blue dress shirt and penny loafers.
There was a delicacy about Henry
Stacey, known both here and in Hollywood only by his nickname, Stace.
His careful eyes scanned the set in front of him with the attention of
a seasoned cinematographer. His job was in fact considerably less
artistic although it was—in the mind of directors like Tony Sloan (and
most of Sloans fans)—far more important than the director of
photography's.
Stace was the company's arms
master.
The actors and actresses in Missouri
River Blues had so far fired close to seventy thousand rounds of
blank ammunition at each other, which probably far exceeded the total
number of live rounds fired by all the real-life crooks and law
enforcers in
the Show Me State since it joined the Union.
The arms and prop assistants had
been working srnce four that morning, supervising the loading of an
armory's worth of submachine guns, rifles, and pistols for the final
scene. Stace himself oversaw the
loading of every weapon to make certain
that no live ammunition
accidentally got mixed into the magazines.
He also had worked with the unit
director and his assistants to oversee the placing of hundreds of
impact squibs—tiny electrically detonated firecrackers—whose explosions
would resemble striking bullets. He did the same with wardrobe and
makeup to rig the blood bladders on the bodies of actors destined to be
wounded or killed in the shoot (and who stood with great discomfort as
they, unprotected, were wired up by assistants who wore thick gloves
and safety goggles). The squibs
were connected to a computerized
control panel and could be triggered either by an operator or, with
additional rigging, by
the trigger action of the gun that was
supposedly firing the bullets whose impact the squibs represented.
Stace and his crew also rigged
debris mortars and vaporized gasoline bombs for the shots in which the
mock-ups of the
antique cars exploded. Reminding actors and actresses
to stuff their ears with cotton before the filming was another part
of
the job as was instructing them how to work the guns, how to stand when
they fired and reminding them to provide the gun-bucking recoil that
occurs only with live ammunition. He had running battles with Sloan (as
he did with all directors) because he urged the actors to point the
muzzles slightly away from their victims for safety, while the
directors, for the sake
of authenticity, wanted guns aimed directly at
their targets.
A competitive and award-winning
pistol marksman, Stace was also the set rifleman— occasionally manning
his own
bolt-action .380, or M-16 automatic, to fire wax bullets for impact effects on
surfaces that couldn't be rigged with squibs—windows, water, or even,
if they volunteered, a stuntman's bare flesh.
The final scene in Missouri
River would involve the firing of five thousand rounds in several
setups. Once the medium- and long-angle shooting was finished, the
rigging would be done once more for the close-up and two-shot angles.
This was going
to be a long day. The exhausted key grip looked over the
prep work, then at his watch. "Man, we'll be fighting the light on
this
one." Meaning working until dusk.
"Are we ready?" Sloan shouted
through his megaphone.
Various crew members, not knowing
whether or not they were the subject of this inquiry, assured him that
they were.
Stace checked the location of
every weapon, noting it on a clipboard, and walked back to the
fiberboard table on which
was the squib control board. Three of his
assistants sat like puppeteers, both hands above rows of buttons.
Because the
scene was newly added to the script and was so elaborate,
there had been no time to rig the guns themselves'to fire the
squibs.
The young assistants—two men and a woman—would use their
judgment in deciding where the machine-gun
bullets would land and push
the corresponding buttons.
Stace said, "Ready."
"Okay," the unit director
shouted. "Everybody in position."
Dehlia sprawled out of the open
door of a muddy Packard.
The Pinkerton agents piled into
the armored truck and it backed down the road.
The parishioners walked into the
church.
Ross's soon-to-be-dead fellow
gangsters checked the harnesses and cables that would jerk them
backward as they were
shot by the agents.
The director of photography and
the camera operator climbed into the Chapman cranes twin seats and rose
twenty feet into
the air. Sloan released his own death grip on the boom
and wandered over to the unit director.
"Pep talk," Stace wryly whispered
to his assistants.
Sloan lifted his megaphone. His
voice crackled, "Could I have everybody's attention please? Quiet
please! I'd just like to
say one thing. This next eight minutes is
costing me a quarter of a million dollars. Don't fuck up."
Pep talk.. .
He returned to his place beside
the crane.
The unit director nodded to the
senior gaffer. The lights clicked on, replacing the mute aura of
overcast sunlight with a wash
of light that seemed to bleach the colors
out of the scene but that would translate into natural sunlight by the
time Technicolor was through with the film. The temperature on the set
immediately rose five degrees and kept going.
"Cameras rolling."
Assistants stepped in front of
each camera and snapped clappers.
"Action!" the unit director
shouted.
The bulky gray armored truck
eased along the dirt road, passing the church, then slowing as it
neared the Packard. It
stopped. Dehlia lifted her head, stained with
the phony blood, and motioned for help. The driver and the front-seat
guard hesitated. They mouthed words to themselves, they spoke into the
back of the truck. The
front doors
slowly opened. The guards stepped out onto the road. Ross lit a smoke
bomb and ran, crouching, toward the back of the truck.
"Now!" the driver shouted,
pulling a machine gun from the front seat.
The back doors of the armored
truck burst open.
Parishioners stepped from the
church, smiling and nodding. The two guards began firing at Ross and
the other gangsters,
who were approaching from a stand of trees. Tree
branches snapped, dirt puffed up, signs were riddled, the side of the
truck was dotted with bullet holes, bodies of gangsters flew backwards.
Churchgoers littered the ground.
"Go, go, go!" Tony Sloan was
mouthing. "Beautiful."
Dehlia was trying to start the
Packard. Ross was covering her and retreating. The other gangsters fell
back The preacher
came out onto the steps. He was brandishing a Bible;
a guard accidentally gunned him down...
"Stone cold beautiful," Sloan
whispered.
It was into the middle of this
battle—directly between the warring factions—that two modern navy blue
sedans and a white Ford Econoline van skidded to a halt. Men in suits
climbed out leisurely, examining the set with some amusement.
Sloan's mouth opened in
astonishment. Everyone began talking at once—many of them shouting
because of their earplugs.
"Jesus Christ," Sloan shouted. No
one had any trouble hearing this. "Who the hell are you?"
The unit director was too shocked
to order the cameras shut off. Finally the assistant director,
holding her ponytail in a death grip, woke out of her stunned silence
and shouted, "Cut. Cut! Save the lights."
The huge lights clicked off.
The assistant whose job it was to
keep the road closed ran onto the set. Sloan pierced her with a glance
of hatred. "They
came right at me," she sobbed. They wouldn't stop."
A tall, gray-haired man climbed
from the first sedan, looking around. When he saw the director he
stepped toward him.
"What," Sloan said, "in God's
name are you doing? Do you have any idea of what you've just done?" His
face was crimson.
An ID card appeared. "I'm Agent
Mclntyre. You in charge?"
"Who are you?"
"We're agents with the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, Department of the Treasury. We've been
informed by the U.S. Attorney in St. Louis that you're in possession of
unregistered automatic weapons and we're here to confiscate them."
"You can't do that!"
"Clear the chambers on those
weapons," Mclntyre shouted to the actors. "Put the safeties on and set
them in the van here."
Sloan stormed up to Mclntyre, who
ignored him.
Another man got out of the car,
studying the smoke and destruction around him. Detective Bob Gianno
looked at the director. "Are you Anthony Sloan?"
"Damn right I am; do you know
what you've just cost me? This scene—"
"You're under arrest for
violation of the Missouri state laws governing possession of illegal
weapons. Would you hold out
your hands, please?"
SEVENTEEN
Stace Stacey smoothed the tufts
of graying hair above his ears and said with utter calm, "I'm afraid
you've made a mistake."
He sat in the office of Ronald
Peterson. Beside him was a fidgeting, furious Tony Sloan, who stared
with particular
contempt at the collection of windup toys littering
Peterson's desk.
"Mistake?" Peterson asked Stace.
"Oh, I don't think so... But first, I want to make
perfectly clear that you are not being
charged with any
federal crime whatsoever. We have noticed an apparent violation of
federal law but are withholding any decision taproceed. Under Missouri
law possession of automatic weapons not registered by the BATF is a
state violation.
Our colleagues in Maddox have decided there's
probable cause for your arrest. They're the ones who've acted
on that. It
was not a federal agency."
"You're a prick," Sloan said.
"You understand what I'm saying
to you?" Peterson cocked an eyebrow enthusiastically.
"I understand that we'll never
make a movie again in this state. That's what I understand."
Peterson shrugged. "You're not
under arrest so you can speak to me without a lawyer present."
"I understand already!" Sloan
barked.
"Please continue, Mr. Stacey."
"I'm qualified as a class-three
federal firearms dealer." Stace set a small piece of paper on the desk,
next to a tiny walking football. 'That's my license. I think you know
perfectly well almost all property and arms masters in Hollywood are
class-three dealers."
Peterson glanced at the license
momentarily. "I don't doubt you, sir. It's the weapons I'm concerned
about."
"Every one of those guns is
registered, tax stamps have been duly bought and I have a right to
transport them over state lines. The—"
"Actually, that's not quite
accurate. BATF notice is required. . ."
"No, sir, it is accurate."
Diminutive Stace Stacey clearly dominated the conversation despite his
calm, unfazed voice. "The notice is generated by the firearms rental
company. I rented those weapons from Culver City Arms and Props.
They're on the Motion Picture Association computer link to BATF's
Washington office. I'm surprised I have to be telling this to a U.S.
Attorney."
Peterson took scrupulous notes.
He looked up, frowning. "Unfortunately we can find no record of the
notice."
"I'm a good friend of Steve
Marring in the BATF district office on the Coast. I suggest you give
him a call immediately."
"It
wasn't a BATF-initiated
operation. Several FBI agents were on the set looking for one of your
employees—
"Pellam," Sloan spat out.
Peterson hesitated and then said
coquettishly, "Yes, as a matter of fact, it was Mr. Pellam. How did you
know that?"
Sloan, sloe-eyed with fatigue,
rubbed the bridge of his nose. When he did not respond Peterson
continued, "My agents
noticed the machine guns and reported their
presence to me. Naturally, we're concerned about such weapons failing
into irresponsible hands—"
Stace said pleasantly, "I heard
not too long ago about a man in San Francisco selling fully automatic
Uzis to high school students. I'd think you might be more
concerned about situations like that."
"A tragedy, I'm sure. But my
bailiwick is Missouri."
"I've had about enough of this,"
Sloan shouted. "You've cost me hundreds of thousands of dollars. I'm
calling my lawyer—"
Peterson shook his head. "Mr.
Sloan . . . Oh, by the way, I really enjoyed Helicop. I figure
it cost me about two hundred bucks after buying the kids all those toys
for Christmas. But I did enjoy that movie."
"Why are you doing this to me?"
"Are we reaching an
understanding?" Peterson asked heartily.
"Understanding?"
"Have I explained to you how I
learned about those weapons? I have, haven't I?"
Sloan had calmed down. There was
a cryptic tone in the conversation reminiscent of what one heard in
offices and
restaurants throughout Beverly Hills and West Hollywood. It
was very Zen—to speak while not speaking. "Pellam?"
"Why don't you talk to him, Mr.
Sloan. Just talk to him.
See if he can remember
anything about what happened that night of
the Gaudia murder." He
looked at Stace. "You talk about Uzis in San Francisco. Well, Mr.
Pellam can help us put away a
man who's been doing a lot worse than
that. But without his help that man's going to go free and a lot more
people are
going to get hurt."
Sloan said, "I understand Pellam
claims he didn't see anything."
" 'Claims.' Well, I know he claims
he didn't see anything."
"Why is he holding out?" the
director wondered.
"Maybe he's afraid—although I've
assured him we can protect him. My personal feeling is he's being paid
off . . . No, don't protest too fast. You'd be surprised what people
will do for money. He is, after all, an ex-convict."
"What?" Sloan whispered.
"San Quentin. Served almost a
year. I assumed you knew."
Stace folded his hands in his
lap. He stared directly into Petersons eyes. "John Pellam is a good
man. He had some trouble. We've all had trouble at times."
"You knew about it,"
Sloan shouted to the arms master, "and you didn't goddamn tell me?"
Stace Stacey was not an employee
of Missouri River Partnership and Tony Sloan was only one of nearly
thirty directors who regularly hired him. Sloan was also, among these
clients, the largest pain in the ass. He now easily won a staredown
with the director and smiled sadly, as if embarrassed at the man's
childishness.
"Manslaughter," Peterson said,
pleased that Sloan had lost yet another round at this meeting.
Stace said, "He did his time. He
got out. He was a good director then, he's a good location scout now."
"Pellam directed? Why
didn't I know this?"
"You were probably, making
running-shoe commercials in New York at the time," Stace offered,
without a hint of discernible irony.
Peterson jotted a note. "I'll
check out what you've told me about your guns, Mr. Stacey, and if
you're correct you can pick them up first thing on Tuesday morning and
the state charges will be dropped."
Stace said, "I am correct, sir,
and I'd advise you to release them to me right now."
"Tuesday?" Sloan blurted. "I
can't wait three days. We're already overbudget. We're—"
"But unfortunately," Peterson
explained, "it's Saturday. There's no one in the Washington office, of
course. Tomorrow's Sunday. And Monday—"
"Columbus Day." Sloan closed his
eyes. "Christ. Why did you wait until this morning? You've known we had
the guns for
two, three days."
His eyes were on Sloan. "Do you
think we're reaching an understanding? Do you?"
Sloan's anger was diminishing.
"Maybe. Possibly."
Stace began to speak. "What you
seem to be suggesting is-"
It was Sloan who silenced him
with a wave of the hand.
Peterson said, "Then if there's
nothing else, gentlemen . . . Oh, as a show of good faith, I'll talk to
those city detectives. I'll recommend you're released on your own
recognizance."
"I appreciate that. You seem like
a reasonable man."
"One more thing, Mr. Sloan."
Peterson slid a piece of
paper toward the director, "Any
chance of an autograph? You know,
for the boys?'
The FBI again?
The severe rapping on the camper
door sounded just like that of federal agents. But Pellam was running
up a long list of potentially hostile visitors, so who could tell? When
he opened the door he held the Colt Peacemaker hidden beneath his
black
Comme des Garcons sports jacket.
Tony Sloan nodded a greeting as
he walked inside without waiting for an invitation. Pellam thought
about making a wisecrack like "Waking the dead?" referring both to the
pounding and to the deceased Ross and Dehlia. But Tony Sloan's
expression
was far too grim for jokes and all Pellam said was "Come on
in" after Sloan already was.
Sloan walked directly to the
counter, where sat a bottle of bourbon. He poured two glasses. "You
were at the shoot?"
"Got there late. But I heard.
Some problem with the guns?"
Sloan gave him a brief account of
the events that culminated in bis handcuffing.
"My God," Pellam whispered.
"Stace is a very but-toned-up guy. I can't imagine he made a mistake
like that." Sloan was strangely pensive. His eyes did not flit around
the camper. They were sedate. They were almost sad.
The director inhaled the whiskey
fumes and drank down half the glass. "Okay, John, no bullshit. Just
tell me. Did you see
that guy?"
Pellam thought he meant the cop
who arrested him. "I told you, I got there late. I—"
"The man in the Lincoln is
what I'm talking about."
"Is that why you're here?"'
Pellam
laughed. "You ve been talking to ... who? The detectives in Maddox." No,
of course not,
he thought. "Peterson. You've been talking to
Peterson."
"John, they can close down
production for three days. If that happens the studio or Completion
Bond's going to take over.
This movie might not get done."
"If I'd seen him I would've told
somebody. I would've told everybody. Look, Tony, this's
extortion. On Tuesday Peterson'll say, sorry, we made a mistake. Call
the studios legal department. Call Hank."
"John, what's this about the
money?"
"Money?"
"I hear you're trying to put
something together with Marty Weller, you're looking for some bucks."
"I am. That has nothing to do
with you or anybody else here."
"Somebody paying you so you won't
testify, John?"
Pellam lowered his head slightly
and eased a long breath of whiskey-scented air into his lungs. "I
think maybe you and I
don't have much more to talk about."
"No," Sloan leaned forward,
pointing a nubby finger at Pellam. "We got one thing more to
talk about. You tell Peterson that
it was this Peter Crimmins in the
Lincoln. I don't care whether you saw him or not. I know he was in the
car and I don't even know who the fuck he is!"
"Sorry, Tony."
"How much is he paying you?"
"I'll ask you to leave now."
"You want to stay on this job and
get your fee, you'll tell Peterson what he wants to know."
"That's money you owe me."
"If I can't wrap this picture in
three days there won't be any money for anybody."
"That's not my fault. I did my
job. Sell one of your Ferraris and pay me."
Sloan set the glass down on the
camper's tiny counter. He seemed calm but the tendons in his neck were
bulging and pronounced just beneath his dark beard. His teeth were set.
"Oh, I got your number, Pellam," he said viciously. "I asked around
about you. You and your artsy films, you and your Cahier du Cinema,
you and your buddies sitting around and talking about Cannes and auteur
theory. You make your jokes, you make the crew giggle. Bonnie
and Clyde, The Wild Bunch. But just tell me, Pellam, how many of
those crew people are you paying? How many of their kids are you
putting through college? How many people came to see your runs,
and how many come to see mine?"
Pellam's last film as director, Central
Standard Time, was never finished. It would have starred Tommy
Bernstein, who died of a massive, cocaine-induced heart attack on the
set during the second week of principal photography. The film Pellam
had directed just prior to that had won a Palme d'Or at Cannes
but was seen by North Americans only in New York, Montreal, Toronto,
Los Angeles, and in those cities with video stores that indulged in
cult films. What Tony Sloan was saying now was absolutely correct.
Pellam said evenly, "I won't tell
Peterson I saw who was in the car."
"Then you're fired. Clear out.
Get the paperwork and any equipment of the company's to Stile. He's
taking over as location manager."
"I'll sue you, Tony. I don't want
to but I will."
"If this film doesn't wrap,
Pellam, I'm coming after you for my fee. That's a million
seven. And even if I lose you'll piss away
a half million in lawyers'
fees alone. You don't respect who I am, Pellam, okay, but you got no
right to cut my legs out from underneath me."
"Did you know this?" Ralph Bales
asked.
Stevie Flom looked at the offered
page of the Maddox Reporter and could not figure out what he
was supposed to know.
"I read the Post-Dispatch mostly."
"Okay, it was in the Post-Dispatch,
too, I'll bet. See, it's the Associated Press. That means a lot of
papers get it."
They were on the riverfront in
St. Louis, the silvery arch towering over them and looking lofty and
weird at the same time,
like a huge toy. In front of them,
unhealthy-looking water! bUish and milky, splashed at pilings. From the
speakers of a candy red excursion boat, a paddle-wheeler, came brassy
jazz. Ralph Bales had been reading when Stevie Flom walked up to him.
Reading and leaning up against the scabby railing, really lost in the
paper.
Stevie Flom was cold and he was
not interested in what was in the paper. He hadn't slept well the night
before, turning over and over, listening to the wirttl rock the single
tree outside his bedroom window. He'd stared at the tree for a long
time.
When he had gone to bed
there were seventeen leaves
on it. When he had wakened there were eight. His wife had slept
with a
smile on her face and that pissed him off.
Then she woke up cheerful and
happy and that pissed him off too.
What it was he was supposed to
know about was this airplane that took off vertically, then the wings
twisted forward and it flew like a normal plane. "That is a great idea."
Ralph Bales pointed at an abandoned dock beside the river. "See, it
could
land there. You wouldn't have to go out to Lambert. That's the
biggest pain in traveling, getting to the airports, you ask me."
Stevie Flom didn't travel much.
Reno, of course. Then he and some of the guys had gone to a casino in
Puerto Rico once.
He'd taken the wife to Aruba, which was nothing but
sand and wind and as hot as an engine block. He wondered why
Ralph
Bales traveled so much he had to worry about getting to the airport.
"I wish I had a piece of that."
"Yeah," Stevie Flom said, and he
looked at the picture of the airplane, which, after a moment of
reflection, he decided was
a pretty good idea. He thought that
with the money he was going to make from Lombro, he would take the wife
on another vacation. Or maybe one of the girlfriends. He'd have to
decide which one.
"I've got the go-ahead," Ralph
Bales said. He turned the paper to the front page, where there were no
airplanes or other
clever ideas at all.
"You got . . . Oh, to take care
of the guy in the camper. The beer guy! Why'd it take so long?"
"Lombro was nervous. I don't
know, he's a -"
"Weird dude is what he is."
"Yeah. Weird. He's upped your
share to ten."
Ten thousand?"
"Of course, thousand. What do you
think?"
"Well, why?' Stevie grinned deep
creases into his baby-skin cheeks.
"Why? Excuse me, you want me to
call him up and give it back?"
"I'm just curious."
"Curious. He's curious," Ralph
Bales whispered. "You've got to make it look like an accident."
"Accident? Why?"
"Because it's got to. That's why
the extra money. I was thinking, maybe something with that motorcycle
of his."
"He's got a cycle?"
"That yellow Yamaha. He keeps it
on the back of his camper."
"Sure," Stevie said. "A cycle
accident. That's easy."
Lake he did it every day.
Stevie Flom thought: Maddox is an
easy place to steal a car but a tough place to drive one around once
you'd boosted it.
The cops didn't have much else to
do but check out hot cars and the place was hardly big enough to get
lost in the
camouflage of heavy traffic. He was eyeballed by two cops
as he made his law-abiding way out of town. Stevie was also unhappy
that this particular Dodge's former owner was a rent-a-car company,
which meant that the forty-eight thousand
miles on it were hard miles,
careless, heavy-foot miles. The damn thing rattled and clanked and
there was a hiss coming
from the AC even though it was off.
But it moved pretty fast and he
was able to keep up with the cycle though the beer guy drove like a son
of a bitch. Stevie worried that if the Yamaha started lane-hopping he
could kiss the man's ass good-bye. He goosed the accelerator and
closed
on the cycle.
He may have had a lemon car but
Stevie was lucky in one respect. He had arrived at the Bide-A-Wee
trailer park just as
the guy walked out of the camper and jumped on the
Yamaha. He'd even glanced at Stevie's car but just briefly, not even
looking in the driver's seat Stevie drove past. In the rearview mirror
he watched the man kick-start the Yamaha. Stevie
made a slow U-turn and
followed.
Now, on the expressway, the beer
man changed lanes, shot forward, braked hard, then settled into the
express lane, about twenty miles over the limit. Stevie, hands
sweating, managed to keep with him and soon they were cruising smoothly
toward
St. Louis.
As he tapped his gold pinkie ring
on the steering wheel, Stevie was thinking about his father. He had a
limited, but severe, repertoire of images of the old man and he
realized now that some of them matched this fellow on the bike. Lean,
mid-thirties, leather jacket, cycle. This thought put him in another
bad mood, and, agitated, Stevie leaned forward to turn on the radio. It
was a digital model and he couldn't figure out how to set the station
for the boss sound, We Rock St. Louis all the hits all the time. The
old radios, you just twisted the dial to where you wanted it, then
pulled the button out and shoved it back in. All this electronic stuff.
Crap!
He kicked it hard with his boot
heel and cracked the housing. It kept playing something classical. He
kicked it again and
plastic snapped and
the speaker went silent except for a hiss.
Stevie Flom stopped worrying
about music and concentrated on the motorcycle.
Donnie Buffett did not see her
right away. He opened his eyes and was afraid to move his head. He
thought it might make
him vomit, the motion. He had been on pills for a
flare-up of pain in his shoulder—the gunshot wound—and they made him
nauseated.
"I'm so sorry," she said.
"Penny, honey..." He lifted his
hand out toward her, and—this was the weird thing—she grabbed it in
both hands and kissed
his fingers, then rubbed them against her cheek.
He looked at her as though he had
not seen her for months, as though he had never before seen her. Dark,
thick hair, a
narrow face, pretty. Good figure, bad posture, shoulders
forward, to conceal large breasts of which she was self-conscious. She
wore clothes he knew she owned and had worn before but which weren't
familiar to him: a gray suit, an orange blouse, light-colored nylons.
Buffett wished they had a child,
someone for Penny to be with. Someone whom Penny would have to be
strong for. She
had strength somewhere in her, he believed, but she
needed someone, or something, to bring it out.
She handed him a shopping bag.
She had baked him some cookies (what he had told Pellam was true; she
was a hell of a cook) and brought another bag of Ruffles potato chips
and a container of Sour King
French onion dip. A Reader's
Digest, some crossword puzzle books.
Donnie Buffett had never done a
crossword puzzle in his life.
She bent down and kissed him,
brother-sister, on the cheek. He smelled her perfume. Buffett wondered,
If you got shot
in the neck do you lose your sense of smell?
But, of course, he hadn't been
shot in the neck. He had just been shot in the back. Luckily. He could
still smell like a sonofabitch.
He looked at the crossword book.
'Thanks, hon."
"I've marked these for you." She
opened the Reader's Digest for him. "My Battle with Leukemia."
There was another.
"Live Your Life 365 Days a Year."
Another article was from Higher
Self magazine, entitled "Joy: Go for It."
Buffett looked at the food, and
Penny said, "I don't know if you can eat those things."
"Sure. It's not like I had my
appendix out or anything."
She nodded earnestly.
Buffett's hair was a mess. It
fell across his forehead. He was always pushing the dark strands off
his face. He did this now
and his arm went out of control. It crashed
into the metal headboard of the bed.
"Shit," he whispered.
Penny's pretty face was shocked.
"The nurse," she said, alarmed, standing up abruptly, looking for the
call button.
"I'm okay. It's nothing. The
pills I'm taking."
"The nurse!"
"Penny."
Neither moved for a moment. "I'm
so sorry."
"Stop saying that. Why are you
saying that?"
He opened the potato chips and
ate a couple, to show her that he liked them. He could not bring
himself to eat the dip. Then
he ate a cookie. They were good. He ate
another one. The sweetness reminded him of his Last Supper, the
doughnut and coffee Pellam had brought him. He picked up the bag she
had brought, intending to set it on the floor beside the bed. He felt
the candle inside the bag. He took it out. "Penny..."
"I know what you think but it
can't hurt. And you've got oil, too."
"Oil."
She stood and took the bag from
him. "It's wish oil."
"Wish oil."
"What it is, you pour some in the
bathtub—"
"Well, I can't take a
bath." He was exasperated. "How can I take a bath?"
She stared at him, tears welling.
"I don't think you have to put it in a bath. I mean, if it works in the
bath it'd work just as well dabbing it on you, wouldn't it?" She added,
"I know it works. You keep wishing that you'll get well. Put the oil on
you, then wish and wish and wish. I meditated for an hour and seven
minutes last night..."
The Terror hears this and rolls
upright. It starts to prowl through Donnie Buffett's guts.
Sweat pops onto his forehead.
Bleeding Christ, is it restless!
Dodging around inside him, playing with the pain in his legs, slipping
up to his heart, dancing
over his crotch. (Can't get south of there,
can you, you shit?)
The Terror....
He fights it down. He presses his
nails into the palm of his left hand. He concentrates on the pain,
willing it to become a
wave of agony. This numbs the Terror. Its
prowling slows and it grows tired. Buffett begins to calm. Penny does
not seem to notice her husband s absence and continues to talk about
shopping and her parents and a consciousness-raising group she's been
attending.
The Terror finally falls asleep.
Buffett took a deep breath and
calmed down, then interrupted her to say, "I'd like you to meet my
doctor."
Penny blinked.
Buffett continued, "Dr. Weiser.
She's the best in the city."
"You know how I feel about
doctors. You need more than—"
"But I do need a doctor,
honey," he said. "Come on, please. Just meet her."
"Okay," she said cheerfully, eyes
sparkling, "I'd like that. I promise I won't lecture her on . .."
What was she going to say? On the
right way to practice medicine? Holism? Spiritualism?
Penny did not continue her
thought but instead crossed her heart like a coy schoolgirl. "Promise."
She nodded broadly, acknowledging, though she probably didn't know it,
her excessive sincerity.
There were some moments when
Penny appeared completely normal. Her hair would be shiny clean and
curled nicely, her face—from the right angle—was soft, her collar
turned up, covering the dark bones of her shoulders. Her hands would be
folded; the torn cuticles and ragged ripped nails were out of view. A
dancing light would be in her eyes—a little mystified, a little shy. It
was charming.
At those times, Donnie Buffett
remembered the woman he had fallen in love with.
He listened to her tell him about
how she and her friends were going to be chanting for him.
"Chanting," Donnie Buffett said,
and was suddenly tired. Exhausted. He closed his eyes and suddenly all
he wanted was to
fall back to sleep. The sleep in which he dreamed of
pain flowing through muscles that now felt no pain. Fatigue wrapped
around him sensuously and squeezed tight like a college girl making
desperate love.
"I'm beat, honey," he muttered,
pretending to doze.
"You should sleep," Penny said.
She touched his hand.
"Uh-huh." Buffett almost opened
his eyes and looked at her. But he chose not to. He felt momentarily
guilty about this deception.
I'm a lucky man. Lucky lucky
lucky. I didn't get shot in the brain. I didn't get shot in the heart.
I didn't get shot in
the neck. I can still smell.
And he could hear her voice in a
detached little whisper, "You sleep now, honey. I'm going home." He
heard paper crinkle. "These are the instructions for the candle."
Donnie Buffett breathed deeply
like a man asleep. And in less than a minute this lie became the truth
and he was dreaming
that he was skiing down a panoramic mountain of
huge white cliffs rising into an infinitely blue sky.
* * *
Halfway to St. Louis, Stevie saw
his chance. He gunned the engine and the car sluggishly responded,
movmg ahead of a lumbering truck.
He eased up right behind the
Yamaha. A dirt bike, it
looked like, with the high
fenders that doubled as mudguards and the
long shocks that would take
the potholes and shitty city streets easily. The rack was cockeyed.
Stevie studied the yellow fenders and the silver bars and the red
helmet and the leather jacket of the driver and then started looking
for an exit ramp.
He saw one a half mile ahead and
glanced in the rearview mirror, at what loomed behind him. It was a
White semi. Not the trailer, just the tractor, the sort with the ten
forward gears and a steering wheel wide as a tire. The truck would have
air
brakes and little weight, but at sixty it'd skid for a hundred
fifty feet.
A quarter mile away.
Stevie Flom started signaling.
He accelerated until he was three
feet from the beer man, who was hunched forward, sunlight flaring off
his helmet. The truck driver was holding back, seeing Stevie's turn
signal but maybe a little confused because the Dodge was not slowing.
A hundred yards.
Stevie eased into the left side
of the lane.
The truck driver must have
figured the signal was a mistake and had accelerated again, driving up
to within two car lengths of Stevie. On the right, the exit ramp
blossomed outward.
Stevie floored the pedal and
looked to his right, then cut the wheel hard.
His left front bumper goosed the
rear wheel of the Yamaha right out from underneath him.
A mad flurry of motion from the
bike—a panicked glance over his shoulder as the Yamaha began to lie
down. The horn and the gutsy squeal of the trucks brakes filling the
air. The man's left boot slamming down onto the highway in an
automatic way, hopeless. Reaching up, pitching forward, flying over the
twisted handlebars.
Sparks sailing off the gas tank
of the cycle. The beer man, his mouth open in a shout that Stevie could
not hear, hands
outward, began to tumble on the concrete at fifty miles
an hour, the fiberglass of the helmet shredding.
Stevie skidded the Dodge into the
off ramp, just missing a yellow plastic collision barrel as he braked
to twenty-five. He was too busy controlling the skid to see exactly
what happened on the expressway. Then he was at the bottom of the ramp.
He heard the squealing of tires and horns. Then he caught the end of a
yellow light and made a leisurely turn onto a grimy, cobble-stoned
street of body shops and empty warehouses and shabby bungalows, not far
from the Mississippi River.
The service was in a boxy
building in downtown Maddox.
Beth Israel Memorial Chapel.
Pellam hadn't known that Stile
was Jewish. They had talked about many things, from women to whiskey to
real estate, but religion was in that category of topics where their
conversation did not go—for instance, why Stile remained in his
profession and never sought to do second-unit directing, as so many
stuntmen do. Or why Pellam stopped directing after Tommy Bernstein died.
Pellam had spoken to Stiles
cousin in San Diego— his closest living relative—and he had learned
that Stile had been raised Reform Jewish. Calls were made, and a
service arranged.
The body was en route to southern
California and 168 people now stood in a dark building in a shabby part
of a dark
Missouri town that had long ago lost whatever allure, or
novelty, it might have had for them. From the outfits, this seemed
more
like a fashion show than a service: No one had brought funeral
clothing, of course, but this was a Hollywood crew so there was plenty of black, albeit in the
form of minidresses and spandex and baggy suits. Adding to the
surrealness were the yarmulkes perching on the men's heads.
The stunt coordinator, Stiles
boss, was a tough sixty-five-year-old with blurred tattoos on his
forearms, now covered by the sleeves of a wrinkled gray suit. He had
fallen off horses at John Ford's direction and crashed through windows
at Sam Peckinpahs and he was now crying like an infant. A lot of other
people cried too. Nobody had disliked Stile, the man who
fell from
130-foot cliffs and who walked through fire.
Pellam had no idea what to say,
not to anyone. Stile had died because of him. The Yamaha had been the
property of the Missouri River Blues Partnership and when Pellam had
turned over the location forms and files to Stile, according to Sloans
orders, Pellam had added, 'Take the Yamaha, too, if you want it. Tony's
gonna make me give it back sooner or later." Stile thanked him, left
the rental car at the campground for Pellam's use, and burned rubber
away to the interstate. He had a date
in St. Louis with Hank the lawyer
about location releases for the infamous final shoot-out scene in Missouri
River Blues.
What could Pellam say?
He put his arm around the
shoulders of one of the young actresses and let her cry. Pellam smelled
bitter hair spray and
cigarette smoke. She wasn't hysterical. She
trembled. Pellam didn't cry. He went to a pew and sat next to several
other crew members, older men, gaffers. A rabbi—or maybe just the
funeral director— walked to the front of the room. He began
talking.
Pellam did not pay attention to the words; they were not, for him at
least, important. The purpose of the ritual had nothing to do with
Stile,
not now. It was not the sermon but the interval it occupied—this hour
in a woody, mute room with a respectful velvet hat on your head—that
was the point: a block of time reserved solely for death.
Pellam heard the drone of the
speakers words, a soft baritone.
He wished he knew how to pray.
He decided he would suggest that
Sloan dedicate Missouri River Blues to Stile, a film that had
turned out to be not the product of artistic vision at all but simply
one hell of a stuntman s movie.
No, not suggest. Whatever else
there was between Sloan and him, Pellam would insist on the
dedication. It was something
he could do.
But it wasn't enough.
What Stevie Flom was going to
say: First, you didn't describe the guy very well. Second, the guy
walked out of the camper
and got on the cycle. Third, you should've
done it yourself..
He got as far as "First—" before
Ralph Bales grabbed his Members Only black jacket by the lapels and
slammed the
terrified Stevie into the wall of Harry's Bar.
"Gentlemen." The bartender wagged
a finger but in a lethargic way. This was a dingy, Lysol-scented place
overlooking one
of the less picturesque refineries in Wood River,
Illinois. It was that sort of bar, where the management would let two
men—two white men, not too drunk or strung-out—go at it. Up to
a point.
Ralph Bales looked from the
frightened eyes of Stevie Flom to the cool eyes of the bartender and let go. He had been right
on the
borderline but now decided not to break his partners nose. Stevie
slumped and ran his fingers through his razor-cut hair. "Aw, Ralph,
come on."
Ralph Bales turned and walked
through the bar into the restaurant behind. He slid into one of the
booths. Stevie followed
him like a butt-swatted puppy and sat opposite.
Ralph Bales said, "You're an
asshole."
"First, what it was, he walked
out of the camper and got on the Yamaha. How was I supposed to know
there'd be somebody else inside? You said he'd be riding a bike. And
like, anyway, you didn't describe him."
"Shut up and listen to me. Lombro
is really pissed now."
"It wasn't my fault."
"Excuse me, I mean, excuse me?
When're you gonna learn that guys like this don't think about
fault. What're you going to
say? 'Gee, Mr. Lombro, first I shot a cop
and now I killed the wrong man but I've got an excuse'?"
"Did you tell him I did it?"
Stevie whispered.
To Ralph Bales's glee the kid was
seriously nervous now. He let Stevie hang-in the wind for some very
lengthy seconds.
"I didn't tell him your name."
"Thanks, Ralph. That was all
right of you."
"I just told him a guy we hired
made a mistake."
" "We hired.' Like you
and me, we hired somebody else. So he won't think it was me." Stevie
nodded. "That was good."
"He was pissed but he's not going
to do anything about it. He's not going the whole nine yards with the
bonus, because of
the screwup but he'll give us something. If you do it
right this time."
"Maybe what you could do is
describe him better to me.
"Maybe what I could do is hold
your hand and take you up and introduce you..."
"Aw, Ralph, come on..."
"Look, this thing is running away
from us."
"Maybe we should just vanish."
"Without a penny? I wish you'd
done the cop right."
"You could've, too." Stevie said
cautiously.
Ralph Bales opened his mouth to
protest then remembered his gun muzzle nestling in the cop's hair. "I
could have, too. Yeah."
The waitress came by and they
ordered boilermakers and hamburgers. When she left, Ralph Bales said,
"Okay, well, do the witness this time and do it right."
Stevie said, "All right, sure.
You still want it to be an accident? I mean, if that's what you want..."
Ralph Bales considered this. "Do
it however you want I don't care."
This relieved Stevie immensely
and he said, "I just want to say one thing. First, you didn't describe
him very well—"
Ralph Bales turned on him.
Stevie lifted two palms and
grinned. "Joke, Ralphy. Joke. You got to keep a sense of humor about
these things."
"He killed my friend," Pellam
said, "and I'm going to get him."
Donnie BufFett was not interested
in what Pellam was going to do. Penny had called and chanted over the
phone to him
for five minutes while he stared at the receiver, first in disbelief,
then in disgust. He had finally hung up and left the phone off
the
hook. Then he had been taken downstairs and poked and probed all
morning. He had been told to contract his sphincter. He had said
peevishly, "My what?" And the young intern had said, "Your
rectum, contract it." And Buffett had said loudly,
so that patients up
and down the hall could hear, "Oh, you mean my asshole?"
The rest of the exam had gone
like that.
Now here was Pellam, sweating and
wild-eyed and talking about getting people.
"Look, you steal my gun, you give
me a lecture about things you don't know from, then you come in and you
start rambling about some killing or another. What," Buffett said
evenly, "do you want from me?"
Pellam leaned close. Buffett
blinked at the nearness of his face, the pores he could see clearly,
the way the dark hairs on the
top of the man's forehead disappeared
smoothly into the skin.
The look in Pellam s eyes
reminded him of young cops after their first firefight. Eager and
energized but also quiet—ironically calmed by death. And because of
that, scary. Extremely scary.
Pellam said, "The man in the
Lincoln killed my friend."
Buffett did not respond and
Pellam told him about Stiles death. 'They got us mixed up. They saw him
leave the camper on the bike and they killed him. They thought it was
me."
"Look, Pellam, it's crazy to
drive a cycle in the city. Accidents happen. I could tell you the
statistics."
"Hell with statistics. I want you
to tell me how to do it."
"Do what?"
"Arrest him. Can I shoot him if I
have to?" The chanting and the poking and probing faded from the cop's
mind. Pellam and
his calm, scary eyes had Buffett's full attention.
"Let me make a call." He was on the phone for ten minutes as Pellam
stared
out the window. Pellams lips moved silently from time to time.
Into the phone, the cop asked, "Any chance it's related to the Pellam
thing? . . . Uh-huh. Yeah, well, I know how you guys feel but I'm
starting to think he's okay .. . Yeah, Pellam, I mean. I'm not so sure
he did see the guy in the Lincoln."
Pellam's head turned.
Buffett said, "Well, do what you
gotta, I understand. But take it easy on him. It was his buddy got
killed."
When he hung up the cop said,
"They're calling it an accident. Hit-and-run. The truck driver said the
car clipped the cycle.
The tag numbers from a stolen Dodge."
"There. Stolen."
"Most hit-and-runs involve stolen
cars. That's why they're hit-and-runs."
Pellam leaned forward again.
"Look, I know it was the guy with the mark on his face. He must've seen
me go to Peterson's office after Nina was attacked."
"I'll have Gianno and Hagedorn
look into it. They—"
Pellam exploded, "Look into it? Look into
it?
All they do is hassle me. You don't understand. I'm going out
that door in five minutes and I'm going to find the guy who killed my
friend and I'm going to get him. If you won't help then the hell with
you!"
"Look, Pellam, if he did it then
the guy's a pro. He's not going to let you just arrest him. You, by
yourself, no backup? Are
you crazy? Are you
ready to waste him if you have to? You ever shot anybody before?"
Buffett shook his head with a condescending smile.
Pellam unzipped his jacket and
pulled the Colt Peacemaker from his belt. The grin left the patrolman's
mouth and his uneasy eyes followed the gun as it went back into the
waistband.
"One thing you might want to
remember," Pellam said quietly. "The guy with the mark on his face?
He's probably the partner
of the man I saw get out of the Lincoln and
that makes him the one who shot you."
No, Buffett hadn't thought about
that. But he did now for a long moment. He said slowly, "I'm a cop. I
can't help you kill someone. I don't care who it is."
"I'm not going to kill him. I'm
going to arrest him."
Buffett's tongue gingerly touched
the comer of his lips. "I don't know what to tell you."
"How do I make a citizens arrest?
Do I have to get him to confess? Can I just arrest him, like in the
movies? Do I have to
read him his rights?"
Buffett the cop considered.
"Well, you don't have probable cause. The truck driver didn't get a
look at the guy driving the Dodge. The procedure our guys'd use is to
find a suspect, then bring him in and interview him. Not arrest him.
Just talk to
him. He doesn't get a lawyer for that but he can get up
and walk out any time he wants."
"Just talk to him?"
"Try to find inconsistencies.
Maybe he'll mention people who're supposed to be alibis, but we can
squeeze them and get
them to turn. It's a hell of a lot of work,
Pellam. You don't just arrest somebody."
"What if I had a tape recorder
with me and got him to say something in it?"
"You can tape yourself talking to
somebody without a court order. That's okay. But it's a little risky,
isn't it?"
"It'll be admissible and
everything?"
"Probably."
Pellam shrugged. He walked to the
door and stopped. "What you told them. I appreciate it."
"How do you mean?"
"What you told the detectives,
about believing me."
Buffett shrugged. Pellam noticed
him rub his eyes in a resigned way. He seemed as tired as the wilting
flowers that littered
the radiator cover of the room. "You okay?"
"Yeah. I guess. My wife came for
a visit." He opened his mouth and was suddenly overwhelmed by the
volume of things he wanted to say, they rushed forward. But just before
he spoke, the torrent dried up instantly, and he asked, "Hand me the
TV
Guide, would you?" Buffett motioned across the room. "Son of a
bitch orderly left it on the dresser. What good's it
doing me over
there? I mean, some people, they just don't think."
A knock on the half-open door
woke Donnie Buffett. He was dozing and he awoke from a dream he could
not remember
but that left a residue of longing. "Yeah?" he muttered.
"Hello?"
The door pushed wider open and a
blond woman's face appeared, her head tilted sideways. The face, which
he did not recognize immediately, was delicate and pretty. She stepped
into the doorway. The lope of her walk, combined with the delicacy and
prettiness, made her sexy. This in turn depressed Buffett even more
than Pellam s visit.
"Hi. You're not asleep?"
Hearing her voice, he remembered
her name. "Nina, right? Pellam's friend?"
As if she now had permission she
entered the room. She wore a tight-fitting brown silk dress. A beige
raincoat was over her arm. Donnie Buffett commanded himself to look at
neither her abundant breasts nor her sleek, pale legs but only at her
face.
"You're Donnie."
"You just missed him." He
smoothed his hair and stroked his two days growth of
beard with forked fingers. "Did I?" She grimaced and Buffett wondered
why he had thought even momentarily that she had come to visit him. She
asked, "When
did he leave?'
Buffett looked at his watch,
surprised. He thought he had slept for hours. "Thirty, forty minutes
ago."
'That's John. Hard to pin him
down. Oh hey! Nice roses. The ones I get never open up."
"There's this stuff in a packet
that comes with them. You put it in the water."
'They smell nice, too. You don't
know where he's gone off to?"
If you only knew, lady.
"Sure don't, no. Look, take some
flowers. You want the roses, take them." Bu£ she shook her head. He
remembered that
he'd tried this once before. Nobody liked hospital
flowers. He figured people thought they were bad luck.
"Pellam told me about what
happened to you in that factory downtown. That's a tough neighborhood.
You okay?"
She nodded but said nothing, as
if the memory were too troubling; Buffett was sorry he'd brought up the
attack. But he felt compelled to add, "Maybe you should, I don't know,
leave town or something, until they find who did it."
"I could do that. I was thinking
I would."
What she did at the moment,
though, was straighten a disordered pile of magazines on the bedside
table until the corners
were perfectly aligned.
Buffett's eyes returned to the
TV. Watching sports increased his depression but he had developed a
taste for bad afternoon movies, provided the sound was off.
Hearing the dialogue spoiled the
experience. He had fallen asleep watching a silent, bad movie about the
hijacking of a ship. He wanted either to go back to sleep or to watch
his movie. He was becoming irritated with her. "I thought visiting
hours are over."
"I smiled at the cop outside and
he told the nurses to let me in."
Buffett grunted but he tried to
make it a pleasant grunt.
She walked further into the room.
He did not like her putting her raincoat over the back of the chair.
This meant she intended
to stay. She kept looking at him. He felt like
a freak. Why wouldn't she leave?
"How are you feeling?"
she asked.
"Great. I'm great." On the screen
the ship hijackers were chasing the good guys around the decks. Or
maybe it was the
good guys who were doing the chasing.
"You don't sound real great."
He looked back at her. "I get
kind of groggy sometimes. Just sitting here."
Her eyes flicked to his hand.
"You're married, right?"
"Yep."
"Your wife visits you everyday?"
"Sure." She's a great little
trouper. "Brings me cookies. You want a cookie?"
"No, thank you. Any lads?"
"Nope. Sour cream dip? I think
it's onion. I don't remember."
Nina was not going away. Why was
she forcing him to have a conversation with her? Why was her mouth
curled into a tiny little smile when there was nothing to smile about?
Buflett said, "You've got a
relative here, right?"
She nodded. "My mother. I was
just visiting her. I got bored and left. Is that bad of me?" She asked
this in a pouty way—
the schoolgirl routine that she seemed to have
perfected—and he understood he was supposed to tell her that it was not
bad
of her, which he did, though not very sincerely. Buffett watched
the silent machine guns firing at fleeing sailors, who called silently
for help. A number of them got gunned down. Several were shot in the
back.
"Well," she said, no longer
smiling. "You're sure Mister Quiet."
Commandos were coming to save the
ship.
"I guess I'm watching TV."
"With the sound oft?"
He clicked the off switch. He'd
denied himself the treat of the commandos' rescue and now she'd sense
his resentment and leave.
But, no, she was walking around
the room in a very leisurely way, straightening his magazines. Then she
started on the vases.
"I think I'm becoming a
curmudgeon," he said by way of apology. "What is that exactly?"
"Got me. An old fart, I guess."
She began to throw out the dead flowers. "I'd think the nurses'd take
better care of them."
"They're pretty busy. Everybody's
busy."
Except me. I sit on my ass all
day long. I can tell you all about fabric softener, breakfast cereal,
and tampons. I
could learn how to hijack ships if you'd leave me the
hell alone.
She washed the vases in the
bathroom and left them upside down to dry on the top of the toilet.
Buffett took grudging
pleasure in watching
her. The glass was immaculate. Some women are good at this, he thought.
Give them a dirty bar of Ivory and a cheap paper towel and they'd make
anything spotless. Penny had been this way.
Penny is this way, he corrected.
Nina walked to a low dresser
across the room. Nothing more to wash. No more silent hijackers or
Monistat commercials.
No more crazy location scouts.
No more nothin'.
"Well, I'm pretty tired," Buffett
said, and yawned a fake but large yawn. "I think I'd like to get some
sleep."
"Naw," Nina said, picking up a
deck of cards from the dresser. "Don't you think you'd really like to
play gin rummy?"
John Pellam, his bomber jacket
covering Samuel Colt's deadly brainchild, walked with the oblivion of
landed gentry through
the streets of Maddox, Missouri.
He kicked at a tuft of tall grass
springing from a perfect hole in the middle of a cracked sidewalk slab.
He continued on. T
here was no traffic here, foot or auto, along this
row of buildings. The tallest structure on the block—a three-story
factory—may have bustled in its heyday but the building now mocked its
past; the roof had collapsed long ago and the old green sign on the
facade read FINERY, the RE ironically worn down by some trick
of erosion.
Looking behind him, looking down
alleys, looking more often in the reflections of windows than at*the
sidewalk where he planted his brown Nokonas, Pellam saw no one
following.
He turned from this part of town
and ambled down Third—past the spot where Donnie Buffett had been shot.
Here, too, he lingered. The rains had washed away the blood he'd seen,
if it had been blood, and the cobblestones were everywhere clean. This
is one advantage of ghost towns—fewer residents to toss litter on the
streets. Pellam, unzipping his jacket slightly, paced back and forth.
He wandered several blocks to the alley through which he had eluded the
sedan several days before. All deserted.
Tony Sloan and the film
company—still without their precious machine guns—were filming the few
remaining scenes. Sloan
was also, Pellam guessed, spending many hours
on the phone arranging for extensions of the financing. Pellam himself
avoided the set. Sloan wouldn't speak to him. Besides, he had friends
there and he wanted to keep what was about to happen as far removed
from them as he could.
He lingered outside the camper at
the Bide-A-Wee. He walked slowly around, then through, the old factory
where Nina had been attacked. He wandered among the gray, corrugated
metal Quonset huts, uninhabited, it seemed, since World War II. He
walked along sidewalks of stores selling dusty office supplies and
medical supplies. He found himself scanning the street in a window's
reflection for a long moment and realized he had been staring intently
at thick mannequins wearing heavy girdles, chastely muted by an amber
plastic sunscreen and the store clerk had been studying him with
amused curiosity.
Where is he? Where is Stiles
killer?
Pellam walked to the river and
watched the sunset from a disintegrating bench in the scrubby remains
of Maddox Municipal Park. The
ambitions of the entire town were expressed in a small store behind
him. The wood sign that proclaimed the owner's name was illegibly
faded, but on the facade itself was a larger message, sloppily
hand-painted: Scrap Metal Bought. All Kinds. All Grades. Cash NOW!
After a dinner of a hamburger and
a beer, Pellam wandered the streets again, streets he shared only with
the few people meandering between the Jolly Rogue and Callaghan's, and
with packs of scrawny dogs with wild eyes but hopeful prances that
sadly suggested domesticated puppyhoods.
At midnight he sat again in the
park, with a beer he did not drink, watching the moon's stippled
reflection in the water, smelling the cold, marshy air and an oily
smell from some distant factory or refinery. When is he going to
find me?
Yet nothing found him that night
but sleep, and Pellam woke on the bench at 4:00 A.M., astonished at
first at the extent of his exhaustion, then at his carelessness, and
finally at his extraordinary good luck at escaping unharmed. He
returned to the camper, sore and chilled, his hands shivering and the
only warm aspect about him the wood grip of the Colt pressing hard
against his belly.
*
* *
Dr. Wendy looked good.
Breezy. That was the way she
walked. Breezy. What did they say in high school? There was a word.
What was it?
Bopping.
Right. And you had to snap your
fingers when you said it.
Bopping. Yeah, you
see that girl? You see the way she bopped into the lunchroom?
"Yo, Dr. Wendy."
"Morning, Donnie."
He wondered if she sailed. He
pictured her in a white bikini, with thin straps. She would have a
small mound of a belly—he remembered the leather near-miniskirt—but
that was okay. He wondered if she owned a boat. No, probably not; she
spent
all her money on clothes and weird earrings. But her boyfriend
might have one.
He wondered if she spent every
Sunday on his boat. He wondered what it would be like to be married to
her.
He wondered if she ever went out
with patients. Donnie Buffett decided he was going to ask her on a date.
She swung the door shut and did
her cigarette routine. "I wanted to come right by. We've got the
results, Donnie. The sexual response tests."
"Okay, I'm sitting down—as if I
had an option." His smile faded and his brow creased with concern.
"What's the verdict?"
"You're reflex incomplete."
He had forgotten what this meant,
but the way she said it, the significant tone and smile of minor
triumph, he guessed it was good news.
"... nearly one hundred percent
of these patients can have erections, either reflexogenic or
psychogenic. Not all of them, but a good percentage, can ejaculate.
There will be a lowered sperm count but all that means is if you want
to have children, you'll have to try harder."
Weiser shook his hand as if
they'd just completed a business deal.
"Well, there you go," Buffett
said happily, and began to sob.
The cop's eyes flooded with tears
and his breath shook out of his body in spasms. His face swelled with a
huge pressure.
He tried to speak but was unable
to.
What's happening to me?
Weiser said nothing.
Buffett was choking on tears, he
was drowning in them. They were going to kill him, drain away his life
like spurting blood.
Was he going crazy? Had it finally happened? What
stage of recovery is hysteria, sweetheart? Crying harder than when
he was a kid, harder than when he broke his nose, harder than when his
mother died ... He could . . . not . . . breathe ... He struggled to
control the jag. Finally he did. The air sucked in deeply and he
relaxed. "I. . ." Another attack struck. He buried
his face in wads of
Kleenex. "I ..." He substituted a pillow for the tissue and cried some
more. Gradually the tears ceased.
"Can I get you anything?" Weiser
asked.
He shook his head, gasping.
He didn't want her to see him
this way. The beautiful, breezy doctor with the spaghetti-strap bikini
and the twenty-foot
sailboat. The doctor with the boyfriend and her
twelve-year-old daughter. But he was out of control, gasping for breath
and crying like a swatted newborn.
She asked if he wanted to be by
himself and he shook his head and threw his arm over his face. After a
few minutes he
began laughing softly. "I'm a nut case," he wheezed.
"You don't have any idea the kind
of stress you're going through."
Buffett felt no Terror and no
Depression but instead a roaring mania. "I don't know why I'm crying, I
don't know why," he whispered as the sobbing began again. "I don't know
why.. ."
Weiser did not offer any
explanation. She sat for a moment, watching him, then stood, opened the
window, and lit another cigarette.
*
* *
Afternoon in Maddox, Missouri.
Pellam had spent hours wandering
around again, playing bait. He walked through antique stores, up and
down the streets,
had a beer at each of three interchangeable taverns,
walked some more, looking from behind his Ray-Bans for the man
who was
looking for him.
As he walked, he stayed apart
from the crowd, he wandered slowly, he put his
back toward several alleys and many cruising cars.
Pellam
decided he had gotten very good at making himself a target.
At 5:00, after eight hours on his
feet, he found himself in the crowded farmers' market off River Road.
The dusty parking lot was filled with stalls where farmers— traditional
ones as well as
past and present hippies—from Missouri and southern
Illinois sold cheese and veggies and muffins and apples
and—sure enough— northern watermelon. Pellam looked at the bleak gaiety
of the place with its faded banners and a doleful clown tying balloon
animals for a small crowd of children with soiled hands
and cheeks. He
heard twangy country western music vibrating out of cheap speakers.
A half hour later, Pellam decided
it was time to return to
the camper. He bought a
bottle of wine, some cheese, crunchy
Dutch pretzels, and two plums.
He clumsily discarded his boots
and jacket when he entered the Winnebago. He washed his face and sat in
the back bunk, eating the cold supper. Pellam did not care for apples
but the only liquor for sale at the market had been apple wine. He
bought it reluctantly, hoping that alcohol would be more prominent than
the apple taste. This was somewhat true though it was overwhelmingly
sweet. He drank half of it down, three straight glasses, and shivered
hard at the sugar hitting his bloodstream.
He had an urge to see Nina but he
dared not, for fear of imperiling her again. This happened so often in
his life—wanting, then pursuing, regardless of the danger. Oh, John
Pellam did not like this aspect of himself— how he welcomed risks. This
nature had led him to be a stuntman for a time, had prodded him to make
movies that critics may have loved but that lost big money for many
people. He easily forgot that others might get hurt because of him.
John Pellam believed in his darker moments that
he carried in his heart
more of his gun-fighting ancestor than was good for him. And for those
around him.
He rose, poured another glass of
wine and, carrying the bottle, returned to the bunk. Apple wine.
Disgusting. He looked at
the label, a picture of attractive, thirty-ish
farmers, a husband and wife couple, hefting a bushel of apples onto a
flatbed. He decided he detested these particular farmers and their
natural, no-preservative, rosy cheeks.
He put on a Patsy Cline tape.
No. Too sappy.
He put on a Michael Nyman.
Better. He noticed a magazine on the floor. It had fallen open to the
horoscope page. He tried
to read his and lost interest. He lay back
onto the bunk.
Taurus. April 22-May 21. A bad
time for investments. Career plans may go awry. Control your
temper and don't wander the streets of small cities with a loaded
pistol.
When Pellam woke an hour later he
couldn't find the wine bottle. Because of the intense throbbing in his
temples, he assumed with some remorse that he had finished it.
But he was wrong.
The man who stood in the middle
of the camper was holding the bottle to his lips, taking a long drink.
His head tilted back
as he gulped, but his calm eyes studied Pellam
curiously.
The man winced—maybe at the
sweetness of the wine—and set the bottle down on the table. He wiped
his mouth with his fingers, the same fingers that picked up the Colt
Peacemaker from the dining table and slipped it into his pocket. He
walked forward toward where Pellam lay. He was handsome and young and
he was wearing a suit.
Pellam was surprised at only one
thing. At how much the birthmark on his cheek did look exactly
like the spot on Jupiter.
He thought of many things to say.
They came to him quickly. Some funny, some ominous. But he was drowsy
and he had a serious headache; he didn't feel like talking. Pellam
opened his slurred eyes wide to help him focus and continued to stare.
The visitor touched the rim of
the wine bottle and moved
his finger in a slow circle
around its perimeter. Outside, water
lapped on the revetment, a truck
diesel chugged in the distance.
Neither man said a word.
Pellam swung his feet around to
the floor. The intruder's hand left the bottle and strayed toward his
hip, where presumably a pistol rested. Pellam moved slowly—not in fear
that he might startle the man but because of the pain in his temples.
He yawned again.
The man said, "You went to
Peterson."
When he had yawned, Pellam's eyes
watered. He wiped the tears away.
The man said, "Didn't the girl
give you the message?"
"She told me."
"Mr. Crimmins isn't real happy
you went to the prosecutor. He hasn't been arrested so he can only
assume you kept your mouth shut."
"I don't have anything to say
about Crimmins."
"He knows you saw him in the
Lincoln that night."
"What do you want?"
The man was big—six two or three.
The clothes fit tight, as if he had very good muscles. Pellam wondered
if he had had an erection when he touched Nina.
"I want to be sure you forget you
saw him."
Oh. Was that it? Was he going to
leave now? Just like that? Make sure you keep telling people you
didn't see Peter Crimmins? Have a nice night.
The birthmark man buttoned his
jacket and pulled on gloves.
He's leaving.
But why the gloves? It isn't that
cold outside.
The man stepped forward quickly.
Before Pellam could lift his arm to deflect the
blow, the fist caught him in the side of the head. Pellam fell
backwards and landed heavily in the bunk. It had been a glancing strike
but on top of an apple wine
hangover, the pain howled through his head.
He moaned and shook more tears from his eyes.
"Damn," Pellam gasped. "Why'd you
do that?"
He struggled to his feet,
grasping toward a cabinet to steady himself. Then his wrist was snared,
painfully, by the man's powerful hand and he was yanked forward into
the man's right fist once again. It connected with jaw. Pellam sank
down
again, stunned.
"That girlfriend of yours, her
face is real pretty. The rest of hers probably pretty nice, too."
Pellam stood slowly and touched
blood away from his cheek. He nearly fainted from the pain. When the
black dots in his
eyes settled and his vision returned, he leaned
against the camper wall for a moment. Then he made his way unsteadily
toward the bathroom.
He mumbled, "Excuse me," as he
walked past the man. He sounded polite.
"Watch it." A pistol appeared, a
dark blue revolver. He showed it to Pellam in profile, opening his hand
quickly and then closing the large, still-gloved fingers. He replaced
it.
Pellam leaned against the door to
the bathroom. He clicked the light on, but he did not enter. He closed
his eyes for a moment, leaning against the doorjamb. He heard the feet
come toward him. The familiar Morse code of the camper floor creaking
under the man's weight. He smelled sweet aftershave. (Was this what
Nina had smelled? Stile had smelled nothing at all, except oil and gas
and asphalt and then blood, blood, blood...)
"What're you doing there?" the
man asked.
Pellam reached into the pocket of
the bomber jacket, which was hanging next to the bathroom, and took
from it Buffett's
pistol, the cold gun. As he turned, Pellam said, "I
want you to lie down on the floor."
Instantly the man dropped into a
crouch and yanked the pistol off his hip.
The explosion of the gunshot was
huge.
It rattled the glass windows and
spattered the walls with bits of gunpowder. Cabinet doors shook, and
from behind a glass-faced poster frame, a somber Napoleon rocked under
the muzzle blast.
*
* *
Donnie Buffett heard the
footsteps and opened his eyes. A shuffling along the corridor outside
his room.
He had seen doctors—looking
somewhat funny—in plastic booties. They made the same sort of sound.
But he doubted what he now heard was made by a doctor. He looked
groggily at his watch. Ten o'clock. Did doctors operate at this time of
night?
Perhaps it was a nurse. The
nurses sometimes brought around snacks and although the lights in his
room were out and Buffett had been dozing, if snacks were on the agenda
Buffett was going to get a snack. If this was the case he hoped it was
the blond nurse. He like her. She was gentle and chattered while she
did the things she had to do. The redhead was silent and seemed
to
resent her complicated duties with the tubes and bottles and bags.
But he didn't think it was either
of these women. Donnie Buffett, husband of a self-proclaimed psychic,
suddenly had a bad premonition about this visitor.
He groped for the telephone. But
before he could grab it the door began to open.
He couldn't run, he couldn't hide.
But he could fight.
Buffett closed his eyes, forced
his breath to slip in and out of his lungs leisurely, like a man in
contented sleep. His right hand curled into a fist, a fraction of an
inch at a time. The footsteps came closer. Buffett tensed the muscles
in his arm. Whoever it was came up slowly on the left side of the bed.
Buffett decided he would grab the guy's crotch with his left and when
he
howled and doubled up go straight for the nose with his right fist .
. .
He wondered if it was the man who
shot him, coming back to finish the job. If the MO was the same as the
Gaudia hit he'd have a small-caliber gun. A .22 or .25, which doesn't
hurt very much and doesn't have any stopping power at all. Buffett
would not die immediately and before he did he could do a lot of damage.
Basketball player, softball
pitcher, jump-rope tugger, Donnie Buffett had very strong hands.
He was suddenly hungry with lust
— the same feeling that seized his body just before the kill when he
was hunting. His shoulders started to tremble. His arm muscles tensed.
The footsteps stopped two feet
from the bedside.
"Donnie," the voice whispered.
He opened his eyes and looked at
the shadowy silhouette above him. A hand disappeared under the
lampshade and the room was suddenly filled with jarring light.
A white-faced John Pellam sat
down in the chair beside the bed.
"Hey, chief," Buffett said in an
unsteady voice, "how'd you get in here? Visiting hours are over."
"The back stairs."
"Some security. You scared the
crap out of me."
"I've got to talk to you,
Donnie." He stared at Buffett. No, past him. His face was
pasty. The cop wondered if he was sick
or if he'd fainted. Pellam held
something in his hand, something small and dark.
Buffett felt his own hand start
to cramp and realized it was still jammed into a large fist. He relaxed
it and felt the pain subside. His heart pounded and he felt a surge of
weakness melt through his chest and his abdomen. "What the hell are you
doing here at this hour?" He too was whispering.
What's he holding?
Pellam glanced down at his own
hand, at the object he held. He looked back up at Buffett and said, "He
broke into the camper. The man who attacked Nina, the one who killed my
friend. I don't know how, he just got in. He hit me a couple times." He
looked at Buffett for a long moment. "I took out your gun—"
"The cold gun?"
"Right."
"Jesus."
"I took it out. I shot him with
it."
"Jesus, Pellam, you shot him?
"I wasn't going to. I was just
going to arrest him. He pulled his gun out and ..."
"He's dead? Well, let's think.
Any witnesses? Anybody hear anything, you think?"
"There's more," Pellam whispered.
"Don't panic yet. Let's think. It
was a break-in. That's burglary, and you've got a right to use deadly
force, even if it's a
mistake. An
absolute right. Okay, let me call. . ."
Pellam held up his hand. The
object was a wallet.
"Where were you parked when it
happened?" Buffett took the wallet which Pellam had thrust toward him.
Absently he
turned it over and over.
"There's more," Pellam
blurted once again.
The cop was still talking about
what Pellam could do, lawyers he knew, what sections of the state penal
code covered justifiable homicide. He opened the wallet. He stopped
talking. After a moment he blinked. "Oh, my God."
Pellam asked him, "I just killed
an FBI agent, didn't I?"
TWENTY
Pellam kept staring at the ID.
Buffett said, "It's over the
line. Peterson wouldn't do that."
"It's true."
"Peterson wouldn't do it.
He wouldn't dare."
"He was making it look like Crimmins
was threatening
Nina and me so I'd testify against him. How else can you explain it?"
BufFett shook his head. "He's the
U.S. Attorney." 'This was the guy that threatened Nina. There's no
doubt about it."
"Impossible."
"She described him perfectly."
"A U.S. Attorney is not going to
send an agent to assault somebody. Maybe the guy is working for
Crimmins. Or was.
A rogue agent. On the take, you know."
"No, it's Peterson."
"He'd be crazy. Peterson, I mean.
Too much risk."
Pellam lifted his palm. "He is crazy.
You
know he tried blackmailing me to get me to testify?"
"Blackmail?"
Pellam took a long moment to hook
a thumb through a belt loop. "I did some time."
"Time?" BufFett did not
understand.
"San Quentin," Pellam said,
volunteering nothing more. Buffett stared for a moment, and said
nothing. Pellam continued,
"He was threatening to tell the film
company."
Buffett took a breath to speak,
then he paused. Finally he said that he just didn't know.
"My friend. This guy killed my
friend."
"No," Buffett said emphatically.
"If he's a rogue agent on a private job for Peterson, murders too over
the line. Peterson's on some kind of moral crusade to put Crimmins
away, okay. But murder, no way."
"Maybe it was an accident. Maybe
he was following the bike to scare me. He misjudged or something."
Buffett conceded that was
possible. "What did you do with the body?"
Pellam thought for a minute, as
if he'd locked away the memory in a hidden part of his mind. "His car
was outside, in the alley across the street. What did I do? I wrapped
him up in some garbage bags and put him in the trunk. I drove it to the
parking
lot by the bus station. There were a lot of cars there. I don't
think anybody'll notice it for a while. Oh, I wore gloves."
"You had to do it. You didn't
have any choice."
"Jesus," Pellam whispered,
shaking his head, numb.
"Where's the gun?"
"I put it next to him. If anybody
found him they might think he'd killed himself."
"Pellam, that's not the way
people kill themselves."
"I wasn't thinking too clearly."
"Did you wipe off the gun?"
"Yeah. For fingerprints, you
mean? Yeah."
"It was a revolver, so you'll
have traces of powder on your hands, but you aren't going to be picked
up in the next
twenty-four hours on this. When the guy doesn't check
in, Peterson'll know something's wrong, assuming he does—did—
work
for Peterson. But what's he going to say? He'll have to deny
everything. I think you're pretty safe."
"I..."
A nurse entered the room. She
smiled at Donnie. She had a tray with a small container of ice cream
and two cookies.
She gave him two pills in a cup.
"Snack time," she said.
Buffett smiled back. "What are
these?" he asked. "The pills."
"Sedatives. Usual."
He took the pills. "Ativan? Half
a milligram?"
She called him "Doctor" as she
said goodnight.
"I always ask. They make mistakes
sometimes. About the pills, I mean. You ever in the hospital, always
ask."
Pellam took a kleenex from
Buffett's dresser and was carefully wiping the agent's-ID case.
He said to Pellam, "You want some
ice cream?'
"Uh-uh. I don't like ice cream."
"You sure?" Buffett opened the
ice cream and began to eat it. He stopped and set down the spoon.
"Pellam, you did what
I would've done."
"Yeah."
Buffett picked up the spoon
again. "You know, there's something else." Pellam took a cookie from
the tray and ate it. The
cop continued, "Let's assume you're right and this guy, the one you shot,
was working for Peterson."
"Uh-huh."
'Then the one who's looking for
you, the one who killed your friend, he's still out there."
"I guess he is." Pellam had not
thought about this. "But what can I do about it?"
"Dusting off your passport might
be a good idea."
Nina, on the other end of the
phone, said, "I'd like to see you tonight."
She sounded seductive. Pellam was
not in the mood to seduce or be seduced. He was sitting on a banquette
three feet
from where the carpet had been stained with an FBI agents
blood. He had used Clorox to scrub it. This had worked pretty well but
the camper smelled fiercely of bleach.
"I called three times and you
never answered."
"I don't have a machine in the
camper," he said, although he did. He often did not turn it on.
"There's all kinds of talk around
the set about you. Mr. Sloan's been saying some things that aren't real
nice. He's talking about suing you. I'm real sorry about your friend,
John. I don't remember him, but I think I met him once. He seemed real
nice."
"He was."
"So you want to be alone tonight?"
"Something like that."
"I don't think it's good for you."
"What's not good?"
"To be alone. Come over.
Cranston's only twenty minutes away." Her voice was a breathy singsong.
"It's just not a good time."
"Okay, if that's what you want."
Melodious became brittle.
Oh not now please.
"Are you trying to tell me
something?" she asked.
Brother.
"No, no, it's just, this thing
with me being the witness and all."
"What about it?" she asked
testily, and obviously wanted an answer. It seemed patently unfair to
have to argue like this with someone you were not sleeping with.
"It's taking up a lot of my time."
"It's probably not taking up time
tonight."
"Well, it is. There've been some
complications."
"Complications? I thought you
were a simple kind of guy." She was being playful now.
Perhaps their fight was over.
"I don't know..." He kept
picturing the way the FBI agent fell, surprised, spiraling down. That
was it. Just a fall. Then he was dead, just like that.
Please, he heard Nina saying. She
had to see him. "Please, John."
The man had just lain there, and
Pellam had walked into the kitchen and dug under the sink for garbage
bags in which to
wrap up the body.
"Its only twenty minutes?" he
heard himself asking.
*
* *
Because his brother was a union
carpenter and had taken him on dozens of jobs, Stevie Flom appreciated
good woodwork. He took pleasure in the way joints and studs met and how
crown molding fit perfectly in the corners of ceilings. Tonight he
wandered through the dark basement of a ramshackle Victorian house by
the riverfront and checked out the handiwork.
Not bad, not bad at all.
Though he wondered why anybody
would renovate a house here, where the only views were of a cement
plant, a trailer
camp on its last legs, and Pelican Island.
Stevie looked at the structural
work again. He approved of the wooden studs, instead of the metal ones
most builders used. That meant the wall was going to be nice and solid.
He looked at the wiring. Electricity was one thing he wanted to learn
about. He was good with hydraulics and mechanics but the idea of
electricity was land of weird.
The concrete floor, he observed,
was not in good shape. A lot of cracks and places where it had
crumbled. He saw
evidence of standing water. That was one thing his
brother had told him to look for in basements.
Evidence of standing water.
Stevie wished he had something to
read. He thought of his old man, who kept newspapers and Time magazines
piled up
n the basement at home—stacks and stacks—with a few Playboys
hidden between them, their places marked with twigs.
But
here—nothing but the boiler instructions encased in plastic. His
brother had once returned with three hundred bucks he
had found in an
old book while doing some work in Alton. This place was nothing but old
basement.
With evidence of water damage.
He was dying for a
cigarette but
he knew he shouldn't smoke. The ash would be evidence. He had seen that
on Magnum PI one time. Evidence of a killer. Or was it a Matlock
rerun?
So he just walked to a half
window and gazed outside, across the street to the empty trailer court.
Wondering when the hell was the
beer guy's Winnebago going to return.
*
* *
He put his head against Nina's
hair and inhaled.
He liked the smell. Animal-musky
and sweaty and perfumed. He breathed in again and woke her up.
"Hm?' she asked.
"Go to sleep," Pellam whispered.
"I was asleep."
"Go back to sleep."
"Hm."
Regardless of Pellam's mood and
inclination several hours ago, a seduction it had been.
Cranston, just off the
expressway, was a town much smaller than Maddox and more affluent and
ginger-bready. A riverfront tourist trap, the town was filled with
shops selling antiques and gadgets and Cute Things. Nina apparently did
much shopping there; her apartment was filled with gingham pillows,
needlepoints of children holding hands, plaques of geese dressed in
colonial garb, wooden hearts and stuffed animals and silk flowers.
Pellam hated it all. He had hoped
the bedroom might be less cute, but of course, it was just the same.
Worse, in fact, because Nina's hobby was photography. No, not even.
Snapshooting. The bedroom contained her collection of photos—fifty,
sixty, a hundred Of them, all in precious little Lucite and pewter and
china frames, lining the radiator cover and windowsill and
bedside table. Pellam was afraid
to turn around-abruptly. They made love under the eyes of Nina's
extended family, and
during one particularly energetic moment, a round
frame fell to the floor, bounced several times, and rolled for a long
time in
an exorbitantly distracting way.
Oh, yes, a seduction.
But an odd one.
She had greeted him at the door
wearing a white T-shirt and short, tight, dark gray skirt sans
stockings. Barefoot. She reminded him of Lynn Redgrave in Georgy
Girl. They had ordered out Hunan beef and cold noodles in sesame
paste and eaten while they watched a bad TV show. Nina had loved it. A
murder mystery. Pellam watched her lips moving as she whispered to
herself, reciting the clues and trying to figure out who the killer
was. He sat closer and put his arm around her.
She rubbed her head
against his as she announced that the victim's brother-in-law had done
it.
She had been wrong. Then,
instantly, she was tired of mass media. Just as the Midnight Movie came
on, Nina turned off the TV, hiked her skirt up, and sat on his lap. He
got an unabashed view of sensible white panties and she began kissing
him. Her arms lashed around his shoulders and in a frenzy she pressed
her mouth to his, shoving her tongue into him, rocking her hips
desperately.
He tasted Chinese food as much as
he tasted Nina and because he was so startled by the assault it took a
minute or two to pick up the pace.
"The thing is," she whispered. "I
have something to say."
He responded by taking off her
T-shirt. Her bra was shimmery and silver and very transparent and it
halfheartedly supported large breasts that she kept playing against his
chest.
"What?" he whispered.
She kissed him. "It's important."
Her breasts battered him again, and he bent toward one. "Listen to me,"
she whispered insistently. But it was a breathless insistence, and he
did not. Instead he kissed her for a full minute.
"No, I mean it." She slapped the
back of his hand as it probed.
Pellam lifted his head, startled.
They lay half-reclining, half-naked, pressed against each other. He
gave her his attention but
she did not speak immediately. He reflected
that there is nothing more ridiculous than two people in the posture of
lovemaking when they are not making love.
"I don't want you to stay over,"
she said.
Pellam was looking for hooks and
eyelets.
This's what you want to tell
me? Just explain it to me as you go along.
"I'm ovulating," she said as if
it were a trade secret.
"I'll be careful."
She blinked and pressed her mouth
to his for a long moment. When they could both breathe again she said,
"Well, of course you have to use a condom. But what I'm saying
is don't make too much out of this. I'm not really in control. It's
just hormones."
"I don't care what it is." He
meant this sincerely. His hand danced along sparkles of the mesh bra.
She leaned away and pressed a
finger to his lips. "You have to promise me you won't stay tonight."
He whispered, "You're beautiful."
"Shhhh." She frowned. "Just promise."
What was the question? "Okay,
sure. But you're still beautiful."
"No, I'm not."
"Can I stay for a few minutes, at
least?" She kissed him again. "Just not all night." She rubbed against
him. She smiled girlishly and he believed whatever had so enigmatically
interrupted the moment was past.
Now, an hour later, lying in the
huge bed (huge to him; he was used to Winnebago bunks), smelling the
animal scent of her scalp, Pellam felt better. There were times when
there ought to be nothing but this, being as close as you can to
another
human being, overlapping skin, mixed sweat, lying in silence
and scents.
He found himself aroused again.
His hand slid down her belly and touched the curled pale hair that
reminded him of the fine hairs at her temple.
She swatted his hand again—this
time with more energy than he thought necessary.
"Are you all right?" Pellam had
whispered this same question at other moments like this. The query did
not have its literal meaning, of course, but was intended as an
emergency exit that allowed other words—whatever she wanted or needed
to say—to escape. Nina whispered, "I have to tell you something."
"Hormones," Pellam said, to be light about it. "It's all right.
I
understand." He kissed her hair. She moved away from him.
"You want me
to leave?" he asked, already offended.
"Well, yes, I do. Not
this
minute, though."
"You're beautiful," he said,
trying to recapture some romance.
"Stop saying that." The curtness
in her voice seemed not so much irritation as distraction, as if she
was considering how to express a complicated thought and was running
through variations before she spoke. When she did speak, finally,
sitting up
and pulling the sheet around her, the message was not as
tricky as he had anticipated. She said, "Your friend, Donnie. The
cop?
I just wanted you to know that I slept with him the other night."
When Stevie Flom heard the sticky
sound of the campers slowing tires on damp asphalt he stood up fast and
notched the
back of his hand on a bolt.
"Damn," he whispered, and sucked
the small wound. He tasted blood and rust and he wondered if he ought
to get a tetanus shot. But then he figured that if the cops looked
around this building after they found the body, they might see some
blood on the bolt and search all the hospitals for people who'd gotten
shots. He was proud that he'd thought of this.
For the third time that night he
checked the Beretta. He pulled the slide back slightly; there was one
round in the chamber
and the clip was full. They were small bullets.
Just .22 longs, not even the full-size long rifles. But they had
advantages. For
one thing, you needed no silencer. Another
advantage—the gun was so small and the recoil so slight that you could
group rapid-fire shots real close.
Tricks of the trade.
Stevie watched the Winnebago rock
to a stop in the trailer
park. The man stepped
outside and hooked up the hose and plugged a large electrical cord into
a junction box. He returned to the camper.
Stevie then made his way out of
the structurally sound basement that contained evidence of water
damage. He cocked the
gun and slipped the safety off. He started across
River Road.
TWENTY-ONE
He was thinking he had done it
wrong.
Forget what she had said and what
she had not. Pellam should have stayed.
This was one of those rules about
relationships that no one ever teaches you. Sometimes you were supposed
to leave and sometimes you were supposed to stay and you had to read a
lot of data fast to figure out which.
Now, locking the camper door,
Pellam debated the matter with himself. It was complicated because he
doubted he, or any man, would have done what she did. A confession like
that? At some time, sure. (Well, maybe.) But lying in a bed with three
scratch marks from her pink nails on his biceps?
Never,
"We played cards for a couple of
hours," she had explained. "I wasn't supposed to be there. It was after
visiting hours. I sat
on his bed. He's very sensitive. You wouldn't
think he would be, being a cop. But he is! His hands were the giveaway.
They're very soft."
Spare me no details.
"His wife's a fruitcake and he's
been very depressed. He said people are afraid to come see him because
he can't walk.
They're afraid of him. I think he's a very funny man."
"Is," Pellam had agreed.
"One thing led to another.
Finally he started to cry. I'm a sucker for men who cry. He said he
didn't think he'd be able to, you know, perform anymore. It's the one
thing that's eating him up. Even more than not walking. I asked him if
I could hold him. And I sat on the bed. And, I guess ..." She had
shrugged her shoulders, and the beautiful breasts that had been pulled
and prodded by two men in as many days slipped out from under the
sheet. She covered herself again.
"And he was able to, uhn,
perform?" Pellam had asked. He shouldn't have. He had forgotten he was
talking to the Queen of Detail.
"Oh, yeah," she had said
enthusiastically. "Twice. We were both pretty surprised."
"Twice?"
Pellam thought, But you slapped
my hand when I wanted to do it twice. This, however, would have sounded
very juvenile,
and he had contented himself with picking up his clothes
with dramatic swipes. "I better be going."
"Don't hate me, John. I'm sorry."
She had started to cry.
"I don't hate you."
"I just saw him lying there so
sad..."
"You did a good thing for him. I
know how depressed he's been ..." Pellam had spoken with reassurance
and in a kind voice; on the other hand, he was dressed in three minutes
and out the door in five.
Now, he now reflected, should've
left. Glad 1 did.
Pulling his shirt off as he
walked into the Winnebago's tiny bathroom, smelling her perfume on the
cloth. He turned the shower water on. The hookup was not very good, the
pressure was low and the water was full of minerals, which meant that
the soap would not lather; it scummed.
He stepped into the bedroom area,
dropped his change and bills and wallet and keys on the bed in one big,
messy pile. He thought how much he liked living alone. He pulled off
his pants and stepped into the shower.
*
* *
Stevie Flom decided he couldn't
shoot a man who was naked. So he sat sideways in the drivers seat of
the camper and
looked at the worn controls. He listened to the
electric-motor sound of the water. He licked his gouged hand. He was
suddenly very tired and decided he needed a vacation. From Ralph Bales.
From Lombro. From this piss-ant river town.
What Stevie was going to
do was take his money from this job and spend two months in Las Vegas.
Maybe while he was
there he would check around for local work. He liked
the idea of perpetual sun. He liked the idea of glossy casinos open
twenty-four hours a day. Free drinks and soft flesh. And many hours
away from the wife.
He thought it was funny, killing
someone whose name you didn't know. He looked around the dash and found
an ID card
for a movie set. He learned that the beer man's name was
John Pellam.
Pellam, Pettam, he
repeated to himself.
The water stopped hissing.
Footsteps. The camper creaked.
The door opened. He smelled shampoo. Stevie lifted the gun.
Pellam, wearing a thick brown
bathrobe and socks, stepped into the hall. He blinked. "How'd you get
in here? Who are you?"
Stevie Flom smiled coldly.
And he felt a sudden jolt of
nausea, a burn spreading through his gut. His hands started to shake.
His teeth, bared by the mad smile, were rattling. He pushed the gun
closer toward Pellam, who was speaking, though Stevie couldn't hear the
words. He didn't know whether the guy was yelling in anger or begging
not to be killed. Stevie simply checked out to anxiety and his whole
body started sweating. He pulled his right elbow in close to his body
to stop the trembling. No effect. His head shook, his neck. He tilted
his head sideways, as if that would let the nervousness run off him
onto the floor. But he kept shaking.
Trying to calm himself, he
ordered Pellam to sit. But the man just stood there, looking at him
angrily, ignoring.
"Sit down," Stevie
growled. The words were lost in a nervous swallow.
Pellam remained standing. His
eyes began to scan the room. Stevie heard some words. ". .. my
friend?... You were the one? ... The motorcycle? . .."
Stevie took the gun in his left
hand and wiped the palm of his right on his pants, then gripped the
pistol again. Pellam took two steps sideways and picked up an empty
wine bottle like a club. "Okay," Pellam said.
Okay? What does he
mean by
Okay? He's got a bottle, I've got a gun. What the hell does he mean by
Okay?
Stevie told himself to hold the
gun out, then he realized he was already doing so. He stepped closer to
Pellam. What the hell does he mean by Okay? Stevie stepped
back again.
Squeeze.
Nothing happened. His finger
would not respond. He looked at his hand. This did not help.
Squeeze the fucking trigger. He
realized he had mouthed the words. Maybe he had actually said them.
Pellam was saying, "Put it down."
Stevie's mind suddenly went
blank. He stuck the gun out in a single furious motion, pointed it
right at Pellam's chest, closed
his eyes, and began to pull the trigger.
The cloud of glass surrounded
Stevie Flom. Bluish smoke and a thousand splinters from what had been
the window of the camper enveloped him. The explosion seemed to occur a
moment later, as the dust of shattered glass settled on the floor.
Stevie Flom turned toward the
window, his muscles now relaxed, the trembling gone. He turned toward
the window and
said, "It's all right. It'll be fine. Really."
Then he dropped to the floor.
The door of the camper swung open
and a man stepped inside, filling the room with his huge bulk, wearing
a sport coat and jeans. Moving fast on small feet, he ignored Pellam,
who stepped back out of his way.
What the hell was going on?
Shutting out lights.
"Who are—?"
"Quiet," the man barked.
"Sure," Pellam said. Bright light
angled in from the kitchen
and gave the room a
tilted appearance, like a fun house. The man shut this light out, too.
He went to the window and looked out. In the darkness Pellam said, "Are
you a cop?"
"Shhh." He walked to Stevie Flom
and felt his neck, pocketed his little gun, then walked to the opposite
window of the camper and looked out once more for a long moment. He
turned and looked at Pellam's hand, which held the apple wine bottle by
the neck. "You got that for any reason?" His voice was thick but
accentless.
"No. Uh-uh." Pellam put the bottle
down.
"You Pellam?"
He nodded and asked, "Who are
you?" "Tom Stettle. I work for a Mr. Crimmins. He—"
"Crimmins?"
"Peter
Crimmins."
Pellam looked at Stevie. "He works
for Crimmins ..."
"Uhn, no, sir. That he doesn't,"
Stettle said
matter-of-factly. "Mr. Crimmins hired me to keep an eye on you."
"Oh."
Pellam stared at the body. "Who's he?" Stettle did not answer but bent
down and started emptying Stevie's pockets.
"He was going to loll you."
"What's exactly going on?"
Without looking up from his task,
Stettle said, "Mr. Crimmins knows that you didn't see him in that car
the night Vince Gaudia got killed. He didn't have nothing to do with
the hit. He wants to make sure you stay alive to tell everybody that.
So he's had me looking out for you. You're a tough man to stay on top
of, let me say."
Stevie Flom didn't seem to be
bleeding. Was he really dead?
This he asked Stettle,
who seemed
surprised at the question. "Well, sure he is. Help me, huh? Let's get
the body into
my car.
I just happened
to check by tonight. It was, like, lucky. I didn't figure he was here
already. I figured they'd do you on the
street like they did Gaudia."
"He's the one who shot the cop?"
"I dunno. Probably," Stettle
said. "You have any garbage bags?"
"Beg your pardon?"
"Garbage bags? Thick ones, if
you've got them."
"I've got some, sure."
Pellam went into the kitchen and
drank a full glass of water. He found Stettle standing in the doorway,
looking at him.
"You want some?"
"Sure."
Pellam poured another glass and
held it out. Stettle took it in a huge hand. Pellam asked him, "Did you
see the other guy
out there?"
"What other guy?"
"There are two of them." Pellam
motioned to Stevie Flom. "He's not the one I saw get out of the
Lincoln."
"He isn't?" Stettle drank the
water. "You mean there's somebody else?"
"Yeah. Heavy guy. Balding."
Stettle grimaced. "I'll do what I
can to keep an eye out for you. But I can't be your roommate. After
this—" he nodded at Stevie s body "—whoever was in the car is going to
be after you in a big way. You should take a vacation. Take a year off
or so."
"That's what people keep telling
me."
Stettle was eager to leave. He
finished the water and took a paper towel then wiped the glass off.
With this same towel he wiped everything else in the camper he had
touched.
"You got to get a new window," he
said, and broke out the
rest of it with his elbow.
Pellam assumed he didn't want to leave
an obvious bullet hole.
Pellam stared as the bits of
glass flew outward. "I guess I should say thanks. I mean—"
Stettle was uninterested in
gratitude. He soaked the paper towel that held a dozen of his
fingerprints and wadded it up,
slipped it into his pocket. "Garbage
bags?" he asked.
"Sure." Pellam handed him some.
"Rubber gloves?"
"Gloves?"
"Playtex, you know."
Pellam found two old pairs.
Stettle and he put them on. "The blood. Nowadays you can't be too
careful, you know."
And for the second time in two
days John Pellam was wrapping a body in green Glad bags. Three mils
thick.
She pulls off the brown dress.
This scares him, seeing the
arc of the dress falling onto the chair. He smells fruity perfume.
She is undoing pins from her
wispy hair, which tumbles down her neck. The hair is like white light.
It ends just above her substantial bra. She smooths her hands along it,
from her neck over her breasts down to her waist. She tosses her head.
Her hair terrifies Donnie Buffett.
Not saying a word, she leans
forward and lets the hair stream over his arm and face. His eyes are
locked on
to her hair. Terrified but unable to look away. His hand
closes on it, he rubs it between his fingers, he weighs
a huge handful.
No. Don't do this to me.
Please. Don't...
She looks down at him, at the
terror on his face.
I want to go to sleep. I want
to—
But she is bending forward, a
slight smile on her face. He is enveloped in her perfume, strawberry
and spice,
and she is kissing him, her mouth firm against his. He feels
her tongue, just its tip against his lips, then through them. She is
kissing him hungrily.
He is trembling.
She backs away.
She is wearing a large silver
sparkly bra, garter belt and stockings, and white panties. All white,
all lacy and glistening in the low light.
"Look," Donnie Buffett says
and he is sweating. "Don't—"
"Shhhh." She bends forward and
kisses him again. He feels the pressure of her breasts under the silky
cloth.
She knows he feels it and rubs against him as she kisses him.
Her tongue slips farther into his mouth. He
doesn't know what to do. He
kisses her back.
Wondering if he'll feel
anything, if he'll feel that, twisty-warm sense, but then no, he
doesn't. And then he wants her to go away, wanting that more than he's
ever wanted anything in his life.
She backs off again, still
smiling. He is terrified and begs her to leave. "The thing is, with
this accident. . . Like
I was saying. You..."
She turns her back to him,
ignoring him. He hears her whisper, "Help me."
His arms slump. "I'm sorry ..."
"Please," she whispers. "For
me? I want it for me"
Somehow this changes
everything. He lifts his hands and undoes the hook of her bra and she
is backing into
him, forcing his hands to
encircle her breasts and grip them. Her neck is inches from his mouth.
He lowers his mouth to it and is caught in an avalanche of her hair. He
tastes it. He smells strawberry. When she rubs against him it is as
though they are underwater and their bodies are sliding past each other
on the current. He turns
her around in his arms and kisses her hard.
She slides off the bed and
stands in front of him as she slips her panties down. He sees the blond
fuzz. This
hair, too, fascinates him; it is so fine you can't really
see the hair, it's more a blur of focus where her legs come together.
She begins to touch herself, running her hands over her body, taking
handfuls of her head hair and spreading them around her flesh.
Then she hops up on the bed
again, puts one leg on either side of his head, and bends forward,
kissing his chest and stomach as she pushes the blankets aside. He is
muttering no no no, but the way it is working out, his mouth being
where it is, she can't hear his words anyway and he gives up talking
and all he can do is think, hell, let's do it do it do it...
This—a memory, not a fantasy—was
prominently in Donnie Buffett's mind when he opened his eyes and saw
John Pellam standing in the doorway of his hospital room.
Buffett blinked then he cleared
his throat. "Hey, chief. I wasn't expecting you."
"Hello, Donnie." Pellam walked
into the room. His boots made a particularly loud noise.
Oh, Christ. He knows.
"Listen, John . . ." Buffett
looked up at the blank TV screen, then at the row of flowers. His face
felt suddenly thick and hot,
as if filled with steam. Oh, man, here's the guy bought me beer
and has treated me like a real person, he's the first one
in the whole
world after the accident to tell me to go to hell, no kid gloves, no
bullshit, and what do I do? I fuck his woman. Oh, man. Oh, man...
"John, listen, I was going to
tell you."
Pellam was grinning. This made
Buffett feel a thousand times worse.
"It wasn't like I planned it. I
know I was ragging you about the casting couch thing but it's not like
I said to her, 'Oh, poor me,
I can't get it up.' It wasn't a trick or
anything."
That did work,
though, come to think of it.
"It's all right, Donnie."
"I'm not saying she came on to
me. I'd never say that to avoid taking my own lumps, you know? But she
was easy to talk to and I was feeling really bad. She hugged me and ...
It just sort of happened. I really was going to tell you.
Really, man. But
last time you were in, you were so, you know, upset
about your friend . .."
"She isn't for me," Pellam told
him.
"No, no, she likes you. I know
she does." Wait. Would this make him feel better or worse? "What
happened . .."
"Donnie, I've got no claim on
her."
"I talked you up afterwards." He
said this cautiously.
Pellam was sitting down in the
chair. "I wouldn't've come by today if I was mad."
Buffett could think of nothing to
do but extend his hand. They shook solemnly, and Pellam seemed amused
by this formal gesture of apology. "I need some help, Donnie."
"Anything. You name it. My
buddies still hassling
you? I'll get them off your case,
John. Don't worry. I'll call the mayor if I
have to."
Pellam looked over the untouched
dinner tray. Donnie followed his eyes. He asked, "Break bread?"
"Haven't eaten in a day."
"Help yourself."
It wasn't bread, it was soup,
rice, and red Jell-O. Pellam ate the soup, Buffett, the rice. They
split the saltines and divided
the Jell-O into two bowls.
"You know, don't you," Buffett
said, "Jell-O really sucks?"
"Uh-huh." But Pellam seemed
hungry. And with milk poured over it the Jell-O was not bad, though
Pellam didn't get much
milk; he had the fork and Buffett had the spoon.
One cube slipped away from
Buffett and he chased it off the tray and onto the sheet and blanket.
"Shit." He cocked his
middle finger against his thumb and flicked the
cube into the wall. It left a pink wound on the wall and splatted on
the floor.
The men laughed.
Pellam told Buffett about an old
record of his uncle's, a comedy record from the fifties. Who was the
guy? Del Close, he thought. It was called How to Speak Hip. There
was this routine, he explained, about a man who gets hung up on Jell-O.
He keeps eating these bowls of Jell-O and ordering more. Going from
restaurant to restaurant. Everybody's staring at him. What flavor was
it? Strawberry, he thought. Or raspberry. "It's to teach you the
expression 'hung up on.' You know, like beat talk was a foreign
language." Pellam said that he had listened to the record a hundred
times when he was a kid. He loved the Jell-O routine.
Buffett smiled politely, waiting
for the punch line, but apparently there was none.
"You have to sort of hear it,"
Pellam said. "And be in the mood."
"No, it was funny," Buffett said
quickly. Today, at least, he was Pellam's toady.
But Pellam seemed to have lost
his taste for humor—as well as for Jell-O and for conversation. He
wiped his face. He
nodded to the bedside table and said, "I guess I
better do it. Let me see that phone for a minute, would you?"
*
* *
The U.S. Attorney was in court
when the call came in.
The secretary buzzed Nelsons
office and asked, "There's a man on three. He says it's important. When
will Mr. Peterson
be back?"
"Take a message, darling," Nelson
snapped. He returned to a lengthy set of interrogatories.
"It's a Mr. Pellam and he says—"
Click.
"Mr. Pellam, Mr. Pellam. How
are you? This is Mr. Peterson's assistant, Nelson Stroud. Is there
something I can do for you?"
"I want to talk to Peterson."
"Is this about the Crimmins
situation?"
Pellam said that it was.
"Well, is there anything I can
help you with?"
"Where is he?"
"Mr. Peterson? He's in court. He
won't be back for several hours."
"Oh." There was a long silence.
Nelson gripped the phone hard and believed that if he breathed too
loud, he would blow
away the fragile phone connection.
"You're a lawyer?"
"Assistant U.S. Attorney for the—"
"Okay. I want a meeting."
Bingo!
"Fine, absolutely fine. You name
a time, you name a place. Whatever."
"Your office, I'd like it to be
in your office."
"Sure, that's fine. Tomorrow?
Tomorrow morning?"
"Sure, tomorrow morning. Only..."
"What is it?"
"Only there's a problem. I need
some assurance from you."
"Assurance, assurance, of
course." Nelson's hands were vibrating. This was the big time, this was
negotiating with vital witnesses, and he was terrified. "What exactly
do you have in mind?"
"I want some guarantee that I
won't be prosecuted," Pellam said.
"Why would you be prosecuted?"
There was a pause.
"Because I
lied when I told you I hadn't seen Peter Crimmins in the Lincoln."
The reporters had hoped for
something hot—perhaps Peterson's announcement that he was resigning to
run for the Senate
or that he was handling some big corporate
whistle-blower case or that the Justice Department would dish up
something photogenic for the newshounds—like a good drug bust, the sort
where the FBI and DEA lay out all the Uzis and Brownings
in the front
of the table and all the plastic bags of smack or coke in the back and
declaim about the progress in the war on organized crime.
But all they got was Peterson
standing at a chipped podium emblazoned with a U.S. Department of
Justice seal, droning on
and on and on ...
He spoke to them in the vast
monotone that marked his delivery at all of his press conferences. "I'm
pleased to announce that
a witness in the Vincent Gaudia killing has
come forward and agreed to testify before the grand jury. This is an
individual
whom my office identified immediately after the killing and
who had serious, and understandable, concerns about his safety,
and who expressed those concerns, but who
has now come forward in exchange for my agreeing not to prosecute for
obstruction of justice."
Which was a jaw-cracker of a
sentence and left the reporters thinking up fast paraphrases.
When asked if this was a reliable
witness, Peterson said, "He looked into the front seat of the car
driven by the man we are certain is responsible for the killing. He was
no more than three feet away. He assures me he can make a positive ID."
A reporter shouted, "Has Peter
Crimmins been identified as the man in that car?"
But Peterson knew the game of
reporter dodge; he was not going to give the defense lawyers a chance
to claim prejudice.
He said, "All I can say at this time is that the
witness will be giving us a formal statement at nine-thirty tomorrow
morning. We anticipate an arrest within twenty-four hours of that"
Peterson then deflected a number
of questions about the killing and talked about several drug busts and
other recent prosecution victories of the U.S. Attorney's office
recently.
"I heard rumors," a woman
reporter called in an abrasive voice, "that you arrested Tony Sloan,
the movie director who's currently shooting a film in Maddox."
Peterson glared into the video
camera lights. "That is absolutely untrue. The movie company
brought a large number of automatic weapons into the district. Both FBI
and BATF agents from the Treasury Department observed what appeared to
be an irregularity in the firearm permits and we just wanted to keep an
eye on them to make sure they didn't fall into the
wrong hands. We did
not at any time contemplate criminal action against Mr. Sloan and the film
company. The local police
in Maddox, I understand, took it upon
themselves, for some reason, to make an arrest. Our findings are that
the permits are
in order and I'm releasing the weapons presently."
"Are you saying that the Maddox
police arrested Mr. Sloan improperly?"
"I won't comment on the judgment
of fellow law enforcement agencies. The arrest was a Maddox Police
Department
decision. Ask them about it."
There were several other no
comments. Finally a very preoccupied Ronald Peterson wandered off
the stage, leaving the
press corps to call their desks or tape their
intros. Most of the TV reporters were far more interested in the Tony
Sloan angle than the Gaudia killing and decided to run some clips from Circuit
Man in the segment about Sloan's arrest.
But hard news is hard news and
everybody wrote up at least a news bite about the witness for ten
o'clock. Vince Gaudia
was, after all, Maddox's only honest-to-God hit
for as long as anyone could remember.
As it turned out, Ralph Bale was
playing darts and did not happen to hear the story. Philip Lombro,
however, did. And by
nine that evening was on the phone.
"He cheated us," Lombro said. "He
took the money and he cheated us! He's going to testify!" His voice was
high. Some of
this was indignation and some of it was anger. But most
of his agitation came from disgust with himself that this whole thing
had gotten wildly out of hand.
"Looks that way," Ralph Bales
said. "He's meeting Peterson tomorrow?"
"At nine-thirty."
After a lengthy silence, in which
he heard the sound of male laughter in the background, Lombro said,
"What exactly are
you going to do?"
"Okay, I think you've gotta agree
we don't have much choice."
Lombro sighed deeply. He did not
agree with anything that Ralph Bales said or thought. But the whole
matter had moved beyond him now. He realized he was being asked a
question and said, "What?"
"I said, you haven't by any
chance heard from a guy named Stevie Flom, have you?"
"Who?'
"A guy working with me."
"No. I don't even know him. Why
would I?"
"No reason. I haven't heard from
him."
"Why would he call me?"
"I mentioned I worked for you
once. It's not important. Anyway, about our situation—"
"Just finish this thing," Lombro
said desperately. '"Finish it."
"You want me to..."
"Do what you have to" were
Lombro's closing words but they had hardly the energy to carry forty
miles to the other end
of the phone line.
*
* *
The hour was not late; it was not
his normal bedtime, but Philip Lombro, hoping that tomorrow would
appear and then
vanish with invisible speed, took two sleeping pills
and, in his silk pajamas, slipped into his bed.
He lay awake for a long time,
tormented by thoughts of
what he had done, thoughts
about the witness's betrayal, thoughts about how he was soon going to
have another man's blood on his hands. But under the sedation of the
Valium, he calmed,
and eventually the man who was going to die tomorrow
did not occupy his thoughts. Nor did Vincent Gaudia nor Ralph Bales.
Philip Lombro was in that netherworld between sleep and waking. Bits of
dreams floated past like the papers caught in the fickle currents
around the Maddox Omnibus Building. He saw faces, most of them
grotesque. Melting into other shapes. They were real to him, intense,
three-dimensional. They reminded him of the images seen through those
plastic three-dimensional viewers he used to buy his nieces and nephews
thirty years ago, the ones that held cardboard disks of fairy tales and
cartoons.
One of these faces, though, was
not grotesque. It was a girl's face, a young girl's. She was beautiful.
Her features did not melt. Her eyes simply looked toward him. Lombro
was powerless to touch her or speak. He was merely observing; you don't
participate in dreams like this.
Then the girl's face suddenly
grew so terribly sad that Lombro became completely awake, pierced by an
urge to cry, and he
sat up abruptly.
This was the hardest part of
living alone, Philip Lombro knew. Waking from dreams by yourself.
Pellam was up at seven-thirty. He
had slept in a location van—one of the big Winnebagos used for makeup.
He rose silently and walked into the bathroom, where he took a
tepid-water shower. Then he brushed his teeth with his fingers and a spoonful
of Arm & Hammer. He felt groggy and hoped he would find something
energizing in the medicine cabinet—diet pills, NoDoz. But there was
nothing other than a prescription drug he had never heard of. The label
warned against operating machinery or driving a car while taking the
medicine.
It would be coffee or nothing.
Pellam dressed in the bathroom,
the cloth of his shirt and jeans darkened by the water he had failed to
towel off. He brushed his damp hair and forwent the noisy blow dryer.
He was here as a spy or, at best, refugee, and wanted his presence kept
secret. Slipping outside, he hurried down the front steps and shivered
in the cool fall air. There was a rich, loamy scent of water, which he
knew would be the river though he could not see it from here.
At the curb he paused to let pass
a powder blue car, slowing as it passed the trailer. On the side was a
sign. Out of Work 117 days. The number 17 was on a separate
piece of cardboard, freshly taped over the previous day's record. "I do
odd jobs," the man called but he drove on before Pellam could say a
word.
Ralph Bales found his heart was
beating like the wings of a panicked sparrow.
He looked at his wrists, focusing
on the veins, surprised that they were not vibrating with blood. His
hands returned to the steering wheel. Ralph Bales was waiting
downtown—in a stolen Chevy—outside the Federal Building on Mission,
waiting for John Pellam to arrive. And the reason his heart was beating
so fast was that this was a terrible site for a hit.
On the way here, he had passed a
car wash whose name was
World O' Wash. The phrase
kept going through his mind, and
all he could think of was World O'
Cops. FBI, Treasury agents, federal marshals and city cops and probably
Missouri Bureau of Investigation agents all over the place—them, plus
court security guards who had never fired a piece except to get their
tickets and had been waiting for years to draw first blood in the line
of duty.
World O' Cops.
Inside the entryway of the
building were two white-shirted guards, big men, with large, square
heads crowned with fade cuts. Secretaries and clerks and lawyers in
running shoes over their dress socks or stockings were streaming into
the office. Everyone looked young and eager.
There were several entrances to
the Federal Building but Ralph Bales was parked in front of what seemed
to be the main one. He supposed there would be a service door or two.
He could see a driveway that seemed reserved for garbage pickups.
That
would be a good place to sneak a witness in. But he had no partner—
Stevie still had not shown—and all he could do was cover the main
entrance. '
He had arrived early, thinking
the beer man would get here well before nine thirty for security
reasons. For an hour Ralph
Bales sat in the car, the engine running. He
moved it only once, when a meter maid waddled by. She held her citation
book
out like a gun, threateningly. He did not let her get close enough
to see his face. He pulled away slowly, did an around-the-block and by
the time he got back—maybe three minutes later—she was gone. He parked
again in front of the building.
It was now nine-fifty.
He watched the mist in the air,
the sunlight flashing off the tall arch; he smelled the burnt metallic
air laced with exhaust. The factories on the east side of the
Mississippi were busy this morning. His heart fluttering . . . Maybe it
was the caffeine in the coffee. He glanced down. He had left the cup in
the car, the cardboard carton, blue and white, with pictures of Greek
gods or Olympic athletes or something. A cup with his fingerprints all
over it. Careless.
He reached down and picked it up,
crumpling the cardboard and slipping it into his pocket.
It was then that the trash
basket—one of those big, filthy orange things—went through his back
window.
Jesus Mother Holy...
Not exactly through the
window. Even cheap American cars had strong glass. The bottom rim of
the basket pushed the window in a couple inches, and the glass turned
opaque with frost from the fractures. The basket rolled off the car and
onto
the street.
"Son of a—"
When he turned back to pull the
door handle up, there was a gun muzzle in his face, and the man's other
hand was shutting
the engine off.
He understood. Ralph Bales knew
exactly what had happened.
"Put your gun in the back," the
beer man said. "On the floor."
Ralph Bales said, "I don't have
a—"
The man's voice terrified him
with its serenity. "Put your gun on the back floor of the car."
"Okay, whatever you want."
"Put your—"
"I heard you," Ralph Bales said,
"I'm going to do it."
"Now."
"Okay."
This reminded Ralph Bales of when
the cop caught him just after the Gaudia hit. Only today there'd be no
Stevie Flom
acting like a madman and stepping out of an alleyway to
save him. With a sudden sickening feeling, he had a good idea
about
what had happened to Stevie Flom.
He dropped the Colt in the back.
The man opened the back door and scooped it up. He sat in the backseat
and pressed
the muzzle of his gun, an old one, against his ear. "Turn
all your pockets inside out."
What if the meter maid shows up
now? Christ, this guy could panic and shoot them both.
"I don't have anything, I mean,
like a weapon or—"
"All your pockets."
Ralph Bales did, dropping the
contents on the seat. The beer man prodded the money and the wallet and
the crumpled cup
and the Swiss Army knife. "Okay, put it back in your
pockets. Except the knife. Leave the knife."
Ralph Bales laughed. "The knife?
You're kidding."
He was not kidding. Ralph Bales
did what he was told.
The man put his seat belt on.
"Drive to Maddox. Now."
"But—"
"Drive."
Bales reached for the shoulder
strap.
"No belt." He rested the gun
against the back of Ralph Bales s neck. "This is a single-action gun.
You know what that means?"
"You have to cock it before you
can pull the trigger," Ralph Bales said like a student
answering a teachers question.
"I have it cocked. It goes off
real easy."
"Okay, listen. If we hit a bump ..."
"Then I'd drive real
slow if I were you."
*
* *
The dream was wonderful.
She was beautiful.
Nina Sassower believed that
although men came on to her—and did so quite frequently—they did so
only because of the size of her breasts and her thin legs. She believed
they tolerated her face, which she saw as pointed and narrow and
pinched.
But in the dream, something had
happened. Perhaps she had had an operation, maybe she had just been
mistaken all her life. She did not know what had changed. But the
person she was in the dream was tall and willowy and had sharp,
intelligent, beautiful eyes.
The image didn't last long. It
shifted into something else, a street she couldn't identify. Then other
people began milling around and the dream ended.
She woke up.
For perhaps two seconds she felt
the afterglow of the dream.
She sat up straight, looked at
the clock, and spat out, "Oh, no! Son of a bitch!"
It was nine o'clock.
She pulled off her nightgown and
yanked open the drawer to her dresser. Panties, bra—no bra. She
couldn't find one. She kept looking. Forget it! She slipped a
sweater on, thinking that it was the first time since the age of
thirteen that she had left
the house without a bra.
Slacks, anklet
stockings . . . They don't match, where's the mate, where? Hell
with it! Go! Beige pumps.
Go, go, go!...
Nina pulled on her blue jean
jacket. She hadn't washed her face and she felt a rim of sweat on her
forehead. She paused in
the mirror to brush her hair and she did that
only because she didn't want to look conspicuous.
For what she was about to do,
conspicuous would not be good.
She left the house and hurried to
her car. After she started the engine, she looked into her purse to
make certain that it contained what she had put there the night before.
A military-issue .45
semiautomatic pistol, the classic 1911 Colt, sat heavily between an
Estee Lauder compact and a pink plastic Tampax container.
Nina knew the gun about as well
as she knew her Singer sewing machine. Although she could not
field-strip it blindfolded she could dismantle it sufficiently to clean
and oil the bore and the parts and did so every time she fired it. This
gun happened to
be identical to the ones Ross's gangsters carried in Missouri
River Blues, although Nina's was loaded with ten rounds of live
ammunition and was not registered with the federal government or with
anybody else.
Nina now started the car's engine
and, not even slowing at a single stop sign or red light, sped through
the quaint, quiet burg
of Cranston, Missouri, then skidded onto the
expressway, hurrying south toward where she believed John Pellam would
be.
TWENTY-THREE
Being a lawyer, he was used to
rewriting.
Ronald Peterson never signed off
on a letter, interrogatory, complaint, motion, or brief without hours
of revision. But the two-page press release describing Peter Crimmins s
indictment for the murder of Vince Gaudia had taken more time, per
word, than anything that Peterson had written in years.
He had just learned, however,
that this was one press release that was not going to be released to
anyone.
"He changed his mind?" Peterson
whispered, barely controlling his fury.
"That's what the message said,"
Nelson explained cautiously, looking away from his boss's enraged eyes.
"And there's no answer at his phone, the phone in his camper. I sent an
agent to Maddox. The camper's not in the trailer park. Somebody in one
of the vans said Pellam'd been fired and they don't know where he is."
"Think Crimmins got him?"
"Well, according to the
receptionist, he didn't sound coerced."
"Why the fuck didn't she put
through the call? She's fired. She's out of here."
Nelson said delicately, "He
didn't want to speak to you. He wanted to just leave a
message."
"What exactly did it say again?"
"Just that he'd changed his mind.
That was it."
Peterson clicked a fingernail and
thumbnail together seven times. "Any hint from the taps on Crimmins?"
"Nothing useful. Business as
usual. We can take that one of two ways. Either he's using a safe phone
to talk to his muscle.
Or he heard the press conference and for some
reason he's not concerned about the guy testifying."
Why wouldn't he be concerned?
One reason: He wasn't the
man in the Lincoln after all.
"Why," Nelson pondered, "would
Pellam be jerking our leash like this?"
Peterson had told no one about
the freelance FBI agent who had gone after Pellam's girlfriend and
then Pellam himself to
"help" Pellam remember about Crimmins and
vanished shortly afterward. Nor did Nelson know that there was nothing
whatsoever wrong with Tony Sloan's federal firearm notices. Nelson
therefore didn't know that Pellam had some very good motives for
jerking leashes. "Cold feet, I suspect," the U.S. Attorney suggested.
"What about the first option?
That Crimmins got to him?"
Peterson shook his head. "Even
Crimmins wouldn't be that stupid. Hell. The press'll play it like we've
got hairy palms."
"What do you want to do?" Nelson
gazed down at the press release.
"What's your assessment of the
case against Crimmins without Pellam's testimony? I'm speaking of the
Gaudia hit."
Nelson thought for a minute.
Peterson made a cats cradle with a rubber band and studied his protege,
whose squinting eyes and pursed lips only partially revealed the lavish
anxiety he felt. "I'd say probable cause if we want to arrest him. But
we won't get an indictment." Nelson cleared his throat.
"And the original indictment, the
RICO charges, without Gaudia's testimony?"
He said, "Acquittal.
Sixty-forty." Nelson's grimace was the equivalent of hunkering down in
a bunker before a bomb detonated.
But Petersons sole reaction was
to press his teeth together. His breath hissed out from between them
and then he chewed on his tongue in rapt contemplation. He slowly
concluded that there was as much danger for him in the Crimmins case as
there
was potential to score one for the good guys.
It was time for the whole thing
to go away.
He told this to Nelson and added,
"Call Crimmins's lawyer. See if we can plead him away for a few years."
Nelson quickly responded, "Will
do," and noted coolly that this order was tantamount to scuttling two
years of work.
"What about Pellam? There's still somebody out there
looking to hurt him. Should we get Bracken or Monroe on it? I mean, the
guy could be in trouble."
Peterson wound up a toy Donald
Duck, which walked for ten inches, hit an indictment, then marched in
place until the spring wound down. "It's Pellam's problem now. He's on
his own."
*
* *
She drove quickly, racing along
Main Street in Maddox, past the empty storefronts, the darkened real
estate brokerages,
the Goodwill Store. The car spun up a wake of
bleached, dull leaves.
Nina had driven from Cranston to
the Federal Building in St. Louis. She hadn't been able to find Pellam
though his camper
had been parked in a lot across the street. It had
been empty. Where, she wondered, had he gone? She paced in panic up
and
down the sidewalk. She suddenly believed she knew. She had leapt into
the car and sped back to Maddox.
Now, driving along deserted Main
Street, she was not so sure she had guessed correctly. The emptiness
seemed to laugh
at her. Where the hell is he?
As she skidded around a curve
beside abandoned grain elevators, images jumbled in her mind. Pellam
standing in the field beside the brown Missouri, aiming his Polaroid.
Nina herself applying makeup to a petite blond actress wearing a yellow
sundress riddled with bullet holes. Pellam lying in bed next to Nina
herself. The huge kick of the Colt automatic that jarred her arm from
wrist to shoulder every time she fired it.
*
* *
"You know something?" Ralph Bales
asked the question in a normal volume, though it echoed loudly through
the empty
factory. He looked around quickly, startled by the sound of
his own words returning.
The beer man did not apparently
want to know anything. Ralph Bales continued, "I don't even know your
name."
Introductions were not, however,
made. The man prodded him
farther inside with
the barrel of the cowboy gun.
Despite the muzzle at his back,
though, Ralph Bales did not feel in danger. Maybe it was how the man
was holding the gun—without desperation, more like a bottle of beer
than a weapon. Maybe it was his eyes, which were no longer as eerily
serene as they had been. They seemed more purposeful, as if the man
just wanted to talk.
In the rear of the warehouse was
a small cul-de-sac beneath a balcony. It was very dark here, lit only
by indirect light filtering
in from the huge arched windows, covered
with grime and dust. The floor was dusty, too, but much of that had
been disturbed by footprints. Directly in front of a Bee Gees poster
was a wood-and-canvas director's chair.
Ralph Bales stopped. The beer man
motioned him forward to the chair. "Sit down."
He sat. "This place is pretty
nifty. You shooting your film here?"
"Put these on each wrist." The
man handed him two pairs of handcuffs. "Right first, then hook it to
the arm."
"Kinky." Ralph Bales looked at
them closely. Property of Maddox Pol. Dept. was stamped on the
side. "Where'd you get these?"
"Put them on."
Ralph Bales relaxed
further. A
guy like this, an amateur, was definitely not going to hurt a
man handcuffed to a chair. He clicked one pair of cuffs on his right
wrist then to the chair. Then he locked the other cuff to his left
wrist. The beer man
stepped forward slowly and, with a ratcheting
sound, hooked the remaining cuff to the other arm of the chair.
He stepped back like a carpenter
surveying a good flooring job. He pulled the Colt out of his belt.
"Now. Who was in the Lincoln?"
So he had a tape recorder hidden
somewhere, trying to get a confession. "What Lincoln would that be?"
"Who was it?"
"Okay," Ralph Bales said with
amused frustration. "This is some kind of bullshit."
"The man in the
Lincoln. Who?"
"I don't know what you're—"
"What did you come down to the
Federal Building for?" Ralph Bales lifted his hands as far as he could.
The tiny chains
clinked. "I wanted to talk to you is all."
"What did
you want to say to me?"
"Okay, I was going to pay you to keep
quiet
about what you saw."
"But you had a gun in your
pocket, and only—" He squinted, trying to remember. "—forty bucks on
you."
"I was going to pay you a lot of
money—more than I'd want to carry around—"
"Who was in the Lincoln?" the
beer man recited persistently.
"I don't know, I really don't.
Sorry."
"I wish you'd be more cooperative,"
the beer man said with
disappointment, and shot Ralph Bales squarely in the center
of his
stomach.
John Pellam walked through the
cloud of sulfury smoke and looked down. "Not bleeding badly," he
announced.
Ralph Bales stared in terror at the
wound. His mouth was
open. "Why... ?" he whispered. "You shot me.... God, that hurts."
"Who was in the car?"
"Why'd you do that for, why'd you
do that?"
"Who," Pellam asked evenly, "was
in the Lincoln?"
"My God," Ralph Bales whispered,
gazing with shocked bewilderment at Pellam. "I'm going to die."
"If you don't tell me I'm going
to shoot you again."
"I don't—"
Pellam shot him again.
A huge explosion. The bullet hit
a few inches to the left of the first wound.
"No, no, man . . . Stop! I'll
tell you." Ralph Bales jerked his head to flick sweat out of his eyes.
"Okay! Philip Lombro! Now call a doctor!"
"Who's he?"
Ralph Bales did not hear.
"Please! I'm going to bleed to death. Please . .."
"Philip?"
"Lombro! Lombro!"
"Who's he?"
"Oh, man, I'm going to faint."
Pellam cocked the gun. "Who
is he?"
"No, no, don't, man, not again!
He's some real estate guy. Don't do it again."
"Spell it."
"Spell what? Oh, man ..."
"His name."
"L-O-M-B-R-O."
"Why did he want Gaudia dead?"
"I don't know. I didn't ask. I'm
going to faint. Oh, shit. Some personal thing. I swear to God. He hired
me to do it. I'm
bleeding to death."
"Where does he live?"
"I don't know. Man, believe me. I
don't know. In Maddox
somewhere. His office is
on Main, that's all I know. He's in the phone book. What do you want
from me? For Christsake, call a doctor." With tearful sincerity he
said, "I'm a good Catholic."
Pellam did not move for a minute.
He smiled.
"No, man, no. Don't do it. You're
just going to leave me, aren't you? Don't let me die! I told you what
you wanted. Call the cops. Turn me in. But for God's sake, get me to a
doctor!"
"Would you testify against this
Lombro?"
"Absolutely. Oh, man, you want
it, you got it."
Pellam repeated the word softly.
"Absolutely." He rubbed the gun with his left hand. Ralph Bales was
crying. This seemed to irritate Pellam. He said, "They're wax bullets."
Ralph Bales kept sobbing.
Pellam said again petulantly,
"Would you stop crying? They're not real bullets."
"What?'
"I wish you'd stop that," Pellam
said, referring to the crying.
Ralph Bales slowly caught his
breath. He frowned. He looked down at his gut—at the two large splats
of bright red blood. As far as the handcuffs allowed, he pulled his
shirt apart. There were huge reddish welts where the bullets had struck
him but the skin was not broken. Fragments of white wax were bonded to
the cloth which was stained with dark blood.
Ralph Bales began to cry again,
but they were tears from hysterical laughter. "You son of a bitch, you
goddamn ..."
That was when a shadow appeared
on the floor beside the men.
The heads of both the men snapped
sideways. They saw sensible pumps, a woman's pants, a denim jacket.
Nina Sassower's pale, pretty face.
And the gun in her hand.
"Nina!" Pellam called.
Ralph Bales began to relax.
Pellam said, "What are you doing
here?"
Her voice was distant, as if she
were speaking through layers of silk or gauze. "I thought you'd come
here."
"You should leave. What's that
gun for? This's got nothing to do with you."
She stepped closer, looking gaunt
and pale. Her skin was matte and her eyes were two dark dots. She
looked at them both and her eyes quickly settled on Ralph Bales's
wounds.
"Oh, God, Pellam ..."
He told her they were fake
bullets, then squinted as he noticed her concerned eyes gazing at the
man in the chair. "Do you know him?" he asked.
She turned to him. "I'm sorry,
Pellam."
"What do you—?" He started toward
her.
She quickly lifted the big Colt
toward his chest. "No. Stay where you are."
"Nina!"
"Put it on the floor. Your gun,
put it down."
Pellam did. Then he laughed
bitterly. "It was all planned, wasn't it?"
"It was all planned," she
whispered.
"You picked me up at the
hospital, you had me get you a job so you'd be close by... Who are you
working for? Lombro?
Or Crimmins? Peterson? Who?'
"I'm sorry, Pellam. I'm so sorry."
Ralph Bales said, "Did Phil send
you? Oh, man .. ."
He moaned in relief. "Come on,
honey. Get me out of here."
Nina squinted, almost closing her
eyes. Pellam knew what this meant. He leapt to the floor as the three
jarring explosions
from Ninas automatic filled the room. Windows
rattled, and dust from the tin ceiling floated down around the three of
them
like gray snow. The shadows of startled pigeons zipped across the
windows.
TWENTY-FOUR
Pellam slowly stood, dizzy from
both the fall and the pounding to his ears from the gunshots.
Reluctantly he looked across the
room.
Ralph Bales had taken all three
rounds in the chest. The chair had not toppled backwards but had turned
forty-five degrees sideways under the impact. The man sat motionless,
head down, facing the windows as if he were dozing in the weak sunlight.
Nina carefully unchambered the
next round and extracted the clip. The empty gun, the slide locked
back, went into her purse. She then stooped and began to collect the
spent cartridges from the floor with impatient but fastidious care as
if she were picking up socks from her bedroom carpet before vacuuming.
Pellam quickly uncuffed Ralph
Bales's wrists, pocketed the cuffs, and wiped the chair free from
fingerprints. He then hurried Nina outside and into the car. His fear
of impending police was unwarranted, however; the gunshots had not been
heard or,
if so, had perhaps been attributed to the final scenes of Missouri
River Blues. They drove to a nearby park on the river bank.
"You know where I got the gun?"
Nina whispered. "My father kept it in his upstairs desk drawer of our
house." She wiped
her tearful eyes.
"Oh, you should have seen that
desk," Nina continued. "It was a rolltop. Oak, I guess. Dark, with
those thin yellow streaks in
it. You unlocked it with a brass key that
always needed polishing. There was such a wonderful sound when the lock
turned. Then you'd lift up the top and there were dozens of these
little compartments, lined with green felt. Some of the compartments
had... Some of them had..."
She cried for a moment. Pellam
made no gesture of comforting her.
"Some of the pigeonholes had
little doors with knobs on them. We would go searching for secret
compartments. We looked
up under drawers, we tapped the back with
hammers, listening for hollow spots. We found the gun when we were
children,
but we didn't think much of it. It had been years since I
thought of the desk. Then last week I remembered it. I remembered
the
gun and I went over to my mothers and got it. I've been practicing
since then. That brought back so many memories. The two of us looking
through the desk. As little girls. Looking for toys, for paper clips,
for—" The tears were strong now. "My sister and me..."
"Your sister," Pellam said, and
finally he understood. "She was the woman with Vincent Gaudia, the one
who was killed that night."
Nina said, "All the papers talked
about was the cop who was shot and about Gaudia. Nobody said anything
about Sally Ann. Nobody cared about her. The day after she was killed I
stayed up all night trying to figure out how to find the man who'd done
it. I thought I'd wait until the police caught him and then at the
trial I'd shoot him. But that might take months and maybe by
then I
wouldn't have the courage to do it. So I decided to meet Donnie. I saw
his wedding picture in the paper and it said he was in Maddox General.
I planned to get to know him and see if he could tell me the killers
name."
"And you met me instead. Your
mother wasn't really in the hospital?"
"No. My sister was my only
family. She was the relative who died I told you about in the camper,
the funeral—when we
were looking for that field. Not my aunt. That's
why I started to cry."
"You overheard Donnie arguing
with me. You heard him say I knew who the killer was."
She nodded. "I'm sorry, Pellam."
There was sadness in her voice. But contrition? None at all.
"Why the job with the film
company?'
"I knew he'd be looking for you.
I thought sooner or later he'd find you."
"You had that gun with you all
the while?"
"Some of the time."
That was why she had been so
upset when she was attacked at the factory, she explained. She hadn't
had the gun with her then; she regretted missing the chance.
The chance to shoot an FBI
agent. Pellam didn't tell her this. "But her name wasn't the same
as yours. Your sisters, I mean."
"No. Sally Anns name
was Moore.
It's her married name. She was divorced a few years ago. Pellam, was I
wrong? I mean, think about it—the policeman was doing his job and he got hurt.
And Gaudia was a terrible man and he got killed but all my sister did
was go to dinner with him. She was innocent."
Pellam doubted whether going out
with Vince Gaudia qualified you as a totally innocent human being. But
he didn't think
Nina was wrong at all to do what she'd done. Why, he
himself had been wandering the barren streets of Maddox with a
gun for
exactly the same reason—to get revenge for Stile s death.
"I wanted to kill him,"
she said. "I didn't want him to just go to jail. I had to do it myself."
Pellam said nothing.
He leaned forward and put his arm
around her. He smelled the sour cordite in her hair from the gunsmoke.
He rocked his
head against hers. But this gesture was halfhearted.
Pellam's thoughts were elsewhere.
They drove up the street for a
short ways until they found a pay phone. Pellam stopped, climbed out of
the car.
"Are
you going to tell the police
about me?" He looked at her for a long moment but said nothing. Her
reaction was to pull down the car's visor, flip it open, and begin to
brush her wispy blond hair.
*
* *
Pellam consulted a card in his
wallet then dialed a number.
In a slightly accented voice a man said, "Hello?"
"Mr. Crimmins, this is the friend that
spoke to you
last night." Pellam had called the man to tell him not to panic when he
heard Peterson announce an impending arrest.
"Ah, well, yes. How are you?"
"Fine. You?"
Crimmins chuckled at the
etiquette. "I'm great. I assume things've worked out."
"There's been a slight
complication."
"Serious?"
"No, not really."
'That's good."
"But I wonder if your associate
Mr. Stettle's free to help me for about an hour."
"I think that could be arranged."
"Tell him to meet me at the
corner of Main and Fifteenth in downtown Maddox in half an hour."
"Is this a possibly risky
situation?"
"I don't think so. But could you
ask him if he'd bring some garbage bags?"
"Garbage bags?"
"He'll understand."
They went to the lounge and
meeting her there, rather than in his room, replaced the evening with
Nina as the best thing that had happened to Donnie Buffett for a year.
"You shouldn't smoke," he told
Wendy Weiser as she lit her cigarette.
"I know." She inhaled three times
and stubbed it out. That's all I smoke anyway. And just twice a day.
Well, three times."
He nodded at the lie
and looked
her over. She was off duty today and had come in solely to meet with
him. She wore tight, faded blue jeans and a leather jacket over a
T-shirt imprinted with a slogan. He made her pull the jacket aside to
reveal the words: "Once I thought I was mistaken. But I was
wrong." He liked her earrings: A tiny gold fork hung from one lobe and
a matching dinner knife from the other.
What was so good about the
meeting was that he was no longer a prisoner. Or rather, he was not the
same degree of
prisoner. He had been in maximum security and
now he had been upgraded to minimum. It wasn't yet straight time but
that
was okay. For the first time in almost two weeks he had a sense of
motion—Buffett moved past things rather than being the stationary
object. The breeze was stale and it smelled of antiseptic and
steam-table food but it moved nonetheless and that
was wonderful.
His maiden voyage in the
wheelchair. He had insisted on piloting himself and Weiser hadn't
objected though j she said it was against the rules. He had a feeling
that Weiser knew what the hospital could do with their rules and
probably told them so frequently. Buffett shoved off hard from the
doorway of his room. But his arms were stronger than expected and he
had lost control, caroming off a water cooler and a candy striper's
backside before he got the feel of the chair.
They had wheeled, and walked,
down the corridor, Buffett considering whether to tell Weiser about the
night with Nina Sassower. It was the sort of thing that she probably
ought to know; it might help with his therapy. But he kept mum. He
hardly wanted Nina to get into trouble. Anyway, if he didn't blow the
whistle there was always the chance she might come back again.
He wondered if he could do it three times in one night.
The lounge consisted of a dozen
Formica tables, bright blue and chipped. Against one orange-painted wall were old, battered vending
machines, for coffee and hot chocolate, for candy, for soda. Some bulbs
in the soda machine were burned out. The front said, OCA OLA.
She asked what he wanted.
Buffett said he'd have an 'oke.
Laughing hard, she said, "I'll
have an 'iet 'oke."
"How come? You got a great
'igure."
They laughed some more and she
walked over to the snack machine. She bought a pack of peanut butter
crackers. "Dinner," she said. And he almost asked her out
then—casually, thinking he would just wonder out loud if sometime she'd
like to grab a bite with him. But the Terror nuzzled him viciously and
the opportunity to ask the question suddenly closed. Then she was at
the table, lighting, inhaling on, and stubbing out the cigarette.
He was slightly disappointed when
she took a manila folder out of her attache case. This made the meeting
more professional, less social. She set it in front of her but did not
open the file.
"Donnie, you're out of spinal
shock now. There has been good restoration of sensation and control to
many of your functions.
I think bladder and rectal control will be
almost normal. And, as I told you, there's no reason that I can see
that sexual functioning won't ultimately be fine ..."
Buffett was clamping down on the
inside of his cheek to keep from smiling. "Ultimately."
"It's clear now that the most
serious and permanent damage will be to your legs. There may be some
improvement but most likely it'll be along the line of faint response
to external stimuli. As far as walking again, on your own, well, it's
the way I told
you before, Donnie."
She offered him a cracker. He
shook his head. She ate it then sipped the soft drink.
"There's a lot of research going
on now in this area; most of it's trying to isolate substances—some are
like hormones and
some are structural proteins . . ."
He smiled to himself as he felt
himself sinking into the brilliant quagmire of her brain.
". . . that affect how the
neurons reach and talk to their receptor cells—"
Donnie nodded and appeared, he
believed, to be interested.
". . . something called FNS."
"Feminine . . . ?" He wanted to
make a joke, but his mind went blank.
"Functional neuromuscular
stimulation." Her eyes sparkled as they always did when she spoke about
science and she explained about some contraption that you hooked up to
your leg muscles to send in jolts of electricity to stimulate them in a
certain order. Eventually, using this device, you could propel yourself
in a jerky fashion by using canes or a walker.
She kept talking but Donnie
Buffett stopped listening. He was deciding that whatever FNS was
exactly he'd never get hooked up to anything like that. Buffett knew he
could sit in a wheelchair for the rest of his Ufe and maybe cry
sometimes and maybe scream and he could see himself pitching a lamp
through the TV set after watching Jeopardy! or Wheel of
Fortune one too many times. And he could picture himself wheeling
out of the house and getting a job. Learning to do wheelies, learning
to go over curbs by himself, developing huge, ball-buster arms and a fifty-inch
chest. But no machines. Just like, if he were blind, he would use a
cane but never rely on a dog. He couldn't explain what this distinction
was exactly but to him it was real and it
was the difference between
his heart being alive and being cold dead.
He noticed that Weiser had
stopped talking and it seemed as if she had asked him a question. He
didn't feel like asking her
to repeat it. He said, "Would you go out
with me?" He added, "I mean, have dinner."
When she declined, as he had
somehow known she would, it wasn't with a shocked or, what would have
been worse,
maternal smile. She looked at him with the intrigued gaze
of a married woman at a party, propositioned discreetly by a
man she
finds attractive.
A pleasant regret, not an
astonished surprise.
She added, "We should stay
friends, you know."
And when she said that, the
Terror nudged Donnie Buffett once, hard, bringing sweat to his
forehead, but then it curled up somewhere inside him and, for the time
being, fell into a deep, deep sleep.
TWENTY-FIVE
"There's a man to see you, sir.
He says his name is Pellam."
"Pellam? Do I know him?" Philip
Lombro said, running a chamois over his Bally shoes.
"He knows you, sir."
"I'm busy. Take his card."
Lombro sat back in his leather
chair and stared at the floor. Dense clouds passing by outside would
cast diffuse shadows
on the green carpeting then a moment later the
harsh sunlight would return.
The intercom clicked. again and
startled him. The electric voice said, "He says it has to do with the
late Mr. Bales."
Lombro cleared his throat. "Send
him in."
Pellam walked into the office. He
looked around at the somber burgundy and navy books—business books,
lawyer books. The desk. The pattern of cloud shadows on the verdant
carpet. The view out the window, the smooth deco designs on the
old
brick building across the street.
Pellam sat down, uninvited, in
the chair directly opposite Lombro's. "Your hit man is dead."
Lombro swallowed and folded the
square of chamois carefully. Yes. It was him. The one with the case of
beer, the man
who'd seen him. "You're the witness."
"The witness." Pellam said the
word slowly, tasting it, letting the sibilant draw out over his teeth.
"Mr. James?"
"No, it's Pellam."
Lombro shook his head at this,
confused. Then he said cautiously, "You cheated me."
Pellam frowned. "I'm sorry?"
"You took my money and you still
went to the U.S. Attorney. I heard the news conference."
"What money?"
"The fifty thousand? The money
Ralph gave you ..."
The voice faded and Pellam
obvioulsy came to the conclusion that was setting prominently into
Lombro's mind. They shared rueful smiles.
Lombro said, "I see."
"The quality of your hired help
leaves a little bit to be desired."
"So it seems. He's dead, you say?"
"An accident."
"I see. Are you here to loll me?"
This he asked in a matter-of-fact voice.
"No," Pellam said.
"I swear I forbade Ralph to hurt
you. All he was going to do was pay you to—"
"But, he came to the Federal
Building yesterday with a gun. You knew that."
Lombro's mouth closed and he
touched some strands of silver hair at his temple.
"I want to know why you had
Gaudia killed."
"Are you a policeman?"
"No."
"But you have a microphone on
you."
Pellam took off his jacket and
turned out the pockets of his shirt and jeans. Lombro, eyes fixed on
the grip of the Colt in
Pellam's waistband, took the bomber jacket and
felt through the pockets.
"I just want to know," Pellam
said sincerely.
Lombro crossed his legs and
gripped his ankle with his right hand, rubbing his fingers along it. He
did not sort through his thoughts. This was a story he had planned to
tell for some time. Perhaps to his prosecutor. "I love my nieces like
daughters.
I've never been married. Never had children. Have you?"
Pellam didn't answer.
"One niece of mine was eighteen.
She was a sweet, sweet girl. But she was somewhat heavy, unsure of
herself. She was going to school and working part-time as a waitress in
a restaurant that Vincent Gaudia would sometimes eat in. Gaudia was a
generous man with money. He would give her twenty-dollar tips. Then it
was a fifty-dollar tip. And after that it was the
promise of a
hundred-dollar tip. I suppose you can guess what happened.
"They spent a few nights
together, and then Gaudia simply forgot that she existed. But the poor
child believed she'd fallen in love with him. I tried to convince her
otherwise but she was inconsolable. He refused to take her calls and
answer her letters. Finally she went to his home. It was late at night,
after she got off work at the restaurant. She left his house at two in
the morning, and on the way home, drove through red light. Her car was
hit by a truck and she was lolled. She had been drinking and had had
sex just an hour before.
The evidence indicated the sex
was of a sort I choose not to describe."
"One of the two thousand," Pellam
mused.
"I'm sorry?"
"I've heard Gaudia had his share
of women. She was a conquest."
"Just so."
"The police said the accident was
her fault but, of course, it wasn't. It was Vincent Gaudia's. He
seduced my niece. It's as if
he murdered her. This is what Gaudia did
to my family and when my brother refused to do anything about his
daughter's
death, I decided to."
"Old World revenge."
"If you will."
"You knew that Bales or his
partner killed the woman who was with Gaudia too. They shot that cop.
And a friend of mine."
Lombro shook his head. There was
alarm and sorrow in his face. "This has all gone so wrong. So wrong! I
should have done the manly thing. I should have lolled him myself and
taken the consequences. I'm not a coward. I just didn't understand how
these things worked. Have you called the police?"
"Not yet, no," Pellam said. He
looked around the office, at the paneling, the prints on the walls. He
asked, "What're you worth?"
"Pardon?"
"Money, you know. How much do you
have?"
"I don't really know."
"A million?" Pellam suggested.
Lombro smiled. "More than that.
Why are you asking?"
Pellam said, "What does that
mean? 'More than that.'"
"I don't exactly know,"
Lombro
said stridently.
"You're in the real estate
business?"
Lombro reached toward his knee
and picked a piece of lint from his slacks. "And I've been in that line
long enough to understand when an offer is about to be made."
"You know," Pellam said, "they
have this service in some states. It's called the crime victims'
reparation fund or something
like that. You ever hear about it?"
"No."
"When someone's mugged or raped
they get some money. Somebody gets killed, the family gets it."
"And
you're suggesting I pay you something." Pellam hesitated, then he
laughed. "Yep. Exactly."
"How much?" Lombro opened his drawer.
Then,
perhaps deciding a check might not be the way to handle something like
this, closed it again.
"I'm thinking mostly of the policeman that got shot."
"Whatever. How much did you have in mind?"
"He's paralyzed, the cop. He'll never
walk again. Life's going to be
pretty expensive for him. Housekeepers, special cars.
And by the way, I
got fired thanks to you."
Lombro looked up from his shoes,
which he now planted on the carpeting? "I am being very honest when I
tell you that I
didn't want you hurt and that I didn't want anyone to
die except Gaudia. I hope you agree I had a ... well, an honorable
motive for doing what I did. I don't think you'll hurt me."
"No," Pellam said, "I don't have
any intention of hurting you."
"You can, of course, go to the
police and tell them what happened. But what it really comes down to is
my word against
your word. I've been involved in plenty of litigation. Lawyers call cases
like this a liar's match. Who believes whom? I think I stand as good a
chance of being believed as you do. I'm influential in this town. I'm
one of the few businessmen still able to pay taxes, which I do in great
abundance. I'm well known in the assessors office and in city hall,
too. So, although I sympathize
with you and your friend, you don't
really have much leverage. I'd consider ten thousand for each of you."
"Nope, that's not enough." Pellam
took a small cloth square from his pocket and dropped it on the desk.
"Take a look." Lombro unfolded the handkerchief and looked at the
business-card case inside. He opened it up, shrugged, and dropped it
back on the handkerchief. Pellam scooped the case up and put it in his
pocket.
"And who," Lombro asked, "is
Special Agent Gilbert?'
"He's the man buried in the
foundation of one of the buildings you're putting up. A project outside
of St. Louis. Foxwood.
I get a kick out of those names for
condominiums. Stonehenge. Windcrest. Do people really—"
"What? There's no one
buried in—"
"And sad to say, he'd been shot
with a gun that's buried in your yard at home."
"Impossible. I don't own a gun."
"I didn't say you own a gun. I
just said the gun was buried on your property."
'This is nonsense."
Lombro's silver face flushed and
his eyes darted. A distinguished man made common. A powerful man,
impotent. "Your policeman friend. Is he helping—" Lombro stared at
Pellam's jacket pocket. He whispered, "And I just put my fingerprints
on his ID card, Didn't I?"
"Not to say they'd convict you.
But Agent Gilbert was involved in the Gaudia murder. He
threatened me and my
friend."
Pellam added, "And
I'd feel obligated to being a personal
acquaintance of the U.S.
Attorney. I'd feel it was my
duty."
Philip Lombro looked out the
window at the brick of the
building across the way. He glanced down, licked his finger, and
lifted a fleck of
paper or dust off the heel of one of his shoes, black
cherry, tasseled Ballys, polished like dark mirrors. Pellam
started to speak but didn't. He paused, staring at the shoes,
frowning as if he'd seen them somewhere before but was unable
to remember exactly where.
* * *
Tony Sloan was still not, in
general, speaking to Pellam using the strongest language Pellam
had ever heard him but he made
an exception to
explain that because the machine guns had been released
and the ending of the film was
successfully in the
can,
half of Pellam's fee would
be released. The rest Sloan was retaining to help defray the cost
of the delay.
"You want to play it that way,
Tony, then I'll see you in court."
Sloan had shrugged and taken up
the vow of silence again, returning to the editing van, where
close to five hundred
thousand feet of film and an extremely discouraged editor, awaited the
arrival of the director's artistic vision.
Pellam had gone directly
downstairs to Marriott's Huck
Finn Room to crash the wrap
party.
There he drank Sloan's champagne
and ate the catfish
tidbits and hush puppies while he chatted with the cast and crew, all
of them exhausted from the trials of the final days of the shooting
that they did not know, or care, if he was still an untouchable.
He looked over the crowd.
He saw the make-up artists in the corner. Nina Sassower was not
among them.
Pellam wandered over to Stace
Stacey, as exhausted as anyone but still retaining his unflappable good
spirits. Pellam handed
over the unused wax bullets and the empty .45 casings Stace had loaned
him. Pellam nodded at them. "Wouldn't mention this."
Stace pocketed the munitions and
touched his lips with a
forefinger.
Pellam told him about
Sloans holding
back his fee. Now
on his third or fourth cuba libre Stace was pretty loose.
'Trying to squeeze you, is
he? That man is a hundred percent son of a bitch," the arms master said,
using the strongest
language Pellam had ever heard him utter.
"But you'll work with him again."
"Oh,
you betcha. And you'll be in line
right behind
me."
"Probably,"
Pellam said.
A woman appeared in the doorway of the
banquet
room.
Pellam recognized her as one of Sloans secretaries. She
urgently waved a slip of
paper at him. He wondered if Sloan had changed his mind
and was
reluctantly
releasing the rest of the money. Not that it truly mattered. Fifty thousand
dollars had just been transferred
from Philip Lombro's investment company into Pellam's account at
a bank in Sherman Oaks.
"You got this fax, John. It's from Marty Weller in Budapest."
And was apparently just about to
be transferred out again, to finance Central Standard Time.
She handed it to him and headed
back toward a cluster of actors but got no farther than Stace Stacey,
who encircled her
waist and rose on tiptoe to whisper something in her
ear. She giggled.
Pellam unfolded the fax. It took
a whole page of producer-babble for Marty Weller to break the news to
him that Tri-Star
was going to be picking up Paramount's
fallen standard and financing the terrorist script, which Weller would
be producing in lieu of Central Standard Time. The Hungarians
were going to Tri-Star with him. They asked Weller to say hello to
Pellam, whom they felt they knew already and whom they had dubbed the
American Auteur. They hoped that perhaps in the future they
all might work together on a "clever-scripted, hey knock-em-dead cult
film noir project."
Pellam folded the paper and
slipped it into his back pocket. He lifted another champagne off a
passing tray. He closed his
eyes and rubbed the cold flute over his forehead.
Stace returned a moment later. He
was without the secretary but the expression on the arms master's face
was not that of a rejected man. He smiled agreeably and said to Pellam,
Tomorrow morning, let's you and me go shooting, what do you say? We'll
take the Charter Arms and the Dan Wesson and shoot up some cans. Maybe
they even have rattlesnakes around here."
Pellam opened his mouth to make
excuses, but then he said, "As long as I don't have to get up too
early, Stace."
"Oh, no, sir. Film's over. We're
on vacation now."
The basketball court on Leonard
Street in Maddox is closed most of the time. It's part of a school
playground but because
of budget cutbacks, the Department of Education
can't afford to keep it open when school's not in session, and the gate
is locked at 5:00 P.M. Not that it matters much; the local kids have
pried apart enough chain link gate to slip through for
pickup games any
time they want.
The court is asphalt. There's a
lot of graffiti on the brick walls surrounding it—names of kids and
gangs and some of those flashy, three-dimensional block letters and
drawings that the talented punks do. But the asphalt itself is clean as
black marble
in a church. Nobody messes with foul lines.
Tonight, a mild, humid night in
December, two men are at the fence. The opening in the gate would be
big enough for them
to pass through if one of the men weren't in a
wheelchair. It's a small chair, gunmetal blue and sporty, with wheels
tilted; at the
top, they're closer together than at the bottom. The man
who is standing looks around and takes a geared, carbon-tempered bolt
cutter from a large, cylindrical canvas sports bag. He props one long
handle on his hip and, using both hands on the other handle, severs one
side of a link of chain, then the other.
They enter the court. The man in
the chair speeds forward under the thrusts of his powerful arms, which
are dark with hair.
Pellam says, "Go easy with an old
man, huh?"
It takes a while for
Donnie
Buffett to get used to dribbling but he's played good offense for years
and knows how to keep
the ball away from his body while controlling it.
He does have a problem, though, because he can only coast in for a shot.
If he uses his arm to move forward, he goes in circles. What he does
is, he sets the ball on his lap and speeds in for the
lay-up.
Pellam
whistles loudly through his teeth and cries, "Traveling."
"So what're you back in town
for?" Buffett asks him after sinking the shot. "That Missouri
River
movie?"
"Nope. That's in post production
now. July release date. I'm suing the director for my fee and credit."
"That's a hassle."
"Goes with the territory. I just
came back to do some scouring for another script."
"What's this one called?"
"Central Standard Time."
"Sounds boring. Who's going to be
in it? You should cast Geena Davis. I really like her. Or Shelley Long.
You ever watch Cheers?"
"Nobody's in it. Nobody's even making
it yet. When I was here I saw some locations that looked pretty
good. I wanted to check them out this time of year. That's when the
story takes place. Winter."
"That's pretty wild. Two movies
in one year. Maybe Maddox'll be the new Hollywood."
"Hollywood started out as a desert,"
Pellam tells him.
"How long you here for?"
"A week or two. Then I'm heading
on to my mothers place, upstate New York, for the holidays."
Buffett usually makes his shots,
which Pellam finds extremely frustrating. Pellam has been watching the
Lakers all season.
He tries to fly up to the basket and stuff the ball
in, but he comes nowhere close. He is a terrible player. The Nokona
cowboy boots don't help much.
Buffett gets the rebound away
from Pellam and sinks another.
"Hell with this," Pellam says.
"Let's see a slam-dunk."
They play for a half hour and
take a break for beer.
In response to a question Buffett
tells Pellam he isn't seeing Nina anymore. "That's over with. It was
just a fluke thing. I
never knew what to make of her. She was moody a
lot. It was like she had some big secret or something."
"I picked that up, too." Pellam
wipes his mouth with his sleeve and thinks they're crazy to be drinking
beer in December.
And crazy to be playing
basketball now, too.
"Did I tell you?" Buffett asks.
"What?"
"Penny's moved out. We're getting
a divorce."
"You're going to what?"
"A divorce. Get one."
"God," Pellam says.
"Well—"
"I think that's awful."
Buffett looks away, inordinately
embarrassed, and swallows a lot of beer. "It happens."
"Did she find out about Nina?"
"No. She still doesn't know."
Pellam shakes his head and starts
to wave his arm at Buffett's legs but changes the motion to encompass
the entire court.
"All this and she decides to leave you?"
"No, Pellam. Uh-uh. I'm the
one getting the divorce. It's my idea. She's going to live with her
parents."
"Oh." This, too, Pellam thinks is
crazy. He looks at Buffett for a moment. "All this and you leave
her?"
"Yep."
"Why?'
"You were over to the house. You
really have to ask?"
"But you'll be living by
yourself? A time like this?"
Buffett shrugs. "I guess, yeah."
Pellam gives him a
more-power-to-you shrug and practices dribbling. The ball gets away
from him. He hops in front and
stops it, then asks, "You see Dr. Wendy
lately?'
Th'other day."
"So?"
"Nothing new. Same old prognosis."
"You want to talk about it?"
"No."
They drink beer for a few
minutes, talking about the Knicks and the Lakers. Then Buffett says,
'They've tried these new
drugs on me. They don't have any effect."
"You gonna kill yourself?"
"I don't think so. Someday
maybe." Buffett is neither joking nor serious when he says this.
"I just thought of something. You
play poker?'
Buffett laughs at the idiocy of
the question. "Of course I play poker."
"You like chili?'
"No. I hate chili."
A breeze comes up and it's too
cold to sit still and drink beer so they head back toward the basket
and begin to play again. Pellam comes up fast and gets the ball away
from Buffett. He dribbles fiercely and lobs a long one, a
three-pointer, which
he knows isn't going to go in, but it hits the
rim, reverberates back»and forth madly and finally drops through the
rusty metal hoop into Buffett's waiting hands.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jeffery Deaver's novels have
appeared on a number of bestseller lists around the world, including
the New fork Times, the London Times and the Los
Angeles Times. The author of fifteen novels, he's been nominated
for four Edgar Awards from the Mystery Writers of America and an
Anthony award and is a two-time recipient of the Ellery Queen Reader's
Award for Best Short Story of the Year. His book A Maiden's Grave was
made into an HBO movie staring James Garner and Marlee Matlin, and his
novel The Bone Collector was a feature release from Universal
Pictures, starring Denzel Washington and Angelina Jolie. His most
recent novels are The Empty Chair, Speaking in Tongues, and The
Devil's Teardrop. There are two other books in the John Pellam
series, Shallow Graves, and the soon-to-be-released Hell's
Kitchen. Readers can visit his Web site at www.jefferydeaver.com.
JEFFERY DEAVER is the author ot
sixteen suspense novels, including The Empty Chair, The Bone
Collector, now a major motion picture from Universal starring
Denzel Washington, the New York Times bestsellers The
Coffin Dancer and The Devil's Teardrop, and his newest
hardcover, Speaking in Tongues. He is a four-time Edgar Award
nominee and his books have been translated into fifteen languages. As
William Jefferies, he is the author of Shallow Graves, BLOODY
RIVER BLUES, and one other Location Scout mystery soon to be published
by Pocket Books, Hell's Kitchen. Deaver was born in Chicago,
attended the University of Missouri, and received a law degree from
Fordham University in New York. He has residences in California and
Virginia. Readers can visit his Web site at www.jefferydeaver.com.