“Right,” I said, gripping the semi with my knees, “and what do men live on?”
“Men,” he said, with real scorn this time. “Skip it. We want women to be different, don't we? Don't you want Eleanor to be different? And they're not. That's the tragedy of the world, and the ancient gods knew it. Women are just like we are. Remember Pandora?”
“Vaguely.”
“You persist in disappointing me. Pandora, say the Greeks, was the first woman. Another of Hephaestus' masterworks, created to torment mankind throughout eternity.”
“Why would Hephaestus want to torment mankind?”
“Well, I'm really taken aback. I thought you were many things, but I never thought you were ignorant.”
“So sue me,” I said.
“You got the fennel, I believe, on several occasions.”
“I can buy fennel in the supermarket. Not that I use a lot of it.”
“I'm sure, Simeon, that you understood the fennel. Please say you understood the fennel. One can take only so much disillusionment in one dose.”
“How do you know I'm not tracing this call?”
“Because you're alone. Because you wouldn't think it was fair. Because there's been no one at your house except that cretinous teenager who checked your mail and brought you that useless gun.”
“It'll punch holes in you,” I said, suddenly doubting that it would.
“You have to aim it at me first. And you won't get a chance. Pandora,” he said.
“Listen, Wilton,” I said, sweating buckets. “Stick Pandora in your ear. If she's too big, find someplace she'll fit.” I hung up.
I wiped my forehead on the way to the refrigerator for a bottle of Singha. At the moment I reached for the phone to call Schultz, it rang.
“You're making me break the rules again,” Wilton Hoxley said, and there was a nervous edge to his voice. “You already know how dangerous that is.”
“You're scaring me to death,” I said, hoping it sounded like a lie.
“If I'm not,” he said, “something is seriously wrong with you. About Pandora.”
“Oh, stuff Pandora.”
“Please stop disappointing me. You said to my mother that you knew who I am, but not why I am. Is that more or less accurate?”
“More,” I said, wiping my forehead with my sleeve and pulling the bandage away. The blood started immediately, and I held the cold bottle of Singha against the cut.
“Well, then, sit tight and listen. Have you got the gun with you?”
“I'm using it to keep my back straight.”
“Get your shirts starched.” Wilton Hoxley barked a laugh. “Listen, insect. After Prometheus took fire to earth in a stalk of fennel—”
“The fennel was painfully obvious,” I said.
“Obvious? Please. Was that why you had to go see that old fart Blinkins?”
“Blinkins and I are old friends,” I said, warding off a sudden desire to cross myself.
“Of course you are. We all love Blinkins. Do you like the Greeks?”
“As Greeks go.” I was regretting the fact that I'd spurned Schultz's offer of protection.
“Then you'll like this,” he said. “Pandora was Zeus' revenge against Prometheus' treachery. She was the first woman, remember? After Prometheus gave fire back to human beings—who were all apparently men at that point—”
“Sounds like a world you would have liked.”
“You can't goad me,” he said. “Listen. Prometheus had a stupid brother—”
“Epimetheus,” I said.
“Bully for you. And Epimetheus was living, with a lot of other males, on the corrupt earth. Zeus commanded Hephaestus, who could do anything over the fire in his forge, to create Pandora. Then, just to cover his bets, he told Hephaestus' wife ...” He faltered.
“Aphrodite,” I said. “A beauty married to a clubfoot.”
“Hera was Hephaestus' mother,” he said. It was the first thing he hadn't meant to say.
“Chucked him out of heaven,” I said.
“All the way to the glittering sea,” Wilton Hoxley said. “But he got back—”
“Which is more than you've managed to do.” The semi was still cold between my knees. My cut had stopped bleeding, so I drank some beer.
“You're boring me,” Hoxley said flatly. “I'm way beyond baiting.”
“What's next, Wilton? You got a new mission?”
“My mission at the moment is to explain to you about Pandora. Aphrodite made her irresistible, like a tailor cutting a coat for a dandy. And she went to earth, this girl, this ancestor of Eleanor's, and she attached herself, as she was meant to do, to stupid Epimetheus.”
“And she brought her box with her.”
“Oh, good, you are sentient. And the box contained all the evils that the gods could conceive to plague mankind, and she, with feminine curiosity, opened it. The only good thing in it, the spirit Hope, was trapped inside when Pandora, terrified by the things she had let loose upon the world, snapped the lid shut. Typical woman,” he said. “Too little, too late, like all of them. And you think I still want Eleanor? Although I'll admit that it would be interesting to see her burn.”
“What's next?” I asked out of sheer desperation.
“Oh, Simeon,” Wilton Hoxley said, “out of all the people in the world, I would have thought you could have figured out what's next. You know my history. If you can't work it out, what's the use of faith in this world? I simply cannot tell you how disappointed I am. Why should Eleanor, why should anybody, trust you with her life when you're such a stumblefoot?”
“But wait,” I said. He disconnected.
part four
INFERNO
I have slain my own dragon.
—Serial murderer Dennis Nilsen
18
Happiness Hills
This is what it said:
127.
The letters were black and even, set in type. They occupied maybe a square inch of paper that must once have been the upper right-hand corner of a left-facing page. There was nothing else.
The cheery canary-yellow envelope was tiny, the kind little kids get birthday cards in. It had arrived in the regular mail, and my name and address were in blue ballpoint in a normal, everyday handwriting, a small and precise handwriting but nothing as inhumanly rigid as the square, tightrope-straight gold calligraphy of the first notes.
I might have dismissed it, except for the return address on the envelope's back flap. It said: From the forge of Hephaestus.
“One twenty-seven,” Schultz said over the phone. He lit up.
“Page one twenty-seven,” I corrected him.
“Yeah,” Schultz said. “Put it in the mailbox. We'll call the Topanga P.O. And tell them we'll be by to pick it up after they collect it. We'll analyze it six ways from Sunday.” Then he started to cough.
“You really ought to quit,” I said. “Your prognosis is terrible.”
“Look who's talking,” he said.
There's not a lot you can do to get ready for someone who's promised to burn you to death, but in the two days between my telephone conversation with Wilton Hoxley and the arrival of the three-number note, I'd done everything I could think of, mainly to keep moving. Sometimes even a futile gesture can be reassuring.
I'd started on Friday morning, the morning after the call.
“Six eight-gallon plastic buckets,” said the checker at the Fernwood Market, ringing them up. “Twenty-four— can that be right, twenty-four?—cotton towels, two, um, sixteen-foot garden hoses, four of whatever these are called, at two-twenty-nine apiece.” I didn't know what they were called either, but they were short lengths of metal tubing with spiral threads at both ends. She dropped them into the bag. “Two nozzles?”
“I've got two hoses,” I explained.
“Piano wire?” she said, holding up a spool.
“It's a jazz piano. Always wants to get wired.”
“And seven sets of wind chimes,” she said, putting
them onto the counter with an unmelodious clatter. “All those bells,” she said. “Let's hope you're a sound sleeper.”
“Let's hope I'm not,” I said.
I coasted Alice into the Valley, where I bought an extralarge sweat suit. Last stop was a Thrifty Drug Store, all overbright white fluorescent lights and underpaid brown help. The help sold me three of those thin plastic raincoats that meteorological paranoids fold up and carry in their pockets. All the way home I hummed complacently.
But halfway up the driveway, toting my haul in two huge cardboard paper-towel cartons with Bravo Corrigan trotting along at my heels and offering moral support, I got mad. If I hadn't had to behave as though I were living under a mad scientist's microscope, I could have carried the things up a few at a time, like a normal suburban American, over the space of an hour or so; instead, I'd needed cartons so he couldn't see my surprises, pathetic as they were. I dumped the junk where I stood and clambered up to the phone to call Schultz's number of the moment.
“Where's he living, damn it?” I demanded.
“Nowhere.” Schultz sounded hoarse, but there was no way to tell whether it was from nerves or nicotine. “He's underground.”
“You're checking hotels?”
“And motels, and rooming houses. Literally every cop in this city has his picture. And it's just jerking off, Simeon, and you know it. It could take weeks.”
“Has he bought a new Mazda?”
“Nein. We're plugged into the DMV. All Mazda sales are being filtered out and fed back to us. There's a lag of a couple of days from the sheer volume of the data, but so far—say, up to forty-eight hours ago—nothing.”
I thought. “Maybe an RV. Something mobile. Does Mazda make an RV?”
“RVs,” Schultz sighed. “Okay, we'll get the RV transfers, too. I don't think Mazda makes an RV, but he may not need a Mazda any more. That may have nothing to do with his new mission. He may be a new god by now.”
“Something mobile,” I said. It sounded right. “Something he could sleep in. It would solve all his problems. He could move around, plan whatever the hell the new mission is, not have to check in anywhere at night.”
The line was silent for a moment. “An RV would be pretty big,” Schultz said.
“So?”
“He saw the kid checking your mailbox. After he torched the Mazda.”
“Whooee,” I said.
“Can't be that many spots where you can park an RV,” Schultz said. “Can there?”
“Check the RVs, okay?”
“Sure. Same forty-eight-hour lag, though.”
“Norbert,” I said. “You're a brick.”
Before exploring Schultz's idea, I went out and lugged the cartons the rest of the way into the house. Bravo Corrigan had gone to sleep in the shade. The sun's heat sat on my shoulders like a fat, feverish kid. Thumb-sized bumblebees droned drunkenly through still air. A big one had decided to give up and rub its legs around in the dust. I stepped over it enviously, staggering along beneath the weight of the boxes.
The junk got dumped, like junk, in the center of the living room. I went into the bedroom to get my hawk-watching binoculars, a nice pair of lightweight Nikons that Eleanor had given me for my thirty-fifth birthday as a subtle way of contradicting my conviction that I was growing farsighted in my old age.
I closed the curtains to let the house cool, or at least stop heating up, for a few minutes. Then I moved methodically around the house, opening each curtain only a couple of inches and surveying the hills opposite.
The house perches very precariously on a ragged, triangular point of land that is almost the highest in the canyon. Rising behind it is a sheer cliff of decomposed granite that stretches twenty-five or twenty-six feet to the peak of the mountain. There is no way up to the peak except to leave the road and claw your way up through the rattlesnakes and chaparral, an unpleasant fifteen-minute hike highlighted by scratched arms and legs, branches in the eye, and worse. I'd done it, out of pigheaded curiosity, when I first rented the place. In front of the house and on both sides is nothing but air.
Half a mile through the air to the north is a tough-looking gang of scrub-covered granitic mounds, not quite mountains, that shoulder their way roughly northwest, toward the Pacific. They have not yet been developed, which makes them an endangered species. A raw interlocking system of dusty red firebreaks runs up and down them. To the south, three quarters of a mile away, is a long, high landslide-prone ridge, sharper than fur bristling on a mad dog's spine, which some optimistic realtor had named Happiness Hills Homes. The mountains in front and west of the house are almost five miles away, and beyond them the ocean wrinkles and smooths itself in the sun.
Seen through the binoculars, between four inches of open curtain, the firebreaks in the granite mounds to the north looked suicidally precipitous. Up the gentlest-sloping of them, though, ran an unsurfaced dirt road for heavy equipment that would easily accommodate traffic in two directions: a possible. The mountains in front of the house were just too damn far away for him to have seen anything, unless he had the Hubble Space Telescope and he'd managed to fix the mirrors.
Happiness Hills Homes looked pretty good. There was plenty of access, and five building lots had been gouged into the face of the rock. Some of them had even withstood the record rains of February and March. On three of them the unfinished Homes of Happiness Hills baked in the sun, all open beams and broken rectangles of sheetrock. The developer had been working on spec, and not a nail had been driven into the houses since two of the pads spilled down the hillside on a fifth consecutive day of rain. Another profitable tax write-off, another hillside ruined.
I hadn't bothered to look for Hoxley's spy-hole for two reasons. First, he was supposed to be looking at me so he could see there weren't any cops hanging around on the edges of things, and second, he could have been practically anywhere while he was driving the little Mazda. But now, if he was literally on the move, roaming the streets in a big, fat RV, he had a new set of requirements. And anyway, I thought, why not let him see me looking for him?
The problem, of course, was that I might find him.
Still, it felt good to be going on the offensive. I jumped lightly over the cartons in the living room, grabbed an apple from the refrigerator, and hiked down the driveway to Alice.
The southbound motorist on Old Topanga Canyon Boulevard, if he or she was stricken with an inexplicable compulsion to visit Happiness Hill Homes, would yield to the compulsion by turning left over an ugly raw concrete bridge that had been poured across Topanga Creek. He or she would then proceed almost vertically upward via a wide road, unpaved but liberally and repeatedly sprayed with oil. He or she would strike a substantial number of the large rocks that litter the road's surface, and he or she would watch his or her temperature gauge rise airily toward the red sector. By the time he or she reached the circle at the top, he or she would probably be swearing liberally. I stopped swearing when I got out of Alice, who was steaming like the teakettle in a British farce, and saw tire tracks in the dust around the periphery of the oiled circle.
A wind tugged at my shirt and threw dust in my face as it blew over the ridge, drawn out of the baking San Fernando Valley by the low atmospheric pressure over the ocean. A fire wind, a steady flow of dry air that can push flames in front of it for days. It dried the sweat on my forehead as I knelt and looked at the tracks. They were very wide, wider than any I'd ever seen on an RV. They could even have been from the wheel of a tractor. Maybe they were going to begin building again. Maybe I was wrong about Happiness Hills Homes.
The pads radiated off the circle like the petals of a daisy. Each of them was reached by a short path, probably an embryonic driveway, that cut through the waist-high brush. Lizards scuttled away from me as I took the path leading to the highest pad.
Pad number one was a fragment. Most of it had rumbled down into the canyon during the rainstorm, leaving a gaping red scar that stretched for a hundred feet or so below it. Granite bou
lders had rolled down onto what remained, probably during the same storm, creating a moonscape of jumble and clutter. I climbed out onto it nevertheless and found cigarette butts, tinsel from a fresh pack, and two used condoms.
Pad number two held one of the partially built houses, just a skeleton of timber with a few empty windows framed in place and some finished stonework around what was ultimately to have been the fireplace. A small rattler sunning on the warm stone of the hearth politely announced itself in plenty of time for me to stop and back away. Other than that, there was nothing at all of interest, unless you counted the splendid view of my house and mailbox, below and almost a mile away.
The rattler was the hero of the day. It was small, which meant that its brothers and sisters were likely to be frolicking in the neighborhood, the healthy rural children of Happiness Hills Homes. The small ones can be as venomous as the whoppers. Bearing that in mind, I negotiated the path to pad three much more slowly than I had to the other two, walking heavily and deliberately with my eyes on the ground. If I hadn't been looking at the ground, I wouldn't have seen the fishing line.
It ran, stretched taut, between the upright timbers of the frame, passing through screw-in eyelets about four inches above the ground. The line was transparent, but the sun was almost directly overhead, and a gleam scooted along it as I approached. The gleam was tiny, but, thanks to the rattler, it was enough.
He'd been thorough, just as he'd been at the Doopermart. The fishing line traversed the entire perimeter of the house, four inches above the concrete pad. After I'd stood there for about ten minutes, just looking, I stepped over the tripline and onto the pad. Moving very slowly, I traversed the pad. It was as clean as if it had been swept. I was pretty sure that it had been swept.
This house was Plan B. Unlike the one on lot two, a stairway ran down from the pad to reach a lower level. A tripwire, stretched across the stairway four inches above the fourth step down, was virtually invisible. A foot coming down on it would have done the job, whatever the job was. It took me quite a long time, standing absolutely still and cupping my hands around my eyes against the sun's glare, to determine that it was the only one. I stepped over it, going down, as though it were a foot thick.
Incinerator Page 22