Michael Lister - Soldier 01 - The Big Goodbye
Page 1
Books by Michael Lister
Power in the Blood
Blood of the Lamb
Flesh and Blood
North Florida Noir
Double Exposure
Thunder Beach
Florida Heat Wave
The Body and the Blood
The Big Goodbye
Blood Sacrifice
Burnt Offerings
Separation Anxiety
The Meaning of Life in Movies
Finding the Way Again
The Big Goodbye
Michael Lister
Pulpwood Press
Panama City, FL
Copyright © 2011 by Michael Lister
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
This is a work of fiction. Any similarities to people or places, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Inquiries should be addressed to:
Pulpwood Press
P.O. Box 35038
Panama City, FL 32412
Lister, Michael.
The Big Goodbye / Michael
Lister.
–—1st ed.
p. cm.
ISBN: 978-1888146-78-3 (hardback)
ISBN: 978-1-888146-79-0 (trade paperback)
ISBN: 978-1-888146-80-6 (ebook)
Library of Congress Control Number:
Book Design by Adam Ake
Printed in the United States
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For Emily Balazs
Table of Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
The Big Goodbye
Michael Lister
Chapter 1
I had not yet recovered from shooting Stanley Somerset when I saw her.
Part of me hoped I’d never see her again. Part of me was constantly looking for her, scanning every crowd, straining to see around every corner, peering into every slowly passing car.
The funny thing was, I only saw her on that rarest of occasions when I wasn’t looking for her—like when I was in the middle of a case, having just shot a man.
Ray and I had been hired by a voice on the phone and a check in the mail to locate a sixteen-year-old runaway from Nag’s Head, North Carolina.
It hadn’t been difficult. The man she had run away with—her forty-eight-year-old step-dad—who had a room in the Dixie Sherman Hotel downtown wasn’t capable of keeping a low profile.
“It just don’t add up. You gonna run to Panama City, you stay at the beach, right?” July, our part-time secretary, said from the backseat of Ray’s big Packard. “Why bring her to the Dixie?”
Like Ray, the car was squarish and conservative, a late-model black four-door sedan that made him feel like a cop.
We were parked on Fifth Street beneath a warm October sun, the planted palms lining the sidewalks flapping in the wind, unable to provide any shade.
“Dixie Sherman’s nice,” Ray said. “Besides, they got beaches where they ran away from.”
Ray Parker, former Pinkerton agent, had seen the world—or so it seemed to me and July. The two of us had barely left Bay County. He was nearly twice as old as we were—wise, too. We never doubted a word he spoke—which was easier than you might imagine. Buttoned up Ray rarely spoke. He was obviously pleased by the possibility of pinching the kind of creep who’d run off with a little girl. We all were.
“Jimmy, you know what I mean, don’t you?” July asked me. “Why bring her here at all?”
She wore her hair in a short feather cut, pincurls around her ears and on top of her head. She did this, she had confided in me one time, to de-emphasize the roundness of her full face, which was just silly. She had a cute face and a long, thin neck. Girls can be so silly sometimes.
“For what we don’t have,” I said. “The lady paying our bills.”
“The wife,” July said.
“The mother,” Ray said.
Sitting at the corner of Jenks and Fifth Street, the Dixie Sherman, the only high-rise around, was built in 1925 by W. C. Sherman, and had one hundred and one rooms, each with a bathroom, a telephone, and elegant furniture—all starting at just three bucks.
When it opened in 1926 many locals referred to it as the “white elephant” downtown and called it “too much hotel” for the area, and maybe it was—back then, but here in the fall of 1943 its rooms were always full and its dance floors were the place to be on a Saturday night.
The couple in question pulled up in a new blue torpedo sport coupe Pontiac, parked, and walked into the lobby.
Thunk.
Thunk.
Thunk.
Three slamming car doors later we were following behind them.
July didn’t usually tag along, but Ray thought she might cozy up to the little sixteen-year-old dumb Dora while we put the cure on her daddy. Ray had saved July’s life on a case he worked before I joined the agency, and had been saving her ever since. She wasn’t much of a secretary, but then there wasn’t much we needed a secretary for. She was stuck on Ray, looked at him in that dreamy, wide-eyed I-owe-you-my-life way that’s worth shelling out the dough of a part-time salary for.
Though Ray hadn’t been a cop for a long time, he still stood out like one, so while July and I hopped the elevator with Stanley and his stepdaughter, Ray took the stairs.
As the elevator ascended, I pretended to be keen on July, which wasn’t hard to do. What was hard was groping her with one arm, but she was swell about it, and as I kissed her neck, she coyly fought off my advances. When the doors opened on their floor and they stepped out into the empty corridor, Stanley looked back and said, “Come on, mister, at least wait’ll you get to your room.”
“Don’t get your pulleys all twisted up, you old fuddy-duddy,” July said, pretending to try to get at him as I held her back. “Ain’t like this is Fifth Avenue or somethin’.”
I nodded toward my missing arm. “Just got back from the war and I’m a little overheated. Didn’t mean no harm. Sorry your little girl had to see it.”
“That’s okay, soldier,” he said. “We all appreciate what you boys—”
“That ain’t his little girl,” July said. “Look at her. Sh
e’s a doll for creeps like ’em young.”
Just as he was supposed to, the man stepped toward us, preparing to protect the dignity of his daughter-bride.
I snapped out a hard left jab—well, as hard as I could with my left—and the punch caught him square on his left cheek.
He staggered back a bit, but didn’t go down.
So I hit him again. This time, a left hook that connected with his right cheek and buckled his knees. He went down, the closing elevator doors bumping into his prostrate body as he did.
Before I could grab him, little Lisa was on top of him, making sure he was okay between turning and yelling obscenities at me.
“We’re here to take you home, Lisa,” I said.
And that was my mistake.
They both perked up when they heard me use her name.
“Your mom hired us to find you and bring you home,” I continued, unaware a guy as sick as Stanley would be paranoid enough to suspect something like this.
“I won’t go,” she said.
“Oh yes you will,” I said, reaching down and grabbing her. “And your daddy’s going to jail.”
When I pulled her off him, Stanley came up with a gun.
That’s me, Jimmy Riley, boy genius.
“Stupid son of a bitch,” I said.
“On the contrary,” Stanley said. “I was ready for—”
“He’s talking about himself,” Ray said as he walked up behind Stanley with a gun of his own. “He should’ve known you’d be packin’ a rod. Put down the heater, Stanley,” Ray said. “I’m a very good shot.”
“Okay,” Stanley said, dropping his head and lowering his gun.
Suddenly, he grabbed Lisa, spinning her around for a shield and sticking the gun to the side of her head.
“Put your gun down.”
Behind Stanley I withdrew mine as Ray placed his on the ground.
“Just relax,” Ray was saying.
Stanley spun around to face us, placing Lisa between us.
“Get around there with him,” he yelled. “Drop your gun.”
We did and I did, my little revolver clanking against Ray’s as it hit the floor.
“We don’t want to live if we can’t be together,” Stanley said.
“I’m not going back,” Lisa said. “I’d rather die.” She then cut her wide and wild eyes up toward Stanley. “I’m tired of running. Tired of her chasing us. Shoot me, baby. Let’s die together. Today. Right here. Right now. She’ll just keep sending ’em. She don’t understand. Nobody does.”
Stanley nodded.
“Kick the guns away from you,” he said.
We did.
“Kneel down.”
We did.
“Stanley,” July said, “she’s clearly an unstable and melodramatic little girl. What’s your excuse?”
“She can’t understand,” Lisa said to him. “She’s never been in love.”
As they talked, I felt back to the .22 in my ankle holster with my left hand. My movements were awkward and clumsy. I hadn’t gotten used to using my left yet.
Coughing to cover the sound, I pulled it free.
“Honey, this ain’t love,” July said. “It only feels like it. You’re the one who’s never been loved.”
“Why you fuckin’ floozy,” Lisa said, then turning back to Stanley, “Bump her off, too, Daddy. Do it for me. Whatta you say?”
Stanley thought about it for a minute, then nodded.
At that, Lisa lit up. Bending over toward July and sticking her face out like a child much younger than she was, she said, “Guess who’s gonna take a powder with us, huh? Huh?”
When Stanley let go of Lisa and raised his gun toward July, Ray lunged toward him as I brought up the small revolver and fired it.
The bullet hit his right leg just before he squeezed off a round. He flinched and missed July, the bullet lodging in the elevator wall behind us. Before he could fire again, Ray had tackled him to the ground and taken away his weapon.
Lisa dove for our guns, still on the floor about five feet away, but July kicked them out of reach. She then jumped up and began flailing at July, who easily blocked most of the kicks and hits, and, quickly growing weary, slugged her in the stomach. She doubled over, trying to take in air, but nothing happened. When she finally could take a breath, she began to cry.
A couple of hours later, after Lisa had been picked up by a rotund police matron, and Stanley had been taken into custody and to Lisenby Hospital to have the bullet removed, and my old partner had taken our statements and let us go, the three of us were riding back down in the elevator.
“She was right,” July said almost to herself.
When Ray didn’t say anything, I said, “About what?”
“I never have been in love.”
“Neither has she,” I said.
“Have you?” she asked me.
I nodded, images of Lauren flashing in my mind like buoys bobbing in the bay on a stormy night, not daring to speak for fear of what might come out.
“Was it anything like that?”
I remembered how gladly I would have died for Lauren when we were together, how badly I had wanted to die when she left me. I recalled the passion and obsession that had so often bordered on madness, and the way in which nothing else in the world seemed to matter—no, that’s not exactly it, the way there didn’t seem to be anything else in the world when we were together.
I shook my head. “No. Nothing like that.”
And then the elevator doors opened and Lauren was standing there with a dandy I didn’t recognize—the poor grotty sap she had her hooks in now.
The timing couldn’t have been worse. I still had the jeebies from shooting Stanley, still raw from the memories July’s questions had resurrected.
Time seemed to stop as I projected onto him all her lies and betrayal. Instantly, standing there all togged to the bricks and high-hating, he embodied all I hated about her faithlessness and my weakness.
Before I realized what I was doing, I had knocked him down, pinned him to the ground with my body, and was punching him repeatedly in the face with the bottom of my left fist.
Friend and father figure that he was, Ray pulled me off him, and when I tried to get through him to continue my assault, he committed a little assault of his own—on me.
Chapter 2
“I hope he’ll be all right,” Ruth Ann said.
“She’ll do far worse to him,” I said.
We were sitting at the bar in Nick’s.
“Gee, mister, who gave you such a high opinion of women?” she asked, smiling before she took the next sip of her drink.
The playful question was rhetorical, so I didn’t answer. She knew damn well.
Nick’s was a small, dark bar that served hard, cheap liquor and lots of it. It had a Wurlitzer jukebox with fluorescent lighting, a small dance floor, and a couple of pool tables in a room in the back.
Ruth Ann Johnson, a Salvation Army nurse, and I often met here for drinks and conversation late at night when the place was filled with our kind of people. I was nursing a tall-neck bottle of Schlitz, staring into the large mirror on the wall behind the bar. She sat beside me sipping on a martini. In the mirror, I could see a few couples dancing in front of the jukebox, the colorful lights of its pipes and grille panels flashing on their faces. Beyond them in the back room, a handful of men in uniform from Tyndall Field and the naval section base were drinking and shooting pool like they meant it.
“I’m worried about you,” she said.
“Because I hit a guy?”
“Hit? You pummeled him, soldier, and you know it.”
I didn’t say anything. I had asked her not to call me that, but the more I asked, the more she said it. She knew better, but it was an assumption nearly every stranger made. I hadn’t been wounded in combat. I never got to serve. I got tangled up with the serious-intentioned end of a shotgun while I was still with the Panama City Police Department and any hopes I had of serving went th
e way of my right arm.
Unlike me, Ruth Ann had served in the war, helping wounded soldiers in the South Pacific before getting wounded herself. I think it was our wounds that made us such good drinking buddies, though we never really talked about my missing arm or her missing leg. I found mine a source of embarrassment, but I wasn’t sure why she avoided the subject of her heroism.
“You think he’ll press charges?” she asked.
I shrugged. “Probably not if it means explaining to his wife why he was at a swanky hotel with another doll.”
“How you know he’s married?”
“It’s my business,” I said with a smile.
I glanced at the bullet hole in the mirror behind the bar, the web-like veins spreading out from it, and recalled a recent case of marital unhappiness involving Angel Adams and her hood husband, Mickey.
“I thought trouble was your business?”
I laughed.
Though I’d never seen her get all dolled up, not even once, Ruth Ann was still the kind of girl guys called doll. She had thick blonde hair worn above her shoulders and flipped out on the ends and big blue eyes that looked interested even when they weren’t. She was small and looked like somebody’s cute kid sister.
“Hey doll face.”
I turned to see a sailor leaning against the bar on the other side of Ruth Ann.
“What’ll you have?”
“Some more quiet conversation with my friend here,” she said, jerking her head back toward me, her blonde hair swishing about as she did.
“You with lefty?” he asked, leaning around her to glare at my missing right.