Any Man's Death

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Any Man's Death Page 19

by Loren D. Estleman


  He looked around for wood to knock, but found none. Even the logs in the log cabin kit were plastic.

  “I got a good relationship with my ex,” the man said. “She could shake a lot more out of me if she knew everything I was in. If I give this to my kid and he gets glue and shit in his hair, she might get pissed off enough to take another look.”

  “So build it with him. Call it a bonding experience, excuse the pun.”

  “I can’t spend that much time with the whiny little son of a bitch.” The man returned the box to the shelf. “Why’d you pick this place? River Walk not public enough for you?”

  “That’s the idea. If you want to attract attention, set up a midnight meet in the park. What you got?”

  The black man turned his back on a woman browsing nearby, drew a doubled-over manila envelope from an inside breast pocket, and held it out. Davis didn’t take it. Most Americans automatically accept an offered object, but most Americans haven’t spent years avoiding summonses and subpoenas. He asked what was in the envelope.

  “Medical report on Jackson. He fractured his ulna in a pickup game day before yesterday.”

  “What’s that? That thing in your throat?”

  “That’s the uvula. The ulna’s a bone in your forearm.”

  “They scratch him?”

  “They don’t know about it, and he ain’t telling ’em. He didn’t go to the team doctor. He was on the d.a. list most of last season and he don’t want to get traded. He’s starting Sunday.”

  “Who says?”

  “The guy that got me the report. You going to question that?”

  “I question everything but the pregame show. Any X rays?”

  “He risked a burglary beef just getting the report. Anyway, you can fake X rays. This has the doc’s signature.”

  “Yeah, like you can’t fake that.” Davis took the envelope and tapped the man’s chest with the end. “If Jackson snaps a hundred-yard pass Sunday, I’m looking for you, your guy, and the doc.”

  “Yeah, yeah. Just remember me when he fumbles.”

  Davis slid the envelope inside his blazer. “Get your kid the John Wayne video. It’ll keep him busy three hours. Your old lady’ll be so grateful she’ll take you back.”

  “Man, that’s the last thing I want. I just don’t want her to know about the Safeway in Houston.” He slid the shrink-wrapped VHS tape of The Alamo out of the revolving rack. “Think he’ll understand it?”

  “What’s to understand? It’s the Duke.”

  A small crowd had gathered in the courtyard to hear the lecture. Davis circled around it and cut back through the mission, where he stopped to poke a dollar bill into the donation box, then touched the forbidden wall on his way out the big oak double door.

  The air outside was thick and hot and smelled of the river. When he’d first arrived from Chicago, accustomed to the wind shaving off Lake Michigan and the abrupt changes of season, he’d thought he’d never get used to the heat, but he’d acclimated quickly. It had helped that returning East was not an option. He’d slept with the wrong not-quite widow, gotten careless and sold the same bogus shares to two investors who know each other, made a couple of other miscalculations that had taken the shine off Lincoln Park and the Sears Tower. In the end it had been a good thing. He liked westerns and really was proud of Texas’s history, and it was comforting not to have to change his address every few weeks. And no one begrudged a bookie his profit, or at least not seriously enough to do anything more about it than question his parentage. That was okay, because he really was a bastard and a son of a bitch. He had the birth certificate and the ironing-cord scars to prove it.

  He’d parked his bottle-green Jaguar on Crockett, down the block from the Menger Hotel, where Teddy Roosevelt had sipped ginger beer in the mahogany-paneled bar and recruited Rough Riders for the war with Spain. He was eager to read the report, which if it was genuine would pay off the place in Galveston, to start. But the only spot he’d been able to find was in the sun, and the air would be too hot inside the car until the climate control got its toe in. He’d go over the material at home with one of Eugenia’s margaritas.

  He couldn’t imagine a more pleasant reading experience. In the four years he’d been running his sports book, he’d never had a tip that looked so much like early retirement. Inside information of that type was the Philosopher’s Stone in his business, the Grand Slam, the Royal Flush, the six-figure rare coin that drops out of the ceiling while you’re replacing the insulation. It was the stuff of urban legend. His source, second-string player that he was in his prime, flop that he’d been in business and his personal life, maintained extensive contacts throughout the world of professional football and had yet to fail him. Of course Davis had given him shit over it; it was the kind of thing that only happened to someone else.

  He threw himself into the fabric-covered seat—leather was never the wise man’s choice in the Sun Belt—folded and transferred the paper sun-shield from the dash to the bucket on the passenger’s side, and started the engine, sliding down the windows to let out the heat. He was reaching for the blower to the air conditioner when he smelled stagnant sweat.

  Something whirled over his head and closed around his neck with a jerk. He was yanked back in the seat, his backside and thighs lifted from the cushion. His hands went to his throat, but the thin wire was sunk too deep in flesh. His throat shut down. Blood whooshed in his head. His tongue swelled and his eyes stuck out like fingers.

  His right hand swept down, clawed air, found the shift lever on the steering column, and flung the indicator into drive. He jammed his heel down on the accelerator. The car shot ahead into a loading zone, where the right front tire struck the curb, forcing the wheels left. Davis got his fingers around the bottom of the steering wheel and spun it in the direction of least resistance. The Jaguar swept out into Crockett, crossed the center line, and sideswiped a delivery van, whose driver swerved and sent the van into a spin that ended when it slammed head-on into a low-slung Chevy Nomad filled with Mexican youths in the opposite lane. The Chevy’s horn honked; a polite noise and belated.

  The man behind Davis’s seat (it was always a man when a garrote was involved) lost his balance when the Jaguar struck the van, regained it as the car careered into the left lane, and leaned back with an animal grunt. Davis lost contact with the seat. Only his shoulder blades pressed against the top of the headrest. His foot came away from the accelerator. He made gurgling noises and felt froth on his chin. The scenery stopped spinning across the windshield and separated into black-and-white checks. Tiny vessels burst in his eyes, making light popping sounds like bubble wrap. His palm struck the steering wheel with a thump. He cuffed it like a flywheel. The Jaguar leaned into a wailing U-turn in the middle of the broad street. The stainless-steel grille of a medium-size truck whirled past, a line of pecan trees planted along the sidewalk, clusters of pedestrians. He saw a round Hispanic face, a flushed, shining, touristy face, the faces of a woman and the baby she was holding, a white-haired old man wearing huge glasses like Harry Carey’s. He could have picked them all out of a lineup.

  It all stopped with a wallop. The windshield turned white and disintegrated.

  Davis woke up thinking he was home in bed. The ceiling looked strange. A minute went past before he realized he was looking at the headliner of the Jaguar. He was sprawled across both front seats with his back bent over the console. His head ached and his throat felt like rusted iron.

  Memory slammed back in and his hands went to his neck. The thin wire, some kind of nylon fishline, was still tight, but he got a finger under it and pulled and it came away along with a ragged patch of skin. He was aware of faces outside all the windows and the shrill of a siren getting louder.

  He hauled himself sitting, bits of broken glass streaming off him. In a sudden panic he slapped his chest. He felt the stiffness of the envelope still in his inside pocket and relaxed. Through the space where the windshield used to be, he recognized the sandstone
wall and part of the brass plaque that identified the Menger. The Jaguar had jumped the sidewalk and rammed the hotel to the right of the entrance.

  He climbed up onto his knees, disregarding the crunching glass, and peered into the backseat. He could tell by the position of the man’s head where he lay on the floor between the seats that his neck was broken. His sphincter had released, filling the car with reek. The face was twisted toward him. It was a youngish, pale sort of face, almost eyebrowless, and unknown to him. He’d expected nothing else. They always sent strangers.

  TWO

  Peter said, “I’m back.”

  And almost before he had the door shut behind him she was all over him, kissing and grappling, healthy muscles working under smooth naked skin. Laurie was two-thirds his size but twenty years younger and nearly as strong. She was the only grandchild of an Ohio farmer, had milked cows, pulled weeds, and wrestled the steering wheel of an aged and disgruntled tractor for a dozen summers before joining her first health club. Laughing and growling, she had him half undressed before he appeared to remember he was still holding the copy of the Los Angeles Times he’d gone out to get. He let it drop to the floor to free his hands.

  From that point on the advantage was his. Peter was forty-four and looked it, with gathers at the corners of his slightly grim mouth, and did not appear particularly fit. But he carried her effortlessly to the bed and threw her down on it and was on top of her on the first bounce, dragging down the thin straps of her camisole and inserting a corded thigh between hers to press himself against her. His ferocity frightened her a little, as it had the first time, but it made her ravenous too, and proud. She was the woman who had discovered this savage thing, buried so deep beneath the ordinary exterior, and the knowledge filled her with proprietary satisfaction, as if she’d found Tut’s tomb, or better yet, the Loch Ness Monster. She tore at the buttons of his shirt and raked her nails across his hard chest with its sparse covering of hair. Between them they managed to push his trousers and shorts down to his knees and then he was inside her with his violence and heat. The penetration made her cry out.

  Afterward, he lay on his back with the sheet up to his waist, reading the paper while she ordered room service and then dressed. Peter was in the shower when the waiter came, a young Hispanic, polite and handsome in an overpolished sort of way, like the bullfighter in The Sun Also Rises with Tyrone Power. Laurie sent him off with a generous tip on top of the guaranteed fifteen percent gratuity, then set out the breakfast things, humming softly the theme from the old movie, which was playing all week on AMC. Splurging thrilled her. Before Peter she’d had to budget everything, even an occasional Saturday night out. There was much to be said for marrying a man who’d made enough from his own business to retire young. There would be no arguments over money, for one thing, and he wouldn’t be working late when she wanted to prepare a candlelit dinner for two followed by an evening of lovemaking.

  Or so she guessed. She actually knew very little about her husband of twenty-four—no, twenty-five hours. She wasn’t even sure if he ate breakfast, usually, or what he liked. But he’d been so absorbed in his newspaper, sighing contentedly as his heartbeat returned to normal, and she hadn’t wanted to disturb him by asking.

  The shower stopped running. Moments later she heard a clink and knew he was getting ready to shave. A man of regular habits, her husband, good hygiene, and consideration for others. She had yet to catch him leaving the toilet seat up. What a stiff, she could hear her girlfriend Cindy saying. Cindy liked bad boys: perennial five-o’clock shadow, parking tickets in the glove compartment, two years’ payments left on the Corvette. It didn’t matter that such men used her like toilet paper and left the moment they smelled commitment. It did to Laurie, which was why the next twenty years with Peter stretched before her as smooth and comfortable as sunshine on blacktop.

  He came out with a towel wrapped around his waist and smiled when he saw the breakfast cart. He had a child’s appreciation of the basics, like good food and a full night’s sleep, and although he limited his indulgence in both, he took no pains to conceal his pleasure from her. She felt trusted.

  She stopped pouring coffee to admire him. He was a good-looking man, in an average way. Even his thinning temples became him. His good physical condition was more apparent without clothes—no bulging biceps or six-pack abs, but no spare tire, either, and she knew from intimate experience that he seldom winded—and unlike some lovers she’d had, he didn’t flex or strike poses to present himself to advantage.

  She realized belatedly that he’d transferred his smile from the cart to her. “Would you mind leaving me the towel?” he asked. “I might spill hot coffee in my lap.”

  She blushed and looked down quickly. “I got scrambled and fried. I can take them either way, but I wasn’t sure about you. I hope you like pancakes.”

  “I like just about everything, except beets and cooked carrots.” He moved the upright chair over from the writing desk in the corner and held it for her.

  Eating, she took care to notice how he doctored his coffee and whether he tasted his eggs before he sprinkled them with salt and pepper. He used very little syrup, just enough to moisten the pancake on top of the stack, and no butter. “Do you avoid fats?” she asked.

  “It depends on my plans for the day. I don’t like to load myself down if I’m going to be moving around. You said you wanted to see where they filmed the original Ten Commandments. The concierge told me that’s clear up in the hills.” He bit off a corner of dry toast. “You know there’s nothing left to see.”

  “I know. It will be easier for me to imagine.”

  “You must be the only member of your generation who cares about anything made before Star Wars.”

  “My father made me watch old movies with him on cable. After a while I got to prefer them. That was just about the time he left.” She drank orange juice.

  “Some might say you married me to take his place.”

  His eyes smiled, so she contented herself with flicking drops at him from her water glass. “Next time I’ll marry a kid.”

  “I’d better be dead. One divorce was enough.”

  She knew he’d been married before, that there was a son who was nearly her age, but he never seemed to want to talk about it. She wondered if his first wife had bothered to notice the little things, the way she was trying to do. She was a child of divorce herself, and knew they were the things that mattered. They built and built and eventually exploded if left unaddressed.

  “Did you tell Roger we were getting married?” she asked.

  “I don’t know where he is right now. I got a postcard a month ago. He was in Amsterdam.”

  “What’s he doing there?”

  “Finding himself, I suppose. Smoking weed and probably worse with his new Dutch friends. Anyway, he’s probably not there now. He’s hitchhiking across Europe. He thinks he invented the idea.”

  “Don’t you get along?”

  “We’ve got a great relationship. Him in his hemisphere, me in mine.” He stuffed his mouth with pancake, and she knew that was the end of that line of conversation.

  She didn’t press him. There seemed to be a diplomacy to these first days, areas best not wandered into. She wondered if it was normal, and supposed for the sake of her peace of mind that it was. She knew so little about Peter, yet he knew so much about her. Laurie was a chatterer, mercilessly mining her background for incidents with which to fill awkward silences. He knew she was twenty-one, that she’d grown up in a suburb of Dayton, spending her summers and then her life after age thirteen on the farm following her parents’ breakup, and that she’d left home at eighteen to attend nursing classes at Ohio State, interning as a receptionist in a family practice center in Toledo. There she’d met Peter, who came in to have a suspicious mole removed, returned twice more for examinations, and came back a third time to ask the pretty blonde receptionist to dinner. She’d liked his looks, his quiet manner, and—professional prejudice—the way
he paid attention to his health and acted upon the messages his body sent him. She could not care about a man who did not care about himself. They were married six weeks later.

  Her mother, still embittered over her own marriage, had not approved. She and Peter were contemporaries, but her antipathy went beyond that. She seemed to suspect him of something, and he seemed to realize that and resent it. Not that they ever discussed their differences: Their stiff politeness toward each other reminded Laurie of the tension at home when she was small, and which she escaped by watching Jimmy Stewart or Merle Oberon emoting in some Hollywood Anytown. Mother had been especially hostile toward Laurie’s decision not to keep her maiden name. But Laurie believed in total commitment, and anyway she had never liked having to spell the German surname for people and correct their pronunciation. It pleased her independent spirit, in these slavishly post-feminist times, to have personal stationery printed reading Mrs. Peter Macklin.

  After breakfast, she sat on the edge of the bed and watched him dress. She was pleased to see him dispense with a tie in deference to California Casual, drawing a navy blazer with plain buttons on over an open-neck shirt and gray trousers. He dressed unobtrusively and always in good taste, but she decided she would do something about those white shirts and uninspired solid ties. Just because she was moving into a furnished life didn’t mean she couldn’t change the wallpaper.

 

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