Revolution #9

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Revolution #9 Page 32

by Peter Abrahams


  Charlie told him.

  “I’ll send it to the lab.”

  “And then?”

  “Then it depends on whether your story checks out.” Bunting glanced at the stitches, furtively this time. “If it does, the question arises: what caused the explosion?”

  Charlie shrugged. It hardly hurt at all.

  Bunting was silent. Then he sighed. “Perhaps it’s best,” he said, gazing into some imaginary distance. “Mr. Charles Ochs and his wife were terrorized by two drifters, an alcoholic ex-Vietnam vet and a woman of unknown identity. The cause of the explosion is being investigated. How does that sound?”

  “Fine, except for the car.”

  “Ah,” said Bunting. “I see you’re a natural at this kind of thing.”

  “No,” said Charlie. “I’m not.”

  Perhaps he’d raised his voice. “No offense,” Bunting said. “The car doesn’t appear to raise any difficulties. It may have been stolen. It’s registered to a San Francisco woman. Annie something. I don’t have all the details. We’re trying to trace her.”

  “And Hugo Klein?”

  “Hugo Klein? What’s he got to do with this?”

  · · ·

  Charlie drove himself home in the Beetle. He got out of the car and saw his view had changed. Straight Arrow was gone, and so was the dock. The weather had changed too. It was hot, and the pond glowed like lava in a crater.

  He went inside, stepping accidentally on one of Emily’s running shoes by the door. That was good. He’d been afraid she’d moved out and just hadn’t told him, not wanting to impede his recovery.

  He found her at her computer. The windows were open, but there was no breeze. She turned to him and smiled. Tiny beads of sweat clung to her upper lip.

  “Watch this,” she said.

  There were columns of numbers on the screen. She touched a few keys. “Here comes a category four hurricane, right onto my beach.”

  He watched the screen for a while. “Nothing happened.”

  “That’s the point. I’ve found a way to protect it.”

  “A storm like that went by and did no damage?”

  She nodded.

  “It’s a nice thought,” Charlie said.

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  Linda Marx Gardner awoke from a dream and felt her husband’s erection against her hip. Not nudging it, not demanding; just there. Earlier in her marriage, or maybe more accurately very early, on predawn mornings like this, the bedroom dim and shadowy, Linda would have taken hold of Scott and started something. Those predawn somethings, their bodies still loose and heavy with sleep, would usually turn out pretty good, sometimes better than that.

  Linda got out of bed. In her dream she’d been frantically erasing words from sheets of pink paper, but the words themselves were all forgotten. As she went into the bathroom, Scott made a little sound in his sleep, one of those soft grunts that indicate agreement. She had a funny thought, not like her at all: was he erasing something too?

  Then she was in the shower, her appointment book opening up in her mind, time blocks dense with her neat writing. There was going to be an overrun on the Skyway account, most of it from the photography screwup, but not all. Linda tried to figure out where the rest of it came from, letting go of everything but work so completely that she jumped as she caught sight of Scott through the steamy glass, his naked back to her as he stood before the toilet.

  She called to him: “Can you wake Brandon?”

  Scott said something she didn’t catch because of the shower’s noise, almost a roar—when they’d renovated instead of moving up from West Mill to Old Mill, they’d used nothing but the best, in this case the 10-Jet Tower from Kohler’s Body Spa collection—and when she looked again he wasn’t there. The water, hot and pounding, felt so good she could have stayed there all day. Linda turned off the shower at once.

  She got out, reaching for a towel with one hand, flushing the toilet with the other. Scott always forgot, or didn’t bother, or something. Her watch, on the granite sink top—black granite streaked with midnight blue, the nicest feature in the whole house—told her she was running two or three minutes late, nothing to be all tense about. She took a deep breath.

  “Bran? Bran? Bran? Bran?”

  Over and over. The word penetrated Brandon’s dreams, twisted them out of shape, finally woke him.

  “Brandon? You awake, buddy? It’s late.”

  Brandon came awake enough to know he had the covers pulled way up, know that he was totally warm, totally fuzzy, totally unable to get up or maybe even move at all. He got one eye open, not much, just enough to peer at his father through gummy lashes. His father: towel wrapped around his waist, shaving cream on his face, razor dripping in his hand.

  “I’m really not—”

  “Forget it, Brandon. You’re going to school.”

  “I feel like shit.”

  “You’re going. And watch your language.”

  Brandon didn’t say anything.

  “Show a little life. Sit up or something. Don’t make me come back here.”

  “All right, all right,” Brandon said, but the only thing moving was that one eyelid, closing back down.

  “And this room is really getting out of hand.”

  Brandon, almost asleep, barely caught that last bit. The inner fuzziness repaired itself quickly, knitting up the little hole poked through by his father and then some.

  · · ·

  A cut-glass prism dangled in the window of the bedroom across the hall from Brandon, a window that always caught the first light. As Brandon sank back into deep sleep, the sun blinked up through the bare tree limbs out back, sending a ray through the prism. A tiny rainbow instantly printed itself on the calendar hanging on the opposite wall, and not only that, but precisely on a special square, the one with the birthday cake drawn inside, eleven flame-tipped candles burning on top. That rainbow, quivering slightly on her upcoming birthday, was the first thing Ruby saw when she opened her eyes.

  She held her breath. This was proof of God’s existence. That was her first thought. She’d barely begun to deal with it, and its backpack—that’s how some thoughts were, they carried backpacks—that God took a personal interest in her, Aruba Nicole Marx Gardner, before her mind got going with the facts: sun, east window, prism, a rainbow that had to land somewhere, coincidence. That was the way Sherlock Holmes would see it, and she respected Sherlock Holmes more than anyone on earth. Didn’t love him—Dr. Watson was the lovable one—but respected him.

  Still, coincidence could be tricky. Take that time she’d been eating a baloney sandwich and reading a story about a frog, she must have been four, when she’d suddenly puked all over the place, including on Brandon beside her in the backseat, frog and baloney getting all mixed up in some way. That was how she saw it, and hadn’t touched baloney since. But she could hear Sherlock Holmes: “A long car trip and a winding road? One could produce the same result with peanut butter and a penguin.” Elementary, my dear Ruby.

  The rainbow moved on, sliding off her birthday, off the calendar, ballooning along the wall, warping around the corner of her open closet, vanishing in the shadows within. The spinning earth did that, stuck the rainbow in her closet. There would be lots of backpacks to that thought, but Ruby didn’t get to them. Some commotion kicked up down the hall, only the sharp notes getting though her door, like when one earphone conks out.

  “Scott? Didn’t I ask you to get Brandon up?”

  Muffle, muffle.

  “Well he isn’t, as usual, and it’s five after seven. Brandon, get up now.”

  Muffle.

  Then came sounds of movement, and Bran yelled, “Fuck. Don’t fuckin’ do that,” in that deep new voice of his, ragged at the edges, that vibrated the walls, and Ruby knew that Mom
had ripped the covers off him, which always worked.

  The sounds that followed—Bran getting up, banging around in his room, crossing the hall to the bathroom they shared, turning on the shower—faded as Ruby took The Complete Sherlock Holmes off her bedside table and found her place: “The Speckled Band.” Just from the title, she knew she was going to like it.

  Speckled. A word she’d never spoken. She tried it out loud for the first time. “Speckled. Speckled.” Her stuffed animals watched in silence from their perches on bookshelves. A strange word, with a kind of power, if that made sense, and maybe not power completely for the good. Freckled was on the good side, heckled a bit nasty, speckled different in some way she didn’t know. The garage door opened under her room and her dad’s old Triumph rumbled out, sounds that were far, far away.

  I had no keener pleasure than in following Holmes in his professional investigations, and in admiring the rapid deductions, as swift as intuitions, and yet always founded on a logical basis, with which he unravelled the problems which were submitted to him.

  Yes, that was it, what was so special about him. As Ruby read, her room went still, began to lose its physical properties, became less solid. The bachelor lodgings at 221-B Baker Street went the other way. Ruby could almost hear the crackle of the fire Mrs. Hudson had had the good sense to light, could almost—

  “Ruby! Ruby! Ruby, for God’s sake!”

  “What?”

  “I called you six times.” Mom, probably dressed for work, probably standing at the top of the stairs, that impatient look on her face, when the up-and-down line between her eyebrows appeared. “Are you up?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Don’t forget tennis after school, sweetheart.” Just from the change of tone, Ruby knew the up-and-down line had smoothed itself out. “See you tonight.” Mom’s voice trailed away as she went down the stairs.

  “Bye, Mom.”

  Maybe not loud enough, because there was no reply. Then Mom was backing out of the garage, lurching just a bit as usual, tires squeaking on the cement floor. The garage door closed—a long whine ending in a thump—and the sound of the Jeep Grand Cherokee, smoother than the Triumph and much less interesting, faded and faded to nothing. Sherlock Holmes deduced from seven spatters of mud that the terrified young lady in his sitting room had had a rough ride in a dogcart. A car honked on the street—Brandon’s ride. The terrified young lady was going mad from fear.

  Linda was dictating a memo about the Skyway account into her digital organizer when her cell rang. Deborah, her sister-in-law, married to Scott’s brother, Tom—Linda always caught her breath for a moment when Deborah called. She was excited about something. Linda could hear it just in the way she said, “Hi.”

  “Hi.”

  “Are you at work yet?”

  “Stuck in traffic.”

  “Me too.” Pause, but not a long one. “Did you get Brandon’s results?”

  “What results?”

  “The SAT.”

  “I thought they weren’t coming till next week.”

  “That’s if you wait for the mail,” Deborah said. “There’s a number to call as of seven this morning. You just need a credit card and patience—it took me twenty minutes to get through.”

  Linda’s dashboard clock read 7:32.

  “So you got Sam’s results?” she said. Sam, Brandon’s first cousin, same age.

  “Fifteen forty.” The volume of Deborah’s voice went way up, almost an explosion, like some spike caused by a change in atmospheric conditions. Linda held the phone away from her ear.

  “Is that good?”

  “Have you forgotten? It’s out of sixteen hundred, Linda. Sam’s in the ninety-ninth percentile.”

  Somehow she had forgotten; now it all came back. “That’s great,” Linda said, stop-and-go on the exit ramp. The homeless guy who worked this spot stared through her window, rattling his Dunkin’ Donuts cup. It all came back, including her own score, and she added, “Wow.”

  “Thanks,” said Deborah. “We kind of expected something good because of his PSAT—they track pretty closely—but still. Some kids do get sixteen hundred, of course, but we probably won’t have him retake it. With his tennis and community ser—” She stopped herself. “Anyway, here’s the number. Good luck.”

  Linda tried the number. Busy, and it stayed busy until she was about to enter the parking garage under the building, a cellular dead zone. That was when she got through. Linda pulled over to the side, her foot on the brake, the car in gear. Someone honked. Linda followed the automated menu on the other end, her heart suddenly racing. She needed Brandon’s social security number, which she had in her organizer, and a Visa or MasterCard number and expiration date, which she had in her head. It cost thirteen dollars. There was a pause, a long one, during which she found she’d actually broken into a sweat, and then the digital voice uttered Brandon’s numbers: “Verbal—five hundred ten. Math—five hundred eighty.”

  Linda clicked off and, as soon as she had done so, began to doubt she’d heard right. Five hundred ten? Five hundred eighty? That would be what—1090 on the SAT? Impossible. Brandon was a good student, almost always got A’s and B’s. Those digital voices were sometimes hard to understand—they tended not to emphasize the syllables a normal human being would. Maybe it had been 610 and 680. That would be 1290, the exact score she’d had years before. She didn’t think of herself as smarter than Brandon. It must have been 1290.

  Linda tried the number again. Busy. The clock now read eight on the button. She was going to be late. No one up there cared about five minutes or even ten, but Linda had never been late, not in the three years she’d been on the job. She let up on the brake, eased the car back into the long term check-in lane, hit redial. And connected. As she entered the garage, she went through the social security and credit card routine again, paying another thirteen dollars, waited for the long pause. While what? While some computer matched the social security number with the credit card number and activated a voice program. How long could it take? She stuck her parking card in the slot, jammed it in, really, and went through the raised gate as the digital voice said: “Verbal—”

  And lost contact, now in the dead zone.

  On the elevator, Linda tried once more. The building was seven stories, her office on six. Linda got through to the SAT number as she passed three, repeated the social security and credit card numbers as she was getting out, paying thirteen dollars yet again, listened to the long pause as she walked down the corridor. She opened the office door and saw to her surprise that everyone was gathered around the conference table for a meeting. They all turned to look at her. The digital voice spoke once more: “Five hundred ten. Five hundred eighty.” This time she caught the percentile too: “Seventy-fifth.”

  Brandon got into Dewey’s car.

  “Hey.”

  “How’s it goin’?”

  “I feel like shit.”

  “Tell me about it.”

  Dewey, the first of Brandon’s friends to get his license, had a joint going, which sometimes happened on the ride home but never in the morning. He passed it to Brandon. Brandon didn’t want to go to school fucked up, didn’t want to go to school at all, but shit. He didn’t take it any further than that, just hit off the joint, passed it back.

  “Could use some gas money,” Dewey said.

  Brandon handed Dewey three ones.

  “Am I driving a lawnmower and I don’t know it?”

  Brandon handed over two more, noticing that the fuel gauge read full. But so what? Dewey pulled away from the curb, squealing the tires just a bit. He switched on a CD, some rap about “fuck you, good as new, all we do, then it’s through” that Brandon hadn’t heard before. Not too bad.

  “School sucks,” Dewey said.

  “Yeah.”

  “I’m thinking about dropping out.”

  “You mean before senior year?”

  “I mean like now.”

  “But what about baseball?” Dewe
y had been captain of the freshman team and had started a few games for the varsity last spring.

  “I’m not going to be eligible anyway,” Dewey said. “I’m flunking two courses.”

  “Still time to get them up.”

  Dewey took a big hit off the joint, breathed out slow. “Right,” he said.

  Fuck you, good as new, all we do, then it’s through.

  Not too bad? It was great.

  “Who’s this?”

  “You don’t know who this is? Unka Death.”

  At that moment, Brandon remembered he had an English test third period, counting for 20 percent of the term grade. Macbeth. Hadn’t studied for it, had fallen asleep after the first few lines, some weird shit with witches that was meant to be symbolic or ironic or some other term he’d have to define, probably getting points taken off even though he knew damned well what they meant.

  “Got an idea,” Dewey said. “Let’s go to the city.”

  “What city?”

  “New York, for fuck sake. I know this bar in the Village where they don’t card anybody.”

  Almost two hours away. Brandon had been to New York maybe a dozen times, but always with his family. “I’ve only got, like, ten bucks on me.”

  “It’s cool. I’ve got a credit card.”

  “You do?”

  “On my mom’s account. For emergencies.”

  Dewey started to laugh. Then Brandon was laughing too. Emergencies: he got it. They drove right past the school. Buses were pulling in and the student lot was filling up. Brandon saw people he knew. Dewey beeped the horn. Brandon thought, Aw shit, as they went by. Dewey passed him the joint.

  “All yours,” he said, ramping up the volume on Unka Death.

  The house was quiet. Ruby loved having it to herself. The terrified lady told Holmes: You may advise me how to walk amid the dangers which encompass me. Ruby checked the time, stuck in a bookmark, the one with Dilbert’s boss—it had finally hit her that the boss’s pointy hair was meant to make you think of the devil, she was so slow sometimes—and got up. Out the window, she saw a cardinal at the feeder, poking its red head inside. It suddenly turned toward her window, then rose and shot off into the town forest behind the house.

 

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