172736.fb2 Down By the River Where the Dead Men Go - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 20

Down By the River Where the Dead Men Go - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 20

TWENTY

I woke up a little after noon. I was spread out on top of the sheets, soaked with sweat, still dressed right down to my shoes. My cat was lying sphinx-style on my chest, kneading her claws through my shirt, her face tight against mine. Starved for food or attention, it didn’t matter which. I got up and opened a can of salmon and spooned it into her dish. The smell of the salmon tossed my stomach and I dry-heaved in the kitchen sink. I stripped, climbed into the shower, stood in the cold spray, going in and out of sleep against the tiles. When I stepped out, the phone was ringing, so I went into the living room and picked up the receiver. Boyle was on the line, thanking me for the previous night’s tip.

“You get anything?”

“Nothing human,” Boyle said. “All the warm bodies were long gone by the time Vice secured the warrant. They found a whole bunch of tools, some lighting and equipment, a camera that had been blown to shit. Looked like someone had quite a party in there, from what I understand. I guess they were in a hurry clearing out.”

“I guess.”

“You sound a little tired,” Boyle said.

“It’s hot in here, that’s all.”

“Heat wave moved in this morning. Say it’s gonna be up around a hundred the next few days.”

“I’m working a shift this afternoon, so I’ll be out of it.”

“Uh-huh.” Boyle cleared his throat. “The porno operation in that warehouse-that have anything to do with the Jeter murder?”

“No. I thought it did, but it didn’t. I got in there, saw what was going on, and got out. Then I called you.”

“Right,” Boyle said after a meaningful pause. “Well, I guess that’s it. Take it easy, Nick.”

“You, too.”

I hung up the phone, got myself into shorts and a T-shirt, and headed down to the Spot.

Mai was behind the stick when I walked in. She gave me a wave, untied her apron, and walked out the front door. I stepped behind the bar. Happy, Buddy, Bubba, and Mel were all in place, snuggled into their stools, drinking quietly under the buzz of the air conditioner and the Sonny Boy Williamson coming from the deck. Buddy asked for another pitcher, his lip curled in a snarl. I drew it for him, placed the pitcher between him and Bubba. Happy mumbled something in my direction, so I fixed him a manhattan. I placed the drink on a bev nap in front of him, and he burped. The smell of Darnell’s lunch special drifted my way. I replaced the blues on the deck with an Impressions compilation, and the intro to “I’ve Been Trying” filled the room. Mel closed his eyes and began to sing. Looking through the reach-through to the kitchen, I could see Ramon doing some kind of bull-jive flying sidekick toward Darnell, Darnell stepping away from it with grace, the two of them framed beneath the grease-stained Rudy Ray Moore poster thumbtacked to the wall. I knew I was home.

Anna Wang came in from the dining area, leaned on the service bar, and dumped out her change. She began to count it, arranging it in sticks. I poured a cup of coffee for myself, added some whiskey to the cup, and took it over to Anna. She reached into the pocket of my T and found a cigarette. I gave her a light. She exhaled and shook a bunch of black hair out of her face.

“Welcome back.”

“Thanks.”

She grinned. “How you feelin’, Nick?”

“Better now,” I said, holding up the cup. And I did, too.

“Phil came in first thing this morning. Said there were enough Camels in the ashtray to service the Egyptian army.”

“Yeah, that was me. And LaDuke. Was Phil pissed?”

“Not really. At least you set the alarm this time.”

Anna pize"27"›

She said, “So how’s Jack?”

“He’s fine.”

“Tell him I said hey, will you?”

“Sure, Anna, I’ll tell him.”

Happy hour was on the slow side, but I had plenty to do, restocking the liquor and arranging the bottles on the call shelf to where they had been before I left. Evening came and my regulars drifted out like pickled ghosts, and then it was just me and Darnell. I locked the front door and drove him back to his place through the warm, sticky night. He didn’t mention the warehouse affair, and neither did I.

Back at my place, Lyla had phoned, so I phoned her back. She wanted to come over and talk. I said that it was probably not a good idea, and she asked why. I said it was because I didn’t want to see her. She raised her voice and I raised mine back; things just went to hell after that. The conversation ended very badly, and when it was done, I switched off the light and sat at the living room table and rubbed my face. That didn’t amount to much, so I went to the bedroom and lay down in the dark and listened to the purr of my cat somewhere off in the apartment. It seemed like a long time before I fell asleep.

Jack LaDuke phoned early the next morning. Roland Lewis had been found dead beneath the John Philip Sousa Bridge: one bullet to the head.