Did I mention that Mikey is my brother?
That
puts another hue on the palate, doesn’t it?
My family is more screwed up than you imagined. I know it.
Hey, I’m not ashamed. We are what
we are. If you think your family’s a
little slice of Leave it to Beaver,
fine. But I suggest you start rummaging
through your memory and figure out what Wally was doing in the bathroom. Maybe you’ll wise up to the deeper Freudian
meaning of June’s pearl necklace. Don’t
be too quick to judge me and mine. I’m
trying not to condemn anyone or anything here.
I’m just telling the story. Take
it for what it’s worth. When I’m
finished, think whatever you want to think.
After
the boys hauled Mikey out of Abe’s, I gave my statement to Vandy’s cohort
Emilio. Just the facts, ma’am.
I
left Abe’s and walked north towards it-didn’t-matter. I had the buzz and a throbbing headache. But the buzz is like morphine. You keep the pain, but you lose the
caring. I just walked. I was right at the point where I could think
about things I didn’t want to think about.
I drink for these perfect moments.
Some people have them sober. So they
say. I have difficulty believing them.
That
particular moment, I started thinking about Torey. It was a family moment. You see, Mikey had been married to Kim. Torey was the kid in the mix. He was the cutest little tyke, too. At age five, he shoplifted thirty dollars
worth of gum from Woolworth’s. By the
time he was seven he was boosting bikes from the private Prep school up by
Further Creek Country Club. It was a
long walk up there. He was showing
initiative and the right touch of disdain for the rich. When he was nine, I taught him Three Card
Monty. You know, where you put down
three cards, one is the Queen of Hearts, you shuffle them around, and you bet
the mark he can’t find the lady. The kid
was a natural. I taught him other stuff,
too, like six ways to open a locked sliding glass patio door, the ins and outs
of gambling on football…don’t, and Canadian rules chess. I was trying to be a good “Uncle.” Mikey wasn’t much of a family man.
Mikey
tried, but he’s the wrong kind of canvas for that sail. I made an attempt to help Mikey be a good
“dad.” I set up times for the three of
us to go out together. I even stole a
camcorder and made a tape of the two of them at Fairyland Park. I shot them riding a roller coaster. There was a fun scene of them sliding down
the big slide. The Tilt-a-Whirl sequence
was great until Mikey threw up. There
was all sorts of father-son stuff like that.
That was the only time they really had fun together. I gave Torey the tape, and he treasured
it. He never went anywhere without that
damned video. He carried it in his
backpack with his baseball glove year ‘round.
One time I went to see him and he was feeling down, I guess. When I went up to his room and peeked in, he
was watching the tape. His eyes were so
big. He might have been crying. I just snuck out of the house. I’m good at sneaking out.
I
was the one Torey turned to when things went kaboom. I remember him riding a stolen Razor scooter
up James Street looking for me. He was
about eleven then.
“Torey,
what’re you doing here? Shouldn’t you be
harassing a phys-ed teacher about now?”
I was concerned about the kid’s education.
“Hey,
Tools.”
“Don’t
call me that.” I cuffed his ear. “Why aren’t you learnin’ stuff?”
“Got
kicked out for a week.”
“What
did you do?”
“Borrowed
some money.”
“Borrowed?”
“Well,
I was going to give it back.”
“Torey,
I’ve told you a million times. Never
borrow money.”
“O.K.
I stole it.”
“That’s
better.” I was trying to teach the kid
to be honest. A thief should always be
up front about what he’s doing.
Rationalizing always gets you into trouble.
“Anyway,
I was looking for you.” Torey had that
weak little smile of his going. The one
that he used when he was upset. I was
pretty tuned into his moods.
“What’s
going on?”
“I
caught Mikey…”
“You
mean dad?”
“Yeah,
I guess. I caught dad humping’ Terri
the Head.” The smile got a little
wider. He was embarrassed.
“Oh,
shit. You caught ‘em?”
“Yeah,
Mikey’s…er, dad’s bare butt was sticking up in the air, and Terri was under
him and…”
“Spare
me the details. You didn’t tell…”
“I
told mom.”
“…mom. Oh, shit.” Then we both started laughing. Men — and boys — do that when they ought to
cry.
Well,
Torey may have been grossed out and eventually laughing, and I may have been
laughing, but little mom, Kim, sure wasn’t.
To her, it was the ultimate sin. Mikey and Terri were getting it on in
the family room — Kim’s family room.
Bad move, Mikey. Torey told
mom. Kim had taken three extra Ativan. She talked to her latest boyfriend about the
situation. Then she took another Ativan
and decided to kick the creep out even before the last pill kicked in.
Kim
wanted out of the neighborhood anyway.
So she got a good job up north.
She moved to the “nice” part of town.
Torey started going to a ritzy Catholic school, Infant of Prague or
something. I didn’t see him as much
after he moved. That’s the way Kim
wanted it, and I didn’t put up any argument.
That’s my sin. But like on his
last birthday, I did send him a Nintendo that I picked up near the K-mart. I did miss the kid. Meanwhile, Mikey just got slimier.
Why
Mikey and I are so different is one of those puzzles that the giants have
wrestled with for eons. All the
thinkers, the philosophers, the theologians, psychologists, scientists,
educators, girlfriends, have tried to figure it out. They’ve come up with theories, religions,
novels, and the Home Shopping Network in their vain attempts to explain
it. I used to ponder it too. Then one day, after four or five Margaritas
on a Costa Rican beach, I had an epiphany.
I figured it out.
I
can’t remember now, though. It’s there
in my head. I just can’t pull it
up. It’s right next to where I boiled
all of human philosophy down to four words, Plato to Kant to B.F. Skinner; “I
want my mommy.” It’s close to that
thought, “Mommy.” I left home when I was
thirteen. Mikey left home when she
died. He was exposed to the radiation
longer than I was. Maybe that’s it.
Mikey
and Kim were history. That’s about the
time Terri straightened out. After
treatment, she moved to the Lysistrata Halfway House. She stayed clean — even after they kicked
her out for failing to remain
chaste. She kept herself straight. She’d
even gotten a real job — at some church, no less. That’s what I heard, anyway. All this was about seven months back. So why was she talking to Mikey again at the
Palomino last night?
Whatever,
she was crying. Why was she crying? Mikey looked upset, scared, or angry. They left the Palomino together around ten. They found her just after midnight. So Mikey had broken her neck, raped her
and…. wait…. raped her, then broken her neck… and then dumped her body up
on the Albino Farm. That made sense,
because everybody knew he had a thing with Terri in the past. Everybody knew he was a sleaze. About a hundred people saw them at the strip
club last night. It was the most
imperfect murder in history.
That’s
when I realized, Mikey didn’t do it.
The
sun hit the horizon on the way down. No,
that’s not a symbol. If you find any
hidden meanings in this, they’re all yours.
I hope you do better than the sun going down coincidence. The sun set, that’s all. I looked up at darkening sky. It looked too clean for Vaporville, but there
it was. That’s when Valerie almost ran
me over.
I
had stepped out into the street like an idiot while I stared slack-jawed at the
sunset. I was in a trance. My brother didn’t kill my friend — a little
break for the family karma. I brushed up
against my favorite state-of-mind, self-pity.
Reality intruded before I could dish up a full helping. A car door handle brushed my wrinkled
khakis. The passenger window slid down.
“Get
in the car before they arrest you for vagrancy.” Valerie loved me again.
I
maneuvered my way in carefully. When it
comes to Valerie’s car, size does matter.
My size did not match its size.
She drove a Neon, Dodge’s revenge on me for all the K-cars I had broken
into over the years. Easiest locks ever,
until keyless entry came along. I’ll get
to that, too. My knees were right up
against my chin. My body was so
compressed that if we hit anything, my internal organs would pop like bubble
wrap at a slumber party. The way Val
drove, internal hemorrhaging was a very clear and present danger.
“Hey,
Valerie. Thanks for the ride.”
“Stuff
it. You weren’t going anywhere. You drunk?”
“Silly
question.”
She
sighed, but let it go. “You all
right? Sorry I was a bitch this
morning.”
“That’s
O.K., Val. I understand.” As usual, the wrong thing to say.
“Fuck
you. Don’t you dare understand me. I wasn’t that big a bitch.” Val has a problem with empathy
sometimes. When it comes from other
people it feels like sympathy to her, and Val hates sympathy.
“Yeah,
sorry.” I was mumbling. My head hurt.
“Why are you picking me up?”
“I
went into work. Everybody’s talking
about Terri at the courthouse. I thought
maybe you could use a friend.” Now she
was being empathic. Or was it
sympathy? I am easily confused after a
few dozen beers.
“A
friend, yeah.” I really didn’t want Val
as a friend.
“Everybody
was talking about the murder. I started
thinking about it and…” She broke the
news gently. “They arrested Mikey.”
“I
know.” I did my best Shake n’Bake
impression. “…and I hepped.” I was joking but I wasn’t smiling.
“What
do you mean, helped? Do I want to
know?” She was asking a lot of questions
again. What a day, nothing but
questions.
“He
came to Abe’s. Wanted me to get him in
touch with you. Vandy showed up with the
Flying Squad. I was forced to put the
finger on my dear brother. He was hiding
behind a case of toilet paper.”
“They
use toilet paper at Abe’s now?”
That’s
why I loved Valerie.
“He didn’t do it.” I braced myself for some of Val’s mutant
feminist anger. She hates Mikey. See, she’s a feminist. She thinks women get a raw deal in our
patriarchical society. Young girls get
pigeon-holed and discouraged by a sexist educational system. Adolescent females become sexualized too soon
by the secret Humbert Humbert-Lolita agenda at the core of our mass media. She would occasionally rail on about the
psycho-sexual violence in the deep dark diseased heart of our culture, the
organized mass marketing of pathological body images and so on. I never said a word when she was on one of
those rants. I’d just keep reading my SI
swimsuit issue.
Mikey
is like the poster boy for all of those male sins. I would never defend him on those
charges. I just knew he hadn’t killed
Theresa, and I knew Valerie would violently disagree. Underline violently.
“He
didn’t do it.” Please don’t hit me.
She
gave me the you’re-a-typical-male stare.
“Of course he didn’t. He’s a
sleazy genetic dead-end, no offense to your bloodline, but he didn’t kill
her. I know that.”
See
how smart I am… except when it comes to women. As usual, I’d misread which way Val was
going. Males are morons when females are
involved. Even Einstein had an ex-wife.
“Yeah,
everyone knew he used her. Everybody
knew she quit him. Too many people saw
them quarrel or whatever last night.
Mikey ain’t that stupid,” I said.
“Oh
my sweet little deluded man, yes he is.
Your brother is a certifiable cretin.
When he was fifteen, didn’t he sell marijuana to a cop sitting in a
patrol car?”
“Yeah,
but it was kind of dark.”
“Did
he, or did he not, try to steal a semi-load of cigarettes while the driver, the
very big driver, was bunked out in the berth?”
“Well…”
“And
how about the time he tried to hold-up that bar…”
“Our
uncle’s place?”
“He
didn’t even wear a mask. Then there was
the time he stole the FBI agent’s cell phone.”
“Hey,
free long distance for three months…”
“With
the Feds listening to every word, and all those phone numbers so neatly
organized on the bill they received from Verizon.”
She
was building a pretty good case. If
Valerie had replaced Marcia Clark, O.J. would’ve worn the Brunos to court and
confessed to Judge Ito before the court cartoonist finished coloring in the red
on F. Lee Bailey’s nose.
“And
what about his ear piece and the sure-fire way to rip off the casino blackjack
table?
“He
never got caught.”
“Caught? He lost over twenty thousand dollars. Why on earth would they want to catch him?”
“Look
out!”
Val
ran a red light. A Hardware Hank van
almost T-boned us. Squealing tires, tortured asphalt — oh, the
inhumanity! Suddenly my spleen hurt.
She
cranked the wheel right and continued without losing a beat. “The point is, Einstein, Mikey is stupid
enough to do it. He’s also amoral enough
to do it, and sociopathic enough not to feel bad about it. He’s sleazy.
He’s an asshole. He’s an absolute
candidate to murder someone…eventually.
I just don’t think…”
“God,
Val!” She almost took the side mirror
off a parked Lexus. Her unpredictable
way of using her hands, her ability to wait to the last millisecond before
stopping, her penchant for swerving towards poles, the way she completely shut out the world
around her until she arrived at her destination, the friction free environment
she created; yes, the things that made her a great lover made her the most
dangerous driver in the world.
I
could hear the sidewalls of the driver side tires rubbing up against the curb
on the median strip. By the way, it was
the same median strip adopted by the Ku Klux Klan in the “Adopt a Median Strip
Clean-up Campaign.” You may have heard about the court case. The Klan won the right to clean up the strip
in Federal Court about a year back. That
was the last publicity the thing got.
That was the last time they appeared to tidy up.
Terrell
Johnson — he owns the BBQ place on 11th called “Let-me-rip-out-yer Ribs” —
and I got together. He does big
business. We’d take all the garbage from
his place — rib bones, chicken bones, saucy napkins — down to that median
strip and dump it off in the middle of the night. Musta’ worn the Klan out. The sign’s still up and most of the bones are
still there, too. It’s an appropriate
shrine to the legacy of the Klan.
“Valerie,
stay close to the middle…”
A
green rib bone bounced off the trunk lid.
She continued her thought. “I
just don’t think he did it. Remember
when he was arrested with the eighteen cases of stolen Arrow Vodka? How did they catch him?”
“He
left it in his driveway.”
“Right,
because he was too lazy to carry it into the garage, all of six feet away. And when they busted him when he was
packaging the coke…”
“Didn’t
shut the blinds.”
“He
didn’t do it because he’s lazy. When I
was down at the courthouse earlier, while you were living the high life at
Abe’s, I talked to Kensington, the D.A.
Nothing’s formal yet, but word is, with all the rain Saturday, the
Albino Farm was empty Saturday night.
Only one pair of unidentified tracks going up and tearin’ ass out. Those obviously belong to the theorized
Sunday night teen patrons. Kensington
was a bit concerned, but he said the cops weren’t worried about how your lovely
brother got her up there. I’m going to
try to get more out of Kensington later.”
“Later?”
“Later. They’ve got something else on him. But all that said, I know Mikey would’ve had
to carry Terri’s body up there — up the big, tall, nasty hill. Ergo: he’s guilty, all right, just not of this crime.”
“Yeah,
you can’t drive up there after a soaker.
The road gets muddy, and you can’t get up enough speed, so the
albinos’ll catch you. Pretty scary.”
“Who
started calling that place the Albino Farm anyway?” Like I said, Valerie’s a Stanford girl. She ain’t from these parts.
“I
don’t know, counselor. Probably some
horny proto-con-man teenager back in the twenties. He made that great discovery that so many men
have made.”
“What?”
“Scared
girls put-out.”
Val
shook her head. “What kind of stupid-ass
girl would believe that albinos were going to pour out of the woods
and…and…what exactly would they do?”
“Terrible
things, horrible things, their pink eyes glowing in the dark. The albino boys would creep up on the parked
car with its steamed up windows, rip the car door open and pin the poor teenage
make-out artist down while grabbing the poor innocent object of his affection.”
“Hey,
I was a teenage girl once,” said Val, as she took a corner in a powerslide. I could smell the burning rubber — an
appropriate odor for the moment. “Don’t
give me innocent.”
“Well,
you gals like to play innocent. That’s
most of the fun. Anyway, the albino boys
would give the girl a choice. Either
have sex with the whole pale gang and be free, or refuse and die a terrible
death while her boyfriend has the color sucked out of him and is condemned to
wander the Albino Farm as a colorless zombie.”
“You
went up there when you were a kid, didn’t you?”
“How
could you tell?”
“It’s
that pasty complexion of yours.” Val
swerved around a wino, just clipping his brown paper bag. It was a waste of Mad Dog.
“There
was a catch.”
“With
men and sex there always is,” she said.
“If
the girl gave in and let the albinos have their way…” I was doing my best spooky campfire
voice. I paused for effect.
Val
stole the punchline. “If she gave in,
the pimply-faced boyfriend goes free, and the woman ends up with a bleached
white fetus growing in her blood red womb.”
“You
know the Albino Farm legend?”
“Not
tough to see where that was going.
Typical male propaganda. Either
way, no matter what the girl decides, she’s on the short end, dead or pregnant
with a bleached baby. Meanwhile, the guy
wins. He’s either set free or turned
into an albino sex machine, a win-win situation for your typical male
adolescent. It’s bullshit.”
“Girls
went for it all the time. It’s the
adventure. Otherwise, you might as well
just park behind the grain elevator.”
She
looked at me like I was a fly on her PBJ.
“Even a stupid, simple-minded, drug-addled, emotionally troubled teenage girl would see through that bullshit
in a heartbeat.”
“Of
course.”
“You
mean…”
“Sure,
and you of all people should know.
Women, even young women always know.
Fear and lust always hold hands, Val.”
“God,
that was profound. Bottom line, Marty,
there are no albinos and there is no farm, but they call it the Albino Farm?”
“That’s
right.” I should have said left. Val ran a red light and missed a Budweiser
truck by inches. There would have been a
riot in Vaporville if she’d hit him.
“Stupid.”
“The
Albino Farm is one of those magic places.
Haunted spots that exist in every city, every town. Like your old girlfriend Sally and all of her
crystal new age shit. The Albino Farm is
an energy locus. A place where fate
touches the earth and powers are unleashed and…”
“And
bras are unfastened.” Val laughed.
“Precisely.” I had to give her that point. Suddenly, I was turned on. No, I was terrified. The Neon hit a two-foot deep pot hole, angled
towards a safety railing, and at the last second, locked up the brakes and
stopped. Riding with Valerie was damn
near pornographic.
“So
that’s a no on the whole making out thing?”
“Just
get out of the car.”
“Listen,
Val, I’m sorry…”
“I
know you are.” She sighed. “Relax, I’m getting out, too. I want to show you something.”
“Oh,
O.K.” I was almost sober. When I’m sober, all I’m usually interested in
is getting not sober. Val wanted to show
me something. I’d try to be interested. It was in my best interest.
She’d
parked, and I use the term incorrectly, right in front of St. Philomena’s
Catholic Church. I could barely open the
door, she was so close to a line of untrimmed bushes. I unfolded out the door, scratched my face on
some branches, and joined her in the middle of the street where it was
safe.
Up
a little embankment was the stained gray granite sanctuary. Built back in the Twenties, before Vaporville
was Vaporville, before the area was called Dogtown, before the neighborhood was
known as the Southside, when this was the heart of town, the church was small
scale gothic. Square and heavy, the nave
was crowned with an ornate tall steeple that didn’t fit the style. Some robber baron had bought salvation with a
big donation and demanded the rococo appendage, architecture be damned. I don’t really know that for sure. But it sounds right. I’m just trying to give you a sense
here. Trust me.
A
matching squat house to the left; that’s the rectory. A cemetery to the right, the buildings
surrounded by a five-foot-high stone wall, were on a shelf that ran about forty
yards back to a steep wooded bluff The
elevation took about an eighty degree shot up about two hundred feet to a little
gap at the crest. That was the lookout
— and the Albino Farm.
“See
that hill?” She pointed at the hill.
“That
hill?” I pointed at the hill. Just two people in the middle of the street
pointing at a hill.
She
gave me the “stop being a smartass” look.
I stopped pointing.
“So,
with no tracks leading away on the old muddy road out of there except for
Romeo’s and Juliet’s, the kids who discovered the body, there’s only one way
up. And from this side it ain’t
easy. The perpetrator had to schlep the
body up a couple hundred yards of overgrown bluff. And first he’d have to toss it over two
walls. The front and back church gates
are locked at night. Apparently, there
are a lot of thieves in the neighborhood.”
She gave me one of her quick,
“you poor S.O.B.” looks.
Apparently Val disapproved of my profession.
“Let’s
take a peek.” As soon as I spoke, I
regretted it. I was willing to believe
Mikey was, here’s a laugh, innocent. But
if I took the first step towards that church, I would be committed to
help. I had a small problem or two with
commitment. He was my brother. He was a low life. I didn’t even like him. Shit, he was family. I took a step.
By
now it was pretty dark. Whenever I went
to Abe’s, the day dissolved. The front
gate, with a stone arch, led to a wide walkway up to the church steps. There was a big rusty lock on the wrought
iron bars. It looked like something out
of “Fall of the House of Usher” starring Vincent Price. I don’t even need tools for those. I fiddled and, with a little scrape, the lock
popped open.
No,
I’m not going to tell you how. I’m not
doing a manual for young burglars here.
Kids go on the internet and learn how to make bombs, how to make drugs,
how to be snipers. I’m not going to be
part of that kind of thing. Like I told
you, I’m a really smart guy. There isn’t
a lock I can’t open. Locks are
easy. I can do other stuff, too, as
you’ll see, but I’m not going to explain how.
If you want your own atomic bomb, do a Google search.
If
you walk around past the steps, there’s a fork in the walkway. Pick it up.
Look for the spoon. Sorry, my
jokes are better when I’ve had a few.
Anyway, to the left is the rectory.
There were some lights on the backside.
The priest was probably eating alone in the kitchen. Father Douglas Hunter was an odd bird. I knew, because I’d been in the seminary with
him.
Turned
out he wasn’t alone. Val and I ducked
back into the shadow of a ten foot juniper as two men came out of the rectory’s
back door. A thin shadow of a man stood
on the lit threshold letting them out.
The yellow beam from the priest’s kitchen fanned out and filled in a
wedge of illumination. The two men
looked like a couple of heavies in a Raymond Chandler movie heading down the
path. Heading right for us.
The
shorter man turned his head as he walked and looked back at the silhouette in
the Rectory door. “Just stay calm. And don’t talk to anyone!” His tone was cultured and reassuring in a
slimy way.
“Yes. Yes.
All right. Thank you, sir.” Doug Hunter, answering from his doorway,
didn’t sound reassured. He sounded
tired.
The
men came closer. The tall guy was
wearing a hat. Mister culture left a
wave of cologne in his wake. I salivated
– fresh cookies in the oven. He smelled
fattening. It triggered a small déjà vu
episode. There was some memory trying to
get out of my nose.
They
walked right by us. I wiped away the
drool. The rectory door shut, and the
shadow we were standing in spread out to cover the walkway again.
Val
made a noise and bit my finger. I’d put
my hand over her mouth without thinking.
“Your technique with women is a bit primitive.” She was Lauren Bacall all of a sudden.
“Sorry,
Val.” My Bogart was below average.
“Did
you i.d. the cop?’ Val was in fine film
noir mode now.
“The
cop?” I hadn’t noticed.
“You
didn’t see the hat? Dead give away,
lover. A cop hat usually sits on a cop’s
head.”
“The
tall guy was a cop?
Son-of-a-bitch.” A tall cop, no
doubt Mr. Piss Puddle himself, Redlands, was half the couple — the TV star
from the news bulletin of Terri’s murder.
But what was he doing at the church at that late an hour? Getting a new rosary?
“The
short guy was the D.A., Kensington, Joseph Francis Kensington — my dinner
date.” Val said the name like there was
a dead cockroach on her tongue.
“Dinner date? Slow Joe Kensington? Sure are a lot of Assumption alumni around.”
“Assumption alumni?”
“Yeah. You know, my alma mater.”
“The seminary? The big dumb cop went to the seminary? You’re not making sense, Marty.”
“No, not the cop. I went to Assumption. Knew Doug Hunter there. And “Slow Joe” got his nickname there.”
“Kensington was a
seminarian?”
“Not all the students
were on the priesthood track. Some were
just regular students. Kensington was a
few years ahead of me. He was at Assumption
College when I was there at Assumption High School– same campus. I didn’t really know him. I never hung out with the jocks. He was in some kind of trouble in Tirawa so
his parents shipped him there. “Slow
Joe” played football for the Assumption Friars.
A real bully.”
“Sure isn’t in football
shape anymore,” Val said.
“Yeah. Chubby fat-fingered guy now. What do you suppose the D.A. is doing here?”
Val
shook her head. “And I’m figuring you’re
going to clear your brother?” She didn’t
have much confidence in me as a sleuth.
Neither did I. “Kensington is
more than a D.A.”
“More
than a breath mint?”
“Hold
the clever quips, Marty. Kensington
hardly ever actually prosecutes people.
He’s rich as hell and has a lot of political clout. That’s why he’s in the D.A.’s office. He’s a fixer.”
“Two
mints in one,” I said.
Val
almost slapped me. “Be serious. I wonder what he’s doing here?”
“Hell,
I’m not even sure what we’re doing here.”
“We’re
going to the crime scene.”
I
looked up at the towering bluff behind the church. Climbing that in the dark? “Aw shit.”
We
turned right on the path. We walked
behind the church, past the doors to the sacristy. That’s like backstage. About twenty yards farther, we were in the
cemetery.
“This
is a little creepy,” Val whispered, a
little human hiss in the graveyard.
“Want
to make out now?” My voice boomed like
the announcer at Yankee Stadium.
Val
jumped a foot into the air. “Knock it
off.”
“Relax,
Val. Nothing bad has ever happened to me
in a cemetery. A few good things have
like…”
“Knock
it off. Where’s the back gate?”
I’d
been here before, as I was about to explain, with Janice Funk. She had eyes like her last name…
nevermind… and cute inverted…well I shouldn’t go into teenage sex — it’s sacred. Let’s just say, I knew the place well. It was my childhood parish. “Over this way, Val.”
“You’re
a sick puppy. You know that?”
“That’s
why you love me.”
The
back gate had another lock from the Dark Ages.
Once through that, we were up against the trees. The ground climbed quickly. The surprise was the fieldstone path. I’d forgotten about it. It snaked up, a series of switch backs, all
the way to the top. Masked by cliff
clinging locust trees, the path was invisible from the street in front of St.
Philomena’s. The thin straight trunks of
the trees also offered some protection from falling. The drop-off at the edge of the path was
extreme. It came out in a little
clearing about thirty-five yards north of the outlook. We parted some wild lilac bushes, and pretty
soon, there was the crime scene tape. I
knew Carl Vandy, and I knew our local constabulary. They hadn’t gone any farther than this. They didn’t know about the path.
Vandy
was plugged in. He was locked in. Mikey was the target. He knew Mikey and Terri were connected. He found out they talked that night. He knew they argued. He found something else. He didn’t give a shit how Mikey dumped
her. He’d lean a little and find that
out, no problem. Mikey was now,
officially, the nearest breathing body.
“How
big was she?” Val was still working to
get her breath after the climb. Every
once in awhile, when I’d been sober for a week or two, I’d nag her about
smoking. It never seemed to go over
well. Addicts get so sensitive.
“You
knew her, Val, Maybe five foot two,
about a hundred and five pounds. Maybe
less after all that meth.”
“Well,
tell you one thing. Mikey the Stick,
meth dealer, lazy bones, didn’t make that climb.”
“So,
who did?” I was afraid of the answer.
“That’s
your job. He’s your brother. She was your friend.”
“Why
don’t I just tell Carl Vandy what we know?” I asked.
“Oh
yeah, that’ll work. He loves you. He’s just looking for an excuse to let Mikey
regain his rightful place in polite society.
Get real.”
I
looked at the little hassock of grass by the lilac. Terri had been right here last night. I closed my eyes. I wondered what choice she had been given on
the Albino Farm. I had a cold feeling
that albinos were prowling. And I swear
to God, I heard them. But the sound came
from down below, in the city. I turned
slowly, and I saw Jesus. I might still
have been a little drunk. Or maybe it
was the moonlight through the clouds hitting St. Philomena’s stone tower just
beyond us. Looking out over the edge of
the bluff, the garish cross came alive for a moment. Jesus’ face wavered in a quick moving shadow
and became Terri’s face. She smiled.
“Let’s
head back.” Valerie broke the vision.
I
had to remember how to breathe. After a
moment, Terri’s face faded, and Jesus returned to his pain on the steeple’s
crucifix. “Yeah. Let’s go.”
So
we hit the fieldstone path. Lit by the
moon, speckled by the shadows of half-bare trees, I walked down it like a
pallbearer. I didn’t look up. I was miserable. Halfway down, one little glint in the leaves
changed everything.
Valerie
was in front of me, so she didn’t see me pick it up. I looked at it as we negotiated the
descent. It was a simple sterling icon
on a thin silver chain, a Saint Christopher Medal. The Protector of Travelers had spoiled this
trip.
I
slipped it into my pocket. I had another
one just like it…around my neck.
It
was Mikey’s.