Authors: Edward Lee
“Sorry,” she wavered. She shook her head, rubbed her eyes. “I have nightmares like that all the time.”
“What was it about?” Phil asked.
“Nothing, nothing—”
But Phil wasn’t even thinking. He should’ve been.
Because a moment later the door swung open—
“Phil, are you all right?” a worried voice rushed. “I heard someone scr—”
Susan stood in the open doorway.
Awwwwwww, shit,
was the only thing Phil could think, standing there agape with just a towel around his waist.
The next two or three seconds seemed like two or three years. Plenty of time for Phil to curse himself up and down.
Goddamn it! How could I be so goddamn STUPID! How could I have left the goddamn door UNLOCKED!
Meanwhile, Susan just stood there. The expression on her face showed worry, confusion, and disbelief, all percolating at once. Then the expression hardened. She glanced at Phil, then at Vicki, and then at Phil again.
Then she said, none too quietly, “Fuck you!” and turned around and ran back up the stairs.
Phil ran after her, ludicrously holding the towel around his waist. “Susan, wait!” he yelled.
“Eat shit!” she yelled back, thumping up the steps ahead of him. “Eat
lots
of shit!”
“Would you
please
wai—” Phil began, then barked “Jesus!” as he stubbed his toe on one of the uncarpeted stairs.
He heard Susan’s door slamming shut on the landing above.
The entire house shuddered.
Phil limped the rest of the way up, feeling about as low as a typical snake belly. What could he say that wouldn’t be a foolhardy cliché? He could hear himself now.
Susan, let me explain!
Or,
it’s not what you think!
If he said
anything
like that, it would prove an even worse insult to her.
Pathetically, he asked himself,
How do I get myself into messes like this?
No answer was forthcoming.
“Susan?” he said, rapping gently on her door. “Please, open the door and at least let me talk to you.”
“Fuck off!”
“All right, you’re really mad now, I understand that. So how about if I come up a little later when you cool off?”
“Blow yourself!”
“Tomorrow, then. Okay? Can we talk tomorrow?” he all but pleaded.
“If I ever see you again, you lying son of a bitch,” she shrieked from the other side of the door, “I’ll kick you in the balls so hard they’ll pop out of your ears!”
Phil took a forlorn step back from the door.
Well,
he thought.
I guess that means no.
««—»»
Vicki, of course, was gone when Phil went back to his room
. I guess she knows a bad scene when she sees one.
He couldn’t blame her for the mishap—he could only blame himself. Susan had told him weeks ago that any sound in his room traveled up to hers through the heating duct. He felt scorned; he hadn’t even done anything wrong.
So what else is new, Phil?
Right or wrong, though, common sense told him that nothing he could say could salvage things between him and Susan.
It wasn’t even 6 p.m. when he was dressed and ready. But ready for what?
Eagle’s dead—he was my closest lead, and God knows where Vicki is.
He’d have to start from scratch again, go back to the club tonight, and try to cultivate the trust of another denizen of Crick City’s underworld.
It would take weeks.
But there was still one person he could work on…
He drove the Malibu to Millersville, to the county lockup. He flashed his ID, then signed his gun in with the block sergeant. In a few minutes, Paul Sullivan was brought to the interview room in handcuffs.
Phil sat with his feet up on the desk. “Hey, bub, how’s it going? I’ll bet you thought it was your Aunt Millie coming to visit, huh?”
“Fuck you,” Sullivan grumbled.
“Believe it or not, Paul, you’re not the first person to say that to me today. Oh, and I really dig your wardrobe. Brooks Brothers?”
Sullivan sat down, dressed in bright orange prison utilities. “How come I got moved out of PC to general pop?”
Generally new inmates were kept in protective custody for five days, for in-processing, before being moved into the general prison population, but it had been at Phil’s request that Sullivan was transferred immediately. And Phil noticed something else: Sullivan had a black eye and new bruises on his face. “You can thank me for that, Paul,” Phil told him. “A sociable guy like you, I figure you’d appreciate the company of your fellow convicts. And with that handsome mug of yours, I’ll bet you got a lot of fans already.”
“Motherfucker,” Sullivan replied. “Half the chumps in there hate my guts. I get in half a dozen fights a day.”
“It’s called socialization, Paul. Let me ask you something. Does the word mannona mean anything to you? Or prey-bee? Or skeetinner?”
“Naw. But it sounds like Creeker talk.”
“And how would you know that? You know a lot of Creekers?”
“Naw, man, but, you know, they’re all over the place, and a lot of the whores at Sallee’s are Creekers. I hear ’em jabberin’ all the time. Coupla years back, me and Eagle ran flake with some hillfolk out of Luntville, pretty much the same as Creekers ’cept they ain’t all fucked up from inbreedin’. They told us all about the shit the Creekers were into, scared shitless of ’em. Said the Creekers were cannibals and shit like that, and they got some weird religion.”
Phil raised a brow. “What do you mean? What kind of religion?”
“I don’t know, why the fuck should I care? But these hillers also said the Creekers, since they can’t talk right, they kinda got their own language. You been to Sallee’s, you’ve heard ’em jabbering that shit.”
This just proved more of what Phil already suspected. Sullivan’s familiarity with the way Creekers spoke only verified some kind of proximity to them. And it was also pretty obvious that he was hiding something.
“You been a liar and a scumbag all your life, Paul? Ever think you might want to do something with your life besides be a lying, ugly, redneck, dope-dealing piece of shit?”
Sullivan grit his teeth. “Man, if I wasn’t in these cuffs, I’d kick your cop ass up and down the wing. I’d dance on your fuckin’ face, bub.”
Phil leaned forward and smiled. “Oh? Well, you sure weren’t doing a whole lot of dancing the other night when we had our little party in your luxurious abode.”
“That’s just ’cos you didn’t fight fair.”
Phil laughed. “Bill me for the coffee table.”
“Go ahead and laugh, bub. At least I got ya back, blowing your cover all over fuckin’ town.”
“Blowing my cover, Paul? And how did you manage that?”
Sullivan mustered a smile, which made the wedgelike face even uglier. “You think you’re pretty smart, slapping that bullshit no-call order on me. So ya wanna know what I did?”
“What’s that, Paulie? I’m dying to know.”
Sullivan’s smile came to its peak, like a curved gash in a slab of tenderized steak. “I had one of the guys on the block call Eagle.”
“Oh? And this colleague of yours
talked
to Eagle?”
“Well, no, but he left a message on Eag’s answering machine, and spilled the beans about you.”
Crafty fucker.
Phil leaned back, chuckling. “Well, let me tell you, Paul, unless they got an answering service at the pearly gates, that’s one message Eagle’s never gonna get.”
Sullivan’s face pinched. “What you mean?”
“Eagle’s dead. And so is your buddy Blackjack. We went out to his place last night, and Blackjack was lying there looking like something in the fresh meat rack at Safeway. Then some Creeker kid blew a hole in Eagle’s chest big enough to drive your big piece of shit truck through.”
“A Creeker?”
“That’s right, Paul. We got set up, there were six of them waiting for us. And I’m sure it breaks your heart to see that I got out alive.”
“A Creeker,” Sullivan quietly repeated.
“One of Natter’s boys. I smoked all of them. A tragic waste of some worthy humanity. Guess none of them will make it to Harvard now, huh?”
Sullivan’s cockiness quickly grew drained of its edge.
His shoulders slumped. Phil could tell the guy was worried now.
“All right, you want me to talk, I’ll talk. But you gotta get me outta general pop and back into PC, and you gotta drop the distro charge.”
Now we’re getting somewhere.
“I’ll think about it,” Phil baited. “But you gotta give me something now.”
Sullivan’s big, unpleasant head nodded. “Awright. We’se been workin’ through a new flake lab outta Lockwood. New guys. Some backer from Florida and an egghead labman just out of stir from the federal can in Bradford, PA. The regular supplier jacked the price, and the rednecks went nuts. These rednecks out here, they go through flake and dust like kids buyin’ cotton candy at the fuckin’ carnival.”