Authors: James Lee Burke
Yall were drinking a little mescal together?
He was eating in Juniors diner on the four-lane. Thats where his girlfriend works at.
We think some guys are trying to hurt him, Danny. Youd be doing Pete a big favor if you helped us find him.
I aint seen him since what I just told you. Danny Boys eyes slid off Hackberrys and fastened on Clawsons, then came back again.
Hackberry straightened up and closed the door. I think hes telling the truth, he said.
You psychic with these guys?
With him I am. He doesnt have any reason to lie.
Clawson took off his large octagonal glasses and wiped them with a Kleenex, staring down the street, a deep wrinkle between his eyes. Can we go inside?
Its full of cigarette smoke. Whatd you do to Danny Boy?
I didnt do anything to him. Hes drunk. He fell down. When I picked him up, he started to swing on me. But I didnt do anything to him. Clawson opened the back door and used a handcuff key to free Danny Boy from the D-ring inset in the floor, then wrapped his fingers under Danny Boys arm and pulled him from the backseat. Get going, he said.
You want me to hang around, Sheriff? Danny Boy said.
Did I tell you to get out of here? Clawson said. He pushed Danny Boy, then kicked him in the butt.
Whoa, Hackberry said.
Whoa what? Clawson said.
You need to dial it down, Mr. Clawson.
Its Agent Clawson.
Hackberry was breathing through his nose. He saw Pam Tibbs at the office window. He turned to Danny Boy. Go down to Grogans and put a couple on my tab, he said. The operational word is couple, Danny.
I dont need a drink. Im gonna get something to eat and go back to my place. If I hear anything on Pete, Ill tell you, Danny Boy said.
Hackberry turned and started back toward his office, ignoring Clawsons presence. He could hear the flag popping in the breeze and the flag chain tinkling against the metal pole.
Were not done, Clawson said. Last night somebody made two nine-one-one calls from a pay phone outside San Antonio. Ill play you part of it.
He removed a small recorder from his pants pocket and clicked it on. The voice on the recording sounded like that of a drunk man or someone with a speech defect. Tell the FBI theres a whack out on a girl name of Vikki Gaddis. Theyre gonna kill her and a soldier. Its about those Thai women that got murdered. Clawson clicked off the recorder. Know the voice? he said.
No, Hackberry said.
I think the caller had a pencil clenched between his teeth and was loaded on top of it. Can you detect an accent?
Id say hes not from around here.
Heres another piece of information: One of our forensic guys went the extra mile on the postmortem of the Thai females. They had China white in their stomachs, balloons full of it, the purest Ive ever seen. Some of the balloons had ruptured in the womens stomachs prior to mortality. I wonder if you stumbled into a storage area rather than a graveyard.
Stumbled?
English lit wasnt my strong suit. You want to be serious here or not?
I dont buy that the place behind the church was a storage area. That makes no sense.
Then what does?
Ive been told of your personal loss, sir. I think I can appreciate the level of anger you must have to deal with. But youre not going to verbally abuse or put your foot on anybody in this county again. Were done here.
Where do you get off talking about my personal life? Where do you get off talking about my daughter, you sonofabitch?
Just then the dispatcher Maydeen stepped outside and lit a cigarette. She wore a deputys uniform and had fat arms and big breasts and wide hips, and her lipstick looked like a flattened rose on her mouth. Hack doesnt let us smoke in the building, she said, smiling from ear to ear as she inhaled deep into her lungs.
PREACHER JACK COLLINS paid the cabdriver the fare from the airstrip to the office-and-condo building that faced Galveston Bay. But rather than go immediately into the building, he paused on his crutches and stared across Seawall Boulevard at the waves folding on the beach, each wave rilling with sand and yellowed vegetation and dead shellfish and seaweed matted with clusters of tiny crabs and Portuguese men-of-war whose tentacles could wrap around a horses leg and sting it to its knees.
There was a storm breaking on the southern horizon like a great cloud of green gas forked with lightning that made no sound. The air had turned the color of tarnished brass as the barometer had dropped, and Preacher could taste the salt in the wind and smell the shrimp that had been caught inside the waves and left stranded on the sand among the ruptured blue air sacs of the jellyfish. The humidity was as bright as spun glass, and within a minutes time it glazed his forearms and face and was turned into a cool burn by the wind, not unlike a lovers tongue moving across the skin.
Preacher entered a glass door painted with the words REDSTONE SECURITY SERVICE. A receptionist looked up from her desk and smiled pleasantly at him. Tell Mr. Rooney Jack is here to see him, he said.
Do you have an appointment, sir?
What time is it?
The receptionist glanced at a large grandfather clock, one whose face was inset with Roman numerals. Its four-forty-seven, she said.
Thats the time of my appointment with Mr. Rooney. You can tell him that.
Her hand moved toward the phone uncertainly, then stopped.
That was just my poor joke. Maam, these crutches arent getting any more comfortable, Preacher said.
Just a moment. She lifted the phone receiver and pushed a button. Mr. Rooney, Jack is here to see you. There was a beat. He didnt give it. Another beat, this one longer. Sir, whats your last name?
My full name is Jack Collins, no middle initial.
After the receptionist relayed the information, there was a silence in the room almost as loud as the waves bursting against the beach. Then she replaced the receiver in the cradle. Whatever thoughts she was thinking were locked behind her eyes. Mr. Rooney says to go on up. The elevator is to your left.
He tell you to call somebody? Preacher asked.
Im not sure I know what you mean, sir.
You did your job, maam. Dont worry about it. But Id better not hear that elevator come up behind me with the wrong person in it, Preacher said.
The receptionist stared straight ahead for perhaps three seconds, picked up her purse, and went out the front door, her dress switching back and forth across her calves.
When Preacher stepped out of the elevator, he saw a man in a beige suit and pink western shirt sitting in a swivel chair behind a huge desk, framed against a glass wall that looked out onto the bay. On the desk was a big clear plastic jar of green-and-blue candy sticks, each striped stick wrapped in cellophane. His hips swelled out at the beltline and gave the sense that he was melting in his swivel chair. He had sandy hair and a small Irish mouth that was downturned at the corners. His skin was dusted with liver spots, some of them dark, almost purple around the edges, as though his soul exuded sickness through his pores. Help you? he said.
Maybe.
Down on the beach, swimmers were getting out of the water, dragging their inner tubes with them, a lifeguard standing in his elevated chair, blowing a whistle, pointing his finger at a triangular fin whizzing through a swell at incredible speed.
Can I sit down? Preacher said.
Yes, sir, go right ahead, Arthur Rooney said.
Should I call you Artie or Mr. Rooney?
Whatever you want.
Hugo Cistranos work for you?
He did. When I had an investigative agency in New Orleans. But not now.
I think he does.
Sir?
Do I need to speak louder?
Hugo Cistranos is not with me any longer. Thats what Im saying to you. Whats the issue, Mr. Collins? Artie Rooney cleared his throat as though the last word had caught in his larynx.
You know who I am?
Ive heard of you. Nickname is Preacher, right?
Yes, sir, some do call me that with regularity, friends and such.
We just moved into this office. Howd you know I was here?
Made a couple of calls. Know that song I Get Around by the Beach Boys? I get around, albeit on crutches. A woman put a couple of holes in me.
Sorry to hear about that.
Some other people and I got stuck with a piece of wet work. Supposedly, it was initiated by a little fellow who runs a skin joint for middle-aged titty babies. Supposedly, this little fellow doesnt want to come up with the money to pay his tab. His name is Nick Dolan. Know who Im talking about?
Ive known Nick for thirty-five years. He had a floating casino in New Orleans.
Preacher chewed on a hangnail and removed a piece of skin from his tongue. I got to thinking about this little fellow, the one with the titty-baby joint about halfway between Austin and San Antone. Why would a fellow like that have a bunch of Asian women shot to death?
Artie Rooney had crossed one leg over his knee and propped one hand stiffly on the edge of his desk, his stomach swelling over his belt. Youre talking about that big slaughter down by the border? Im not up on that, Mr. Collins. To be frank, Im a little lost here.
Im not a mister, so dont call me that again.
I didnt mean to be impolite or insult you.
What makes you think you have the power to offend me?
Pardon?
You have a hearing problem? Why is it you think youre so important I care about your opinion of me?
Rooneys eyes drifted to the elevator door.
I wouldnt expect the cavry if I were you, Preacher said.
Rooney picked up his phone and pushed a button. After a few seconds, he replaced the receiver without speaking into it and leaned back in his chair. He rested his elbow on the arm of the chair, his chin on his thumb and forefinger, his pulse beating visibly in his throat. There was a bloodless white rim around the edge of his nostrils, as though he were breathing refrigerated air. Whatd you do with my secretary?
A little Mexican girl across the river said I might have to go to hell. You want me to tell you what I did?
To the girl? You did something to a little girl is what youre telling me? Rooneys hand seemed to flutter at his mouth, then he lowered it to his lap.
I think you worked some kind of scam on this Dolan fellow. Im not sure what it is, exactly, but its got your shit-prints on it. You owe me a lot of money, Mr. Rooney. If Im going to hell, if Im already there, in fact, how much you reckon my soul is worth? Dont put your hand on that phone again. You owe me a half million dollars.
I owe you
what
?
Ive got a gift. I can always tell a coward. I can always tell a liar, too. I think youre both.
What are you doing? Stay away from me.
Out on the beach, a mother up to her hips in the water was scooping her child from a wave, running with it up the incline, her dress ballooning around her, her face filled with panic.
Dont get up. If you get up, thats going to make it a whole lot worse, Preacher said.
What are you doing with that? For Gods sakes, man.
My soul is going to be in the flames because of you. You invoke Gods name now? Put your hand on the blotter and shut your eyes.
Ill get you the money.
Right now, in your heart, you believe what youre saying. But soon as Im gone, your words will be ashes in the wind. Spread your fingers and press down real hard. Do it. Do it now. Or Ill rake this across your face and then across your throat.
With his eyes tightly shut, Artie Rooney obeyed the man who loomed above him on crutches. Then Preacher Jack Collins laid the edge of his barbers razor across Rooneys little finger and mashed down on the back of the razor with both hands.
7
N
ICK HAD HEARD of blackouts but was never quite sure what constituted one. How could somebody walk around doing things and have no memory of his deeds? To Nick, the terms blackout and copout seemed very similar.
But after Hugo Cistranos had left Nicks backyard, telling him he had until three oclock the next afternoon to sign over 25 percent of his strip joint and restaurant, Nick had gone downstairs to the game room, bolted the door so the children wouldnt see him, and gotten sloshed to the eyes.
When he woke in the morning on the floor, sick and trembling and smelling of his own visceral odors, he remembered watching a cartoon show around midnight and fumbling with a deadbolt. Had he been sleepwalking? He stood at the bottom of the stairwell and stared up the stairs. The door was still locked. Thank God neither his wife nor the children had seen him drunk. Nick didnt believe a father or husband could behave worse than one who was dissolute in front of his wife and children.