by Don Winslow
A Long Walk Up the Waterslide
( Neal Carey - 4 )
Don Winslow
Don Winslow
A Long Walk Up the Waterslide
Prologue
He never should have smelled the coffee.
Neal Carey was lying in bed when the scent drifted under the door and snuck into his nose.
As he lingered in that pleasant zone between sleep and wakefulness, he savored the fact that it was Saturday morning and he didn't have to get up for anything. But the coffee smelled so good, not rushing-to-work, out-of-a-can coffee, but some of that special coffee that Karen had bought in Reno last month. Saturday-morning coffee, hazelnut or maybe Kenya AA, and he thought he detected a scent of chocolate.
If it was a custom blend, Karen must have been up early grinding it, which was unusual because she liked to sleep late on weekends. Neal pictured her shiny black hair and blue eyes and decided that maybe he’d join her in the kitchen so he could sip coffee and look at her. They could have a big breakfast and then drive out into the hills somewhere for a long hike, or maybe head out to Milkovsky ranch, borrow a couple of horses, and ride along Sandy Creek until they found a spot for a picnic. The day had the potential to be a glorious September Saturday in the northern Nevada wilderness known as the High Lonely, where for the first time in his life Neal Carey wasn’t a bit lonely.
And that coffee just smelled so damn good.
Neal rolled out of bed, opened the door, and heard a voice.
That voice: the voice with all the soothing qualities of a rock scraping across a cheese grater.
“This is very nice,” the voice was saying. “Your own blend?”
Neal heard Karen answer, “Half hazelnut, half macadamia.”
Macadamia?
“And these muffins,” the voice said, “delicious.”
“Neal made them,” Karen said.
Neal stood behind the bedroom door for a second, then walked through the small living room and stood in the kitchen doorway.
Karen spotted Neal first.
“Honey,” she said, “look who’s here.”
“Hello, son,” Joe Graham said.
It isn’t just the voice, thought Neal. It’s the smile, the sweet, cheerful, mocking smile of a rat on a landfill.
“Hello, Dad,” Neal answered.
Karen gave Neal a peck on the cheek and handed him a cup of coffee.
Maybe I should give this stuff up, Neal thought. It smells like battery acid, makes my stomach hurt, and gives me a headache.
He pulled out a chair and sat down at the table.
That’s where he made his big mistake. He should have gone back to bed, pulled the covers over his head, and refused to come out until Joe Graham was thirty thousand feet in the air, winging back to New York. If Neal Carey had done that, he never would have met Polly Paget, or gone to Candyland, or had to take a long walk up the water slide.
But he didn’t.
He smelled the coffee.
Then he drank it.
Part One
Pollygate
1
Son, this job is so simple,” Joe Graham said between bites of toast, “that even you could do it.”
“More orange juice, Joe?” Karen asked. She hovered over Graham with a pitcher in her hand. Before that, she’d hovered over him with a plate of scrambled eggs, fried potatoes, and rye toast. Prior to that, she had just generally hovered, dispensing coffee, juice, and muffins while she made breakfast.
Neal shot her a dirty look. In the nine months they had lived together, Karen had made breakfast for him exactly once-Pop-Tarts, burned.
Neal did most of the cooking in the house.
Until Graham arrives, Neal thought, and she turns into Aunt Bea.
Karen returned the dirty look. Not an Aunt Bea dirty look, but a Karen Hawley “don’t tread on me; I’ll cook breakfast any damn time I feel like it” look.
Besides, Karen loved Joe Graham. That little leprechaun face was just so damn cute, and the artificial arm made him so vulnerable. She liked the way he respected himself and the people around him. And she knew the story of how Graham had raised Neal from an abandoned child into a pretty decent human being. Karen treated Graham like a beloved father-in-law, even though he wasn’t Neal’s real father and Neal wasn’t her husband.
In 1980s America, Karen thought, families don’t always come in square boxes.
“So what is this? Your Serpico look?” Graham asked.
He’d never seen Neal with long hair before, never mind the beard. And the worn denim shirt hanging over faded blue jeans? The kid needed a decade check.
“Sort of a disguise,” Neal mumbled.
He was embarrassed. At first, the beard and hair were just that, a gesture toward disguising his identity, but then he came to like the look. Not even the look so much, he thought, but the feel: more laid-back, loosely wrapped, a nice change after he’d spent the first 27 years on his toes and wrapped tighter than the insides of a baseball.
“I like it,” Karen said. She ran her fingers through his hair where it met his collar. “But maybe I should give it a trim tonight. It’s looking a little shaggy.”
This is nice, Graham thought. This is nice for the kid; he finally has somebody. Every other time I’ve come to get him, I’ve found him buried in a stack of books, index cards, and bad memories. Kid used to eat self-pity like it was ice cream. This time, he’s with a stand-up woman who loves him so much, she doesn’t take any of his crap. And he can’t feel too sorry for himself; he opens his eyes in the morning and she’s there.
“So do you want work?” Graham asked.
“Dad, I’ve been thinking…”
“When did that start?” Graham asked. He felt it was his duty to insult Neal.
“It’s a recent development,” Neal admitted. “But I’ve been thinking about retiring.”
He’d been thinking about it real hard since the moment he squeezed the trigger and dropped a man dead in the snow. Then he disappeared into Karen Hawley’s bedroom and didn’t come out for weeks, hiding from the Feds, the Highway Patrol, and the local cops.
Then the funniest thing happened: nothing.
When he finally poked his head out-long hair, beard, and all-nobody cared. No cops came; no questions were asked; nobody in the little town of Austin, Nevada, said anything.
And Neal got a life.
“You’re what, twenty-eight?” Graham asked.
“Working for Friends counts like dog years,” Neal answered, “so I’m really one hundred and ninety-six.”
Friends was shorthand for Friends of the Family, banker Ethan Kitteredge’s private organization that helped his wealthier clients out of jams, which usually meant putting Neal and Graham smack in the middle of one. Neal had just gotten out of the last jam, and wasn’t eager to get into another.
Besides, I’m happy, Graham, Neal thought. I get up in the morning, fix Karen her lunch, then go to my desk and work on my Smollett thesis until about noon. Then I either make lunch or walk down to Brogan’s for a sandwich and a beer, then back to work until late afternoon, when I whip up dinner. Then Karen comes home and we eat, after which she usually grades homework. Then we might watch a little television before we go to bed. I like my life.
“I’m thinking about transferring my credits from Columbia,” Neal said, “and finishing my degree at Nevada.”
Finishing my degree: It had an unreal sound to it. He’d been trying to finish his master’s degree for about six years, but work for Friends had taken him on some major detours from his goal of one day teaching English at a little college somewhere.
“Have you been getting the checks?” Graham asked.
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Neal nodded. A few weeks after he’d gone underground, a package arrived at the door with a complete set of ID for a young man named Thomas Heskins. A few days after that, the checks started to come in an amount roughly equal to Neal’s monthly salary as an operative for Friends of the Family.
Karen frowned at the mention of the checks, which were a touchy subject in the house. Neal made more money sitting around the house working on “Tobias Smollett: The Image of the Outsider in the Eighteenth-Century English Novel” than Karen made working fifty-plus hours each week teaching elementary school. In typical Neal Carey fashion, he had decided to write his master’s thesis before enrolling in a graduate program.
Karen Hawley loved Neal Carey deeply, but he did have a horse-and-cart problem. And now that she had a sabbatical semester, it was starting to become her horse-and-cart problem.
“The checks,” Graham said, “were not meant to be a pension. They were sort of disability payments while you had to hide out.”
Were? Neal thought. This didn’t sound good.
“What are you saying, Dad?” Neal asked.
“I’m saying you can be Neal Carey again if you want.”
Why would I want to do something like that? Neal thought.
“Who did you pay off?” Neal asked.
The “you” in this case being Kitteredge’s bank in Providence, Rhode Island.
“The usual,” Graham said. Washington politicians were about as hard to purchase as magazine subscriptions, although you did have to renew them more often. Besides, the feds didn’t have much of a hard-on for this case. If someone did them a favor by disposing of a dirtbag neo-Nazi like Strekker, well, it was one less dirtbag they had to worry about. Graham couldn’t prove that Neal had performed this particular service and they had never talked about it, but the last time Joe Graham had seen Neal Carey, he had been trotting out into the sagebrush with a rifle in his hands.
“Ed thinks it’s time you came back to work,” Graham said.
Ed was Ed Levine, manager of Friends’ New York office, where Graham worked and Neal usually didn’t.
“Who’s missing?” Neal sighed. “Who do you want me to find?”
Because that was mostly what he did for Friends.
Graham smiled his rat-sucking-on-garbage smile and said, “That’s the beauty part.”
“What’s the beauty part?” Neal asked. Giving in and asking was easier than letting Graham drag it out.
“You don’t have to find anybody,” Graham answered. “We already found her.”
“Sooo…?” Neal asked.
Graham grinned.
“We want you to teach her English.”
“Who? Why? Where’s she from?”
“Brooklyn,” Graham answered.
“Which leaves who and why,” Neal said.
“Are you taking the job?” asked Graham.
He wasn’t going to give up anything else unless Neal was on the job.
Uh-uh, thought Neal. I say yes and then you tell me you found her in some prison in Outer Mongolia and my job is to break in, teach her English, and escape on camelback across the Soviet Union.
“I’m retired,” Neal repeated.
“How much?” Karen asked Graham.
Neal raised his eyebrows at her.
“We’ve been talking about putting a deck on the back of the house,” she explained.
Neal turned to Graham. “What is she, a witness?”
“Maybe,” Graham answered.
“Maybe?”
Graham said, “It might depend on how good you do with her.”
“Who is she,” Neal asked, “Eliza Doolittle?”
Graham rubbed his artificial hand into his real palm. It was a habit he had when he got nervous or impatient.
“Are you on, or what?” Graham asked.
“Is this a mob thing?” Neal asked. Because mob witnesses were dangerous. People tended to get killed in their general vicinity. “You want me to clean up some mob bimbo who’s mad because Guido slapped her around, and now she wants to tell the world about his funny friends, right?”
“Nothing like that,” Graham promised.
“And where do I have to go?”
“That’s the next beauty part. You don’t even have to leave the house. We want to bring her here.”
“Here,” Neal echoed.
“Here?” Karen asked.
“Here,” Graham repeated.
Neal laughed and turned to Karen. “Now how much do you want the deck?”
Graham also turned to Karen and gave her his most obsequious smile. “We think you would be a major asset in the cleaning-up process.”
Karen poured Graham a fresh cup of coffee, sat down next to him, and put her arm around his shoulder.
“You know, Joe,” she said, “when I envision this deck, I see a cedar hot tub on it.”
Neal whooped with laughter.
“I like her,” Graham said. “She’s a vicious putz like you, but I like her.”
“There’s a lot to like,” Neal agreed. A lot to love, he thought.
Graham said, “Okay, we’re talking deck with Jacuzzi money.”
“That was easy. Who is this mystery witness?” Neal asked.
Graham paused dramatically. He chewed his last bite of toast twenty-eight times and announced, “Polly Paget.”
Karen’s big blue eyes got bigger.
“The whole country’s looking for Polly Paget,” Neal said. “I should have known you had her.”
Graham shrugged.
“Where is she?” Neal asked.
“Out in the car.”
“You left that woman sitting out in the car?!” Karen yelled. “What do you think she is, luggage?”
“She was asleep.”
Karen punched Graham in the shoulder and stormed out the kitchen door.
“Ouch,” Graham said, looking a little hurt.
“One of Karen’s dirty little secrets,” Neal explained as he took a blueberry muffin, “is that she reads People magazine. Is it all true?”
“Polly Paget says it is,” Graham said as he rubbed his shoulder.
Neal munched on the muffin. Graham’s answer meant that he didn’t know whether or not to believe what Polly Paget was saying about Jackson Landis.
2
Polly Paget had been a typist in the secretarial pool of Jack Landis’s New York office and, according to Polly, Jack Landis had done a few laps in her end of the pool.
On its own, Neal knew this was not particularly earthshaking. Polly Paget certainly wouldn’t be the first secretary who had typed twenty words an hour and had the job security of a federal employee, and she wouldn’t be the last secretary who did more work on her desk than at it. What started to make Polly Paget exceptional was the fact that she claimed she had been raped.
None of which would have even made the paper, except that the alleged rapist was none other than Jackson Landis himself, the founder, president, and majority owner of the Family Cable Network. Jack was also the devoted husband of Candy Landis, with whom he cohosted the top-rated cable show in the country, “The Jack and Candy Family Hour,” a program so wholesome it made “The Lawrence Welk Show” look like a Tijuana animal act.
Neal didn’t know whether he believed Polly himself.
She fits the part, Neal thought.
“Disiz a cute lihul place yoo got heah,” Polly said as Karen set her suitcase down in the kitchen. “Gawd, izit faw enough away from evryting, or what. Oi mean, we drove an drove an drove an drove and Oi dint see anyting, nevuh moind a mall. An joo have a batroom Oi could use? Oi have really gadda pee.”
Polly Paget was a walking, talking-especially talking-stereotype. Her auburn hair was big-teased, blow-dried, and sprayed into a huge red halo that looked like a sunset over an oil refinery. She had a handsome, long face with a wide slash of mouth and two long incisors that looked just a little like fangs and gave her a slightly predatory look. Her long, thin nose had a slight Roman curve. Nea
l had to admit to himself that her eyes were sexy. Framed by wide red eyebrows, her green cat eyes sparkled behind the layers of mascara, eyeliner, and fake lashes. Everything about Polly screamed bimbo.
And Polly Paget was tall-a good five ten, with long legs, small breasts, and wide shoulders. She looked a hell of a lot more like the wolf than the lamb.
And the clothes: Today she was dressed entirely in brand-new denim that made it look as if she’d gone shopping for her trip to the West. Lots of silver and turquoise jewelry, and bright red fingernails that were so long, she couldn’t possibly type even if she wanted to.
“You got any losh?” she asked as she came out of the bathroom. “So my hands don’t dry? I’ve got the worst problem with dry hands. They crack if I don’t use enough losh. I have some in one of the other bags, but it’s out in the car.”
Neal winced. Polly didn’t say the or they; she said de and dey, and she seemed to have a little ventriloquist hidden in her throat that made her words sound as if they were coming out of her nose. And she didn’t say car; she said caw.
Karen said, “I think I have some lotion in the bedroom. I’ll go get it.”
“I’ll go get it with you,” Neal said.
In the bedroom, Karen found a plastic bottle of lotion while Neal rummaged through the chest of drawers.
“What are you looking for?” Karen asked.
“A revolver,” answered Neal. “One bullet or two?”
Karen smiled and grabbed Neal’s shoulders.
“Her hair is so big!” she whispered. “I’ve always wanted to meet a woman with big hair like that.”
“But do you want her staying here for a month or more?”
Karen looked at him sharply.
“Neal, the woman was raped!”
“The woman says she was raped.”
Karen’s blue eyes got serious as she tightened her grip on his shoulders.
“Neal Carey,” she said, “if a woman says she was raped, then she was raped.”
Not necessarily, Neal thought.