The Burglar in the Rye

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The Burglar in the Rye Page 6

by Lawrence Block


  The cool weather brought the browsers back. The store had people in it from the minute I opened up, and every once in a while someone actually bought a book. I was pleased when they did, but I can’t say I really minded if they didn’t, because in a sense I wasn’t really there at all. I was thousands of miles away, in the jungles of Venezuela with the intrepid Redmond O’Hanlon.

  Specifically, I was reading about the candiru, the toothpick fish, a tiny catfish adapted for a parasitic life in the gills and cloaca of bigger fish. I’d read O’Hanlon’s earlier book, Into the Heart of Borneo, and when a copy of In Trouble Again turned up in a bag of books, I’d set it aside to read before shelving.

  And I was reading it now, in what I thought was the companionable silence suited to a bookshop, when I felt a hand on my arm. I looked at the person attached to the hand. It was a woman—slim, dark-haired, late twenties—and her long oval face was a mask of concern.

  “I didn’t want to disturb you,” she said, “but are you all right?”

  “Yes,” I said. She didn’t seem reassured, and I could understand why. Even I could tell that my voice lacked conviction.

  “You seem…anxious,” she said. “Unnerved.”

  “What makes you say that?”

  “The sounds you were making.”

  “I was making sounds? I hadn’t realized it. Like talking in one’s sleep, I suppose, except I wasn’t sleeping.”

  “No.”

  “I was caught up in my book, and maybe that amounts to more or less the same thing. What sort of sounds was I making?”

  She cocked her head. She was, I saw, a very attractive woman, a few years older than I’d thought. Early thirties, say. She was dressed in tight jeans and a man’s white dress shirt, and her brown hair was drawn back in a ponytail, and thus at first glance she looked younger than her years.

  “Troubled sounds,” she said.

  “Troubled sounds?”

  “I can’t think how else to describe them. ‘Arrrghhh,’ you said.”

  “Arrrghhh?”

  “Yes, but more like this: ‘Arrrghhh!’ As if you were trying to get the word out before you strangled.”

  “Oh.”

  “You said that two or three times. And once you said, ‘Oh my God!’ As if consumed with horror.”

  “Well,” I said, “I remember thinking both those things, arrrghhh and Oh my God. But I had no idea I was saying them out loud.”

  “I see.”

  But I could tell she didn’t. She was still looking at me with clinical interest, and she was far too attractive for me to let her think there was something wrong with me. “Here,” I said, shoving O’Hanlon at her. “Here, where I’m pointing. Read this.”

  “Read it?”

  “Please.”

  “Well, all right.” She cleared her throat. “‘In the Amazon, should you have too much to drink, say, and inadvertently urinate as you swim, any homeless candiru—’ Candiru?”

  I nodded. I’d meant for her to read the paragraph to herself, not out loud, but I couldn’t think of a graceful way to tell her so. And she was a good reader, with volume and presence. My other customers, already alerted by the sounds I’d been making and our subsequent conversation, had stopped what they were doing in order to hear her out.

  “‘Any homeless candiru’—I hope I’m pronouncing it correctly—‘attracted by the smell, will take you for a big fish and swim excitedly up your stream of uric acid, enter your urethra like a worm into its burrow, and, raising its gill covers, stick out a set of retrorse spines’…retrorse? ‘Nothing can be done. The pain apparently is spectacular. You must get to a hospital before your bladder bursts; you must ask a surgeon to cut off your penis.’”

  She closed the book, looking troubled herself, and placed it on the counter between us. Even as she did so, all my other customers began drifting out of my store. One man actually cupped a hand over his groin. The others looked less defensive, but just as determined to get away from the very thought of such a thing.

  “That’s awful,” she said.

  “It doesn’t make one want to grab the next plane to the Amazon.”

  “Or go into any river at all,” she said. “Or step into a bathtub.”

  “It could put a person off water entirely,” I agreed. “I may quit drinking the stuff.”

  “I don’t blame you. What does that word mean, anyway?”

  “Uh…”

  “Not ‘penis,’ silly. ‘A set of retrorse spines.’ What does ‘retrorse’ mean? It’s not a word I’ve ever seen before.”

  “I think it’s like the barbs on a fishhook,” I said. “Meaning it can’t go back out the way it came in, because of the direction the spines are pointing.”

  “That’s what I assumed, but the word’s a new one to me. The whole thought ties you up in knots, doesn’t it? You just now got a real arrrghhh look on your face.”

  “Did I? I’m not surprised. It’s a pretty arrrghhh concept.”

  “I’ll say. I suppose it’s every man’s worst nightmare. I wonder what it’s like for girls?”

  “Girls?”

  “Did I say something wrong? Do you prefer women?”

  “To almost anything,” I said, “which is one reason I never want to meet a candiru. But I wasn’t being politically correct. Whatever you call them, girls or women, I wouldn’t think they’d have anything to fear from the candiru.”

  “This one wouldn’t,” she said, “because she has no intention of placing herself on the same continent with the horrid thing. But girls swim, too, the same as men. And I hope it won’t shatter any illusions to tell you that sometimes we piddle in the pool.”

  “I’m shocked.”

  “Well, welcome to the world, Mr…. I don’t know your name. Is it Barnegat?”

  “It’s Rhodenbarr. Bernie Rhodenbarr.”

  “And is Bernie short for Barnegat?”

  “It’s shorter than Barnegat,” I said, “but what it’s short for is Bernard. Barnegat Light is a place on the Jersey shore where Mr. Litzauer used to spend his vacations, so when he opened a bookstore he used the name.”

  “And this is his store?”

  “Not anymore. He sold it to me a few years ago.”

  “And your name is Bernie Rhodenbarr, and mine is Alice Cottrell. Where were we?”

  “You were welcoming me to the world, and telling me that you pee in the pool.”

  “Never again,” she vowed. “I won’t even dip a toe in the pool, for fear that there might be a candiru in it. Who’s to say it couldn’t happen? I gather it’s some sort of fish.”

  “The toothpick fish. It’s a kind of catfish, according to O’Hanlon.”

  “People bring in fish from South America,” she said. “Tropical fish, for people to keep in their aquariums. Aquaria?”

  “Whatever.”

  “And it’s possible someone could fly in some candiru, mixed in with a shipment of neon tetras and opaline gouramis.”

  “Gouramis come from Asia.”

  “Neon tetras, then. Are you sure gouramis come from Asia?”

  “Positive.”

  “Do you keep tropical fish?” I shook my head. “Then how do you happen to know an arcane factoid like that?”

  “I own a bookstore, and I pick books up and read them, and odd facts lodge in my mind.”

  “Like the candiru in one’s urethra,” she said. “Which could arrive in a shipment of fish for the hobby market, and could wind up in someone’s aquarium or outdoor pool, and could get released into the wild. The water’s probably too cold for them up here, but suppose they were released in Florida?”

  “I’m convinced,” I said. “I’ll never go swimming again, and I’ll steer clear of Florida forever. But where’s the danger for girls—or women either, for that matter? I realize you pee, although I understand you have to sit down to do it—”

  “Not when we’re swimming.”

  “But you don’t have penises, so what’s the problem?”
r />   “You’re saying there’s nothing for the surgeon to cut off.”

  “Right.”

  “You should see your face. You don’t even like to talk about the surgeon, do you?”

  “Not especially, no.”

  “We don’t have penises,” she said, “but we do pee, and we do have urethras. And a toothpick fish could swim in there, and find a place he’d care to call home, and then what’s a girl to do? No point running to the surgeon. ‘Cut it off! Please, cut it off before my bladder bursts!’ ‘Sorry, can’t do that, as you haven’t got one.’”

  “Oh.”

  “You see what I mean?”

  “I’ll make you a deal,” I said. “Let’s never go to the surgeon.”

  “All right.”

  “And we won’t go to Jones Beach, either.”

  “That’s all right, too.”

  “And we won’t talk about this anymore.”

  “That’s even better.”

  There was the trace of a smile on her lips, an impish light in her brown eyes. You don’t expect a conversation centered on something as horrible as the candiru to be what you would call flirtatious, but ours was, just the same. It might not be evident in the words we spoke, but a transcript of our conversation wouldn’t include the sidelong glances and raised eyebrows, the subtle nuance of a stressed syllable here and a bit of body language there. It was a flirtation, and I didn’t want it to end.

  “But we ought to talk about something,” I went on. “Forget my book. What about your book?”

  “Actually,” she said, “this one’s your book as well. I took it off the shelf, and I haven’t bought it yet.”

  “You can, of course. If you can’t bring yourself to part with it.”

  She put it on the counter, and I recognized it right off. It was a hardcover copy of Nobody’s Baby, by Gulliver Fairborn.

  “That just came in a month or so ago,” I said. “I’m not sure what it’s marked. Thirty dollars?”

  “It’s marked thirty-five.”

  “If you want it,” I said, “you could probably talk me down to thirty.”

  “If I really worked at it.”

  “That’s right.”

  “It’s not a first, is it?”

  “For thirty dollars, or even thirty-five? Not hardly.”

  “But that’s a high price for a book that’s not a first, isn’t it? If I just wanted to read it, I could buy a paperback. It’s available in paperback, isn’t it?”

  “Abundantly. It’s never been out of print since the day it was published.”

  “How nice for Mr. Fairborn.”

  “I don’t know how many copies it sells annually,” I said, “or what kind of royalty he gets, but I’d say it’s nice for him, all right. But he deserves it, don’t you think? It’s a wonderful book.”

  “It changed my life.”

  “A lot of people feel that way. I read it when I was seventeen, and I would have sworn at the time that it changed my life. And for all I know, maybe it did.”

  “It changed mine,” she said flatly, and tapped the book with her forefinger. “No dust jacket,” she said.

  “No.”

  “And it still brings thirty-five dollars?”

  “Well, it hasn’t yet,” I said, “but I live in hope. If it had a jacket, I’d remove it, and wait until a first comes in without one. Or sell it separately. The jacket’s worth two hundred dollars, maybe a little more. That’s the difference in price between a first with and without a jacket.”

  “That much?”

  “It would be more,” I said, “but for all the jackets from later printings like this one. The jacket’s identical, at least through the first ten printings or so. Then they started putting review quotes on the back. But what you want to know is why this book costs as much as it does, and that’s because it’s a later printing of the original edition, and that makes it collectible for someone who’d like to have a first but can’t afford one. After all, the only difference between this copy and a first edition is that this one doesn’t say ‘First Edition’ on the copyright page. Instead it says ‘Third Printing,’ or whatever it says.”

  “‘Fifth printing,’ actually.”

  I flipped to the page in question. “So it does. If you just want to read the book, well, Shakespeare and Company’s a few blocks down Broadway, and they’ve got the paperback for five ninety-nine. But if you want something closer to a first and don’t want to pay a fortune for it…”

  “How large a fortune?”

  “For a first edition of Nobody’s Baby? I had a copy show up shortly after I took over the shop. It came in with a load of stuff, and I thanked my lucky stars when I realized what it was. I priced it at two hundred dollars, which was much too low even then, and I sold it within the week to the first person who spotted it. He got a bargain.”

  “That doesn’t answer my question.”

  “No, it doesn’t. What’s a first of Gulliver Fairborn’s first book worth? It depends on condition, of course, and the presence or absence of a jacket, and—”

  “A very fine copy,” she said. “With an intact jacket, also in very fine condition.”

  “The last catalog listing I saw was fifteen hundred dollars,” I said, “and that sounds about right. For a really nice copy in a really nice dust jacket.”

  “And if it’s inscribed?”

  “Signed by the author, you mean? Because an inscription that reads ‘To Timmy on his seventeenth birthday, with love from Aunt Nedra’ doesn’t add anything to the book’s value. Quite the reverse.”

  “I’ll tell Aunt Nedra to keep her good wishes to herself.”

  “Or write them very lightly in pencil,” I said. “Gulliver Fairborn’s signature is rare, which is a rarity itself in this age of mass public book-signings. But you won’t see Fairborn hawking signed copies on QVC, or jetting around the country with pen in hand. In fact you won’t see him at all, and I for one wouldn’t recognize him if I did. He’s never given an interview or allowed himself to be photographed. Nobody knows where he lives or what he looks like, and a few books ago you started hearing rumors that he’d died, and that the recent books were the work of a ghostwriter. V. C. Andrews, no doubt.”

  “Not Elliott Roosevelt?”

  “Always a possibility. Anyway, someone did a computerized textual analysis, the same kind that reporter did to prove Joe Klein wrote Primary Colors, and established that Fairborn was writing his own books. But he hasn’t been signing them.”

  “Suppose he signed one.”

  “Well, how sure could we be that he really did the signing? It’s not terribly difficult to scribble ‘Gulliver Fairborn’ on a flyleaf, especially when hardly anyone has seen an authentic signature.”

  “Suppose the signature’s authentic,” she said. “And suppose it’s what I originally asked you about, not just a signed copy but an inscribed one.”

  “Saying something about Timmy and his birthday?”

  “Saying something like ‘To Tiny Alice—Rye can do more than Milt or Malt / To let us know it’s not our fault. Love always, Gully.’”

  “Gully,” I said.

  “Yes.”

  “And I guess you’d be Tiny Alice.”

  “You’re very quick.”

  “Everybody tells me that. So your question’s not hypothetical. You’ve got the book, and you’re in a position to be sure of the signature.”

  “Yes.”

  “Tell me the inscription again.” She did, and I nodded. “He’s paraphrasing Housman, isn’t he? ‘Malt can do more than Milton can to justify God’s ways to man.’ A friend of mine used to recite that couplet just before he drank the fourth beer of the evening. Unfortunately he did it again with beers five through twelve, and one grew a little weary of it. ‘Rye can do more than Milt or Malt’—why rye, do you suppose?”

  “It’s all he drinks.”

  “You’d think he could find something better to drink, wouldn’t you? What with Nobody’s Baby still in
print after…how many years?”

  She answered before I could consult the copyright page. “About forty. He was in his mid-twenties when he wrote it. He’s in his early sixties now.”

  “If the computer analysis is right, and he’s still alive.”

  “He’s alive.”

  “And you…know him?”

  “I used to.”

  “And he inscribed a book to you. Well, as far as the value’s concerned, all I could do is guess. If the copy came into my hands, I’d call a few specialists and see what I could find out. I’d get the handwriting authenticated. And then I’d probably consign the book to an auction gallery and let it find its own price, which I’d be hard put to guess at. Over two thousand, certainly, and possibly as much as five. It would depend who wanted it and how avid they were.”

  “And if you had a few of them bidding against each other.”

  “Exactly. And it wouldn’t hurt if you were somebody famous. Alice Walker, say, or Alice Hoffman, or even Alice Roosevelt Longworth. That would make it an association copy, and would render it a little more special for a collector.”

  “I see.”

  “On the other hand, the inscription’s interesting in and of itself. How did he come to sign it? For that matter, how did you happen to meet him? And, uh…”

  “What?”

  “Well, this may be a stupid question, but are you sure the man who signed your book was who he claimed to be? Because if no photos of the man exist, and if nobody knows where he lives or what he looks like…”

  She smiled a knowing smile. “Oh, it was Gully.”

  “How can you be sure?”

  “Well, I didn’t just run into him at a bookstore,” she said. “I lived with him for three years.”

  “You lived with him?”

  “For three years. Do you suppose that makes my book an association copy? Because you could say we had an association.”

  “When did this happen?”

  “Years ago,” she said. “I moved in twenty-three years ago, and—”

  “But you would have been a child,” I said. “What did he do, adopt you?”

 

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