by John Lutz
“Can I getcha anything?” she asked.
“Anything? Probably not,” Nudger told her. “Just food or drink.”
Her bored-waitress expression didn't change. Wrong wavelength, wrong planet. More evidence that the universe was made up of random, disparate parts.
“I'm not hungry,” Sandra said. “I'll just have another Scotch and water.” She looked at Nudger. “Go ahead and order some lunch; I won't think you're impolite.”
“What's good here?” Nudger asked the waitress.
“Roast-beef sandwiches.”
“What else do you serve?”
She shook her head. “Just roast-beef sandwiches.”
“Good,” Nudger said. A painless and easy choice was refreshing. “I'll have one with ketchup, salt and pepper, no onions.”
“They only come one way,” the waitress said.
No choice at all was necessary. “Great!” He wasn't being sarcastic; he was obviously really pleased about the sandwiches' lack of variety.
She looked at him oddly and made a darting squiggle of some sort in her order pad. She made similar marks to represent the drink orders, then moved away busily to deliver her message so that someone who read waitressese could interpret and cook and pour.
“The roast-beef sandwiches here are delicious,” Sandra assured him. “Now that your mind's at ease about that, what else is worrying you?”
“Do I look worried?”
She nodded her long head. “And puzzled. About what?”
“Why were you waiting for me in my hotel room night before last?” he asked her.
She smiled. “I like you and I like lust.”
“I don't doubt the last part,” Nudger told her.
She seemed more amused than offended. “There's nothing wrong with lust; it's so much purer and less complicated than love. But why do you doubt the first part of what I said? I do like you.”
“But you must know that David Collins doesn't share your affection for me. So why did you give him the letters?”
“David Collins? Letters?”
“Collins is the guy who sent you to search my room and my mind.”
“And the letters?”
“The stack of blue envelopes you took from my room and gave him.”
As he watched her face, Nudger's stomach began to bother him, a vague stirring of pain and regret. He was wrong about this woman, his stomach was telling him. A presage of guilt twisted its claws into him. It had to be her, and yet it wasn't. He knew it in that instant. He was hurting someone who cared for him, who had trusted him more than he'd trusted her. Yet he had no choice; he had to find out about this for sure, and then probe deeper.
“Is this the big-shot David Collins who gets his name in the papers now and then for charity and chicanery?”
Nudger nodded.
“Never met the man. These his letters that are missing from your room?”
“Not his letters, but they were written by someone he knows.”
“And you think I went to you so I could pick your brain and rummage through your room, that I used sex as an excuse to get in and stay awhile.” She seemed, more than anything else, disappointed in him. “You believe I stole from you.”
“I don't know that for sure. That's why I wanted to talk with you.” Too late for moderation; he had lost her.
She stood up from her chair, looking down frowning and slowly shaking her head at him, as if he were vintage wine that had suddenly gone to vinegar. He had let her down in a way not so dissimilar.
“In the grand scheme of things,” she told him calmly, “we didn't have much between us, Nudger, but what we did have, you've broken.”
“I didn't have any choice. I had to know.”
“And do you know?”
He did know; he was certain. It hadn't made sense from the beginning. “You didn't take the letters,” he told her. “Sit back down, Sandra. Please.”
She gave him a distant, pitying smile, turned, and walked with her long-legged stride through the crowd of drinkers and diners toward the exit. A one-chance woman walking from his life. Afternoon brilliance and traffic noise erupted around her briefly, as if she had magically summoned it all simply by touching the doorknob; then she disappeared into the brightness and sound even before the door swung closed.
Nudger felt suddenly as if the chain-smoking, chain-drinking, moaning girl on the piano were singing just for him. He sat morosely, thinking that the conversation hadn't turned out at all as he'd planned. In fact, a number of incidents had gone wrong for him lately. It was dispiriting; he felt dejected and small. Maybe he'd commit suicide by leaping from his chair onto the floor.
He tried to shake that feeling. It was counterproductive, and he had to work to do.
Besides, maybe his string of bad luck was ended. Luck was like that—streaky. And it had balance, a way of equalizing. So probably, despite how he felt about what had happened with Sandra, he'd bottomed out and fortune was now on the upswing. It had to be that way; from now on, things large and small would break his way. He was, in fact, convinced of it. He could feel his new run of luck throbbing in his veins.
A shadow fell across the table. Sandra's? He jerked his head around to look up and behind him, caught the oppressive scent of lilac.
The big waitress was standing over him, looking blankly down at him.
She said, “We're out of roast beef.”
TWENTY-EIGHT
Nudger didn't know the woman crossing the Majestueux lobby's deep carpet with a springy, indomitable sort of walk. Preoccupied with his problems, he didn't pay much attention to her until she got nearer. She was in her mid-forties, still attractive in the fragile way of blond women with porcelain complexions. Age had touched her lightly but often, a faint but harsh line here, a lack of luster in the well-coiffed hair there. She seemed brittle yet gentle and knowing, tempered by life's fire. Her springy walk was compact and graceful, like a gymnast's. She was on the short side, petite, and when she locked gazes with Nudger her pace toward him quickened. She had to be—
“I'm Marilyn Eeker, Mr. Nudger,” she said. “The desk clerk pointed you out to me. I've been trying to get in touch with you.”
“I know,” Nudger said. “We seem to be a second behind or ahead of each other. Why have you been looking for me, Miss Eeker?”
“Mrs.,” she corrected. “It's about Ineida. I know you've been … looking into her life.”
Nudger waited, wondering.
Marilyn Eeker smiled nervously and glanced around. “Can we go somewhere and sit down, Mr. Nudger?”
“Sure.” Nudger motioned toward the hotel restaurant. She went inside with him, and the Creole Queen who was the hostess led them to a corner booth by the window. They sat looking out at the wavering heat rising like sultry dreams from the damp street.
Marilyn Eeker said nothing until the waitress had brought the iced tea she'd ordered, the glass of milk for Nudger. She added two exactly level spoons of sugar to her tea, then a squeeze of lemon, dropping the rind into the glass. Nudger noticed that the cuff of her blouse was frayed. When she had finished carefully and thoroughly stirring the concoction, she said, “Ineida's missing, Mr. Nudger. What do you know about it?”
“What I don't know,” Nudger said gently, “is who you are, and why you think she's missing.”
Marilyn Eeker was surprised; her translucent blue eyes widened. They were beautiful eyes, only just beginning to fade. Then she smiled apologetically. “I'm sorry—I'm not thinking straight these days. I'm Ineida's mother.”
Nudger's hand reaching for his glass paused. “David Collins' wife?”
“I used to be. We divorced fifteen years ago. David managed to pull strings, keep custody of Ineida. I live alone now, and use my maiden name. David and I never see each other. But my daughter and I remained close; we became good friends. She confides in me, Mr. Nudger. She told me she thought you were working for her father, then she became unsure of that. Who are you? Who are you working for?�
�
Nudger looked across the table into the deep and relentless agony that was tearing at the fiber of this gentle woman. Her daughter was missing, and she'd been left out of the game entirely. He figured he owed her answers. “I'm a private investigator, hired to look into Ineida's relationship with Willy Hollister. I can't tell you the identity of my client, but it isn't David Collins.”
She gazed out the window for a moment, then turned again to face him and nodded. “I've met Willy Hollister. Ineida brought him by my house to show him off one day. I didn't like him.”
“Why not?”
“I grew up on the bayou, Mr. Nudger, then went to school in the East and got sophisticated and came back still a Southern girl and snagged the eligible David Collins for a husband. My father was a naturalist. He used to keep alligators from the time they were barely hatched to when they grew big and wild and something made them return to the swamp. They'd get a look in their eyes just before they disappeared into the bayou behind our house; something would enter their minds that they couldn't control and didn't want to. I hadn't seen that look since I was a tomboy bending saplings, until I met Willy Hollister.”
“How did you find out Ineida's missing?” Nudger asked.
“She was supposed to meet me and didn't show up. I phoned, got no answer, and went by her apartment. It was obvious she hadn't been there for a while. I called David, demanded to know where she went. He was evasive. He also acted as if something was very wrong; he couldn't hide it. There's a rage boiling just under his skin, Mr. Nudger. He gets that way when he's helpless, frustrated, and a little scared.”
“Willy Hollister's gone, too,” Nudger said. “It appears that he and Ineida ran away together.”
Marilyn Eeker gazed down at her delicate hands folded on the table, breathed out hard through her nose. “I was afraid of something like that.” She looked up slowly. Her pale blue eyes were clouded. “Ineida's pregnant,” she said.
Nudger lifted his glass of milk a few inches off the table, set it back down, and shoved it away, sloshing some of it onto his fingers. Cold.
“Christ!” he said. “How do you know?”
“She told me. She's known for almost two months. She's approximately three months pregnant.”
“Your husband didn't mention that when we talked.”
“He's my former husband. And he doesn't know. Ineida was afraid to tell him.”
“I'm afraid to tell him, too,” Nudger said. “Is she going to have the baby?”
“Yes, she won't have an abortion.”
“She should,” Nudger said.
“Maybe.”
He sat quietly for a moment. It all made better sense this way. Maybe Ineida and Hollister actually had eloped; maybe the pregnancy forced them into it. The ransom note might not be genuine, might be the work of a crank.
But he knew that was highly unlikely. For Hollister, Ineida's pregnancy would only be an unwanted complication, a catalyst for more tragedy. Still, Nudger decided to keep quiet for now about the note.
“Have you considered phoning the police, Mrs. Eeker?”
“No,” she said, “David would kill me.” She said it calmly and reasonably. She wasn't exaggerating; it was an assessment.
“What are you going to do now?”
She shook her head, bit her lip. “I'm not sure.”
“Go to Collins,” Nudger told her. “Tell him you know about Ineida and Hollister running away together. Tell him you talked to me, and I confirmed what you suspected. Whether you tell him about the pregnancy is one for you to think over.”
“He'll throw me out.”
“He won't. He knows that if he does, you might go to the police. Threaten him with that if you have to. Ineida's your daughter; you have a right to know what's being done to get her back. Your husband will explain. Tell him if he doesn't, I will.”
“He'll be furious with you.”
“If he weren't already, I wouldn't be giving you this advice.”
Nudger watched her wrestle with her dilemma. Then she apparently reached a decision; tension loosened its grip on her tight, squared shoulders.
She said, “Thank you, Mr. Nudger,” and stood up. From her cheap vinyl purse she fished out a pair of crinkled dollar bills and laid them on the table. They were faded and finely worn, not unlike Marilyn Eeker herself.
Nudger picked up the bills and held them out for her. “I'll take care of the check,” he said. “I'm on an expense account. Please. It's the American way.”
“It's nice of you to offer,” she said, smiling down at him. She had such a delicate, crystalline smile.
Then, ignoring the money extended toward her, she walked briskly away, prepared to face her former husband's contempt, and bring his anger with Nudger to a peak.
Nudger could understand why she and David Collins weren't compatible.
TWENTY-NINE
Nudger decided not to tell Fat Jack about his unsettling conversations with David Collins and Marilyn Eeker. The big man had enough to worry about and would hardly be reassured by the fact that Ineida was pregnant, or that Nudger was being pressured hard by Collins to find her before any harm came to her. Fat Jack knew that as Nudger's search for Ineida went, so went his own chances for survival. And everyone knew the odds on any kidnap victim turning up alive. In such circumstances a massive client, as overwrought as he was overweight, could be a liability.
“So what have you found out, old sleuth?” Fat Jack asked from where he stood by his office window. He was leaning far backward, as if to look down at a particular angle, his huge stomach straining at his gold belt buckle. Nudger wondered if he was contemplating squeezing through the window and letting two stories of height end his problems. But something told him Fat Jack wasn't the suicidal type; he'd thrived too long making music in an indifferent and demanding world to fall into the self-destruct category. His theme song was survival.
“I haven't found out anything new,” Nudger said. “That's why I'm here. Did Hollister have a regular dressing room or locker where he kept a change of clothes or any personal items?”
Fat Jack turned to face Nudger. The light streaming through the window made his gingery hair appear sparse, his huge head more bloated with fat. He looked unhealthy these days. “Hey, I never thought of that! Yeah, he's got no private dressing room, but he does have a locker. Down in the hall near the green room.”
Nudger assumed the green room was the all-purpose place of faded paint and yellowed posters. “Is it locked?”
“There are three lockers,” Fat Jack said, “all with combination locks. The combination's two left, three right, one left.”
“For which locker?”
“All of them. Nobody's supposed to keep anything valuable in them, and I can't give every new performer a fresh combination, so I keep it so I can remember the numbers.”
“Which one's Hollister's?”
“The one closest to the green-room door.”
The desk phone gave a shrill scream and Fat Jack jumped. Telephones were making him nervous lately. Nudger could understand why. They were nasty instruments that might convey the wrong message, that might at any moment spring up on their coiled wire and bite fatally.
“I'll let you know if I find anything interesting,” Nudger said, drifting toward the door as Fat Jack moved reluctantly yet with ponderous grace toward the phone. Fat Jack was sweating again; his white collar was dark up near the top from perspiration. Nudger was depressed by being around such agony.
Fat Jack tucked the receiver into his neck folds and somehow nodded good-bye as Nudger shut the door. Nudger heard him say, “Hey!” in a relieved voice. This caller wasn't likely to bring bad news.
Downstairs, business was already beginning to build. Marty Sievers was behind the bar, studying a sheet of paper and talking earnestly with Mattingly the bartender. He glanced at Nudger but gave no sign that he'd seen him. Judy Villanova was serving some of the exotic pineapple-with-parasol drinks to a group of women at a corne
r table who looked as if they might be part of a tour group. When she moved away to return to the bar, she saw Nudger and smiled.
Sam Judman smiled too, nodding as Nudger walked past. Jud-man was on the stage with the backup band, getting his drums set up for this evening, back at his job. Not much time had been wasted in bringing back old blood after Hollister had left. Obviously, Fat Jack and Sievers didn't figure Hollister would return here to play piano.
Nudger found the lockers easily enough, lined along the wall just outside the door to the grimy green room where he'd had his conversation with Hollister and been granted the great man's autograph. They looked like secondhand lockers from a high school gym; they were beige and defaced with indecipherable graffiti. Near the top of the middle unit it was proclaimed in a scratched message that someone named Gloria liked to do something, but Nudger couldn't make out what. It was more titillating that way.
Nudger worked the combination dial on the locker Fat Jack had said was Hollister's. It rotated stiffly, as if it needed oil, but at the end of the combination it clicked and Nudger could feel the tension of the dial relax in his hand. He twisted the handle and pulled the narrow steel door open.
Inside, a black Fat Jack's T-shirt hung on one of the hooks. A wrinkled and soiled tan sport jacket was draped over another. On the locker's floor lay a pair of run-down jogging shoes.
Nudger searched the jacket's pockets, then turned each shoe upside down and shook it. He didn't find what he was looking for, only a small brown spider that fell from the left shoe and scurried for cover.
Outside in the club, the band started in on a warm-up number. Nudger didn't recognize it, but it had a strong beat and Judman was going wild on the drums while the crowd, carefree people who knew nothing about kidnapping and murder, clapped in time. It was good to hear.
Nudger stood still for a few minutes in the warm hall, listening. Then he closed the locker door, twirled the combination lock, and left the club without going back upstairs to Fat Jack's office.