Comeback

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Comeback Page 15

by Richard Stark


  So Quindero got to his feet and came over to take Parker’s twenty, then crossed to Liss, who said, “Lean down, Ralph, let me tell you especially what I want.”

  Liss whispered to Quindero, while Parker watched the shadows inch up the opposite side of the ravine. Then Quindero started for the door, and Parker told him, “George told you, call the motel, see did they really check out. Now, their name at the motel is Fawcett, be sure you get that right. And while you’re at it, ask if Mr. Grant checked out, too.” Looking at Liss, he said, “Because I didn’t.”

  Liss laughed. “Shit, I was just hoping you’d lied to me. I mean, Parker, it’s fine we’re partners again and all that, but if it could turn out you don’t know where that money is any more than I do, it would simplify my life, it really would.”

  Parker said to Quindero, “Be sure to make the call, and get the names right. George here is anxious to kill me, you know.”

  Quindero threw frightened looks at both of them. He stood in the doorway, clutching the money in his right hand.

  Liss said, “Ralph. You know you’ll come back.”

  “Yes,” Quindero said.

  “Because you got nowhere else to go,” Liss told him. “I saved your ass, and I’ll go on saving it. Just so long as you do what you’re told.”

  Parker said, “Quindero. Have George describe his retirement plan some time.”

  Liss laughed, but then he said, “Parker, that isn’t funny. Ralph is new at the game. Don’t upset him.”

  Parker looked out at the ravine again, and Liss made shooing motions at Quindero, who scurried away.

  They were silent for almost five minutes, sitting against two walls at right angles to one another, resting, not seeming to look at one another. Then Parker said, “What do you want him for, George? Besides to send for pizza.”

  “To throw out of the sled,” Liss said.

  6

  It was unnatural to sit here like this. Parker needed Liss dead, and he knew Liss felt the same way about him, and they were both held back. Liss was held back because Parker was his only sure route to the duffel bags full of money, and Parker was held back because Liss had the gun.

  After dark, Parker thought. A chance will come after dark.

  The afternoon slowly descended outside, the sunny areas growing bright even as they narrowed, the shadows getting darker. The rock and the tangled underbrush out there would be full of creatures, wary, moving in sudden jumps, hidden away in the cat’s cradle of vines and branches, living their lives with all senses alert. Darkness would be good for them, too.

  Thorsen’s gun was pale, standing out against the dark floor over next to the box where Quindero had been. Neither of them looked directly at it, but both knew it was there. Parker looked out the windows at the ravine and watched the light change. Liss didn’t seem to look at anything.

  Quindero was gone almost an hour, and when he came back he seemed more agitated than ever. He carried a brown paper shopping bag with handles, and when he came in he said, “My picture’s in the paper.”

  They looked at him. Liss said, “Is it a good picture, Ralph? Is it one you like?”

  Parker said, “Show me the paper.” And held his hand out.

  Quindero dithered, not sure what to do, looking first at Parker, then at Liss.

  Liss did his half-grin. “You bought the paper, Ralph? Did you? For your scrapbook? Sure, go ahead, let Parker see it.”

  Quindero put the bag on the floor, rooted in it, came out with a newspaper, handed it to Parker. Then he carried the bag over to Liss, to divvy up the food.

  It was this city’s one newspaper, full-size, not tabloid. It was heavy on the ads, heavy on the wire service reports, with just barely enough local staff to cover robbery, murder, arson and escapes all happening at once. Under the main headline:

  WITNESS MURDERED IN MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Police Guard Not Enough; Killer Escapes

  was an excited story about the events in the hospital, plus a recap of the robbery at the stadium, plus a lot of self-confident official pronouncements.

  Three photos of equal size and importance ran horizontally under the main headline and next to the subhead and story. From left to right, they were the local police commissioner, Tom Carmody and Ralph Quindero. The newspaper couldn’t have done a better job of taking attention away from Ralph Quindero’s features if they’d decided not to run the picture at all.

  The photo they’d used of Quindero was a black-and-white blowup of something from the family’s collection, and it showed him in sunshine, full face, smiling and squinting, two things he wasn’t likely to do for a while. When Parker looked at this picture and its placement, and then looked at Ralph Quindero, it seemed to him Quindero could probably walk through the newspaper’s editorial department without anybody recognizing him.

  Over next to Liss, Quindero squatted down and ripped up the paper bag into large irregular pieces to use as plates. On one of these, he brought Parker two slices of pizza, plus a can of some local bottler’s cola. A bottle would have been more useful, but it didn’t matter.

  It was getting darker in here, hard to read, but once everybody was settled, with Quindero once again seated against the right wall, mouth full of pizza, Parker held the newspaper angled to catch the light from the windows and out loud read, “Walter Malloy, the Quindero family attorney, issued a plea late this morning for fugitive Ralph Quindero to give himself up, saying, ‘There are no substantive charges against Ralph. At this point, the police merely want to talk to him as a witness. The longer he stays in hiding, the more he risks facing some sort of charge down the line.’ Police have announced a special telephone number for anyone with information on any aspect of the investigation.” Parker looked over at Quindero: “You want the number?”

  Quindero blinked a lot, staring back and forth between Parker and Liss. “What does that— What do they mean?”

  Parker said, “Oley oley in free.”

  Liss laughed, and looked at Quindero, and told him, “It’s a good thing we don’t believe what we read in the newspapers, huh, Ralph?”

  Quindero simply stared at him.

  “Because, if you did believe that bullshit,” Liss went on, “I’d have to kill you now. I can’t have you go home and tell stories about me. But we don’t believe it, so that’s okay.”

  Quindero said, “We don’t believe it?”

  “Oh, come on, Ralph,” Liss said. “That’s the stuff they say every time. They’d say it to me if they could. Come on in, there’s no problem, nobody’s mad at you. Oh, okay, you say, I’m all right. And you go in, and the first thing, they slap the cuffs on you. You’ve had the cuffs on you, remember, Ralph?”

  “I remember,” Quindero said.

  “And that was before all this other stuff. Everything’s okay and you should come in now? When back before old Tom got his, and you and I headed out of there, way back then they had the cuffs on you?”

  “That’s right,” Quindero said.

  Liss looked at Parker, and shook his head. “Parker, why do you want to upset my partner here? That’s not a good thing to do.”

  Parker looked at the top of the paper. “It says there’s a chance of rain tomorrow.”

  “We don’t care about that,” Liss said. “We’re long gone by then. One way or another.”

  7

  It’s getting too dark in here,” Liss said.

  They’d all been silent for a long while, Quindero brooding, Liss and Parker both waiting. But it was true; darkness had spread in this east-facing room, faster than outside, where the shadow across the way had not yet quite reached the rim of the ravine. Clear sunshine tinged with red made a kind of fire along the rim, a line of concentrated brightness, with the sky beyond it a deep blue turning gray. Inside, they could still see one another, but no one would be able to read the newspaper. Thorsen’s gun no longer gleamed on the floor. And Liss wasn’t happy.

  Parker felt Liss’s eyes on him, but didn’t respond. He kept on watching
the rim of the ravine out there. When the last of the sunshine left, there would be a sudden drop in reflected light into this room. Not a big change, not even very noticeable. But enough to make everything blur, everything out of focus, until their eyes could adjust. In that instant, Parker would go for Thorsen’s gun.

  But Liss was unhappy. “Parker,” he said, “I don’t know about this.”

  “What’s the problem, George?”

  “Same as always. You.”

  Parker kept watching the rim. The sun moved very slowly. “Nothing’s changed,” he said. “We’re all still like we were.”

  “I don’t want you loose when it’s dark in here,” Liss said.

  “Midnight doesn’t come for a while, George.”

  “Even if I had a flashlight, I couldn’t use it,” Liss said. “Not with all those windows. There’s always some nosy son of a bitch with time on his hands to call the cops.”

  “We’ve been doing fine up till now, George.” The light hung on the rim, golden red. The air was so clear you could see individual branches, fall shades of yellow and tan on the weeds and underbrush, turned Technicolor by the sun.

  Liss abruptly stood. “Ralph,” he said, “put your foot on that gun.”

  Parker didn’t bother to watch Quindero obey. He also stood, watching Liss’s hands, waiting for one of them to reach to a pocket or behind his back. “George,” he said, “don’t fuck things up.”

  “There’s a closet,” Liss said. “Ralph and me, we looked the place over when we first got here. Downstairs, next story down, there’s a closet with a door on it and a lock on the outside.”

  “George, you don’t want me to—”

  “It’s that or I wound you,” Liss said. The strain was coming back into his voice. “Maybe that’d be easier anyway. Don’t have to gut-shoot you, I can take out both your knees, and Ralph can carry you when it’s time to go.”

  Quindero made a little startled sound, not quite a protest.

  Parker said, “Better have Ralph test that first. See how far he can carry me.”

  Quindero stammered and said, “I don’t— I don’t think I could do that.” He was a reedy weedy thing, a poor specimen.

  Liss had to know it, but he also had to protect himself. “Goddamit, Parker,” he said. “I want you out of the way, locked up, where I don’t have to worry about you all the time. Eleven-thirty, we’ll let you out, we’ll all get out of here. Meantime, Ralph and me, we’ll go get a car.”

  “George—”

  “We do it my way!”

  Parker was silent, thinking. A closet till eleven-thirty? Half an hour after Brenda and Mackey would drive by the motel, and they surely wouldn’t wait. But could a closet hold him that long? Liss and Quindero had to go get a car. He said, “Make it eleven. It could take a while to get there.”

  “Eleven,” Liss agreed. “But I can’t have you out here, Parker, you understand that. I’ll have to shoot you, either to kill or wound. I can’t have you around.”

  “I’ll wait, George,” Parker said. “Where is this closet of yours?”

  “Downstairs. Next flight down. You lead the way.”

  The light hung on the rim of the ravine. Parker shrugged and turned toward the stairs. Behind him, Liss said, “Ralph, bring along that fucking gun.”

  * * *

  8

  It was darker down here, with all these interior walls separating off bedrooms and bathrooms, but Liss and Quindero were behind him, keeping their distance, and there was no advantage to be made of the darkness. Parker went down the stairs, and at the bottom, from behind him, Liss said, “Around to the right,” which was the hall through the middle of the building.

  Parker saw that the closet Liss was talking about was the one that used to be the elevator shaft. The lock was a hasp, with a wooden dowel stuck in it. Liss, still keeping well back, said, “Take the dowel out. Hand it back to Ralph.”

  Parker did that, and opened the door, and only a faint odor of dry wood came out. It was black inside there, impossible to see a thing.

  Liss, sounding more and more nervous, said, “What’s the problem? Get in there.”

  It wouldn’t do to have Liss lose control; he was the one with the guns. Parker said, ‘Take it easy, George. It’s dark in here, I gotta feel my way.”

  He took a step forward, reaching his arms out, and at first encountered nothing. The elevator, when it had been in place, had been deeper than wide, comfortable for two people, possible for three if they knew one another. Now that the space was a closet, the front half was empty, but when Parker stepped in deeper, his hands met the round horizontal wooden pole toward the back for hanging clothes on, and the wooden shelf above it. Both were empty, and so was the floor.

  The pole and shelf were at head height, but there was plenty of room in front of them. Parker turned around to look out at Liss and Quindero, in the hall with the staircase behind them. “All right, George,” he said. “Go get your car.”

  Liss said to Quindero, “Shut it. Put the dowel in. Make sure it’s goddam tight.”

  Quindero came forward. His eyes met Parker’s just before he shut the door, and they were full of panic. But he’d go on obeying Liss, because there wasn’t one solitary other thing he could think of to do.

  The door closed. In absolute darkness, he heard the dowel scrape into place. Then it sounded as though Quindero was pounding the dowel in tighter, probably with the butt of Thorsen’s gun. Shoot his own elbow off, if he wasn’t careful.

  Late for Ralph Quindero to be careful.

  Parker went down on the floor, pressing his cheek to the plywood floor and his head against the base of the door, his ear next to the space under the door. He heard Quindero back away, heard him say, “It’s good and tight.”

  “Good.”

  “Do we go get the car now?”

  “No. When it’s dark. Come on upstairs.”

  The steps went away. Two pairs, receding down the hall, then mounting the stairs.

  Parker sat up, rested his back against the plywood wall, and crossed his forearms on his knees. His watch didn’t glow in the dark, which was sometimes an advantage and sometimes not.

  It didn’t matter. He was better in here for now, not making Liss antsy. There was plenty of time to come out.

  9

  It was probably time. Parker had listened now and then at that space at the bottom of the door, but heard nothing, so Liss and Quindero weren’t bothering to check on him in here. He’d seen the faint gray line of light under the door shadow and blur, until at last it disappeared into the general black. He’d gone on waiting, and now it was probably time to get out of here.

  Did Liss understand what these closets were? Maybe not. They were afterthoughts, simple structures inserted to make use of the space. These closets were not structural, and therefore had none of the building’s support beams going through their ceilings and floors. Simple stringers, two-by-six lengths of wood, had been toed into place to support plywood floors; that was it. And Ed Mackey had already showed them how to lift the floor in the bottom-level closet, to find the motor well for use as a hiding place for the duffel bags.

  Parker went down on all fours and started in a front corner, patting the floor, looking for a seam. He found it where he expected it to be, about a foot and a half back from the doorway opening, the same place it had been downstairs. When they’d added these closets, they’d laid one sheet of plywood from the rear of the space to near the front, to give themselves leeway in fitting the piece in, and then they’d cut a second piece to fill the remaining space.

  Next, he stood and felt his way to the back of the closet, where he patted the underpart of the shelf until he came to one of the two L-shaped brackets that the shelf rested on. It would have been easier if the shelf had just been placed there, but they’d screwed it to the brackets, so he stood under the shelf, bent down, kept out of the way of the wooden clothes pole, and punched upward with the heels of both hands, flanking one of the bra
ckets, until the shelf broke loose.

  When the shelf popped upward, with a quick ripping sound, one of the screws fell out and bounced on the floor. Parker paused, listening for a reaction. There’d been very little noise, but he couldn’t be sure they hadn’t heard it. If they were in the building.

  After three or four minutes, when he still heard nothing, he went back to work, holding the shelf up out of the way with one hand while twisting the bracket back and forth with the other, until the screws holding it to the wall came loose. This part he managed to do with almost no noise at all.

  Now he had the bracket for a tool. It was three inches along one side and four inches along the other, thin but strong metal. He put this to work on the floor, gouging along the seam line until he’d torn a slit wide enough to squeeze the bracket into. Kneeling on the larger section of floor, bearing down on the bracket, he pried the smaller section up one fraction at a time. Four screws had been drilled down into the corners of this piece, plus one each at front and back into the central stringer. It was the rear screw in the stringer that Parker pried out first, then the left corner, then the right. Then he could peel this piece up and back toward the door, until the other three screws gave way.

  Now he had a space a foot and a half by five feet, with a two-by-six stringer across the middle and Sheetrock underneath. Using the bracket, Parker sliced through the Sheetrock a piece at a time, breaking the pieces off to bring them up into the closet and lay on the floor here, not wanting pieces of ceiling to fall and make a racket.

  When he made the first hole in the Sheetrock, he saw gray light again, very dim, defining the jagged hole. There was no door on the ground floor closet, and whatever light was coming in the study windows reached back to here.

  Parker removed chunks of ceiling, clearing the space, then slid down through the opening feet first. He had to wriggle his torso through the narrow opening, had to hold his arms over his head and at last just permit himself to drop.

 

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