“No? You’re not just stringing this out?”
“Nope. Cross my heart and hope to die.”
As Ray Charles belted the second chorus of “Hit the Road, Jack”—“and don’t you come back no more, no more”—Hall whirled around and marched toward the glowing red lights of the stereo equipment. He grabbed the CD player, ripped it loose, and hurled it against the wall. The housing shattered into pieces and the music died.
“I hate that fucking song,” Hall muttered.
“Me, too. Thanks.”
Hall came back to the couch and grunted softly as he settled into the cushions. Harry stared at the gun in Hall’s belt holster. Harry had a gun, too—a .32-caliber Beretta Tomcat with a seven-shot clip that he kept in a holster attached to the underside of his desk. He’d bought the gun last year through Carmine, after he’d heard about a series of break-ins a block away. He’d never fired it and had only taken it out of the holster a few times to clean it, per Carmine’s strict instructions.
“The thirty-five grand is in my van, Harry. Take the money and make the call.”
“Nah. It wouldn’t last me very long—I’ve got some expensive obligations.”
“Don’t we all,” said Hall. He sighed, flipped Harry’s cell phone open, and punched some buttons. Harry heard it ring once, and then someone answered.
“Come up,” Hall said, and snapped the phone closed.
Harry’s gaze strayed to the monitor on the desk. The Jackson Pollock screen saver glowed with a close-up of black and red blobs on a tawny surface. It looked like a NASA photo of an alien terrain. He wished he were there—he was certain that on Mars or Venus there were no trained killers waiting for a phone call to come up the stairs and put a bullet in his skull.
Hall looked at him and shook his head. “You’d go down this road for Geiger and a kid you don’t even know?”
“It’s got nothing to do with them, Mr. Hall, or whatever your name really is.”
Harry wondered whether his neighbor was home. He shared the brownstone with a garrulous commodities broker who owned the bottom floor; they’d kibitzed on the sidewalk a while ago, and the guy had mentioned that he was taking the wife to Europe for part of the summer, but Harry couldn’t remember when. If they were downstairs and Harry started screaming, they might very well hear him. But as soon as the idea occurred to him, he knew he wouldn’t do it. He wasn’t going out like a jerk, even if he’d spent too much of his life being one. For a second, he was back in Central Park, drunk in the mindless night, lying on the ground spitting blood and teeth while the muggers stood over him and asked yet again, “Gonna give us the fucking ATM code?” He’d looked up at them and said, “Something’s happening here but you don’t know what it is, do you, Mr. Jones?” They’d gone back to work with their boots, and then Geiger had come along …
The front door swung open. Harry and Hall turned in unison to see a tall silhouette in the dark hallway.
“No go?” a man asked.
Harry knew the voice, recognized it the way you catch a glimpse of a familiar face in a crowd but can’t remember the context of your association.
“No go,” said Hall.
As the silhouette started into the apartment, Hall reached to the side table and turned on the lamp.
“Jesus,” said Harry, the word pulled from him slowly.
The panhandler he’d given twenty dollars to on Ludlow Street stood scowling at him.
“Harry,” Hall said, “this is Ray.”
“Hi, Ray,” said Harry.
“There’s a woman asleep in the back room,” Hall said to Ray. “Go get her.”
Electric itches of dread scurried across Harry’s palms. He’d forgotten about Lily.
Ray tromped toward the second bedroom and Hall turned back to Harry. “She your wife or your girlfriend?”
“Sister.”
Ray carried Lily into the living room and put her down in a chair. Still half asleep, she listed side to side.
“Don’t do this to her, Harry,” said Hall.
Harry looked back at Hall and then broke into a grin.
“What’s funny, Harry?”
“Let me see if I’ve got this straight,” Harry said. “You think she’s your ace in the hole, right?” He stood up, tying the sleeves of his jacket around his waist to keep covered.
“What’re you doing, Harry?” said Hall.
“Just watch, okay?” Harry walked to his sister and did the knuckle knock on her head. “Anybody home?”
“Can we go for a walk?” said Lily.
“What’s my name, sis?”
“Where shall we go?” she said.
Harry worked up a light, sandpapery chuckle and put it out there for them.
“Fellas, meet my little sister, Lily. She’s an institutionalized, mostly catatonic schizophrenic. She hasn’t known who I am for more than a decade—and at a hundred grand plus a year, she’s a fucking stone around my neck.” He shook his head at them. “I mean, I don’t want to see her get hurt, but if you think that’s gonna turn me around…” He gave them the chuckle one more time. “Guys, let me put it this way. Every night I get down on my knees and pray she’ll die. You’d be doing both of us a favor if you broke her in half.”
Hall and Ray shared a flat look.
“Harry,” said Ray, “she may be crazy as a fucking eight, but it doesn’t mean she won’t feel the pain.”
“Time for that phone call, Harry,” Hall said.
“I’m telling you—Geiger won’t answer.”
“Just make the call,” said Hall. “We’ll take it from there.”
Harry could see the reflection of the rising sun crawling up the sides of two crystal buildings across the river. The earth was turning at an incomprehensible speed. We’ll take it from there. If Hall could locate Geiger off an unanswered call from a cell phone, he had access to some major-league technology.
“So,” Harry said, “I’m thinking this isn’t about a stolen painting, huh?”
“Fuck you,” said Ray. He picked Lily up and tossed her across the room. She hit the floor like a rag doll, hardly making a sound. She lay facedown, limbs askew, and then began to whimper in short spurts. Looking at her, Harry suddenly imagined that the sadness swelling inside him would crush his heart against his ribs and kill him.
Ray turned to Harry and tapped his forehead with a bratwurst-sized finger.
“That’s what this is about, Harry.”
“Know what, Ray? You are one shit-ass excuse for a mean motherfucker.” Ray’s huge hand flashed up and grabbed Harry by the throat. “And,” Harry croaked, “you owe me twenty bucks, asshole.”
Ray’s lips parted in a viperous grin, and for a moment Harry thought he’d take the bait.
“Stay on plan, Ray,” Hall said. “Get her on her feet. We’ll see how coldhearted big brother really is.”
As Ray let go of him, Harry took his last, best shot.
“You were real good down on the street, Ray,” he said. “Tell me something: do you do other stuff, or does Massah Hall always have you play the homeless nigger?”
Ray’s arm came up and across as if he was stepping into a perfect backhand. His forearm met Harry’s skull at ear level, and the blow sent him flying.
Harry hit the floor short of where he’d hoped to, but then went into a clumsy rollover, praying it looked realistic. He came to a stop lying faceup against one of the desk’s legs. He had a loud screech in his head, tears in his eyes, and a blurry but unobstructed view of the Beretta in its holster.
Hall was up on his feet.
“Jesus, Ray! What’re you—a goddamn plebe? Huh?”
“Sorry,” Ray muttered.
Harry closed his eyes. His left kneecap had taken the full measure of his weight and had a ballooning throb in it now. Clusters of stars skittered across the undersides of his lids. He thought he might pass out from the pain and cursed himself for not considering that possibility beforehand. And now that the gun was in reach, he felt t
iny spiders of panic crawling up and down his spine. He had no plan for how to proceed beyond this point.
Harry heard Lily whimper again and felt tears bulge beneath his eyelids. The fireworks display in his head was abruptly interrupted by a bleached-out, undulating vision. He was in their bathroom on Ninety-fourth Street, soaking in the tub and reading about the latest exploits of his beloved Green Lantern. The door opened and Lily came in—she couldn’t have been more than seven. She lifted up the toilet seat and then her pleated tartan skirt, before plopping down and starting to pee. She turned to him and gave him a magnificent grin.
“Hear it?” she said. “That’s why they call it tinkle, ’cuz that’s how it sounds. Can I come in with you?”
“No.”
“Why not?”
“Because.”
“I used to.”
“I said no, didn’t I? You deaf?”
“How could I be deaf if I’m answering you, stupid?” She leaned toward him and rapped her knuckles on the top of his head three times. “Anybody home?”
Now, lying under the desk, the saddest, angriest part of him wanted to rip the Beretta from its holster and fill the room with bullets until the clip was empty and no heart among them could ever beat again.
“Harry?” It was Hall’s tired voice. “Harry, get up.”
Harry didn’t move. He heard a long sigh sift through Hall’s nostrils. He knew Hall wasn’t interested in any of this extracurricular activity. He was all about information, precision, clean angles. He was chafing at the waste of time.
“I swear to God, Ray,” Hall said. “If he’s out cold…”
“I hear you,” Harry said.
“Then get up and go sit in the chair. Ray, put Lily on the couch so Harry has a good view of her.”
Harry opened his eyes. Once Ray picked up Lily he was going to pass right by him. Harry rolled over and got up onto his hands and knees, sucking oxygen to counteract his dizziness.
Harry watched Ray lean down to Lily, take hold of the back of her blouse, and start dragging her across the floor toward the sofa. She could have been a mannequin en route to a window display.
“Rise and shine, Harry,” Ray said.
Harry’s right hand rose and grabbed the edge of the desk for support. The action gave him a second’s peripheral glimpse of Hall’s whereabouts—he was still standing at the sofa. Harry slid his left hand under the desk and closed it around the Beretta’s dimpled, hard-rubber grip just as Ray came abreast of him.
Ray paused and gave him a brittle smile. “Show’s about to start, pal.”
Harry pulled the gun free and stuck it into Ray’s wide, smooth forehead. “Move one inch and I swear to God that will be the last incredibly stupid thing you ever say.”
Harry liked the sound of that—he liked the delivery, too. He watched the lids of Ray’s eyes pull back to their limits, revealing angry mahogany irises.
“Jesus Christ,” Hall said. “I don’t fucking believe this.”
Harry pushed the gun’s muzzle deeper into the thin flesh. “Hands up.”
The joints of Ray’s jaw tensed and he scowled as if he’d bitten down on something very bitter. Then he let go of Lily and raised his hands above his head.
“Turn ninety degrees with me,” Harry said, “so I have Mr. Hall in my line of sight behind you. Baby steps—and slow.” The two men turned on their shared axis. Now Harry could look at Ray and also have a head-on view of Hall standing ten feet away. “Mr. Hall,” he said, “take your gun out and toss it in the direction of the bathroom door.”
“Calm down, Harry,” said Hall. “You sound pretty antsy.”
“I am antsy. Very.”
“Let’s don’t kill anyone, okay?”
“You said you were going to kill me.”
“Things happen, Harry, and things change. You make a plan, then reconfigure. So relax. You’re the one with the gun in your hand.”
“Now toss yours, like I told you.”
“Harry—”
“Do it—before I work up enough nerve to shoot somebody!”
Hall cocked his head and smiled. “Harry, you have a genuinely unique way of putting things sometimes.”
Hall’s right hand moved to his belt holster. He gripped the gun with his pointing finger and thumb, slowly lifted it out, and tossed it through the bathroom door. It hit the tile with a sharp clatter and skidded across the floor.
“Now sit down on the couch,” Harry told him.
Hall did so, the smile still playing at the corners of his mouth.
Harry took a step back from Ray, keeping the gun aimed at the shallow gully between the man’s eyebrows. They both noticed that Harry’s hand was shaking.
“Scared, asshole?” said Ray.
“Parkinson’s. Forgot to take my meds.” He switched to a two-handed grip on the gun, which helped reduce the trembling. “Now get on your knees, Ray.”
Ray shook his head. “Not happening, man. You’re not gonna shoot me, and I’m not getting on my knees.”
Harry saw Hall’s chin dip wearily toward his chest. “Ray, we don’t have time for this. Do what he says.”
“Not part of my job description.”
“Ray,” said Hall, “get on your fucking knees!”
As Ray knelt down, Harry was almost certain he saw sparks of rage leaping about in his eyes.
“Let’s have your gun, Ray. Same way.”
“Motherfucking…” Ray said, the rest of his thought fizzling out into a mutter as he took out a shiny snub-nosed revolver and tossed it behind Harry.
Harry couldn’t keep his eyes on both Hall and Ray and see Lily, but he wasn’t confident enough to take a quick glance her way.
“Lily,” he said. “Can you stand up, Lily?”
“Sure she can,” Ray said. “Then she’ll recite the Pledge of fucking Allegiance.”
Harry’s head felt lopsided and his knee was squishy and hot. For a moment he forgot that he was holding the gun.
“Know what, Ray?” he said.
“What?”
Harry stared down at him, his mind suddenly blank. He’d meant to deliver a clever rejoinder, but when nothing came he swung his arms around as hard and fast as he could. The Beretta met Ray’s sneer with such force that he arched backward and landed flat on his back while his spouting blood was still suspended in the air. A wave of drops floated and then fell, dappling his pants and sweatshirt with scarlet.
Hall sprang up from the couch as the room filled with the reflexive, slurping sound of Ray trying to breathe.
Harry shifted his weapon in Hall’s direction. “Stay!”
Harry glanced down at Ray. He’d rolled over onto his side to keep from suffocating and now let out a syrupy moan. His hands were wrapped tightly around his face, but blood seeped through his fingers.
“Muhjerfushur,” Ray gurgled.
Sunlight had spread through most of the room now, and Harry let his gaze wander across it for a moment, knowing that what had been his home, his sanctum, was lost to him. But what truly hurt was the recognition that everything he’d be leaving behind had come to him because of his chosen line of work.
The sloshing sound leaking from behind Ray’s palms was growing louder. He finally managed to get himself up into a sitting position without moving his hands. Harry took a step back.
“Shit,” said Harry. “I didn’t mean to do that.”
Hall snorted and sat down on the sofa again. “Yes, you did, Harry. My guess is you’ve been wanting to do that for a long time. You just didn’t know it till now.”
To Harry’s chagrin, he realized that he had, in fact, felt a joint-loosening sense of release, a cleansing liberation. He turned and looked at Lily. She was sitting up, hands in her hair, fingers twirling and untwirling a long black hank of it in a mute, private ritual.
“I’m going to put on some pants,” Harry said.
He picked up Ray’s gun and walked to the bathroom, his eyes still on Hall. He put the gun in the sink
, pulled the sport coat from around his waist, and took his trousers off the toilet seat. As he stepped into them, he heard Ray spit out something thick and viscous. Harry tried not to think about what it was.
“I’m going to have a smoke,” Hall said. “Reaching in my pocket, okay?”
Pulling on a shirt and then his sport coat while switching the gun from hand to hand, Harry came back out into the living room. “Be my guest.”
Hall took a pack of Camels and a lighter from his pocket. Lighting a cigarette, he said, “Why’d Geiger do it, Harry?”
“He figured if you were willing to take the kid to Dalton, then he was expendable—and so maybe we all were. I’m gonna get out of here now, with my sister. Do I need to take all the guns?”
“If you’re asking whether I’m going to come out into the street running after you, guns blazing—then no, you don’t have to take the guns.”
Harry stuck his feet into his loafers, grabbed a towel from the bathroom, and came back out into the living room. He was getting used to the weight of the Beretta in his hand, but he felt like a stranger in someone else’s place.
He got halfway to Lily and stopped. Turning to Hall, he held out a palm. “My cell phone.”
Hall tossed it to him. Harry lifted Lily up and held her close. He could feel her heart beating against his chest. She started humming something very softly, stopping and starting in even, repetitive intervals. It sounded vaguely familiar to Harry, but he couldn’t place the tune.
“How long has she been like that?” Hall asked.
“Too long,” Harry replied. “I’ve got to ask you, Hall. Would killing both of you end this?”
“Think you could do that?”
“Strictly hypothetical. Would it?”
“De Koonings are hard to come by, Harry.”
Harry nodded and looked over at Ray.
“Hey, Ray,” he said. Ray raised his head, his large, blood-soaked hands still clamped onto his face. Harry tossed him the towel. It landed at his knees, and Ray reached down with both hands to pick it up.
Harry saw that the Beretta had done tremendous damage to Ray’s face. The proud, aquiline nose was pancaked and off-center, and the plane of the upper lip was crushed and raw. The unseen teeth beneath the bloody plexus were broken if not gone.
The Inquisitor: A Novel Page 10