“No. It’s music.”
“It’s good music, isn’t it?”
He nodded. “I think so.”
“So your father’s wrong, isn’t he?”
“About music?”
“About music.”
“I guess.”
“So he could be wrong about other things.”
Logic Lessons with Lyle; a new PBS series.
“I guess,” he said.
“Well, it’s wrong to kidnap somebody. It’s wrong to keep them against their will.”
“I don’t see what that has to do with music.”
Score one for the imbecile.
“Lyle, it shows your father’s fallible.”
“Huh?”
“Not perfect. That he can be wrong.”
“He told me to keep you here. We’re not hurting you. We’ll probably let you go.”
Probably. Oh Jesus Christ; her life was hanging by probably.
“Lyle . . .” And she didn’t know what to say. She was lost. She was lost if she thought she could talk her way out.
That afternoon, Monday afternoon, she had tried sex. She decided she’d fuck this moron, if she had to, to get out of here; or at least start to fuck him: she might be able to knock him out with his Walkman, if she got ahold of it and smacked him hard enough (the phone was out of her reach, no matter what she tried). Also, he carried a .38 with a wood stock, stuck down in his belt, which would neuter him if it went off, which seemed a good idea to her. He was thick enough, maybe, to take it out and put it on the nightstand, while they made it. If she could interest him in that.
“I’m lonely,” she said.
He was just starting to watch Gilligan’s Island; it was half past four. That was one of the shows where he listened to the original soundtrack, as opposed to substituting his own Walkman rock ’n’ roll version.
“I don’t understand,” he said.
“I’m lonely.”
“I’m keeping you company.”
“You’re a good-looking boy, Lyle. Why don’t you come sit by me.”
He did.
“Wouldn’t you like to kiss me, Lyle?” Gag me with a spoon.
“Sure,” he said. “You’re real pretty.”
“Then why don’t you?”
“Pa said don’t fool with you.”
“Do you always listen to your pa?”
“Yes,” he said.
She grabbed the stock of the .38 in his belt, wedging her hand between his belly and the gun, trying to find the trigger, trying to get her finger on the trigger to shoot his fucking nuts off, and he smacked her.
He stood there; he was quavering a little. “That wasn’t nice,” he said.
“Fuck you,” she said, face stinging.
“You can’t be trusted,” he said, shaking his head, turning to his bed and flopping onto it and watching Gilligan’s Island.
She was trembling. With rage. With fear. With disgust at herself, for trying to seduce this retard; with astonishment that he had spurned her so readily. She had gotten everything she ever had with her looks, with her sexual attractiveness, and her cleverness in knowing how to use same, how to mate her intelligence with her good looks. It had landed her Nolan, and a sweet life. It had inadvertently landed her here, as well—in the clutches of a cluck against whom all her feminine wiles, her brain, her body, her manipulative powers, were useless. She was impotent.
He let her bathe, once a day. He let her wash out her clothes, her underwear, and the father had provided some Jordache jeans and a frilly blouse (was there a girl in this god-awful family?) for her to wear while her clothes dried. So at least she didn’t have to feel scuzzy. At least she could be clean, relatively, at least her hair wouldn’t be a greasy mess; it was a clean mess, but that was better than greasy. It helped her keep her spirits up, just enough to be thinking of ways out of this.
She went to the bathroom as often as she could get away with it. It was necessary, because she went through the countless cans of Diet Coke Lyle thoughtfully fetched for her upon command. And she was working on a project: the window.
The bathroom window, which looked out upon snowy ground and evergreens mingling with gray skeletal trees, was painted shut. She was working it loose. Paint chips fell, which she dutifully gathered and flushed down the toilet. She didn’t work on it long or hard at any given time, except during her bath, while the water ran, covering the noise of her upward thrusts at the stuck window.
Wednesday morning, as her bath was drawing itself, she broke it loose. She slid it open, carefully, but the wood against wood made an awful screech.
And Lyle was right there, on the other side of the unlocked door: “Are you okay in there?”
Cold air was rushing in on her; goose pimples took control.
“I’m fine,” she said, trying to keep her voice light, squeezing the words past her heart, which was in her throat, in her fucking throat.
He was saying, “What was that noise?”
“The water pipes, I guess. Cold today.”
“Well. Hurry up in there.”
She waited a few beats; the water was still running, so she couldn’t hear whether his footsteps made their way across the room, back to the bed and TV. Maybe he was still on the other side of that door, .38 in his belt. Maybe he was watching Jeopardy! while Billy Idol sang. Who the fuck knew.
She put the stool down, and stood on it, and crawled over and out of the window and dropped to the snow, on her knees and hands, in the borrowed jeans and frilly blouse, and she began to run, at first toward the trees—then looking around, she saw down the slope, the top of a building; she curved and ran toward there, her feet crunching in snow-covered leaves, and it was a motel, a small one, just a handful of rooms, and down the hill, goddamn! Highway. Beyond that, the river, the Mississippi.
She knew where she was, vaguely; this was the Illinois side. Probably near Andalusia. She tumbled, ankle giving. Damn! Fuck!
She got on her feet again, quickly, front of her wet from snow. Her ankle was okay—she’d twisted it a little, it would slow her down some, but it wasn’t bad, certainly nothing broken, and she heard him behind her. Christ!
She could hear his footsteps, as he strode through the snow, could hear him puffing, gulping in air, and she tried to pick up speed and then he was on her, tackling her, bringing her down. She looked up, saw the goal line, the highway, down the hill. No touchdown today.
He yanked her up, holding her by her upper arm, dragging her like a disobedient child back up the hill.
“That was bad,” he said. “You shouldn’ta done that.”
“Don’t tell your father.”
“I have to.”
“Why?”
“I just have to.”
He was amazing; he was goddamn fucking amazing. “Do you really think it was wrong of me to try to save myself? To try to get away?”
“You’re supposed to stay with me.”
They made her keep the door open when she went to the bathroom, from then on. They let her keep bathing, but with the door open. Lyle had nailed the window shut. He nailed the other windows in the place shut as well, after that.
Wednesday night, late, so late it was Thursday morning, Lyle left for a meeting with his father and Nolan and some other people. By now she had caught the drift of it, hearing Lyle’s half of frequent phone conversations with his “pa.” Unless she was badly mistaken, they were planning to rob some of the stores at Brady Eighty. Maybe a lot of the stores. They were using Nolan’s inside knowledge about the mall in particular, and his expertise at such robberies in general, to pull this heist. But the bottom line still seemed to be revenge. She could smell Nolan’s death in this. And her own.
They left her with the owner of the frilly blouse and jeans, a cute, slutty teenage girl named Cindy Lou, perky boobs poking at a RATT T-shirt; sitting in a chair on the other side of the other bed and reading Hit Parader magazine and listening to her own tapes on her brother’s Walkman. She s
eemed nervous and embarrassed and avoided talking to Sherry.
Sherry tried to get the girl’s attention, to no avail, but finally the girl put her magazine down and took the earphones off and came and sat on the bed.
“What’s this about?” she asked. It had taken her a long time, lost in her magazine and music, to allow some thoughts, some doubts, to push through. But they apparently had.
“Don’t you know?” Sherry asked.
“I don’t pay much attention to what Lyle and Daddy do. I figure what I don’t know won’t hurt me.”
“Well, it can hurt me. They kidnaped me, your daddy and Lyle. Lyle’s your brother?”
She nodded; she had big blue eyes and was faintly freckled. She looked innocent and worldly at once.
“They’re getting you involved in it, kidnaping, leaving you here with me.”
She swallowed, looked away. “I know,” she said glumly.
“I didn’t do anything to them. I live with a man they’re forcing to do some things, by holding me captive. I think they’re going to kill both of us, when this is over.”
The girl shook her head no. “Daddy wouldn’t do that. Lyle wouldn’t do that.”
“I think they would.”
“Anybody rape you or anything?”
“No.”
“Not Lyle? Not Daddy?”
“No.”
She shrugged. “See,” she said, offering that as proof of her family’s good intentions.
“You weren’t sure when you asked me, though, were you? You thought maybe I might have been raped.”
She shrugged again. But said nothing.
“Help me.”
“How?”
“They left you the key to these cuffs, didn’t they?”
“Not rilly, no. They said if you had to pee, to tell you to hold it.”
“Maybe we can find something to bust this rung, and I can slip my cuff off . . .”
“No. I can’t help you. I’d like to, lady, but no.”
“Will you take a message to someone for me?”
“No. I’m sorry. Now, I don’t want to talk to you, anymore.”
“Please!”
But the girl was already back in her chair, putting the headphones on, turning up the heavy-metal music.
Thursday night, finally, Sherry got her hands on that bed stand telephone. But it was Lyle’s doing: she had been cuffed to a nearer rung so that she could talk to Nolan, tell him she was alive and well.
Hearing his voice was wonderful and so very sad.
“They’re using me,” she said, “to make you help them, aren’t they?”
“You know about the mall heist?”
That confirmed her suspicions; it was a large- scale robbery.
“I picked up on it,” she admitted. She told him he could lose everything because of this, but he reassured her, said he wouldn’t lose her, said he’d planned the job smoothly; but she could hear it in his voice, try as he might to hide it: they were both under a sentence of death.
Now she felt compelled to reassure him: “They haven’t hurt me. They keep saying once you’ve cooperated, I’ll be released.”
He told her they’d be together in a few hours, and then he said something amazing: when she said she loved him, he said he loved her, too. He’d never said that before. It was nice to hear. Too bad this was what it took . . .
She wiped the tears from her face, and then he said something wonderful: “I’ll take you to Vegas when this is over and prove it.”
That was as close to a proposal as she was likely to get out of him. Suddenly she was smiling; suddenly she was believing she would live through this ordeal.
“Hang on, baby,” Nolan said, and he hung up.
She put the receiver gently back in its cradle, and the world exploded and went black. She crumpled to the floor, not even knowing that Lyle Comfort had pistol-whipped her. She slept blissfully, ignorant that her captor of these past few days was now slinging her over his shoulder like a sack of something, carrying her into the woods, where the mess wouldn’t matter.
18
THE WORST part, for Nolan, was having to mingle with his customers. Fisher had wired his black box in at 10:27, according to Nolan’s watch, and they waited till 10:45, just to be safe, before assuming the cops and security guards wouldn’t be showing up. Then the job had really got under way.
But Nolan’s didn’t close till two; the bartender and waitresses would be out of here by two-thirty, and then, finally, better than four hours into it, he could join up with the others out in the mall. Until then, he was a captive in his own club, striving to maintain the appearance of just another night, and building a partial alibi at least.
The very worst thing was DeReuss and his wife had eaten supper here tonight; thank God the jeweler had long since gone—having him here during the heisting of his own shop would’ve been a little much even for Nolan’s nerves.
Before leaving, DeReuss had complimented Nolan on the Surf and Turf, and added, “I’ve been giving some thought to your complaints about the security out here—I’m ready to go to bat for you at the next Merchant Association meeting.”
“Good,” Nolan had said.
Now Nolan glanced at his watch. Eleven-twenty. It would be hours before DeReuss’ jewelry store got Winch’s attention; no safes would be blown till Nolan’s was closed and the nitro noise would attract no attention.
Right now, Dooley would still be working on picking locks, although the Leeches and the rest would be well into looting stores, according to Nolan’s priority list, loading up the dollies and furniture carts with goods from the stores Dooley had already unlocked. The first thing he’d had Dooley do was pick the locks on the three major department stores and the garage doors at the loading docks therein, for the Leeches to pull their trucks up to.
He walked casually in back and used the Radio Shack walkie-talkie on his desk, checking in with Jon.
“Nothing so far,” Jon reported. He was sitting in the cab of the semi backed up to the central loading dock, the one behind Penney’s. He was keeping watch for patrolling cops and any stray Nolan’s customers who might for whatever reason choose to pull around back on their way home. No civilian cars were parked in the rear lot—only the loading-dock trucks, Fisher’s gray Buick, Comfort’s red pickup, Jon’s blue van and an old clunker belonging to the lady janitor. Nolan would move his Trans Am back here after Nolan’s closed.
“How’s the loading going?” Nolan asked.
“Nothing in this truck yet,” Jon said. “Are you sure this is where you want me?”
“It makes you a free agent, not being part of the action inside. That could be helpful.”
The walkie-talkies he and Jon were using were a forty-channel model; these he had purchased, at his usual discount. By now another eight walkie-talkies should have been lifted and distributed among the other players. After Dooley picked the department store and loading-dock locks, the Radio Shack store was next on the list. Nolan had instructed Dooley which walkie-talkies to steal, putting three-channel models in everybody else’s hands, giving Nolan and Jon the opportunity to communicate without being listened in on.
“No sign of Lyle either,” Jon said.
Nolan didn’t know if that was good or bad.
“Okay,” Nolan said, and signed off.
He went back out and mingled with the customers. It was a dirty job but somebody had to do it.
PHIL DOOLEY was averaging ten minutes a lock—the loading dock’s garage doors had taken a little longer, but the stores were going quickly. It was approaching midnight now. He figured he should be done by two, easy. Then he would pitch in with the others and haul goods out and help load up the trucks. He would rather have worked with Roger, as usual—been there to give him a hand, say if he had to lay a safe on its back for a gut shot. But that just wasn’t practical—every able body was needed to get all the heavy labor done.
Right now, Roger was helping the Leeches load refrigerators
and TVs out of an appliance store; Fisher was, too.
That left Dooley the solitary job of going from store to store—according to Nolan’s list—and opening them for business. The mall with its Christmas decorations and limited lighting was a strange place to be, even for somebody like Dooley, who was used to being in places after they were closed. Most places were completely dark, though—not half alive, like Brady Eighty. The sounds of the men working, the wheels of their carts, the whump of heavy appliances being set onto carts, occasional swearing, occasional ouches, echoed down the wide central corridor, as Dooley bent over the lock of the Haus of Leather.
The last place he’d opened for after-hours business was a luggage shop—Nolan had suggested it because some of the luggage was expensive, but also because they could use the stuff to transport some of the smaller items—everything from jewelry to expensive perfume.
Dooley liked the concentration, the close work; doing a marathon number of locks like this—nothing in his career to date compared to it—was the sort of challenge he relished. If the take tonight was what Nolan and Comfort indicated, this could even put the capper on his career—he could retire on his cut.
Not that he didn’t feel bad about Nolan’s situation. He truly hoped Nolan’s woman would be returned unharmed—he had no one similar in his life right now, but he could empathize. He had never had a lasting relationship, though not for want of trying, and perhaps for that reason he was especially attuned to pains of the heart. What Nolan must be going through, behind that stony exterior. A shame, a rotten shame.
But the money at stake made Dooley secretly, if guiltily, glad the job hadn’t been called off.
The tools Dooley was using, two of which were presently inserted in the lock where the sliding glass doors joined in front of the Haus of Leather, were picks—small thin steel objects with curlicue tips, not unlike dentist’s tools, and used by Dooley with similar care and expertise. Dooley carried these in a custom soft-leather pouch, which was currently on the floor at his feet, should he need to use another of the fine tools. Delicate instruments, requiring a delicate touch, which Dooley had.
Even at his age, with his experience, Dooley practiced several days a week, at least; and, through his legitimate locksmithing business in Des Moines, he was able to keep on top of the latest trends in the industry, ordering any so-called burglarproof lock advertised in the trades, practicing on it till he could pick it in minutes. He’d encountered only a couple he couldn’t master, and these he never went near.
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