by Ken Douglas
“I fired off seven rounds at him,” Maggie said.
“So, you’re not a very good shot.”
“I am a good shot. Besides, I saw blood.”
“That doesn’t mean he’s dead.” Gordon set his coffee down. “I’m going to see an old friend and find out what I can about Congressman Nishikawa. I’ll be back before noon. Till then I want you to stay inside with the door locked. Shoot anyone who tries to break in or pick the lock.” He was serious.
“You won’t get an argument out of me on that,” she said.
“I mean it,” he said.
“What kind of friend?”
“One who won’t talk in front of you, otherwise I’d bring you along.”
“He got up, started for the door, opened it, turned back toward her. “When I get back, we’ll have to find someplace for Jasmine to stay till this is over.”
“What about me? I thought you wanted me to move out, too.”
“I changed my mind. You’re staying here.”
“Why? I don’t get it.”
“We’re after a big fish. We need bait.”
“I don’t think I like the sound of that.”
“I hate it,” he said. “But we don’t have much choice if we want to put an end to this without involving the police.” And all of a sudden, Maggie knew what Gordon was going to do.
“You’re going to kill him, aren’t you?”
“Yes I am.” Then Gordon closed the door and she was alone.
Horace went straight to the motel, got his gun, then drove to the Taco Bell on Fourth Street. Coffee and toast didn’t cut it for breakfast. He ordered five tacos and a large coke, then went to the pay phone in the back to call Striker. He dropped a quarter into the phone.
“Did you mean what you said yesterday?” he said when Striker picked up.
“If I said it, I meant it, but what specifically are you talking about?”
“Having more money than I can count.” Horace felt his knuckles turning white as he gripped the phone. He relaxed his hand.
“Maybe not more than you can count, but you do the woman before tomorrow at this time and I’ll have a briefcase for you with a hundred and fifty large in it. Twenty-five for the woman in Catalina, twenty-five for the kid and a hundred for the Kenyon woman.”
“I already did the Kenyon woman.”
“She’s still walking around.”
“She won’t be tomorrow.” Horace grit his teeth. Striker was paying a lot, but it wasn’t right about the bitch in the alley. He’d done the job, he deserved to be paid. Besides, he didn’t like thinking Virgil died for nothing.
“That’s what I wanted to hear.” Striker sounded smug.
“I might wanna take a vacation after.”
“I understand,” Striker said.
“Anything I should know?”
“They haven’t pulled her car out of the bay yet, so the cops don’t know it was hers.”
“She didn’t call ’em?” Horace tightened his grip on the phone again.
“No.”
“What’s that tell you?” Horace said.
“She knows someone’s coming for her and she doesn’t want the police involved. She’s not afraid.”
“She’s gonna to be ready. That what you’re saying?”
“Maybe,” Striker said.
“Shit.”
“Exactly.”
“That’s why you’re paying so much?”
“If it was easy, I wouldn’t need you.”
“Okay, but I want twenty-five extra for the bitch in the alley,” Horace said. “Fair’s fair.”
“Deal, but I want the Kenyon woman dead by tomorrow.”
“She’ll be dead.” Horace hung up and went to get his tacos.
Maggie took her coffee to the kitchen, washed the cups. She went to the refrigerator to get some ice and saw the Winnie the Pooh magnet for the first time. There were three yellow Post It notes under it.
She lifted the magnet and pulled the notes off the door. The top one was a reminder for Margo to pick up the cleaning from the Main Street Cleaners on Monday. Yesterday, Maggie thought. The second was to remind her to take the car in for a five thousand mile check up. Maggie laughed, she wouldn’t be doing that. Mom’s new address was scrawled across the top of the last one, followed by an address on Balboa Island.
She went to the bedroom, picked up Margo’s purse, then stopped herself. It was way too dressy for faded Levi’s and a sweatshirt. She grabbed the backpack, dumped out the school books, then dumped the contents of the purse into the pack. She reached under the pillow, pulled out the Sigma, put it in the pack, too.
Yes, she’d promised Gordon she’d stay inside with the door locked, but Balboa was a straight shot down Pacific Coast Highway on the bus. She could get there, talk to Margo’s mother and be back way before Gordon.
She jogged up to the guard shack, returned the guard’s wave, then saw a bus glide into the bus stop.
“Hey, wait!” She ran to the stop, caught the bus just in time.
Horace was about to make a pass by the Sand and Sea Condos, when he saw the Kenyon-Nesbitt woman with the new hair running to catch a bus.
She sure wasn’t acting like she was expecting trouble. Not a bit like a woman who’d had her car run into the bay only last night. How come she didn’t call the cops, scream bloody murder? She wasn’t making any sense.
He let a car get between him and the bus. No problem following. Horace fingered the Beretta in the shoulder holster under his sport coat. He missed the bomber jacket, but she’d seen him in it last night. Besides, it had a bullet hole in it and he wasn’t able to get all the blood off it.
He wished he’d had a chance to change the plates on the Toyota, then he could just drive by when she got off the bus and pop her. But he hadn’t and he sure as hell didn’t want anyone writing down Sadie’s license number.
He couldn’t see the woman in the bus, but he’d see her when she got off. “Then what?” he muttered. He couldn’t very well follow her on foot. She’d gotten a good look at him in that stop-and-rob in Long Beach and again in that Safeway.
All of sudden, he pictured her in the supermarket, the way she looked at him. She wasn’t scared. Upset, annoyed, bent outta shape, all that, but not afraid. He tried to concentrate and keep his eyes on the road at the same time. And then he saw the picture in his mind, sure as if he’d been lying in bed with his eyes closed, sure as if he was back in that supermarket. She wasn’t afraid when he’d smacked Virge with that magazine, she was relieved.
“Shit!” He pounded the steering wheel. The woman in the Safeway was the news guy’s wife. When she got away, him and Virge went to the Condos in Huntington Beach and grabbed the other one and, not knowing the difference, Horace left the body by the dumpster in back of the fag place.
“Shit, shit, shit!” He pounded the steering wheel with each outburst. Striker had him kill the woman in Catalina and the kid at the Towers, so the cops wouldn’t follow up on the case with the Kenyon woman and she’d been dead all along.
“What a fuckup,” he moaned. That old woman, the kid, dead for nothing. Horace just wanted out, wanted to go away with Sadie. But it wasn’t gonna happen, not unless he did the woman on the bus. “Calm,” he told himself. His hands were white on the wheel. He relaxed his fingers, one at a time, without taking his eyes off the back of that bus.
Twenty minutes later he was fit to be tied. Driving like an old lady had never been his style, but there was no other way without passing the fucking bus. He wondered how far it went. All the way to San Diego? He hoped not.
It pulled to the stop before Balboa Island and she hopped off. He floored it, passed the bus, hung a right in front of it and took the bridge to Balboa. Where else could she be going?
He found a spot in front of a surf shop, parked and waited. It didn’t take long before he spotted her. She looked like a college kid strolling up the street with that backpack slung over her shoulder.
She
walked right past the Toyota and went into the surf shop. Horace could see her in the store, plain as the steering wheel in front of his eyes. A pimply faced kid behind the counter was talking, pointing. She was asking directions.
Horace hoped she bought something good while she was in there, because, if he had his way, it was the last time she was ever gonna do any shopping. He clenched his fists on the wheel, then whipped his head around and pretended he was looking out the back window as she turned toward him and came out of the store.
Chapter Eighteen
Maggie strode out of the surf shop, looked up into a cloudless sky. She blinked against the sun as she made her way along the sidewalk. It had been several years since she’d had been on the island. The unique boutiques were out of her price range then. Now, she supposed, she could buy whatever she wanted. Back then she wanted it all. Now, all she wanted was to be left alone, so she could have her baby and raise Jasmine. Material things, she didn’t need them, didn’t want them.
A chill rippled through her, a strange feeling, like she was being watched. She spun around. The sidewalk was crowded with tourists scurrying from store to store, but she saw nothing out of the ordinary. She was being paranoid, she told herself, imagining ghosts where there were none, like she did when she was a little girl and wanted her dad to come into her room and chase away the monsters. There were no monsters then, there was nobody following her now. After all, she’d jumped onto the bus at the last possible instant and it wasn’t planned. It would be impossible for anybody to have followed her.
She took a deep breath, studied faces as people passed by. Nobody was interested in her. Nobody knew where she was. She was perfectly safe. She took a deep breath, sighed, then started on her way.
Horace now thought of her as the Twin. And he felt a little bad about what he was going to do. She hadn’t seen him blow away Fujimori in the stop-and-rob and she wasn’t the one who stuck the switchblade in Virge’s belly. But she’d got a good look at him in that Safeway and that wasn’t good. For that reason alone, she had to go.
He saw her stop in the middle of the sidewalk, turn and inspect faces, as if she knew she was being watched, but she never looked to the parked cars. She was an amateur, but why wouldn’t she be?
All of a sudden, she spun around, took off at a brisk walk, moving away from where he was parked. Horace watched till she turned a corner, then he nosed the Toyota into the traffic. He made the turn just in time to see her make a left a few blocks up. She wasn’t quite jogging, but she was walking real fast, swinging her arms as if she didn’t have a care in the world. He pushed the accelerator, made the left and passed her. Cars lined the curb, there was no place to park, so he doubled parked with the engine running next to a yellow pickup. Now all he had to was wait, like a spider for a fly.
A quick check in the rearview as she approached. He pulled Virge’s switchblade out of his hip pocket. All he had to do was open the door, jump out, pull her between the pickup and the Corvette parked in front of it and do her. It was broad daylight, but he’d be gone before anybody noticed. He had his hand on the door handle when she stopped and stared up at a big white house. She was studying the address. Then all of a sudden she started up the walkway.
“Damn,” he muttered as he pulled away from the yellow pickup. No way could he stay where he was. This wasn’t New York. You didn’t double park in California, not for more than a few seconds anyway, not unless you wanted some old biddy calling the cops.
Maggie stood in front of a large white house, sandwiched between similar homes. The front yard was ringed with a three foot hedge, not a leaf out of place. The lawn looked painted on. There was a “For Sale by Owner” sign in the middle of it. A house like this on an island where small homes were the norm was more then expensive, Maggie knew. This was a million dollar home, maybe more.
If Margo’s mother lived here and it was a new address, why the for sale sign? Had she just moved in and not taken it down yet? That didn’t make sense. She put the question out of her mind, went up the walk, took the steps up the porch, pushed the doorbell. Chimes rang inside. “Rich people.” She shook her head.
The door opened, a little girl rushed out, bumped into her.
“Whoa,” Maggie said. The child was younger than Jasmine, four or five years old. She had Orphan Annie red curls and a wide smile.
“Sorry! Oh, Margo, I didn’t recognize you.”
“That’s okay,” Maggie said.
“I gotta go check on the sitters.” The girl giggled, then scooted past and ran down the walkway.
“Margo, what did you do to your hair?” The speaker was a striking woman, who appeared younger than she was. She was tall, almost six feet, and she looked like a model. Maggie looked at her neck, the backs of her hands-even they looked young, but the eyes gave her away.
“I’m not her,” Maggie said.
“My, God!”
“Can I come in?”
The woman stepped aside and made way for her to enter. She had shoulder length blond hair, like Maggie’s till she’d cut it and dyed it dark. She was dressed in a silk blouse and skirt, as if she were going out.
Inside the house, Maggie saw a plush white carpet, modern furniture-steel and glass, cold and sterile. The walls were white, there were no paintings or anything on them, no wood grain anywhere. It was as if Margo’s mother lived in an antiseptic future where people didn’t age.
“It’s all new,” the woman said. “And it’s only temporary.”
“You don’t have to apologize,” Maggie said.
“I wasn’t. I was explaining, because you looked shocked.”
“Maybe I was, a little. This place looks so cold. Is this the kind of atmosphere Margo grew up in?”
“My name’s Debra Murrant,” the woman said, ignoring the question.
The furniture was different-Margo had beachy rattan stuff, whereas here the sofa and chairs here were made out of soft white leather, the same color as the carpet-but the arrangement was the same. Two chairs opposite a sofa with a coffee table between. It was set up as if conversation were expected. Maggie didn’t see a television.
“There’s no easy way to say this,” Maggie said. “Margo’s dead.”
“Oh!” Debra’s hands went to her face. She staggered, as if she were going to fall.
In an instant Maggie was at her side. “I’ve got you.” She helped her into one of the chairs. “Can I get you anything?”
“Water. Kitchen. That way.” She pointed.
Maggie found a glass, filled it with water from the tap. Back in the living, room she gave it to Debra Murrant, who wrapped both hands around the glass with laced fingers and held it tight without drinking.
“How?”
“I think it was the man who killed Frankie Fujimori. She saw him, she could identify him.”
“I told her to leave it alone, but she wouldn’t listen.” Debra took a sip of her water, fingers white on the glass. “She was like a dog with bone about him and now it’s gotten her killed.” She sighed. “I suppose that means Jasmine will wind up with her horrible father.”
“I’m not going to let that happen,” Maggie said.
“How can you stop it?”
“They meant to kill Margo, but they killed me instead.”
“I don’t understand.”
“It’s a long story.”
Debra wiped the tears away from her eyes. “I have time.”
“But before we talk about that, I have some questions.”
“Of course,” Debra said.
“I need to know how she came to live with you and I wound up with my father?”
Debra’s eyes were moist, full of sadness. That and something else, a kind of fire. “Like your father, my husband Gil was in Viet Nam when it happened.” She stood up. “I’m gonna make some tea. How do you take yours?”
“Milk,” Maggie said. “Not cream.”
Horace drove around the block for the third time. Who the fuck was she talking to? How
long was she gonna be? Another time around and people were gonna notice. The old lady neighborhood watch types would be on the phone to the cops.
Up ahead the yellow pickup he’d parked next to earlier started to pull away from the curb. Opportunity knocked and Horace answered. He was behind the truck, easing into the spot, even as it was vacating it.
He got out of the car, went to the hood, raised it. Not the best cover in the world, but believable for a few minutes. He looked at the battery, the oil covered engine. Sadie didn’t take good care of her car. It was something he was going to have to teach her. You never knew when you’d have to depend on your vehicle. If you weren’t there for it, it might not be there for you.
“What’cha doin’, mister?” It was a kid’s voice.
Horace grinned, like he was somebody’s uncle or something, pulled his head out from under the hood, turned toward a little girl and said, “Who wants to know?”
“I do.” The girl had bright red hair, green eyes and a face full of freckles.
“And who are you?” On one hand it was good the kid was talking to him, that way he didn’t have to pretend to be working on the car. But it was bad on the other hand, because he didn’t want her around when the Twin came out of that house.
“I’m not supposed to talk to strangers.”
“Hey, you started it. My name’s Horace, what’s yours?” Stupid, he told her his real name. He was getting to be as dumb as Virge.
“Yeah, I guess. My name’s Virginia Wheetly. I live over there.” She pointed to a two story house next to the one the Twin had gone into.
“Ah, next door to-” he paused, “I forget her name.”
“Mrs. Murrant, but she likes me to call her Debra. She just moved in till she sells the house. She’s my friend.”
“Really,” Horace said. That explained the for sale sign.
“Yeah, My mom and dad work, so I got a sitter.”