Night Freight

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Night Freight Page 13

by Pronzini, Bill


  She unlocked and opened the door without hesitation. He was propped against the stucco wall, arms hanging and body slumped with exhaustion. Big and youngish, that was her first impression. She couldn't see his face clearly.

  "Need some help," he said in a thick, strained voice. "Been in the water . . . washed up on your beach. . . ."

  "I know, I saw you from the terrace. Come inside."

  "Better get a towel first. Coral ripped a gash in my foot . . . blood all over your floor."

  "All right. I'll have to close the door. The wind. . . ."

  "Go ahead."

  She shut the door and went to fetch a towel, a blanket, and the first-aid kit. On the way back to the kitchen she turned the heat up several degrees. When she opened up to him again she saw that he'd shed the life jacket. His clothing was minimal: plaid wool shirt, denim trousers, canvas shoes, all nicked and torn by coral. Around his waist was a pouch-type waterproof belt, like a workman's utility belt. One of the pouches bulged slightly.

  She gave him the towel, and when he had it wrapped around his left foot he hobbled inside. She took his arm, let him lean on her as she guided him to the kitchen table. His flesh was cold, sea-puckered; the touch of it made her feel a tremor of revulsion. It was like touching the skin of a dead man.

  When he sank heavily onto one of the chairs, she dragged another chair over and lifted his injured leg onto it. He stripped off what was left of his shirt, swaddled himself in the blanket. His teeth were chattering.

  The coffeemaker drew her; she poured two of the big mugs full. There was always hot coffee ready and waiting, no matter what the hour—she made sure of that. She drank too much coffee, much too much, but it was better than drinking what John usually drank. If she—

  "You mind sweetening that?"

  She half-turned. "Sugar?"

  "Liquor. Rum, if you have it."

  "Jamaican rum." That was what John drank.

  "Best there is. Fine."

  She took down an open bottle, carried it and the mugs to the table, and watched while he spiked the coffee, drank, then poured more rum and drank again. Color came back into his stubbled cheeks. He used part of the blanket to rough-dry his hair.

  He was a little older than she, early thirties, and in good physical condition: broad chest and shoulders, muscle-knotted arms. Sandy hair cropped short, thick sandy brows, a long-chinned face burned dark from exposure to the sun. The face was all right, might have been attractive except for the eyes. They were a bright off-blue color, shielded by lids that seemed perpetually lowered like flags at halfmast, and they didn't blink much. When the eyes lifted to meet and hold hers something in them made her look away.

  "I'll see what I can do for your foot."

  "Thanks. Hurts like hell."

  'The towel was already soaking through. Shea unwrapped it carefully, revealing a deep gash across the instep just above the tongue of his shoe. She got the shoe and sock off. More blood welled out of the cut.

  "It doesn't look good. You may need a doctor—"

  "No," he said, "no doctor."

  "It'll take stitches to close properly."

  "Just clean and bandage it, okay?"

  She spilled iodine onto a gauze pad, swabbed at the gash as gently as she could. The sharp sting made him suck in his breath, but he didn't flinch or utter another sound. She laid a second piece of iodined gauze over the wound and began to wind tape tightly around his foot to hold the skin flaps together.

  He said, "My name's Tanner. Harry Tanner."

  "Shea Clifford."

  "Shea. That short for something?"

  "It's a family name."

  "Pretty."

  "Thank you."

  "So are you," he said. "Real pretty with your hair all windblown like that."

  She glanced up at him. He was smiling at her. Not a leer, just a weary smile, but it wasn't a good kind of smile. It had a predatory look, like the teeth-baring stretch of a wolf's jowls.

  "No offense," he said.

  "None taken." She lowered her gaze, watched her hands wind and tear tape. Her mind still felt numb. "What happened to you? Why were you in the water?"

  "That damn squall a few hours ago. Came up so fast I didn't have time to get my genoa down. Wave as big as a house knocked poor little Wanderer into a full broach. I got thrown clear when she went over or I'd have sunk with her."

  "Were you sailing alone?"

  "All alone."

  "Single-hander? Or just on a weekend lark?"

  "Single-hander. You know boats, I see."

  "Yes. Fairly well."

  "Well, I'm a sea tramp," Tanner said. "Ten years of island-hopping and this is the first time I ever got caught unprepared."

  "It happens. What kind of craft was Wanderer?"

  "Bugeye ketch. Thirty-nine feet."

  "Shame to lose a boat like that."

  He shrugged. "She was insured."

  "How far out were you?"

  "Five or six miles. Hell of a long swim in a choppy sea."

  "You're lucky the squall passed as quickly as it did."

  "Lucky I was wearing my life jacket, too," Tanner said. "And lucky you stay up late with your lights on. If it weren't for the lights I probably wouldn't have made shore at all."

  Shea nodded. She tore off the last piece of tape and then began putting the first-aid supplies away in the kit.

  Tanner said, "I didn't see any other lights. This house the only one out here?"

  "The only one on this side of the bay, yes."

  "No close neighbors?"

  "Three houses on the east shore, not far away."

  "You live here alone?"

  "With my husband."

  "But he's not here now."

  "Not now. He'll be home soon."

  "That so? Where is he?"

  "In Merrywing, the town on the far side of the island. He went out to dinner with friends."

  "While you stayed home."

  "I wasn't feeling well earlier."

  "Merrywing. Salt Cay?"

  "That's right."

  "British-owned, isn't it?"

  "Yes. You've never been here before?"

  "Not my kind of place. Too small, too quiet, too rich. I prefer the livelier islands—St. Thomas, Nassau, Jamaica."

  "St. Thomas isn't far from here," Shea said. "Is that where you were heading?"

  "More or less. This husband of yours—how big is he?"

  ". . . Big?"

  "Big enough so his clothes would fit me?"

  "Oh," she said, "yes. About your size."

  "Think he'd mind if you let me have a pair of his pants and a shirt and some underwear? Wet things of mine are giving me a chill."

  "No, of course not. I'll get them from his room."

  She went to John's bedroom. The smells of his cologne and pipe tobacco were strong in there; they made her faintly nauseous. In haste she dragged a pair of white linen trousers and a pullover off hangers in his closet, turned toward the dresser as she came out. And stopped in midstride.

  Tanner stood in the open doorway, leaning against the jamb, his half-lidded eyes fixed on her.

  "His room," he said. "Right."

  "Why did you follow me?"

  "Felt like it. So you don't sleep with him."

  "Why should that concern you?"

  "I'm naturally curious. How come? I mean, how come you and your husband don't share a bed?"

  "Our sleeping arrangements are none of your business."

  "Probably not. Your idea or his?"

  "What?"

  "Separate bedrooms. Your idea or his?"

  "Mine, if you must know."

  "Maybe he snores, huh?"

  She didn't say anything.

  "How long since you kicked him out of your bed?"

  "I didn't kick him out. It wasn't like that."

  "Sure it was. I can see it in your face."

  "My private affairs—"

  "—are none of my business. I know. But I also know the
signs of a bad marriage when I see them. A bad marriage and an unhappy woman. Can't tell me you're not unhappy."

  "All right," she said.

  "So why don't you divorce him? Money?"

  "Money has nothing to do with it."

  "Money has something to do with everything."

  "It isn't money."

  "He have something on you? Then why not just dump him?"

  You're not going to divorce me, Shea. Not you, not like the others. I'll see you dead first. I mean it, Shea. You're mine and you'll stay mine until I decide I don't want you anymore. . .

  She said flatly, "I'm not going to talk about my marriage to you. I don't know you."

  "We can fix that. I'm an easy guy to know."

  She moved ahead to the dresser, found underwear and socks, put them on the bed with the trousers and pullover. "You can change in here," she said, and started for the doorway.

  Tanner didn't move.

  "I said—"

  "I heard you, Shea."

  "Mrs. Clifford."

  "Clifford," he said. Then he smiled, the same wolfish lip-stretch he'd shown her in the kitchen. "Sure—Clifford. Your husband's name wouldn't be John, would it? John Clifford?"

  She was silent.

  "I'll bet it is. John Clifford, Clifford Yacht Designs. One of the best marine architects in Miami. Fancy motor sailers and racing yawls."

  She still said nothing.

  "House in Miami Beach, another on Salt Cay—this house. And you're his latest wife. Which is it, number three or number four?"

  Between her teeth she said, "Three."

  "He must be what, fifty now? And worth millions. Don't tell me money's not why you married him."

  "I won't tell you anything."

  But his wealth wasn't why she'd married him. He had been kind and attentive to her at first. And she'd been lonely after the bitter breakup with Neal. John had opened up a whole new, exciting world to her: travel to exotic places, sailing, the company of interesting and famous people. She hadn't loved him, but she had been fond of him; and she'd convinced herself she would learn to love him in time. Instead, when he revealed his dark side to her, she had learned to hate him.

  Tanner said, "Didn't one of his other wives divorce him for knocking her around when he was drunk? Seems I remember reading something like that in the Miami papers a few years back. That why you're unhappy, Shea? He knock you around when he's drinking?"

  Without answering, Shea pushed past him into the hallway. He didn't try to stop her. In the kitchen again she poured yet another cup of coffee and sat down with it. Even with her coat on and the furnace turned up, she was still cold. The heat from the mug failed to warm her hands.

  She knew she ought to be afraid of Harry Tanner. But all she felt inside was a deep weariness. An image of Windflaw Point, the tiny beach with its treacherous undertow, flashed across the screen of her mind—and was gone again just as swiftly. Her courage, or maybe her cowardice, was gone too. She was no longer capable of walking out to the point, letting the sea have her. Not tonight and probably not ever again.

  She sat listening to the wind clamor outside. It moaned in the twisted branches of the banyan tree; scraped palm fronds against the roof tiles. Through the open window jalousies she could smell ozone mixed with the sweet fragrances of white ginger blooms. The new storm would be here soon in all its fury.

  The wind kept her from hearing Tanner reenter the kitchen. She sensed his presence, looked up, and saw him standing there with his eyes on her like probes. He'd put on all of John's clothing and found a pair of Reeboks for his feet. In his left hand he held the waterproof belt that had been strapped around his waist.

  "Shirt's a little snug," he said, "but a pretty good fit otherwise. Your husband's got nice taste."

  Shea didn't answer.

  "In clothing, in houses, and in women."

  She sipped her coffee, not looking at him.

  Tanner limped around the table and sat down across from her. When he laid the belt next to the bottle of rum, the pouch that bulged made a thunking sound. "Boats too," he said. "I'll bet he keeps his best designs for himself; he's the kind that would. Am I right, Shea?"

  "Yes."

  "How many boats does he own?"

  "Two."

  "One's bound to be big. Oceangoing yacht?"

  "Seventy-foot custom schooner."

  "What's her name?"

  "Moneybags."

  Tanner laughed. "Some sense of humor."

  "If you say so."

  "Where does he keep her? Here or Miami?"

  "Miami."

  "She there now?"

  "Yes."

  "And the other boat? That one berthed here?"

  "The harbor at Merrywing."

  "What kind is she?"

  "A sloop," Shea said. "Carib Princess."

  "How big?"

  "Thirty-two feet."

  "She been back and forth across the Stream?"

  "Several times, in good weather."

  "With you at the helm?"

  "No."

  "You ever take her out by yourself?"

  "No. He wouldn't allow it."

  "But you can handle her, right? You said you know boats. You can pilot that little sloop without any trouble?"

  "Why do you want to know that? Why are you asking so many questions about John's boats?"

  "John's boats, John's houses, John's third wife." Tanner laughed again, just a bark this time. The wolfish smile pulled his mouth out of shape. "Are you afraid of me, Shea?"

  "No."

  "Not even a little?"

  "Why? Should I be?"

  "What do you think?"

  "I'm not afraid of you," she said.

  "Then how come you lied to me?"

  "Lied? About what?"

  "Your husband. Old John Clifford."

  "I don't know what you mean."

  "You said he'd be home soon. But he won't be. He's not in town with friends, he's not even on the island."

  She stared silently at the steam rising from her cup. Her fingers felt cramped, as if she might be losing circulation in them.

  "Well, Shea? That's the truth, isn't it."

  "Yes. That's the truth."

  "Where is he? Miami?"

  She nodded.

  "Went there on business and left you all by your lonesome."

  "It isn't the first time."

  "Might be the last, though." Tanner reached for the rum bottle, poured some of the dark liquid into his mug, drank, and then smacked his lips. "You want a shot of this?"

  "No."

  "Loosen you up a little."

  "I don't need loosening up."

  "You might after I tell you the truth about Harry Tanner."

  "Does that mean you lied to me too?"

  "I'm afraid so. But you fessed up and now it's my turn."

  In the blackness outside the wind gusted sharply, banging a loose shutter somewhere at the front of the house. Rain began to pelt down with open-faucet suddenness.

  "Listen to that," Tanner said. "Sounds like we're in for a big blow, this time."

  "What did you lie about?"

  "Well, let's see. For starters, about how I came to be in the water tonight. My bugeye ketch didn't sink in the squall. No, Wanderer's tied up at a dock in Charlotte Amalie."

  She sat stiffly, waiting.

  "Boat I was on didn't sink either," Tanner said. "At least as far as I know it didn't. I jumped overboard. Not long after the squall hit us."

  There was still nothing for her to say.

  "If I hadn't gone overboard, the two guys I was with would've shot me dead. They tried to shoot me in the water but the ketch was pitching like crazy and they couldn't see me in the dark and the rain. I guess they figured I'd drown even with a life jacket on. Or the sharks or barracuda would get me."

  Still nothing.

  "We had a disagreement over money. That's what most things come down to these days—money. They thought I cheated them out of twenty
thousand dollars down in Jamaica, and they were right, I did. They both put guns on me before I could do anything and I thought I was a dead man. The squall saved my bacon. Big swell almost broached us, knocked us all off our feet. I managed to scramble up the companionway and go over the side before they recovered."

  The hard beat of the rain stopped as suddenly as it had begun. Momentary lull: the full brunt of the storm was minutes away yet.

  "I'm not a single-hander," he said, "not a sea tramp. That's another thing I lied about. Ask me what it is I really am, Shea. Ask me how I make my living."

  "I don't have to ask."

  "No? Think you know?"

  "Smuggling. You're a smuggler."

  "That's right. Smart lady."

  "Drugs, I suppose."

  "Drugs, weapons, liquor, the wretched poor yearning to breathe free without benefit of a green card. You name it, I've handled it. Hell, smuggling's a tradition in these waters. Men have been doing it for three hundred years, since the days of the Spanish Main." He laughed. "A modern freebooter, that's what I am. Tanner the Pirate. Yo ho ho and a bottle of rum."

  "Why are you telling me all this?"

  "Why not? Don't you find it interesting?"

  "No."

  "Okay, I'll give it to you straight. I've got a problem—a big problem. I jumped off that ketch tonight with one thing besides the clothes on my back, and it wasn't money." He pulled the waterproof belt to him, unsnapped the pouch that bulged, and showed her what was inside. "Just this."

  Her gaze registered the weapon—automatic, large caliber, lightweight frame—and slid away. She was not surprised; she had known there was a gun in the pouch when it made the thunking sound.

  Tanner set it on the table within easy reach. "My two partners got my share of a hundred thousand from the Jamaica run. I might be able to get it back from them and I might not; they're a couple of hard cases and I'm not sure it's worth the risk. But I can't do anything until I quit this island. And I can't leave the usual ways because my money and my passport are both on that damn ketch. You see my dilemma, Shea?"

  "I see it."

  "Sure you do. You're a smart lady, like I said. What else do you see? The solution?"

  She shook her head.

  "Well, I've got a dandy." The predatory grin again. "You know, this really is turning into my lucky night. I couldn't have washed up in a better spot if I'd planned it. John Clifford's house, John Clifford's smart and pretty wife. And not far away, John Clifford's little sloop, the Carib Princess."

 

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