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Five Classic Spenser Mysteries

Page 35

by Robert B. Parker


  “For God’s sake, Spenser, not in front of Paul.”

  “Why not? You do it in front of Paul. Why shouldn’t I talk about it in front of him. Neither one of you is interested in the goddamned kid. Neither one of you wants him. And both of you are so hateful that you’ll use the kid in whatever way is available to hurt the other.”

  “That is simply not true,” Patty said. Her voice sounded a little shaky. “You have no right to talk that way to me. Paul is my son and I’ll decide what’s best for him. He’s coming home with me now and he’s going to live with his father.”

  Paul had stopped nailing and was kneeling, his head turned toward us, listening. I looked at him. “What do you think, kid?” I said.

  He shook his head.

  “You want to go?” I said.

  “No.”

  I looked back at Patty Giacomin.

  “Kid doesn’t want to go,” I said.

  “Well, he’ll just have to,” she said.

  “No,” I said.

  “What do you mean?” Patty said.

  “No,” I said. “He’s not going. He’s staying here.”

  Patty opened her mouth and closed it. A big, fuzzy, yellow-and-black bumblebee moved in a lazy circle near my head and then planed off in a big looping arch down toward the lake.

  “That’s illegal,” Patty said.

  I didn’t say anything.

  “You can’t take a child away from its parents.”

  The bee found no sustenance near the lake and buzzed back, circling around Patty Giacomin, fixing on her perfume. She shrank away from it I batted it lightly with my open hand and it bounced in the air, staggered, stabilized, and zipped off into the trees.

  “I’ll have the police come and get him.”

  “We get into a court custody procedure and it will be a mess. I’ll try to prove both of you unfit,” I said. “I bet I can.”

  “That’s ridiculous.”

  I didn’t say anything. She looked at Paul.

  “Will you come?” she said.

  He shook his head. She looked at me. “Don’t expect a cent of money from me,” she said. Then she turned and marched back across the uneven leaf mold, wobbling slightly on her inapt shoes, stumbling once as a heel sank into soft earth. She got into the car, started up, yanked it around, and spun the wheels on the dirt road as she drove away.

  Paul said, “We only got three studs to go and the last wall is finished.”

  “Okay,” I said. “We’ll do it. Then we’ll knock off for supper.”

  He nodded and began to drive a tenpenny nail into a new white two-by-four. The sound of his mother’s car disappeared. Ours was the only human noise left.

  When the last wall was studded we leaned it against its end of the foundation and went and got two beers and sat down on the steps of the old cabin to drink them. The clearing smelled strongly of sawdust and fresh lumber, with a quieter sense of the lake and the forest lurking behind the big smells. Paul sipped at his beer. Some starlings hopped in the clearing near the new foundation. Two squirrels spiraled up the trunk of a tree, one chasing the other. The distance between them remained the same as if one didn’t want to get away and the other didn’t want to catch it.

  “ ‘Ever will thou love and she be fair,’ ” I said.

  “What?”

  I shook my head. “It’s a line from Keats. Those two squirrels made me think of it.”

  “What two squirrels?”

  “Never mind. It’s pointless if you didn’t see the squirrels.”

  I finished my beer. Paul got me another one. He didn’t get one for himself. He still sipped at his first can. The starlings found nothing but sawdust by the foundation. They flew away. Some mourning doves came and sat on the tree limb just above the speed bag. Something plopped in the lake. There was a locust hum like background music.

  “What’s going to happen?” Paul said.

  “I don’t know,” I said.

  “Can they make me come back?”

  “They can try.”

  “Could you get in trouble?”

  “I have refused to give a fifteen-year-old boy back to his mother and father. There are people who would call that kidnapping.”

  “I’m almost sixteen.”

  I nodded.

  “I want to stay with you,” he said.

  I nodded again.

  “Can I?” he said.

  “Yes,” I said. I got up from the steps and walked down toward the lake. The wind had died as the sun settled and the lake was nearly motionless. In the middle of it the loon made his noise again.

  I gestured toward him with my beer can.

  “Right on, brother,” I said to the loon.

  CHAPTER 23

  “Well, Father Flanagan,” Susan said when she opened her door. “Where’s the little tyke?”

  “He’s with Henry Cimoli,” I said. “I need to talk.”

  “Oh, really. I thought perhaps you’d been celibate too long and stopped by to get your ashes hauled.”

  I shook my head. “Knock off the bullshit, Suze. I got to talk.”

  “Well, that’s what’s important, isn’t it,” she said. and stepped away from the door. “Coffee?” she said. “A drink? A quick feel? I know how busy you are. I don’t want to keep you.”

  “Coffee,” I said, and sat at her kitchen table by the bay window and looked out at her yard. Susan put the water on. It was Saturday. She was wearing faded jeans and a plaid shirt and no socks and Top-Siders.

  “I have some cinnamon doughnuts,” she said. “Do you want some?”

  “Yes.”

  She put a blue-figured plate out and took four cinnamon doughnuts out of the box and put them on the plate. Then she put instant coffee into two blue-figured mugs and added boiling water. She put one cup in front of me and sat down across the table from me and sipped from the other cup.

  “You always drink it too soon,” I said. “Instant coffee’s better if it sits a minute.”

  She broke a doughnut in half and took a bite of one half. “Go ahead,” she said, “talk.”

  I told her about Paul and his mother. “The kid’s making real progress,” I said. “I couldn’t let her take him.”

  Susan shook her head slowly. Her mouth was clamped into thin disapproval.

  “What a mess,” she said.

  “Agreed.”

  “Are you ready to be a father?”

  “No.”

  “And where does this leave us?” she said.

  “Same place we’ve always been.”

  “Oh? Last time we went out to dinner it was a fun threesome.”

  “It wouldn’t be that way all the time.”

  “Really? Who would guard him when we were being a twosome? Do you plan to employ Hawk as a baby-sitter?”

  I ate a doughnut. I drank some coffee. “I don’t know,” I said.

  “Wonderful,” Susan said. “That’s really wonderful. So what do I do while you’re playing Captains Courageous? Should I maybe join a bridge club? Take dancing lessons? Thumb through The Total Woman?”

  “I don’t know. I don’t know what you should do, or I should do. I know only what I won’t do. I won’t turn the kid back to them and let them play marital Ping-Pong with him some more. That’s what I know. The rest has to be figured out. That’s what I wanted to talk with you about.”

  “Oh, lucky me,” Susan said.

  “I did not want to talk about how you’re in a funk because I’m paying more attention to him than to you,” I said.

  “Perhaps what you want to talk about isn’t terribly important,” she said.

  “Yes, it is. What we have to say to each other is always important, because we love each other and we belong to each other. And will forever.”

  “Including what you refer to as my funk?”

  “Yes.”

  She was silent.

  “Don’t be ordinary, Suze,” I said. “We’re not ordinary. No one else is like us.”

  S
he sat with her hands folded on the edge of the tabletop, looking at them. A small wisp of steam drifted up past her face from her coffee cup, a fleck of cinnamon sugar marred her lower lip near the corner of her mouth.

  The kitchen clock ticked. I could hear a dog bark somewhere outside.

  Susan put one hand out toward me and turned it slowly palm up. I took it and held it.

  “There’s no such thing as a bad boy,” she said. “Though you do test the hypothesis.”

  I held her hand still and said, “First the kid wants to be a ballet dancer.”

  “And?”

  “And I have no idea how he should go about that.”

  “And you think I do?”

  “No, but I think you can find out.”

  “Aren’t you supposed to be the detective?”

  “Yeah, but I’ve got other things to find out. Can you get a handle on ballet instruction for me?”

  She said, “If you’ll let go of my hand I’ll make some more coffee.”

  I did. She did. I said, “Can you?”

  She said, “Yes.”

  I raised my coffee cup at her and said, “Good hunting.” I sipped some coffee.

  She said, “Assuming you can keep him despite the best efforts of both parents and the law, which rarely awards children to strangers over the wishes of the parents. But assuming that you can keep him, are you prepared to support him through college? Are you prepared to share your apartment with him? Go to P.T.A. meetings? Maybe be a Boy Scout leader?”

  “No.”

  “No to which?”

  “No to all of the above,” I said.

  “So?”

  “So, we need a plan.”

  “I would say so,” Susan said.

  “First, I’m not sure how much the parents will want to get tangled up in legal action at the moment. Neither one wants the kid. They only wanted him to annoy each other. If they had to get into a court action to get him away from me, I’d try to prove them unfit and I might dig up things that would embarrass them. I don’t know. They may each, or both, get so mad that I wouldn’t give the kid up that they’ll go to court, or the old man may call out his leg breakers again. Although I would think after the first two debacles they might be getting discouraged.”

  “Even parents who dislike their children resent giving them up,” Susan said. “The children are possessions. In some cases the parents’ only possession. I don’t think they’ll give him up.”

  “They don’t want him,” I said.

  “That’s not the point,” Susan said. “It’s a shock to the most fundamental human condition. The sense that no one can tell me what to do with my child. I see it over and over in parents at school. Kids who are physically abused by parents who were abused when they were children. Yet the parents will fight like animals to keep the kid from being taken away. It’s got to do with identity.”

  I nodded. “So you think they’ll try to get him back.”

  “Absolutely.”

  “That’ll complicate things.”

  “And the courts will give him back. They may not be good parents, but they aren’t physically abusive. You haven’t got a case.”

  “I know,” I said.

  “If they go to the courts. As you say, the father seems to have access to leg breakers.”

  “Yeah. I think about that. I wonder why.”

  “Why what?”

  “Why he has access to leg breakers. Your average suburban real estate broker doesn’t hang out with a guy like Buddy Hartman. He wouldn’t know what rock to look under.”

  “So?”

  “So what kind of work has Mel Giacomin been involved in that he would know Buddy Hartman?”

  “Maybe he sold him real estate, or insurance.”

  I shook my head. “No. Nothing Buddy’s involved in is legitimate. Buddy’d find a way to steal his insurance.”

  “What are you thinking?”

  “I’m thinking if I can get something on Mel, and maybe something on Patty too, I’d have some leverage to bargain with on the kid.”

  Susan smiled at me for the first time in some days. “Mr. Chips,” she said. “Are you speaking of blackmail?”

  “The very word,” I said.

  CHAPTER 24

  I picked Paul up at the Harbour Health Club.

  “He benched one-oh-five today on the Universal,” Henry said.

  “Not bad,” I said.

  Paul nodded. “The Universal is easier,” he said.

  “One-oh-five is one-oh-five,” I said.

  We walked up to the Faneuil Hall Market area and ate in Quincy Market, moving among the food stalls and collecting a large selection of food and sitting in the rotunda to eat.

  “I have a plan,” I said.

  Paul ate part of a taco. He nodded.

  “I am going to try to find out things about your parents that will let me blackmail them.”

  Paul swallowed. “Blackmail?”

  “Not for money. Or at least not for money for me. I want to have some leverage so that I can get them off your back and off mine and maybe get you their support in what you want.”

  “How can you do that?”

  “Well, your father knows some ugly people. I thought I might look into how come.”

  “Will he go to jail?”

  “Would you mind if he did?”

  Paul shook his head.

  “Do you feel anything for him?” I said.

  “I don’t like him,” Paul said.

  “ ’Course it’s not that simple,” I said. “You’re bound to care something about his opinions, his expectations. You couldn’t avoid it.”

  “I don’t like him,” Paul said.

  “It’s something we’ll need to talk about, probably with Susan. But we don’t have to do it right now.” I ate some avocado-and-cheese sandwich. Paul started on his lobster roll.

  “You want to help me look into this?” I said.

  “About my father?”

  “Yes. And your mother. We may find out things that you won’t like to know.”

  “I don’t care.”

  “If you help?”

  “No. I don’t care if I hear things about my mother and father.”

  “Okay. We’ll do it. But remember, you probably will care. It probably will hurt. It’s okay for it to hurt. It’s very sensible that it should hurt.”

  “I don’t like them,” Paul said. He finished off his lobster roll.

  “All right,” I said. “Let’s get to it.”

  I was parked in a slot behind the Customs House Tower by a sign that said U.S. GOVT. EMPLOYEES ONLY. As we walked to the car Paul was a few steps ahead. He’d gotten taller since I’d had him. And he was starting to fill out. He wore jeans and a dark blue T-shirt that said ADIDAS on it. His shoes were green Nikes with a blue swoosh. The hint of definition showed in his triceps at the back of his arms. And there was, I thought, a small broadening of his back as the latissimus dorsi developed. He walked straighter and there was some spring. He had a lot of color, reddish more than tan, as he was fair-skinned.

  “You look good,” I said as we got into the car.

  He didn’t say anything. I drove down Atlantic Avenue, across the Charlestown Bridge, and pulled up near a bar off City Square, not far from the Navy Yard. The front of the bar was done in imitation fieldstone. There was a plate glass window to the left of the doorway. In it a neon sign said PABST BLUE RIBBON. Across the window behind the neon was a dirty chintz curtain. Paul and I went in. Bar along the right, tables and chairs to the left. A color TV on a high shelf braced with two-by-fours. The Sox game was on. They were playing Milwaukee. I slid onto a barstool and nodded Paul onto the one next to me. The bartender came down the bar. He had white hair and tattoos on both forearms.

  “Kid ain’t supposed to sit at the bar,” he said.

  “He’s a midget,” I said, “and he wants a Coke. I’ll have a draft.”

  The bartender shrugged and moved down the bar. He poured some C
oke from a quart bottle into a glass, drew a small draft beer from the tap, and set them in front of us.

  “I don’t care,” he said. “But it’s a state law, you know.”

  I put a five-dollar bill on the bar. “Buddy Hartman around,” I said.

  “I don’t know him,” the bartender said.

  “Sure you do,” I said. “He hangs out here. He hangs out here and he hangs out at Farrell’s on Rutherford Avenue.”

  “So?”

  “So I want to give him some business.” I put another five on top of the first one without looking at it. Like I’d seen Bogie do once in a movie. The bartender took the top five, rang it up, brought me the change. He put it on the bar on top of the first five.

  “He don’t usually come in here till about three,” he said. “Sleeps late. And he comes in here and has a fried egg sandwich, ya know.” It was two twenty-five.

  “We’ll wait,” I said.

  “Sure, but the kid can’t sit at the bar. Whyn’t you take that table over there.”

  I nodded and Paul and I went to a table in the back of the bar near the door to the washroom. I left the change on the bar. The bartender pocketed it.

  Paul paid no attention to the ball game, but he looked at the barroom carefully.

  At two fifty Buddy Hartman strolled in, smoking a cigarette and carrying a folded newspaper. He sat on a barstool. The bartender came down the bar and said, “Guy looking for you over there. Says he’s got some business.”

  Hartman nodded. He said, “Gimme a fried egg sandwich and a draft, will ya, Bernie?” Then he looked casually over toward me. The cigarette in his mouth drooped and sent smoke up past his left eye. He squinted his left eye against it. Then he recognized me.

  He spun off the stool and headed for the door.

  I said to Paul, “Come on,” and went out of the barroom after him. Buddy was cutting across the expressway entry ramps, heading for Main Street.

  “Watch the traffic,” I said to Paul, and shifted up a gear as we crossed the ramps. Paul stayed behind me. We were both running easily. We were up to five miles a day in Maine, and I knew we’d catch Buddy all right. He was ahead, near the big pseudo-Gothic church, running erratically. He wouldn’t last long. He didn’t. I caught him by the church steps with Paul close behind me. I got hold of his collar and yanked him backward and slammed his face first up against the church wall to the left of the steps. I patted him down quickly. If he had a weapon he had it well concealed.

 

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