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Authors: Walter Satterthwait

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BOOK: The Hanged Man
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I nodded.

He frowned at me. “What
is
it with her, man? Why does she do that shit? Is she, what, like a nymphomaniac?”

I shrugged. “I think that Justine uses sex,” I said, “uses her body, to control her world, to give herself a sense of power. Or she tries to.”

He shook his head. “She's a flake, man.”

I nodded. “Probably as good an explanation as any.”

He looked at me. “You're not gonna …”

“Tell Sylvie? No.”

“Jeez,” he said, and shook his head sadly. “It was just that one time, man. And it never happened before, not with anyone.”

I nodded. “Who else has she been involved with, Brad?”

He frowned again.

“Brad, you don't believe that Giacomo killed Bouvier. I don't either. It had to be one of the others.”

He nodded, looked away. “Yeah. I could see you didn't go for the burglar bit.” He looked back at me. “I guess I don't either. I wanted to, because Sylvie does. But, Jesus, man, that's
heavy
. That means that someone we know is like a
murderer
.”

“That's right. And you do know these people, Brad. I don't. I don't have any kind of handle on them. Who else has Justine been involved with?”

“But it doesn't make any difference, man. Quentin didn't give a shit. He knew she played around. He did, too. I think they got turned on, the two of them, telling each other about it. I think that was their number.”

“Maybe. But I still have to learn as much as I can.”

He took a deep breath. “Shit, man.” He shook his head again. “I don't feel right, talking about other people.”

I respected his sense of honor, but I had a job to do. “I already know about Peter Jones,” I said. Taking the first olive out of the jar, trying to make it easier for him to give me the rest. “Who else? Carl Buffalo?”

He looked surprised. “Jesus, man, how'd you know about Carl?”

I hadn't known; I'd picked a name at random. Maybe that was also the way Justine operated. “I heard something,” I said. I didn't mention that I'd heard it right here, and right now.

“Yeah,” he said. “Carl told me she came over to his place and did the same deal with him that she did with me. But Carl got off on it—this is before he had an old lady of his own. A couple years ago. Carl fell for her, man. He was gonzo for her, and when she cut him off, he kinda flipped out for a while. He kept calling her, you know? Asking her to see him. She'd just laugh. Like you say, man, she's a power tripper. She gets off on it. Carl couldn't see that. Finally Quentin had to go over to Carl's and ask him to cool it.”

“Quentin went to Carl's place?”

“Yeah, like I say, Quentin knew what she was doing. That was their game, man. Being, like, secret swingers.”

“When did she cut it off?”

“I told you. Couple years ago.”

“Who else was she involved with?”

“Shit, man, she's not the one who's dead. Quentin is.”

“And I won't know why unless I understand the connections between all these people. What about Bennett Hadley? Was she ever involved with him?”

He looked at me, frowned, shook his head. “Don't think so, man. Bennett's not her style. Too spooky, maybe.”

“Spooky?”

“He gets these headaches, like. Migraines, I guess. And he weirds out. It's like, you know, people who drink too much and get blackouts? But Bennett, man, he doesn't need to drink. He gets one of those headaches, like when he gets upset, and he starts talking weird, and then later on he can't, like, remember any of it.”

I remembered Hadley massaging his temples. “Weird how?” I asked.


Weird
, man. I was out with him once, me and Peter Jones and him, we were at Vanessie's having a drink. Just beer, right? That's all I ever drink. And so Peter asks him something about his family, right? About his father. What'd his father do, you know? What kind of job did he have? And Bennett starts rubbing his head and wincing, sorta, and then the next thing you know he's shouting at us, me and Peter. Stuff about ingratitude and envy, crazy stuff. Came out of nowhere, man. And
loud
. The bartender had to ask us to leave. Bennett's still babbling away, right? And then, when we get outside, Bennett sorta stops and looks like his knees are weak. And he rubs his head some more and then he looks around like he can't figure out where he is, you know? And then he asks what happened and Peter tells him. Peter's good with that stuff, real gentle. And Bennett, he says he musta had a flashback. From the war, you know? Vietnam. He was there.” Brad shook his head. “Spooky, man.”

“How often does he get these headaches?”

“I dunno. Peter told me he's seen him do it before. But that was the only time
I
ever saw it happen. Only time I
want
to see it happen, man.”

“You've read his book?”

“Sure. Good book. He's okay, he's cool, he knows what he's talkin' about. It's just those headaches, man. They're spooky.”

“What about Leonard Quarry?”

“What about him?”

“Was Justine ever involved with him?”

“With Leonard? Are you kidding? He weighs like a million pounds. He looks like Jabba the Hut, man. Justine can't stand him.”

“What do you think about him?”

He shrugged. “I dunno. He's always been okay to me.”

“Does that mean he hasn't been okay to other people?”

He shrugged. “I don't know about other people, man. All I know is how the guy treated me.”

“No way he might be responsible for Bouvier's death.”

“No way, man. All Leonard wants to do is buy and sell things and lie around in the hot springs. The heat is good for his emphysema. That's why he moved to Agua Caliente.”

I nodded. I said, “I've heard that Justine had a relationship with Veronica Chang.”

His eyebrows went up. “No shit. I didn't know that.” He grinned. “Far out.” A thread of admiration, perhaps even envy, ran through his voice.

“What do you think of Veronica Chang?”

“Amazing lady, man.” He nodded. “Amazing.”

“How so?”

“First of all, she's like drop-dead gorgeous. I mean, you remember the Dragon Lady, from the old ‘Terry and the Pirates' thing on TV?”

“Sure.” Brad was, on that evidence, a few years older than he looked.

“Really? You remember that? A million years ago, it seems like now. But I still remember the Dragon Lady. And Jesus, man, was I in love with that chick. Those eyes and that slinky body, you know? Well, that's Veronica. And I know it's like a stereotype and all, but Veronica, well, she really is, like,
inscrutable
, you know? She sits there, man, with this little Dragon Lady smile, like she knows exactly what you're thinking. She doesn't say much, most of the time. Hardly says a word. But when those eyes of hers lock on, man, watch out. This is a lady with some serious charisma.”

“Has she been involved with anyone besides Justine?”

“Shit, man, I didn't know she
was
involved with Justine. Far as I knew, the only person she ever hung out with was her brother.”

“Her brother?”

“Paul. He lives with her. Better watch out for him, too, man. He's a Bruce Lee clone. Except that Bruce Lee was like, what, only about three feet tall? Paul is like six feet if he's an inch, and he's built like a brick shithouse. And he does some kind of martial arts thing. I dunno, karate, kung fu, some kinda Oriental thing like that. Chop chop.” He chopped his hand at the air.

“Paul wasn't at the party.”

“No. He doesn't go out much. Probably hangs around the house all day and punches sandbags. Or whatever it is they do, those karate guys.”

I asked him about the others who'd been there last Saturday night. He liked them all, not perhaps with the blanket exuberance that Sylvia would later show, but genuinely, it seemed to me.

So, as I drove northwest through the rolling hills, I ticked off what I'd learned that was possibly important. The state police had checked the drains and the fireplaces in the La Cienega house. Bennett Hadley had headaches from time to time. Justine Bouvier, from time to time, had had Carl Buffalo. And had once had Brad Freefall. Veronica Chang had a brother. I didn't know yet whether any of this was actually important, and maybe I would never know.

Agua Caliente lies in a narrow valley bordered by low-lying brown hills, the hills striped today with irregular bands of melting snow. I passed the entrance to the commercial hot springs and drove another quarter of a mile, following the directions I'd received from Brad Freefall. Found a large aluminum mailbox, battered and unmarked, listing atop its wooden post as it guarded the entrance to a small dirt track that wound off to the left, through a snow-splotched field and down into the pale spidery cottonwoods. I turned off the main road and followed the path along the slope. The station wagon coughed discreetly once or twice, a professor clearing his throat before his lecture on semiotics.

Surrounded by tall trees that filtered out some of the sunlight, Leonard Quarry's house squatted at the end of the road, a two-story, chocolate brown adobe rectangle with a steeply pitched zinc roof. There were no cars parked in front. Black brittle weeds leaned out of the thinning snow. Shadowed, solitary, the old house seemed gloomy and abandoned. Water streaked the plaster, staining it the color of old blood. Beneath the roof's overhang, to the left of the cement steps, sat an unruly stack of pinon firewood. A few logs had escaped the pile, but hadn't made it back to the safety of the forest. They lay black and twisted atop the snow. Over the wooden door brooded a large bleached steer's skull.

I eased out of the Subaru, walked up the steps, knocked on the door. Meltwater dripped from the skull's shattered sinus cavity, as though the thing were suffering from influenza. I stood away from the drip.

After a moment, the door opened. Halfway. Cautiously.

Peeking around the door, bent slightly forward, she was medium tall, in her late twenties, and as thin as Sylvia Morningstar but very pale. The paleness was highlighted by the jet black makeup outlining her large, expectant brown eyes. Her hair was also black and it hung in soft, Pre-Raphaelite curls to her delicate shoulders. She wore a long-sleeved dress of white lace that fell loosely to the gathered waist, then continued its fall to her ankles. Her feet were bare, the skin so translucent that I could see the blue of veins. She was very beautiful—an earlier and more ethereal version of Cher.

“Oh dear,” she said, as though mildly surprised, and she put the slender fingers of her right hand lightly to her throat. Her wrist was fine-boned, not much thicker than my thumb.

“Sierra Quarry?” I said.

“Yes?” Sounding faintly uncertain, as though she were unsure of my intentions, or her own identity.

“My name is Joshua Croft. I'm an investigator working for the Santa Fe public defender's office.”

“Yes,” she said, her soft voice low and solemn. She nodded. “I know who you are.”

This caught me off guard. Maybe it was supposed to. “Really?” I smiled. “How?”

“Sylvia called. Sylvia Morningstar. She said you might be coming by.”

Ah.

“Oh dear,” she said again. She blinked and glanced around me, left and right, as though checking to see if there were any more of me lurking about.

“Yes?” I said.

She removed her hand from her throat, put it along the edge of the door, elbow out, as though barring me. Her fingernails were bright red, the only touch of color she apparently allowed herself. Like Giacomo Bernardi's, they'd been bitten to the quick. She stood up straight. “Leonard's not here,” she told me. She said it bravely, the mistress of the castle denying entrance to the Saracens. “I don't know when he'll be back.”

“Do you know where I could reach him?”

“No,” she said with that low, fluting solemnity of hers. “No, I don't.”

“May I come in for a few minutes and ask you a few questions?”

“Oh no,” she said, and her bravery vaporized. Her eyes widened slightly and her fingers went again to her throat. “No, I couldn't do that. Not without Leonard here.”

“It won't take long, Mrs. Quarry.”

She shook her head. “No. No, I'm sorry. It wouldn't be right. Not without Leonard here.”

“Mrs. Quarry, you're welcome to call the public defender's office if you like, to verify my credentials.”

“No, no, no. It's not that. It's just that it wouldn't be right without Leonard.”

“I see.” I didn't see much of anything, except her, and her I didn't understand. I reached into my coat pocket, slipped out a business card, held it out to her. “Could you give this to Mr. Quarry, please, and ask him to call me?”

She took the card. “I will. Of course.
Thank you
.” The gratitude seemed genuine, but I couldn't tell whether she was thanking me for leaving the card, or simply for leaving.

I told her, “But I'll try stopping by again, later today.” After I talked to Peter Jones.

Her eyes widened again. “Oh no, you really shouldn't. I don't have any idea when Leonard will be coming home.”

I didn't point out that she was supposed to be psychic. I thought that this was very sporting of me.

“It might be very late,” she said. “You'd probably just be wasting your time.”

I was probably wasting it now. “Right,” I said. “Thanks.”

I climbed down the steps and into the Subaru. She stood there, peering solemnly around the door, and watched me until I drove out of sight. Before I did, I waved at her. She didn't wave back.

I was irritated. First the guy doesn't return the calls I leave on his machine. Then, when I very cleverly show up on his doorstep, he's not there.

BOOK: The Hanged Man
6.35Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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