Authors: James Lee Burke
Nick had nail wounds in his wrists and hands for other reasons. Although Esther pretended differently, she would probably never forgive him for his involvement in the deaths of the Asian women, regardless of the fact that he was almost as much a victim as they were. At least that was the way he saw it.
A shadow moved across the breakfast table. Nick turned in his chair, startled, knocking over his glass of milk.
You want oatmeal? Esther said.
I already ate, he replied.
Why are you up so early?
Restless, I guess.
Go on back to bed.
Do you want to?
Want to what?
Sleep some more?
Im going to fix some tea.
Maybe neither one of us got enough sleep, Nick said, stifling a yawn. Its only six-twenty. We could take a little nap. Later, we can go out for breakfast. Want to do that?
My aerobics class is at seven-thirty.
Better not miss the aerobics. Thats important. They let men in there? I could use that. Jumping up and down and sweatin to the golden oldies or whatever. He stiffened his fingers and jabbed them against the softness of his stomach. Then he did it again, harder.
She gave him a curious look and filled a pan with water and placed it on the gas burner. Sure you dont want some oatmeal?
Im starting a diet. I need to reform myself physically, maybe get plastic surgery while Im at it.
Nick went upstairs and shaved and brushed his teeth and got fully dressed, putting on a tie and a white shirt, more as a statement of independence from his sexual and emotional need than as preparation to go to work at his restaurant, which didnt open until eleven. He went back downstairs, deliberately walking through the kitchen, pulling a carton of orange juice out of the refrigerator, sucking his teeth, whistling a tune, ignoring Esthers presence.
Where are you going? she said.
Downstairs and pay some bills. While theres still money in the bank for me to pay the bills. Tell the kids Ill drive them to the pool later.
Whats with the attitude? she asked.
The flower beds smell like litter boxes with fish buried in them. We need to load the weed sprayer with Lysol and douche all the beds.
Listen to you. You see the paper? A whole family is killed, and youre talking about how the garden smells. Count your blessings. Why the dirty mouth in your own kitchen? Show a little respect.
Nick squeezed the heels of his hands against his temples and went down the half-flight of stairs into the glacial coldness of his office. He sat behind his desk in the darkness and planted his forehead on the desk blotter, the gold tie hanging from his throat like an ear of boiled corn, his flaccid arms like rolls of bread dough at his sides. He banged his head up and down on the blotter.
I couldnt help but hear yall talking. Maybe you could take a page from the papists. Celibacy probably has its moments, a voice said from the darkness.
Jesus Christ! Nick said, his head jerking up.
Thought we should go over a few things.
I had the alarm on. Howd you get in? Nick said, focusing on the man who sat in the stuffed leather chair, a pair of walking canes propped across his shoe tops.
Through the side door yonder. I came in before yall went to bed. Fact is, I browsed two or three of your books and took a little nap here in the chair and used your bathroom. You need to tidy up in there. I had to dig clean hand towels out of the closet.
Nick picked up the phone receiver, the dial tone filling the room.
I came here to save your life and the lives of your wife and children, Preacher said. If I were here for another reason
Well, we dont even need to talk about that. Put the phone down and stop making an ass of yourself.
Nick replaced the receiver in the cradle. The back of his hand looked strangely white and soft, cupped around the blackness of the receiver. Is it money?
I say something once, and I dont repeat it. Youre not deaf, and youre not lacking in intelligence. If you pretend to be either one, Im going to leave. Then your familys fate is on you, not me.
Nicks fingers were trembling on top of the desk blotter. Its about Artie Rooney and the Asian girls, isnt it? Were you the shooter? Hugo said the shooter was a religious nutcase. Thats you, right?
Preachers face remained impassive, his greased hair combed back neatly, his forehead shiny in the gloom. Rooney is going to have you and Mrs. Dolan killed, and maybe your children, too. If the shooter can get in close, he wants your wife shot in the mouth. He also plans to have me killed. That gives us a lot of commonalities. But you say the word, and Ill be gone.
Nick felt his mouth drying up, his eyes watering, his rectum constricting with fear and angst.
Are you going to get emotional on me? Preacher asked.
Why should you care about us?
Ive been sent. I am the one who has been sent. Preacher tilted his face up. He seemed to smile in a self-deprecating manner, in a way that was almost likable.
What the hell are you talking about? Nick wiped at his nose with the back of his wrist, not expecting an answer, not wanting to listen any more to a lunatic.
You watch television shows about witness protection and that kind of thing?
Everybody does. Thats all thats on TV.
Want to live in a box in Phoenix in summertime with sand and rocks for a yard and bikers with swastika tats for neighbors? Because outside of cooperating with me, thats the only shot youve got. Artie Rooney has an on-again, off-again business relationship with a Russian by the name of Josef Sholokoff. His people come out of the worst prisons in Russia. Want me to tell you what they did to a Mexican family in Juárez, to the children in particular?
No, I dont want to hear this.
Caint blame you. You know a man name of Hackberry Holland?
No
Who? Holland? No, I dont know anybody by that name.
You recognize the name, though. Youve seen it in the newspaper. Hes a sheriff. You read about the death of the ICE agent in San Antonio. Holland was there.
I told you, I dont know this Holland guy. Im a restaurateur. I got into the escort business, but I dont do that anymore. Im going broke. Im not a criminal. Criminals dont go broke. Criminals dont file bankruptcy. They dont see their families put on the street.
Were you interviewed by the ICE agent? Has Holland been to see you?
Me? No. I mean, maybe the man from Immigration and Customs came to my home. I dont know anybody named Holland. You say something only once to other people, but other people got to say it ten times to you?
I think Sheriff Holland wants to do me injury. If he takes me off the board, you go off the board, too, because Im the only person standing between you and Artie Rooney and his Russian business partners.
I made mistakes, but Im not a thief. You stop dragging me into your life.
Youre telling me Im a thief?
No, sir.
You have a pistol in your drawer, a Beretta nine-millimeter. Why dont you take it out of the drawer and hold it in your hand and point it at me and call me dishonorable again?
If you found my gun, you took the bullets out.
Could be. Or maybe not. Open the drawer and pick it up. The weight should tell you something.
I apologize if I said something I shouldnt.
Preacher leaned forward in the chair. He was wearing a brown suit with light stripes in it, and the cast was gone from his leg. You take Mrs. Dolan and your children out of town for a while. You pay cash everywhere you go. A credit card is an electronic footprint. You dont call your restaurant or your lawyer or your friends. Artie Rooney may tap your phone lines. Ill give you a cell phone number where you can contact me. But Ill be the only person youll be talking to.
Are you crazy? Nobody is this arrogant. Nick opened the side drawer to his desk and looked at the gun lying inside it.
A crazy person is psychotic and has a distorted vision of the world. Which of us is the realist? The one who has survived among the predators or the one who pretends to be a family man while he lives off the earnings of whores and puts his family at mortal risk?
Nick tried to hold his gaze on Preachers.
You want to say something? Preacher asked. Pick up the gun.
Dont tempt me.
Did you ever fire it?
No.
Pick it up and point it at me. Hold it with both hands. That way your fingers will stop trembling.
You dont think Ill pick it up?
Show me.
Nick rested his hand in the drawer. The steel frame and checkered grips of the nine-millimeter felt solid and hard and reassuring as he curved his fingers around them. He lifted the gun out of the drawer. Its light. You took the clip out.
Its called a magazine. It feels light because youre scared and your adrenaline gives you strength you normally dont have. The firing mechanism has a butterfly safety. The red dot means youre on rock and roll. Pull back the hammer.
I dont want to.
Do it, little fat man. Do it, little Jewish fat man.
What did you call me?
Its not what I call you. Its what Hugo calls you. He also calls you the Pillsbury Doughboy. Fit your thumb over the hammer and pull it back, then aim the front sight at my face.
Nick set down the gun on the desk blotter and removed his hand from the grips. He was breathing audibly through his nostrils, his palms clammy, a taste like soured milk climbing into his mouth.
Why caint you do it? Preacher asked.
Because its empty. Because Im not here to entertain you.
Thats not why at all. Push the button by the trigger guard.
Nick picked up the gun and squeezed the release on the magazine. The magazine fell from the frame and clunked on the desktop, the loading spring stacked tight with brass-jacketed shells.
Pull back the slide. Youll see a round in the chamber. The reason you didnt point the gun at me is because youre not a killer. But other men are, and they dont think two seconds about the deeds they do. Those are the men Im trying to protect your family from. Some of us are made different in the womb and are not to be underestimated. Im one of them, but I think Im different from the others. Is everything I say lost on you? Are you ignorant as well as corrupt?
No, you make me want to blow your fucking head off.
The door to the upstairs opened, and light flooded down the staircase. Whos down there? Esther said. Before anyone could answer her question, she descended the stairs, gripping an empty pot by the handle. She stared down at Preacher. Who are you?
A friend.
Howd you get in my house?
The side door was open. Ive explained this. Why dont you sit down?
Youre one of them, arent you?
One of who?
The gangsters who have been plaguing our lives.
Youre wrong.
Hes about to leave, Esther, Nick said.
Youre one of those who abducted my husband, she said.
I wouldnt call it that.
Dont lie.
You shouldnt use that term to me, madam.
She stepped closer to him. The Asian women, the prostitutes, the illegals or whatever they were, youre here about them. Youre the one who did it.
Did what?
Killed them. It was you, wasnt it?
Why do you say that? Preachers mouth twitched slightly, his words catching in his throat.
Your eyes are dead. Only one kind of man has eyes like that. Someone who murders the light behind his own eyes. Someone who has tried to scrub Gods fingerprint off his soul.
Dont you talk to me like that, woman.
You call me woman? A dog turd off the sidewalk calls me woman in my own house?
I came here to
Shut up, you worthless gangster, she said.
By God, you wont talk to me like he began.
She swung the stainless-steel pot, still caked with oatmeal, across his face. The sound reverberated like a brass cymbal inside the room. Before he could recover from the shock, she hit him again, this time on the head. When he tried to raise his arms, she rained down one blow after another on his neck, shoulders, and elbows, gripping the handle with both hands, chopping downward as though attacking a tree stump.
Esther! Nick said, coming from behind his desk.
When Preacher lowered his arms, she swung the pot again, catching him right above the ear. He got to his feet and stumbled to the side door, blood leaking out of his hair. He jerked open the door and climbed the short flight of concrete steps into the yard, grabbing the higher steps for support, his palms smearing with bird shit.