Duncan Delaney and the Cadillac of Doom (6 page)

BOOK: Duncan Delaney and the Cadillac of Doom
4.2Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“That woman could screw up a wet dream,” Benjamin muttered.

He sat back. Someone was always preventing Fiona from assaulting him. He did not doubt she could damage him before he finally put her down. He frowned. That would not benefit his friendship with Duncan. He resolved to be more cordial in future encounters, not for Fiona’s benefit, but for Duncan’s. Billy Masterson came in and led him from the room down a hall and to the left.

“Hey,” Benjamin said, “my cell’s back that other way.”

“Jesus, Ben, I know that. It’s my jail after all. We’re letting you go.”

Benjamin’s public defender, a gray haired man named Conley whose breath whistled through his nose with a perpetual whiskey smell, waited in the lobby. Lightning struck Benjamin’s brain. He turned to Masterson.

“You looked at the tape!”

“Actually,” Conley said, “it was me who looked. They just assumed they knew what was on it.”

“What took you so long?”

“Well,” Conley admitted, “I guess I assumed the same thing they did.”

“We’re really sorry, Ben,” Billy said.

Benjamin laughed, realizing what the deputy had whispered to Fiona. It must have rankled when she realized any leverage she possessed was lost. But she played it through and almost roped him. Billy gave Benjamin back his wallet, two hundred and forty-eight dollars in bills and seventy-three cents in change, a Canadian nickel, cigarette papers and a tobacco tin, two ribbed condoms, the keys to his truck, his belt, his shoelaces, and his hat.

“Let us know if you want to prefer charges against Leroy Kern,” Masterson said.

“Let me think about that one.”

Benjamin tied his shoelaces and put on his belt. Masterson gave him the fifty dollars from the pool.

“Your guess was closest,” he explained.

“Thanks, Billy. You boys treated me okay this time.”

“I’ve talked to the judge,” Conley said. “He agreed to apply time served against your previous sentence and suspended the remainder. Your weekends are forthwith free.”

“Thanks, Mr. Conley.”

“You come see us again soon,” Masterson said.

“Not me. I’ve mended my ways.”

Conley laughed. “Sure, Ben. See you at church next Sunday.”

   

Tiffy’s white convertible Volkswagen Rabbit was parked in front of the Cheyenne Club when Benjamin drove up. Mr. Bradshaw had given her the car upon the successful completion of her cosmetology course work at the community college. She never aspired to or attained a position in the industry. She just had a thirst for knowledge. An
I Brake for Cowboys
decal adorned her rear bumper. Benjamin parked behind the Rabbit, wondering if she had the same logo tattooed on her ass.

It was early and the club was not crowded. Benjamin sat at the bar, took off his hat, and ordered a beer. He drank it without pause. He had been dry near a week and the beer quenched a burning within. He ordered another and looked to the dance floor. Tiffy danced there with a young cowboy. They both wore hats. Benjamin pondered why half the population of Wyoming found it imperative to wear their hats indoors.

Savages,
he thought.

Tiffy wore a short denim skirt, white leather boots, and a white long sleeved blouse with a bolo tie. A flimsy bra beneath the blouse barely restrained her breasts. Benjamin pictured her naked. He felt no guilt. Countless men and boys and a proportionate number of women had envisioned Tiffy naked in the course of her young life. Benjamin did not see why he should be the first to forsake that pleasure. The young man she danced with was apparently of the same perspective, as he furtively glanced to ascertain which way her chest swayed. Tiffy left him on the dance floor when the music stopped. She sat at the bar beside Benjamin.

“How did you get out?”

“Hasn’t been a jail built yet that can hold Benjamin Lonetree.”

“Escaped, did you?”

“Three men died in the purchase of my liberty.”

“Uh huh. Buy me a beer?”

Benjamin called for another round. Tiffy uncrossed and crossed her legs again. Her skirt’s brevity impressed the hell out of him.

“I suppose you’ll tell Duncan you saw me here.”

“That was not my intent.”

“Well, it doesn’t matter. I’d tell him myself if I knew where he was. I’d tell him it don’t mean nothing.”

“What do you care? You dumped and forsook him.”

“Is that what he said?” Tiffy touched his arm. “This is all a terrible mistake. I miss him so.”

Benjamin glanced at the young cowboy who in turn eyed him with ill disguised envy. “I could tell.”

“Oh, don’t mind him.” She moved closer. “We were just dancing.” Benjamin smelled her jasmine perfume. “You know where Duncan is, don’t you?”

Benjamin had stopped by the post office on the way to the Cheyenne Club. Amongst the bills and the advertisements in his box was a card from Duncan with his new address. Benjamin had put the card in his pocket and the remaining mail in the trash.

“I know.”

“You’ll tell me, won’t you?” She touched his knee. “I’d be so grateful.”

Benjamin sighed. He set his beer down. It would be rude to ignore an invitation that plain. He kissed her. She expanded her mouth to receive him and he indulged her with his tongue. After a moment she pushed him away and smirked.

“Well, now, Benjamin! Whatever did you do that for?”

“To see if I could.”

“You always could have. You just never noticed.”

Tiffy grasped his ears and kissed him again. She guided his hand to her breast. Benjamin had often laid in bed and mused what he would do to or with or for her if the opportunity ever tendered itself. But now, when she was (technically at least) broken up with Duncan and was as such fair game, he startled himself by resisting.

“You can touch me if you want,” she whispered.

“Which is exactly why I’m not going to.”

“It’s all right. I wouldn’t tell Duncan.”

“I would.”

Tiffy cuffed him once, hard. Benjamin slapped her back. She appeared surprised, then stimulated. She seized him and tried to kiss him again.

“Let’s get out of here,” she said.

“I’ve got a better idea.” He pushed her away. “Why don’t I get out of here and you find someone else to lead around by the pecker.”

He paid for the beers and left. Tiffy followed him to the Purgatory Truck. Her previously smoldering eyes had cooled to glaciers. She handed him an envelope.

“Will you give this to Duncan?”

“Sure.”

“If you tell him anything, I’ll just deny it.” She turned and walked away. “Candy ass pansy Indian fairy,” she said as she retreated.

“White bow-legged cowgirl slut,” Benjamin said as he got in his truck.

Tiffy stopped. “I am not bow-legged!” she yelled. Then she went back inside.

   

Leroy Kern stood behind the counter at the Lazy Rancher, absently rubbing the goose egg on his forehead. He had been seeing double since the incident and could only today successfully fuse his images. Earlier that morning, Billy Masterson had stopped by and explained the situation. It riled Leroy Kern that Benjamin could, in theory and if he so desired, prefer charges against him. He protested, but Billy held up his hand and said,
self defense don’t include protecting yourself from being stared at.

Leroy Kern looked up when he heard the Purgatory Truck. He reached under the counter. He panicked when he remembered Billy had confiscated his gun as evidence. Benjamin shut off the truck and went inside. He took a six pack of beer out of the cooler and placed it in a hand basket beside a plastic wrapped tuna salad sandwich, a bag of chocolate chip cookies, and a half pint of potato salad. He took a quart of thirty weight off a shelf and put it in the basket between the six packs. He put the basket on the counter.

“Howdy, Leroy,” Benjamin said.

“Hey, Ben.”

Leroy Kern, pale and sweating, removed and totaled the items in Benjamin’s basket. His goose egg was a painful purple, and both eyes were bruised. He looked like a fat, bald raccoon.

“No hard feelings?” he asked.

“Just because you tried to murder me? Of course not.”

Leroy Kern relaxed. “That’ll be twenty-one seventy-five.”

“You take care of that, Leroy?

Benjamin picked up his goods and headed for the door. He stopped at the candy rack. He took a Milky Way bar and held it up. Leroy Kern stood there with his mouth open and his eyes dull.

“I believe you owe me one of these.”

He pocketed the candy bar and stepped outside. He placed his appropriated goods on the passenger seat and got in. As he backed up, he looked through the glass and watched with grim satisfaction as Leroy Kern finally closed his mouth, took out his wallet, and put a twenty and three ones into the cash register.

   

A thin, ebony haired receptionist was sitting behind a chrome and glass desk when Duncan walked into Angela Moncini’s office that Monday, her crossed legs covered in black mesh. Her name was Marie, and she was pretty as a mannequin, though substantially more lifelike. She surveyed him with an entomologist’s indifference. Duncan leaned the two paintings wrapped in butcher paper against a wall and took off his hat.

“I’d like to see Angela Moncini if I could.”

“Is she expecting you?”

“Well, yes and no.”

“Which is it?”

“Both, I guess.”

“Your name?”

“Duncan Delaney.”

“I’ll see if she’s in.” She stood and went through a door.

Duncan looked about. Framed newspaper and magazine clippings on the walls detailed the varying successes of Angela Moncini’s clients and the importance of their work to Western civilization. Looking at the clippings, Duncan felt like a pretentious dung beetle from Wyoming competing with big city cockroaches. He picked up his paintings and turned to go, but a placid, euphonious female voice arrested him.

“You must be Duncan.”

He turned. Angela Moncini’s onyx hair was cut to her shoulders and her eyes were gray and soft above tan valleys cut deep beneath the ridges of her cheekbones. She wore a black skirt and stockings and a white silk blouse through which Duncan deciphered the intricate pattern of her bra. Duncan understood what Benjamin must have felt when first he gazed upon her.

“Yes, ma’am. I must be.”

“Can I have Marie get you a drink?”

“Yes, please. Beer if you have it.”

“I’ll make a note to get some. Would you settle for champagne?”

“That would be fine.” He really wanted a beer.

“So you’re Duncan Delaney,” Angela repeated.

“Yes ma’am.” He took out his wallet. “I have identification.”

Angela laughed. He put his wallet back, feeling stupid. She took his hand and led him through a door.

“I want to show you something,” she said.

Her office was on the fifteenth floor of a high rise and its window offered a wide vista past concrete and steel stalagmites to the sea. The room itself was like a well-furnished gallery. Two leather chairs sat before an ebony desk with a third chair behind it. An elaborate oriental rug lay atop the mahogany floor. Recessed lights adorned the ceiling. But what seized Duncan’s imagination were the paintings. He could identify a few of the canvases on the walls, and some signatures, but he stalled at a painting of a young blond woman on horseback riding a herd across a wide grassy plain to market. The girl wore blue jeans, a denim shirt, and a white cowboy hat. She was more than beautiful and the view would be idyllic if boring save that the herd she drove was comprised of naked, hairy men on all fours. Duncan scrutinized the signature.
Sheila
something. He could not make out the last name. He moved on until he came to a painting that routed an icy thrill up his back and down his arms. Benjamin’s family, framed in rosewood and illuminated by recessed lighting, hung like an icon on her wall. Marie materialized with champagne. Duncan gulped a glass down.

“Did I paint that?” he asked.

“It’s brilliant,” Angela said.

He was not prepared to go that far. Still, six hundred dollars no longer seemed ludicrous.

“Holy Jesus,” he said. “What a difference a frame makes.”

Angela laughed. Duncan thought he said something stupid again but there was no malice in her eyes.

“I could sell it for twice what I paid. But I won’t. I keep the first paintings of all my artists. Now let’s see what I
can
sell.”

Marie brought in his paintings. He tore the butcher paper off and set them against the desk. He stepped back and began to sweat. Angela shifted a foot and put one hand to her chin. Duncan fanned his face with his Stetson, ready to crawl back to Cheyenne. Angela looked up and smiled. Anxiety washed from his body like dye from a new pair of blue jeans.

“Duncan,” she said, “You’re going to be a big hit in this town.”

   

Duncan was still feeling the champagne when he sauntered past the white, nineteen sixty-five Cadillac convertible parked below his window. Its top was down, and it had immaculate red leather seats and a high polish to its paint. Had he known what it was, and what it would one day do, he would have fetched the baseball bat he had bought that morning and reduced the car as best he could to scrap. Much later, as he watched the killer General Motors product crushed and pulverized at a scrap yard and many times after, he would think back to that day and wonder if he would have done anything different. But he would always conclude the only thing worth changing was the way it all turned out.

He climbed the stairs and ducked under the pipe in the hallway. Inside his studio he hung his Stetson on his easel. He picked up and waltzed Cat across the floor. Cat purred a question and Duncan chuckled an answer. He collapsed laughing on the couch. Cat jumped to the open window.

“Lighten up, Cat! If you can’t stand the painter, get out of the studio!”

The Cadillac started outside. Its stereo blared
Only Women Bleed
. Cat glanced at Duncan and down at the sidewalk. Then he leaped out to the street. Duncan jumped up and ran to the window.

“Hey!” he yelled, “I was …”

Cat had landed in the Cadillac next to a young woman whose beauty shattered him and sent the shards crashing about her feet. She was maybe three years older than Duncan and oddly familiar. Her hair was as blond as his was red but much longer. Her Caribbean blue eyes smiled above full, laughing lips that had never felt the needle’s collagen sting. Her skin was smooth and her teeth even and white. She wore a black leather jacket over a tight black dress. Black stockings sheathed long, athletic legs, ending in black pumps with sharp heels. Her breasts curved wonderfully within the low neck of her dress. She was as beautiful as any model or actress in print or on screen.

BOOK: Duncan Delaney and the Cadillac of Doom
4.2Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Memories of Gold by Ali Olson
What Pretty Girls Are Made Of by Lindsay Jill Roth
The Horseman's Bride by Elizabeth Lane
Noah's Compass by Anne Tyler
Cloudburst Ice Magic by Siobhan Muir
Sway by Lauren Dane