Quarry (11 page)

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Authors: Max Allan Collins

BOOK: Quarry
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The night before, however, had been something else again. I came home to the YMCA, feeling no pain but still the captain of my own ship—well, first mate, anyway. My hormones were pretty much in check from my bout with Helen what’s-her-name back at the Howard Johnson’s yesterday, and I’d gotten a certain satisfaction out of just standing and mentally feeling up Bunny of Bunny’s. I don’t think Boyd crossed my mind once, or the mark, Albert Leroy, either. Not right then anyway.

To show you how much in control I was, I managed to remember there was no can in my room, that my only source for relief was the communal john on the Y’s dormitory floor where mine and all the other “apartments” were. My bladder was near explosion point and as I pushed open the door and flicked on the light switch, I heard a chorus of voices say, “Hey!” “Watch it!” “What the fuck!”

Automatically I flicked the light switch back off and was wheeling back out the door, my mind clouded but alert enough to know something stunk in Denmark. If I carried a gun, I might’ve reacted real bad. But I don’t, so I didn’t.

Then I got the picture. Quite literally.

On the wall of the large john-room were the silvery, flickering images of a film. A woman in a dark wig and nothing else was sitting on the edge of a bed; she had fleshy thighs and was spreading them, bountiful droopy breasts staring downward at the action. There was no sound, other than that of the eight-millimeter projector clicking and clacking away and some scattered hard breathing from the audience, which I gathered was made up of five or six fellow YMCA residents. Sitting on the floor of the can of the Young Men’s Christian Association, digging the porno.

I laughed and went back outside, getting my key from out my pocket. I was almost down to my room when I heard a voice from behind me say, “Hey man! Hey, Johnson!”

That was the name I was registered under. I turned and said, “Yeah?”

It was the bearded guy, the youngish Gabby Hayes who had checked me in. And by young I mean somewhere between twenty-five and forty, don’t ask me where.

“Say, man,” he said, “go on back in the john and do what you have to.”

I laughed again and said, “Never mind. You boys scared the piss right out of me.”

“That doesn’t offend you, does it?”

“Offend me?”

“Those pornies, I mean. Look, everybody here on the floor knows about it, and I only show ’em because the guys enjoy it. They pitch in and I send for the stuff in the mail. From the back of the men’s mags. I don’t hardly make a cent on it, honest to Christ.”

“Hey. No big deal.”

“No, but it is. I’d get fired if anybody reported this. If any of the guys staying here don’t approve, fine, I’ll stop showing ’em. So if you don’t like it, please say so, okay?”

“Listen, I don’t really care one way or the other.”

He smiled, nodded his shaggy head. “You’re all right, Johnson.”

“Thanks. Look, I wouldn’t mind taking a shower before I turn in. How much longer does the Bijou go on in there?”

“Should be over in five minutes. Can you hold out that long?”

“Sure.”

“Look, I’ll come down to your room and knock when I’ve got everybody out of the john, okay?”

I nodded.

Ten minutes later I was sitting on the bed, shoes off, rubbing my feet, and the knock came-at the door. I got up and opened it and Gabby said, “All clear.”

“Fine.”

“You wouldn’t care for a nightcap, would you?”

If I hadn’t been drunk, it might’ve occurred to me that maybe this guy had in him some of what Boyd was. But I was drunk. So I said, “I already had more than I need, but . . . what the hell.”

“Fine. Come on.”

He had a bottle of whiskey, I didn’t notice what kind, which he poured over ice from a little cooler he kept in one corner of his room. He used water glasses and poured them three-quarters full; a refill would be unnecessary. I sat at the chair at the desk-dresser and he sat on the bed.

“Thanks for understanding about the movies.”

“Okay.”

“It’s not that I’m a sex maniac or anything.”

“Sure.”

“Or those other guys either. It’s just something to do.”

“I understand.”

“Do you?”

“Sure.”

“You understand then. That’s good. That’s real good.
Because I don’t want anybody getting the wrong impression.”

“Yeah.”

“You a salesman, or what?”

“Yeah.”

“You got a wife?”

“No.”

“Girl friend?”

“A few.”

“More than one, huh? Girl in every port?”

“Here and there.”

“Anything steady?”

“No.”

“Take my advice. Get somebody steady. Listen to me. I’m older than I look, you know. I ran away from home when I was a kid.”

I was too drunk to notice how contrite the guy was getting. If I’d looked at him close I probably would’ve seen tears in his eyes. But I didn’t look at him.

I concentrated on my drinking and several minutes went by before I realized he’d been talking quite a while, talking about God knows what. He was saying, “ . . . bummed around a long time. My folks were dead and buried before I ever got back home. I was bumming before it was popular. I hitchhiked when it was a way of life, not a damn fad. You know what I’m saying?”

“Sure.”

“No you don’t. You don’t know what I’m saying. You don’t know why I show movies to those guys either.”

“Sure I do.”

“No. You don’t know why I asked you for a drink.”

“Yeah I do.”

“What then?”

“You don’t want to lose your job. You want to make sure I’m okay.”

“You’re okay, I know you’re okay. That’s maybe part of it, I guess, making sure you’re okay, but you still don’t know, do you?”

“Sure I do.”

“You’re a salesman, you say?”

“Yeah.”

“How long?”

“Five years.”

“You’re young yet. You thirty?”

“No.”

“You’re young yet. Get another job.”

“What?”

“Get off the road.”

“What?”

“Find somebody. Find some woman. Or somebody.”

“Sure.”

“I mean it. If you don’t, you know what happens?”

“No.”

“You mean you don’t know?”

“Tell me.”

“You wake up old.”

“Is that right?”

“That’s right. And you find yourself old and alone and in a room and you die that way.”

I looked at him. For a moment he was Albert Leroy. Sitting on that bed and wearing a gray sweater with diamond shapes on it. For an icy instant he was my mark.

I blinked.

Hard.

And I looked again and he was a young Gabby Hayes. Only he didn’t seem so young anymore, and I didn’t feel so drunk anymore.

I thanked him for the whiskey and left the room.

So I went to bed depressed and woke up with a sour film in my mouth and a sour mood in my mind and I climbed out of bed and took the shower I never got around to the night before and went down for a long, cold swim.

I had to see Boyd today. Had to. Today was Wednesday —and Thursday was the day.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

14

 

 

THE POOL WAS
long and narrow. The water was green to look at and cool to swim in. Cool was good. I hate it when the water’s overheated, it puts me off—it’s closer to soaking in a big hot bath than swimming in a pool.

For a long time I swam. Somewhere between one hour and two. A good half hour of that was spent floating on my back and staring at the ceiling and thinking. It wasn’t good to think. Not on a job, not when your mind should be uncluttered. But if thinking couldn’t be helped, best to do so in a relaxed way like this.

I loved the water. Its coolness, its gentle, lazy movement. The water made me think of Wisconsin, even though this water was full of chlorine and in Wisconsin the water was clear and fresh. I thought of Wisconsin and the lake and the nice moments my life had its share of.

My life.

I thought about it, defined it:
I live in a small A-frame, a prefab, on a lake in Wisconsin. Alone. I’m within an easy drive of Lake Geneva, where I belong to the Playboy Club, where I spend a night or two a week, when I’m not working. One night a week I play cards with some friends of mine down at Twin Lakes, mostly old guys who’ve retired, doctors and dentists and lawyers who stay the year round, though the crowd changes during the summer and the winter skiing months, when some men closer my age drift into the penny ante game. Once a year I go to Las Vegas and gamble and do my best to screw some pretty girls; sometimes I win. Once a year, in the winter, I go to Fort Lauderdale and soak up some sun. When I’m at the lake, in summer months, I swim and sun and water ski when I can find a knowledgeable female assistant to help me with my boat. There are many nice outdoor things to do around there in the fall, and the spring too, but in the winter I stay inside and listen to my stereo and watch television and read an occasional paperback western. When I’m not working.

A nice life:
comfortable, better than comfortable. I work six, maybe seven jobs a year, for varying fees, my yearly income averages between fifteen and twenty thousand, a lot for a man alone, though I manage to spend every cent every year. I pay taxes on an income of seven or eight thousand, under my salesman cover; Broker fills out the IRS forms for me. My cover is something of a joke: door-to-door salesman of women’s “personal wear,” meaning hosiery and lingerie and the like. I still take along a sample case and credentials, but first year or so I took the case door-to-door some, establishing myself in whatever town the hit was in as a salesman, while Boyd was doing his lookout thing. Later I decided that was stupid. It was better to be invisible, and the cover was useless as far as cops were concerned anyway. After all, cops wouldn’t ask questions till you did something, and the only thing you would do is kill some guy, immediately after which you’d be the hell out of town. And if they did happen to catch you in the act or something, a fuck of a lot of good a damn sample case of underwear is going to do you.

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