Short Ride to Nowhere (9 page)

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Authors: Tom Piccirilli

Tags: #Mystery & Crime

BOOK: Short Ride to Nowhere
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Jenks still had half a donut and half a glass of milk in front of him.
 
Chef moved in on him another step and the door flapped closed behind him.
 
Jenks hadn’t even given him more than a glance.
 
Now he’d have to look.
 
Now he’d have to assess and confront.
 
Stare down and sneer.
 
All because of what?
 
Because Chef had his own boxing match going on inside his head and he hadn’t punched anyone out all day long?
 

Jenks thought, I really want to finish my donut.

He could imagine Hale, reaching for the stale cheese Danish and thinking,
I really want this fucking Danish.
 

That’s what the world came down to sometimes.
 
You and some baked goods.
 
The universe on your tongue.
 
Daring to eat a peach.
 
Sucking down some rainbow sprinkles.
 

Chef coming a little closer.
 
“You hear what I said?”

“I heard,” Jenks said, sipping his milk.
 
How hard-assed did you look drinking milk?
 
How big a threat?
 
How awful an enemy?

“Finish up and go.”

“Sure.”

“Now.”

“As soon as I finish up, I’ll go.”

It surprised Jenks a little to think that he’d spoken more to people over the last two days than he had in the entire year beforehand.
 
All of it with a mean edge, maybe just a touch of a whine or a growl.
 
Out on the boat the crew never asked him anything except about the rigging and nets.
 
On the beach he could sleep and watch the waves and the kids swimming and the lovers walking and nobody said anything besides “good morning.”
 
So what was the difference?
 
It had to have something to do with Jenks himself.
 
His mission.
 
His rage, his fears, his defects and deficiencies.
 
They read it in his face, sniffed it in his sweat.
 

“Now,” Chef said.

Jenks thought, it really could happen.
 
You could kill a man over a donut.
 
How had he gotten to this place?
 
His chest tightened and his breath hitched.
 
His pulse began to hammer.
 
His heartbeat hurt.
 
He winced against the throbbing pain and finished the last bite of donut.
 
He swallowed the last of the milk as Chef got within arm’s reach, his hands hidden beneath the counter.
 
You had to wonder what was under there.
 
A pistol, a shotgun, a fire extinguisher, a cast-iron skillet.
 
What would you say to St. Peter when you showed up at the pearly gates, your brains still leaking out of your head?
 
I didn’t live my life well enough.
 
I failed in loving my neighbor.
 
I drank too much milk. I took too long with the chocolate donut.
 
I died an idiot but not a murderer.
 
And St. Peter flipping pages through the great book of life, pursing his lips, checking off your sins, underlining your failures.
 
Not enough gold stars for you, take your bitching to hell with you, loser.

Jenks hopped backwards off the stool and watched as Chef overreacted to his movements and nearly flung himself backwards into the freshly made tray of raisin muffins.
 
Jenks cut out the door and got to his car, the veins in his throat still snapping.
 
He got behind the wheel and stared the engine, let it roar like his own scream.
 
He wheeled out of the parking lot and drove around blindly until he found an area of waterfront where he could pull off.
 
He discovered he was holding his breath and when he let it out he swallowed down great lungfuls of air.
 
He turned on the radio and listened to music he didn’t like but that somehow calmed him.
 
He hadn’t killed anybody yet.
 
He wondered if Hale had.
 
The girl or someone else.
  

“What did you do next?” he asked as the sun burned through the windshield and dried the tears of frustration on his face.
 
He hadn’t realized he’d been crying and it was a shock to find that he could still weep.

11
 

He finally thought about tracking down Hale’s family.
 
He wasn’t even sure if Hale’s ex-wife knew that he was dead, although the cops had probably already notified her.
 
Maybe it was something that would matter to her, maybe not.
 
Jenks tried to imagine how it would go down, whether Hale’s suicide would be dismissed as another stupid move by a madman or whether it would carry more weight than that.
 
He watched the water and found an oldies station and let him mind wander back to when he was a kid and the songs were fresh.
 
He saw himself back in high school, standing at some girl’s locker, trying to act suave and hip and doing a fair job of it, as she stared at him with a kind of selfish contempt.
 
He asked her on a date and she turned him down, and kept staring just to see how he would react, if his reaction itself would be funny or worth discussing with her friends later.
 
He felt then as he felt now: As if the next thing in the world could not be as terrible as what had led up to it.

With the music playing softly he fell asleep.
 
An hour later he awoke from a nightmare he couldn’t remember, his hands flashing out like he was wrestling with something.
 
He took the key out of his car to keep the battery from dying and thought about the nameless little girl that Hale had been found with.
 
It soothed him somehow.
 
He dropped his chin to his chest and fell back asleep.

He awoke at 8pm very hungry and drove back over to the donut shop.
 
The place was empty.
 
A different girl was working the counter.
 
She was much friendlier than the last one and was chatty as hell.
 
Jenks liked listening to her.
 
She didn’t ask any questions, just launched into a slew of chatter about the weather, some political topics, and some situation going on with the bears in the Bronx Zoo.
 
He ate a half dozen donuts and drank three glasses of milk and nodded to her and laughed and went “Oh ho!” in the appropriate places, sounding a lot like his old man.
 
His old man never gave a shit about anything that anybody else ever said but he made the right noises to sound as if he did.

If Chef or another chef was in the back, he never showed himself.
 
The girl threw today’s paper down in front of Jenks, which he took as an invitation to stay in the shop as long as he wanted.
 
He read it through and ordered another half-dozen donuts, and by the time he was done it was almost eleven o’clock and the whores were on the street and there were cars lined up at the curb.

He watched the brazen women walking in the center of the street yelling and laughing.
 
Some drinking coffee, some swilling and spitting mouthwash across the asphalt.
 
When he was in high school he remembered the women leaned toward the fat, wearing leather bikinis and fishnets, with red-wax lips burning in the street lamp glow.
 

Now the ladies seemed to be better dressed, wearing average clothes, prettier on the whole, older but appearing more like the woman next door.
 
He realized that a lot of the men in their cars parked at the curb weren’t customers at all, but husbands and boyfriends playing the role of pimp.
 
The recession must’ve done it to them too.
 
As unemployment skyrocketed, this was a way for them to get back into the workforce.
 
Some of the husbands were on their phones, some texting or playing videogames.
 

Trina Beck emerged from the shadows much later than expected.
 
It was after two when she met up with the other women and started shouting towards the passing traffic.
 
Someone picked her up immediately.
 
Jenks watched as she directed the driver down a nearby alley.
 
You could tell the guy didn’t like the idea, so he pulled up on the opposite side of the street right on the rim of the streetlight’s radiance.
 
It was just bright enough that Jenks could see money being exchanged.
 
Trina Beck’s head ducked down into the dude’s lap and began to bob.
 
It took about three minutes.
 
Then she climbed out of the car, threw a knotted condom in the gutter, and the car drove off as she crossed back to where the other ladies congregated.

Katrina Beck was still a beautiful woman.
 
Jenks hadn’t been expecting that.
 
She looked a great deal like she had in the photo in the frame hanging above her kitchen door.
 
Older, a touch more worn, but still with that extra something that would make men want her desperately.
 
Trina was wearing a black dress, something more appropriate to a night out in the theater district than slipping from car to car beneath the 59
th
Street Bridge.
 

After performing oral sex on nearly a dozen men in little more than ninety minutes, a black SUV pulled up beside her and she handed over a wedge of money to the driver.
 
They spoke briefly and laughed together.
 

The dude was young, thirty, younger than Mikey, her son.
 
Handsome dude, wearing a white button down shirt and a black sport coat and tie.
 
Jenks caught the flash of cufflinks.
 
The dude made a phone call while Trina Beck returned to work.

They both exuded a sense of money, self-reliance, and power.
 
They showed no fear of cops coming around or any kind of sting operation.
 
They were slick, earning long green, seemed happy to be there doing their thing.
 
Was it just the result of the new Depression?
 
In the twenties you robbed banks and ran moonshine.
 
Now, is this how the new poor survived?
 
You got under the bridge and dressed better than you ever had before.
 
Jenks couldn’t see this woman in a homeless shelter stealing a two day-old cheese Danish.
 

He had to get closer, face to face, ask her about Hale, figure this thing out.
 

Jenks waited another hour and a half while Trina Beck continued her action, only twice getting into the back seat of vehicles to lift her dress and go the full ride.
 
The men had too much on their minds, didn’t want to put any effort into it at all, willing to just sit there with their pants open while she took control and got it done.
 
No wonder the economy was in the shitter, Jenks thought, we’re all too damn lazy.

The kid returned again and she handed him another bundle of cash.
 
She was clearly the hottest item on the street but none of the other ladies seemed to be angry or jealous about it.
 
Jenks watched a few of the other women sneaking off to sniff coke or smoke meth in the alleys.
 

She was getting more popular as the night went on.
 
He actually had to get in line in order to make a date with her.
 
They were bottlenecking right there in the street, cars backing up, pulling over, motors running, waiting their turn.
 
He was fourth out of six.
 
No, seven.
 
Everyone patient, nobody in a mad rush, guys knowing she was worth the extra time it would take.
  
And none of them even wanting to get laid.

Finally, at a quarter to six in the morning, the sun still down, Jenks drew up beside Trina Beck and she gave him a short smile and a flash of leg.
 

“Are you lonely this morning, baby?”

“I’m lonely every morning,” he admitted.

“Well, that’s too bad.
 
You should come see me more often then.”

“I’m here now.”

“Yes, you are.”
 
She gave him her prices.
 
If the other ladies charged as much he would’ve thought it was a ripoff, but for Trina Beck they didn’t seem unreasonable.
 
He did a quick calculation and was astonished at the amount of cash she’d pulled in already.
 
He wondered why she didn’t go high class, work the best hotels in town and find private customers instead of wandering the streets.

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