Текст книги "Robert B. Parker's The Bridge"
Автор книги: Robert Knott
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Текущая страница: 16 (всего у книги 17 страниц)
— 75 —
I was sitting in a comfortable chair on the porch of Virgil and Allie’s place with the morning sunshine warming my face. The early snow was all gone now and the temperature was pleasant. The streets were still muddy, but the crops and fields in the area were thankful for the early winter soaking.
Business was back to normal in Appaloosa. The streets were busy with activity. I thought about what Wallis had said, about how many people were in the town now. Appaloosa had changed damn near before our eyes from a little town to a city, a full-grown city. Hocus-goddamn-pocus.
Nell came walking up the boardwalk, spinning her parasol on her shoulder. Her chin was high and her posture was erect. She had a degree of purpose and pride to her step. She waited for a buggy to pass, then crossed the street. She was smiling when she approached the porch.
“Hello,” she said.
“Morning,” I said.
“A nice one,” she said.
“It is,” I said. “And I suspect the warmer conditions we got now, and the fact the tent-show outfit is finally going to get rigged up, that you’re feeling somewhat chipper.”
“How did you know?” she said, as she walked up the steps.
“Well, hell, I could tell it,” I said. “Saw it right off. Watching you coming a block away.”
“Why,” she said with a smile and a spin of the parasol, “are you some kind of officer?”
“I am, as a matter of fact,” I said back with a smile. “Have a seat.”
“Why, thank you,” she said. “You the only one home?”
“I am,” I said. “Virgil’s at the office and Allie’s with her ladies’ social. She’s drumming up ticket sales for your show.”
“She’s something else,” Nell said.
“Yes, she is,” I said.
Nell sat in the center of the hanging bench swing just to the left of me. She was wearing a yellow gingham dress under a long, thin dark green topcoat with brown velvet cuffs and lapels.
“You’re looking better, Everett,” she said.
“Than what?” I said.
“Than before,” she said.
“Before what?” I said.
“When you were at Doc’s.”
“You came?”
She tilted her head and smiled.
“You’re a devil,” she said.
“Am I?”
“Did I come?” Nell said with a slight pull of her chin to her collarbone. “I most certainly did.”
“Doc Crumley had me on double doses of the devil himself there for a while,” I said. “So there was a lot of chasing butterflies, running through fields of flowers, and kissing beautiful women and that sort of thing.”
“Imagine that?” she said with a smile. “And that sort of thing.”
“Only so much time for flowers, butterflies, and beautiful women,” I said.
“Yes, a shame, really,” Nell said. “We all need more of that sort of beauty in our lives, don’t you think?”
“As long as it’s not in a bottle,” I said.
She nodded. Smiled.
“Well,” she said. “I’m very glad to see you’re looking well.”
“Thank you,” I said.
She reached out and grabbed my hand and squeezed it a little as she looked directly at me.
“Scary?” she said.
“Not at the time,” I said.
She just looked at me for an extended moment, then looked to the street. She smiled a little.
“My husband was right,” she said, looking back to me.
“About?” I said.
“Me,” she said.
“What about you?”
“That I have a good eye,” she said.
I had a good idea what she was getting at, but I was in the mood, so I asked anyway.
“What do you mean?”
“When I first saw you,” Nell said. “He was right.”
“About?” I said.
“You, of course,” she said.
“Me?”
“Yes, you,” she said. “Being a man of substance. A man of quick resolve.”
We stood together in silence. She looked off down the street for some time, then looked back to me.
“About what I said,” Nell said. “When we were washing dishes together.”
“It’s okay,” I said. “You don’t have to say anything.”
She smiled.
“Not that I’ve not thought about it,” I said. “I have.”
“Thought of it?” Nell said.
“Yes,” I said, “but another man’s wife is another man’s wife.”
She looked at me, nodding slightly, and a slow smile came to her face.
“Thought about it?” she said.
I nodded.
Nell nodded . . . “Can I ask you a question?” she said.
“Of course,” I said.
“Do you think I’m beautiful?” Nell said.
“I do.”
“Good,” she said. “I needed to make sure.”
“Make sure?” I said.
“Yes,” she said. “I just needed to know it was beautiful me with the flowers and the butterflies.”
“Now that you mention it,” I said. “I’m pretty sure it was you.”
She laughed and looked away.
“What’s funny?”
She looked back to me, that certain look in her eye.
“There’s no pretty sure to it,” Nell said.
— 76 —
Nudge?” Virgil said.
“Sure,” I said.
“Isn’t this exciting,” Allie said, walking up the hall to the parlor.
Allie’s face was covered with a white cream. She was barefoot, wearing just her corset, bloomers, and chemise, when she entered the living room, vigorously rubbing in the cream with her fingertips.
Virgil looked at me and shook his head a little as he got out of his chair and walked to the breakfront.
“It is,” I said.
“Finally get to see them perform,” Allie continued on, as she entered the kitchen. “Lord knows there’s been some awful business recently, for all of us.”
Virgil got two glasses and the Kentucky and closed the breakfront door.
“Especially you, Everett,” Allie said, as she came back from the kitchen, wiping the goo from her face with a rag. “You getting shot there at the Yaqui Brakes being the absolute worst of all for me, the worst for me.”
She stood, continuing to wipe her face as she talked to us.
“I know it has been absolutely dreadful, all that has happened recently, but tonight will be uplifting and inspiring for Appaloosa and us,” she said. “This will be special, and I know you won’t be disappointed, Virgil.”
“Okay,” Virgil said. “You gonna put some clothes on, or are you planning on going like that?”
“I’m wearing the new dress I ordered and you paid for,” she said with a chirp. “What time is it, Everett?”
I looked to the clock on the wall behind me.
“Quarter past,” I said.
“Oh,” she said. “I got to get myself moving.”
“Well, do,” Virgil said. “Get going, get yourself ready.”
“I won’t be long,” she said, as she turned for the hall. “But I do need this time to make myself pretty.”
“You don’t need no time for that, Allie,” Virgil said. “You’re pretty as a peach just as you are.”
Allie stopped and turned back to Virgil.
“Why, Virgil Cole,” she said. “Aren’t you adorable?”
“Don’t think that’s the right word, Allie,” Virgil said. “But I appreciate it all the same.”
She walked up to him and kissed him on the lips, leaving a circle of white cream around his mouth.
“You are,” she said, as she rubbed the cream off his face with the rag. “Adorable. Don’t you think, Everett?”
“I do,” I said.
“Go on,” Virgil said, pointing to the hall behind her.
Allie turned and scampered off down the hall.
“I won’t be long,” she said. “I do not want to be late.”
Virgil watched her, then turned to me, holding up the bottle and glasses.
“We’ll be on the porch waiting on you, Allie,” Virgil called to her.
Virgil opened the door and I followed him out to the porch.
We sat in the side-by-side chairs that backed up to the house. Virgil poured us each a nudge of whiskey.
“She’s excited,” I said.
“She is,” Virgil said.
We sat for quite a bit watching the sun dropping as we sipped on the Kentucky.
“Maybe she’s right,” Virgil said.
“’Bout what?”
“Maybe this Extravaganza will be uplifting and inspiring,” Virgil said.
“Has been some bad business for Appaloosa,” I said.
Virgil looked at me out of the corner of his eye.
“Look forward to seeing this fortune-teller,” Virgil said. “This sage.”
I nodded a little but didn’t say anything.
“Hard to figure,” Virgil said. “That business?”
“Is,” I said.
We sat quiet for a bit, drinking our whiskey. I thought about her. Séraphine the fortune-teller. Wondered about her and where the hell she came from and where she’d be going. I imagined what it might be like if she stayed and what it’d be like to be with her on a day in, day out basis. On many levels we were certainly goddamn good together. Maybe it was possible. Hocus-by-God-pocus, I thought . . . anything is possible.
“Hear that?” Virgil said.
I listened a moment and nodded.
“Music.”
“Sounds as if they’re getting things going over there,” Virgil said.
I nodded.
We just listened for a while to the faint sound of the music being played by the tent-show band from where they pitched camp north of town. It carried an eerie echo through the streets.
— 77 —
Virgil, Allie, and I walked the streets to the vacant lot where the big tent was set up. With each block we walked we could hear the band getting louder and louder.
Other Appaloosa townsfolk were moving through the streets, too, and we soon found ourselves in a stream of traffic headed for the festivities.
When we rounded the corner we could see the band sitting out in front of the tent playing a lively tune, as two jugglers kept numerous colorfully painted balls in the air.
Beauregard stood next to the tent’s entrance, greeting the crowd with big how-do-you-dos.
He was in costume. His face was painted with makeup. His eyebrows were dark, his face was powdery white, and his cheeks and lips were bright red. He was dressed like Porthos the Musketeer with a huge feathered hat that flipped up in the front, a velvet frockcoat and waistcoat, knee-high boots, a sword attached to his hip, and a handkerchief protruding from under his coat sleeve.
“Oh, goodness,” Allie said with the enthusiasm of a child. “Oh my goodness.”
“Looks like a good turnout, Allie,” I said.
“Oh, it does, Everett,” she said. “It certainly does.”
“I suspect your promotional efforts paid off,” I said.
“There’s Nell,” Allie said.
Nell exited the tent in an elaborate Marie Antoinette–like pannier-hooped dress with a low-cut bodice that exposed a good part of her bosom.
“Oh my word,” Allie said.
“Guess it’s almost showtime,” I said.
Allie excitedly scurried her way through the crowd and over to Nell.
“Guess so,” Virgil said.
“Big to-do,” I said.
“It is,” Virgil said, looking around.
Beauregard saw Virgil and me as we moved closer toward the entrance with the rest of the townsfolk.
“Hello, gentlemen,” he said, over the top of the others in front of us.
Beauregard stepped away from the crowd and got in step with Virgil and me as we moved toward the entrance.
“Marshal Cole,” he said. “And Deputy Marshal Hitch. Welcome. I am certainly glad you came out tonight. We have an exciting show in store for you this evening.”
“Looking forward to it,” I said.
“And you, Marshal?”
“Me, too,” Virgil said.
“Fantastic,” he said, then stopped walking.
We stopped as well, because he was leaning in as if he needed to say something.
“Look,” Beauregard said. “I know we got off on the wrong foot and I know you don’t much care for me. But I just want you to know, as much as you may despise me, I hold no one more accountable for those despicable feelings toward me other than me.”
“Despicable feelings?” Virgil said, looking around at the crowd. “We’re here like everyone else, to see your show. Ain’t that right, Everett?”
“Just like everyone else,” I said.
“Fine and dandy,” Beauregard said. “But I don’t imagine there’s a day that goes by that either of you are even remotely close to being like everyone else.”
–
The insides of the tent’s walls were painted to look like a European landscape with various villages on the horizon.
Virgil, Allie, and I took our seats and the show began, starting with Beauregard stepping onstage.
“Appaloosa,” he said. “Let’s start by giving yourselves a big round of applause for being here tonight.”
He clapped and most everyone in the two-hundred-plus crowd did the same.
“Let your friends and family know,” he said. “We will be here each and every evening with a variety of new and exciting entertainment, so keep coming and we’ll keep you feeling glad that you did.”
Beauregard went through the list of the evening’s events to be presented. He let everyone know there would be a three-act play, with intermissions, along with singing, dancing, and fortune-telling by Madame Leroux.
Beauregard ended his intro by saying, “Following the play, we have the most magnificent of magic from Dr. Longfellow, so sit back and enjoy . . . the show.”
The show got under way and for the most part it was very entertaining. The play was funny. Beauregard and Nell were good performers, and Beauregard actually made Virgil laugh.
The first intermission had a rousing singing and dancing number that included Nell showing off her legs as well as her vocal skills. The bit was enjoyable, but I was curious to see what the next intermission brought with Madame Séraphine Leroux.
The second act of the play seemed to go on forever. It was engaging, but I was anxious to see her when the act ended and Beauregard stepped out onto center stage.
“Now, this is something really special,” he said. “Something I know you all have been waiting for. Allow me to introduce to you the one, the only, the mystic, the clairvoyant, the beautiful . . . Madame Leroux.”
Beauregard held out his hand toward the side wing and Madame Leroux walked onstage.
Virgil leaned forward and looked to me.
I could not take my eyes off of her.
Madame Leroux was a beautiful woman wearing a turban, but she was someone else, someone other than Séraphine. She was an exotic-looking woman, but she was weathered, with a dark complexion, and looked to be maybe sixty-five or seventy years old.
Virgil leaned Allie forward a bit and edged himself over behind her, cupping his mouth as he spoke in my ear. Allie looked back and forth between Virgil and me.
“Nice-enough-looking lady, Everett,” he said. “A little long in the tooth for you, though, don’t ya think?”
He leaned back in his seat but remained looking at me.
I looked at him.
He nodded, offering a slight encouraging smile with his eyebrows raised.
— 78 —
Before Madame Leroux wrapped up her show of holding cards to her head and guessing the numbers and suits, or picking people from the audience and telling them where they came from and letting them know someone just died or someone was just born, I got up from my seat and walked out of the tent.
From inside the big tent I heard whistles and clapping as I made my way through the pavilions and found Madame Leroux’s trailer.
I knocked on the door, but there was no answer. I opened the door and had a look inside.
“Hey,” a gruff voice said. “Whatcha doing there, mister?”
The voice was from a little fella in a high-top silk gent’s hat. He was wearing suspenders holding up baggy trousers over his long johns.
“Looking for Séraphine,” I said.
“This is Madame Leroux’s trailer,” he said.
Just then Madame Leroux came walking up.
“This fella was looking through your trailer,” the man said.
“Not looking through your trailer,” I said.
“Said he’s looking for . . . ?”
“Séraphine,” I said.
“This is my trailer, young man,” she said.
“Why are you looking through her trailer?” the fella said.
“I’m not,” I said.
“Looked like it to me,” the fella said.
“Séraphine. I’m looking for Séraphine.”
“I know,” he said. “You said that.”
Madame Leroux shook her head.
“This is my trailer,” she said.
“Do you know where I can find her?” I said.
“No,” she said. “I don’t know any Séraphine.”
The little man shook his head.
“No Séraphine on this show, bub,” he said.
“I saw her,” I said. “In this very trailer when you rode into this town. I saw her in the window of this trailer.”
“I know Deputy Chastain,” Madame Leroux said. “He’s made an arrest here before and he will do it again. If I find anything missing, you could find yourself in trouble.”
I was listening to her, but I wasn’t really listening to her. I looked around, thinking, but wasn’t even sure what the hell I was even thinking about. My mind was racing as I tried to come to some understanding about everything that had led up to this very moment.
Without even thinking, I showed Madame Leroux and the fella with the top hat my badge.
“You don’t have to worry about me stealing anything from you, Madame Leroux,” I said. “I’m a territorial deputy marshal. My name is Hitch, Everett Hitch.”
“Oh,” she said, “Well, okay, I’m sorry . . .”
“No, no,” I said. “It’s okay.”
“Do you have a young lady on the show,” I said, “lovely, intense, beautiful, with very long dark hair, pale complexion, blue eyes. She’s slender, a little on the tall side?”
The little man shook his head.
“Sorry, young man,” Madame Leroux said. “Sounds to me you’ve been duped.”
The little fella nodded.
“No woman like that on this show,” he said. “I can tell you that for certain.”
Wallis, I thought. Wallis.
“Appreciate it,” I said. “Thank you . . .”
I walked off, leaving Madame Leroux and the little fella in the top hat and headed for the Boston House.
I walked briskly through the streets as my mind raced. What the hell? What was this? Who is she? Where is she? Why did she leave me to believe she was with this damn show? She was here, by God. She was most certainly here.
The Boston House was busy when I entered, and Wallis looked up at me when I walked in and made my way through the crowd and up to the bar.
“Everett,” he said with a big smile. “What can I get you?”
“Need to talk to you,” I said.
“You want something?” he said.
“Not at the moment,” I said.
“What’s up?” he said.
“You remember when I was here,” I said, “a while back? I came in when you were closing up?”
“Sure,” he said.
“You remember the woman that walked in?” I said. “We sat right there?”
“What woman?” he said with a blank look on his face.
I pointed to the table where we sat.
“Right there,” I said. “You served her a brandy.”
Wallis looked at me, maintaining the blank look on his face, then smiled.
“Well, hell, Everett, I’ve drunk my share and have dropped a few marbles in my day, but I damn sure do remember her, of course I do,” Wallis said.
“You do,” I said.
“Sure,” he said.
“Have you seen her?” I said. “Have you laid eyes on her since?”
He shook his head.
“Nope,” he said. “She sift through?”
I just looked at Wallis, then looked around the room. Everybody in the place seemed to be talking louder than they needed to be talking. I looked back to Wallis.
“I suspect,” I said.
Wallis looked at me a moment, then grabbed a bottle and poured us both a healthy swallow. He scooted the whiskey across to me and held up his glass.
I looked at the whiskey, staring at it for a moment, then picked up the glass and looked to Wallis.
“To the moon,” he said.
— 79 —
Nice evening,” I said.
“Damn sure is,” Virgil said.
We sat silent for a bit, sipping on the Kentucky.
“That weather came on good,” I said.
“Damn sure did,” Virgil said. “Didn’t it?”
“Next few months might prove to be mild,” I said.
“You think?” Virgil said.
“For some reason,” I said, “I do.”
“Warm now,” Virgil said.
“Unseasonably so,” I said.
“Is,” Virgil said. “Ain’t it?”
“Might be a good time to paint,” I said, looking up at the underside of the porch.
“Thought you said you’d help build but weren’t interested in painting?” Virgil said.
“I did say that.”
“Change your mind,” Virgil said.
“Often do,” I said.
“A man does that once and a while,” Virgil said.
“They do.”
Virgil looked up at the underside a bit.
“I’ll get the paint,” he said.
“Do,” I said. “Before I change my mind.”
“By God,” Virgil said.
I nodded.
Virgil looked back out to the horizon and we sat quiet for a long spell without talking, as we watched the evening sun.
“She rubbed off on you,” Virgil said, without looking at me.
I looked to Virgil.
“Obvious?”
“Is,” he said.
I shook my head a little.
“Some,” I said.
“Where you figure she went?” Virgil said.
“Don’t know.”
“Maybe she ain’t gone.”
“She is.”
“How do you know?”
“Just do.”
Virgil looked at me.
I saw Allie up the street. She was walking our way, carrying a box of groceries.
“Allie,” I said softly.
Virgil looked to her. We just watched her. The setting sun was shining on her. Her hair was a bit untidy and moving with the breeze as she walked. She looked almost angelic the way the golden sunlight was shining on her. She greeted a few folks on the boardwalk as she neared. She looked as happy as I’d ever seen her.
“Allie,” I said quietly again.
Virgil nodded.
She saw us as she crossed the street.
“Hey, boys,” Allie said with a smile. “It’s so nice out, isn’t it?”
“It is,” Virgil said.
“You need some help,” I said.
“No, no,” she said. “I got it.”
She walked up the steps, carrying the box.
“Just wait and see what I’m fixing for supper,” she said.
“Okay,” Virgil said.
I got up and opened the door for her.
“It will be scrumptious,” she said. “Oh . . . got you something, Virgil.”
Allie balanced the box a little on her knee. She retrieved a cigar from the box and handed it to Virgil.
“Don’t say I never got you nothing,” she said. “Mr. Sadler said it came all the way from Cuba.”
“Why, thank you, Allie,” Virgil said.
“You’re very welcome,” she said, as she continued on inside. “You know I’d have got you one as well, but thankfully you don’t have the habit . . . Just leave the door open for the breeze, Everett.”
Virgil looked back to me and smiled a little.
I picked up the bottle of Kentucky, refreshed our drinks, then sat back down.
Virgil looked at the band on his cigar and nodded a little. He bit the tip and spit it over the rail. He fished a match out of his pocket and dragged the head of it on the leg of his chair. He cupped his hand, keeping the flame from the breeze, and lit the cigar. He worked on it some till he got it going good, then flicked the match away and leaned back and looked at the cigar for a moment.
We heard the familiar clamor of pans from inside.
“You okay in there?” Virgil called.
“Oh, yes. Fine,” Allie said. “I’m fine, just, it’s fine . . .”
“You sure?” he said.
“I’m fine,” she said.
Virgil smiled a little. He sat back in his chair and puffed on his cigar for a bit.
We sat quiet for a bit, watching the very last piece of sun until it was gone.
“What is it?” Virgil said, tilting his head a little. “Where are we?”
“December,” I said. “Second day of.”
“Is it?”
“It is.”
Virgil shook his head.
“What happened to November?”
“It came and went, Virgil,” I said.
–
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