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The return swing with the metal drawer caught the nearest young lion on the side of the head, and sent him reeling into number two, while Parker ran forward, the drawer held out in front of him like a battering ram, and caught number three as he was trying to duck away. One bottom corner of the drawer sliced his cheek as the other corner gouged his shoulder, and the whole drawer, Parker’s momentum behind it, drove him straight back into the wall. He hit hard, crunched between the wall and Parker’s weight on the drawer, and he dropped straight down when Parker let go of the drawer. The drawer and the man were both still falling when Parker spun around and kicked number four twice, first in the balls and then in the forehead as, in agony, he bent quickly down.
These four had trained in gyms, and knew a lot about self-defense. They actually didn’t have guns, and they’d never thought they would need such help. But they’d never been crowded into a small room before, getting in each other’s way, with somebody who was trying to kill them and who didn’t do any of the moves they’d learned about in gym.
Thorsen and numbers three and four were out of play. Number one, having been side-swiped with the drawer, was groggy but standing, and number two was moving in on Parker, hands splayed out, doing all the moves he’d learned.
Parker didn’t have a lot of time. He didn’t know how much noise he was making or who might be around to hear it. He didn’t know when it would occur to one of these survivors to run the hell out of this room and go for help. He didn’t know when it would be too late to get out of here, so he had to get out of here now, so he lunged in, ducked back, feinted for the balls, and sliced the edge of his left hand across number two’s Adam’s apple. Number two stopped, clutched his throat, made a strangled scream, and fell backward, trying desperately to breathe.
Number one, bleeding on the side of the head where the drawer had hit him, was getting less groggy by the second, but wasn’t yet one hundred percent. He came in at Parker, arms in defensive position, looking to throw a punch, and Parker pointed at number two, on the floor, making terrible noises through his crushed throat: “If I put you down, there won’t be anybody around to get him breathing.”
Number one looked down and to his right, following the point of the finger and the sounds from his friend, and Parker stepped in fast to clip the side of that jaw with his right elbow.
Forty seconds since he’d first reached for the drawer. They were all down. They were all out and silent except the one trying to breathe. Parker crossed to Thorsen, stripped off the coat, stripped off the very nice holster that was engineered to fit against the side without a strap across the body, and put it on himself, under his jacket. It would need some adjustment later, but it would do for now.
12
The hall was empty. Parker pulled the door to 1237 hard shut, to lock it, and walked at a steady pace toward the turn to the elevators. Behind him, way back at or near Archibald’s suite, a door opened and closed, but he didn’t look back.
The neat young guard was still in place on the wing chair facing the elevators. He nodded when Parker came around the corner, and put a finger in his missal to hold his place. Parker said, “How you doing?”
“Fine, sir.”
Parker pushed the Down button and waited, but before it arrived someone else came walking around the corner. Christine Mackenzie. Dressed as before, but now with a simple gray hat and gray cloak as well, as though she were on her way to give alms to the poor. “Well, hello,” she said, on seeing Parker, with a bigger smile than she’d permitted herself back in the suite. “Fancy meeting you here,” as though she hadn’t been watching Thorsen’s office door, waiting for him to leave.
“How you doing?” Parker said.
“Well, I’m doing fine,” she told him. “Since we have this unexpected stay here in this nice city, I believe I’m going to do some shopping.”
“Good idea.”
The elevator arrived. He gestured, and she boarded, and he boarded, and she pushed L. The young guard was back reading his missal again before the doors closed.
They were alone in the elevator. “You should see the view on nine,” she said, and pushed that button.
Parker didn’t have time for views, or anything else. A lot of people were going to be chasing after him in a few minutes. He said, “Why’s that better than the view on twelve?”
Here they were at nine already. “They have a conference room here,” she said, holding the door open. “Huge windows, all around. Come on and see, it’s fabulous.”
It was easier to go along. “Okay,” he said, following her out of the elevator. “Show it to me.”
She giggled, a low contralto. “I will,” she said.
He never thought about sex when he was working, but he was always hungry for it afterward. What situation was this he was in now? The heist was done, and yet it wasn’t done. The job was finished, but it was still going on, with complications and trailing smoke. Was he going to have sex with this woman now, or not? He looked at her body, imperfectly hidden in somebody else’s clothing, and it looked very good, but his mind kept filling with Liss, with Brenda and Mackey, with the duffel bags full of money; and now with Thorsen and Archibald and Calavecci and Quindero and who knew how many more. But still, it was a good body, walking along beside him here.
The conference room was at the opposite end on nine from Archibald’s suite on twelve, so it was a view of a different quadrant of the city, but not that much different. Still, the room was large and airy and empty, with thick gray-green carpet and a large free-form conference table and some tan leatherette sofas along the inner wall.
“Come look,” she said, and when he went over to stand beside her she hooked her arm through his. “I love the way the sunlight bounces off that roof,” she said, pointing with her free hand. “See it?”
‘Yes.”
She smiled at him, came close to laughing at him. “You don’t care much for views, do you?”
“Depends,” he said, and bit that swollen lower lip.
“Oo, careful,” she said. “No marks.”
Beneath his hand, her breast was so firmly contained in place it might have been made of kapok. This wasn’t going to work; she might as well be a sofa. “Not a good idea,” he said, and backed away, disengaging her arm.
“You don’t think so?” She stood by the window, facing him, letting the full light from outside make her argument.
Three floors up, they’d surely be making phone calls by now, and not all of them for a doctor. Parker said, “Sometimes the time isn’t the right time.”
“All times are the right time,” she corrected him, and slowly smiled. “As the Bible says, Hope deferred maketh the heart sick.”
“That’s the Bible?”
“I always do what the Bible tells me,” she said, and stretched, and smiled again. “Come, let us take our fill of love, until the morning. It says that, too.”
She was a true pistol. He said, “What about Archibald?”
She laughed at the idea that he cared about
Archibald. “Stolen waters are sweet,” she quoted, “and bread eaten in secret is pleasant.”
“I’m sure it is,” Parker told her. “And it’ll be even better later. I’ll take a rain check.”
The smile disappeared. The body snapped to attention. Behind the horn-rim glasses, the blue eyes flashed at him. “Rain check? I’m not a game.”
That wasn’t from the Bible.
Part FOUR
1
It was called Sherenden, and it was a house from the twenties, modern architecture of the time, designed by someone famous in his day and built at the edge of a ravine in what had then been the outskirts of town. On two steep acres of brush-covered rocky hill, at the end of a narrow winding road from the nearest city avenue, the house had been constructed of fieldstone and native woods and stainless steel, fitted into the broken shape of the landscape, with a large airy living room at the top, four windowed walls around a central black-stone fireplace
. The rest of the house spread away beneath, for a total of four stories with an interior elevator, its shaft blasted into the rock.
The original owner was a lawyer, also famous in his day, and the bottom level of the house, enclosed by two jutting rock ledges of ravine, had been his study, with accompanying bath and small kitchen. From his desk in there he could look out through plate glass at the wildness of his ravine as though suspended from a balloon, and not see the slightest corner of the rest of the house.
When it was built, the place was considered daring and original and one of the templates that would describe the future. It was written up approvingly in newspapers and magazines of its day, and was still mentioned, with small black-and-white photos, in books on modern architecture.
Time had not been kind to the house. First there had been the divorce, as acrimonious as any divorce in the history of law, which had seen Sherenden fought over but unlived in for more than ten years. The winner, the ex-wife, had had no real use for the house but had wanted it out of spite, and had thereafter ignored it almost completely. Her heirs sold it as soon as they could.
Then there was the city, which had grown in ways and directions not expected by the town planners. This rocky area just within the city limits, full of inaccessible ravines, had seemed the least likely direction for the city to grow. But then, after World War Two, the interstate highway system was born, and an on-ramp was placed just outside the city line in this direction, and it suddenly made sense to knock down hills and fill ravines and put in working-class housing developments; a thousand homes from the same blueprint, girdling the two acres that contained Sherenden.
In the early sixties, one of the subsequent owners turned Sherenden into two apartments, by means of a lot of plywood and the removal of about half the original windows. (The elevator had ceased to function years before, and now became an additional closet on each level.) In the late seventies, another owner decided to restore the place to its former glory, despite the fact that the views from the living room were now of many small Monopoly-board houses stretching away toward infinity and the view from the bottom floor study was of the dump that had been made at the base of the ravine. However, he went bankrupt while the work was still under way, and so the plywood went back up, even more than before, sealing the house away.
The bank that took over at that point enclosed Sherenden with a tall wire fence, and waited. They were always on the verge of selling the two acres—nobody at the bank ever thought about the house itself, except as a problem—to someone who would demolish the “existing structure” and level the land and put in eight houses, but the deals always fell through.
Kids and vagrants and drunks had made a sieve of the fence and a sty of the house. In the last decade, homeowners in Golden Heights and Oak Valley Ridge Estates, the neighboring development communities, had put forth a number of petitions against this eyesore in their midst, but the bank wouldn’t tear the place down without a purchaser, and so the stalemate continued.
2
Parker took a cab to a shopping center, out away from the middle of town. He had lunch in a bar there—despite its fake Tiffany lamps, it was a bar—and watched the television up on its high shelf, full of excited local bulletins, one after another. A whole lot of stuff happening around here these days. The bartender thought it was probably the work of a private army, stocking up money and supplies for the revolution, and Parker said he thought the guy was right. The bartender had known after one look that Parker was a kindred spirit.
From the phone booth in the back of the bar, Parker called the Midway Motel and asked for Mr. or Mrs. Fawcett, and was told they’d checked out. No, the woman on the phone didn’t know when they’d left, they were just gone. He asked to be connected to Mr. Grant’s room, and let the phone ring in the black emptiness there for a good long time. The woman who’d switched him over never did come back to tell him his party wasn’t answering and might be out and did he want to leave a message, so eventually he hung up.
Brenda had her compact, anyway. And Liss was probably not at the motel. Was he at the house, he and Quindero?
A city bus line ran past this shopping center and on out to the developments by the interstate. Parker took it, at two-thirty that afternoon, a time when the passengers were a few schoolkids getting home early, some maids and cleaning women done with their day’s work, and shoppers sitting slumped in the middle of their mounds of parcels.
Parker left the bus at the first corner in Oak Valley Ridge Estates and walked back down Oak Valley Ridge Avenue the way he’d come. In just over a hundred yards he got to the road leading in to the right. A pair of crumbling stone pillars, once graceful but now anemic, with bad rusted gouges at the top where the light fixtures had long ago been stolen, flanked a blacktop road that immediately curved down and away to the right, disappearing into a tangle of shrubs and trees. Wild rose vines knitted the underbrush together, interweaving their tough thorny stalks with the tamer junipers and maples, making it impossible for a human being to travel anywhere in there except on the road.
The road itself was receding back to nature. Frosts and rain had crumbled the blacktop, and weeds had grown through. Branches encroached from both sides, and closed completely over the top. Nothing here invited the passerby, and in fact the passerby was told to go away, private property no entry said the black letters on the yellow metal sign hung from the thick chain arced between the pillars, no trespassing said the black letters on the yellow plastic sign stapled to the pillar on the left, and danger keep out said the red and black letters on the white plastic sign stapled to the pillar on the right.
Parker slowed as he neared this welcome, waiting for two cars to finish going by. They did, and he stepped over the chain and walked briskly down the first curving slope.
He was now on the bank’s two acres, an irregularly shaped parcel lying like a throw rug atop a lumpily unmade bed. The blacktop, almost disappearing in places, curved and climbed and dipped, covering nearly a quarter of a mile in what would have been much less distance in a straight flat line from entrance to house. Along the way, he saw nothing but shrubs and trees and vines, and at one point the faded blue trunk of a car that someone had years ago driven or pushed off the road into a deeper spot. The undergrowth grew up through the car, as though it weren’t there.
In the old days, the first view of the house must have been something. You climbed a steep slope, came around a corner, and there in front of you was a wall of glass. Inside were the lights, and the graceful lines of the furniture, and the glow of the fireplace, and the confident movements of people. And beyond all that, seen through the house, was the view, already visible from here, of wild nature, tumbled scenery, and open sky.
Today there was the fence; that was the first thing. Eight feet high, chain link, it had one of its vertical metal support bars sunk into the middle of the road itself, to declare this no longer a road. Beyond the fence was the wall of plywood, darkened and discolored by time. It didn’t look like a house any more. It didn’t look like anything.
The fence had been snipped at the right edge of the roadway, as though for a prisoner-of-war escape, just enough to make it possible to push the flap of fence back out of the way and ease slowly through without ripping your clothes; though sometimes, to judge by the frayed threads on some of the sliced-off edges, clothes did get caught here.
Parker eased his way through, and moved to the right, over weedy ground that had once been lawn and had not yet been completely reclaimed by woods.
He’d been here before, with Mackey and Liss, when they’d been making ready for the job. It was Mackey who’d found the place, and researched it in architecture books in the library, and was as proud of it as if he’d designed it himself. “Parker, it’s a beauty. Nobody knows it’s there, you got a million hiding places inside it, and it’s right next to the entrance to the interstate!”
At first, Parker wasn’t so sure. He had never liked places with only one entrance and ex
it. Given the situation with this house, once you were in it, the only way out was back that same road. On both sides of the house were woods that would eat you alive, and behind it was the ravine, too deep to get into and too steep to get out of, being very slowly filled as a town dump.
But Mackey was right about one thing: the house did have more than its share of hiding places for a few duffel bags. And they didn’t intend to stay there at all, just drop the loot and go back to the motel. The idea was, if it so happened that any of them was made, or questioned, or shaken down by the cops, the swag would be nowhere near them.
So they’d gone through the house, Mackey leading the way, and it was Mackey who’d pointed out that there used to be an elevator in here where these closets were, and that its motor had been at the bottom of the shaft. The floors in all the closets that had been installed after the elevator car itself was removed and sold were plywood, and would pry up very easily. Mackey showed them how easy it would be to pry up the floor in the bottom-level closet, which revealed the old black motor, furred with dust on grease, leaving plenty of room for the duffel bags. It did mean lugging the bags down three flights of stairs and later back up again, but they would certainly be safe down in there for a few days.
If things had gone right.
Now Parker needed a place to lie low until tonight, when he could steal a car from the nearby development and go see if Brenda had caught up on her reading. At the moment, there were too many people looking for him, people who knew his face if nothing else about him. He had to give up the idea of settling with Liss until this whole operation was finished; unless Liss had also decided to hole up at the house.
Of course, the house still had its same disadvantage: one way in, one way out. But that could be an advantage, too. From inside the house, Parker could watch the road. If he saw anybody coming in, he might not be able to leave, but at least he’d know about them before they knew about him.