Bloody River Blues
trembling gone. He turned toward the window and said, “It’s all right. It’ll be fine. Really.”
Then he dropped to the floor.
The door of the camper swung open and a man stepped inside, filling the room with his huge bulk, wearing a sport coat and jeans. Moving fast on small feet, he ignored Pellam, who stepped back out of his way.
What the hell was going on?
Shutting out lights.
“Who are—?”
“Quiet,” the man barked.
“Sure,” Pellam said. Bright light angled in from the kitchen and gave the room a tilted appearance, like a fun house. The man shut this light out, too. He went to the window and looked out. In the darkness Pellam said, “Are you a cop?”
“Shhh.” He walked to Stevie Flom and felt his neck, pocketed his little gun, then walked to the opposite window of the camper and looked out once more for a long moment. He turned and looked at Pellam’s hand, which held the apple wine bottle by the neck. “You got that for any reason?” His voice was thick but accentless.
“No. Uh-uh.” Pellam put the bottle down.
“You Pellam?”
He nodded and asked, “Who are you?”
“Tom Stettle. I work for a Mr. Crimmins. He—”
“Crimmins?”
“Peter Crimmins.”
Pellam looked at Stevie. “ He works for Crimmins . . .”
“Uhn, no, sir. That he doesn’t,” Stettle said matter-of-factly. “Mr. Crimmins hired me to keep an eye on you.”
“Oh.” Pellam stared at the body. “Who’s he?”
Stettle did not answer but bent down and started emptying Stevie’s pockets. “He was going to kill you.”
“What’s exactly going on?”
Without looking up from his task, Stettle said, “Mr. Crimmins knows that you didn’t see him in thatcar the night Vince Gaudia got killed. He didn’t have nothing to do with the hit. He wants to make sure you stay alive to tell everybody that. So he’s had me looking out for you. You’re a tough man to stay on top of, let me say.”
Stevie Flom didn’t seem to be bleeding. Was he really dead?
This he asked Stettle, who seemed surprised at the question. “Well, sure he is. Help me, huh? Let’s get the body into my car. I just happened to check by tonight. It was, like, lucky. I didn’t figure he was here already. I figured they’d do you on the street like they did Gaudia.”
“He’s the one who shot the cop?”
“I dunno. Probably,” Stettle said. “You have any garbage bags?”
“Beg your pardon?”
“Garbage bags? Thick ones, if you’ve got them.”
“I’ve got some, sure.”
Pellam went into the kitchen and drank a full glass of water. He found Stettle standing in the doorway, looking at him. “You want some?”
“Sure.”
Pellam poured another glass and held it out. Stettle took it in a huge hand. Pellam asked him, “Did you see the other guy out there?”
“What other guy?”
“There are two of them.” Pellam motioned to Stevie Flom. “He’s not the one I saw get out of the Lincoln.”
“He isn’t?” Stettle drank the water. “You mean there’s somebody else?”
“Yeah. Heavy guy. Balding.”
Stettle grimaced. “I’ll do what I can to keep an eye out for you. But I can’t be your roommate. After this—” he nodded at Stevie’s body “—whoever was in the car is going to be after you in a big way. You should take a vacation. Take a year off or so.”
“That’s what people keep telling me.”
Stettle was eager to leave. He finished the water and took a paper towel then wiped the glass off. With this same towel he wiped everything else in the camper he had touched.
“You got to get a new window,” he said, and broke out the rest of it with his elbow. Pellam assumed he didn’t want to leave an obvious bullet hole.
Pellam stared as the bits of glass flew outward. “I guess I should say thanks. I mean—”
Stettle was uninterested in gratitude. He soaked the paper towel that held a dozen of his fingerprints and wadded it up, slipped it into his pocket. “Garbage bags?” he asked.
“Sure.” Pellam handed him some.
“Rubber gloves?”
“Gloves?”
“Playtex, you know.”
Pellam found two old pairs. Stettle and he put them on. “The blood. Nowadays you can’t be too careful, you know.”
And for the second time in two days John Pellam was wrapping a body in green Glad bags. Three mils thick.
SHE PULLS OFF the brown dress.
This scares him, seeing the arc of the dress falling onto the chair. He smells fruity perfume.
She is undoing pins from her wispy hair,
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