Silent Prey
toward him.
“You were going to pull out a gun,” he said.
The blond man shrugged. He had heavy shoulders, like a weight lifter, and he shifted, setting his feet.
“That really pisses me off,” Lucas shouted at him.
“Hold it, for Christ’s sake,” said Fell, her voice low and urgent.
Lucas swung the iron again, quickly, violently, overhead, then down. The blond flinched, but the iron smashed through the freshly baked bread and the platter beneath it. Pieces of china skittered across the floor, and he shouted, “And tried to fuckin’ bribe us . . .”
Then he ran down, staggered, turned back to Smith and pointed the club like a saber.
“I don’t want to be your friend. I don’t want to deal. You’re a goddamned dirtbag, and it makes me feel nasty to be here. What I’m telling you is, I want you to put theword out on your network. And I want you to call me. Lucas Davenport. Midtown South. If you don’t, I will fuck you up six different ways. I’ll talk to the New York Times and I’ll talk to the News and I’ll talk to Eye Witness News and I’ll give them pictures of you and tell them you’re working with Bekker. How’d that help business? And I might just come back and fuck you up personally, because this is a serious matter with me, this Bekker thing.”
He turned in a half-circle, his breath slowing, took a step toward the door, then suddenly whipped the club into the kitchen like a helicopter blade. It knocked a copper tureen off a wall peg, bounced off the stove, and clattered to the floor with the tureen. “Never was any fucking good with the long irons,” he said.
On the way out of the building, Fell watched him until Lucas began to grin.
“Nuttier’n shit, huh?” he said, glancing at her.
“I believed it,” she said seriously.
“Thanks for the backup. I don’t think blondie would’ve done much . . . .”
She shook her head. “That was funny; I mean, funny-strange. I didn’t know Jackie Smith was gay until I saw this guy. That’s like dealing with spouses, only worse. You whack one and the other’s liable to come after you with a knife . . . .”
“Are you sure they’re gay?”
“Does Raggedy Ann have a cotton crotch?”
“I don’t know what that means,” Lucas said, laughing.
“It means yes, I’m sure they’re gay,” she said.
“How come he called you Dr. Fell?” Lucas asked. “Are you a doctor?”
“No. It’s from the nursery rhyme: ‘I do not love thee,Dr. Fell; the reason why I cannot tell; but this I know, and know full well: I do not love thee, Dr. Fell.’ ”
“Huh. I’m impressed,” Lucas said.
“I know several nursery rhymes,” Fell said, digging in her purse for the pack of Luckys. “Want to hear ‘Old King Cole’?”
“I mean with Smith. Knowing the rhyme.”
“I don’t impress you, huh?” She flipped the cigarette into her mouth, her eyes slanting up at him.
“Don’t know yet,” he said. “Maybe . . .”
Barbara Fell lived on the Upper West Side. They dropped her city car at Midtown South, found a cab, and she said, “I’ve got a decent neighborhood bar. Why don’t you come up and get a drink, chill out, and you can catch a cab from there.”
“All right.” He nodded. He needed some more time with her.
They went north on Sixth, the sidewalk traffic picking up as they got closer to Central Park, tourists walking arm in arm along the sidewalks.
“It’s too big,” Lucas said, finally, watching through the window as the city went by. “In the Twin Cities, you can pretty much get a line on every asshole in town. Here . . .” He looked out and shook his head. “Here, you’d never know where it was coming from. You got assholes like other places got raindrops. This is the armpit of the universe.”
“Yeah, but it can be pretty nice,” she said. “Got the theaters, the art museums . . .”
“When was the last time you went to a theater?”
“I don’t know—I really can’t afford it. But I mean, if I could.”
“Right.”
In the front seat, the taxi driver was humming to himself. There was no tune, only variations in volume and intensity as the driver stared blank-eyed through the windshield, bobbing his head to some unheard rhythm. His hands gripped the wheel so tightly that his knuckles were white. Lucas looked at the driver, looked at Fell and shook his head. She laughed, and he grinned and went back to the window.
The bar was small, carefully lit,
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