develop, gestation period.”
Greevy took a deep swig of beer and held the bottle out to me. What the hell. Here we were, casual scientists, two men of the world talking things over, trying to understand. I drank and passed the bottle back.
“Day or two, the samples I took will start hatching. From the eyes, mouth, wounds. I’ll be able to tell you more then. Almost to the moment how long he’d been dead. What he’d been eating. What parts of the city he frequented.”
The bottle shuttled back another time or two.
“Strange work you do,” I said.
Though there’d been no bell, kids began spilling out onto streets from a school nearby, those with top grades, I assumed, let go early as reward. They took to bicycles and buses and looked impossibly young, part of the world’s order and continuity. They fit.
One of them, though, twelve maybe, a girl with skin white as paper and coppery hair, stepped in front of us and stood there fiercely.
“What are you men doing?” she said.
Greevy ignored her.
“You’ve been sitting there watching, for a long time now. I saw you from inside, through the window. That’s how it can start. I should call the police.”
“We’re just friends, miss,” Greevy said, “catching up on things. Neither of us even knew there was a school nearby. Believe me, no harm’s intended.”
“Sure you are. You people never intend harm, do you? And this is where you usually meet, right? In the middle of a vacant lot.”
“Miss. I’m sorry. I don’t know what else I can tell you.”
A bus pulled in at the stop across from the school. Our inquisitor’s eyes went from us to the bus and back.
“Well—” She turned and ran for the bus, sprang aboard. We saw her face in the back window, still watching us, till the bus passed out of sight. Neither Greevy nor I spoke for a time.
“Had a son once myself,” he said finally. “Long gone now.”
“Divorce?”
“Death.”
“I’m sorry.”
“Yeah. Me too.” He upended the empty bottle. A drop or two came out. “Boy was never right. Just couldn’t get it together, and even when someone else’d pull it together for him, he couldn’t keep it in the road. Something just got left out in the mix, you know. No one’s fault. But no one should have to live like that, either. All I could think when I heard was, Good, he’s not hurting anymore.
“It’s all a gift, Griffin. All of it. You think maybe your son, wherever he is, knows that?”
“I think he does, yes.”
“Good.” After a moment he said, “So how do I get in touch, assuming I have something for you?”
I scribbled name, address and phone number on a sheet from my notebook, tore it out and handed it to him. It went haphazardly into a coat pocket, no surprise. Though from general appearance the coat had been in use for some time, the pocket was still sewn shut. He had to rip out stitches to get the paper in.
“Circle K up by the corner,” he said. “Still have more than an hour before my ride shows up. You want, we could grab a quart of beer, a couple of dogs.”
Fine idea, I said, just what I wanted, and we swung that way. But when we got there a tour bus sat across the street. Through storefront windows we could see streams of elderly folk clutching bags of chips and pretzels, bottles of orange juice, candy bars, souvenir pralines. Greevy and I ended up on the curb by a nearby Exxon station. NOPD cars came drifting past as kids schlepped home lumpy knapsacks, lunchboxes, Gameboys, Walkmen, form-fitted saxophone and French horn cases.
“They think it’s Disneyland,” Greevy said.
“Kids?”
“The tourists. Look at them. Like this is what they’ve been waiting for all along, what their lives’ve come down to, this pitiful bus ride with a package of Fritos and an adventure happening outside the window at the end. The kids know better. At least I hope to hell they do.”
Listing right then left, a man with bandy legs approached us.
“Sonny
Nora Roberts
Amber West
Kathleen A. Bogle
Elise Stokes
Lynne Graham
D. B. Jackson
Caroline Manzo
Leonard Goldberg
Brian Freemantle
Xavier Neal