The Lola Quartet

The Lola Quartet by Emily St. John Mandel

Book: The Lola Quartet by Emily St. John Mandel Read Free Book Online
Authors: Emily St. John Mandel
Tags: Mystery, music
Ads: Link
everyone sleeping for a century inside. There was something eerie about the drugged silence of the house, a spellbound stillness that made him want to run. Gavin held his cell phone near the girl's face and took her picture. She startled awake at the digital click of the shutter and stared at him, blinking. He closed the door, went back to his car and drove as quickly as possible away from there.
       In his room at Eilo's house he sat on his mattress with the notebook on his lap. He wrote Has met Chloe and Pills under Jack's name.
       Gavin put the notebook down and went to the window. The squalor of the house and the tent in the backyard weren't things he wanted to think about. He'd always liked Sasha and Daniel but Jack was the one he'd felt closest to. Gavin wore fedoras and read noir and watched Chinatown over and over again and Jack understood, Jack was in the wrong decade too, Jack was going to be a jazzman. There had been long stoned hours in Jack's basement after school, listening to jazz and talking about how things used to be, how things were going to be, talking about anywhere other than the stultifying present.
       Gavin's room was at the back of the house, facing the freeway. On the far side of the yard pylons rose up with dark shadows beneath them, cars passing in a blur of light high above. How could he have let Jack slip away so completely? The traffic was no more than two hundred yards from him, but with the windows closed the room was silent. There were evenings when he didn't understand the world at all.
     
" Y o u ' r e  c e r t a i n  you don't know where they went?" he asked Eilo that night. " Chloe and that woman she was with?" They were eating Thai food out of takeout containers.
       "I drove by the house two days after I took the photograph," Eilo said. "They were gone already."
       "No forwarding address?"
       " These people don't always leave forwarding addresses," Eilo said. "They used to, before the economy tanked, but sometimes now they just disappear."
       "I've been thinking about trying to find them," Gavin said.
       "Good luck," Eilo said. "I wouldn't know where to begin. Have you thought of hiring a private investigator?"
       I want to be the private investigator. He couldn't bring himself to tell her this. "I'll look into it," he said.

    I n t h e morning Gavin returned to the police station.
       "I'm surprised to see you again," Daniel said. He had kept Gavin waiting for an hour. His fingers tapped almost silently on the side of his coffee cup, a nervous flicker. "Aren't you hot? Wearing a fedora in this heat?"
       "It's a summer fedora," Gavin said.
       "And here some of us make do with baseball caps."
       "I went to visit our multitalented piano and saxophone player yesterday," Gavin said. "You remember Jack? He speaks highly of you."
       Daniel sighed and his face softened a little. "Sure," he said, "I try to keep an eye on him. He's been arrested a couple times."
       "I asked him about Anna," Gavin said, "and he said to ask you."
       "Me? Why would I know anything about your high school girlfriend?"
       "Well, she hung out with us at school, with the quartet. We were all friends."
       "I don't know that you were much of a friend to her. Was there some reason you wanted to see me, Gavin, or is this strictly a social call?"
       "What do you mean by that comment? How was I not a friend to her?"
       "I'm pretty busy," Daniel said. "You know, doing police work and stuff. I'm going to get back to work now."
       "Okay, look, the main reason I came is, Jack's staying in this house on Mortimer Street—"
       "Eleven ninety-six Mortimer," Daniel said. "I've been there. Lovely home, isn't it?"
       "A girl answered the door when I knocked. No older than thirteen or fourteen, maybe twelve, stoned out of her mind. Jack said she was his roommate's sister or her stepsister or something, just staying there for a while. I came to see

Similar Books

Murder Under Cover

Kate Carlisle

Noble Warrior

Alan Lawrence Sitomer

McNally's Dilemma

Lawrence Sanders, Vincent Lardo

The President's Vampire

Christopher Farnsworth