Max suddenly felt small. He looked out the window. The guy in the rowboat rested his oars in the locks and held a conversation with a middle-aged couple in matching Sun Devils T-shirts.
Max looked away. He needed to make a decision here.
Then Karen said, “Jerry’s fit to be tied. He needs to know what you’re going to do.”
“Do?”
“About V.A.M.Pyre. It’s not fair to the cast and crew…to everybody. We’re depending on, well, you know. It’s hard for everybody, not knowing if we’re going to have that job.”
He knew then that Karen wouldn’t let it go. She’d keep pushing. She’d try to get him to go back. It was economics to her, and rightfully so. She and Dave had to make a living. The motorcycle shop was more of a hobby than anything else, and while Dave had plenty of other stunt work, their bottom line depended on Max.
Everyone depended on Max.
He should do the right thing. He should think of somebody else besides himself. But right now he just…couldn’t.
“Just tell him I’m all right, OK? Just tell him that.” He set the phone in the cradle and stared out the window.
Mercifully, the man in the rowboat was gone.
After his talk with Karen, Max turned on the TV and clicked through the channels, looking for references to his escape the day before. He saw nothing on the cable news shows. Max figured Gordon White Eagle didn’t want it known that a high-end, exclusive dry-out center like the Desert Oasis had misplaced one of its high-profile celebrities.
He went looking for breakfast, walking the one block to Paradox’s main drag. The place was unreal. There were boardwalks, like you’d see in the movie Tombstone. One-story buildings, streets you could drive a cattle herd through.
He felt oily, grainy, and dirty. He was clean but his clothes weren’t. He should have washed them in the sink, but it hadn’t occurred to him until he’d put them on this morning. He kept forgetting things.
Kept seeing things.
He turned the corner and he was walking back to the motel when he heard someone calling his name.
Across the street, a guy in a suit leaned against the driver’s door of a black limo, arms folded. Sunglasses, buzz cut, Bluetooth.
Out of place in a town like this.
“Max!” the guy called again. Max ignored him and kept walking. He didn’t look back, just kept moving, picking up the pace.
His heart going like a jackhammer.
Knew he was going down the moment before the guy landed on him like a pile of bricks.
Chapter Five
ON THE WAY over to the trailer court where the domestic over the goat had taken place, Pat said to Tess, “What’s the story with the movie star?”
“I helped him out this morning. Did you see the stretch limo?”
“Stretch limo? Woweeeee,” Pat said. “I told you this place was a gold mine. All those rich sons of bitches moving in to take in the desert air and prison view.”
“There were two guys, arguing with the homeless guy.”
“That would be Max.”
“Right. At first I thought maybe the transient was doing the squeegee thing on their windshield, and the guy in the limo didn’t like it.”
“Huh.” He shook his head. “Can’t see that happening around here. As many cars come down this street, it wouldn’t be worth the initial cost of the squeegee. This tough economy, you want to avoid any unnecessary startup costs. So then what happened?”
“They were trying to load him into the back of the limo.”
“Hope they had one of those pine tree air fresheners hangin’ from the rearview mirror.”
Tess had stopped and asked what the trouble was. The limo driver had been annoyingly obsequious. “No trouble, Officer.”
Tess said to the homeless man, “You want to go with them?”
“No, I don’t.”
“His wife wants him to come to the hospital,” said the big guy with the earpiece. “She’s having a baby.”
Tess looked at the man. “That true?”
“No.”
She focused on him, this piteous sight in the stinky clothes. Underneath the grime, she saw his facial structure—good health shining through. Even, white teeth. An athletic frame. She knew who he was immediately.
“Listen, Deputy,” the big guy said. “Frank here goes on binges, forgets himself. His wife is having a baby and she wants him there. We thought we’d clean him up—”
“You two friends of his?”
The guy stared at her. “We’re friends of the wife.”
“Would you mind telling me her name? His wife.”
He glared at her. “Sally.”
She pulled out her pad, did the officious thing. “Last name?”
“Uh, Dor. Dor-man.”
“Spell it?”
“D.O.R.M.A.N. Dorman.” Sometime in his life, he’d participated in a spelling bee.
“She’s at which hospital?”
“Ma’am, if you’ll excuse us, we’re just trying to help out a friend, and we have to get going—”
“I’m asking because if it’s an emergency, I’ll be happy to escort you.”
“You know what? Never mind. If this jerk doesn’t give a damn about his wife, then it’s his problem.”
The two men got in the car and drove away.
A welcome breeze blew through, spiraling around them in the early sun. The only freshness in what would be a very hot day.
“Thanks,” the guy said.
“So what was that all about?”
He shrugged. She noticed, with that shrug, he not only had a good frame, but muscle layered over it. Muscle that came from hours in the gym—lean, but sculpted. Of course he would.
He was a little shorter in person but just as handsome, even under the five o’clock shadow. His head was big for his body—just a little. She noticed that because she’d read that celebrities’ heads were often larger than their torsos—somehow it made them more photogenic.
In this case it was definitely true.
Most of what Tess knew about Max Conroy came from a People article she’d read at her doctor’s office after she’d sprained her foot in April. She knew, for instance, that Conroy was what they called a “franchise” in the movie business. He’d starred in three V.A.M.Pyre films—big summer blockbusters. He had a contract to do at least two more. The films featured a “vampire version of a James Bond-like character,” who righted wrongs and drank the blood of beautiful women. Together the films grossed $2.7 billion. Tess had not seen any of them, but her friend Marcy had a teenage daughter who was obsessed with the man. Teenage girls and handsome vampires—go figure. Tess herself thought from the look of him that Max was getting a little old for that kind of thing, and when she thought about it at all, wondered why he didn’t make movies that appealed to a general audience. He was leading man material; that was for sure.
It was a nice spread in People, and included three photos. One of Max on the set of his new film, one of him horsing around with his wife, Talia, at their Malibu mansion, and one of him posing before the vintage motorcycle shop he co-owned with his best friend and stunt double, Dave Finley.
According to the People article, Max Conroy had married Hollywood star Talia L’Apel twice. Talia had this cute little mole under one eye. She had appeared in several chick flicks, the last one being Lemon Aid, about a woman whose child had cancer and the city that wanted to close the child’s lemonade stand down. Tess saw that movie with her cousin on February eighth, when they’d driven down to Phoenix for the day. Max and Talia divorced in January, but four months later, after reconnecting at a Hollywood party at Charlie Sheen’s house, they’d flown to Vegas and tied the knot again at the Desert Dreams Wedding Chapel. They’d grabbed tourists off the street for their witnesses. Tess knew their names and what they did—the man was grossly overweight—but she’d filed it away and didn’t feel the need to retrieve it now. That was just background stuff, and over the years she’d learned to keep some of that information out of sight.