“How so?”
“Winky and Boris were both named as possible fathers in Connie’s legal papers.”
“Connie,” Blatt broke in, “was a stone psycho cunt so anything she said was either psycho or total bullshit. I mean there’s no way. Like I told you the first time you were here, any partying Winky or Boris did was a long time ago.”
I looked at Younger. Impassive.
Finally, he said, “We’re all past the partying stage.”
I said, “Obviously, Ree wasn’t—”
“Because she had a kid?” said Blatt. “That’s not partying, that’s what chicks do, they have kids. It’s a hormonal thing, you’re a doctor, you know that. If it was partying, all she had to do was terminate like … the ball was in her court.”
I said, “Like she did before?”
“Like nothing,” said Blatt. “Her business isn’t yours or mine or anyone’s.”
Spenser Younger said, “I’m still not getting what being a father has to do with getting killed.”
“Exactly,” said Blatt.
Both of them waited.
I said, “A theory has come up. Someone wants Rambla to themselves and is trying to eliminate the competition.”
Both men looked puzzled. Tears pooled in Chuck-o Blatt’s eyes. He wiped them away violently, pulled out a bottle of gin, twisted the cap off, swigged and grimaced.
Spenser Younger said, “I guess I could see that kind of nasty with someone like Connie, but — oh, man, I wasn’t even thinking about Connie, she’s another victim, isn’t she? This is crazy.”
Blatt said, “Like I keep reminding everyone, Connie was a psycho bitch, anyone could hate her. Winky? Just the opposite, he was fucking Sara Lee, you couldn’t not like him.”
Spenser Younger nodded. “And he always wanted kids.” His eyes saucered. “Oh, man, I never told anyone because he swore me not to, but now …”
He reached for the bottle in Blatt’s hand, said, “Screw side effects,” and took a swallow.
“Winky couldn’t have kids,” he said. “Low sperm count. Even a long time ago, he had a chick — remember Donna, Marvie?”
“The redhead,” said Blatt, outlining a female hourglass.
Younger said, “She loved Winky, would’ve done anything for him. Kept begging him to knock her up, this was I don’t know — twenty years ago. When we took the bus through Ohio?”
“Rock on, Cleveland,” said Blatt, without joy.
“Winky finally agreed but it never happened,” said Younger. “One day he asks me to drive him to some place — the Cleveland Clinic, bigtime medical situation. I’m doing the driving because his license wasn’t renewed, he couldn’t get an out-of-state rental. I drive him to the clinic, he goes in, comes out, real quiet. I’m thinking he’s got some bad disease, he says nope, don’t worry, just routine. Then he clams up. Couple weeks later he’s looking real down and we’re all pretty … remember that sensimilla we used to take with us on the road?”
“Hundred-proof,” said Blatt.
Younger smiled. “So Winky and I are both getting high as an asteroid and he goes on one of those weed-speeches, tells me the test was for his sperm count and guess what, it’s lower than low, he’ll never be a daddy. Then he cries, then like he’s forcing himself to get happy, he gets happy, and the topic never comes up again.”
Blatt had stared at him throughout the monologue. “No shit. Poor Wink.”
Younger turned to me. “Anyway, he’s not the dad, Doc, and if Connie thought so she was off by miles.”
“Connie was always full of shit,” said Blatt.
I said, “If Connie made a mistake, someone else could’ve.”
“Like who?”
“That’s what we’re trying to figure out.”
“Well you won’t figure it out here,” said Younger. “Hell, why not just ask Ree?”
“Shortly after Winky was shot, Ree left town.”
“Shortly after? You’re making it sound suspicious.”
I said, “Whenever someone splits without notice the police take it seriously.”
“They think she’s behind all this shit?”
“You guys don’t watch the news?”
“What for?” said Blatt. “News is all bullshit.”
“Hear, hear,” said Younger, raising the gin bottle.
I said, “Ree’s face was all over the nightly broadcast. The police consider her a person of interest in Connie’s and Winky’s murders.”
“Person of interest?” said Younger. “That mean suspect?”
“A rung lower,” I said. “Suspect minus hard evidence.”
“That’s totally absurd.” His laughter was unforced.
Same for Chuck-o Blatt, though his “Ha!” was tinged with anger. “Yeah, sure, two of the coolest, gentlest people on the planet, one’s dead, the other takes a trip which is her God-given unalienated right, so the stupid cops think she did bad stuff? Give me a break.”
I said, “That’s why I’m trying to come up with an alternative explanation.”
“Yeah, well, whatever.” Blatt curled his finger at Younger. Younger passed him the bottle, said, “I wish I could help you, Doc, but one thing for sure: It wasn’t Ree. She’s too good a person.”
Blatt downed two swigs, put the bottle down on the counter hard.
I said, “Thanks, guys.”
“An alternative explanation,” said Blatt. “Maybe it’s just some fucking maniac shooting people.”
Younger said, “Who just happen to be Winky and Connie?”
Blatt said, “Yeah, that is lame … okay, maybe he’s right.” Turning to me. “Maybe you’re right, it has something to do with the kid. But what? Fuck if I know. I mean she’s a cute kid but what’s the big deal? It’s not like she’s an heiress or something.”
“Hey,” said Younger. “Wouldn’t that be something, Ree partied with a rich guy and now he’s worried about getting soaked, so he takes care of business.”
“Yeah, right,” said Blatt. “On Lifetime network, tonight.”
Younger said, “It could happen, Marv. Ree named the kid Rambla, said because the conception was in Malibu. What’s Malibu? Rich folk.”
“If that ain’t the truth,” said Blatt. “Million bucks for an ounce of sand.”
I said, “You guys remember anyone specific from Malibu?”
“Hell, no,” said Blatt. “It’s not like we’re in that world.”
I turned to Younger.
He said, “Can’t remember the last time I was even at the beach.” Blinking. “Now that I lost my taste for surfing.”
“You surfed for shit, anyway,” said Blatt.
“Yeah, I did.”
“I was even more for shit. Couldn’t stay on the fucking board.” Slurred words. Third swig.
Younger took the bottle. “You were beyond for shit, man. You were the fourteenth level of hell filled with elephant shit.” Burp.
“Yeah but gimme skins, I’m fucking Krupa incarnated.” Blatt laughed. “Put me on a fucking board and I’m super-spazz — oh, man, sorry.”
“Cut it out, man,” said Younger.
“Cut what out?”
“Being sensitive, I like you just the way you are, as an asshole. Me and Mr. Rogers.”
“Mr. Rogers liked jazz.”
“Mr. Rogers was cool.”
“Miss him,” said Blatt.
“Miss everyone,” said Younger. “ ’Member we were in that motel in Harrisburg, watched Mr. Rogers when we were loaded, he had this guy playing a D’Angelico Excel? Handyman whoever, he’s supposed to be a janitor and he’s got this twenty-grand guitar and he’s bopping off notes like Tal Farlow?”
“Handyman Negrino,” said Blatt.
“No, no … Negri.” Younger beamed. “Handyman Negri, cool dude.”
“Mr. Rogers,” said Blatt. “Go know.”
I slipped out of the bar just as the topic segued to Captain Kangaroo.