He could fuck you, frame you, and roll you onto the street — and expect you to be having fun.
“Tanneau has the rest of it,” he said. Tanneau was the judge. The rest of it was the divorce papers.
“Hank,” she said, “can’t we work on this? We can work this out. Look,” she said, “I know how to forgive. I believe in forgiveness.” She’d intended to sit all the way through this lunch, display a little style, but two minutes into it she’d already made herself a beggar.
“Not every day comes out symmetrical, Babylove.”
“Don’t ever call me that.”
“Babylove,” he said, and the word went right down through her. “What about the Cajun chicken?”
“What?”
“It’s new.”
“New?”
“Yeah. Try the Cajun chicken.”
“I’d love to! But I’ve got a conflict.” She was already getting her coat on. “Will you mail me my copies?”
“Where to?” he said.
“Where to?”
“What’s the address? Where do you live life these days?”
She stood staring at him while they both realized she had absolutely no answer to the question.
“And where are you off to at the moment?”
“I’ve got an appointment with the judge.”
“The judge is out,” Hank said.
“I’ve got an appointment.” She grabbed up the papers and stuffed them in the pocket of her coat and left.
Tanneau had his offices in a renovated brick building, formerly a power station, now a high-rent fortress of commerce and law. He owned it. Despite all the vodka, the idea of seeing him had her heart pounding as she walked in the sunshine, in the aroma of evergreens, in all these atmospheres covering the stench. She would take the stairs, she would announce herself, she’d be ushered into the aura of his greatness, and he’d stand politely while she seated herself before his desk. He’d take his place behind it, fold his hands, lean toward her, and stare at her in mild confusion and sorrow, as if he couldn’t think of any reason why she’d come. He looked like a TV preacher with his big white coif, sentimental and telegenic. It could only have been a matter of time before he and Hank Desilvera had rubbed together and caught fire and started burning anybody fool enough to get close to either of them. And she’d gotten close to both: secretary to the judge, wife of the county prosecutor.
When she got to Tanneau’s office, the brand-new secretary claimed he wasn’t in. “I’m sorry — did you have an appointment?”
“He needed a signature.”
But this new secretary, Anita’s replacement, a middle-aged woman in a chestnut frock, found nothing in the files for Anita Desilverio.
“Desilver-
a
For Jesus’ sake. Mrs. Henry Desilvera? The divorce agreement?”
“Oh. God. Yes,” her replacement said.
She had the copies in her in-basket. Anita signed all three and kept one. “Allow me.” She dropped two copies in the basket marked OUT. Six months from now — that would be that. In a single morning with some documents and a little ink she’d made herself a vagrant, a felon, and a future divorcee.
She turned and slapped the judge’s door three times with the flat of her hand. “You know I’m out here.”
Her replacement drew a quick breath. “I told you — the judge isn’t in.”
Anita put both her hands flat against the door. She laid her cheek against its wood. “EIGHT HUNDRED BUCKS A MONTH. FOREVER.”
Her replacement reached for the phone.
“If I have to pay restitution for the rest of my life, guess what? You can expect to hear me yell.”
“Yell outside, then. The judge isn’t in there. He’s in the hospital.”
“Really?”
“He went for a biopsy Friday, and they took him right into surgery.”
“I hope he dies.”
“You’re drunk.”
“Not yet. But I like the way you think.”
Gambol permitted himself to rest on his back on the tarmac for one minute, checking this interval by his wristwatch, and then rolled himself over onto his belly and put his palms flat against the pavement either side of his shoulders. He rested thirty seconds before he raised himself to crawl forward on two hands and one knee, head hanging, taking ragged breaths, hauling his wounded leg toward the protection of the pines.
Propped against a tree trunk, he rested for two minutes. When he opened his eyes the branches overhead seemed to be rushing away into the sky.
He got his cell phone in his hand and punched Juarez on the speed dial.
“Yowsah. Mistah Gambolino.”
“I need a doctor.”
“So get a doctor.”
“I need a friendly doctor. I’m shot, man.”
“Shot?”
“That fucking Jimmy Luntz.”
“What?”
“Jimmy Luntz shot me.”
“What?”
“I need a doctor. And I need a ride. I need him to come and get me. I need a ride.”
“You hurt bad? You can’t drive?”
“The fucker took my car.”
“What?”
“Fuck ‘what.’ He shot me through my leg. My right thigh. Through the bone, I think.”
“Your thigh?”
“I got out to open the trunk, and he — bang, man.”
“Where are you?”
“Oh, man.”
“Gambol, stay with me. Where are you?”
“I’m near Oroville.”
“Where’s Ortonville? You in San Diego County or something?”
“Not Ortonville, man. Oroville. It’s on Route Seventy. Way the hell up here past Sacramento and all that.”
“Which direction from Oroville? Like east, west, what?”
“I think north.”
“North. Near Madrona? I got a friend in Madrona.”
“Get me the fuck out of here.”
“I’m on it. Where did he shoot you?”
“In the
thigh
I
told
you.”
“Luntz?”
“Luntz.”
“Jimmy Luntz? Oh, fuck. Oh, fuck. He will die. My promise to you.”
“You bet your ass.”
“My promise and my gift to you. He’s dead.”
Gambol shut his phone and dropped it into his breast
pocket. He paused for half a minute before undertaking the effort of tightening the belt around his leg. The leg was numb, and he felt cold.
He laid his head back against the tree trunk and considered the movements to follow and reviewed his consideration carefully before letting himself tip rightward onto his elbow and wrestling himself, by stages, onto his belly. As he stiffened his arms, raised himself, and began crawling forward, the phone fell from his pocket, and he stopped. He went down onto his elbows and took hold of it with his mouth.
Gripping his bloody cell phone in his teeth he dragged himself several yards farther into the pines and scrub and lay on his belly while sirens approached and arrived.
When he heard voices getting near he struggled onto his side and saw the ambulance not far beyond the point where he’d entered the small stand of pines, and three paramedics talking with two uniformed cops, cursing and laughing. The patrolmen had parked their cruiser right over the large stain on the blacktop. Even from this distance Gambol could make out his own blood trail.
He turned onto his back, buttoned his cell phone into his jacket’s lapel pocket, and worked himself into position and dragged his leg farther away from the parking lot and lay in the mouth of a concrete culvert, where he waited, staring straight upward, blinking rapidly to keep himself conscious, while the two crews decided they’d been lured here as some kind of prank.
The crews didn’t stay long. As they passed over the culvert he heard their vehicles thumping on the highway above his head.