From the sofa Chip asked, “You stop by the restaurant?”
Bobby shook his head. He started out again as Louis picked up the plate he’d set there for Chip. He said, “Bobby, you going upstairs, aren’t you?”
He stopped, but didn’t say he was or he wasn’t.
Louis walked over and shoved the plate at him. “This’s for Harry. Be a treat for him, some home cooking.” Bobby took the plate and Louis said, “Hold it in both hands, you don’t drop it.” That got Louis Bobby’s dead-eyed look, one Louis was getting used to. Bobby walked out and Louis said after him, “You come back, I’ll dish you up.”
Louis turned to Chip.
“Never wants you to forget he’s a mean motherfucker. The man practices up there front of the mirror, trying different mean looks to use on people.”
“All he says is she’s not home,” Chip said. “What do you think?”
“I’m thinking he might’ve done the fortune-teller,” Louis said, “and he’s practicing his story.”
“Jesus,” Chip said, his nerves showing through the weed in him. “I could call her up and see.”
“Don’t,” Louis said, using the remote to switch the TV picture to the upstairs room, Harry still lying on the cot. “I’ll drive over there in a minute, peek in a window.”
Louis picked up a pork chop from his plate, got ready to take a bite and held it in the air seeing Bobby on the screen now, his pigtail hairdo, his back in the fiesta shirt moving toward Harry with the dinner plate. Now they were looking at Bobby in profile standing over Harry stretched out on the cot.
“He’s asleep,” Louis said. “Don’t have his mask on.” Louis raised his voice to the TV screen, saying, “Harry, pull the bathing cap down, man.”
Now it looked like Bobby was saying something. Harry didn’t move, eyes still closed. Now Bobby nudged the side of the cot with his leg. Now he raised his foot, put a lizard-skin shoe against the side rail of the cot and gave it a good bump. Harry’s eyes opened. Opened wide seeing Bobby at the same time Bobby turned the plate of food upside-down, dumping the chops, the butter beans, the tangy okra all over Harry’s face. They watched Bobby come away looking up at the camera, but with no expression to speak of.
“The guy’s crazy,” Chip said.
Louis watched Harry, sitting up now, wiping the food off him, the man looking dazed, but then seeing a pork chop and picking it up from the floor, studying it close, both sides, before taking a big bite.
Louis took a bite of his pork chop, laid it on the plate and brushed his hands in the air, ready to go. He said, “Well, least Bobby didn’t shoot him.”
Bobby came up to the Mercedes as Louis was backing the car out of the garage.
“Where you going?”
“Get laid; I’m overdue.”
“The guy was there, Raylan? At the fortune-teller’s house. He pulled a gun on me, told me to go on, get out of here. I didn’t want Chip, the way he is, to know the guy was there, so I didn’t say nothing.”
“You didn’t get to talk to Dawn.”
“No, he came out, Raylan did.”
“You had your piece in the sack?”
“Yeah, but I never did it that way. What I want to do, man, is meet him face-to-face with my piece right here”-Bobby patted his stomach-“and draw. I know I can beat him.”
“Like in the movies,” Louis said.
“Yeah, only it’s real life. I want to practice doing it with you, so I be ready.”
“You want to practice…?”
“Get so I can pull it out quick.”
“Man, you crazy. You know it?” Louis took a moment, sitting there with the motor running, Bobby hunched over his arms on the windowsill. “You didn’t see her?”
“She was inside.”
“You don’t know if they talked and she told him anything.”
“It don’t matter,” Bobby said. “I’m gonna kill him.” He straightened, stepping away from the car. “You get back, we practice.”
Dawn’s front door was open a crack. Louis walked in and there she was, coming out of the bedroom, something in her hand. Seeing him, she stopped next to a canvas suitcase sitting in the middle of the floor.
“You leave your door open?”
“I was on my way out,” Dawn said and held up her sunglasses. “I forgot these.”
Louis moved toward her standing there in a white skirt he’d never seen before, Dawn-with that nice dark hair-looking afraid of him or afraid of something. He held his hands out and now she moved toward him, coming into his arms. She said, “Hold me,” and he took her slender body close, tight against him, his fingers feeling the bones in her shoulders, stroking her hair now.
“What’s wrong, baby? Got caught in the middle, huh? Bobby tuggin’ at you from one side, the law tuggin’ from the other…”
“I didn’t tell him anything.”
“I know you didn’t, baby. The cowboy come to see you-then what?”
“When Bobby came, Raylan wouldn’t let him in the house.”
Calling him Raylan.
“He talk to Bobby, ask him what he wanted?”
“They were outside. Bobby had a paper bag with a gun in it. I didn’t see it, but I knew it was a gun.”
Louis said, “Bobby take it out, show the marshal?”
He felt her shake her head no, close to him. She smelled nice. “And the cowboy, the marshal, he didn’t show his gun either?” He felt her shake her head, again saying no. “Told Bobby to leave and Bobby did, huh? Didn’t give the marshal any shit out the side of his mouth?” She said no, still scared; he could feel it the way she clung to him.
Like she clung to him the first time he came here.
Told him what he was thinking: “You’re trying to imagine what I look like without my clothes on.” And he said, “I know you gonna look fine. Let’s see if I’m right.” He opened his arms and that was when she clung to him the first time-back when she was still seeing Chip but about to break it off, telling Louis Chip talked a good game, but that was all. Louis had caught her when she was tender, in need of loving. She would read him and they’d go to bed and satisfy each other until they were worn out. Fifty dollars for the first reading, on the house after that, once a week or so, Chip never knowing a thing about it. Chip hadn’t even seen Dawn in months when Louis thought of using her to set up Harry.
“Chip say you going to the police if he don’t pay you.”
Dawn said, “I had to tell him something. I stick my neck out-what’ve I gotten? Nothing.”
“Your ship’s coming in, baby, pretty soon now. Tell me what the marshal knows.”
“He thinks he knows everything, except where Harry is.”
“But can’t come up with a probable cause, the way the system works, to get some action going. Else they’d be all over us,” Louis said. “I never saw a deal get fucked up so quick-one thing after another. I won’t give you the messy details.”
“Please don’t,” Dawn said.
“I should be making my move tomorrow, Sunday the latest. You hear what I’m saying?”
“Your move,” Dawn said. “You’re making plans of your own.”
“See, according to my horoscope my reputation for shrewd business ideas is paying off, but it also say romance could suffer. What should I do?”
“Well, for one thing your star pattern is going through a dramatic change.”
Talking to him in her fortune-teller voice now while he held on to her, letting her feel he could hold her tighter if he wanted.
“The cosmic dust is just now beginning to settle. The good thing is that during this astrocycle others are extremely open to your ideas.”
“I see it happening,” Louis said, “starting to put my ideas to work. Seeing who I want and who I don’t want, who’s gonna get cut out or left behind. Tell me what you see.”
“An empty house,” Dawn said.
“Whose?”
“This one.”
“Where you gone to?”
“I see myself on a beach.”
“Around here?”
He felt her shake her head.
“On an island in the Bahamas. Isn’t that where the money is?”
Louis grinned. “You something else.”