"I… I don't-"
"I killed her, Johnnie. I killed both of them. And don't say I couldn't have, that I'm not that kind of a guy, because you don't know."
"I"-He started to rise up on his elbow, then lay back again. "I'll bet you had a good reason, Lou. I bet they had it coming."
"No one has it coming to them," I said. "But I had a reason, yes."
Dimly in the distance, like a ghost hooting, I heard the refinery whistles blowing for the swing shifts. And I could picture the workmen plodding in to their jobs, and the other shifts plodding out. Tossing their lunch buckets into their cars. Driving home and playing with their kids and drinking beer and watching their television sets and diddling their wives and… Just as if nothing was happening. Just as if a kid wasn't dying and a man, part of a man, dying with him.
"Lou…"
"Yes, Johnnie." It was a statement, not a question.
"Y-you m-mean I–I should take the rap for you? I-"
"No," I said. "Yes."
"I d-d-don't think-I can't, Lou! Oh, Jesus, I can't! I c-couldn't go through-"
I eased him back on the bunk. I ruffled his hair, chucked him gently under the chin, tilting it back.
"'There is a time of peace,' " I said, "'and a time of war. A time to sow and a time to reap. A time to live and a time to die…'"
"L–Lou…"
"This hurts me," I said, "worse than it does you."
And I knifed my hand across his windpipe. Then I reached down for his belt.
… I pounded on the door, and after a minute the turnkey came. He cracked the door open a little and I slid out, and he slammed it again.
"Give you any trouble, Lou?"
"No," I said, "he was real peaceful. I think we've broken the case."
"He's gonna talk, huh?"
"They've talked before," I shrugged.
I went back upstairs and told Howard Hendricks I'd had a long talk with Johnnie, and that I thought he'd come through all right. "Just leave him alone for an hour or so," I said. "I've done everything I can. If I haven't made him see the light, then he just ain't going to see it."
"Certainly, Lou, certainly. I know your reputation. You want me to call you after I see him?"
"I wish you would," I said. "I'm kind of curious to know if he talks."
13
I've loafed around the streets sometimes, leaned against a store front with my hat pushed back and one boot hooked back around the other-hell, you've probably seen me if you've ever been out this way-I've stood like that, looking nice and friendly and stupid, like I wouldn't piss if my pants were on fire. And all the time I'm laughing myself sick inside. Just watching the people.
You know what I mean-the couples, the men and wives you see walking along together. The tall fat women, and the short scrawny men. The teensy little women, and the big fat guys. The dames with lantern jaws, and the men with no chins. The bowlegged wonders, and the knock-kneed miracles. The… I've laughed-inside, that is-until my guts ached. It's almost as good as dropping in on a Chamber of Commerce luncheon where some guy gets up and clears his throat a few times and says, "Gentlemen, we can't expect to get any more out of life than what we put into it…" (Where's the percentage in that?) And I guess it-they-the people-those mismatched people-aren't something to laugh about. They're really tragical.
They're not stupid, no more than average anyway. They've not tied up together just to give jokers like me a bang. The truth is, I reckon, that life has played a hell of a trick on 'em. There was a time, just for a few minutes maybe, when all their differences seemed to vanish and they were just what each other wanted; when they looked at each other at exactly the right time in the right place and under the right circumstances. And everything was perfect. They had that time-those few minutes-and they never had any other. But while it lasted…
… Everything seemed the same as usual. The shades were drawn, and the bathroom door was open a little, just to let in a little light; and she was sprawled out on her stomach asleep. Everything was the same… but it wasn't. It was one of those times.
She woke up while I was undressing; some change dropped out of my pocket and rolled against the baseboard. She sat up, rubbing at her eyes, starting to say something sharp. But somehow she smiled, instead, and I smiled back at her. I scooped her up in my arms and sat down on the bed and held her. I kissed her, and her mouth opened a little, and her arms locked around my neck.
That's the way it started. That's the way it went.
Until, finally, we were stretched out close, side by side, her arm around my hips and mine around hers; limp, drained dry, almost breathless. And still we wanted each other-wanted something. It was like the beginning instead of the end.
She burrowed her head against my shoulder, and it was nice. I didn't feel like shoving her away. She whispered into my ear, kind of baby-talking.
"Mad at you. You hurt me."
"I did?" I said. "Gosh, I'm sorry, honey."
"Hurt real bad. 'Iss one. Punch elbow in it."
"Well, gosh-"
She kissed me, let her mouth slide off mine. "Not mad," she whispered.
She was silent then, waiting, it seemed, for me to say something. Do something. She pushed closer, squirming, still keeping her face hidden.
"Bet I know something…"
"Yeah, honey?"
"About that vas-that operation."
"What," I said, "do you think you know?"
"It was after that-after Mike-"
"What about Mike?"
"Darling"-she kissed my shoulder-"I don't care. I don't mind. But it was then, wasn't it? Your father got ex-worried and…?"
I let my breath out slowly. Almost any other night I could have enjoyed wringing her neck, but this was one time when I hadn't felt that way.
"It was about that time, as I recollect," I said. "But I don't know as that had anything to do with it."
"Honey…"
"Yeah?"
"Why do you suppose people…?"
"It beats me," I said. "I never have been able to figure it out."
"D-don't some women… I'll bet you would think it was awful if-"
"If what?"
She pushed against me, and it felt like she was on fire. She shivered and began to cry. "D-don't, Lou. Don't make me ask. J-just…"
So I didn't make her ask.
Later on, when she was still crying but in a different way, the phone rang. It was Howard Hendricks.
"Lou, kid, you really did it! You really softened him up!"
"He signed a confession?" I said.
"Better than that, boy! He hanged himself! Did it with his belt! That proves he was guilty without us having to screw around before a judge and put the taxpayers to a lot of expense, and all that crap! Goddammit, Lou, I wish I was there right now to shake your hand!"
He stopped yelling and tried to get the gloat out of his voice. "Now, Lou, I want you to promise me that you won't take this the wrong way. You mustn't get down about it. A person like that don't deserve to live. He's a lot better off dead than he is alive."
"Yeah," I said. "I guess you're right at that."
I got rid of him and hung up. And right away the phone rang again. This time it was Chester Conway calling from Fort Worth.
"Great work, Lou. Fine job. Fine! Guess you know what this means to me. Guess I made a mistake about-"
"Yes?" I said.
"Nothing. Don't matter now… See you, boy."
I hung up again, and the phone rang a third time. Bob Maples. His voice came over the wire thin and shaky.
"I know how much you thought of that boy, Lou. I know you'd just about as soon it'd happened to yourself."
As soon? "Yeah, Bob," I said. "I just about would have."
"You want to come over and set a spell, Lou? Play a game of checkers or somethin'? I ain't supposed to be up or I'd offer to. come over there."