For his last number, Harry Bright cleared his throat and struck a false chord before beginning. Then he strummed until he found the correct one and sang “We’ll Be Together Again.”
Sidney Blackpool thought of Trish Decker, née Patsy Bright, weeping in her bed. Harry Bright sang, “ ‘I’ll find you in the morning sun and when the night is new, I’ll be looking at the moon but I’ll be seeing you.’ ”
It was the end of the medley. He advanced the spool. He punched the play button again but there was nothing. He reversed the cassette. There was nothing at all on the other side. Harry Bright had not recorded “Make Believe.” Not on this cassette.
He reversed it and replayed Harry Bright’s songs. Harry Bright had dedicated one number on that cassette. His speaking voice sounded an octave lower than his singing voice. Harry Bright said, “This song’s for Patsy.” Then he strummed an introduction and began “I’ll Be Seeing You.”
While Harry Bright sang, Sidney Blackpool again thought of Patsy Bright. Until the chorus when Harry Bright sang,
“A park across the way, the children’s carousel, “The chestnut tree, the wishing well.”
Then Sidney Blackpool thought about the boy he’d never seen. He thought about Danny Bright. Then he thought of both Patsy Bright and Danny when Harry Bright sang the last chorus:
“I’ll find you in the morning sun and when the
night is new,
“I’ll be looking at the moon but I’ll be seeing you.”
Sidney Blackpool found himself searching for the rage. He wanted the fury. It was always so easy to find it. In fact, it was often impossible to avoid. Now where was it when he needed it? He found himself starting to cry and couldn’t say for whom. He got himself under control just prior to arriving at the hotel.
CHAPTER 16
It was the most fitful night’s sleep yet. He didn’t think he’d dreamed because he didn’t think he’d been asleep long enough. Sidney Blackpool got up at dawn, exhausted. He was too nauseated to eat but managed three cups of coffee from room service. He called Mineral Springs P.D. and disguised his voice when Anemic Annie answered. He reached Officer O. A. Jones just before the surfer cop was to hit the bricks. The detective said: “This is Blackpool. Go to a music store or call a radio station. Listen to an old song called ‘Make Believe.’ Do it for me today. And don’t mention it to a soul. I’ll be in touch.”
As usual, Otto slept until called. When he’d had his shower and shave he came into the sitting room and said, “Sidney, I don’t think I’m up to another day on the links. It’s too hard on my head. Except for where Fiona beat on me, my body feels okay, but my brain’s all bruised. I was picking fights yesterday. I ain’t country-club material.”
“We aren’t playing golf today.”
“I suppose we’re going to Mineral Springs.”
“Uh-huh,” Sidney Blackpool said. “We’ve run outta rope and nobody’s hanged himself. I figure today we have a private talk with Paco Pedroza and maybe with Coy Brickman.”
“And also Palm Springs P.D. to let them in on our fun-filled week?”
“Maybe we’ll even go visit Sergeant Harry Bright. Let’s see what shape he’s really in.”
“How’d you do with his wife?”
“His ex-wife. I got a cassette of Harry Bright playing a uke and singing old songs.”
“And?”
“ ‘Make Believe’ ’s not on it. There must be another one. Coy Brickman called her and asked to borrow it. We’re making him nervous. He’s starting to worry that O. A. Jones might get it right. We’re getting to him, Otto.”
“And Harry Bright?”
“He’s gotta be in on it somehow. One a those two sergeants returned to the burning car.”
“In on what?”
“I don’t know what. They killed him. Or one a them did and the other’s an accessory. Or the whole damn town’s in on it. I just don’t know.”
“But why?”
“I don’t know. Maybe today we’ll find out.”
“Can I have breakfast first?”
“Eat a big one. This’s gotta be the last workday, one way or the other. We’re outta rope.”
“Thank God,” Otto said. “I wanna lay by the pool just one afternoon and then I wanna go home. I’m getting so crazy I’m starting to miss all the Ewoks on Hollywood Boulevard.”
“I really don’t see any reason why we can’t go for that today,” Sidney Blackpool said.
“Lay out by the pool? Soak in the spa?”
“Let’s do it,” Sidney Blackpool said. “Tell you the truth, I gotta relax and think. I’ve been needing a drink in my hand every step a the way and that’s no good.”
“Did you lay his wife, Sidney?” Otto asked. “Harry Bright’s wife?”
“His ex-wife.”
“That answers it.”
“What difference does it make one way or the other?”
“I dunno, Sidney,” Otto said. “This whole case stinks like a burnt corpse. I just wish you wouldn’t a laid Harry Bright’s wife.”
“Ex-wife, goddamnit!”
“Let’s go swimming,” Otto said.
It wasn’t such a bad day. All in all, it was probably the best of their desert vacation. Sidney Blackpool slept on a poolside lounge chair, and when the sun got too hot he moved under an umbrella and slept some more. Otto got a mild sunburn but enjoyed himself enormously by doing belly flops and squeaking like a porpoise, which tickled a couple of divorced telephone operators from Van Nuys. He thought they were cute, and didn’t even care that they weren’t rich. In fact, he bought them drinks, and made a tentative date with both of them for 8:00 P.M. in the hotel dining room.
Otto was starting to get his head straightened out. The mountains never looked more beautiful to him. The sky was dappled by hairy white clouds that seemed to skim the peak over the tram as they scudded by in the desert breeze. The Shadow Mountains shimmered in sparkling light. Against his better judgment, he introduced the telephone operators to piña coladas and mai tais, and bought them lunch at poolside. He was hoping that his partner might sleep away the entire afternoon.
At 3:00 P.M. Sidney Blackpool awakened, swam a few lengths of the hotel pool, looked toward Otto and started for the room.
“That’s my business partner, girls,” Otto said.
“You won’t stand us up tonight, will ya, Otto?” the older one asked.
“If I don’t show up tonight, it may be somebody’s murdered me,” said Otto, and the girls giggled like hell and sucked on the piña colada.
At 4:00 P.M. they were halfway to Mineral Springs. “What’d Chief Pedroza say about this meeting?” Otto asked, breaking the silence.
“Nothing. Just okay.”
“What’d he say when you said it was confidential and private?”
“Same answer.”
“What’d you say when he said he’d like to meet us down in the oasis picnic ground? Did you ask if we should bring the potata salad?”
“I said okay. Just okay. This is a small town. He knows we been nosing around. He might be getting a feeling that we’re onto something. He might even be getting a feeling that Coy Brickman’s acting nervous for some reason or other.”
“He might even be getting nervous himself, Sidney,” Otto said. “Whatever’s going on he might be part of.”
“I thought a that,” Sidney Blackpool said. “We’re all getting nervous.”
“We’re a long way from Hollywood, Sidney. In lots a ways. We’re gonna meet a desert cop out in a lonely picnic ground after dark which makes it only a little bit less risky than a picnic in Central Park. And maybe he knows a whole lot about Jack Watson’s death. And we ain’t so much as got a slingshot between us and nobody in the whole fucking world knows we’re there. We could be the next ones they find in a burned car in Solitaire Canyon. Tell me you thought a all that.”