Another possibility was that Graham would track us down before Heinz could. It wasn’t out of the question. Graham wouldn’t fly out-that would waste time-but he’d direct efforts over the phone. He would have already used my credit-card number to get the car-rental agency and the license plate of the car. A little grease would have the state police locate the car at the rest stop. That’s where it would get tricky. Would they just assume we kept going west on Route 15, or would they think of taking the back road south through the Mojave? If they looked down the back road, they’d see the wreck of the car and figure it out from there. If not… hello, Heinz.
So what would Graham do? Send his troops on the highway or the back road?
Easy. Graham would do both.
Graham would have a map spread out in front of him and would consider each and every possible route from where they found the rental car. Then he’d send his troops out on a coordinated, organized search with designated check-in times and places.
You’d have to know Graham to know how sure I was of this. For example, this is a man who does his weekly grocery shopping as follows: He decides what he’s going to cook, then writes down all the ingredients he needs. Then he redoes that list, rewriting the items in the order they appear in the grocery store as you work from the left aisle to the right. That way he can go through the store once, in one smooth progression from left to right.
If any man could sit behind a telephone in New York City and find the splotch of a burned-out car in the middle of the Mojave Desert, that man was Joe Graham.
Since I figured it was a push between Heinz and Graham getting there first and there was nothing I could do to affect the results of that race, I moved on to another topic.
Babies.
Specifically, a baby. Karen’s and mine. Not a real baby, not yet, but a putative baby. A possible baby.
Baby, baby, baby, baby. Just the word was intimidating, and yet…
Maybe it was the very real prospect of imminent death that made me reconsider my timetable on the b-word thing. Two years was a long time and a lot of things could happen. And it would seem like a waste if Karen and I didn’t have a… a kid. Karen would be a terrific mother and I would be a-well, I could be an acceptable father.
There probably was something to all Karen’s psychobabble about unresolved rage at my absent father and inadequate mother. That didn’t necessarily mean that I couldn’t rise above it, though. A man plays the cards he’s dealt, right?
A man. Sigh. A father.
Now if there’s a scarier word than “baby”, it’s “father”.
I know it seems obvious to you, but I just then figured out that it wasn’t the kid I was so afraid of, it was being the kid’s father. I mean, what does a father actually do? I knew from watching old television shows that a father takes the kid into the study and says wise things to it, but that was about the extent of my knowledge. And I believe we’ve already pretty much established that I don’t exactly overflow with wisdom. What was I supposed to do, take the kid into the study and say petulant things to it?
Oh, man. A father. Sigh.
Okay, so I never knew my father. I never even knew who he was. For the longest time as a kid I thought he was Chinese or something, because when I asked my mother who my father was she answered “some John”.
In my childhood years, such as they were, Some John had loomed large in my imagination. He was variously a football player, a baseball player, an astronaut, a war hero-you get the pathetic idea-and in my imagination he was always coming back for me. Somehow he’d get the idea that he had a kid and would move heaven and earth to track me down, and one day I’d be sitting on the fire escape and see him coming down the alley and he’d look up and see me and just know, and in that deep, manly television voice he’d say, “Son, thank God I found you.”
Pathetic, huh?
When I got a little older, say ten, I gave that one up. By that time I figured out that my father was just another pathetic loser who had to pay a woman to be with him. The kind of guy that, even if he knew he had a kid out there somewhere, wouldn’t give a good goddamn.
So what does a father actually do? See, I can’t tell you. I can only tell you what my father actually did.
Nothing, that’s what.
So what chilled me right then, more than even the freezing desert air, was the unavoidable fact that at least half of me was that guy, that bum. And I didn’t want to do to any kid what…
Man, talk about bathetic.
Next topic.
An old man. Nathan.
I was worried about him. He was shivering now, even by the fire, and I didn’t know how much more he could take, ornery as he was. He’d already been through a lot, and who knew what was coming up?
I snuck a glance at him. He was lying with his head propped against the log, his blue eyes were watery and tired-looking now. He seemed small and frail.
And quiet.
Not pouting-quiet, either, but really quiet. For the first time since I’d known Nathan, he was truly silent.
I guess old men look at death all the time.
“Hey, Nathan?”
“Yeah?”
“Who’s on first?”
We went through almost the whole routine before he fell asleep. Then I managed to slip an arm under him and hold him against my chest.
It was still cold but that might keep him a little warmer.
Me, too, I guess.
Chapter 24
One thing about the desert-you can hear a car coming from a long way off.
The sun was just up, a pale orange circle in a lavender sky. That wouldn’t last long. Soon the sun would be blazing, washing out the sky to a blue so pale it’s almost white.
Nathan and Sami were asleep. I eased my arm from under Nathan, got up, and peeked over the edge of the knoll. A car was coming up from the south. I figured we had about ten minutes.
When I came back to the fire, Nathan’s eyes were open.
For a second there I thought I saw Nathan smile.
I put an ungentle toe into Sami’s foot.
“Wake up,” I said. “What kind of car does Heinz have?”
“He has a Mercedes,” Sami mumbled.
That was good news. I wasn’t sure what a Mercedes was. I had in mind a sleek sedan, though. The car I saw looked more like a small truck.
“And a Porsche, a BMW, and a Land Rover,” Sami said.
That was bad news. The car I had seen looked like it could be a Land Rover.
“What color’s the Land Rover?” I asked.
“White.”
“I think Heinz is here,” I said. “Okay, friend Sami, you know what to do?”
Sami bobbed his head like one of those dogs in the back window of a car. “I tell Heinz your bodies are in the shack. I bring him in, okay?”
“Okay,” I said. “And you do anything different, I’m going to put one in your back.”
I’d heard this line in a movie and thought it sounded pretty tough. Yeah, okay, I thought that Sami would think it was pretty tough. He didn’t exactly quake, though, so I added, “If you try to signal him in any way, any funny faces, any hand gestures, anything at all, I’ll blow your head off.”
“Okay, okay,” Sami said. “We’re the friends now.”
“Yeah, we’re the friends.”
Then I heard the crunch of tires on gravel. The car was coming up the dirt road.
“Places, please, gentlemen,” I said. I helped Nathan into the shack and sat him down on the floor in the back. Then I crouched under the window to the right of the door. The plan was that Sami would walk Heinz into the shack, I would stick the gun into Heinz’s back, and the good guys would win.
That was the plan, anyway.
I heard the car pull up and the car door open. Whoever it was didn’t plan on being there long because he left the motor running.
Of course, I told myself, it was still possible that this wasn’t Heinz but one of the legions of private eyes that Graham had doubtless sent to search for me. I mean, there had to be hundreds of white Land Rovers merrily off-roading the greater California-Nevada desert biome. It didn’t have to be Heinz.