then his eyes widened in surprise. “Holy shit! I didn’t know I
knew that.”
“Is that some sort of Indian name, do you think? Like Sonny Sixkiller or Ron Nine Moons?”
“Coulda been, but…” Brodsky paused, thinking, then burst out: “It was awful! Not when it was happening, but later on… thinking about it… it was like being…” He dropped his voice. “Like being raped, sir.”
“Let it go,” Owen said. “You must have a few things to do?”
Brodsky smiled. “Only a few thousand.”
“Then get started.”
“Okay.” Brodsky took a step away, then turned back. Owen was looking toward the corral, which had once held horses and now held men. Most of the detainees were in the barn, and all but one of the two dozen or so out here were huddled up together, as if for comfort. The one who stood apart was a tall, skinny drink of water wearing big glasses that made him look sort of like an owl. Brodsky looked from the doomed owl to Underhill. “You’re not gonna get me in hack over this, are you? Send me to see the shrink?” Unaware, of course, both of them unaware that the skinny guy in the old-fashioned horn-rims
“Not a ch-” Owen began. Before he could finish, there was a gunshot from Kurtz’s Winnebago and someone began to scream. “Boss?” Brodsky whispered. Owen couldn’t hear him over the contending motors; he read the word off Brodsky’s lips. And: “Ohh, fuck.”
“Go on, Dawg,” Owen said. “Not your business.”
Brodsky looked at him a moment longer, wetting his lips inside his mask. Owen gave him a nod, trying to project an air of confidence, of command, of everything’s-under-control. Maybe it worked, because Brodsky returned the nod and started away.
From the Winnebago with the hand-lettered sign on the door (THE BUCK STOPS HERE), the screaming continued. As Owen started that way, the man standing by himself in the compound spoke to him. “Hey! Hey, you! Stop a minute, I need to talk to you!”
“Overhill? No,
Owen stopped in spite of the screaming from the Winnebago, which was breaking up into hurt sobs now. Not good, but at least it seemed that no one had been killed. He took a closer look at the man in the spectacles. Skinny as a rail and shivering in spite of the down parka he was wearing.
“It’s important to Rita,” the skinny man called over the contending roar of the engines. “To Katrina, too.” Speaking the names seemed to sap the geeky guy, as if he had drawn them up like stones from some deep well, but in his shock at hearing the names of his wife and daughter from this stranger’s lips, Owen barely noticed. The urge to go to the man and ask him how he knew those names was strong, but he was currently out of time… he had an appointment. And just because no one had been killed yet didn’t mean no one
Owen gave the man behind the wire a final look, marking his face, and then hurried on toward the Winnebago with the sign on the door.
Perlmutter had read
So Pearly felt disquiet but no
All the electronic gear was rebounding. On Kurtz’s desk the fax hummed constantly, piling up paper. Every fifteen seconds or so, Kurtz’s iMac cried “You’ve got mail!” in its cheery robot voice. Three radios, all turned low, crackled and hopped with transmissions. Mounted on the fake pine behind the desk were two framed photographs. Like the sign on the door, the photos went with Kurtz everywhere. The one on the left, titled INVESTMENT, showed an angelic young fellow in a Boy Scout uniform, right hand raised in the three-fingered Boy Scout salute. The one on the right, labeled DIVIDEND, was an aerial photograph of Berlin taken in the spring of 1945. Two or three buildings still stood, but mostly what the camera showed was witless brick-strewn rubble.
Kurtz waved his hand at the desk. “Don’t mind all that, boys-it’s just noise. I’ve got Freddy Johnson to deal with it, but I sent him over to the commissary to grab some chow. Told him to take his time, go through the whole four courses, soup to nuts,
Melrose returned Kurtz’s smile tentatively, Perlmutter with less reserve. He had Kurtz’s number, all right; the boss was an existential wannabe… and you wanted to believe that was a good call. A
“My only order to Lieutenant Johnson-whoops, no rank on this one, to my
Kurtz rocked, looking happily at the two men with the snow melting from their footgear and puddling on the floor. “The best prayers are the child’s prayers,” Kurtz said. “The simplicity, you know. “God is great, God is good, let us thank Him for our food.' Isn’t that simple? Isn’t it beautiful?”
“Yes, b-” Pearly began.
“Shut the fuck up, you hound,” Kurtz said cheerfully. Still rocking. The gun still swinging back and forth at the end of its belt. He looked from Pearly to Melrose. “What do
“Yes, s-”
“Or
They didn’t reply. Kurtz was rocking faster now, and the pistol was swinging faster, and Perlmutter began to feel a little antsy, as he had earlier in the day, before Underhill arrived and sort of cooled Kurtz out. This was probably just more plumage, but-
“Or Moses at the burning bush!” Kurtz cried. His lean and rather horsey face lit with a daffy smile. “'Who’m I talking to?' Moses asks, and God gives him the old “I yam what I yam and that’s all that I yam, uck-uck-uck.' What a kidder, that God, eh, Mr Melrose, did you
Melrose’s mouth dropped open.
“Answer me, buck.”
“Sir, I-”
“Call me sir again while the group is hot, Mr Melrose, and you will celebrate your next two birthdays in the stockade, do you understand that? Catch my old drift-ola?''Yes, boss.” Melrose had snapped to attention, his face dead white except for the patches of cold-induced red on his cheeks, patches that were cut neatly in two by the straps of his mask. “Now
“Sir, I may have just in passing said something-”
Moving with a speed Perlmutter could scarcely credit (it was like a special effect in a James Cameron movie, almost), Kurtz snatched the nine-millimeter from the swinging holster, pointed it without seeming to aim, and fired. The top half of the sneaker on Melrose’s left foot exploded. Fragments of canvas flew. Blood and flecks of flesh splattered Perlmutter’s pantsleg.
Melrose carried on blatting. His foot was
“Just so you can hear me, buck, You
Still sobbing, his eyes starting from his face like blue glass balls, Melrose managed a nod.
Quick as a striking snake, Kurtz’s head turned and Perlmutter clearly saw the man’s face. The madness there was stamped into the features as clearly as a warrior’s tattoos. At that moment everything Perlmutter had ever believed about his OIC fell down.
“What about you, bucko? Listening? Because you’re a messenger, too. All of us are messengers. “Pearly nodded. The door opened and he saw, with unutterable relief, that the newcomer was Owen Underhill. Kurtz’s eyes flew to him. “Owen! Me foine bucko! Another witness! Another, praise God, another messenger! Are you