Quinn smiled, then became more serious and began lightly tapping a pencil on the desk. 'What I'd like is for her to give herself a chance.'

'She's trying to do that,' Pearl said. 'Her workplace seems okay except for the food.'

'And the music.'

'What I heard was recorded,' Pearl said.

'A mercy.'

'I don't know, Quinn. I'm not a parent. But I'd feel okay about Lauri. Life teaches its lessons gradually, and I can see why a father would be impatient, especially if he's…impatient. My advice to you is to stop worrying so much.'

'What about that musical geek she's been dating?'

'Wormy? Him I didn't see. Does he have a real name?'

'If he did, no one would use it. Wormy's too apropos. Or maybe it's his show business name, for when he sings and fronts his band at the restaurant.'

'Have we got a sheet on him?'

'I'm going to check on that,' Quinn said. 'I need for you to find out his name nobody uses.'

'Me?'

'It might be too obvious if I ask Lauri. And if I ask at the restaurant, somebody, some worm, might recognize me and mention it to her. You could go by the Hungry U when she's not there and ask around in an unofficial capacity.'

Pearl stood up from her perch on the desk. 'Get hold of yourself, Quinn. You're liable to get that boy fired.'

'What if he has a sheet? Deals in drugs, steals cars, or assaults women?'

'You suspect any of that?'

'All of it.'

Pearl stared at him and shook her head. 'You're overplaying your role as a father, Quinn. I was glad to talk with Lauri, but I'll be damned if I'm going to spy on her or delve into her personal life.'

'Personal life?'

'Sex life.'

'Damn it, Pearl!'

'Damn what?' Fedderman asked. He'd just come in. The morning was heating up and he already had his suit coat slung over his shoulder, holding it Frank Sinatra-style, hooked on one finger. His tie was crooked and there were crescents of perspiration beneath his arms on his white shirt that was partly untucked.

'Nothing,' Quinn said. 'I want you to call a restaurant in the Village, the Hungry U, and tell them you're a journalist for Spin magazine. Ask for the real name of a guy whose band is playing there, goes by Wormy.'

'That French?

Quinn explained and spelled it for him.

Fedderman had played journalist before and didn't find the request all that unusual. 'What's the band called?'

'The Defendants.'

'Cute,' Fedderman said. 'What're we gonna do when we find out who this Wormy is?'

'We're gonna find out who he really is,' Quinn said.

26

Bocanne, Florida, 1980

It was deep into the night, and Sherman had been unable to sleep. His light was on and he was lying in bed reading about the battle of Lookout Mountain and trying not to think about Sam, when his mother opened his bedroom door. She had on an old dress and apron and was holding some trash bags.

He lowered the open book to his chest.

'Come when I call,' she said to Sherman.

His heart fell as he watched her lay the folded trash bags on the corner of his dresser. He knew what they were for. She knew he'd bring them when she called.

'Mom…?'

'It's not time for questions, Sherman, it's time for doin'. And what you're gonna do's what I tell you.'

'I know, Mom.' He propped up his book again and watched the print swim before his eyes.

He didn't hear her leave, but he knew she was gone.

Ten minutes later she called his name and, wearing only his Jockey shorts, he trudged into her bedroom.

Sam was lying nude and dead still on the bed. He had a peaceful expression on his face, though his mouth was a bit crooked.

'He didn't suffer none,' Sherman's mother said, noticing how Sherman was looking at Sam, not at all like Sam was any of the other lifeless hulks he'd seen. 'Pick up his stuff.' She pointed to a pile of Sam's belongings she'd built in the middle of the floor. Next to it were his boxes of books.

'Can we keep the books?' Sherman asked.

'Ain't you read 'em all?'

'I could read 'em again.'

'They go into the swamp with the rest of Sam's things, Sherman. Every part of Sam's gotta be gone.'

He didn't argue. Instead he stooped by the pile of old clothing. Next to it were an empty leather wallet and tobacco pouch, and an old pipe with a tooth-marked stem. Sherman began to cry as he stuffed it all into one of the black plastic trash bags.

When he was finished, his mother said, 'Go put that bag on the porch, then come back here an' give me a helpin' hand with him.'

Sherman did as he was told, then returned to help her move Sam into the bathroom.

Myrna gripped Sam beneath his arms, and Sherman clutched him just beneath the knees. They'd done this often enough that unconsciously they'd established a system.

'Shut up your cryin',' Myrna said to Sherman, as Sam thumped off the bed onto the floor. 'Now come grab an arm.'

But Sherman was already on his way. Sniffling and choking back sobs, he gripped Sam's right wrist while his mother gripped the left, and they began dragging him over the plank floor toward the bathroom.

Rigor mortis had come and gone in Sam, so it wasn't too difficult to wrestle him into the big clawfoot tub.

'Go out an' git your father's tools,' Myrna said.

Sam silently obeyed. He knew which tools to select from the old wooden shed.

When he'd returned to the bathroom with the tools, the water was running. His mother had already removed all her clothes so as not to get blood on them, and had begun on Sam with a knife.

'He weren't a bad man,' Sherman said, observing.

'Bad don't figure into it, Sherman. It's about survival.' She began working the knife back and forth in a sawing motion to cut through a small tendon. 'Someday you'll understand.'

Sherman wondered if he would.

'Turn that tap water down some,' Myra said, 'then go fetch the rest of them bags.'

Sam obeyed, then he stood and watched the water mixed with blood swirling down the drain. Sam's blood. He began to cry again.

'The bags, Sherman!'

He left the bathroom, glancing back as his mother scooted across the tiles to the dry end of the tub opposite the taps, her bare breasts swinging pendulously with her smooth but hasty movement. He knew how she worked, keeping everything dry as possible until finally it was drained enough to use the power saw on what was too big or tough to cut with a knife. The stench, the sound of the gurgling, bloody water, went with Sherman as he returned to

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