“They just have big mouths,” she said. “Anyway, I’m sorry. I’m sure it’s tough.”
“That was just the right thing to say, Kay. Thanks.”
She smiled and I moved over to a booth. I sat with my head back against the old, red, leather cushion and closed my eyes. Immediately last night jumped through my head.
I opened my eyes and drank half of my coffee in one gulp. It was bitter. I called to Kay to bring me a Coke. I sipped it. It wasn’t any better.
“Use your phone?”
Kay was behind the bar wiping up a water spot “Have at it. You know where it is.”
I went through the back door, into the stockroom. The phone was sitting on the directory on a shelf next to an economy-sized can of tomatoes. That would be for the chili they served [i t said,. Good stuff, but hot as a potbellied stove.
I leaned on the shelf and used the directory to look up a number. It was on the first page in big letters. I dialed.
“LaBorde Police Department”
“I’d like to speak to Lieutenant Price.”
“Just a moment.”
When Price came on the line, I said, “This is Dane. I just wanted to know what happened to Russel’s body.”
“He’ll be buried day after tomorrow. Would have been today, but they did an autopsy.”
“Why?”
“Fairly standard procedure. Why do you want to know about burial?”
“This Russel, he got any family besides his old man?”
“I don’t think so. None that we know of. The county is paying for it. A pauper’s funeral we call it.”
“Where’s he going to be buried?”
“Greenley’s Cemetery. You’re not planning on coming, are you?”
“It crossed my mind.”
“Guilt?”
“Something like that.”
“I know how you feel, but you’re letting this get out of hand. You’ve got to accept the fact that you killed him in self-defense. He broke into your house.”
“Just got to thinking about it. Doesn’t seem right he’ll be buried without anyone there.”
“You think his spirit’s going to feel cheerier with you there? The man who killed him?”
I was quiet for a moment. When Price spoke again, his words seemed packed in ice. “Look, I’m not trying to make you feel shitty, okay? I’m just saying there’s no point. I doubt if he’d killed you he’d be attending your funeral.”
“Not the point-”
“Maybe it is the point. Just do your best to forget it. Get on with your life. People are going to talk about it and you’re going to hear it. It’ll be rough for a while. But it’ll pass.”
“What time are they burying him?”
“You’re stubborn, aren’t you?”
“Just humor me, Price. I don’t know I’m going to do anything, but it would make me feel better to know. Day after tomorrow when?”
Price sighed. “One-thirty. But Dane, do yourself a favor. Stay away.”
I hung up and dialed a good friend of mine who’s a house painter, gritted my teeth and told him what had happened. I tried to make it simple and clear.
“Hell, Richard, I’m sorry.”
“No need to be,” I said. “It’s done. Look, what I need is for you to paint my living room. It’s not that there’s still blood on the wall, but it would make me feel better to have a fresh coat on the room.”
“I understand, I’ll get my boys and we’ll be over there about noon.”
“Thanks, Ted. And I’m calling a locksmith and the furniture store. You beat any of them there, let them in. Best way for you to get in is to take some wire pliers and go around back and cut through the wire rig I made last night.”
“No problem,” Ted said.
“Thanks.”
I used the book again and got the number of a furniture store.
“I want a couch,” I said, and I gave them the colors of the room, the general dimensions. They described what they had and I picked. I hoped Ann would like it well enough. Buying it sight unseen was not a good idea, but I just didn’t want to deal with people face to face any more than I had to.
“When can you deliver? I’d like it today if you could.”
“That will be fine. About one o’clock all right?”
“That’s good. There’ll be a painter there named Ted Lawson to let you in. Could you take my old couch off my hands? It’s not good for anything, but I’ll pay you extra to carry it off.”
He thought on that a moment. “I suppose we can do that. No charge.”
“Good. And could you cover the new one with plastic?. I don’t want to get paint on it.”
He said they could, and I hung up, then dialed the locksmith.
“Truman’s Locks, Truman speaking.”
“My name is Richard Dane, and-”
“You’re the fella shot that burglar last night, ain’t you?”
Great Godalmighty, word sure did move.
“That’s right. I need a lock on the door he tore up. Can you do it today?”
“I can start today. Depends on how bad the door is busted. You might have to get someone out there to fix that first”
“It just needs a lock,” I said.
“All right. Hey, they gonna put you in jail?”
“It was self-defense.”
“That don’t mean nothing these days. You can’t trust the cops any better than the crooks. What’s that address?”
I told him.
“Say, Mr. Dane. How about a burglar alarm and some burglar bars? I could fix you up real good. Goddamn Houdini couldn’t get in your house once I got you secured.”
I knew he was working on my paranoia, and I knew I’d r [kn?”
“Good move. We’ll get that lock and the bars in today. Start on that alarm system tomorrow. That sound okay?”
“Peachy,” I said, and hung up.
I went up-front and sat at my booth again and finished my Coke. It tasted a little better. I looked at the clock behind the counter and over the mirror. Eleven. Too early for lunch.
To hell with that.
“Kay,” I called, “how about you get that cook in back to fix me up a fried egg sandwich, and don’t hold the grease.”
“Got it,” she said, then yelled to the back. “Clyde.”
A black man in a stained white apron appeared at the cook window. “Two baby chicks, dead on bread and don’t hold the grease,” she said.
Clyde tapped two fingers to his forehead in salute and disappeared. I heard grease splattering in a pan a little later.
Kay came over with a Lone Star beer and sat it on the table. “On the house,” she said.
I took my time drinking the beer, and later eating the sandwich, listened to a couple of Dwight Yoakam songs on the jukebox, then drove back to the shop.