Ginger, annoyed and upset but not alarmed, watched him in the rearview mirror, and when next he looked out ahead of his car two men had emerged from the Riviera and were walking in this direction.
Now, belatedly, Ginger got worried. He still didn’t really believe the events in the beach house could have a serious effect upon his own life—for years Peter had only been amusing, a joke, Ginger’s private joke—but the first twinges of doubt, and even of dread, crossed his mind as he watched the two men approach his car. Both were big, tough-looking, middle-aged. One hung back near Ginger’s front fender while the other came forward to speak. Ginger waited for him, and in sudden terror recognized the man just as he spoke:
“Mr. Merville, I am Michael Wiskiel of the Los Angeles office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. I’m afraid I must ask you to step out of the car for a moment.”
Wiskiel; the man on television. “FBI?” Ginger desperately tried for a smile. “For a traffic violation?”
Wiskiel, opening the Thunderbird’s door, said, “If you’d just step out of the car for a moment.”
Drive away. Shift into first, run the second man down (the second fantasy slaughter-by-automobile in fifteen minutes), accelerate over the hills and into the Valley and disappear. Except that it wasn’t possible; how many times had Ginger acknowledged to himself that the life of the fugitive was not for him? Whatever Peter did with his days and nights, however he survived from year to year, Ginger could not possibly live the same way. Whatever happened, Ginger was a creature of civilization, limited to a life within society. Feeling unutterably sorry for himself—the unfairness of it all!—Ginger struggled out of the Thunderbird. Hopelessly but automatically he maintained as much of the pretense as he could: “Is something wrong?”
“You just came from Kenny Heller’s beach house.”
They’ve been watching me! “Well—umm...” He couldn’t quite bring himself to admit it, though he already knew there was no point denying it.
Wiskiel didn’t wait for him to resolve the problem, but went on, asking, “Who did you leave there?”
“No one.” That lie was instinctive.
And not believed: “No one?”
And here, at the edge of doom, hope was born. Wasn’t he after all shrewder than this heavy-jawed cop? Ginger had first begun lying himself successfully out of scrapes when he was barely in kindergarten, and his tongue had never lost its skill. He was clever and devious and bright, and there would never be any reason to abandon hope. “The place was empty,” he said. “At least, no one answered when I rang.”
“You were
“But I wasn’t.” Confidence was flowing again, Ginger was pulling himself back from the brink of despair. “Kenny loaned me the place,” he said smoothly, “but I couldn’t find the key. He always
Wiskiel frowned; was uncertainty coming into his expression? He said, “So you saw no one.”
“Not a soul. Obviously, Kenny loaned the place to someone
“So if there’s anybody in the house, you wouldn’t be able to help us with information.”
“I’m terribly sorry, but no. And I do
“An FBI matter,” Wiskiel said, being officially distant but not actually hostile. Then, surprisingly, he extended his hand toward Ginger, saying, “Sorry to have troubled you.”
“Not at all,” Ginger said, smiling broadly, in love with himself, reaching out to shake Wiskiel’s hand.
And Wiskiel clamped Ginger’s hand in an incredible grip, so astonishing that Ginger cried out and actually rose on tiptoe. Squeezing, crushing Ginger’s hand in his fist, Wiskiel rasped his thumb and fingers back and forth, grinding the bones of Ginger’s hand. Broken hand—can’t play the bass—extreme pain—these things flashed through Ginger’s mind as he reached in agony with his left hand, clutching at Wiskiel’s blunt hard fingers, crying out, “My God! Don’t!”
Wiskiel pressed forward, his grip hard and tight, his pressure forcing Ginger back against the side of the Thunderbird. “Put your left hand down at your side,” Wiskiel ordered, his voice low and mean, “or I’ll break every bone in your hand.”
“You
“How many are in the house?”
No, he couldn’t, he couldn’t give himself away like that. “
Now Wiskiel gripped his own right thumb with his left fist, and ground the knuckles of his left hand into the back of Ginger’s hand, over the small delicate bones. This was
The grinding knuckles paused, but the gripping right hand remained. Wiskiel said, “How many in the house?”
“Oh, please, my hand.” Another police car had pulled up next to the Buick; to take Ginger away, he knew that now. Passing traffic slowed to watch, but no one would stop, no one would rescue him.
A brief excruciating grind: “How many are in the house?”
“
“How many are in the
“FIVE!”
The crushing grip eased, ever so slightly. “Good,” Wiskiel said. “Who’s the leader?”
“Peter—Peter Dinely.”
The second man had come up beside Wiskiel, with notepad and pencil. Ginger was aware of him writing down Peter’s name, as Wiskiel said, “Who else?”
“Somebody named Mark—Larry—I don’t know their last names. And a woman named Liz.”
“What about Joyce Griffith?”
“Joyce.” Although Wiskiel was now merely holding Ginger’s hand in an ordinarily tight grasp, the waves of pain still flowed up the length of his arm and spread through his body, shattering and distracting him. Joyce; he had trouble thinking, remembering the creature making all that food... “She’s dead.”
“How?”
“Mark—Mark killed her. She’s buried in the sand in front of the house.”
“And Koo Davis? Alive or dead?”
He had admitted everything else, but still he hesitated. Koo Davis. To acknowledge familiarity with
But Wiskiel was implacable. Another reminiscent squeeze, dragging a groan from Ginger’s throat, and Wiskiel said, harshly, “
“Alive! Alive!”
“Good. Where are they keeping him?”
“Upstairs bedroom. Enclosed, no windows.”
“An inner room,” Wiskiel said. “All right, good. What guns do they have?”
“I don’t know. I
“All right.” And the punishing hand abruptly released its grip. “You can go with these two gentlemen,” Wiskiel said.
Ginger tucked his throbbing hand into his left armpit, hunching down over it. He would
Wiskiel looked at him without expression. “Tough shit,” he said.