photos. They had a shit load of books down there, with thousands of pictures. Sooner or later she was gonna come across his. He was a lot younger when he’d been arrested, had short hair and no mustache, but the way they’d locked eyes in that stop-and-rob, Horace felt sure she’d recognize him.

Still, he hadn’t been able to kill her. Stalk her, yes. Kill her, no.

Horace shivered, blamed it on the air-conditioning. He felt good after he’d blown away the Jap, better when he found out who it was. Frankie Fujimori, a low life the planet could rotate very well without.

But when Striker told him he had to do the woman, he’d resisted, saying it wasn’t right, but Striker had threatened to bring in one of those Yakuza types his bosses at the construction company had hanging around all the time. Then Horace had to see it for what it was. A job, no more, no less. Besides, if he didn’t do it, it wouldn’t be no blonde those Yakuza fucks would be going after.

And when they came for him, there wouldn’t be a thing he could do about it. Striker had too many resources. He was untouchable. There was no going against him. So he’d stalked her, building his resolve, convincing himself he could do it. But when he was finally ready, she’d pulled a disappearing act. Now all of a sudden she pops up in the Safeway in the Shore. If he hadn’t seen her with his own eyes, he wouldn’t have believed it.

“It’s the woman you showed me in that newspaper, isn’t it?” Virgil said, interrupting his thoughts. “I was right, wasn’t I?”

“Yeah, Virge, you were right. You did good.”

“I knew it.” Virgil was glowing with pride.

The waitress brought their burgers and fries. They ate in silence as Horace pondered the problem of the woman across the street. There was no way out of it. He was going to have to go over and see what was what, maybe do her in the bar if he got a chance. Maybe she’d go to the can. He could follow her in, cut her throat and be gone before anyone had a clue.

“She’s been over there long enough. I’m gonna go and serve the papers. I might be awhile, maybe a half hour.” Ma and Virgil thought he was a process server. He’d told them he worked for the DA and that his job was to find and serve papers on difficult subjects, people who had the money and means to avoid a subpoena.

After all, he could hardly tell them what he really did for a living. He couldn’t tell anyone. It had started after he was arrested for a B and E all those years ago. Striker cut him a deal. Horace snitched on his friends and walked. But he was never free, Striker kept him on a short leash. When the man needed someone leaned on, he called Horace.

When a guy owed Striker money, a favor, information, anything, and didn’t deliver, Horace paid a visit to his wife and scared the shit out of her. It always worked. Horace had to give Striker his due, it was way better then breaking arms or busting heads. It was amazing how you could get a guy to do what you wanted by fucking with someone he loved.

Only once had he ever had to hurt anyone. Striker sent Horace after this guy’s kid brother, because the guy wasn’t married. But the bastard wouldn’t deliver, so Horace broke the brother’s arm. Fucker was kissing Striker’s ass the next day.

Horace sighed. Only once, till he’d blown away the dude in the stop-and-rob.

“I could help,” Virgil said, shaking Horace back to the here and now.

“You did help, Virge. You spotted her in the store. That was good.”

The big guy was all puffy, eyes wide with pride. Horace smiled at him. Virgil was five years older, but followed Horace around like a puppy dog, as if he were the younger brother and in some ways he was. Virgil had a memory like a trap, but he couldn’t read. He was dyslexic and slow, no more than eight or twelve in some ways, an old man in others.

“So, how come I have to stay while you finish the job?” Virgil squirmed in his seat. “You wouldn’t have found her if it wasn’t for me.” His eyes were begging.

“Virgil, when I serve papers, I’m an officer of the court. I’m deputized, like a policeman. We can’t have civilians helping us. In fact, if my boss knew I was here with you while I was about to serve papers on the woman over there, he would fire me. You wouldn’t want that, would you?”

“No.”

“So, although you helped, we gotta keep it secret or I could lose my job. You gotta sit here and be good till I get back. It’s important you stay in your seat and drink your coffee. Hey, I got an idea.” Horace raised his hand, got the waitress’s attention. She came over. She had her notebook out, pencil ready to write.

“You got hot cherry pie with ice cream?” Horace said.

“Yeah.”

“Make it a double helping for my brother here.”

“Really?” Virgil was drooling now.

“And if he wants anything else before I get back, bring it to him,” Horace said.

“She sure is pretty,” Virgil said, after the waitress left.

“She’s older than Ma,” Horace said.

“Not the waitress, dummy. The woman across the street.” Virgil’s hands were shaking, Horace hoped it was nothing.

“I’m not supposed to notice things like that.” Horace shook his head. So that was it, Virgil was smitten. Probably had been since he’d seen her picture in the paper. Horace had been surprised when he’d seen it. He’d told Ma one of his subjects was on the second page. Of course, she couldn’t see it, but he’d forgotten about Virgil.

“What’cha thinking about?” Virgil asked.

“About how low a man can sink,” Horace said.

“Whatdaya mean?”

“Nothing,” Horace said, but it was something. He’d always considered himself a man with standards, principles, and now he was about to go against everything he believed in. He was going to kill a woman. It ate at him, but he didn’t see any way out.

“Pass me your switchblade under the table,” Horace said.

“Why?”

“In case I got to defend myself, why do you think?”

“Okay.” Virgil reached into his pocket, handed the knife over. Horace slipped it into his own pocket, was about to get up, when he saw the trembling in his brother’s eyes. Like Ma, Virgil got the fits, but if you were lucky and caught them in advance, sometimes you could prevent them.

“Hey, Virge, I think I’ll hang here with you for a bit and have some pie, too.”

“Really?”

“Yeah, I can serve the papers later.” Horace raised his hand for the waitress again. He hated these fits Ma and Virgil got and was afraid someday he’d be afflicted, but so far it hadn’t happened. He didn’t understand them, what brought them on or what made them go away. They didn’t hurt Ma so much anymore, she’d learn to roll with them and she recovered pretty quick, but once one got a hold of Virgil, he’d thrash like a mad dog, then, when it was over, he’d sleep for a day. The trick with Virge was to catch it beforehand and calm him down, sometimes that kept them at bay.

The girl across the street just got a reprieve, but maybe not. She’d been in there awhile, maybe she’d be there awhile longer, maybe she’d still be there after Virge calmed down.

Chapter Three

Maggie took another look at herself in the mirror behind the bar. She made a comb of her fingers, brushed her hair back. Her lower lip quivered. She was about to cry again. She steeled herself against it.

“Maggie, I need some help.” Dick put a margarita down in front of the woman sitting next to her. “That old woman.” He nodded to a Japanese woman standing at the far side of the bar, next to the man in the suit. “She can’t speak English.”

“I’ll see what she wants.”

“And I’ll love you forever.”

“You say that to all the girls.”

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