Death of a Blue Movie Star (36 page)

Read Death of a Blue Movie Star Online

Authors: Jeffery Deaver

Michael Schmidt, who thought he was God and destroyed a fine actress’s chance for no good reason.

Arthur Tucker, who stole Shelly’s play after she’d died.

Rune wondered why descent seems the natural tendency, why it’s so much harder to go upward, the way Shelly was trying to do. Like there’s some huge gravity of darkness.

She liked that,
gravity of darkness
, and she wrote it down in her notebook, thinking she wished she had a script to use the phrase in.

If she hadn’t died would Shelly ever have climbed out of the Underworld like Eurydice?

Rune dozed and woke at sunset, the orange disk squeezing into the earth over the Jersey flatlands, rippling in the angle of the dense atmosphere. She stretched and took a shower, and ate a cheese sandwich for dinner.

Afterward, she walked to a pay phone and called Sam Healy.

“I got fired.” She told him the story.

“Oh, no. I’m sorry.”

“My one regret is that we didn’t ship it to the networks,” she joked. “Can you imagine?
Lusty Cousins
on an ad during prime time? Boy, would that’ve been wholly audacious.”

“You need any money?”

“Aw, this is no big deal. I get fired all the time. I think I get fired more often than people hire me. Probably doesn’t work that way but it seems so.”

“Well, you want to go out and get drunk?”

“Naw, I’ve got plans,” she said. “Let’s make it tomorrow.”

“Fair enough. My treat.”

They hung up and Rune took a couple dollars in quarters out of her pocket, called directory assistance.

She needed most of the coins. It took her quite a while to find a dance school that promised to make her an expert Texas two-stepper in just one night.

The place didn’t exactly live up to that promise. It took a while to convince them she wasn’t interested in signing up for a series of Latin dances or the “Chic to Chic” Fred and Ginger special.

But after the lessons got under way she picked up the moves pretty fast and she figured she could hold her own. The next night she surprised Healy by showing up at his place in a gingham skirt and blue blouse.

“I look like Raggedy Ann. I’ll never be able to show myself south of Bleecker Street—I hope you’re happy.”

They went to his Texas club again and danced for a couple hours, Rune impressing the hell out of him with
what she’d learned. Then an amateur caller got on stage and started an impromptu square dance.

“Enough is enough,” Rune said. They sat down and started working on a plate of baby back ribs.

At eleven a couple of cops Healy knew came in and in a half hour the place was so crowded that they all left and went to another bar, a dive of a place on Greenwich Avenue. She expected them to talk about guns and dead criminals and bloodstains but they were just normal people who argued about the mayor and Washington and movies.

She had a great time and forgot they were cops until one time there was a truck backfire out on the street and three of them (Sam wasn’t one) half-reached for their hips, then a second later, when they understood it was just a truck, dropped their hands, never missing a beat of the conversation and not laughing about what they’d done.

But that made Rune think of Tommy and that reminded her of Nicole and the evening went sour. She was happy to get home and into bed.

The next day she applied for unemployment at the office on Sixth Avenue, where she knew most of the clerks by name. The lines weren’t long—she took that as a barometer reading of a good economy. She was out by noon.

Over the next week she saw Healy three times. She sensed he wanted to see her more but one of her mother’s warnings was about men on the rebound. And getting too involved with an
older
man on the rebound didn’t seem real wise at all.

Still, she missed him and on Thursday when she called she got a pleasing jolt when he said, “Tomorrow’s my day off, how about we go—”

“Blow things up?”

“I was going to say, have a picnic someplace.”

“Oh, yeah! I’d love to get out of the city. The streets
smell like wet dogs and it’s supposed to hit ninety-seven. The only thing is I’ve got this interview at a restaurant.”

He said, “You’re making a movie about a restaurant?”

“Sam, I’m applying for a job as a waitress.”

“Postpone it for a day. We’ll get out of the city.”

“You’re twisting my arm.”

“I’ll call you tomorrow with details.”

“I haven’t said yes.”

“Tomorrow.”

He hung up.

“Yes,” she said.

CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

Kent was a small town in Putnam County, sixty-seven miles north of New York City, near the Connecticut state line. The population was 3,700.

The town hadn’t changed much since the day it was incorporated in 1798. It was too far from New York or Albany or Hartford for commuters, though a few people drove to and from Poughkeepsie for work at Vassar. The residents mostly made their money from farming and tourism and the staples of small-town economics: insurance, real estate and building trades.

Travel books about the area generally didn’t mention Kent. The
Mobil Guide
gave the restaurant in the Travel-lodge near the Interstate a couple of stars. The Farming Museum got mentioned. So did a spring flower festival.

It was a quiet place.

Outside of the small downtown, about a mile from the last of the seven Protestant churches in Kent, was an old rock quarry. The huge pit did double duty: a Saturday
night hangout for teenage boys who had either dates or six-packs of Bud, and an informal shooting range during the day. This afternoon, three men stood at a disintegrating wooden board that served as a table for bench-resting rifles and for holding ammo and targets and extra magazines.

All three were in the NRA-accepted standing firing position—right foot back, parallel to the target, left forward and pointed downrange. They were tall men with shortcut hair sprayed into place. Two of the men had graying hair and were thin. The other, a younger man with black hair, had a beer belly, though his legs were thin and his shoulders broad. They all wore light-colored shoes, light slacks (two pink and one gray) and short-sleeved dress shirts with ties kept in place with a tack or bar. In the shirt pocket of the fatter man was a plastic pen-and-pencil caddy.

They all wore teardrop-shaped shooting sunglasses tinted yellow and made out of impact-resistant glass. In their ears were flesh-colored earplugs.

One thin man and the fat man held Kalashnikov assault rifles, whose clips they had just finished emptying at paper targets 150 feet away. They rested the guns on the ground, muzzles up, and began picking up the empty brass cartridges, which they would reload themselves on the weekend.

The third man held a square, ungainly Israeli Uzi, which he fired in two-second bursts. The muzzle ended in a ten-inch sound suppressor, and the gun made a sound like a hushed chain saw.

All three guns were fully automatic and therefore in violation of federal and state law. The suppressor was a separate offense. None of the men, however, had ever even seen an agent from the FBI or BATF in this part of the county and they weren’t any more secretive with these
guns than they were with their favorite .30-06 deer rifle or Remington side-by-side.

The man with the Uzi aimed carefully and emptied the clip.

He took his earplug out and said, “Cease fire,” although the others had already laid the guns on the bench, muzzles downrange. There were just the three of them present but they’d been raised in the protocol of firearms and adhered to formalities like this—the same as when they’d arrived, an hour before, and this man had glanced at the others and said, “Ready on the left, ready on the right, ready on the firing line … commence fire.”

These were rituals they respected and enjoyed.

He set down the Uzi and went downrange to pick up targets. When he walked back to the shooting stations they picked up their guns, pulled out the clips, opened the bolts, put the safeties on and started toward the parking lot. The guns disappeared into the trunk of a Cadillac El Dorado.

The ride took only ten minutes. The car pulled into the black gravel driveway of a white colonial, which had been built with money from the man’s insurance business. The three men walked around a fieldstone path to the entrance of a den. Inside the large room, decorated with dark green carpeting and wormwood walls, they rolled a gray tarpaulin out on the floor and laid the guns on the thick canvas. Battered metal cleaning kits appeared and the sweet smell of solvent filled the room.

In thirty seconds the guns were stripped down into their component parts and the three men were swabbing the bores with patches threaded through eyelets in the tips of aluminum rods. They lovingly cleaned their weapons.

One of the thin men, John, looked at his watch and walked to the desk—this was his house—and sat down. In seven seconds the phone rang and he answered. He
hung up and returned to the blanket. He began to rub oil on the sling of his Kalashnikov.

“Gabriel?” asked Harris, the dark-haired man, the fatter one.

John nodded.

“Has he figured out what happened?”

“Yes, he has,” John said.

The third man, William, said, “Who climbed on our bandwagon?”

“It seems there was a man who wanted that girl killed, the one in those filthy movies. He planted the second bomb. He was killed by the police.”

“The press thinks he was behind all the bombings?” William asked.

“It seems so. To cover up what he did.”

“Media,” said Harris. “Blessing and a curse.”

John finished assembling the Kalashnikov, closed the bolt, put the safety on and stacked the gun on a rosewood rack next to a Thompson submachine gun, a Remington pump shotgun, an Enfield .303, an M1 carbine and a .30-06 bolt-action. “What do you two think?”

Harris said, “All Gabriel’s work is wasted if they think someone else did the bombings…. You know, though, it
is
a good smoke screen. There’s no pressure on him now. It’s a good thing we picked up the count with the passage about the third angel, after the second bomb.”

William used a tiny periscope to study the bore of his gun, looking for any bits of gunpowder he’d missed. “We can’t just stop. Brother Harris is right.”

“No. We can’t just stop,” John said slowly. He poured water into a Mr. Coffee and began to brew a pot of decaf. Like the others here he felt caffeine was a sinful stimulant. “But I’m not sure I agree about Gabe. The police aren’t going to ignore the other bombings. The experts will finish their reports, and they’ll find out that someone else was behind them.”

Harris said, “Gabriel will stay to see things through. He won’t hesitate to sacrifice himself.”

John said, “But he shouldn’t. He’s too valuable.”

“Then let’s give up on New York,” William said. “Send him to Los Angeles. Hollywood. I’ve said all along we should have begun there. Nobody knows Gabriel in California. All his connections are in Manhattan.”

“With all respect,” John said, “I think we’ve got to finish what we started.” He spoke softly, as if it pained him to disagree.

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