Is Fat Bob Dead Yet? (22 page)

Read Is Fat Bob Dead Yet? Online

Authors: Stephen Dobyns

“Oh, thank goodness, thank goodness. The dog trucks are out, and they're gobbling up beagles all over town. I've seen fistfuls of fur in the gutters!”

“Gobbling?”

“They steal them from right under your nose and sell them to midnight labs for research. They make them smoke nonfiltered cigarettes! You must, must,
must
put your trust in FBNA! Your donation will be your pup's lifeblood.”

“What's FBNA?”

“Free Beagles from Nicotine Addiction, Inc. It's all that stands between your pup and years of torment.”

Angelina puts up a good fight, but at last she offers fifty bucks, and she might have given more if she weren't saving up for her face-lift, et cetera. Anyway, she's already contributed fifty bucks to Prom Queens Anonymous.

Vaughn reads from his script. “Am I to understand that your love for Magsie is worth only fifty dollars? Your dear pup has given you thousands of hours of love and devotion, and your fifty-dollar pledge adds up to a hundredth of a penny for each of those hours. To my mind that's a shocking admission. Tell me, Angelina, do you secretly hate your little dog?”

“Fuck you, you son of a bitch! You're lucky I can't twist your balls off!”

In his work Vaughn has heard this sort of anger before. What he listens for, however, are the choked sobs beneath the shouting. And he thinks he hears them.

“Please, Angelina, no personal attacks. It's Magsie's welfare that matters here. We need to speak calmly. What about one hundred?”

“It's fifty or nothing, shithead! Unless you want a motorcycle. I got a bunch of them, all Harleys. I'll sell you one cheap.”

We shouldn't think that Angelina is a fan of motorcycles. Her life with Fat Bob has led to a serious hatred of Harleys, since she suspects he prefers the touch of his Fat Bob to her own caresses, which is probably true. But Fat Bob is at the edge of bankruptcy. He owes money to lots of people. And, as said before, Angelina holds the titles to the Harleys in the garage on Montauk Avenue. She doesn't hold these titles out of kindness; it's simple leverage. It lets her make Fat Bob jump through hoops.

“I'm sorry,” says Vaughn, “we don't do merchandise.”

They haggle some more. At last Didi signals to Vaughn to accept the fifty bucks. Time is money, and the conversation is lasting too long.

Then, before Angelina hangs up, she asks, “Tell me, d'you know Eartha Kitt?”

Vaughn Monroe rumbles with a sound comparable to distant, stampeding cattle. “The name's familiar, but I like male singers best, tenors and baritones. Does she live around here?”

“I'm beginning to wonder.”

—

T
he day progresses. Connor has no luck in finding Fidget, so by late afternoon he's picked up the mail from the P.O. and stopped at a dozen houses where people have promised sums ranging from fifty to one hundred dollars. As said before, these actions spike Connor's anxiety to lunar levels, since each could lead to his arrest. But every so often Didi has called with another bunch of names. Soon Connor will head back to the Winnebago, but now he has time for one last visit: Angelina Rossi.

The name rings a bell, but Connor ignores the subliminal warning. And maybe Angelina's house looks familiar, but he's already visited many houses, and at the moment he is busily comparing the attractions of Linda and Céline. Each, to Connor's mind, has trunkloads of allure, so to compare them is serious work.

He hurries up the steps and rings the bell. Again he experiences a subliminal discomfort. There's the metallic rattle of locks being unfastened, and the door opens.

“You!” barks Angelina.

The scales fall from Connor's eyes, and he squeezes his expression into one of happy incredulity. “What a glad surprise!” His smile hovers at the cusp of lockjaw.

“I just gave you money yesterday!” says Angelina through the screen. “You're supposed to work for Prom Queens Anonymous. What's going on?”

Connor knows if he bolts down the street, Angelina will pursue him. Were he a dog, he'd roll over and pee a little. He laughs gaily. “Oh, I see your mistake. You think I'm actually employed by PQA, Inc. No, no, no. To save money for their prime target, these groups, with others, have formed a consortium to see to the gathering and distribution of funds. Occasionally I visit the same house five or six times.”

Angelina believes none of this. “And what about Eartha Kitt and Vaughn Monroe? What kind of trick is that?”

“Charities employ many voices: Julie London, the Big Bopper, Lupe Fiasco. As for me, I don't like it, but management claims it lifts the comfort level of donors.”

“So it's a trick!”

“No, no, no!” Connor feels sweat forming on his forehead on this otherwise cool day. “It's like a beautiful woman wearing perfume. Does she need the perfume? Can you call it a trick? Of course not. It only adds a touch of magnitude to the package.”

Angelina keeps lobbing shells of grievance, and Connor dodges them. At last he says, “Do you have the check right now?”

Angelina looks steely, and Connor looks benign. In fact, Angelina tries to look generous, because she's formulated a plan, while Connor tries not to show panic. Each sees the deception of the other.

“I don't have it right now,” says Angelina, “but I'm expecting it soon. Would you like to come in and wait?”

Connor's benign expression acquires hints of terror. No way will he enter Angelina's house. He glances at his watch and makes a sad face. “I have several more appointments. Could I come back around seven?”

“I've just baked brownies,” says Angelina, who has never baked anything sweet in her life. “I'm sure they're still warm. I bet you'd like a couple with a cup of coffee.” She pushes open the door.

“We're on a pretty tight schedule. Save the brownies for later. Shall we make it seven o'clock?” He tries to back down the steps without falling.

We don't know if Connor's education included the tale of Medusa with her rattlesnake ringlets and knack of turning men to stone, but he suspects Angelina's skills fall in that area of expertise. He also knows she intends to call the police. He walks quickly to the Mini-Cooper, almost a run. He'll deposit the checks he's picked up during the day in the FBNA account and return to the Winnebago.

—

C
onnor is driving back to Brewster when his cell phone tweedles. It's Vasco.

“What the fuck are you doing, Zeco?”

Connor imagines many possible answers, but he says, “Driving back to the Winnebago.” It's sunset, and the sky is red behind him.

“Not now, you silly fuck. What do you mean going over to Céline's? You got to stay away from there. You'll get yourself hurt. Chucky's furious.”

Connor is more angered at being called a “silly fuck” than interested in why Chucky might be furious.

“She invited me. She's upset.”

“You think she's a grieving widow? Sal Nicoletti's name is Danny Barbarella, and he's from Detroit, like you said. The whole thing's an FBI setup. Céline's an escort hired to play a part. No wife, no kids, it's all bullshit. Stay away from her.”

“She called, and I went over. That's all. I feel sorry for her.”

“You're caught in something too big for you. Shall I tell her you're a cheap little charity con man? How's she going to feel when she learns you're the one who outed Danny? Céline stood to make a good chunk of money from this charade. How'll she like it when she hears you fucked it up?”

Connor hears slot machines jangling in the background and doesn't answer. He wants to think his brother is lying, but he doesn't know why Vasco should lie.

“There're guys that don't like you, and Chucky's at the top of the list. He hurts people. It's his job. He wants you to find Fidget and to stay away from Céline. You go to her house again, bad things will happen. I'm just passing on the message.”

NINETEEN

M
anny drives down Eugene O'Neill Drive, three lanes heading into town. It's Thursday afternoon. He and Vikström are coming from Lisowski's Hog Hurrah. Their disappointment isn't as bad as broken toothpicks in a toddler's Christmas stocking, but it's disappointment nonetheless. As for Eugene O'Neill, Manny believes he was a former New London mayor, but he's not sure. He could ask Vikström, who knows that sort of thing, but he doesn't want to give Vikström the opportunity to be right. Better to be wrong and silent than to see Vikström smirk. Merely the chance of this, for Manny, is an irritant.

“I just can't fuckin' believe,” says Manny, “that Lisowski is banging Angelina. He didn't even have any black-and-blue marks.”

“Maybe they're still at the hand-holding stage,” says Vikström.

“You kidding? She's a crocodile. They don't nibble—they gulp. One bite and he's gone. He's lucky to be alive. She's walking
vagina dentata
.”

“Vagina what?”

“Pussy with teeth. It's Latin—the Romans had it. That's why their empire fell.”

Manny's brain is moving too fast for Vikström. “Has it occurred to you that Lisowski might have busted into Burns Insurance and stolen Fat Bob's computer?”

“Say more.”
Uh-oh, here's Vikström being right again,
Manny thinks.

“It happened Monday night or early Tuesday morning when most people thought Fat Bob was dead. Angelina might want the computer to see if Fat Bob had any hidden money or other stuff she could get from him. She wouldn't break in herself, but if she and Lisowski were ‘a number,' she might get him to do it. Like, who else would do it?”

Manny is silent, then says, “Fat Bob might do it himself to hide his tracks, or a thug from the casino might do it to see if Bob had any ‘hidden money,' as you say.”

“Sure, those are possibilities, but Lisowski had already shot up Fat Bob's Fat Bob. He might have broken into Burns's place around then or later.”

“So how do we hang it on him?”

“That's the trouble, I don't know. But if we get a hold of his pistol and ballistics can tie it to the shells we found around the shot-up Fat Bob, then that's a start.”

“If, if, if,” says Manny. He hates disappointment. It's often with him twenty-four hours a day. So when it shows up, he takes it out on Vikström, his special target.

Vikström, on the other hand, meets disappointment philosophically, or what he calls philosophically, meaning they'll find their answers soon or, conversely, they won't. And in two or three days, the disappointing event or person or fact will be buried under the weight of a dozen new cases.

Looking out the passenger window, Vikström thinks that proving Lisowski shot up Fat Bob's Fat Bob would mean getting search warrants for the Hog Hurrah and Lisowski's house to look for the pistol. But their supervisor, Detective Sergeant Masters, would never sign off on it. He hears her saying,
Is this another one of your hunches, Detective?
And he imagines her sarcasm dripping like fat from a cheap steak. Anyway, the pistol might be at Angelina's—or simply elsewhere—and they'll never find it.

At the moment the detectives are on their way to talk to Angelina, which does nothing to improve their mood. They again want to ask her about Fat Bob and where he might be found. And they may ask about Lisowski and his pistol. Vikström believes that Angelina won't be as angry as she was the other night, which will make her easier to talk to. So the visit is Vikström's idea. Manny has no wish to see Angelina again. His annoyance with Vikström is like semi-molten magma bubbling near the surface.

Out of the blue, Manny says, “I've been meaning to tell you: you don't want to pronounce it like ‘okeyDOkey' or ‘upsy-DAIsy.' It's not like that. Only beginners pronounce it ‘kar-ee-O-kee.' The real pronunciation is ‘KAR-e-o-KEE.' That's how the Japanese pronounce it, and that's how we should pronounce it.”

Vikström feels he's been struck in the head by a sock full of wet sand. Where had this attack come from? “
You
always pronounce it ‘kar-ee-O-kee.'”

“That's because I don't want to be accused of showing off. How's it going to seem if the only ones to pronounce it correctly are me, the Japanese, and maybe a few Koreans? So you've got to start saying it right.”

Vikström begins to protest but asks himself,
Is it really worth it?
“You mean like ‘CARE-e-o-KEY'?”

“That's not bad, but it's still not correct. You got to hit the first syllable like ‘KAR,' more of a
K
sound than hard
C
; and ‘KAR' is pronounced somewhere between ‘KAR' and ‘CARE.' Let's hear you do it.”

Vikström begins to feel sullen, but he gives it a try. “KAR, KAR, KAR!”

“That's good, but not good enough. Say ‘KAR, KAR, KAR!'”

“For Pete's sake, that's what I said!”

“No, you're slipping off the diphthong. Look, don't get pissed I'm trying to help. You'll have to practice it at home till you get it right. Now for the hard part. It's not ‘KAR-e-o-KEY.' It's ‘KAR-e-o-KEEEEE'! Try it.”

“CARE-e-o-KEE!”

“Better, but it won't win no cigar. Hit that last syllable hard.”

Vikström feels trapped in Manny's irritating game as he might feel trapped in a jail cell. “CARE-e-o-KEEE, CARE-e-o-KEEEEE!”

The Subaru has stopped in Angelina Rossi's driveway. Angelina's on the front porch; she looks at Vikström as if he were fighting his way out of his human form into something Martian. She's not sure whether to run into the house and call the police or to pretend that she's suddenly gone deaf and has heard nothing.

Vikström sees Angelina on the porch with her eyes squeezed half shut and her mouth half open. He turns to Manny. He doesn't shout, but he grinds his teeth.

“That's much better,” says Manny, getting out of the car. “We'll do the whole thing again later.”

“Fat fucking chance,” mutters Vikström as Manny slams the car door.

Soon Vikström and Manny stand in Angelina's living room while she hovers in the doorway of the kitchen—a possible escape—and her beagle, Magsie, dances in front of the detectives barking its little heart out. Angelina wears tight jeans and a dark turtleneck sweater—lingering echoes, perhaps, of having been a prom queen.

Vikström's afraid he'll have to kick the dog if it attacks.

Manny says, “We got one of those. Call it Schultzie. Cutest thing in the world.”

Angelina chooses not to be diverted from the main subject. She nods toward Vikström. “Why was that guy screaming in your car?”

Manny holds up a finger. “Not screaming. Shouting. There's a difference.”

Angelina isn't satisfied. “I should call the police and get a conjunction.”

Vikström tries to bend his features into a warm smile. “We'd like to ask a few more questions about Fat Bob. You have any pictures?”

“I burned them, like I told you last time. I burned everything, even burned his jockstrap. Whyn't you lock up the con men who want to steal my pup? The guy was just here for the second fucking time trying to get my money. I just called 911. That's why you showed up, right?”

Manny and Vikström have heard nothing about the 911 call. Manny says, “I was just getting to that. We came personally to make sure you were safe.”

“They called me and called my ex, and we've both got unlisted phones. A woman called about giving money to Prom Queens Anonymous. I Googled the name and couldn't find it. And the guy who called today had a voice like a famous singer.”

“Vaughn Monroe,” says Manny.

Vikström's surprised. “How'd you know?”

Manny chooses not to say. “I've had my eye on him. Were you told to send the money to a post office box in New London?”

Angelina nods. She finds Manny a reliable sort of fellow, unlike the other one.

Vikström feels unsteady on his legs. “How d'you know this stuff?”

Manny shrugs. “Elementary multitasking.”

“The guy who came to the house, I told him to stop by later for my check. That's why I called 911, so you could catch him.”

“Good thinking, but I doubt he'll show. We'll stake out the post office.”

Vikström keeps his mouth shut. Manny and Angelina have exchanged a look, which is not sexual but has marked them as platonic soul mates.

“Can you describe the guy?” asks Manny.

“He was young, tall, and he had a tan—”

“Ah,” interrupts Manny. “We know him—Connor Raposo. Very dangerous. Do you feel safe? We could put you up in a hotel with a guard.”

Manny shows no surprise that once again they've come across the young man with the tan, but Vikström is stunned. He's torn between being impressed and disgusted by his partner. No way could Manny get permission to put Angelina in even a cheap motel. He begins to speak, but he sees that Manny and Angelina are communicating in a nonverbal region somewhere high above him, one from which he's excluded. Maybe it's not a bad thing, Vikström decides.

“I'm okay here.” Angelina opens the door to the hall closet and stands on her tiptoes, reaching into the top shelf. Her tight jeans creak. “I have a weapon.” She pulls down a vicious-looking long stiletto. The detectives feel little surges of adrenaline.

“It's a Chinese folding spike bayonet. Daddy brought it back from Korea. He was a marine. He said I could use it against scumbags.” The bayonet is fifteen inches long and looks like a fat needle.

“That should do the trick,” says Manny.

“I should've grabbed it when that guy came to the door,” says Angelina, “but I didn't want to turn my back on him. I could've stuck him.”

Manny and Angelina again look fondly at one another, but again it's platonic. It's a beagle owner's kind of fondness.

Vikström, on the other hand, feels a burst of sympathy for Connor. Maybe
he
can't picture Connor stuck with a Chinese bayonet and bleeding all over his black Bruno Magli slip-ons, but
we
picture it well enough.

“So where can we find your ex-husband?” says Vikström, feeling impatient.

Turning in unison, Manny and Angelina give Vikström identical looks of annoyance; when they turn back to one another, their features soften.

“Tell me,” says Manny, “what are your feelings about karaoke?”

“No!” shouts Vikström. “What about Fat Bob and the guy with the tan?!”

Angelina ignores him. “Really, I've never tried it, but I've always thought it looked wonderful. My ex, the fuck, didn't like music.”

“What a pity,” says Manny. “My partner doesn't like music either.” Angelina and Manny assume identical frowns.

“These partnerships look so good at the beginning,” says Angelina.

“Say, you know what?” asks Manny, as if he's just discovered antimatter. “They got karaoke apps on smartphones. I got one right here.” Manny digs an iPhone out of his back pocket. “We could try a song. It would get you started!”

“Oh, I'd be too embarrassed.” Angelina blushes. It's probably her first blush since junior high school.

Vikström stands in the entryway. He's appalled.

Manny jabs buttons on his phone. “It'll just take a second. You say you like Vaughn Monroe?”

Angelina doesn't deny it.

“The words'll scroll past on the screen. Sorry the speaker's so shitty.” Manny holds the phone in front of Angelina's nose. “See? Here it is. We'll sing together.”

Angelina leans forward. Though shy, she doesn't want to miss this chance. The music starts; the words appear. Manny and Angelina stand so close that Manny's right ear vanishes within her tangles of black hair.

“An old cowpoke went ridin' out one dark and windy day.

Upon a ridge he rested as he went along his way.

When all at once a mighty herd of red-eyed cows he saw,

A-plowin' through the ragged skies and up a cloudy draw. . . .”

Vikström backs against the front door. He's afraid he'll shoot them both out of psychotic aggravation. We know what happens with temporary lunacy. People get weird. Angelina's voice is a high soprano. It's not bad, but it's untaught. When she strains for the high notes, her face looks like a bruised fist.

Manny turns toward his partner and winks. Vikström is confused. Then he realizes that what seemed Manny's madness is in fact strategy. He's concocted the whole charade, standing arm in arm with Angelina, caterwauling. He's softening her up and driving Vikström nuts at the same time.

But Vikström wants no part of it. He buttons his coat. “Finish this quick. I'll wait in the car.”

Sitting in the shotgun seat of the Subaru, Vikström rests his head against the headrest and puts on his dark glasses—a cheap pair with heavy tortoiseshell frames whose lenses distort the world as completely as an antique pane of glass. The afternoon sun gives a little vibrancy to his thinning blond hair, but, like much else, it's an illusion.

Vikström digs out his cell phone and calls his fellow detectives, Herta Spiegel and Moss Jackson, who are supposed to be looking for Fidget. But Herta doesn't pick up, and Moss has called in sick. He's got a bad case of psychosomatic flu.

That Manny was trying to drive him nuts is, for Vikström, no surprise. In fact, if a day passed
without
Manny's trying to drive him nuts, that would be—Vikström pauses at the brink of metaphor—something to write home about. But it's only a surprise if Vikström thinks of Manny as a police detective. His conduct is surprising for a cop. But is it surprising for a karaokean, a practitioner of the art of karaoke?

Such is Vikström's idle thought. The sun through the windshield is warm, and Vikström has reached one of life's little forks in the road: nap on one side, cogitation on the other. So if Manny's behavior is unsurprising for a karaokean, it suggests his behavior is personality-driven rather than his personality being behavior-driven. If personality is the cause and not the effect, then this is a whole new understanding. And what seems clear—and this is the target of Vikström's thought—is that personalities are flexible. One can pick and choose. One can be a cop one day and a phony songster the next. At any moment one may have a number of personalities vying for one's attention.

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