The Wrong Goodbye (30 page)

Read The Wrong Goodbye Online

Authors: Chris F. Holm

Tags: #Urban Life, #Fantasy, #Fiction

  I'll tell you, for a blind chick, she could
move
. One second, she's stretched out like a housecat in a patch of sunlight, and the next, I'm flat on my back. The table that had until recently separated us was now upturned, and cards lay scattered across the floor. One platform heel ground against my Adam's apple. And that arm she'd draped so casually over the chair back had returned holding a sawed-off shotgun that, unless I was much mistaken, had until recently been Velcroed to her chair back.
  "Listen to me, you son of a bitch – you ain't taking my Gio from me again, you hear? You tell your people he's
my
man, and hell can't have him." 
  Oh. Good. He told her, then.
  I tried to argue. To explain I wasn't here to collect him. But that was kind of hard, seeing as how she'd stuffed the barrel of the shotgun in my mouth. So instead, I settled for thrashing around like an idiot and making frantic
mmmmfthftfhing
noises. 
  "Damn
right
you should be scared. Now, I understand your kind can't die, but you feel pain the same as anybody else. So I want you to remember something before you come sniffing around here for my man again, OK?"
  I
mmmmed
some more. I guess she took it as a good enough response.
  "I want you to remember what buckshot tastes like."
  I watched her finger tighten on the trigger. Felt a sudden rush of warm dry air, cutting through the chilly air-conditioned shop like a knife. Something hit the ground behind me, and then the gun went off, my world disintegrating in a sudden roar of thunder. 
  It took me a couple minutes to realize I wasn't dead. A couple more before I could bring myself to open my eyes. My face stung like hell, but a quick check indicated everything was more or less where it was supposed to be. The left side of my face was pretty scraped up, and my ears were bleeding, too, but all in all, a shotgun blast to the face wasn't as bad as I'd anticipated.
  Then I saw the crater in the floor beside me – ruined tile and pitted subfloor – and realized she'd missed.
  I tried to piece together what had happened. Saw the shop door still swinging open, two paper bags of groceries lying just inside. One was upright, and stuffed to overflowing. The other was on its side, its contents scattered across the floor. A pool of milk spread slowly out around it like a photo-negative of someone bleeding out in an old black-and-white horror movie.
  Lady Theresa was lying on her back beside me, her shotgun out of reach. She seemed content to let it stay there. Of course, it's not like she had a choice, what with Gio sitting on her chest.
  The boy looked good, I'd give him that. Maybe being on the lam suited him. He'd ditched his funeral duds, swapping out his suit for a pair of navy blue Bermuda shorts and a silk bowling shirt. Looked like he'd had himself a shower and a shave as well. Lady Theresa, however, looked a little worse for being tackled. Her hair wrap had come undone, setting loose a good two feet of unruly Afro. Her sunglasses sat crooked on her head, leaving one pale white eye exposed. And she looked
pissed
. From all the gesticulating the two of them were doing, it was clear they were having a discussion, and a heated one at that. But my ears were ringing like Notre Dame at Christmas, so it took me some serious concentrating before I could piece together what they were saying. 
  "– I mean Jesus fuck, Ter, what the shit were you
thinking?"
  "I was
thinking
I was saving your fat ass, darlin'. How was I supposed to know this guy was friendly?" 
  "I told you keep an eye out for him!"
  "No, you told me to keep an eye out for some dude in a suit all beat to shit. This guy strolled in all healthy-like in jeans."
  "Yeah, well, thanks to you, he looks halfway back to beat to shit."
  "I'M FINE," I said, from like a thousand miles away.
  "Fine, huh?" asked Gio, smirking. "Then why the hell're you yelling?"
  "I'M YELLING?"
  "Yeah."
  "AM I STILL?"
  "A bit, dude." 
  "OH. DID YOU MISS ME?"
  "For the sake of politeness, let's say yeah. Hey," he said, nodding toward the still-upright bag of gro eries, "you wanna beer?"
  "GOOD LORD YES."
29.
  
  
  
"So," I said, washing down a bite of chips and salsa with a swig of Dos Equis, "when'd you realize you had the sight? Uh, the ability to divine, I mean," I added lamely.
  Theresa laughed. "You gotta loosen up, honey – ain't no need to dance around the fact I'm blind. I mean geez, you try to shoot a guy
once,
and he gets all worried about offending you." 
  "Funny, that," I said.
  We were sitting in the back room of Theresa's shop, me and Gio on a thrift-store dinette set, Theresa lounging in an oversized beanbag chair in the corner. The room was draped all over with richly colored fabric just like the front room of the shop. An oversized lava lamp sat in one corner, next to an air mattress and a pile of blankets. A galley kitchen with a mini-fridge and a toaster oven occupied one wall. The sink was piled with dishes, and a pair of toothbrushes lay next to it. Looked to me like Gio had been crashing here, and his woman with him.
  My hearing was back to maybe fifty percent, and a few minutes' cleaning up my face in the shop's restroom revealed only minor cuts and scrapes beneath the blood. I'd emerged to discover Gio'd laid out a snackfood feast, as well as the promised beers. I hadn't realized until I saw the food how hungry I was. And after twenty minutes of shoving food into my face, I'd only just begun to slow. Guess skim really takes it out of you. No wonder Danny had looked like shit. 
  "As for my ability to sense what lies behind the curtain," Theresa continued theatrically, "I guess somehow I've always known." 
  Gio snorted. 
  "Something funny?" I asked.
  "Just the fact she's fulla shit," he replied. "Ter can't see the goddamn future any more than she can see your hand in front of her face."
  "You're kidding me."
  "He's not," Theresa said.
  "But the cards–"
  "– are marked," she finished. "You notch the edge ever so slightly with your nail – usually suit on the right-hand side, card value on the left. Something my daddy taught me when I was a kid. Got me kicked out of Binion's more than once."
  "More than once? I was under the impression once you get kicked out of a casino, you're never let back in."
  Theresa smiled. "That's mostly true," she said. "But the first time they kicked me out, I was a lanky boy of twenty-three. One of the benefits of starting out a Terrence and becoming a Theresa is you get a do-over on the mistakes you make in youth. Or a second chance to make them all over again." 
  Ah, so that explained her height, her voice – her broad, well-muscled frame. But right then, I was far more curious about the hand she'd dealt me before the shooting started, and the reading she'd doled out. "The cards you laid down today – did you pick them?" 
  "Nope," she said. "Never do, and today's deal was no different; they came up how they came up. All I did was read 'em."
  "Then it's time to burn those cards – they hit a little close to home for my taste. If
you
didn't select those cards, something else did, and whatever that
something else
is, your deck – and by extension, you – are now on its radar. Even if you
weren't
harboring a fugitive from hell," I said, nodding toward Gio, "that kind of attention is best avoided."
  Theresa shivered at the thought, crossing her arms and hugging them tight to her chest. "You got it, darlin'. If I'da thought for a second any of this shit was real, I'da stayed good and far away. Fact is, my daddy was a confidence man, and in a way, I suppose, I was taking after him when I opened this place. He always said the mark of a good grift is folks walk away feeling like they're the ones getting something out of it, and by that measure, this gig of mine is as good a grift as you'll ever find. Folks want to believe. They want the comfort of knowing there's a plan for them. But believin's hard. You can't just tell 'em what they want to hear – you gotta make a show of it. My pop, he was all about blending in, looking like the marks he set his sights on. For me, that ain't never been an option. But in this business, being peculiar's more an asset than a liability. Folks find Otherness mysterious, hard to fathom; it's that mystery that helps 'em believe. And baby," she said, extending her arms as if inviting appraisal, "if you want Other, I ain't nothing but. But that's all this gig has ever been: a grift. If I could see the future even a little, you can be damn sure I would've ducked when that shitfuck decided to break a bottle across my face."
  "Jesus," I said. "That's how you got your scars?" 
  Theresa nodded, her massive, parted Afro bobbing as she did so. "Once upon a time, I was a showgirl at The Flamingo."
  Gio interjected. "Topless dancer, she means."
  "Funny – you never seemed too hung up on my title back then," she said. And then, to me: "It's where we met. Gio was a regular. This was, of course, before he had boobs of his own to look at."
  "Hey, gimme a break," Gio said. "I didn't pick this body – Sam did. And believe me, hon, these things ain't half as fun as yours."
  She arched an eyebrow, and then laughed.
  "Anyways," she continued, "it used to be they'd walk high-rollers through the dressing room, introduce 'em to the girls. One of the perks of a big bank account, I guess. One night, they bring this fella through – finance minister for some Podunk country I'd never heard of – and he and I get to talking. Before me and Gio got together, this was. After the show, we headed back to his suite, have a couple bottles of Dom, fool around a little. I thought we had a lovely time. And so did he, until he popped backstage on my night off to ask after me, and some catty-ass bitch who'd been coveting my spot on the weekend show for months spilled the beans about my former dick-having. Two nights later, I'm walking out to my car after a performance, and
BAM
– lights out. Crazy fucker would've killed me, too, if Gio hadn't seen." 
  "So what happened?" I asked.
  "I took care of it," Gio replied.
  Theresa said, "Took care of
him
, you mean."
  "I took care of
both
of you. Believe me, if it were up to me, I wouldn'ta done him so quick. But what was I gonna do – let you bleed out while I took my time on him?" Then, to me: "I snapped his fucking neck right quick, and then I stuffed him in my trunk and drove Theresa to the ER."
  "Sounds reasonable to me," I said, and I meant it. In life, I wasn't what you'd call a violent man. But I learned the hard way that even a man not prone to violence will kill if it's to protect the woman he loves. Even if it means that woman can never look at him the same again. In that sense, Gio's a hell of a lot luckier than me.
  "Damn right it does," he said. "'Course, the fucker got pretty ripe out in the parking lot, on account of I stayed by Theresa's bedside for the better part of three days. But we been together ever since. A shame I had to ditch that car out in the desert along with the body, though – that rotting bag of shit managed to take Ter's sight
and
ruin a cherry '73 Mustang. I'm talking Mach 1 fastback in Grabber Orange with a spoiler and a side-stripe. Better coffin than that assweasel ever deserved."
  "Boys and their cars," Theresa said. You could damn near
hear
her sightless eyes rolling behind their tinted lenses. But she was smiling when she said it – a wan smile tinged with sadness, but a smile nonetheless.
  "OK, I've got to ask," I said. "You told me you don't believe in any of this supernatural stuff, and yet when some stranger comes walking in here claiming to be your dead boyfriend, you welcome him with open arms. How the hell does
that
work?"
  "My dear Samuel, are you of all people going to get all hung up on looks? The way Gio tells it, this time next week, you won't look like this at all. You'll be halfway around the world – another body, another job. And yet you'll still be you. I'll admit, when Gio walked into the shop, I was skeptical, but blind or not, it didn't take me long talking to him before I saw the truth. Flesh and bone ain't who you are – it's what's within that counts."
  I hoped to hell she was right – that this time next week, I was still somewhere in the world. Right that sec, though, I wasn't counting on it.
  "Listen, Sam," Gio said, "not that I mind hanging out and shooting the shit, but don't we kinda have a job to do?"
  Theresa sighed. "Gio, do you really think Sam had forgotten why he came? The boy was just trying to be polite."
  "We've come far enough, me and Sam, he oughta know he don't gotta wear kid gloves with me." 
  "If you think he was doing it for you, then you're even thicker than that body you're borrowing. He was doing it for
me
. See, Sam here plans on taking you away from me, and he don't expect you to come back. Not rushing you is his way of letting me have a few more minutes with you before I lose you all over again. Only there's one thing Sam didn't count on."
  All the sudden, I hoped to hell that beanbag chair wasn't hiding another sawed-off. "Yeah?" I asked, resisting the urge to duck. "What's that?" 
  "I'm coming with you." 
  Gio balked. "The hell you are!"
  "I'd like to see you try to stop me, love. You forget, I know where you're going. You leave me here, I'll only follow after."
  I scowled. "Wait – what do you mean, you know where we're going?
I
don't even know where we're going."
  But Theresa didn't reply to me, instead saying to Gio: "You're up, love. It's time to tell him about the crows."
 
"I been doing some poking around, in case you made it back. Thought I'd see if I could track down this Danny character."

Other books

The Heart Is Strange by Berryman, John
Dreaming of Jizzy by Y. Falstaff
Family Britain, 1951-1957 by David Kynaston
A Future for Three by Rachel Clark
Protect Me by Lacey Black