Page 17 of Skin Tight

“And you’ve been an absolute peach about it,” said Murdock. “Fact, I almost forgot why we came in the first place.”

  “Yeah,” said Detective Joe Salazar, “the questions we got, you can’t really answer. Thanks just the same.”

  Murdock slid the chair back to the corner. “See, we need to talk to Rip Van Rambo here. So I think you’d better go.” He smiled for the first time. “And I apologize for that wisecrack about the Kotex. Not very professional, I admit.”

  “It was tampons,” Joe Salazar said.

  “Whatever.”

  Christina Marks said, “I’m not leaving this room. This man is recovering from a serious gunshot wound and you shouldn’t disturb him.”

  “We spoke to his doctor—”

  “You’re lying.”

  “Okay, we put in a call. The guy never called back.”

  Salazar walked up to the hospital bed and said, “He don’t look so bad. Anyway, three weeks is plenty of time. Wake him up, Johnny.”

  “Have it your way,” Christina said. She got a legal pad from her shoulder bag, uncapped a felt-tip pen, and sat down, poised to write.

  “Now what the hell are you doing?” Salazar said.

  “Forget about her,” Murdock said. He leaned close to Stranahan’s face and sang, “Mi-ick? Mick, buddy? Rise and shine.”

  Stranahan growled sleepily, blowing a mouthful of stale, hot breath directly into Murdock’s face.

  “Holy Christ,” the detective said, turning away.

  Salazar said, “Johnny, I swear he’s awake.” He cupped his hand at Stranahan’s ear and shouted: “Hey, fuckwad, you awake?”

  “Knock it off,” Christina said.

  “I know how you can tell,” Salazar went on. “Grab his dick. If he’s asleep, he won’t do nothing. If he’s awake, he’ll jump ten feet out of his frigging bed.”

  Murdock said, “Aw, you’re crazy.”

  “You think he’d let one of us grab his schlong if he was wide awake? I’m telling you, Johnny, it’s a sure way to find out.”

  “Okay, you do it.”

  “Nuh-uh, we flip a coin.”

  “Screw you, Joe. I ain’t touching the man’s privates. The county doesn’t pay me enough.”

  Stranahan was lying there, thinking: Thattaboy, Johnny, stick to the book.

  From the corner Christina said, “Lay a finger on him, I’ll see that Mr. Stranahan sues the living hell out of both of you. When he wakes up.”

  “Not that old line,” Salazar said with a laugh.

  She said, “Beat the shit out of some jerk on the street, that’s one thing. Grab a man’s sexual organs while he’s lying unconscious in a hospital bed—try to get the union worked up about that. You guys just kiss your pensions good-bye.”

  Murdock shot Christina Marks a bitter look. “When he wakes up, you be sure to tell him something. Tell him we know he drowned his ex-wife, so don’t be surprised if we show up in Stiltsville with a waterproof warrant. Tell him he’d be smart to sell that old house, too, case a storm blows it down while he’s off at Raiford.”

  With secretarial indifference, Christina jotted every word on the legal pad. Murdock snorted and stalked out the door. Joe Salazar followed two steps behind, pocketing his own notebook, fumbling for a fresh Camel.

  “Lady,” he said out of the side of his mouth, “you got to learn some respect for authority.”

  THAT weekend, a notorious punk band called the Fudge Packers was playing the Gay Bidet. Freddie didn’t like them at all. There were fights every night; the skinheads, the Latin Kings, the 34th Street Players. This is what Freddie couldn’t understand: Why the spooks and spics even showed up for a band like this. Usually they had better taste. The Fudge Packers were simply dreadful—four frigging bass guitars, now what the hell kind of music was that? No wonder everybody was fighting: to take their minds off the noise.

  Since Chemo had disappeared, Freddie had hired a new head bouncer named Eugene, guy used to play in the World Football League. Eugene was all right, big as a garbage Dumpster, but he couldn’t seem to get people’s attention the way Chemo did. Also, he was slow. Sometimes it took him five minutes to get down off the stage and pound heads in the crowd. By comparison Chemo had moved like a cat.

  Freddie also was worried about Eugene’s pro-labor leanings. One week at the Gay Bidet and already he was complaining about how loud the music was, could they please turn it down? You’re kidding, Freddie had said, turn it down? But Eugene said damn right, his eardrums were fucking killing him. He said if his ears kept hurting he might go deaf and have to file a workman’s comp, and Freddie said what’s that? Then Eugene started going on about all his football injuries and, later, some shit that had happened to him working construction down in Homestead. He told Freddie about how the unions always took care of him, about how one time he was laid up for six weeks with a serious groin pull and never missed a paycheck. Not one.

  Freddie could scarcely believe such a story. To him it sounded like something out of Communist Russia. He was delighted the night Chemo came back to work.

  “Eugene, you’re fired,” Freddie said. “Go pull your groin someplace else.”

  “What?” said Eugene, cocking his head and leaning closer.

  “Don’t pull that deaf shit with me,” Freddie warned. “Now get lost.”

  On his way out of Freddie’s office, Eugene sized up his towering replacement. “Man, what happened to you?”

  “Gardening accident,” Chemo replied. Eugene grimaced sympathetically and said good-bye.

  Freddie turned to Chemo. “Thank God you’re back. I’m afraid to ask.”

  “Go ahead. Ask.”

  “I don’t think so,” Freddie said. “Just tell me, you okay?”

  Chemo nodded. “Fine. The new band sounds like vomit.”

  “Yeah, I know,” Freddie said. “Geez, you should see the crowd. Be careful in there.”

  “I’m ready for them,” Chemo said, hoisting his left arm to show Freddie the new device. He and Dr. Rudy Graveline had found it on sale at a True Value hardware store.

  “Wow,” said Freddie, staring.

  “I got it rigged special for a six-volt battery,” Chemo explained. He patted the bulge under his arm. “Strap it on with an Ace bandage. Only weighs about nine pounds.”

  “Neat,” said Freddie, thinking: Sweet Jesus, this can’t be what I think it is.

  A short length of anodyzed aluminum piping protruded from the padding over Chemo’s amputation. Bolted to the end of the pipe was a red saucer-sized disc made of hard plastic. Coiled tightly on a stem beneath the disc was a short length of eighty-pound monofilament fishing line.

  Freddie said, “Okay, now I’m gonna ask.”

  “It’s a Weed Whacker,” Chemo said. “See?”

  CHAPTER 15

  GEORGE Graveline was sun-tanned and gnarled and sinewy, with bread-loaf arms and wide black Elvis sideburns. The perfect tree trimmer.

  George was not at all jealous of his younger brother, the plastic surgeon. Rudy deserved all the fine things in life, George reasoned, because Rudy had gone to college for what seemed like eternity. In George’s view, no amount of worldly riches was worth sitting in a stuffy classroom for years at a stretch. Besides, he loved his job as a tree trimmer. He loved the smell of sawdust and fresh sap, and he loved gassing yellow jacket nests; he loved the whole damn outdoors. Even Florida winters could get miserably hot, but a person could adjust. George Graveline had a motto by which he faithfully lived: Always park in the shade.

  He did not often see his wealthy brother, but that was all right. Dr. Rudy was a busy man, and for that matter so was George. In Miami a good tree trimmer always had his hands full: year-round growth, no real seasons, no time for rest. Mainly you had your black olives and your common ficus tree, but the big problem there wasn’t the branches so much as the roots. A twenty-year-old ficus had a root system that could swallow the New York subway. Digging out a big ficus was a bitch. Then you had your exotics: the Australia
n pines, the melaleucas, and those godforsaken Brazilian pepper trees, which most people mistakenly called a holly. Things grew like fungus, but George loved them because the roots weren’t so bad and a couple good men could rip one out of the ground, no sweat. His favorite, though, was when people wanted their Brazilian pepper trees trimmed. Invariably these were customers new to Florida, novice suburbanites who didn’t have the heart or the brains to actually kill a living tree. So they’d ask George Graveline to please just trim it back a little, and George would say sure, no problem, knowing that in three months it’d shoot out even bushier than before and strangle their precious hibiscus as sure as a coat hanger. No denying there was damn good money in the pepper-tree racket.

  On the morning of February tenth, George Graveline and his crew were chopping a row of Australian pines off Krome Avenue to make room for a new medium-security federal prison. George and his men were not exactly busting their humps, since it was a government contract and nobody ever came by to check. George was parked in the shade, as usual, eating a roast-beef hoagie and drinking a tall Budweiser. The driver’s door of the truck was open and the radio was on a country-music station, though the only time you could hear the tunes was between the grinding roars of the wood chipper, which was hooked to the bumper of George Graveline’s truck. The intermittent screech of the machine didn’t disturb George at all; he had grown accustomed to hearing only fragments of Merle Haggard on the radio and to letting his imagination fill in the musical gaps.

  Just as he finished the sandwich, George glanced in the rearview and noticed a big blond man with one arm in a sling. The man wore blue jeans, boots, and a flannel shirt with the left sleeve cut away. He was standing next to the wood chipper, watching George’s crew chief toss pine stumps into the steel maw.

  George swung out of the truck and said, “Hey, not so close.”

  The man obligingly took a step backward. “That’s some machine.” He gestured at the wood chipper. “Looks brand-new.”

  “Had her a couple years,” George Graveline said. “You looking for work?”

  “Naw,” the man said, “not with this bum wing. Actually I was looking for the boss. George Graveline.”

  George wiped the hoagie juice off his hands. “That’s me,” he said.

  The crew chief heaved another pine limb into the chipper. The visitor waited for the buzzing to stop, then he said, “George, my name is Mick Stranahan.”

  “Howdy, Mick.” George stuck out his right hand. Stranahan shook it.

  “George, we don’t know each other, but I feel like I can talk to you. Man to man.”

  “Sure.”

  “It’s about your little brother.”

  “Rudolph?” Warily George folded his big arms.

  “Yes, George,” Stranahan said. “See, Rudy’s been trying to kill me lately.”

  “Huh?”

  “Can you believe it? First he hires some mobster to do the hit, now he’s got the world’s tallest white man with the world’s worst case of acne. I don’t know what to tell you, but frankly it’s got me a little pissed off.” Stranahan looked down at his sling. “This is from a .45-caliber machine gun. Honestly, George, wouldn’t you be upset, too?”

  George Graveline rolled the tip of his tongue around the insides of his cheeks, like he was probing for a lost wad of Red Man. The crew chief automatically kept loading hunks of pine into the wood chipper, which spit them out the chute as splinters and sawdust. Stranahan motioned to George that they should go sit in the truck and talk privately, where it was more quiet.

  Stranahan settled in on the passenger side and turned down the country music. George said, “Look, mister, I don’t know who you are but—”

  “I told you who I am.”

  “Your name is all you said.”

  “I’m a private investigator, George, if that helps. A few years back I worked for the State Attorney. On murder cases, mostly.”

  George didn’t blink, just stared like a toad. Stranahan got a feeling that the man was about to punch him.

  “Before you do anything incredibly stupid, George, listen for a second.”

  George leaned out the door of the truck and hollered for the crew chief to take lunch. The whine of the wood chipper died, and suddenly the two men were drenched in silence.

  “Thank you,” Stranahan said.

  “So talk.”

  “On March 12, 1986, your brother performed an operation on a young woman named Victoria Barletta. Something terrible happened, George, and she died on the operating table.”

  “No way.”

  “Your brother, Rudy, panicked. He’d already been in a shitload of trouble over his state medical license—and killing a patient, well, that’s totally unacceptable. Even in Florida. I think Rudy was just plain scared.”

  George Graveline said, “You’re full of it.”

  “The case came through my office as an abduction-possible-homicide. Everybody assumed the girl was snatched from a bus bench in front of your brother’s clinic because that’s what he told us. But now, George, new information has come to light.”

  “What kind of information?”

  “The most damaging kind,” Mick Stranahan said. “And for some reason, your brother thinks that I am the one who’s got it. But I’m not, George.”

  “So I’ll tell him to leave you alone.”

  “That’s very considerate, George, but I’m afraid it’s not so simple. Things have gotten out of hand. I mean, look at my damn shoulder.”

  “Mmmm,” said George Graveline.

  Stranahan said, “Getting back to the young woman. Her body was never found, not a trace. That’s highly unusual.”

  “It is?”

  “Yes, it is.”

  “So?”

  “So, you wouldn’t happen to know anything about what happened, would you?”

  George said, “You got some nerve.”

  “Yes, I suppose I do. But how about answering the question?”

  “How about this,” said George Graveline, reaching for Mick Stranahan’s throat.

  With his good arm Stranahan intercepted George’s toad-eyed lunge. He seized one of the tree-trimmer’s stubby thumbs and twisted it clean out of the socket. It made a faintly audible pop, like a bottle of flat champagne. George merely squeaked as the color flooded from his face. Stranahan let go of the limp purple thumb, and George pinched it between his knees, trying to squeeze away the pain.

  “Boy, I’m really sorry,” Stranahan said.

  George grabbed at himself and gasped, “You get out of here!”

  “Don’t you want to hear the rest of my theory, the one I’m going to tell the cops? About how you tossed that poor girl’s body into the wood chipper just to save your brother’s butt?”

  “Go on,” George Graveline cried, “before I shoot you myself.”

  Mick Stranahan got out of George’s truck, shut the door and leaned in through the open window. “I think you’re overreacting,” he said to the tree trimmer. “I really do.”

  “Eat shit,” George replied, wheezing.

  “Fine,” Stranahan said. “I just hope you’re not this rude to the police.”

  CHRISTINA Marks was dreading her reunion with Reynaldo Flemm. They met at twelve-thirty in the lobby of the Sonesta.

  She said, “You’ve done something to your hair.”

  “I let it grow,” Flemm said self-consciously. “Where’ve you been, anyway? What’s the big secret?”

  Christina couldn’t get over the way he looked. She circled him twice, staring.

  “Ray, nobody’s hair grows that fast.”

  “It’s been a couple weeks.”

  “But it’s all the way to your shoulders.”

  “So what?”

  “And it’s so yellow.”

  “Blond, goddammit.”

  “And so . . . kinky.”

  Stiffly, Reynaldo Flemm said, “It was time for a new look.”

  Christina Marks fingered his locks and said, “I
t’s a bloody wig.”

  “Thank you, Agatha Christie.”

  “Don’t get sore,” she said. “I kind of like it.”

  “Really?”

  Despairing of his physical appearance since his visit to Whispering Palms, Reynaldo Flemm had flown back to New York and consulted a famous colorologist, who had advised him that blond hair would make him look ten years younger. Then a makeup man had told Reynaldo that long hair would make his nose look thinner, while kinked long hair would take twenty pounds off his waist on camera.

  Armed with this expert advice, Reynaldo had sought out Tina Turner’s wig stylist, who was booked solid but happy to recommend a promising young protégé in the SoHo district. The young stylist’s name was Leo, and he pretended to recognize Reynaldo Flemm from television, which was all the salesmanship he needed. Reynaldo told Leo the basics of what he wanted, and Leo led him to a seven-hundred-dollar wig that looked freshly hacked off the scalp of Robert Plant, the rock singer. Or possibly Dyan Cannon.

  Reynaldo didn’t care. It was precisely the look he was after.

  “I do kind of like it,” Christina Marks said, “only we’ve got to do something about the Puerto Rican mustache.”

  Flemm said, “The mustache stays. I’ve had it since my first local Emmy.” He put his hands on her shoulders. “Now, suppose you tell me what the hell’s been going on.”

  Christina hadn’t talked to Reynaldo since the day Mick Stranahan was shot, and then she had told him next to nothing. She had called from the emergency room at Mercy Hospital, and said something serious had happened. Reynaldo had asked if she were hurt, and Christina said no. Then Reynaldo had asked what was so damn serious, and she said it would have to wait for a few weeks, that the police were involved and the whole Barletta story would blow up if they didn’t lie low. She had promised to get back to him in a few days, but all she did was leave a message in Reynaldo’s box at the hotel. The message had begged him to be patient, and Reynaldo had thought what the hell and gone back to Manhattan to hunt for some new hair.

  “So,” he said to Christina, “let’s hear it.”

  “Over here,” she said, and led him to a booth in the hotel coffee shop. She waited until he’d stuffed a biscuit in his mouth before telling him about the shooting.