18

“During the day he’s always with his buddy,” Steiger said. “The lights stay on at night usually till midnight, one o’clock. If there’s an alarm, they normally would turn it on when they went to bed. Otherwise they’d keep tripping it, letting the cat out, dumping the garbage, that kind of thing. Embarrassing as hell when the cops come running in with the blue lights going and the weapons out and it was you throwing out the coffee grounds.”

As he talked Steiger was looking out the hotel window at the Charles, dark now and glossy-looking with the lights reflecting off of it from Storrow and Memorial drives. Angie sat with no clothes on at the round table on which they ate breakfast, and did her nails.

“So when would be best?” Angie said.

“In about an hour,” Steiger said. “Round ten o’clock. I go to knock on the door. When he answers I do it, and leave. Tomorrow we go back to Cleveland.”

“You’re going tonight?”

“Yeah.”

“I hope you don’t have to kill the wife.”

“If she doesn’t see me, I won’t. If she does, I will. It’s luck.”

“I know,” Angie said. “You want to make love again before you go?”

“Whatever we do together is making love, Angie.” He walked over from the window and touched her shoulder. “We’re making love all the time.”

“Okay,” she smiled. Her nails were done.

“If anything happens to me you know what to do?”

“Like always. Every time you go out you go through it with me. I have the safe-deposit key. I’ve got plenty of money to get home. I leave everything here and go.”

“Good. Kiss me good-bye.”

She stood and pressed against him and kissed him, careful all the time that her still wet nails didn’t touch his clothes.

“Hurry back,” she said.

“I always do.”

Steiger took the shoebox from the top shelf of the closet. He took out the Ruger, loaded it, put the holster on his belt, slipped the nose of it into his back pocket. He took twelve rounds of .44 ammunition, wrapped six in a Kleenex and put them in the left shirt pocket of his tan Levi’s shirt. He wrapped six more in another Kleenex and put them in the right shirt pocket. He buttoned both pockets. He put on a dark blue summer-weight blazer with plain brass buttons. It covered the gun. He slipped a package of Lucky Strikes into the breast pocket of the blazer, adjusted his shirt collar in the mirror so that the points of the collar rolled out over the lapels of the blazer. He looked at his watch.

“Okay, babe. See you pretty quick. How about late supper in the room when I get back?”

“Wine, cheese, French bread, and a pâté?”

“Wonderful.”

He went out of the hotel room and took the elevator to the lobby. The elevator was glass-walled and the lobby was eleven stories high. He looked down, as the elevator descended, at the fountains on the ground floor. The elevator seemed to descend into them.

He went to the hotel garage, got the rented Plymouth, paid the Puerto Rican attendant at the gate, and drove out. On Memorial Drive he turned left and headed east along the river. At the end of Memorial Drive he turned right across the Charles River Dam, past the Science Museum, stopped for the lights at Leverett Circle, and then cruised up the ramp to the expressway and headed north up Route 93. As he drove he turned the tuning dial on the radio until he found an easy-listening station. He listened to the music as he drove toward Smithfield. He was listening to the orchestra of Frank Chacksfield as he turned off Route 93 at the 128 exit and went north on Route 128. He was listening to Carly Simon as he reached the Smithfield exit and turned off. As he came into the center he turned the radio down. He parked on the street in front of the home next to Newman’s. Hanging from a colonial lamppost by the front gate a small white sign with pseudo-rustic ragged ends said The Frasers in brass letters.

Steiger left the keys in the ignition, left the parking lights on, and got out of the car. He closed the door quietly and walked briskly back toward Newman’s house. It was set back from the street, and the front yard was shadowed by old maple trees grown huge over several centuries. He turned without any hesitation into the long driveway smelling of bark mulch and walked toward the side door of the house. The lights were on in the house, in most rooms. Upstairs and down. He took the Ruger out of his hip holster as he walked up the drive, and held it against his leg.

When Steiger reached the side door Hood stepped out of the shadowed bushes behind him and jacked a shell into the breech with the pump action of the shotgun. Steiger turned at the sound. The .44 still held against his right leg, his face was inquisitive.

“What the hell is this,” he said.

Hood said, “Don’t bullshit me, Jack. I saw you take the gun out coming up the drive.” He held the shotgun steady on Steiger’s middle. “Reach across with your left hand. Take the gun by the barrel. Hold it by the barrel and toss it with your left hand over here to my right. You do anything quick and I’ll cut you in two.”

“You got the cannon,” Steiger said. He tossed the gun left-handed and butt-first onto the bark-mulch-covered driveway near Hood’s right foot. His face was still pleasant and quizzical.

With the shotgun steady still on Steiger, Hood felt with his foot for Steiger’s gun in the driveway. When he found it he maneuvered it into position and then kicked it into the bushes with his heel. “Put your hands on top of your head,” he said to Steiger. Steiger did, not clasping them together but resting the right lightly on top of the left.

Hood stepped closer to search Steiger for a gun. He held the shotgun against Steiger’s neck as he patted him down on the left side, then he switched the shotgun from right hand to left so that he could search Steiger’s other side. Steiger brought his right elbow around and hit Hood on the temple as the gun was in mid-switch. Hood staggered and dropped the shotgun.

Steiger bent down for it and Hood kneed him in the face. It straightened Steiger up but he had the shotgun. Hood lunged in against him, locking his arms around Steiger’s. The shotgun was in Steiger’s right hand but he couldn’t turn it to bear on Hood. The muscles in Hood’s back and shoulders swelled with effort as he clamped his arms tighter around Steiger, his balled right fist pressing into the small of Steiger’s back, his left hand covering it, adding pressure. With his hands he pulled in and up, leaning his chest into Steiger, bending him back while keeping his arms pinned against him. Hood’s neck thickened, the trapezius muscles bulged up at the base of his neck and across his shoulders. Steiger tried to use the shotgun butt against Hood’s kidneys, but it was too awkward an angle to hurt. In his present position the shotgun was useless. He dropped it and locked his own hands behind Hood’s back. Hood had arched forward in arching Steiger back and thus had an advantage in leverage. Steiger couldn’t reverse it, he was bending farther back and it was harder to breathe. He let go of Hood’s back and brought his hands down under Hood’s buttocks. He got hold and heaved back. Hood’s feet came off the ground. His leverage was lost. Steiger was able to straighten his back and turn Hood toward the house. He tried to ram Hood against the cement stairs to the porch door but he couldn’t and they both fell and rolled, locked in each other’s embrace, fifteen feet down the driveway. Hood released his hold as they rolled and came up on his feet under the huge old maple tree. Steiger came up opposite him. Steiger’s gun was somewhere in the bushes. Hood’s shotgun was fifteen feet away back up the driveway. Steiger hit Hood a sharp left-hand hook on the right cheek and followed with an overhand right that staggered Hood against the tree. He kicked at Hood’s groin, but Hood karate-blocked it with his left forearm. Hood reached behind him with his right hand and brought out the bowie knife. It was dark but there was enough light filtered in from the street lamps to see the knife. Steiger backed away, Hood followed. Hood held the knife low in his right hand, sharpened side up, moving it back and forth in front of him. His knees were bent and he shuffled like a boxer, left foot always ahead of the right. Steiger, as he backed away, kept his hands out in front of him, overlapping the thumbs, making a V and aiming the crotch of the V at the bowie knife as it moved. Hood had both hands on the knife, ready to switch to either hand if Steiger went for one. They were in the shaded darkness under the big maple tree as they moved down the sweet-smelling bark-mulch driveway. A car went by on the street behind Steiger. Neither Hood nor Steiger knew. Both concentrated on the knife. Nothing else impinged, nothing else was real. Their faces were serious. Steiger took a head-jerking glance at his car parked in front of the next house. It was too far to run. The knife would catch him before he could get in and lock the door. He half-turned as if he would, and as Hood charged he gave him a head fake and dashed for the shotgun, past Hood, back up the driveway. Hood caught the back of his jacket as he went by. He half-turned him and drove the nine-inch knife blade upward into Steiger’s stomach, turned it at the end of the thrust, and pulled it toward him along the line of Steiger’s rib cage. Steiger made a soft sound, Hood pulled the knife free and slashed it back and across Steiger’s throat. Steiger fell down and died on the bark mulch in silence.