In this sixth and final book in the Ambient series, U.S. government freelancer Walter Bullitt tests his new psychotropics on himself and unsuspecting citizens, until he becomes involved in a murderous plot to sabotage a presidental campaign and his world becomes even stranger. Reprint.
Going, Going, Gone
By Jack Womack
Grove Press
Copyright © 2002
Jack Womack
All right reserved.
ISBN: 9780802138668
Chapter One
Soon as I spiked I turned my eyes inside. Setting old
snakehead on cruise control always pleases, no matter how
quick the trip. I looked out the window for a minute or an
hour or so, listening to stoplights click off blue, orange, blue.
Meteor showers of Maryland-bound cars shot past down
there on Connecticut Avenue and I made wishes on their
long swirly trails. It pissed me bigtime that my innkeepers
liked the guests to suffer silence, and I made a note to bring
along a hi-fi next go-round. I thought I felt Metroliner vibes
four hundred feet below me, steady as a motel vibrabed, but
it was nothing but blood doing a sprint up my legs, trying to
get to my heart before it was too late.
I'd just started examining the pattern of the tooled holes
in my wingtips circles inside of stars, looked downright
masonic if you ask me when I heard those jingle bells ring.
In my mildly altered condition it never would have occurred
to me that Martin would never blitz his own battleground, so
I jumped. Only natural considering my iffy relationship with
DC's boys in blue. Luckily enough, before I could make for the
john and drown my bagged cat I realized I was only hearing
the phone, and so I restashed my stash. Usually I unplug the
ringer at check-in, but this time it had slipped my mind. You
always risk clipping a good buzz in mid-hum, when you sign
on for a twenty-four-hour shift. Goes with the territory.
`Morning,' I shouted at the receiver, trying to remember
which end was which.
`Evening,' Bennett said. `Can't you tell the difference?'
`Six of one, half dozen of the other!'
`Are you drunk?'
`Dog's on the leash,' I assured him.
`You finish the distribution?'
`Hold on.' My hand was getting numb. I'd put a tourniquet
round my arm with the phone cord somehow and thought I'd
better unwrap it before I could spontaneously amputate. `You
were saying?'
`Was there anything left to distribute?'
From afar Bennett came on like a Harvard Dillinger, but
up close you knew he was just another dental hygienist. On
his evolutionary scale I topped out around Fishhead level try
as he might, he never cottoned to watching his boss treat
me like Future Man. Too bad for Benny but Martin and I went
back many moons, plus we had more in common than old Ivy
League ever would with either of us. `Cut the j'accuse,' I said.
`Produce reached the market!'
`Speak English!'
`Speaking!'
`What about it, then?'
`About what, my brother?'
`Don't brother me!'
`Not to offend. I mean only in the broader sense.'
`When'll the wolves start howling?'
`English, Bennett. Please.'
`When should the roundup start?'
I reviewed my own experience. `Body phase lasts maybe
twenty minutes. Then it calms down a little and you think
everything's square. All of a sudden chemistry takes the
wheel and you park yourself in Mars orbit for nine hours
or so, depending on whether or not you ate beforehand.
DuPont boys be able to handle that?'
`They're capable men.'
`You say so. Motto of a park ranger's be prepared.'
`Oh, hell '
Help.
Without warning I found myself listening in counterpoint.
Side effect? Could be, but Bennett was a prankster. `You going
stereo on me?'
`What are you talking about?'
Help.
Whoever was shouting help was broadcasting through a
separate channel. He wasn't in the phone but didn't seem to
be in my head either. I gave the room the onceover but I was
the only one on duty. Whoever he was he sounded like he'd
been sealed up in an oil drum. Possibly an unfortunate who'd
run afoul of one of Bennett's less restrained subcontractors.
Help.
`That's not you, is it?'
`What are you on now?' Bennett's words popped out of
the receiver; they were purple, and diamond-shape. Amazing
how long the effects last sometime.
Help.
`Help you what?' I asked. `Who's out there?'
`Walter!!'
`What?' I thought it best not to go into a lot more detail;
things like this kind of disturbed Bennett's peace of mind.
`Must be hearing things, compadre. Nothing to write home
about.'
He hissed like a stabbed tire. `I've got a message. Think
you'll remember?'
`Try me.'
`Mister Rollins says they want to meet you again tomorrow
morning for breakfast. It's essential that you reconsider
the offer.'
`Can't oblige,' I said.
`Essential, I said.'
`I heard you the first time.'
`Essential.'
I knew my limits. He'd be putting the needle down again
and again till I finally got up and changed the record. `All
right, but tell 'em I got to charge a full day rate.'
`Understood,' he said. `Meet them in the Willard coffee
shop, nine sharp. The Willard Hotel. It's a hotel. Know
the place?'
`Warren G. Harding shot his niece there, didn't he?'
`Nine sharp. Willard Hotel. We'll be waiting. Think you'll
need any help waking up?'
`Not yours.'
Bennett skipped the gracious goodbye pages when he took
his Emily Post lessons. Once he hung up I savoured the
sound of blood rushing past my ears. The seller goes where
the market calls but these assignments in DC were always
a trial. Nothing like a trip to the land of the two-headed
men to remind you why they dumped all that marble in
a swamp. Nowhere else will you get the lingering miasma
and rotting vegetables that sustain sound government. On a
regular schedule the fen's trolls burn off excess gas. The glow
attracts fools and children. The stench overcomes them, the
gas hits the blood like carbon monoxide, the bog sucks them
under. They're done for. Stay out of politics, my brothers,
there's no keeping clean.
Bennett's call had rung down the curtain on my mind's
nightly adventure. Even though I considered taking it from
the top I noticed it was midnight, and since I'd been hit
with this unforeseen breakfast subpoena I decided I'd better
take the sensible road and toddle off to snoozeville. While
shedding my outerwear I let myself go blank. Listened to
walls creak as they eased their weary stones, heard the wind
tickle the ivy's dry threads. I was stashed in the usual drawer,
an N Street townhouse with 1850 skin and 1965 guts. Claims
adjusters infested the ground floor offices but the apartments
were available for government transients. I don't know who
crashed in my suite when I wasn't in town. Martin didn't
say, I didn't ask. The joint must have been classville in
buggywhip days but the trolls had been hard at work since.
On a five-star scale I'd give the leftovers a negative four. A
junkman wouldn't take the furniture if you paid him. Turn
on the faucets and take bets on what colour the water'd
be. Cockroaches big as chihuahuas and just as quiet. Every
morning rats raced through the groundcover out front to the
point where even a dead sober man would think the yard was
trying to sneak away from the house. Well, it was never more
than a couple nights' flop to me and after all, I've done time
in places that made this look like the Savoy-Plaza. I'd just
started kissing the sheets when my unseen friend returned.
Help.
Definitely not Bennett this time. I tried hauling myself up
but it wasn't easy.
Help.
Where was that boy? Somewhere on my left, maybe? Don't
believe the yarns, there's not much to be gained when you
start hearing people who aren't there. `Yo boyo, your signal's
coming in clear. Show yourself.'
Help me.
`No need to be shy,' I called out, thinking I'd pinned him
down on radar. I tiptoed to the bathroom and pushed at the
door. `Hey Livingstone. Stanley here.' No answer, so I flipped
on the brights and peeked in. `Anybody?' Nobody. Now if
I'd stayed horizontal I could have probably convinced myself
that the evening's entertainment simply intensified those bad
DC vibes, but once up my reptile brain couldn't be rubed.
Maybe I landed in the middle of one of those CIA campfire
tales you always hear. Those necrophiliacs had no need to
unscrew my bulbs, but they wouldn't have cared. This was
probably the kind of fun they had when they weren't out
shooting Nixon.
Help.
I did a Norman's mother. Nobody in the shower so I
checked under the sink. Bug city; ten thousand long-term
leasees but none of them were talking. Men of science test all
theories, so I stared down into the toilet bowl. In heightened
states the sight of running water calms me down, and the
longer I looked in the better I felt. Nothing but an unexpected
side effect, I told myself. No telling what'll bob up when
the mind starts simmering. In my more adventurous days I
once dropped a little blue tab, supposedly some derivative
extracted from San Pedro cactus buds. Maybe so, but all it
did was make me sneeze uncontrollably for fourteen hours.
Please help.
I looked up and I saw them standing there. Almost there,
I'd better say. This was the first time I could eyeball somebody's
front and glim their back simultaneously, but that
wasn't the real mindbender. It was hard getting a fix on
them because half the time they were turning colours and
half the time, shifting into black and white. Made me want
to shout focus at the projection booth. He wore what looked
like a Bellevue suit, except the arms didn't have those fashionable
belts and buckles. Just as well because if they had he
couldn't've lugged the doll. His honey lay in his arms like a
swoonstruck bobbysoxer. She gave every indication of being
out on a heavy nod. Under the circumstances, mind you, I'd
hesitate to say either one would have bled if you cut them.
From what I could tell he'd had it hard wherever he'd had
it, and she looked like she'd been dragged by a truck from
Cleveland way past Detroit.
Please help us.
Neither of them were flapping gums when the words came
through, but I heard him stone clear. The shakes hit me where
I stood and that's a side effect I never get from that evening's
particular family of chemicals. Closing my eyes, I tried to think
of something to say. When I raised my shades once more my
new pals were starting to fade. They didn't seem to notice,
but I didn't think they were too conscious of anything, to tell
the truth. Going, going, gone and that was that for them.
Somehow it was worse having them gone. I rolled back
into bed and listened hard. Even though I didn't hear him
anymore it still took time before I could start copping Zs.
What with all the excitement I'd worked myself into a tizzy.
I couldn't shake the notion somebody was hotfooting over
my grave. Seeing ghosts will do that, I suppose, and that's
the way I finally chalked it up. Axe-murdered in this room
years ago, probably, and the walls couldn't hold back on
what they'd seen any longer. Fortean phenomena, the logical
explanation. Nothing weird about it until it happens to you.
just one of those strange things happening every day, like
green snow or a frogstorm, or buses showing up in threes.
I couldn't wait to get back to New York. Of course I didn't
foresee I'd have guests along for the ride.
I cooled on my slab till roostertime, then rose and soaked
my head in sunshine. No distressing afterburn, I was pleased
to note no neckache, no blurry vision, no need to brush
one-handed while propping myself up with the unused paw.
While scrubbing I decided to show up extra sharp for these
boys. I shaved close, played coathanger for my priciest suit.
Sparkled like a diamond in the rhinestone counter when I
got there. The Williard Hotel's slavemasters weren't big on
face control, and the coffee shop was almost one hundred
percent DC riffraff. Most looked nitrogen-poisoned, stumbling
around blind with walking bends, good for nothing
but taking fingerprints or filing them. I breezed through
their midst and ignored the looks the secretaries shot me.
Martin and Bennett held court at a booth in the rear. Most of
the dregs on hand favoured official federal government style.
But my boys were men of taste, and put on a Washington
style show. Seven-layer silk ties, trifold linen squares, cuffs
overloaded with silver and gold; suits thick as overcoats and
shoes shiny enough to scare away the schoolgirls.
`Everything went exactly as you predicted, Walter,' Martin
told me. `Congratulations are in order.' My boss came on like
he always did, the head man in Statuary Hall. Bennett looked
like he'd sat on a pickle and couldn't get it out. He eyed me as
if I were some evil bird swooping down to bag his waffles.
`Muchas thankas.' Taking a load off, I signalled the
waiter.
`Sleep well?' Bennett asked.
`Slept better.'
`Too much on your mind, perhaps '
I lit into the mocha java the second Pierre set it down in
front of me, but that was a serious mistake. Gave my tongue
third degree burns and for a second I thought my throat was
going to seal up
`Hot?' Bennett asked.
`Beelzebub,' I said. `Like drinking the sun.'
`You remember our associates,' said Martin, stretching
out his hand like he was introducing the dog act. `Mister
Hamilton. Mister Frye.'
`Morning, my brothers.'
The co-conspirators nodded and winked and I returned
the favour. Hamilton was silver-haired, silver-tongued and
slippery as wet glass. I don't think he was a mammal.
Old mellifluous knew anything he served up had to drip
with syrup, otherwise it'd never slide down. His sidekick
Frye seemed content with the job of vestigial twin. If you
taught a ferret how to walk on its back feet and put it
in a three-hundred-dollar suit, you'd have Frye. He sat
there emitting a series of sinister chuckles. Those two were
kingsize trolls but it was never clear to me what precise
realm of the swamp they oversaw, and they seemed the
sort who'd like to keep it that way. Martin screwed a Lucky
into his holder. Bennett almost fell out of his chair, offering
his lighter.
`You get it?' he asked. Martin fired up and shot one smoke
ring through another.
`The Willard used to be such a magnificent hotel,' Hamilton
proclaimed, oozing the grease of sociability. He knew if he
came on like Uncle Bob he'd get an invite to any Friday
dinner. `Sad, how much it's changed over the years. You're
not old enough to remember what this was, before it was a
coffee shop.' I'd have guessed nobody was. `It was a corner
of the grand ballroom. The ceiling and those walls are false,
you see. My friend Donald Cook's graduation party was
given here in 1926. Donald was the son of Senator Cook,
he died on the Brittannica.' I was starting to wish I had. `An
unforgettable evening. We kept our flasks at the ready, filled
with hooch. Whenever the chaperones turned their heads
we'd have a snort. I danced with Sally Patterson half the
night.' He went all cow-eyed, recalling the scent of long-lost
fur. `Fifty beautiful young men and women, learning the ways
of the world.' I suspected he placed himself pretty high on the
beauty scale. `The stage was there.' He pointed at the steam
table, where two Japs stood slinging hash. `Seven smoke
musicians. Real hot poppas from New Orleans, as we used
to say.' He burst out in soft song. `If the man in the moon was
a coon, coon, coon '
Hambone pursed his lips like he was spitting out watermelon
seeds. Frye made with the chucks: hmnf hmnf hmnf.
Bennett sighed; he probably spent half his life hearing about
parties he wasn't invited to. Martin, like me, played icecube.
`I did some stepping out back in Cambridge myself,'
Bennett said, at the same time eyeballing me. `Not very
good at it, though. Two left feet.'
`I suspect you underestimate yourself,' Hamilton said.
`Surely I wouldn't have held a candle to you, sir.' Bennett
kissed most people's feet because he was too short to reach
their ass.
`Sweet memory is all that lingers once the ball is over,
gentlemen,' said the old codger. `So soon we forget.'
If this went on much longer he was going to drag out the
uke and start yodelling. After he tossed off that little lyric from
the hit parade I was in no mood to foxtrot. `I've forgotten why
you asked me here, actually,' I said. `Not to cut you short, my
brothers, but I've got a train to catch.'
`Mister Smith,' Hamilton said, speaking in my direction,
as if he'd been struck blind but suspected I had a quarter.
(My legal given is Bullitt, by the by, but I use a more
forgettable monicker for piece work.) `I want to offer you
the opportunity to reconsider our proposal. We think you're
our man for the job.'
`I don't even know what your proposal is,' I said. I'd turned
them down simply because I hadn't liked their looks; you
get to my level and you can start getting away with that,
sometimes. `Told you I like to see the sandwich before I
bite down.'
`Son, your qualms are understandable,' Hamilton said.
'Ordinarily we'd have already enlightened you, but I fear a
certain restraint was and is called for in this situation.'
`Restraint's my middle name.'
`So Martin has told me. And Bennett, as well.' Little
mongoose glared at me with beady blue eyes. `All the same
your talents are such that we're willing to make allowances
for your, uh, personal style.'
`I appreciate your appreciation,' I said. `Need more than
that, though.'
`In the fullness of time you'll be provided with all necessary
information.'
`Time's filled up. Spill or I'm walking.'
`Walter!' Martin looked ready to come down hard, but I
fired back my own daggers and he eased off on playing up
the Great White Father bit. Hamilton didn't look any more
or less upset than he had when I'd said no, two days earlier.
There was something about this I hadn't liked from the start.
Since I wasn't officially on the payroll, and wouldn't have
been one of Martin's Bennetts even if I had been, I wasn't
covered with the kind of insurance you have to have when
you get too far out in the jungle.
`Hear Hamilton out, Walter,' Martin said. `It's a very simple
proposition. Once you have all the details I'm sure you'll
change your mind.'
`OK, so let's play catch. You going to tell me, or am I
going to have to guess?' Our waiter slunk back to top off
the percolations, but I shooed him away.
`I always appreciate forthrightness.' Hamilton's eyebrows
hopped like caterpillars doing a mating dance. `What would
you guess, if you guessed.'
`This have anything to do with pharmaceuticals?' I asked.
`That's to be decided.'
`Will I be playing the old sucker game?'
`Could be.'
`Sowing the seeds of disarray?'
Hamilton dipped a shard of toast into a pool of yolk. `Do
you read the newspaper, son?' he asked, leaning over so far
I could count his fillings.
`How else do I know what I've been up to?'
Hamilton hooted. Hmnf hmnf hmnf, said Frye. They were in
on somebody's joke, that was for sure. `Surely an intelligent
man such as yourself,' said the Grand Codger, `understands
that at moments sotto voce is preferable to fortissimo. You
understand the broader problems with which we constantly
grapple '
`We who?' I asked.
`Is that a question, Walter?'
`Who are you, anyway?' I asked. `Can't quite put my
finger on it.'
`Walter ' Martin started to say.
`You don't have J. Edgar's thumbprint on you,' I said,
thinking I'd better start sharpening the pencils. `Since you're
out in daylight and aren't moist, I can rule out CIA.' Hmf
hmf hmf. `You're about as military as I am. My man Martin
generally doesn't let on who pays for the groceries long
as I make the delivery. Usually, I don't care. But truly,
my brothers, all this incognito cum laude is making my
mind start to wander. Feel like I'm in a tryout for Skull
and Bones.'
`You're thinking of Yale, Walter,' said Bennett. `We look
like Yalies?'
Martin glared like an icy road. For a minute I gave them
the benefit of the doubt, thinking they simply feared being
taped al fresco. In truth there's no better place to talk trouble
than out in the out and about. Every time Martin and I faced
off to swap tales we took to the ozone, and hit the bricks.
An old trick, never fails to keep nosy parkers from tuning
in on the party line. It's a subtle concept for the layman to
grasp, and these two clowns were no laymen. Just as I was
starting to give in the old gringo flipped me such a death's
head that I realized he was doing the Miss Priss bit purely
for entertainment value. I got the notion he didn't care who
heard what he said, since he never exactly said it.
`Walter, are you aware of what happens this November?'
Hamilton asked.
`This is February!' Hmnf hmnf hmnf, said Frye.
`Good things take time,' Bennett said.
`There's an election this November,' said Hamilton. `You'll
be voting?'
`Never,' I said. `99 bottles of beer on the wall. I don't
sing along.'
Hamilton made with the tut-tuts. `Possibly we're not as
cynical as you are.'
`Try me.'
`Are you familiar with the field of candidates? Does anyone
in particular come to mind?'
He had me there, but I wasn't going to let on. Thinking for
a second, the obvious name popped into my head. `President
Lodge.'
`Thought we were going to have to cue you, Walter,'
Bennett said.
`What about on the Democratic side?' Hamilton asked.
`Usual suspects, I suppose. Johnson, Humphrey. Pritchard.
You think it'll matter?'
`You are cynical, son.'
`Call me son once I'm in the will,' I said. `If I had to guess I'd
say Lodge'll be re-elected. Incumbents always are.' Hamilton
eyed me like I was a puppy who wet the rug. `No?'
`We'll be clear on that by the end of next month, Mister
Smith,' he said. `But that's no concern of yours.'
`There's a name you've forgotten, Walter,' Bennett said.
'Among possible candidates. Who do you think you've forgotten?'
I shrugged. `Gimme a phone book.'
`An old family name,' Martin said.
`But not that old.' The shift in Hamilton's vocalese as he
purred his way into a growl made me appreciate the ease
with which this old coot could hop from his wheelchair and
whip out the shiv. Takes practice to glint like Jehovah when
you're wearing a Brooks Brothers suit, but he had it down
pat. `The Kennedys '
'Them?'
`Walter, hear us out.'
`Not a chance. I'm no steeplejack. I work the ground
floor and mezzanine and I want to keep it that way. `Not
a chance '
Hamilton lobbed his dentures my way and flashed those
big blue peepers. `This would entail your serving in the
traditional agent provocateur position, Walter.'
`Walter, you could do it in your sleep,' Martin said.
`Probably done it in your sleep,' said Bennett.
`There's nothing to it '
All signs on this eightball pointed to no. Number one
swoon tune in DC was Never Waltz With A Kennedy. Once
you involved yourself, even with a third cousin of a third
cousin, it was only a question of time till Old Black Joe, reliable
as napalm, caught you and dipped you in his deep-fryer.
Giving his public rap sheet the onceover could crack your
mind like a bullwhip, and nobody knew scratch about the
deals that strayed from the path en route to Grandma's. His
five boys couldn't match him except in pawing frails, try as
they might and by all indications they tried. Nature herself
had taken the girls out of the competition, there were five
of them but every one strangled themselves in the womb to
keep from coming out. Every spring through the thirties the
Kennedy Curse struck anew. Once between the cartoon and
part six of Perils of Nyoka I caught a glimpse of the gang in the
`Ten Years Ago Today' segment of The March of Time, filmed
just before they went to London in 39'. They'd lost another
one, the last. The boys wore black tie, Rose shrouded her
weeds. Old Joe pried the top off the blarney jar and told the
reporters Willa God, boys, all's jake but you got to watch
Willa. She'll get you every time.
`Not a chance, not one in a million.'
`Walter, you need to hear specifically,' Hamilton started to
say, but I wasn't listening. I heard something else.
Help.
Like I needed to see old brother Jell-O and his snoozy moll
just then. They hung out by the cash register as if intending
to clean out the till while a crony caused a distraction.
Help us.
Without signalling, my ghosts took the off-ramp and faded.
I told myself I'd kicked back too long in the tub last night and
was still pruny. But I wasn't kidding anyone, the luck of genes
makes my system flush like a storm drain. Possible, though,
that this new product was time-release. That could bring any
number of complications about on down the line. Might mean
all kinds of trouble uptown as well but the Dupont Circle boys
could find out on their own without a park ranger. Even now
their slammerful of potential perps were probably tearing the
roof off the drunk tank, ripping out the porcelain, shitting on
the ceiling, standing there franks in hand and howling for the
bastards to turn the northern lights back on.
`What's so funny, Walter?' I heard Bennett say.
`Is he having a stroke?' Hamilton said.
`Just weighing the odds against the house,' I testified,
coming out of my stew, laying both hands near but not on
the Big Book. `Pardon the trance.'
`No question you're the man for the job,' Martin said, and
then demonstrated the folly of total self-assurance. `You're
Irish as they are, why wouldn't it work?'
Fortean ghosts were hard enough to bear but this took first
prize in the Stupid awards. Something must have short-circuited
in Martin's head, or else he was feeling more comfy
around these characters than he had any right to be. He was
no more tater tot than I was, and he knew that as well as I
did. Now neither of us played the rules according to Hoyle,
and while no VIP players who might suspect ever admitted
seeing us deal with our spades hidden, we knew they always
kept their guns on the table. Couldn't speak for my boss but
I had no yen to scope scenic Guatemala and the deeper south
unless I had a return ticket tight in my hand. It especially
made me sweat buckets when his idle comment provoked
Frye into burping up something other than chucks.
`Black Irish, maybe.'
Bad, bad news. No question his superior snagged it, but old
Methuselah didn't return fire. Martin's mask slipped enough
to show me he knew he'd been bugging too frantic on the
canyon's lip. `If you would hear us out, Mister Smith, you'd
understand what a valuable opportunity this could prove to
be for you,' Hamilton said, steepling his hands as if to pray to
himself. `Carpe diem. A new world hitherto unimaginable to
you will either open or close, depending upon your decision.
May I continue?'
His picnic basket was starting to sit heavy on my grave.
`Pass the mustard,' I said.
`What?'
`Need to spread it on those fat slabs of spamola you're
slicing off.'
`Now, Mister Smith '
`I'm passing. Thanks anyway.' Easing myself up slowly, I
aimed a finger at the timepiece hanging on the wall. `Got to
roll, I fear, New York's waiting.'
`You strike me as an infinitely adaptable fellow of subtle
resources,' Hamilton said. The smile he gave me would have
shamed a wax museum. `Martin knows you're the man for
the job. Perhaps we should agree to leave the matter open.
It seems to me you should be considerably more interested
in hearing us out than you've yet understood.'
I understood he could probably corner the market in nasty
if he wanted, but I didn't want to wait around and find out.
`Tally ho, my brothers, that train's at the gate.'
`I'll be calling you,' Martin said.
Didn't look back as I strolled but I knew they kept me in
the crosshairs. Took the long way out through the lobby, to
tell the world I was in no rush. Soon as I was out of range
I let my feet do their business. Had the admiral outside
whistle up a cab, and two minutes later I was cruising up
Connecticut en route to DuPont Circle. Neglecting to stop by
the stationhouse to give the gang my regards I bounded down
the escalator and hopped the noon express. Settling into a
crowded car I switched off the seat's radio and settled back,
trying to put breakfast, that song, those ghosts, everything
out of mind. In two hours I'd pipeline straight into Penn
Station's warm marble barn and then it'd be hello, New
York. I couldn't wait.
Once I was back in the free world I wasted no time heading for
my castle. No sooner did I get there, though, than I realized
I might as well have left the drawbridge down. My greeting
committee floated above the corner of the living room, near
the window and to the left of the hi-fi.
Help.
What really made my bag rise this time was my quietude in
the face of this species of unnatural. Bad pennies are forever
turning up but not being surprised when you find them is
another matter indeed. There was only one thing left to try.
Hair of a different dog taken in ideal conditions proves an
unfailing remedy in most cases of aftershock, and I could
see no reason it wouldn't work here. I have to be truthful
and say I don't know how hard I looked. Unplugging the
phone, I greased and papered my Victrola's spinner and slid
a new needle in the tone arm. Thumbed through the C shelf
until I spotted the right man. Lay down the shellac, grooved
the point and let it spin. No crime in listening. Never was.
`Pastafazoola, Tallullah '
No crime in singing along, though the neighbours might
disagree.
'Pass me a pancake, Mandrake '
No doubt about it, these palefaces weren't hep to the jive.
My two ghosts took the hint and condensed. Suspected they'd
be back but that was then and this was now.
Alone again I stashed the cash Martin'd slipped me for
my efforts in the strongbox, then pulled down my humidor
to keep a date with Mary Jane. Dressed her in something
tight and kissed her down to her toes. Got a Pepsi out of
the fridge and lent Cab my ears. Though I don't teetotal I'm
not one for putting on the boozebag. Body trips leave me too
full of that old ennui. The ideal agents as I see it are the ones
that take your head off and let you hold it awhile. I cooped
inside, content, till delirious night came creeping through the
streets. Then, after a quick rinse and shave, I snatched up my
wrapper and ankled downstairs.
Two blocks west on the slum end of Park was my crib
away from crib. Those up on their long-gone New York know
the tale of McGurk's Suicide Hall, famed Bowery hotspot of
the gay nineties, a most favoured lure for the addled and
unsavoury, whilom HQ of the fearsome Coney Boys. If you
soaked McGurk's in cheap black and Chinese red you'd get
Max's. All the ambience of an opium den full of Dada girls,
though louder. El perfecto, in the vernacular. No Packards
lined the curb two deep so I suspected the night's talent
didn't attract the riffraff. When I checked the marquee I saw
that I was right. WELCOME THE VELVET UNDERGROUND AND
NICO TO MAX'S KANSAS CITY. I'd head upstairs to revel after I
perambulated the lower depths to see who was where. Before I
could go in I noted out of the corner of one eye some character in
a Rogers Peet suit, passing out flyers at the corner. He had a small
table set up and a sign hung on the front. MM YOUR PO INSTEAD,
Some kind of anti-war gig I figured, and headed inside.
Smoke of all notions hit me like perfume as I stepped out
of the ozone into the pressure chamber. Once my peepers
adjusted for night vision I made out the personnel on board.
In the far distance Warhola's full moon hair beamed through
the night. Candy and Jackie had been bookending him but
now they got up and were making for the stairs. Judging
from the pudding bowls at the far end of the bar I reckoned
Mancusian talent passing through town had dropped by to
judge the competition. Closer still huddled the usual gaggle of
Brooklyn tomatoes and Bronx bagel babies, decked out in their
slickest Serendipity flash. If you didn't choke on hayseeds those
farmgirl charms could warm the coolest heart. In the middle of
the action were my two most usual suspects, and I gladhanded
cheer all around.
`What's happening, hepcats?' I asked, doffing my homburg,
and calling for the drink that hits the spot.
`Walter,' Trish said. `Where've you been hiding?'
`Here there everywhere,' I said. We pecked cheek and did the
vertical rub. Trish and I were hard on the sheets not that long
ago but when she showed too much interest in how, exactly,
I harvested my cabbage, I took to the fields. Knowledge is
danger, knoweth the man, and I doubted she'd have approved
of my every escapade. Even so we remained tasty pals. She was
wanton that night, a flame-haired vixen, smoky and dazzling,
total Gernreich on the hoof. As I eased my paw down her
treacherous rear slope I found myself as always sliding across
a Lothrop and Stoddard unitock. Trish had spent her heedless
youth in a stately Wayne Manor out on the Philly main line,
and the domestication clung. `What's with the girdle, Myrtle?' I
said. `I'll need brushes to keep the beat on this tom-tom.' Our
compadre Borden lounged close by, swilling with a smile, his
fedora's awning hanging low. As usual he rode out in standard
Fourteenth Street undertaker drapes. Good to see he'd regrown
his chin shrub, made him look like a top shrink doing field work.
Over time I'd clipped my own hedge down to its most nefarious
essential. Kittens purr like mad when you brush their fur with
the old pussy tickler.
`How deep's the scene, my brother?'
`Subcutaneous,' he said, a man of select words.
`You've been missed,' Trish said, playing bumpercars with
my hip.
`Just a weekend cruise,' I said. `Felt like a month.' A sudden
flood of would-be cognoscenti streaming in threatened to do a
Johnstown on us. Felt like I was taking the Sea Beach Express
on the fourth of July. We started sliding our feet to the rear of
the bus, trying to miss the wave.
`Care to divulge?' she asked.
`Lips, ships,' I said, shaking my head. Realized, scanning
the room, that I half-expected to spot my silent Cals floating
somewhere over the backbar, trying to find space before coming
in for a landing. Wished I'd upped the dosage on my nerve tonic.
`I earn my gold stars. You?'
`Mother's pearl,' she said. `You have to ask?'
`When's showtime?' No sooner did I wonder than I felt
the vibes ripple through the floor, and saw the lamps start
to shake.
`Shortly. Let's move,' said Trish, and with Borden we carved a
path through the wall of superfluous flesh, making for the ascent.
'I've been on tiptoes all day looking forward to this. They're so
fabulous.'
`Utmost,' said Borden, playing jungle guide as he led us off.
'Utmost fabulousity.'
Hard to slouch walking up stairs, but he pulled it off. `After
you,' I said to the beauteous one, keen to see what lay under
that doily she'd wrapped around her waist, but my chivalry went
begging.
`My turn to take the scenic route,' she said, pointing upwards.
`Scamper.'
I did. Once we topped out we parked ourselves next to sweet
Candy and ever-charmless Ondine, near the front. The band
kicked off Venus In Furs and we let our heads fill up. The usual
goofball light show was in progress, the band looked as if it
were being attacked by yellow amoebas. Sterling stood there
strumming away, Cale did his Bob Wills on Seconal bit, crazy
Angus wandered back and forth whacking that Tibetan oildrum
and weaselly Lou glowered like a nine-year-old looking to get
spanked. Blondie sat off in the corner slapping her tambourine
and making with the teutonics. I was just starting to settle in
for a long decadent night when I heard Trish shouting at
Borden.
`New girls in town, must be.'
`Tres wild,' Borden shouted back. `Canadian?'
`Hardly,' Candy said; even though she tried to whisper,
her voice always carried. I turned in what had become an
Continues...
Excerpted from Going, Going, Gone
by Jack Womack
Copyright © 2002 by Jack Womack.
Excerpted by permission.
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