Feast Day of Fools - James Lee Burke [81]
“Like what?”
“In pain, depressed, unhappy. What did Collins say to you when he called your house?”
“It’s not what he said. It’s what he is. He loves death. That’s his edge.”
“So he’ll have a smile on his face when we blow his head off.”
“I met Jim Harrison once. He’s a novelist. He made a remark in passing that I never forgot. He said, ‘We love the earth but we don’t get to stay.’ On an evening like this, an irrefutable truth sometimes has a way of invading your soul. As a nihilist, Collins doesn’t bear that burden. He seeks the dark hole in the ground that the rest of us fear. For that reason, we have no power over him. Even in killing him, we do his will. For that reason alone, I never believed in capital punishment. You said it when we first started dealing with Collins. He wants me to be his executioner.”
She stretched her arm across his back and hooked her hand on his right shoulder and laid her face against his arm. “You were actually mad because my cousin was here?”
“No,” he lied.
“He came to borrow money. His wife left him. He’s a philanderer. No one else in the family will have anything to do with him.” She exhaled and slipped her hand under his arm and squeezed it. “You and I were born by accident in different generations, Hack. But we’re opposite sides of the same coin. Why do you keep thinking of yourself as old? You’re handsome and youthful, and your principles have never changed. Why do you think people around here respect you? It’s because from day to day you’re always the same good man, one who never goes with fashion.”
“There is no worse fate than for a young woman to marry a drunkard or an old man who is about to fall apart on the installment plan.”
“Boy, do you know how to rain on a parade.” She brushed her forehead back and forth on his shoulder. “What are we going to do, Hack?”
“About what?”
“Us.”
“You want a root-beer float?” he asked.
“I feel like running off with my cousin. I probably would if he wasn’t my cousin. I think right now I’d run off with Attila the Hun.”
“You’re the best, Pam.”
“Best what?”
“The best of everything.”
“I can’t tell you how depressed that makes me feel.”
The silence that followed seemed to envelop them, as though the inadequacy of the language they used in speaking to each other had come to define in an unalterable way the impossibility of their relationship. His cell phone vibrated in his pocket. It was R.C. “Maydeen told me to call you direct, Sheriff,” he said. “I’m down in Coahuila in kind of a cantina.”
“What are you doing in Coahuila?”
“I got a girlfriend in El Cibolo. On the way back, I blew out a tire and found out somebody had stolen my spare. I bummed a ride to this beer joint, except it’s not exactly just a beer joint. There’s some cribs in back, and up the street there’s some reg’lar hot-pillow joints that need turnstiles on the doors. There was an hombre malo in here earlier, one I couldn’t get a good look at, but he looked like he had a dent in his face. After these guys left, I asked this mulatto shooting pool who they were, and he said they were guys I shouldn’t be asking about unless I was interested in guns that went south and cocaine that went north. He also said the guy they worked for was getting his ashes hauled up the street, a joint that specializes in girls in their early teens.”
“Could the guy with the dent in his face be the one Anton Ling put a screwdriver in?”
“Maybe. He was back in the shadows, shooting pool on the edge of the light. All I could tell was that one side of his face looked caved in.”
“Are there any Mexican cops around?”
“Not unless you count the two who’re getting blow jobs out back.”
Hackberry took a notepad and a ballpoint pen from his shirt pocket. “What’s the name of this place?” he said.
R.C. WAS HAVING a hard time focusing on the face of the mulatto