Lullaby Town Read online

Page 17


  Charlie DeLuca had finally made contact.

  CHAPTER TWENTY SIX

  Karen Lloyd got out of her car and ran to the edge of the field. When she saw the bike, her eyes got wide and she put her hands on the sides of her head and she yelled, "Toby?" first scared and then angry, like maybe this was a bad joke and he would jump out and yell boo. She pushed past me into the rye and the timothy and the pumpkin vines, screaming her son's name and running one way and then another. "Toby?"

  I caught her and held her and she said let go and tried to pull away. I said, "He's not there. They wouldn't hurt him. They want you on their side and they know that if they hurt him they'll lose you."

  "I want to find him."

  "We'll find him. We'll go back to the house and wait for Charlie to call."

  "Oh my God. What am I going to do?" She was breathing hard, as if her subjective reality had suddenly been hypered on to a higher plane. "How could they do this? How could they know?"

  "There's only one school here. They probably hung around until Toby started for home and then they picked him up."

  "But his bike."

  "I don't know."

  "Did they just run over him?"

  "No."

  "My God. What did they do to him?" She turned and ran back to the car and I followed.

  Five minutes later we knew.

  Charlie DeLuca's black Lincoln Town Car was sitting in Karen's drive behind the limo. Ric was in the passenger's side with the window down and country-and-western music on the stereo. Reba McIntyre. He still had the black Ray Bans and the black spiked hair and the deathly white skin. A brand-new red Schwinn mountain bike was leaning against the garage, the price tag still on the handlebars. Karen said, "Oh, thank God."

  Ric peeled himself out of the Town Car as we parked. He was wearing a triple-layered black leather English jacket with an acne of metal studs. When the jacket pulled open you could see something stainless-steel and shining under his left arm. The ten. "Let's go inside."

  Karen said, "Is my boy all right?"

  "Let's go inside. Charlie's waiting."

  Karen ran toward the door, and Ric and I followed.

  Peter and Dani and Toby Lloyd and Charlie DeLuca were sitting in the living room, Peter and Charlie in the two wingback chairs and Dani and Toby on the couch.

  Charlie DeLuca was laughing at something that Peter was saying, and they were each holding a bottle of St. Pauli Girl. Toby was sitting on the edge of the couch, hands between his knees, staring at Peter with a kind of nervous curiosity. Joe Pike was standing against the wall by the fireplace, arms crossed and weight on one foot. When Ric came in, Pike put his weight on both feet but didn't uncross his arms. Charlie DeLuca smiled at us like he was everybody's favorite uncle and said, "Here they are, now."

  Karen went directly to Toby and gripped his upper arms and looked him in the eyes hard enough to read something written on the inside of his skull. "Are you all right?"

  "Sure, Mom."

  "Did anyone hurt you? Or threaten you?"

  The boy was looking confused and embarrassed. "What do you mean?"

  Ric nodded at Pike, took off his Ray Bans, and rubbed at his eyes. Guess one pair of dark glasses in the room was enough.

  Charlie smiled at me. "You're still here, huh? I figured for sure you'd be back ridin' Dumbo, knew what's good for you."

  I gave him a little hand shrug. "Maybe we didn't understand each other."

  Peter was smiling, like he had a joke. "You're not going to believe why Toby's late, Karen. Go ahead, Charlie, tell her. Listen to this." Go ahead, Charlie. Old friends.

  Charlie settled back in the wing chair. "I backed over his bike at school. Can you imagine that? I felt so terrible that I waited around until he came out so I could buy him a new one. Hey, a bike is like a horse, right? You're a kid, your bike is your best friend. I felt like such a dufus." Dufus. Putting on the show for Peter, and Peter eating it up.

  Karen stared at Charlie as he said it and then she looked back at her son. "You went with this man to buy the new bike?"

  "Well, yeah. Sure." Talking fast and knowing that he was in trouble. "We went to Quisenberry's. He said he wanted to pay for a new bike and he asked where they sold them in town and I showed him."

  Karen looked from Toby to Charlie and then back to Toby, then she slapped him so hard that it sounded like a .22 pistol fired indoors. "Don't you ever go away with a stranger again!"

  Toby's head snapped to the side and Dani gasped and Peter said, "Hey! What'd you do that for?"

  Karen said, "Shut the fuck up." Her face was white now, almost as white as Ric's, and she was trembling.

  Toby looked scared. "He knew you, Mom. I thought it'd be okay."

  Charlie said, "Tobe, I'm afraid your mom's upset and she's got a right to be. It's my fault." Good old Uncle Charlie. He looked back at Karen, and he didn't look so much like Uncle Charlie anymore. "All of this never would've happened if I hadn't come all the way here from the city for a meeting, and you know what? I'm stood up. I'm left hanging. I need this, right? To be insulted like this?"

  Peter nodded, in perfect agreement with his new friend Charlie. "Hey, I get a clown working on a picture does that, I set him straight."

  Charlie smiled. "That's right, Pete. Sometimes you just gotta set people straight."

  Peter nodded again and shot a wink at his son.

  Karen said, "Toby. Go to your room and close the door."

  Toby's face darkened, but he went out. When he was gone, Karen turned to Charlie and said, "You bastard."

  Peter gave surprised. "Jesus Christ, Karen, the guy's apologized fifteen times. Toby's okay."

  She didn't look at Peter. Her eyes stayed with Charlie and her chest rose and fell and the skin at the corners of her mouth turned a sort of purple color under the makeup.

  Charlie said, "Believe me, I know how she feels. You warn kids about strangers, but kids are still kids, right? They make mistakes. I know how I would feel if anything happened. You wouldn't want anything to happen, would you, Karen?" Giving it to her slow.

  Karen shook her head. "No. I wouldn't want anything to happen."

  I said, "We get the drift."

  Ric said, "No one asked you."

  I said, "Did anyone ever tell you you look like Herman Munster?"

  Charlie's eyes made a slow-motion move from Karen to me, then he got up from the chair and walked over. A vein pulsed in his right temple. He said, "Some guys never get it, Ric. Some guys, you tell'm and tell'm, they never get it, and they end up in trouble."

  I nodded. "Some guys, trouble is a way of life."

  Peter was giving confused. "What are you guys talking about?"

  Charlie took another step closer. He was maybe six inches from me, red-faced and snorting, staring with eyes that were now dead and fishlike, and you could see how he got the name, Charlie the Tuna. "You got brain damage from too much sun? You wanna go over the top right now?" His voice was a sort of a hiss.

  Peter said, "Hey, this doesn't need to get out of hand."

  Ric said, "It's cool," and came up behind Charlie, putting a hand on either shoulder, working him just like he had worked him with Joey Putata, whispering, talking until the snorting and the pulsing had stopped. Keeping Sal DeLuca's kid in control of himself. I wondered if they paid him extra for this.

  Peter said, "Hey, Charlie, you all right? You want a glass of water?"

  The deep-sea eyes submerged and Charlie made a little move that stopped Ric. Charlie stepped back and picked up his coat and Ric held it open so that Charlie could work into it Charlie said, "I'm fine, Peter. Just a little misunderstanding, that's all. Misunderstandings happen."

  Peter said, "Hey, sure." Everything okay now.

  Charlie looked at Karen again, then buttoned his coat and went to the door. "It was a pleasure to meet you, Peter. Christ, you know Chainsaw is one of my favorite pictures. I bought a videocassette. Seventy-nine ninety-five. I musta seen it – what? – over a doze
n times, Ric?"

  Ric said, "A dozen."

  Peter said, "You'll never have to buy another. Give Karen a call and let her know your address. I'll send you tapes of all my movies." He hoisted the St. Pauli Girl and made a little salute.

  Charlie smiled. "I'll give Karen a call." Then he looked back at Karen and shook his head. "C'mon, Ric." Ric opened the door and they left.

  Joe Pike peeled himself away from the wall and went across to the window and looked out.

  Peter said. "Jesus, I don't know why you had to make such a big deal about it, Karen. Toby's fine."

  Outside, a car door opened, then closed. Toby yelled "Bye" from his room. Watching out his window. An engine started. A car pulled away. Pike drifted back to the wall.

  Karen went through the dining room and into the kitchen, closing the door quietly after her.

  Peter said, "What's her problem?"

  I left them in the living room and went to the kitchen after Karen Lloyd. She was standing at the sink, staring through the garden window at her backyard. There were little clay pots on the shelf in the window for growing herbs. Some of the pots were planted, but some of them weren't.

  She said, "The man came to my home. He actually came to my home. He was threatening my child."

  "Mobsters will do that."

  She stared at the backyard some more, and I thought she was going to cry, but she didn't. Every tendon in her body was standing out. I will change my life. I will maintain control. You had to admire it. She said, "Oh my God, what am I doing to us? What if they had hurt my son?"

  I reached out and touched her back. She didn't pull away. I said, "They didn't and they won't. Charlie wants you on his side. He hurts the boy, he knows he's lost you."

  She nodded, thinking about that but not believing it. "I want you to watch out for him. Will you do that? Will you and Mr. Pike stay with us until this is over?"

  "Yes."

  She turned away from the window and looked at the door to the living room. "I'm going to have to tell all of this."

  "I don't see any way around it."

  She closed her eyes and looked tired. "Christ," she said, "that's going to be worse than dealing with Charlie."

  CHAPTER TWENTY SEVEN

  I left Karen Lloyd in the kitchen and went back out into the living room. Toby had come back and was sitting on the couch with Peter. Pike was gone. Outside, probably. Peter said, "You want to come visit me in California?"

  "Sure."

  "Hey, you come out," Peter said, "I'll make the studio send their jet. They got this jet, it does nothing but fly jerks to places they don't need to go. The studios are scared shitless of me. I got a house in Malibu on the beach. Johnny Carson lives a couple doors down. So does Steven Spielberg and Sly Stallone and Tom Hanks. We can hang out. Won't that be great?"

  "Uh-huh." Maybe meaning Spielberg and Stallone, maybe meaning the jet. Dani was smiling and nodding at how wonderful it would all be. Every boy's adventure come true.

  Outside, I could see Pike on the driveway, palms together over his head, standing on one leg. Tree pose. Seeking focus and balance and escape from chaos. Peter said, "What's your favorite car?"

  "What do you mean?"

  "I mean, what's your favorite car? You see TV, you see cars driving around, you look at magazines. You gotta have a favorite car."

  "I kinda like red cars." He had never thought about it.

  Peter spread his hands and beamed. "Hey, you come out, we'll get a red car to drive around. How about that?"

  Toby made a face like his father was speaking Venusian. "You'll buy a car because I'm there?"

  "Sure. You're my son. We'll buy a fuckin' helicopter, you want."

  Toby sort of giggled, maybe for the helicopter, but more likely because Peter had used the F word.

  Peter said, "Dani, go get the thing."

  Dani grinned and went out to the limo and came back with a couple of good-sized boxes. Peter said, "Open'm up, champ." Champ. Just like Ward Cleaver talking to the Beave.

  Toby opened them. The boxes contained a top-of-the-line JVC professional videotape camera, a turbo-charged videotape player and electronic editor, some blank tapes, and copies of all of Peter Alan Nelsen's movies. I figured the setup would retail out at about thirteen grand, excluding the movies. Toby said, "Wow."

  Peter patted him on the leg. "Now you can make your own movies. Just like your old man."

  "Will you show me how?"

  "Bet your ass." Peter leaned forward and ruffled his hair. "You're Peter Alan Nelsen's kid, and things are going to be different from now on. Your life is going to undergo enormous improvement."

  What a thing to say to a twelve-year-old.

  Peter said, "Whatever you want, it's yours. Anything you wanna do, we'll do it. I'm thinking about buying a couple of motorcycles so we can go riding together. Would you like that?"

  "Yeah!"

  When Karen came out of the kitchen, Toby said, "Look at what Peter gave me."

  Karen didn't like it much. "It looks expensive."

  Toby said, "We're gonna get motorcycles. We're gonna go riding together."

  Karen didn't like that at all. "Motorcycles are dangerous, Peter. Toby is too young."

  Peter said, "I'll get'm a trail bike. We won't ride on the street. We'll ride in the woods."

  Karen's jaw clenched and her eyes went hard. 'That's not the point. Toby lives here. Toby lives a certain way and too many expensive gifts will distort his values."

  I said, "Tobe. Peter and your mom have to talk. Why don't you go outside for a little bit"

  Peter said, "The boy and I were just getting to know one another."

  Karen said, "I know, but this is important You can get to know each other after."

  Toby went out the front door and pretty soon there was the thump thump thump of the ball on the drive. Karen looked at Dani. "Could we have some privacy?"

  Dani flushed and said that she'd keep Toby company and went out.

  Peter said, "What?"

  Karen sat on the couch and tucked her skirt under and stared at the man she had married when she was seventeen years old and lived with for fourteen months. Then she took a sharp, quick breath and told him about her involvement with the mafia. No preamble.

  Outside, the deepening twilight was purple and chill and punctuated by the bounce of the ball and an occasional laugh or word. I could see Dani and Toby and most of the drive, but not the hoop. Someone would shoot the ball and the ball would arc up, but then it would be gone, passing from my line of sight. It didn't matter. You could tell if they made it or not by their faces and the sounds they made and by how the ball rebounded. If someone ran to one side or the other, the ball had caromed off the side of the hoop. If someone ran fast straight ahead, they had lofted an air ball and it was rolling into the garage. If the ball gently came back to them or they trotted forward to the hoop, they had made a basket. You didn't see the event, you saw the results of the event. I had read a book on modern astronomy which had said that both Neptune and Pluto were predicted long before they had ever been seen because of peculiarities in the orbits of the other outer planets. It made me think that planets weren't so very different from people. Seeing what happened around them was enough to tell you where they were and what they were.

  When Karen Lloyd was finished, Peter looked at me and said, "Is this for real?"

  "Yep."

  He stood up and gave impatient. "No. I mean, is this really real? This guy who was here, Charlie, he's a criminal, he's in the mafia?"

  I said, "It's really real, Peter." Something only someone in show business would have to hear. "The DeLucas are one of the largest mafia families in New York. I've talked to Charlie about letting Karen out of the setup, but he's said no."

  Peter made a big deal out of looking around the room before he looked back at Karen. He was grinning, like this wasn't really real after all, like maybe we were clowning around. "You're in the mafia."

  "No. I'm not in the ma
fia. I'm involved with the mafia." Her voice was edged. The edge hadn't been there a few minutes ago.

  "Does the boy know?"

  The jaw knotted again. "Stop calling him 'the boy.' He has a name."

  "Jesus Christ, all right. Toby. Does Toby know?" Now Peter was giving us irritated.

  "No. This is illegal, Peter. What I'm doing is against the law. You don't tell a child something like that"

  I said, "This is why I didn't call. We were trying to get this straightened out before I brought you in."

  Peter said, "Jesus Christ."

  "If Karen goes to the police, she'll have to cut a deal with the states and the feds. She can do that, and her testimony will put Charlie and probably Sal away, but then she'd have to go into witness protection."

  Karen said, "We'd have to change our names. We'd have to move and go into hiding. I won't do that to Toby or to me."

  Peter said, "But the guy's here threatening our kid."

  I said, "Charlie did what he did today to get a message across. He won't do anything else if Karen makes the pickups that he tells her to make and continues to launder the money."

  Karen said, "I've asked Elvis and Mr. Pike to move in here until this is over."

  Peter blinked at me. Surprised. "I didn't know you were staying here."

  "I wasn't staying here. I'm going to stay here now."

  Peter frowned, thinking about it and not liking it. "How long is this going to take?"

  I told them about Gloria Uribe and the Jamaican named Santiago, and that maybe Charlie was going to meet with Santiago sometime tomorrow.

  Peter was shaking his head. "You're gonna follow him around and hope you see a connection? Christ, that could take years."

  "It's what we can do."

  Peter went to the window. Outside, Toby passed the ball to Dani, who shot and missed. She laughed when she missed and said something that I couldn't understand. Peter said, "All right. If that's the way things are, that's the way things are. I'll take care of it." He was looking sort of pleased with himself.

  Karen said, "What do you mean, you'll take care of it?"