I could see Pyotr now, and he looked embarrassed, as though my appetite were his fault.
“What time is it?”
“Seven P.M.”
“God’s teeth.”
“It was four in the morning when we arrived here. You have slept for thirteen hours. I fell asleep at noon and have just awakbned. Do you feel better now that you have eaten?’
“No, but I concede the trick is possible. What’s good for total bodily agony?”
“Well, there is no cure. But certain medications are said toalleviate the symptoms.”
“And Callahan’s has opened by now. Well, how do we get me to the car?”
In due course we got to Callahan’s where Lady Macbeth~ lay in state on top of the bar. the wake was already in full swing when we arrived and were greeted with tipsy cheers. I saw that it was Riddle Night: The big blackboard stood near the door, tonight’s game scrawled on it in the handwriting of Dec Webster. On Riddle Night the previous week’s winner is Riddle Master; each solved riddle is good for a drink on the Riddle Master’s tab. The Dec looked fairly happy-every unsolved riddle is a free drink for him, on the house.
The board was headed “PUBLIC PERSONALitIES.” Beneath that were inscribed the following runes:
I.
a) Hindu ascetic; masculine profession
b) tramp; crane
c) profligate; cheat
d) span; tavern, money
e) fish; Jamaican or Scottish male, caviar
f) certainly; Irish street
g) handtruck; forgiveness
II.
a) pry; manager
b) smart guy; Stout
c) chicken coop; more loving
d) bandit; crimson car
e) coffin; baby boy
I) tote; subsidy
g) moaning; achieve
III.
a) irrigated; laser pistol
b) Nazi; cook lightly
c) British punk; knowledge, current
d) chicken coop; foreplay
e) wealthier; nuts to
IV.
a) Italian beauty; stead, depart, witness
b) toilet; auto, senior member
c) be dull; Carmina Burana
d) grass; apprentice, younger
e) valley; odd
f) bums; leer at
Example: penis; truck = peter; lorry = Peter
Lorre. Extra drinks for identifying Categories I-IV
People were staring at the board, seemed to have been staring at it for some time, but none of the riddles were checked off yet. I paid my respects to the Lady, said hello to Mike, accepted a large glass of dog-hair. Then, deliberately, I turned away from the Lady and toward the board.
(Why don’t you take a crack at it before reading further?)
“Got one,” I said at once, and allowed Long-Drink to help me to the board. “First one in line,” I said, marking with chalk. “Hindu ascetic; masculine profession. That’s lain; Man’s Field, and Category One is Actresses.”
Doe Webster looked pained. “Say Film Women,” he suggested. “More accurate. Mike, one for Jake on me.”
Given the category Section I was fairly simple. I got b) ‘Bo; Derrick. Long-Drink MçGonnigle got c) Rakehell; Welsh. Tommy Janssen figured out that d) and e) were Bridge It; Bar Dough and Marlin; Mon Roe. Josie Bauer took f) Surely; Mick Lane and g) Dolly; Pardon. We collected our drinks gleefully.
I suspected that the second category would be Male Actors (or Film Men), but kept my mouth shut, hoping I could figure them all out and do a sweep before anyone else twigged. This turned out to be poor tactics; I got a), b), d) and f), but while! was puzzling over the rest, Shorty Steinitz spoke up. “The category is Male Film Stars, and the first one is Jimmy; Steward!” I tried to jump in at once, but Long-Drink drowned me out. “Got b): Alec; Guinness! Hey, and f) has to be Carry; Grant.”
“And d),” I said initably, “is Robber; Red Ford. But what about th~ others?” We stared at them in silence for awhile.
“A hint,” Doe Webster said at last: “With reference to g), the first name is what I’ll be doing if you do the second.”
“Got it!” Long-Drink cried. “Keenin’; Win.” The Doe grimaced. Callahan was busy keeping score and distributing the prizes, but he had attention left to spare. “That third one there, c): That has to be Hennery; Fonder.”
There was a pause, then. Nobody could figure out “coffin; baby boy.” (Can you?) After awhile we turned our attention to the remaining two categories, but the silence remained unbroken. The Doc looked smug. “No hurry, gents and ladies,” he said. “Closing time isn’t for several hours yet.” We all glared at him and thought hard.
Surprisingly, it was Pyotr who spoke up. “I have a sweep,” he stated. “Category IV in its entirety.”
Folks regarded him with respectful interest. He was committed now: if he missed one, he would owe the Dec all six drinks. The Dec looked startled but game-he seemed to think he had an ace up his sleeve. “Go ahead, Pyotr.”
“The category is Famous Monsters.” The Dec winced. “The first is Bella; Liei Go See.” Applause. “Then John; Car a Dean.” More applause.
“Not bad,” the Dcc admitted. “Keep going.”
“The next two, of course, are among the most famous of all. Be dull; Carmina Burana has to be Bore Us; Carl Orff….” He paused to sip one of the three drinks Callahan had passed him.
“Brilliant, Pyotr,” I said, slapping him on the back. “But I’m still stumped for the last three.”
“That is because they are tricky. The first is tortured, and the last two are obscure.”
“Go ahead,” Doe Webster said grimly.
“The first is the famous Wolfman: Lawn; Trainee Junior.”
Delighted laughter and applause came from all sides. “The others are both Frankenstein’s Creature, but it would require an historian of horror films to guess both. Glenn Strange played the Monster in at least three movies…” The Doc swore. “… and the last shall be first; the man who played the Monster in the very first film version of Frankenstein.”
“But we already had Karloff,” I protested.
“No, Jake,” Pyotr said patiently. “That was the first talkie version. The very first was released in 1910, and the Monster was played by a man with the unusual name of Charles Ogle. Read,‘chars’ for ‘burns’ and you come close enough.”
We gave him a standing ovation-in which the Doc joined.
All of this had admirably occupied my attention, from almost the moment of my arrival. But before I turned to a study of Category ifi, I turned to the bar to begin the third of the four drinks I had won-and my gaze fell on the ruined Lady. She lay there in tragic splendor, mutely reproaching me for enjoying myself so much while she was broken. All at once I lost all interest in the game, in everything but. the pressing business of locating and obtaining oblivion. I gulped the drink in my hand and reached for the next one, and a very elderly man came in the door of Callahan’s Place with his hands high in the air, an~expression of infinite weariness on his face. He was closely followed by Fast Eddie Costigan, whose head just about came up to the level of the elderly man’s shoulder blades. Conversations began to peter out.
I just had time to recall that Eddie had vanished mysteriously the night before, and then the two of them moved closer and I saw why everybody was getting quiet. And why the old gent had his hands in the air. I didn’t get a real good look, but what Eddie had in his right hand, nestled up against the other man’s fourth lumbar vertebra, looked an awful lot like a Charter Arms .38. The gun that got Johnny Lennon and George Wallace.
I decided which way I would jump and put on my blandest expression. “Hi, Eddie.”
“Hi, Jake,” he said shortly, all his attention on his prisoner.
“I tell you for the last time, Edward-,” the old gent began in a Spainish accent.
“Shaddap! -Nobody ast you nuttin’. Get over here by de bar an’ get to it, see?”
“Eddie,” Callahan began gently.
“Shaddap, I said.”
I was shocked. Eddie worships Callahan. The runty little piano man prodded with his piece, and the old Spaniard sighed in resignation and came toward me.
But as he came past me, his expression changed suddenly and utterly. If aged Odysseus had come round one last weary corner and found Penelope in a bower, legs spread and a sweet smile on her lips, his face might have gone through such a change. The old gent was staring past me in joyous disbelief at the Holy Grail, at the Golden Fleece, at the Promised Land, at-
-at the maimed Lady Macbeth.
“Santa Maria,” he breathed. “Madre de Dios.”
Years lifted from his shoulders, bitter years, and years smoothed away from his face. His hands caine down slowly to his sides, and I saw those hands, really saw them for the first time. All at once! knew who he was. My eyes widened.
“Montoya,” I said. “Domingo Montoya.”
He nodded absently.
“But you’re dead.”
He nodded again, and moved forward. His eyes were dreamy, but his step was firm. Eddie stood his ground. Montoya stopped before the Lady, and he actually bowed to her. And then he looked at her.
First he let his eyes travel up her length the way a man takes in a woman, from the toes up. I watched his face. He almost smiled when he reached the bridge. He almost frowned when he got to the scars around the sounding hole that said I had once been foolish enough to clamp a pick-up onto her. He did smile as his gaze reached the fingerboard and frets, and he marveled at the lines of the neck. Then his eyes reached the awful fracture, and they shut for an instant. His face became totally expressionless; his eyes opened again, studied the wreck with dispassionate thoroughness,
and went on to study the head.
That first look took him perhaps eight seconds. He straightened up, closed his eyes again, clearly fixing the memory forever in his brain. Then he turned to me. “Thank you, sir,” he said with great formality. “You are a very fortunate man.”
I thought about-it. “Yes, I believe I am.”
He turned back and looked at her again, and now he looked. From several angles, from up close and far away.
The joining of neck to body. The joining of head to neckstub. “Light,” he said, and held out his hand. Callahan put a flashlight into it, and Montoya inspected what he could of Lady Macbetlfs interior bracings through her open mouth. I had the damndest feeling that he was going to tell her to stick out her tongue and say “Ah!” He tossed the flashlight over his shoulder-Eddie caught it with his free hand-and stooped to sight along the neck. “Towel,” he said, straightening. Callahan produced a clean one. He wiped his hands very carefully, finger by finger, and then with the tenderness of a mother bathing her child he began to touch the Lady here and there.
“Jake,” Long-Drink said in hushed tones. “What the hell is going on? Who is this guy?”
Montoya gave no sign of hearing; he was absorbed.
“Remember what I said last night? That there are only maybe four Master-class guitar makers left in the country?”
“Yeah. This guy’s a Master?”
“No,” I cried, scandalized.
“Well then?”
“There is one rank higher than Master. Wizard. There have been a dozen or so in all the history of the world.
Domingo Montoya is the only one now living.” I gulped Irish whiskey.. “Except that he died five years ago.”
“The hell you say.”
Fast Eddie stuffed the gun into his belt and sat down on his piano stool. “He didn’t die,” he said, signalling Callahan for a rum. “He went underground.”
I nodded. “I think I understand.”
Long-Drink shook his head: “I don’t.”
“Okay, Drink, think about it a second. Put yourself in his shoes. You’re Domingo Montoya, the last living guitar
Wizard. And all they bring you to work on is shit. There are maybe fifty or a hundred guitars left on the planet worthy of your skill, most of which you made yourself, and they’re all being well cared for by careful and wealthy owners. Meanwhile, fools keep coming in the door with their broken toys, their machine-stamped trash, asking Paul Dirac to do their physics homework for them. Damnfool Marquises who want a guitar with the name of their mistress spelled out in jewels on the neck; idiot rock stars who want a guitar shaped like a Swiss Army knife; stupid rich kids who want their stupid Martins and stupid Goyas outfitted with day-glow pickguards by the man everyone knows is the last living Wizard. Nobody wants to pay what honest materials cost nowadays, nobody wants to wait as long as true Quality requires, everybody wants their goddamn lily gilded, and still you can’t beat them off with a club, because you’re Domingo Montoya. You triple your fee, and then triple it again, and then square the result, and still they keep coming with their stupid broken trash-or worse, they purchase one of your own handmade masterworks, and use it ignobly, fail to respect it properly, treat it like some sort of common utensil.” I glanced at Montoya. “No wonder he retired.”
Montoya looked up: “I have not retired. If God is kind I never will. But I no longer sell my skill or its fruits, and
I use another name. I did not believe it was possible to locate me.”
“Then how-“
“Two years ago I accepted an apprentice.” My brows went up; I would not have thought there was anyone worthy to be the pupil of Domingo Montoya. “He is impatient and lacks serenity, but both of these are curable with age. He is not clumsy, and his attitude is good.” He glowered at Eddie. “Was good. He swore secrecy to me.”
“I went ta school wit’ ‘in,” Eddie said. “P.S. Eighty-t’ree. He hadda tell somebody.”
“Yes,” Montoya said, nodding slowly. “I suppose -I can see how that would be so.”
“He come back ta de old neighborhood ta see his Ma. I run into ‘im on de street an’ we go to a gin mill an’ pretty soon he’s tellin’ me de whole story, how he’s never been so happy in his life. He tells me ta come out to Ohio an’ meetcha sometime, an’ he gimme yer address.” Eddie glanced down at the gun in his belt and looked sheepish. “I guess he sh’unta done dat.”
Montoya looked at him, and then at Lady Macbeth, and then at me. He looked me over very carefully, and to my great relief I passed muster. “No harm done,” he said to Eddie, and for the first time I noticed that Montoya was wearing a sweater, pajamas, and bedroom slippers.