Henry was sitting on the asphalt in the far corner of the parking lot, nearly hidden from view behind parked cars. It was the opposite corner from where
“Say, mister, you got a dime for a cup of coffee?”
“Coffee costs more than that,
“Jeez, I didn’t see it was you. I didn’t recognize you out of your uniform.”
Henry rose shakily from his sitting position and dropped the bottle onto the asphalt.
“This really 7-Up?”
“It sure is. Like to make me sick. Let’s get out of here. Something weird is going on.”
Henry headed down the alley and left
“I didn’t want to take no chance on that
Henry paused, the shaking brought under control, eager to part with his information but wanting to be paid some mind in the process.
“I sure do,
“Right back to the same building where that Donut Shop is. Only he went down to the basement.”
“What are you talking about? What basement?”
“Right there in that building. There’s steps in the back, right off the parking lot.”
Sam tried to picture the steps in his mind, but there was nothing very clear showing up. He had been down that alley a thousand times, too.
“There’s a railing there.”
The picture was becoming a little clearer for
“Anyway,”
“Were they carrying anything? Bags? Something under their clothes?”
“Nothing that I could see. But I didn’t stand there with my head sticking out. They wasn’t in there more than a few minutes.”
“Do you think you could recognize them again?”
“No. I didn’t see that much of them. In fact, the only reason I think they was kids was by the way they walked. Kind of fast like. You know how kids are. They left out the alley to
Pike Street
. I hardly seen them.”
“How many times did that
“Just that once. Of course, I missed him that first time.”
Henry’s bad teeth shone in the afternoon sun, but then he looked around and seemed to sense he was out of place. The smile disappeared. They were both out of place. Past them a parade of men and women in expensive suits and equally expensive hair walked with their heads high and looked as though they were in a hurry to get someplace they didn’t want to go. Were they all deal makers,
First Avenue
, they didn’t walk with their heads so high.
“You did a good job,
“You want me to keep on watching? I got time, you know.”
“No. Let’s call it a day. We don’t want them to get suspicious.”
He wanted to go home, and he didn’t want to think about
“What do you think they’re doing,
“Call me
“Yes sir,
“What do you think they’re doing?”
“I don’t know. I wouldn’t mind finding out though.”
“I wouldn’t either,”
“Sure. I ain’t never worked for the law before. Maybe I could get me something in the morning first unloading those trucks, like I did today. I don’t want no more money from you.”
“Okay. I’m usually in the Market about that time. Maybe I’ll see you.”
“Sure. Well, guess I better get going then. Got to keep on the move.”
Henry swallowed hard and his Adam’s apple skipped in his skinny neck as though his throat were parched. Like a fast-moving cloud, a look of torment moved across his face that had only a moment before showed renewed possibilities.
He stood with
“Well, I guess we’ll call it a day then,”
“Yeah, that’s what we’ll do,”
“Which way you headed?”
“That way,”
“I’m heading the other way. See you in the morning.”
“You bet,”
Sam lingered for one more moment, the familiarity of
“You got any family around here?”
“Them I still got are in
Missouri
. Not many left, though. Didn’t even know about my mother dying until I passed through. They didn’t have no way to reach me. I seen her grave though. She ought to have a bigger stone, but with the likes of me to look after her, it ain’t surprising. How about you? You must have lots of family.”
“Not so many. My mother died a year ago. Let me tell you,
“I bet she was proud of you.”
“You think so?”
“Sure. You in your uniform and all. A mother likes to see her son in some kind of uniform. I was in the army once, and that was the picture she kept on the bureau.”
“I wonder what picture
“He didn’t have no mother.”
From
Since midnight Katherine had been alone.
A heavy fog had settled at the waterfront, and she could see no lights across the Sound. When she flashed the car’s spotlight over the water, the beam revealed nothing. Even close images blurred and faded as though she were nearsighted.
Katherine walked down the stairway to the thick, wood planks of the dock. She heard the rustle of water against them. Radio announced the time—0400 hours.
Evenly spaced and mournful, two foghorns played opposite each other—first one, then the other at a different pitch. The closer, louder horn had the lower tone. Each hummed its single note as though tuning before playing the rest of the music, but there was no more music.
The fog seemed immobile until she looked up to the light mounted at the stairway. She saw the fog waltzing with itself, twirling and circling in irregular turns, ignoring the two notes that played to regular time.
The stiff sleeves of her blue jacket rubbed against her bare arms. It was too early in the year for the down liner that softened it. She crossed her arms and stood where he usually landed.
The ferry horn blasted off to her right and she followed the moving glow from the ferry lights as they dimmed into the fog. The wake from the ferry arrived at the dock and raised and lowered the wood planks before wasting itself on shore. She released sight of the ferry and looked into the vacuum behind it. There was a dim flash of light as though the fog had cracked open for a second; then it was gone. It might never have been there. She saw it again. A flash, darkness, another flash. It moved toward her. She walked to the very end of the dock and pulled out her flashlight. She flashed it twice, then twice again.
“Morning,” came his voice.
“Good morning to you,” she said. He was close by then.
There were low-lying lights on the dock that guided him in, and he changed direction at the last moment so that the kayak slid sideways into the wood. She caught the line he tossed.
“I wasn’t sure you would come,” she said, “with the fog and all.”
“The fog doesn’t bother me much.”
“Cute little light you have there.”
A rubber cord fastened a battery lantern to the top of the kayak.
“Could you see it?”
“Quite a way out,” she said.
“I always wondered if it did any good.”