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Authors: Jerry Stahl

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Hard-Boiled

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BOOK: Plainclothes Naked
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A year after they split up, it occurred to Manny, out of nowhere, that Marge had actually been talking to
him.
Getting off calling him a
FOOL
and an
ID
-iot and a
TO
-tal
ASS
-hole while writhing beneath him. It was, in retrospect, one of the high points of their union.

“Madame’s waiting on the
verahn-dah,
” Lipton announced, doing his campy-ironic number, and Manny made his way through the high-ceilinged central hall to the patio in back where Marge sat sipping tea. Her one vice was Celestial Seasons Fast Lane: ginseng and mega-caffeine, two bags at once, sipped from a large white mug with her face and logo on it. “Mayor Marge and Business—The Perfect Blend!”

“You have five minutes,” she informed him, without looking up “Be still my heart,” said Manny.

He had to stare, amazed all over again at the choices his ex had made. Marge seemed to be willing herself to Elizabeth Dole-dom, opt ing for a stiff, camera-ready do and business suits that might as well

have had
MIDDLE
-
AGED
spray-painted across the back. When they met, she was a fresh-faced, slightly full-of-herself All-American Rich Girl. All perfect skin, pert breasts, and bouncy ponytail.
Now look at her,
he thought. If life was Disneyland, Marge looked like she was standing in line for Menopause Mountain.
Did I do that?
he wondered. In a dishy moment, Lipton confided that milady had a portrait of Margaret Thatcher over her bed.

When he couldn’t handle standing anymore, Manny took the lib erty of sitting down and saw that the mayor was reading a brochure, “Brink’s Home Security—Questions & Answers.”

“You’re at four-and-a-half,” Marge said, still not bothering to raise her eyes. A squirrel stared at him from a bone-dry bird feeder, and a pair of crows Heckled and Jeckled across the manicured lawn. Manny knew better than to wait her out. Marge would just as soon freeze him with silence as grant him a thirty-second conversation. And none of his detective tricks would work, either. She was sharing a bed with him when he’d dreamt them up.

“Having security problems?” he asked, by way of icebreaker. “I hear Brink’s does a pretty good job. At least that’s what it says on the ads that come on during
Oprah.

“You’re watching
Oprah
now?”

“Oh constantly,” he said. “Is that bad?”

Since the divorce, it was plain his ex found everything about him vaguely nauseating. She could ask him his favorite color, and if he said “green” she’d speak to him in the same tone she was using now.
There’s something really unsavory about green,
that tone implied.
Only a deeply disturbed underachiever like you would think green was a decent color
....

“Oprah and I are getting married,” he said, just to get her nose out of her Brink’s brochure. “She says she wants a man who can eat as much as her and not gain an ounce. I’m one lucky guy.”

“Manuel!”
Marge sighed, slapping down her pamphlet. She met his eyes with more annoyance than malice. “I’m sure there’s a reason you came by, but do you have to do a
routine
before you tell me what it is?” Manny cranked up a smile. His hunch was that Mister Biobrain had been pinched from the mayor’s place, maybe on purpose or maybe—

imagine their surprise!—by some skells who thought they were walking off with cash and Rolexes and ended up with a bonus: a close-up of W blobbing his family jewels in the mayor’s face.
Two-for-one day!

“Okay,” he said, leaning forward and reaching for the Brink’s brochure, “I’m just wondering if you’re checking on extra security because your place got hit.”

Marge studied him, crinkling her eyes, and Manny could sense her drive to find out what he knew doing battle with her desire to keep him from knowing anything. She opened her stay-hot teapot and dropped in another Fast Lane, then closed the top with a little
thwop.

“The thing is, Marge, there’s this snitch claims he knows a guy who knows a guy who knocked over the mayor’s place. I don’t have to tell you, people will spout all kinds of crap to get out of a corner, and since we caught this guy peeping in the window at Immaculate Heart, where the girls change for field hockey, I don’t want to waste time tracking this if it’s nothing but stay-out-of-jail bullshit. But now that I see you with your shiny Brink’s brochure, looking a bit—no offense— less self-assured than usual, I’m wondering if maybe it’s true. I’m won dering if this guy with a snitch jacket long as your femur might actually be dealing straight.”

Marge opened her teapot and plopped in another bag—that made three—and Manny was reminded of the odd geometry that abides between the formerly married. Much as they may loathe each other, they also
know
each other. So that even the things that drive them cra ziest are somehow comforting, a source of familiar fury, fermented over time to one of life’s most dependable, piquant joys.

“Your instincts are off, as usual,” Marge informed him. “If anybody tried to break in here, they’d be caught. But if they did manage”—she smiled her build-a-stadium-in-my-town smile—“I’d report it to the police. So if there’s nothing else... .”

“Just a little unasked-for advice,” said Manny. And, standing up with a pleasant smile, he picked the teapot off the table and peeked inside. “If you really want to make great tea, you might think about adding water. Stuff doesn’t taste the same when you drop the bags in dry.”

“Very
Columbo,
” said Marge, “but your five minutes are up.”

ELEVEN

“Don’t talk to me. Not a word. Nothing. Don’t even aim your eyeballs in my direction.”

“But Tony—”

“I told you, goddamn it! In this car you do not exist!”

Zank slammed his palm off the Gremlin’s steering wheel, sending the tiny hatchback into the path of an oncoming tractor trailer. He swerved at the last minute, a frantic move that slammed both men sideways. The Gremlin’s front seat was so cramped, McCardle’s shoul der brushed Zank’s before he could scramble upright.

“DON’T TOUCH ME!” Tony screamed. “But Tony, I didn’t do anything.”

Watery blood bubbled from the bruise on Tony’ fore head, where his mother had ashtrayed him. A plum

size contusion oozed beside that, and a welt swelled under his nostrils, courtesy of Carmella’s comb-slash. Where Mac had accidentally shot the top of Tony’s ear off, a clamshell of dried blood gunked the side of his head, flanked by flesh-tone streaks where the hair had been scorched away.

“Tony, I—”

“NO!”
thundered Zank. “What is
wrong
with you? Shut up!
Stay

shut up!”

“But Tony, come on, man. I didn’t
want
to do it. She made me!” “She made you? She
made
you!”

The madder Tony got, the more weight he put on the gas pedal, until they were zooming down Liberty Boulevard, Upper Marilyn’s main drag, swishing by SUVs and pickups that seemed parked doing 35.

“You’re sick, you know that?” Tony shouted, pounding the dash board while McCardle cowered. “And I’ll tell you something else, if you ever mention what happened, if you so much as
think
of telling anybody you ... you... .” He couldn’t bring himself to continue and bit his lip. “If you do, I’ll kill you so fast you won’t know you were ever fucking alive. You hear me? I might kill you anyway, just to make sure. I’ll rip out your fucking kidneys with a fork.”

“You’re kidding, right? She had a gun on me.
Your
gun! You saw!” “I saw,” said Zank. “She had a gun. You had a boner. That’s what I

saw. You weren’t some kind of faggot, or half-faggot, or I don’t know what, you’d have taken the bullet.You’d have risked it. But you had my ass in your lap, and you were all pudgied up.”

McCardle began to sniffle. His lower lip quivered over his soul patch. “C’mon, Dog, it wasn’t you. I like fat ladies, okay? My
auntie
was a fat lady.”

Zank snorted. “So fucking what?” He rounded a corner with no signal and sent a mail truck screeching out of the way. “My aunt had a fucking moustache. That don’t mean I like broads who shave. You had your skink in me!”

McCardle whimpered. “Just an
inch.

“No, man, you
fucked
me!” Tony cried, his voice beginning to crack. “You fucking
fucked
me!”

“Not technically,” McCardle protested. “As soon as you cut her I pulled out.”

“Bullshit! You stopped ’cause you thought I was gonna cut
you.
You were afraid I’d cut your plumpy off. I would’ve, too, you fucking
man-ho!

The pair kept squabbling at the red light. The windows of the Gremlin were down, and a swarthy man in a Boy Scout uniform glared at them from the wheel of a minivan. Behind him a dozen Scouts pressed their faces against the glass.

“Damn perverts!” the scoutmaster yelled, waving his cap to get the Gremlin screamers to pipe down.

Zank saw who was yelling and screamed. “Boy Scouts! I fucking

HATE
Boy Scouts!
They should all die!

Tony clawed at his seat belt, trying to leap out of the car, but McCardle held him back. “Calm down,Tony, they’re kids.”

“Get off me, goddamn it! I’ll waste ’em all! The little
fuckers!
” McCardle grabbed him by the shoulder, and Zank threw him off. “I told you not to touch me!” he roared. “Didn’t you hear me? I

know about you, man. I know about the Parakeet Lounge!”

Before McCardle could defend his honor, Tony was rolling again. He caught sight of Carmichael Street and swung a hard left. Mac dug his fingers into the seat, to keep from flying sideways and grazing his irate companion a second time.

“You even know why we
went
to that motel with that fat slit?” Zank asked. “You ever figure that out?”

McCardle was busy fighting back sobs and barely heard the ques tion. “I don’t know
anything,
Tony!” He buried his face in his hands. “I just know it wasn’t you that got me stoked. It was
her,
that Carmella, the way she spread them big legs, the way the inside of her thighs got all sweaty-like, how they touched all the way to her knees, and then,
Sweet Mother of Jesus,
when she pulled out that big vibrator... .”

“Enough! You’re gonna make me blow chunks.” Zank straight-armed McCardle to make him stop. “We went to the motel for insur ance, Cocoa Puff. The idea was, one guy stays in the room with the broad, one guy goes out and checks the street and number she gave us, makes sure we’re not bein’ gamed. I find out Carmella slipped us some phony address, I call you up and you torture the cunt till she coughs up the right info.
Then
you kill her. That’s how it’s done. Where’d
you
go to school, man?”

McCardle dabbed his eyes with the sleeve of his parka.

“You mean, I could’ve been
with
her? While you were out check ing?”

“What’d I just say?”

“But what if she gave us the right address?”

“Then we don’t torture her,” said Zank. “We just kill her.”

McCardle hardly heard. He was still thinking about what could have been: a blissful hour or two, alone with that massive beauty. He could have tied her up, buried his face in her beehive, licked all over her hips. . . . The Big Love opportunity of a lifetime,
gone.
He plunged his face in his hands.

“Get ahold of yourself,” Zank growled. “We gotta kamikaze.”

Tony shifted on the seat to find a position that didn’t ache. He wondered if Mac could tell he wasn’t cherry, and quickly blocked the thought with a dozen other ones. But McCardle was somewhere else entirely. In Mac’s mind he was tying the bodacious rest home supervi sor to the bedpost, cinching the rope tight below her belly button, let ting his fingers linger over that shaved slope down to her no-doubt chubby lovelips. Oh
yeah!
He wanted to leave her hands free, so when he tickled her she could still hit him. He wanted—

“There she is!”
Tony cried, gunning the Gremlin up Carmichael just as Dee-Dee Walker stepped out of Tina’s house and strode toward the
Trumpet
pool car. He slowed down to check her out and lowered his voice.

“Looks kind of hoity-toity for a fucking old people’s nurse. I bet she already got some dough for Mister Biobrain and spent it on clothes, the thieving bitch!”

Tina, meanwhile, watched from behind her living room curtain as the reporter set her camera and notebook on the roof of her Toyota Camry and unlocked the door. She kept watching while her inquisitor picked up her stuff, got in, and started the car. If Tina noticed the avo cado Gremlin with the bleeding white guy and buff little black man squeezed in front, it didn’t register.

She closed the curtain before the two vehicles disappeared around the corner.

TWE LVE

Manny had a brother named Stanley he never talked to who went to Penn State and became a stockbroker. Stanley moved to New Jersey, married three shiny blonds in a row, and fathered a pair of children with names like colognes: Artemis and Jade. What made Manny think about Stanley was the stench in the Liver Ward.

Along with cracking her coccyx, breaking some ribs, rupturing her spleen, and shattering both elbows after her rest home plummet, Tony Zank’s mom had been diagnosed with acute cirrhosis. So she’d been shipped from Seventh Heaven to Marilyn Charity, where they stuck her in Liver.

Most of the other occupants, walking-dead rum mies with distended bellies and tears flowing hepati

tic yellow when they begged for a bottle, slumped on the edge of their beds and stared at their hands. An odd fact: Once they stopped seeing giant insects flying out of the walls, dying drunks pretty much stared at their hands all day. But their hands were not what Manny was ponder ing. It was their stench that grabbed him by the throat, a toxic cocktail of sweat, bile, soaking sheets, and rank desperation that watered the eyes as it keelhauled the stomach. Manny couldn’t describe the smell exactly, but there was one thing he was certain of: His brother Stanley would never have to inhale it.

BOOK: Plainclothes Naked
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ads

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