Authors: David Bell
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Short Stories (Single Author)
“That makes sense,” I said.
“Well,” she said, “I’ll let you keep at it.”
I did. For another hour after she left my side. When I first saw the box with my mother’s handwriting on the side, I almost went right past it. In a thick black marker, she had scrawled “Old Books.” My mother used a distinctive “d.” She always added a looping swirl to the end, her own personal version of a serif font.
I pulled that box close to me and opened it. My father’s books. The big-dick books, mostly spy novels. Robert Ludlum. Ken Follett. Frederick Forsyth. Eric Ambler. I went on to the next box with my Mom’s writing on it. Same thing. Dad’s books, but not Dad’s
book.
I opened two more with the same results. I wanted to take them all. I wanted to tell Patti that they all belonged to me, and I was going to haul them away whether she wanted me to or not. I had no idea what I would do with them. I really didn’t want to read them. I just wanted to
have
them. I wanted them in my possession instead of someone else’s.
And then I found the smaller box, also with Mom’s handwriting on it.
The box was sealed with several layers of packing tape. The box looked old, worn, and a little beaten, like it had been shipped and moved around more than once without being opened. I couldn’t get the tape off of it. I had to use a key to dig into and slice open the thick tape. It required a lot of effort. I sliced and dug and pulled until the lid came open.
The top of the box was stuffed with bubble wrap. I pulled that off. Then there was a layer of thin cardboard. I tossed that aside.
And then I saw it. The cover showed a rugged cowboy on his horse. They stood on a ridge that overlooked a small western town. The cowboy packed a revolver on his hip, and the stock of a rifle protruded from a scabbard on his horse. The cowboy looked lean and tan and strong. He squinted into the distance, toward the town. He looked capable and alone.
Across the top in thick, Western-style lettering, it said:
Rides a Stranger
a novel by Herbert Henry. I lifted up the copies on top. There were more below. Many more. I guessed the box held about twenty of them in clean, crackling new shape despite their age. They were well preserved and perfect. If what the book collectors and Detective Hyland told me was true, I was staring at a twenty thousand dollar box of books.
I had found them.
I picked up one of them, gently, like I was handling a bird’s egg. I paged to the back and looked for an author bio. There was a small one. It simply said, “Herbert Henry is an author who lives in the Midwest. This is his first novel.”
I went back to the front and found the dedication, the one that had caused so much trouble. It was there, just as Hyland said. “For M.A. with love.”
And that was it. No author photo. No acknowledgements. Just that little bio that could have been about anyone.
None of this told me Dad wrote the book.
I turned to the back and read the copy there:
Brick Logan rides alone. He travels the western trail accompanied only by his horse and his Colt revolver. He rides to forget his past and the tragic loss of the woman he loved.
But now he enters another western trail town, one more in a long line of stops he makes. And this time Brick finds himself drawn into the life of Chastity Haines, a beautiful widow and the mother of a young son. Brick helps save the town from the merciless influence of a ruthless cattle baron. But when the fight is done, will Brick choose the life of a family man and give up his fiddlefooting, trail-haunted days. Or will he forever remain alone … and a stranger.
“Jesus,” I said. “Dad.”
“Did you find what you wanted?”
I nearly jumped. It was Patti. She stood over me, her smile hopeful.
“I think so,” I said. I gently put the copy of
Rides a Stranger
back into the box, and then I thought better of it. “I’ll take all of these.” I indicated the boxes that had belonged to my dad. I took my wallet out and grabbed all the cash I had. It amounted to about seventy-seven dollars. “Here. Just take this.”
“We’d probably sell these for a dollar apiece. Fifty cents for the paperbacks.”
“Just take it all,” I said. “For your time and trouble.”
“Can we help you put them in your car?” she asked.
“Yes,” I said. But I picked up the box of
Rides a Stranger
to carry on my own. Before I left with it, I reached into the top of the box and took one copy out. “Here,” I said. “It’s a book my dad wrote.”
“Really?” she said. “Wow. I’m glad you found it.”
“Do me a favor,” I said. “Don’t put it out with the other books. Just take it. If you have the chance, look it up on the internet.”
“Why?” she asked.
“Consider it a donation as well. From my family.”
Patti looked puzzled. “Okay,” she said. “If my grandpa were still alive, I’d give it to him. It looks like the kind of book he’d like.”
I nodded. “You’re probably right.”
I pulled up to the door of the Goodwill store, and the same bearded guy who had directed me to Patti lifted the five boxes of books that once belonged to my dad—and now belonged to me—into the trunk of my car. I had placed the other box, the valuable one, on the passenger seat, so I could keep a close eye on it.
The Goodwill employee took being outside as an opportunity to light a cigarette. He leaned back against the side of the building while I finished situating the boxes in the trunk. I had one stop to make. I was going to go back to the police station and give a copy of the book to Mary Ann Compton. I didn’t know if they’d let her have it, but I would trust Hyland to let me know. If they wouldn’t take it or guarantee its safety, I intended to find her lawyer and pass the book along there. But I wanted Mary Ann to have one.
“You live around here?” he asked.
“I used to,” I said. “My parents do … well, my mom does.”
My mom’s house. Mom lives around here. I had to get used to saying that.
“Neighborhood’s changed a lot,” he said.
“Sure.” I closed the trunk.
“Houses are rundown now. People don’t take care of things.”
“Well, thanks for your help,” I said.
“My family used to shop here all the time when I was growing up.”
I looked at him. “You mean at Goodwill?”
“No,” he said. “I thought you grew up around here. Don’t you remember the old IGA grocery store that used to be here?”
I looked at the building. It started to come back to me. There
was
a grocery store there when I was a kid, one we went to from time-to-time. To be accurate, I should say that my dad and I shopped there. Mom didn’t like it. She felt it was too small, too narrow in its selection. It was possible the store closed and became a Goodwill all those years ago because a lot of people shared my mom’s feelings. But Dad liked to go there. If Mom sent him out on some errand—buy a gallon of milk, buy a loaf of bread—or if he needed something for himself—shaving cream or a newspaper or—
He always looked at the books when we went into IGA. They had a long rack of paperback books and magazines near the front of the store, and we always stopped there before we checked out. And Dad always bought a book. A spy novel, a mystery, and, yes, a western. Did he think about his own writing when he stood in front of that rack? Did he think about what might have been if he hadn’t given the whole thing up for Mom and me? He never showed anything. He always seemed perfectly content, but who knew what was really going on inside of him as he looked at all of those books?
“There’s a parking lot behind here as well, right?” I asked.
“That’s right.”
“And it looks over the lot next door? There’s a fence, and you can see down into the next lot? Right?”
The guy nodded. “That’s right.”
“You used to come here when you were a kid. I used to come with my dad. And you know what? He used to show me the horses back there.”
“Horses?”
“Yes. There was an old, abandoned house next door. Apparently, the neighborhood wasn’t always great. And out back of that house, someone kept a couple of horses. They just wandered around in the yard over there, cropping grass or whatever. Do you remember that?”
The guy ground out his cigarette and shook his head. “I don’t remember any horses.”
“They were there,” I said.
“Could be,” he said and then turned and went back inside.
But I remembered. I remembered it very clearly. Dad and I used to come to the IGA, and when we came out to go the car, he would turn to me and say, “Do you want to look at the horses?”
And I always said yes. I thought it was magic that Dad knew they were there. And how did he know I would want to see them?
Did he contemplate all the western stories he could have written—
should
have written—as he looked at those horses that seemed so out of place in the middle of that neighborhood? So lonely and forgotten?
I jumped in the car and drove around back. The parking lot looked pathetic, the asphalt cracked and stained. I drove over to the edge of the lot where the rusting and rickety chain-link fence still stood. I climbed out, taking one last look at that box of books. My dad’s legacy. Besides me, the most lasting mark he made on the world.
I climbed out and walked over. I put my hands against the fence, felt the ragged and flaking metal beneath my hands. I searched.
The remains of the house had sunk into the ground. Nothing remained but a pile of boards and a crumbling chimney. And no matter how long or hard I looked, the horses, of course, were long, long gone.
All rights reserved, including without limitation the right to reproduce this book or any portion thereof in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2013 by David Bell
978-1-4804-5622-8
Published in 2013 by MysteriousPress.com/Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.
345 Hudson Street
New York, NY 10014
FROM MYSTERIOUSPRESS.COM
AND OPEN ROAD MEDIA