The Dewey Decimal System (27 page)

Read The Dewey Decimal System Online

Authors: Nathan Larson

BOOK: The Dewey Decimal System
10.48Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I stop turning the pages. My head knows this is no forgery. I understand I needed to see this. My heart asks the obvious question: is this the woman for whom you have marinated me in blood? Is this the creature you would seek to protect?

Hakim Stanley watches me from the corner. Smiling. I know what he’s thinking.

I close the file, pick it up.

I close my eyes. Stand there for a while, like that.

Place my gun in my mouth. It’s still hot, tastes like chemicals. I pull back the hammer.

But that doesn’t feel right. No, nothing is that simple. It’d be cheating.

I withdraw my pistol and open my eyes.

In picking up Jovana’s file, I have exposed another. It’s cover reads:

Walter Reed—National Institutes of Health

That would be me.

Hell no. I take both dossiers. I extract one sheet, the photocopied mug shot of Jovana. I pocket this.

At the wet bar I grab a bottle of vodka. Drop both files in the fireplace. Douse them in vodka.

Matches on the heath, strike them,
poof
. Flames consume paper.

Pull off the gloves. Get out the Purell
TM
, scrub up.

Based on this new information, I might need to rethink my current plans.

I pop a pill, and Hakim and I wait and watch the fire until it’s all gone.

T
he playground. The garbage. It’s all there. It’s always been there. Outside of the projects, properly named the Gun Hill Houses.

It’s me outside the projects, just as I was on my return from figurative padded rooms in D.C.

Biopsies, drip IVs. Catheter tubes. Nonsense questionnaires. A rainbow of pastel capsules and pills. Isolation tanks. Electrical charges. High-pressure hoses. Induced headaches. Neon green tracer fluids coursing through the body. Restraints. Merciless fluorescent lighting.

Note that none of this matters now. Disregard it. The System maps out my future movements.

Enter the building. All surfaces are subway-car metallic, reflecting the warped form that is me. Enter the elevator and a cloud of piss and beer. Push the correct button.

All of this is deeply familiar. Exit the elevator, follow the hallway to the correct door. Take out the key. Enter the bedroom. Pistol is drawn.

Stanley hovers in a darkened corner, a shadow. Blinks his single eye.

Iveta/Jovana sleeps beneath a worn sheet.

Watch the sheet rise and fall. Rise and fall.

Two options, both simple and easily done. Either way it ends badly for me.

I choose option B. Lift the gun. Engage the safety.

I take the page from Jovana’s file out of my pocket, unfold it, and set it beside the mattress. Place the key to the apartment on top of it. On the back I have written:
Jovana. FBI/INTERPOL knows. I know. Time to go.

Take a last look at her. She appears so small. I can only see the top of her head.

On my way out, I withdraw the plastic bag from the bathroom vent. Avoiding the mirror, knowing who I’ll see there.

Close the door behind me, quiet as possible.

T
wenty-sixth Street near Sixth Avenue.

The prehistoric parishioners start straggling in, so I reckon services at the Cathedral of Saint Sava are soon to be getting underway.

I spritz a little Purell
TM
on my hands. Rub it in.

This idea here came to me late last night.

Taking a welcome break from the 000 of computer science/general works, I had been doing some reading on the Serbian Orthodox Church, so it was fresh on the brain.

Woke up this morning and thought, hell, it seems like a nice day for a walk regardless.

I got here via a series of left turns. You know me. You know how I do.

Adjust my hat. Feeling way out of place.

“Sir, you had asked to see me?”

I point myself in the speaker’s direction. It’s the same dude from my previous visit, and like all the best priests he’s clad in black from head to toe, even in this goddamn heat.

“Yes, I did. Don’t know what the protocol is here, so I’ll just get to it.”

I produce the ziplock, the mummified hand within.

“This, well, I believe belongs to your institution. Not this particular church, but the denomination in general. Sorry about the … the packaging.”

He looks at the thing in confusion. “Is this a joke, sir?”

“No, it is not. This is, you know,” I jiggle the bag, “‘the hand.’ Or whatever.” I mime the quotes in the air.

He gets it now. His substantial monobrow nearly hits his hairline. “For the love of … And I suppose you believe you can sell me this thing?”

I shake my head. People assuming shit, I swear. “Just here to return it. That’s all. What am I gonna do with it? I don’t know what you people get up to with these deals, but I can appreciate that they’re important to you.”

He looks from me to the baggie and back to me.

“So, here.” I hand him the ziplock.

He takes it. “There were stories,” he says quietly. “I heard it went missing, during these endless wars, of course …”

“Well, it was presented to me as the real deal. Carbon dating, X-rays. I don’t know how you actually confirm shit like that. Pardon me, Padre.” Shouldn’t be cursing in church.

He sticks out his hand. We shake. I see his eyes are welling up, which seems to be embarrassing for both of us.

“Please …” he says. “Won’t you stay for the service?” He indicates a nearby pew.

I think about that. It is the weekend, after all. My books can wait, they’ve waited this long. And it’s hot as fuck out, that nasty wet New York heat.

“Yeah,” I say. “Yeah, sure, why not.”

“What is your name, my friend, so I can dedicate a specific prayer. So that God may protect and continue to bestow His blessings.”

I want to say,
Iveta
. I want to say,
Hakim Stanley
. But I say, “Decimal. Dewey Decimal.”

“Dewey Decimal,” he repeats. “Thank you.” He dabs at his eyes and splits.

Probably has a warm-up kind of thing he does, get himself psyched up to represent for God.

I watch the old biddies inch forward to take their positions. Enjoy that incense.

Thinking, motherfucker, I’m so glad I didn’t off myself. I have a lot of living to do up in this bitch.

Wonder where Jovana is right now, right at this very moment.

Wonder about Stanley. His family.

A minute later I sit, pop a pill.

Damn, these pews are comfortable. Despite the multitude of microscopic parasites and bacteria that reside in the wood, residue of asses past.

A hush comes over the place as the service begins, like gauze dropped over my head.

And I sleep.

Also available from Akashic Books

THE DEAD DETECTIVE

a novel by William Heffernan

320 pages, hardcover original, $24.95

“The Dead Detective
is William Heffernan’s first novel in seven years, and wherever he’s been, he hasn’t forgotten how to write a good, gritty police procedural … This edgy police drama succeeds in capturing the hysteria that grips Tampa residents when a celebrity criminal … is found dead in a cypress swamp with her throat cut and the word ‘Evil’ carved into her forehead.”

—New York Times Book Review

“The Dead Detective
is a meaty story that offers an intriguing and conflicted protagonist, a darkly fascinating victim, solid police procedural detail, a knowing look at the Tampa Bay area and its politics, an unlikely murderer, and a creepy denouement that hints that Harry [protagonist] will be back.”
—Booklist

BLACK ORCHID BLUES

a novel by Persia Walker

272 pages, trade paperback original, $15.95

“The best kind of historical mystery: great history, great mystery, all wrapped up in a voice so authentic you feel it has come out of the past to whisper in your ear.”

—Lee Child, author of
Worth Dying For

“A remarkable achievement; imagine the richly provocative atmosphere of Walter Mosley or James Ellroy’s best period work, and a savvy, truly likable heroine, and you have
Black Orchid Blues.
Persia Walker is a rising superstar in the mystery genre.”

—Jason Starr, best-selling author of
The Pack

THE PRICE OF ESCAPE

a novel by David Unger

224 pages, trade paperback original, $15.95

“David Unger spins a fascinating tale of weird redemption in
The Price of Escape,
leading us on a tense journey from 1938 Nazi Germany all the way to Guatemala. The sinister United Fruit Company casts a giant shadow over this vividly rendered landscape, devouring everyone and everything in its path. Unger has created a compelling protagonist in the flawed and anguished Samuel Berkow, a man on the run from his own demons and the terrible forces of history.”

—Jessica Hagedorn, author of
Dream Jungle

MANHATTAN NOIR

edited by Lawrence Block

264 pages, trade paperback original, $15.95

Brand-new stories by:
Jeffery Deaver, Robert Knightly, Lawrence Block, Liz Martínez, Thomas H. Cook, S.J. Rozan, Justin Scott, and others.

“A pleasing variety of Manhattan neighborhoods come to life in Block’s solid anthology … the writing is of a high order and a nice mix of styles.”

—Publishers Weekly

BROOKLYN NOIR

edited by Tim McLoughlin

350 pages, trade paperback original, $15.95

*Winner of Shamus Award, Anthony Award, Robert L. Fish Memorial Award; finalist for Edgar Award, Pushcart Prize

Brand-new stories by:
Pete Hamill, Robert Knightly, Arthur Nersesian, Maggie Estep, Nelson George, Sidney Offit, Ken Bruen, and others.

“Brooklyn Noir
is such a stunningly perfect combination that you can’t believe you haven’t read an anthology like this before. But trust me— you haven’t. Story after story is a revelation, filled with the requisite sense of place, but also the perfect twists that crime stories demand. The writing is flat-out superb, filled with lines that will sing in your head for a long time to come.”

—Laura Lippman, winner of the Edgar, Agatha, and Shamus awards

THE BROTHERS’ LOT

a novel by Kevin Holohan

320 pages, trade paperback original, $15.95

“Kevin Holohan’s strange yet disconcertingly recognizable world has echoes of Flann O’Brien’s and Monty Python’s, but there is rage as well as absurdist comedy.
The Brother’s Lot
is a memorable, skillfully wrought, and evocative satire of an Ireland that has collapsed under the weight of its contradictions.”

—Joseph O’Connor, author of
Star of the Sea

These books are available at local bookstores.

They can also be purchased online through
www.akashicbooks.com
.

To order by mail send a check or money order to:

AKASHIC BOOKS

PO Box 1456, New York, NY 10009

www.akashicbooks.com
, [email protected]

(Prices include shipping. Outside the U.S., add $12 to each book ordered.)

Other books

Toxic (Better Than You) by Valldeperas, Raquel
Picture Perfect by Fern Michaels
Absolute Power by David Baldacci
Charmed Life by Druga, Jacqueline
Improper Ladies by McCabe, Amanda
Kate's Wedding by Chrissie Manby
Immortal Trust by Claire Ashgrove
First Lady by Susan Elizabeth Phillips
The Hunter's Moon by O.R. Melling