The Lure (28 page)

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Authors: Felice Picano

BOOK: The Lure
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“What are you, on the rag today, Lure?”

“What’s wrong with you? You keep twisting and distorting everything I tell you. Do you want to know the truth or do you want your own version of it?”

Noel remained quietly furious for the next minute of silence.

“Get back to the financial thing,” Loomis finally said in a quiet tone of voice.

“Just don’t keep distorting what I say,” Noel put in, then went on: “It’s not exactly clear. According to Alana, he’s devoted to the gay political movement, providing large sums of money for equal rights legislation in various parts of the country. His idea is to form an economic council to guide the funding. To my knowledge they have no direct links with any militant gay groups you read about in the papers.”

“To your knowledge?” Loomis put in.

“That’s what I said. None of the militant leaders has been in the town house, or even been mentioned except in critical terms. But they might be funded in specific campaigns. Evidently, Redfern doesn’t trust them that much.”

“All right. You made your point. What’s this council?”

“Redfern wants to form it, with himself and another half dozen prominent gay businessmen as permanent members, and another half dozen businessmen coming in and leaving every year.”

“From New York?”

“From all over. San Francisco, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Houston, Miami, D.C., Denver, and New Orleans. Cities with large and wealthy gay communities. It will be nationwide. They haven’t a name yet. When they do, they’ll announce it to the press. It sounds like a good idea.”

“They’re not going to be too happy when the press gets wind that it’s being funded by criminal activities.”

“If Redfern’s as smart as you say he is, wouldn’t he make certain the money is clean?”

“Maybe he can’t keep it clean anymore.”

“Dorrance could. He’s a genius at that. He was the senior Redfern’s accountant for twenty years. Because of him, the old man kept so much of the money he made.”

“You seem real impressed by these guys, Lure. You ought to hear yourself. This one’s a boy genius. That one’s an old genius. This one’s a world-famous model. That one sold a million records in a month. Even this conspiracy is a good idea: perverts running the country.”

Noel allowed a long pause before answering. He was angry at Loomis’s unreasonableness, but he wanted to try to get past that anger so he could discover why the Fisherman was being so purposefully deaf to the information he wanted Noel to provide, that he was providing. More important, what was Noel supposed to believe? What he was seeing every day—but perhaps not clearly, perhaps incompletely, perhaps distorted by his own fears and prejudices—or what the Fisherman insisted the facts were? Stymied for the minute, he said:

“You know, Loomis, I’m getting a little fed up with these phone calls. Why don’t I just write you a letter?”

“Don’t be funny. What’s Redfern up to tonight?”

“He and Alana are going to a charity ball at the St. Regis.”

“And you?”

“It’s my night off.”

“Did they invite you?”

“They invite me everywhere.”

“Why aren’t you going?”

“I said: it’s my night off.”

“Next time ask me before making that kind of decision!”

“I had a previous engagement.”

“I said, next time ask me!”

19

That conversation spoiled the rest of Noel’s morning.

He decided to call Alana, persuade her to join him for lunch, an afternoon movie, perhaps even a walk in the park. He was sure she’d make him believe again that all he was doing for Whisper was worthwhile, even though she didn’t, couldn’t, know his part in it. She’d soften him up again, fill up the empty day.

She wasn’t at home when he called. Okku said she was at the studio. Noel dialed there. After a long wait she came to the phone, sounding breathless.

“The proofs of you are marvelous, Noel! Just marvelous! It looks as though you have been posing all your life! You will have a wonderful career! You’ll be earning your own money and won’t have to feel hostile to Eric because you are dependent on him.”

“How about lunch?”

“I ate. Don’t you care about the photos?”

“A drink, then, when you’re finished. I’ll come meet you.”

“I don’t know when I’ll be done here. Brickoff has gotten some insane idea in his head and has locked me and three other women in the studio all day, until he is done. Lunch was sent up. I don’t know when we’ll be done. He is completely crazy today.” She waited long enough for Noel to realize she meant it. “I’m sorry, Noel. Really. Maybe tomorrow.”

“All right, tomorrow.” But he couldn’t hide his disappointment. Interrupting her apologies, he hung up.

An hour later he decided to smoke some grass Randy had left at the apartment. It only took half the joint to get him pleasantly high. He put the remainder in his wallet, thinking it was too beautifully sunny a day to stay inside moping. Downstairs, he got the Atala out of the storeroom, dusted it off, took it to a nearby gas station to refill the tires, and then rode down to the Village.

Here the streets were filled with strollers, shoppers, people on errands, or just loitering about enjoying the sun. It seemed on afternoons like this that the entire Village population was either unemployed, or worked at night, or only on rainy, cloudy days. Christopher Street was as crowded as any Friday or Saturday night, and as he rode along the curb, Noel slowed down, took off his T-shirt, and began to say hello to people he knew, flirting with strangers, riding around in large, aimless circles in the middle of the road, playing catch me with trucks and buses, then zooming over to greet some guys smoking on the corner—in general acting to perfection the persona of the hot-looking number, naked-torsoed on a sunny day, riding a ten-speed bike.

After a while he rode over to the concrete-covered waterfront park, and from there, up a few steps to the Morton Street Pier. From the end of the pier he could see up and down the Hudson River, north to the Palisades and the George Washington Bridge, down to New York Harbor past the Statue of Liberty to the Verrazano Bridge. Elegant ocean liners, vast, seagoing freight carriers, tugboats, speedboats, fireboats on patrol, the flow of the river below. Above, airplanes of all sizes, from superjets to Cessnas, police and airport transportation helicopters, innumerable kites.

Noel put his bike down, bunched up his shirt for a pillow, and lay down on the pier’s wooden protecting ledge, thinking that he would never have seen this place if he hadn’t become a part of gay life. He was enjoying the cool breezes that played on his naked chest, the hot, steady June sun striking down on him, the subtle lap of water against the pilings of the jetty. In minutes he felt relaxed.

“You sleeping?”

Noel looked up-his vision swimming with the Hudson’s reflections brightly spotting the figure in front of him—Vega. What did he want?

“Sit down.”

Vega sat close enough so that his pants leg brushed the tips of Noel’s hair.

“You look comfortable,” he said.

“Why not. It’s a fabulous sunny day!”

“It’s okay.”

Noel looked up. It had been weeks since Noel had last seen Vega. Since he’d left the Grip, he’d deliberately avoided him. Out of the lighting of the bar Buddy looked—thinner, his features harsh, sunken.

“Don’t drag me down to where you are, man. Here,” he handed Vega the roach of grass from his wallet, “get high. It’ll cheer you up. It did me.”

“You smoking now?” Buddy asked, taking the joint and lighting it.

Where’s your slimy pal, Miguel, your henchman?
Noel wanted to ask. Instead he said, “Keep it. Finish it.”

“This Redfern’s weed?”

“No. Randy gave it to me.”

Buddy sucked on the roach, finishing it and throwing it up in the air, catching it in his mouth like a trained seal with a herring. “It is good. You like it uptown?”

“It’s all right. Today’s my day off.”

“What are you doing there? Watching Dorrance?”

Noel didn’t know how much he ought to say. “Who knows what I’m doing there? Redfern offered me a half-assed, high-paying job, so he can be around if I ever decide to let him into my pants. And Loomis said to take the job.”

“Oh!” It came out of Vega sounding like a lowtoned bass drum, filled with inexplicable resonances.

Buddy became more talkative. He was pretty much manager of the Grip, now that Chaffee was at Bar Sinister all the time, and Noel uptown, he said. He liked working at the Grip; it paid well enough.

Noel suddenly wondered if he didn’t have Buddy all wrong. Maybe Vega didn’t know that Little Larry was also a Whisper agent. If not, that would justify why he and Miguel had followed them home from the Window Wall that night. Of course it didn’t explain Miguel’s animosity, but that could have been just a bad drug trip that one night.

“Are you sorry you joined up?” Buddy asked.

Noel’s previous distrust returned. “I don’t know. Why?”

“You don’t sound too happy.”

“I’m not happy about Loomis,” Noel hazarded. “We argued again this morning. Sometimes he really pisses me off.”

“On purpose.”

“I don’t think so. We just can’t get along.”

“You did before. I say he does it on purpose.”

Buddy’s certainty made Noel wonder. “Spill it,” he said.

“I don’t know if I should,” Buddy began to say. Both of them sat up and looked at each other. “I used to think you were a real schmuck,” Vega said. “When I said he does it on purpose, you didn’t disbelieve me, why?”

Noel evaded it. “I don’t know why.” Then as Buddy began to stand up: “He lies to me. Tries to make me believe certain things, hides other, important things from me, that’s why.”

Vega sat down again. “You like Randy?”

“What’s that have to do with anything? Oh, all right. Yes, I like Randy.”

“I know you’re balling with him. I want to know what you think of Randy.”

“I’m not in love with him or anything like that. I couldn’t be…with another guy. But I like him, I like being with him. We have fun.” Noel enumerated Randy’s qualities ending with, “And he’s never asked me to do anything I didn’t want to.”

“Like blow him?”

Noel answered, looking away at the river. “I guess you know.”

“He likes you, too. He’s helping you, Noel.”

“So he is working for Whisper?”

“If you don’t already know, I can’t tell you.”

Noel didn’t even try to press for an answer. He thought about Randy, whom he’d seen last night for the first time in a week: his handsome face and smooth-as-silk skin, his happy-go-lucky attitude, that found a joke in almost anything. Jesus! Loomis must have placed Randy in the town house before Noel. He must have been the in-house agent, before Noel replaced him, but he hadn’t worked out to Loomis’s satisfaction.

To cover up his silence, Noel asked, “Has he complained to you about that?” How much did Randy tell Vega?

“Randy? No. He never complains. He thinks you’re a little uptight, that’s all. He can get blown fifteen times a day, if he wants.”

“I guess you’re right. But before this whole business began I never had sex with another guy.”

“Bullshit!”

“Oh, well, with my second cousin when I was thirteen years old. But that doesn’t count. Most preadolescents fool around.”

“You had sex with two guys when you were in college. In your senior year. You were part of an initiation ceremony. You and some other frat members got shitfaced drunk and carried away and you gang-raped two pledges.”

Noel was flabbergasted. No one knew that. No one but he and the dean of schools. Not Monica. Not even his parents.

“The kids brought charges against seven of you, but it was all hushed up somehow, and everything worked out.” Vega seemed to take pleasure saying it. “So don’t give me that crap!”

Noel felt he was suddenly treading the very beginning of a path that had opened unexpectedly—perilously—in his life.

Vega seemed more of a danger than ever before. “How do you know that?”

“You don’t deny it?”

“Don’t game with me. I ask how do you know it?”

“I read it. Page fourteen. A psychosexual history of the subject with special reference to sexual identity and violence. Your dossier, if you haven’t figured it out by now. Compiled by Whisper.”

Noel was stunned. “My dossier?”

“We all have one. You. I. All of us. It’s some fancy reading. Better than a paperback novel. Filled with hushed-up scandals, sex, violence. Real dirt. Mine came up in the Navy. Loomis got all of it right, gotta hand it to him. But I’d always fucked around with guys. When I was a kid in P.R. I used to be a real macho hustler. Fourteen years old.”

“Does Randy know?”

“You don’t believe me, I can tell. Come take a look for yourself. I have them up at my apartment.”

“What else do you know about me?”

Vega was gloomy. “I didn’t read everything. It’s all in the dossier. Come take a look for yourself.”

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