Authors: Donald E. Westlake
W
ALKING WITH
L
IZ TO
Hommel's, toting my suitcase, I had leisure to think things over. What next, I wondered. I'd done my con and made it work, I'd screwed both sisters, I'd precipitated the break with Candy that I suppose I must have been angling for, so now everything was obviously finished. To repeat the twin gag would be insanity; I couldn't possibly get away with it twice. And while Liz was fun in her way she was hardly restful; I might as well have stayed with Candy.
So what I should do right now was take the next ferry/cab/train back to the city, move into my office (ah, the sleeping bag stored in the closet), and start hustling around for someone else to put me up for the rest of August. Also for another female, though that was at the moment secondary.
But I just couldn't seem to let go. I'd made the Art-Bart phone call to Betty the minute I'd gotten off the ferry, I'd risked severe physical impairment to drop Bart's name into my farewell scene with Candy, and now I was walking to Hommel's with Liz, my mind searching for a way to get invited to spend the rest of the summer at the Kerner house. Why?
Well, partly for the Laurentian Lumber Mills, I suppose. And maybe a tenny little bit for that television station in Indiana. I was, after all, engaged to an heiress, or at least Bart was.
And also for the sheer silly intrigue of it. I've never been able to quit when I was ahead, never known how to stop before I got caught, and I wasn't likely to learn now. So I went with Liz to Hommel's, watched a ferry depart, and waited to be invited home.
For a while it looked as though it wouldn't happen. Liz spent her first two drinks making remarks about Candy, some of which I thought were probably unfair, then devoted her third to class-conscious slurs of the citizens around us. It must be hard to be a promiscuous snob, but Liz managed.
Finally, partway into her fourth vodka-ice, she looked at me and said, “So what do you do now?”
“Swelter in the city, I suppose. I'll hate to break the news to Bart.”
“Screw Bart.”
“He's my brother.”
“He isn't mine,” she said, callously, I thought.
“Then there's my apartment,” I said. I sighed, but was manful about it. “Well, I've camped in my office before.”
“What's wrong with your apartment?”
I was just about to tell her it was sublet when I realized I was supposed to have been spending half of every week in the damn place. “Bart,” I said. “It's just a one-and-a-half in the Village, there isn't room for both of us.”
“He's in
your
place?”
That didn't make sense, did it? “Well,” I said. Invention flowed through me, bred by necessity, and I said, “Bart doesn't have his own place yet Not till after Labor Day.”
“Why not?”
“He spent several years out on the Coast,” I explained. (Of course! If a friend of mine expressed bewilderment about Bart in Liz's presence, this would explain it; he was a
long-lost
brother.) “He just came back the beginning of the summer,” I said, “when he came into the business with me.”
“Oh. Well, you want to come stay at my house?”
“Do I have to sleep in the closet?”
She showed me her sour grin. “I like being around you,” she said. “You're a little funnier than most people. Like back at your lady-friend's house.”
“I give all credit to my supporting cast.”
“Uh huh.” She downed her drink and signaled to the proprietor for another. “Can you get hold of that brat with the boat?”
“I can try.” But should I plead Bart's case? No. Screw Bart, as Liz so correctly pointed out. Let him plead his own case, with Betty. “I'll be right back,” I said, and headed for the pay phone.
A
ND THEN I WROTE
: “Christmas comes but once a yearâI'm glad you can do better.”
That was on the ferry, Wednesday morning, three days after I'd moved in at Point O' Woods. I was old family there by now, and I was sure Bart would do every bit as well.
Betty had accepted my presence with her inevitable artificial hostess smile, but of course the hypocritical little bitch had to pretend Liz and I weren't screwing, so of course
we
had to pretend we weren't screwing, so there'd been a lot of tiptoeing back and forth as a result At least we hadn't had to enter any closets.
I was now in full uncontested occupation of Mom and Pop's room. I had at first tossed my attaché case onto Daddy's bed, to see if Betty would comment, and damn if she didn't switch me over to the other bed: “It's closer to the closet.” An unintentional private joke, at which Liz and I did
not
exchange looks. And also an indication that Betty actually was the sentimental creep she pretended to be; she was saving that bed for Bart.
And wasn't she, though. She insisted on calling Bart right then on Sunday evening, inviting him out for his half-week vacations. In desperation I gave her Ralph and Candy's city number, praying there was no subtenant there that I hadn't been told about, and apparently there was not. After the third futile attempt, I said, “Why not call him in the morning? He's bound to be in the office.”
“That's just what I'll do,” she said, and the three of us went out to dinner at Flynn's. During which I excused myself to go to the john, found a pay phone, and called Gloria at home. “Be there, bitch,” I muttered, as I dialed, and damn if she wasn't.
Her husband answered, and when
I
identified myself he said, “Oh, yeah?” Then he covered the phone inefficientlyâon purpose, I assumeâand I heard him shout, “It's that bastard!”
Was no further identification necessary? And to think of the salaries I'd paid that ingrate, many of them on time.
“Hello?”
“Now you have to guess
which
bastard.”
“Come on, Art, I'm watching television.”
Ah, the married life. “Tomorrow,” I said, “a lady will call asking for my twin brother Bart.”
“Oh, for God's sake.”
“Now, Gloria. All you have to do is take her number and tell her Bart is out at a meeting with his local distributor, andâ”
“
Local
distributor!”
“And,” I said firmly, “you will have him call back as soon as he gets in.”
“How many felonies will I be committing?”
“None. A little white lie in the service of love, that's all it is.”
“Bullshit.”
“Gloria, remember how you hated working at Met Life? The bells going off all the time, twenty-two minutes for lunch?”
She sighed. “Bart, huh? Very original.”
“It stands for Bay Area Rapid Transit,” I explained, and went back to dinner with the ladies.
And so it came to pass that on Monday morning Betty called Bart, and an hour later Bart returned the call from the pay phone by the firehouse. Candy was discussed, and the unfortunate incident of the day before. Betty wanted to know if Bart thought Art had been adulterous with Candy, and Bart admitted he'd wondered the same thing himself. Betty proferred her invitation, and Bart was happy to accept. “We can be with each other three days a week,” he said.
“And three nights,” quoth Little Miss Hot Pants.
The intervening nights, however, belonged to Liz, who was no slouch herself. Bouncety bouncety; by Wednesday morning I was just as pleased to board that boat for a day's vacation at the office.
Liz saw me off at the pier. “I like a man who goes away for half the week,” she said.
I bet you do, I thought. I said, “Have a nice rest,” and patted her cheek. And wrote my new Christmas card on the ferry. Thus do we artists adapt the facts of our own lives to the purposes of our art.
T
HE GENTLEMAN WAITTNG
in my outer officer was up to no good; I could tell it the minute I laid eyes on him. Gloria, with a now-you're-in-for-it look, waved grandly at the fellow and said, “There's a Mr. Volpinex here to see you, Mr. Dodge. He wanted either you or your brother Bart.”
Whoops. Mr. Volpinex had apparently been my age when he'd died, several thousand years ago, and in the depths of the pyramid been given this simulacrum of life. The ancient chemists had dyed his flesh a dark unhealthy tan, and painted his teeth with that cheap gloss white enamel used in rent-controlled apartments. His black suit was surely some sort of oil by-product, and so was his smile.
“I take it,” this thing said, extending its hand, “I am addressing Mr.
Arthur
Dodge?”
“That's right” His hand was as dry as driftwood.
“I am Ernest Volpinex,” he said, and gave himself away. No
real
thirty-year-old would have reached into his vest pocket at that juncture and given me his card. So my first guess was right; he was the undead.
I took the card, but kept my eyes on its owner. “How do you do?”
“I am,” he said, with the smile of a bone-grinder, “the attorney for the Kerner estate.”
I sensed Gloria's ears cocking like a collie's at the phrase
Kerner estate
. Kerner had been the name of the girl two days ago, Bart was the person that girl had been looking for, and the word
estate
was well within Gloria's vocabulary. “Why don't we go into my office?” I said.
“Thank you very much.”
And so we entered the office. I gestured to my guest chair, but Volpinex took a moment instead to read the cards mounted on my wall, so I sat at my desk and leafed through the call memos. Wastebasket wastebasket wastebasket â¦
I had transferred to the incoming mail and had discovered, to my pleased surprise, an actual amended statement and supplemental check from All-Boro, when Volpinex falsely chuckled, turning to face me, and said, “Very amusing.”
“I keep them around to lighten my darker moments,” I said. “Do have a chair.”
“Thank you.”
I didn't care for the way he made himself at home in that chair, settling in as though he'd just foreclosed on a mortgage I hadn't known about. He said, “May I smoke?”
You can fry. “Certainly.”
He had a silver cigarette case and a black holder. The case was also a lighter at one end. If he hadn't used those two magic names
Bart
and
Kerner
I would have considered him some sort of overdone buffoon; as it was I watched him with respect, if not admiration.
Satisfied at last with his cigarette, he said, “We've been neighbors, you know.”
What? “Have we?”
“You were staying for a while in Fair Harbor, and I've rented a place in Dunewood.”
“Ah.” Ah hah! With sudden conviction, I knew that
this
was my host at the party where I'd first met Liz. And wouldn't he also be the fellow she was with last weekend, while I was Barting Betty? Which was why Liz had suddenly showed up on that part of the beach.
And to think she'd been putting me down for my connection with Candy.
“You were staying,” my saturnine friend continued, “with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Minck, were you not?”
“That's right,” I said.
“And so was your brother, known as Bart Would that stand for Bartholomew, by the way?”
“No, actually his name is Robert. We were named after two famous World War One flying aces, Arthur Powerton and Robert Godunkey. But because we're twins and so on, I suppose the name just evolved into Bart.”
“Ah,” he said. “That's probably why I haven't been able to pick up much about him.”
I permitted myself to look just slightly outraged. “Pick up?”
“I have a passion for being fair,” he said, unruffled, smiling at me. “And I just don't believe it's possible to be fair if one isn't thorough. Don't you agree?”
“You've been checking up on my brother?”
“And yourself,” he assured me. “And yourâ” his gesture around at my office was condescending “âcompany. And even your hosts in Fair Harbor.”