Wanted (2 page)

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Authors: Kym Brunner

BOOK: Wanted
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“Hey, Dad. How'd it go today?” I plop down on the fancy swivel chair opposite his desk.

“Amazing!” He smiles broadly, the first time in weeks. “Wait until you see what I bought. Absolutely incredible.” He reaches into the box and pulls out three acrylic cases, certificates of authenticity, and a brochure listing all the auction items. “There was a little casino in Dallas that went belly up. The owner needed cash fast, so I made out like the devil.”

I raise an eyebrow at his word choice. “Considering what kinds of things you collect, I'd say that's not too far off. What did you buy?” I lean closer, trying to get a glimpse.

He holds up a small container. “Behold, the bullets taken from the corpses of Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow. The silver ones are from Bonnie, the gold ones, Clyde.”

“Really?” My jaw drops open as I stare in awe at the five metal chunks mounted on a black velvet pad. “You've wanted to buy a Bonnie and Clyde item for a long time.”

“I know. Wait until you see what else I bought.” He lifts a clear square container. Mounted inside of it is a nondescript tan beret. “This gorgeous relic cost me seven hundred bucks. Mom would have died if she saw this.”

I wince at his accidental slip of the tongue. Despair licks at my heart for a split-second, but I will it away. I did enough crying two years ago to last me a lifetime. “Was this Bonnie's hat?”

“No, don't you recognize it? Faye Dunaway wore it in the Bonnie and Clyde movie. Check it out.” His voice catches as he slides a color movie photo toward me. It's a shot of Faye Dunaway leaning against a car wearing the tan beret, looking achingly beautiful.

“Ohmigod, Dad! This is, it's…” I can't finish my sentence, but I don't need to. Dad nods and squeezes my hand, both of us choked up.
Bonnie and Clyde
was Mom's all-time favorite movie. We watched it with her every year on her birthday, a tradition I looked forward to. Now it just makes me sad. Haven't watched it since her fifty-first birthday, shortly before she died.

I clear my throat. Dad coughs. “I bought something for you too, Monroe.”

“Dad, why?” After all the crap I've put him through lately, I figured the only thing he'd be buying for me is a bus ticket out of town. I hope this means he's starting to forgive me.

“Think of it as an early graduation present.” He holds up another clear plastic display case, this one the size of a magazine. He holds it gingerly, like he's presenting a newborn to me. It contains a piece of paper that looks yellow and fragile from age. “I know you like history as much as I do and thought you might like a keepsake for yourself. It's worth a couple grand, so you can either take it home or display it here in the restaurant. It's up to you.” He hands it to me with a sweet, genuine smile. “It's a poem Bonnie Parker wrote called ‘The Trail's End.'”

“Seriously? Thank you, Dad!” I pop out of my seat to hug him—our first time since the arrest. “This is so cool! I definitely want to bring it home with me, at least for a little while. This is the poem Faye Dunaway reads to Warren Beatty in the movie, right?”

“Yep. Bonnie Parker wrote it while she was in prison for bank robbery, when she was only a little older than you are.” He pauses, looking at me.

I avoid his gaze, running a fingertip across his nameplate that reads, “Don't Mess with Gordie Baker or You're Dead,” complete with fake bullet holes. I know he's sending me a mental message: If I don't get my act together, I'll be heading to prison too.

He rubs his eye. “She won a few writing awards in high school. Who knows what she could have done with her life if she hadn't dropped out of school at age fifteen to get married.”

Something doesn't jibe with the movie. “She married Clyde at fifteen?”

“Not Clyde—a man named Roy Thornton. He just up and left one morning and never came back. Supposedly Bonnie met Clyde at a party not too long afterwards, and they were inseparable until death did them part two years later.”

So Bonnie got hitched at fifteen, ditched at sixteen, robbed banks at seventeen, and everyone thinks
I'm
a mess? “A match made in Hell, huh?”

He smiles. “That's what some people say. Do me a favor and read the first two stanzas aloud. I barely got a chance to look at it during the auction.” He leans back and relaxes.

“Sure.” I glance at the clock and see I still have five minutes until I need to meet Clarissa. I pick up the plastic container and am stupidly amazed to discover that it's written in Bonnie's own handwriting. Duh. No electronics back then. The idea that her fingers touched this piece of paper and it's now millimeters away from my fingers makes my heart race, making me feel both exhilarated and dangerous. All the years separating us evaporate in an instant.

I clear my throat and begin reading.
“You've read the story of Jesse James/ of how he lived and died./ If you're still in need;/ of something to read,/ here's the story of Bonnie and Clyde./ Now Bonnie and Clyde are the Barrow gang/ I'm sure you all have read./ How they rob and steal;/ and those who squeal,/ are usually found dying or dead.”

I picture a girl about my age blowing on the end of her gun, prodding a lifeless body with her shoe.
“Ya shouldn't have snitched,”
she says without emotion. A creepy chill works its way up my spine and I shiver. “Pretty brutal—if it's true.”

“Of course it's true. Bonnie and Clyde killed at least twelve people. Most of 'em cops.”

Good, I think, but instantly regret it. Cops are great until they bust you—then they suck. Somehow that jolts my memory about the wallet. I dig it out of my purse and toss it on the desk. “One of my customers left this behind tonight. Guy was a scumbag, so it serves him right.”

“Why? What did he do?” Dad growls.

I wave in the air dismissively. “Nothing horrible. Just asked me out.”

“Jerk.” Dad shakes his head in disgust. He picks up the wallet and casually glances inside, like he's looking for identification, but I see him check the dollar bill part. My heart sinks. He obviously thinks of me as criminal first, daughter second. He stands. “I'll be right back. Going to see if Percy can track this guy down. Maybe I'll have a word with him when he shows up.”

“Dad, don't,” I call out, but he heads down the hall toward his general manager's office.

I can't help smiling. Typical Dad. Always wanting to protect me from the world. I turn the display case over, noticing that the back of the poem is filled with doodles of clouds and flowers, just like I do to my spirals. I imagine a girl my age in a jail cell lying on a cot, writing this poem.

“Hello, Bonnie,” I whisper. “Did you have a lot of stuck-up chicks at your school, too? Is that why you dropped out?” I laugh, feeling silly talking to a dead girl. I pull the slug box toward me, thinking how cool it would be to touch one. Like touching death head-on. When I don't hear footsteps, I think, why not? You only live once
.
Look at my poor mother and how much she missed out on. I dive for the box, pulling at the clear plastic seal. It's stuck tight. I slide a fingernail under the edge of the sticker and slowly pry it up, careful not to rip the seal itself.

A rush of bubbling nervous energy makes my fingers tremble as I lift the cover. A puff of stale air with the scent of rancid meat assaults my nose. I breathe through my mouth as I pull out one of the silver gnarled bits. Is this
the
bullet—the one that actually killed Bonnie Parker? I spy a tiny spot of dark brown nestled between two twisted nibs of steel. Is that her dried blood? Could it be locked inside here after all this time? I lick my finger and touch the spot.

It smudges, turns brownish red. Holy shit—it is her blood! I rub it a bit harder when something sharp pierces my fingertip. A bright red dot from a tiny jagged cut sprouts on the pad of my index finger. I ram my wound into my mouth and glare at the slug. That's when I realize that Bonnie Parker's blood was on my finger and is now on my tongue.

Gross! In a flash, I yank my finger from my mouth and vigorously scrape my tongue on the inside edge of my shirt, hoping to remove all of Bonnie's rehydrated blood cells. A tingling sensation that I'd gotten away with something big rushes through me. I quickly wrestle a Clyde slug out of its slot, close the lid, and smile at my palm. Bonnie and Clyde. Together again. Seconds later, my vision blurs—as if someone smeared Vaseline across my eyes. The slugs in my hand become a swirling mess of flesh and metal. I close my eyes, trying to clear the mess, when a vivid scene floods my mind—one so clear it's like I'm witnessing it live.

I'm riding in the passenger seat of a car, an old-fashioned one too, judging by the three large dials in front of the steering wheel and the long skinny gearshift knob rising up out of the floor. A sleek gray fishtail skirt hugs my legs perfectly, matched with a gorgeous, cream-colored peasant top. The driver looks to be my age, or maybe a couple years older at the most. He's got slicked-back dark brown hair, revealing ears that tip slightly away from his head in a cute, elfish way. He's wearing mocha brown dress pants, a pale blue shirt with the sleeves rolled up, and a striped tie loose around his neck. Like a businessman on a lunch break. Very sexy.

“How ya doing, doll?” He grins at me, his golden brown eyes lighting up his face. He reaches over, a tattoo of a woman's face on his forearm, and pats my knee. “Sure was fine sleeping in a bed for a change last night, huh?”

“Yep. Except now it's already hotter than heck and it's barely nine o'clock,” I say in a strange Southern accent. I reach for the crank handle and lower the window partway. A gust of wind blows strands of strawberry blonde hair into my face.

My elf-eared date takes his hand off my leg and thumps the oversized black steering wheel. “Aw, for crying out loud. Will you look at that? Some dumb hack lost his load.”

I look ahead of us and see a pickup truck stopped right in the middle of the road, crates of melons scattered everywhere. “Poor sap prolly forgot to latch the gate,” I say.

“I ain't stopping either, or we'll be here all day.” He grips the wheel harder.

“Don't lose your temper now, Clyde. It might be faster if you help.”

As we approach the pickup truck, the intense rat-a-tat-tat of hundreds of bullets whizzing through our car has me ducking for cover. Tiny missiles whistle past my head, leaving penny-sized holes all around me. Clyde's limbs flail uncontrollably as sprays of red blood hit the windshield, my white silk blouse, the cracked leather seat. Shards of glass pelt my neck as I cross my arms in front of my face, screaming. The car careens off the road toward the bushes, bobbing and jerking like an old wooden roller coaster as all four tires get shot out. It makes a final heave of exhaled air and comes to rest ten yards further. I collapse against Clyde's shoulder, my skirt at a jaunty angle halfway up my thigh, but I don't make a move to fix it. I'm left peering through a crumpled mass of tangled hair and torn flesh, staring at Clyde's blood-soaked forehead.

The sound of snapping fingers startles me out of my daydream. The image of Dad's face blends with Clyde's as his office comes into focus. “Earth to Monroe,” Dad says, loading his treasures back into the cardboard box—including the velvet-lined bullet case.

I sit up in a flash, inhaling sharply, the slugs still nestled in my palm. How could I have fallen asleep so quickly? It seemed so real, like I was in one of those movie theaters with enhanced sound, scent, and motion. I swallow hard, trying to think of something logical to say as to why I took the slugs out of the box when it was clearly sealed shut, but my mind goes blank.

Dad interlocks the flaps of the box so the top stays closed. “I'm going to lock these babies up now. Don't want dust or moisture to get inside. Ruins their value.”

A cannonball of guilt lodges in my chest, knowing I messed up yet again. I can't bring myself to tell him what I've done. After he walks away, I slip the slugs into my pants pocket. I'll guard them with my life tonight and find a way to return them in the morning.

I call out, “By the way, Clarissa invited me to a party tonight.” I twirl a lock of my hair, hoping he's not mad. “She's leaving for L.A. soon and we wanted to hang out before she leaves.”

He stops walking and turns to me, his forehead heavily creased. “You sure that's a good idea, Monroe? The judge said you needed to stay clean for a whole year or you could—”

“I know,” I interrupt, unable to bear hearing another reminder of my fate. “But I learned my lesson, I promise.” I look him in the eye, wanting him to trust me again.

He frowns. “You need to make this decision for yourself. But I want you to know that I'm not bailing you out if you get arrested again, nor will I foot the bill for college. Are we clear?”

I glance down at my hands, feeling the heat of his stare. “Yeah. We're clear.”

“Okay, then.” He sighs, manages to smile. “Have fun and wake me when you get home.”

“I will. Bye, Dad.” I kiss his cheek and race down the hall to where Clarissa stands waiting for me. Seconds later, I hear a high-pitched squeal of laughter.

I glance over my shoulder, but no one's there.

Clarissa pushes open the door to the parking lot. “Ready for the party of a lifetime?”

“You know it,” I say, secretly hoping the party's not
too
crazy. If it looks like it's getting out of control, I'll just take a cab home. I'd rather die than get arrested again.

Be careful what you wish for, girlie.

How odd, I think, as I dash out into the night. My conscience had a Southern accent.

CHAPTER 2
Friday, May 20th // 9:24 P.M.
Clyde

A sudden jolt runs through my bones, swift as lightning and strong as a Texas twister in May. I blink twice, three times, but I can't see nothing. I must be in the bottom of a mineshaft on a moonless night because it's dark and I'm cold. Real cold. I concentrate hard as I can to move my body, one finger even, and finally, after what seems like forever, I give up.

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