Part 6 (1/2)

”Those people you sell to, they're looking for something. And so are you. They're looking for what you can give them-a sense of doing the right thing. My Lord, friends, it is so beautiful. You believe in G.o.d? You better thank G.o.d right now for helping you to find this job, this job that lets you help others while you help yourself.”

This went on for another half an hour. The Gambler made those who had scored feel like royalty, and those who had blanked would burn to get back out there and try again. He possessed and harnessed an incredible energy that I saw and understood, even though it left me unmoved. Where everyone else fed off his enthusiasm, I saw a core of meanness, as though it were not money but anger that kept him going. I saw the guy who would happily steal the poor in-love woman from her poor but in-love man just for the pleasure of meanness.

”Now, there's one more thing,” the Gambler told the crowd. He was winded, slightly bent, and breathing deeply. ”I just learned that there may be a reporter who's interested in us. I don't know the details, but he's gonna be taking a look at what we do. May already be here among us, for all I know. And let me tell you a little something about the news, folks, ENCYCLOPEDIA SALESMEN BRING KNOWLEDGE AND OPPORTUNITY TO NEEDY FAMILIES ENCYCLOPEDIA SALESMEN BRING KNOWLEDGE AND OPPORTUNITY TO NEEDY FAMILIES doesn't make as good a headline as doesn't make as good a headline as ENCYCLOPEDIA SALESMEN TRICK CUSTOMERS. ENCYCLOPEDIA SALESMEN TRICK CUSTOMERS. Hard as it is to believe, that's how they're going to want to show us. So if a reporter comes up to any of you, I don't want you to say anything. Not a thing other than 'No comment.' You hear? You find out their name, who they work for, get a business card if you can, and bring it to me. Are we all on the same page?” Hard as it is to believe, that's how they're going to want to show us. So if a reporter comes up to any of you, I don't want you to say anything. Not a thing other than 'No comment.' You hear? You find out their name, who they work for, get a business card if you can, and bring it to me. Are we all on the same page?”

”Yes!” the room roared.

”These people want to stop you from making money and our customers from learning. I don't know what the h.e.l.l their problem is, but as long as I'm head of this crew, we're going to keep on making the world a better place, and we're gonna make money while we do it.”

After the meeting, everyone began to file out by the pool, the way we did every night. I moved through the crowd, trying to keep an eye on Chitra. I heard her say something to Ronny Neil and walk off. He hesitated and followed, but I got the sense they weren't going together.

By the pool, the crew bosses would be grabbing cases of tall boys, Bud or Miller or Coors or whatever was cheapest, and shoving them in coolers. Someone would bring out a radio or a tape player. If people in the rooms above them minded the noise, we never heard about it.

I always joined them, at least for a while, but that night I wasn't up to it. I needed to be alone. The after-sales meeting had been a torture, but at least it had distracted me for a few minutes; now, alone again, I felt like I had to get away. I wasn't able to make idle conversation, to laugh at stupid jokes. I was afraid that if I had a beer or two, I'd start to cry.

I went back to the motel room. It had two beds shared by four guys-Ronny Neil demanded his own bed, and Scott and Kevin were willing to share, which meant I ended up on the floor. We didn't pay for the motel ourselves, so I couldn't complain. It was hard to tell how much was the room and how much the roommates, but when I walked in, the scents of mold and sweat and cigarettes and something stale and crusty slapped my senses. Even so, the feeling of solitude and privacy comforted me.

I sat by myself for a moment, staring at the blank, gray face of the TV. Maybe there was something about the murders. Maybe I should be watching. I continued to stare, afraid of what I might see or not see, until, in a surge of bravery, I lunged forward and turned it on.

The late news would be long over by now, but I figured if there was a murder, the local news stations would jump at the chance to use their generally useless live broadcast equipment. Nothing. No police cars or helicopters hovering over the mobile home. I sat at the edge of the bed, hands pressed against the tattered bedspread that smelled like a mix of ashtray and aftershave, and stared with unfocused eyes at Johnny Carson, who was laughing hysterically at Eddie Murphy. I didn't really know who or what Eddie Murphy was imitating, but I took comfort in Johnny Carson's appreciation. Could I really have witnessed a murder in a world full of Carson's belly laughs?

I wanted to embrace the doubt, but there were too many questions. So I opened the night table drawer and took out the phone book to look up Oldham Health Services. Nothing in the yellow pages or the business white pages. It didn't prove anything. It could be reasonably close by without being in the same county, but unless I knew where it was, I didn't see how I could get a number to call them and ask them who they were and-and what? If they knew a guy named b.a.s.t.a.r.d? That wasn't exactly a conversation I wanted to have.

I stood up and looked out the window, pressing the thick brownish curtain to one side and trying not to cough from the storm of dust I'd unleashed. About thirty book people were out now. The tinkle of music and laughter filtered through the window. I'd flipped off the gurgling air conditioner for a moment so I could hear what there was to hear. Through the gla.s.s I could just discern the furiously optimistic jangle of ”Walking on Suns.h.i.+ne.” That song was everywhere that summer, and as much as I hated it, its rhythms pumped with an undeniable pull. It announced cheerfully that people were having fun somewhere else. Quite possibly everywhere else. And sure, it was stupid, mind-numbing fun, but it was still fun, and sitting in a tobacco-saturated motel room with globs of ancient s.e.m.e.n encrusted into the carpet, trying to decide if I'd really seen two people gunned down that night, was a h.e.l.l of a lot less fun than walking on suns.h.i.+ne down to the pool, drinking watery beer, and possibly even flirting with Chitra.

I looked out the window again and there was Chitra, sitting on the edge of a slatted reclining chair, the sort sunbathers across the country-the world, for all I knew-endured in order to tan themselves. A tall boy was wrapped around those long, silver-ringed, red-tipped fingers. Like everyone else, she still wore her selling clothes-in her case, black slacks and white blouse, so she looked like a waitress. A beautiful waitress.

The fact was, I was going to be eighteen in January, and this virginity business was beginning to get me down. Not in a frenetic, must-visit-the-wh.o.r.ehouse, Porky's Porky's sort of way, but more in a life-is-pa.s.sing-me-by way. It felt as though everyone I knew had been invited to a party from which I was barred. I could hear the music and the peals of laughter and the clinking of crystal champagne flutes, but I couldn't get in. sort of way, but more in a life-is-pa.s.sing-me-by way. It felt as though everyone I knew had been invited to a party from which I was barred. I could hear the music and the peals of laughter and the clinking of crystal champagne flutes, but I couldn't get in.

From my room, I could make out Chitra's distant smiling face. It was a big, easy, open, and unself-conscious grin. She was one of those pretty girls who didn't fully appreciate or factor in the effect pretty girls had on men, so she believed the world to be a much nicer place than it was. The brutality of people like Ronny Neil remained invisible to her not only because she wouldn't know a redneck if he did doughnuts on her lawn in his four-by-four, but also because they weren't a.s.sholes around her, were they? They didn't insult her, crowd her s.p.a.ce, make her feel that only the thinnest gossamer thread kept her safe from a monumental a.s.s kicking. No, they tripped over themselves, they told her how nice she looked, they gave up their seats for her, they offered her a piece of Kit Kat. And for a moment, I felt an incredible jolt of envy-envy not of those who were close to Chitra, but of Chitra herself and that beautiful, protected, fantastical universe into which she'd been given a free pa.s.s.

Now she threw back her head and let out a full, tinkling laugh, so high-pitched that I could hear it this far away, through the gla.s.s, over the music from the boom box. She was surrounded by a group of people. Marie from the Jacksonville office, a couple of people from Tampa, Harold from Gainesville, who I suspected might be a rival.

At first I didn't recognize the guy who was doing such a great job of amusing her. The umbrella at their table was up, and the angle was odd. I could tell from the clothes it wasn't Ronny Neil, and anyway, Ronny Neil wasn't very funny. He might tell some dirty jokes or racist jokes in the car, but they were stupid, and only Scott laughed at them. They sure as h.e.l.l weren't going to make Chitra throw back her head and let loose.

And then I saw the comedian. Tall, thin, black jeans, white b.u.t.ton-down with the collar done up, even whiter hair puffing upward and outward.

It was the a.s.sa.s.sin. Chitra was talking with the a.s.sa.s.sin.

Chapter 8.

EMPTY B BUD CANS already littered the outdoor stairwell. The Gambler and Bobby and the other crew bosses asked us not to litter, but there was no way to get a bunch of exhausted bookmen, thrilled after a long day to be sitting and drinking beer, to pick up after themselves. The bosses didn't really care as long as the books were sold, and Sameen and Lajwati Lal, who owned the motel, were content if not exactly happy as long as the bills were paid. We stayed at this motel every time we came to Jacksonville, and they weren't about to mess with a decent-size account, so in the end nothing got done. already littered the outdoor stairwell. The Gambler and Bobby and the other crew bosses asked us not to litter, but there was no way to get a bunch of exhausted bookmen, thrilled after a long day to be sitting and drinking beer, to pick up after themselves. The bosses didn't really care as long as the books were sold, and Sameen and Lajwati Lal, who owned the motel, were content if not exactly happy as long as the bills were paid. We stayed at this motel every time we came to Jacksonville, and they weren't about to mess with a decent-size account, so in the end nothing got done.

I rounded the stairs, nearly slipping in a puddle of spilled beer but recovering by leaping into the air and landing at the bottom of the first floor.

To get to the pool I had to cross a little courtyard, go past the reception lobby, and come out the other end. I never got that far. When I landed I smelled something sweet and familiar, and it wasn't until I felt a hand on my shoulder that I processed the scent.

It was pot. Not that I found anything especially sinister about pot. Sure, I a.s.sociated its use with my father, but my father also wore pants, and I wasn't about to eschew them on similar grounds. I'd smoked a few times, and though it always made me headachy and paranoid, I figured that sometimes you had to be a good sport and go along to get along. But here, on the road, with the bookmen, I a.s.sociated pot with just one thing: rednecks.

”Where's the Hebrew fire?” Scott lisped in his high-pitched voice. It wasn't bad enough the guy had an impediment, he sounded as if he'd just sucked in helium as well. He had one of his dinner-plate hands on my shoulder, and there was nothing friendly about it. He pressed hard, but even so I could have gotten away if that's what I'd wanted; however, doing so would have involved some squirming, which struck me as humiliating. Better, I thought, to act as though I didn't care. This strategy was one I'd turned to again and again in middle school and high school. It never worked, but I clung to the routine as desperately as a sailor clung to prayer in the face of a storm.

”Yeah, where ith it?” Ronny Neil said. Hara.s.sing me didn't mean that Scott was above contempt.

I looked at Scott's hand. ”I've got somewhere to go,” I said. The sour odor of his unwashed body began to pierce the sh.e.l.l of the pot.

”Where would you have to go?” Scott asked. His eyes were already red and half-closed, and he teetered a little uncomfortably on his feet. I tried not to stare at a cl.u.s.ter of pimples on his chin, big and foamy white at the top.

”Yeah,” Ronny Neil repeated, tossing his hair back like an actor in a shampoo commercial. He took a big suck from the pipe, held it for a moment, and blew the smoke in my face.

I understood the gravity of smoke blowing. A man blew smoke in your face, you beat the s.h.i.+t out of him if you had the chance. It was a hanging offense, a reason to go nuclear.

”Bobby wants to see me,” I said in a scratchy voice. It seemed like a good lie. No one wanted to get on Bobby's bad side. There was no percentage in that.

”f.u.c.k Bobby and f.u.c.k you and f.u.c.k all your a.s.shole friends,” Ronny Neil said.

”That,” I observed, ”is a lot of f.u.c.king.”

”You little s.h.i.+t,” Scott added. He jabbed his finger in my stomach. Not insanely hard, but hard enough to hurt.

Ronny Neil smacked Scott in the back of the head. ”I tell you to hit him, you fat f.u.c.k?”

”I just poked him,” Scott answered defiantly.

”Well, don't juth pokth himth. Don't juth poke n.o.body until I tell you to, a.s.shole.” He turned to me. ”You think Bobby is so great? He ain't s.h.i.+t around here, and he don't know s.h.i.+t about what's going on. The Gambler trusts us. us. You understand? Not you and not Bobby. So stop hiding behind him like he was your mama.” You understand? Not you and not Bobby. So stop hiding behind him like he was your mama.”

”Bobby's a f.u.c.king a.s.shole,” Scott said. ”He gives all the best areas to a p.u.s.s.y like you.”

”A puthy like you,” Ronny Neil repeated.

”You know what, I'm starting to feel like a third wheel in this conversation,” I said. ”I think the polite thing would be for me to excuse myself.”

”I think the polite thing would be for you to stick it up your a.s.s.”

”It's funny,” I said, ”how the standards of politeness vary from culture to culture.”

”You think you're smart. You blank again tonight?” Ronny Neil handed the pipe over to Scott, who looked at his hand for a moment, trying to figure out how to keep me where he wanted without touching me. Scott then studied the ground and moved around on unsteady feet to block me from getting away.

”I didn't blank,” I said. ”Not that it's your business.”

”When you fall asleep tonight,” Scott said, ”we're gonna f.u.c.k you up.”

I had heard this threat before, but it never amounted to anything. They didn't want to get fired, they just wanted to make me afraid. And it worked, because even though they hadn't done anything yet didn't mean they weren't going to. They were certainly capable of it. Guys like Ronny Neil and Scott had no real future, not one they could imagine or look forward to. The end of high school had always meant that I could put the worst behind me; for Ronny Neil and Scott, it meant that the best was over. They were entirely capable of doing something horrible and irreversible, of sending themselves to jail, all on a whim.

My clenched determination not to waver before them was beginning to crumble. I'd seen too much today, and now I could feel the tears welling back somewhere in my throat. I needed to find some way to end this.

”Just what do you boys think you're doing?”