Behind her, Lundy said, "Air-conditioned, you got plenty of vodka, scotch, steaks, and beer in the ice box and"-he took an envelope out of his pocket and handed it to Renda-"twenty-five hundred cigarette money."
Wiley was opening cabinets and doors. "There's a shower in the john. Even a magazine rack."
"Tonight we'll be in Mazatlan," Lundy said. "We can stay there or go on down to Acapulco, it's up to you."
Renda looked up at him. "Regular vacation. You having a nice time?"
"Listen, I think I could use a rest. That stunt, hitting the fucking bus, that took some years off me."
Renda watched him turn to the refrigerator and take out a can of beer.
"Where is he?"
"You want one?"
"I said where is he!"
Lundy, about to pop open the can, looked over at Renda. "The guy? He turned himself in. Last I heard they're still holding him at Edna."
Wiley came in to stretch out on the opposite bunk. "Kind of tight fit, but all the comforts of home."
"We're not at home," Renda said. "He is."
"He's in jail, Frank." Wiley's tone was soft, approaching him carefully. "You're free. We can go anywhere you want."
"There's only one thing I want," Renda said. "Him."
Lundy opened the can and took a swig. "He gets out, we can have somebody take care of that."
Renda shook his head. "Not somebody. I said I want him. I want him to see it and know it's me. Put the gun in his stomach and look at him. Not say anything, just look at him and make sure he understands."
"You still have to wait," Lundy said.
Renda didn't say anything. He was still picturing it, putting the gun in the melon grower's stomach.
"All right, let me ask you," Lundy said. "What do you do, walk in the jail, ask them for a visitor's pass? How do you get close to the guy?"
"You get him out of jail."
"You get him out. How?"
"Find the guy he hit," Renda said. "Tell him to drop the complaint. It was all a mistake, a misunderstanding."
"What if the guy doesn't want to drop it?"
"Jesus, I said tell him, not ask him."
"Maybe pay him something?"
"That's up to you. See what it takes."
"You mean you want me to do it? Go back there?"
"I'm talking to you, aren't I?"
"I just wanted to be sure."
"You're going to go back and set it up," Renda said. "Find the guy made the complaint and get that done. Get some people if you see we need them. Call me, I come up. We go in and get out fast. No bullshit screwing around. Arrange it, I walk up to him, and it's done."
Lundy took a sip of beer, getting the right words ready in his mind. "I keep thinking though, what about the cops? They'll be looking for you, watching your house, the apartment."
"Christ, you think I'm going to go home? We'll stay someplace else. Call Harry, tell him to arrange it."
"I mean right now, why take a chance?"
"I told you why."
"I'm not against it," Lundy said. "I'm just thinking, we're this far. Why change your mind all of a sudden?"
"I didn't change it. I hadn't made it up yet. But the more I think about it-I know it's what I'm going to do."
"I was going to lie on the beach," Wiley said, "and read my book."
Lundy waited a moment. "You know, Frank, there's a lot of guys'd do it. I mean guys the cops aren't waiting to flag."
Renda said, "Hey, Gene, one more time. I said I want him. I never wanted anybody so bad and I'm going to do it strictly as a favor to myself. You understand? Am I getting through to you? I'm going to do it, not somebody else. Before I take any trips or lay on any beach I'm going to walk up to that melon grower son of a bitch, I'm going to look him in the eyes, and I'm going to kill him."
Harold Ritchie was a pallbearer at his partner's funeral. Bob Almont, good guy to ride with in a squad car, and goddamn he'd miss him. Shot down in the street by some creepy son of a bitch. Ritchie hoped it was the one he'd shot coming out of the station wagon. He went to Bob Almont's house after the funeral, with Bob's close friends and a few relatives that'd come from Oklahoma. They sat around drinking coffee and picking at the casserole dishes some neighbors had brought over, while Evelyn Almont stayed in the kitchen most of the time or sat with her two little tiny kids who didn't know what the hell was going on. After a couple of hours of watching that, it was a relief to get back to the post.
The deputy at the counter tore off a teletype sheet and handed it to him. "What you asked for. Just come in."
He read it as he walked over to Lieutenant McAllen's office, knocked twice, and walked in. McAllen was sitting at his desk.
"You're right," Ritchie said, "Phoenix had a sheet on him. Robert L. Kopas, a.k.a. Bobby Kopas, Bobby Curtis. Two arrests, B and E, and extortion. One conviction. Served two years in Florence."
"I could feel it," McAllen said. "The guy's up to something."
"Changed his mind and dropped the charge. The way I read it," Ritchie said, "he's decided it'd be more fun to get back at the guy himself."
"Maybe. But is he smart enough? Or dumb enough to try it? However you want to look at it." McAllen paused. "Or did somebody put him up to it?"
Ritchie was nodding. "That's a thought."
"Yes, it is, isn't it?" McAllen said. "You got any more on Majestyk?"
"On my desk. I'll be right back." Ritchie went out and returned within the minute with an open file folder in his hands, looking at it.
"Not much. He lived in California most of his life. High school education. Truck driver, farm laborer. Owned his own place till he went to Folsom on the assault conviction. Here's something. In the army three years, a Ranger instructor at Fort Benning."
McAllen raised his eyebrows. "An instructor."
"Combat adviser in Laos before that," Ritchie went on. "Captured by the Pathet Lao, escaped and brought three enemy prisoners with him. Got a Silver Star." Looking up at McAllen he said, "Man doesn't fool, does he?"
"Well, he's a different cut than what we usually get."
"Doesn't seem afraid to take chances."
"Doesn't appear to." McAllen was thoughtful a moment. "Let's talk to him and find out."
He said to Majestyk, "You look better than the last time I saw you."
"Thank you, but I'd just as soon wear my own clothes." He was dressed in jail denims with white stripes down the sides of the pants. The scrapes and cuts on his face were healing and he was clean-shaven. "What I'd like to know which nobody'll tell me, is when I'm going to court."
"Why don't you have a seat?" McAllen said.
"I've been sitting for four days."
"So you're used to it," McAllen said. "Sit down."
He watched Majestyk take the chair then picked up a pack of cigarettes and matches and leaned over to hand them across the desk.
"Have a smoke."
As Majestyk lighted a cigarette, McAllen said, "I guess what you want most is to get out of here."
He waited, but Majestyk, looking at him, said nothing. "Well, I think it might be arranged."
Majestyk continued to wait, not giving McAllen any help.
"The guy you hit, Bobby Kopas?" McAllen said finally. "He dropped the charge against you."
When Majestyk still waited, McAllen said, "You hear what I said?"
"Why'd he do that?"
"He said he thought it over. It wasn't important enough for him to waste a lot of time in court. You think that's the reason?"
"I met him once," Majestyk said. "I can't say I know him or what's in his head."
"He's got a record. Extortion, breaking and entering. Does that tell you anything?"
"You say it, I believe it."
"I'm saying he could have a reason of his own to see you walking around free."
"Well, whatever his reason is, I'll go along with it," Majestyk said. "If it means getting my crop in."
"You can stay if you want," McAllen said.