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Majestyk seemed to be thinking about it. He said, "Twenty-five thousand, huh?"
"Tax free."
"Could you go any higher than that?"
Renda gri
"I just wondered."
"Twenty-five," Renda said. "That's your price. A nice round number. Buy yourself a tractor, a new pair of overalls. Put the rest away for your retirement." He waited a moment. "Well, what do you think?"
"You say I call somebody named Wiley," Majestyk said. "What's the number?"
5
THE Papago trading post was a highway novelty store in the desert, about three miles below and east of the hunting cabin. Big red-painted signs on and around the place advertised AUTHENTIC INDIAN SOUVENIRS… ARROWHEADS… MOCCASINS… HOMEMADE CANDY AND ICE COLD BEER. There was a Coca-Cola sign, an Olympia sign, and a Coors sign.
Majestyk came down from the cabin about nine in the morning and approached the store from about three hundred yards up the highway, reading the signs and listening for the sounds of oncoming cars. Nobody passed him. He reached the store and went inside.
Beyond the counters displaying the trinkets and souvenirs, the Indian dolls and blankets, and sayings carved on varnished pieces of wood-like, "There's only one thing money can't buy. Poverty"-he saw the owner of the place sitting at a counter that was marble and looked like a soda fountain. The man was about sixty, frail-looking with yellowish gray hair. He was having a beer, drinking it from the can.
Approaching him Majestyk said, "I got a flat tire a couple of miles back. No spare."
"That's a shame," the owner said.
"I wonder if I could use your phone. Call a friend of mine."
"Where's he live?"
"Down at Edna."
"That's two bits call Edna."
Majestyk watched him raise the wet-glistening beer can to his mouth.
"I don't have a spare. The truth is, I don't have any money on me."
"Have to trust you then, won't I?"
Majestyk smiled at him. "You trust me for a can of that too?"
When he got his Coors, a sixteen-ounce can, he took it over to the wall phone with him, looked up a number in the Edna directory, and dialed it. He kept his back to the man at the counter. When a voice came on he said, quietly, "I believe you have a Lieutenant McAllen there?… Let me speak to him, please."
He waited, looking over at the counter where the owner of the place was watching him, then turned his back to the man and hunched over the phone again.
"This is Vincent Majestyk. You remember we met a few days ago?" He paused, interrupted, then said, "No, I'm downtown in a hotel. Where do you think I am? Listen, why don't you let me talk for a minute, all right?" But he was interrupted again. "Listen to me, will you? I got Frank Renda… I said I got him… You want to listen or you want me to hang up?… Okay, I got Renda and you got an assault charge against me. Drop it, tear it up, kick it under the rug, and I'll give you Frank Renda."
With the loud sounds coming from the receiver he held the phone away from him, covered the speaker with his hand, and looked over at the owner of the place.
"He's sore cause I took him away from his breakfast." He turned and put the phone to his ear again, waiting to break in.
"Yeah, well nothing's free in this world," Majestyk said finally. "You want him, that's the deal… No, I'll deliver him. You come here you're liable to say you found us. But I bring him in it's me doing it and nobody else… Yeah. Yeah, well it's nice doing business with you too."
He hung up, took a sip of beer, but didn't move away from the phone. "Put another call on there, okay?" he said to the store owner. "Phoenix. And maybe a couple more beers, to go."
He finished dialing, waited, and as he turned to the wall said, "I got a message for somebody named Wiley. You understand? All right, get a pencil and piece of paper and write down what I tell you."
It was a little after twelve, the sun directly above them, when the sports car appeared on the county road. They had been waiting since eleven-thirty, partway up the slope that was covered with stands of pinyon pine. In that time this was the first car they had seen.
"That's it," Renda said. He started to rise, awkwardly, still handcuffed.
Majestyk motioned to him. "Keep down." He watched the sports car, a white Jaguar XK, go by raising a trail of dust on the gravel road, finally reaching a point where it passed from sight beyond the trees.
"That's the car," Renda said.
Majestyk continued to watch the road, saying nothing until the car appeared again, coming slowly from the other direction.
"All right, let's go."
By the time they reached the road the Jaguar was approaching them and came to an abrupt stop. An attractive young girl with short blond hair and big round sunglasses got out and stood looking at them over the open door.
Majestyk stared, taken by surprise. He hadn't expected a girl. The possibility had never entered his mind.
"Who's that?"
"That's Wiley," Renda said. He started toward the car and called to the girl, "You got the money?"
"I already gave it to him," the girl said. "God, Frank, you're a mess."
"What do you mean you gave it to him? Come on, for Christ sake, where's the money?"
She was frowning as she raised the sunglasses and placed them on her head. "I was told to stop at the store on the highway and pay the man three dollars and eighty-five cents, and that's what I did. It's the only money I was told to bring."
Renda turned to Majestyk, who was walking toward the Jaguar now, looking at it closely.
"What are you pulling? What kind of shit are you pulling! We made a deal-twenty-five grand!"
"It doesn't look like you'd fit in the trunk," Majestyk said. "So I guess maybe you better drive, Frank. Keep your hands on something. Wiley can squeeze in behind the seats." He looked at Renda then. "You can get in by yourself, or I can help you in. Either way."
"I must have missed something," Wiley said. "Is it all right if I ask where we're going?"
Majestyk gave her a pleasant smile. "To jail, honey. Where'd you think?"
Wiley was three years out of Northwestern University, drama school; two years out of Universal City, a little television; one year out of a Las Vegas show-bar, topless; and six months into Frank Renda.
Until recently she had been amazed that life with him could be so-not boring, really-uneventful. Living with a real-life man who killed people had sounded like the trip to end all trips. It turned out to be mostly lying around swimming pools while he talked on the phone. Frank was fun to watch. He was a natural actor and didn't know it. He played roles constantly, from cool dude to spoiled child, and looked at himself in the mirror a lot, like almost every actor she had ever known. It was interesting watching him. Still, it was getting to be something of a drag until, four days ago, when she fingered the guy in the bar for him. No, it wasn't exactly a finger job. What she did was sit at the bar, keeping an eye on the guy. When it looked like he was getting ready to pay his check, she got up and walked out of the place, letting Frank know the guy was coming, giving him a minute or so to get ready. She didn't know what Frank had against the guy; she didn't ask him. This was real-life drama. She stood off to the side and watched Frank calmly shoot the guy five times. Wow. From about ten feet away. The guy was a great dier. It was really a show, cinema verite. Until the cop came from out of nowhere and jammed his gun into Frank's back. She got out of there, took a cab back to her apartment and waited, the next four days, close to the phone.
More true-life adventure now, scrunched behind the bucket seats of an XK Jag, driving down a back-country road, her handcuffed boyfriend with both hands on the top arc of the steering wheel, and a solemn-faced, farmer-looking guy staring at him, watching every move he made.