Джо Горес - Cases

Здесь есть возможность читать онлайн «Джо Горес - Cases» весь текст электронной книги совершенно бесплатно (целиком полную версию без сокращений). В некоторых случаях можно слушать аудио, скачать через торрент в формате fb2 и присутствует краткое содержание. Город: New York, Год выпуска: 1999, ISBN: 1999, Издательство: Mysterious Press, Жанр: Триллер, на английском языке. Описание произведения, (предисловие) а так же отзывы посетителей доступны на портале библиотеки ЛибКат.

Cases: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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In 1953 Pierce Duncan leaves college as an innocent and sets off to see America. His road trip will take him from the savagery of a Georgia chain gang to a wild ride through Texas to the darkest side of the Las Vegas fight game — and, finally, to San Francisco, the far end of the world. Along the backstreets and freight lines Dunc will meet beautiful women, dangerous men, and murder. And in California, home of the lost and the outcast, he will join up with the dynamic head of a private investigation agency. Here he will learn everything about being a man — and about brutal betrayal.
Joe Gores has written a violence-marked love letter to a lost time in America, and a San Francisco roiling with the unexpected. With Dunc’s mind teeming with the cadences of Hemingway and Joyce. CASES is also an ode to the art of writing itself: writing as vivid as a lightning storm over a lonely highway, as unforgettable as a first kiss, as haunting as a dead woman’s eyes.

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But Tony warned, “I’ll break his fuckin’ neck!”

Joshua made a graceful movement too fast for the eye to follow, and was pointing his switchblade finger at Tony’s ample middle, as he had done to Samuel the day he’d been doused with water. Only now his finger was an opened-out straight razor, the gleaming blade making little eager circles in front of him.

“I takes me a swipe with this here razor, Mr. Union Man, an’ when you tries to nod your head you be in fo’ a big surprise.”

Tony stepped back, arms out wide from his sides. Obviously neither he nor Luigi had thought they’d need a gun to beat somebody up. Dunc gulped in great lungfuls of air.

“International’s gonna be mighty innersted in whut you been do in’ in this local,” Joshua said. “I hear they be as tough as you guys pretend you are. Dunc, we be goin’ now.”

The three of them backed out the door. Samuel’s rattletrap was alongside the Grey Ghost with both doors hanging open.

“I thought... you guys... were already gone,” panted Dunc.

“We figured you might need a little help when you went to cash your check.” Samuel was thoughtfully rubbing his boot in the dust to rid it of Luigi’s blood.

Dunc’s kidney burned, but it was not as bad as a kidney shot he’d taken from an opposing lineman’s helmet during his high school football days. Then he’d pissed blood for a week.

“You guys... knew all along... what was going on.”

Samuel shrugged. “Near enough.”

“Figgered you was havin’ a lotta fun workin’ it out your own se’f,” said Joshua. “But we think maybe you won’t wanna work here no mo’. Those guys gonna have long memories.”

“But what about you? If you lose your jobs over this—”

“Shit, man,” said Samuel, “we can work anywheres we want.”

Joshua gave his hee-hee-hee laugh. “We be the dynamic duo!”

“You go on now, Dunc,” said Samuel. “Jes in case they got some life in them yet.”

They didn’t. No one appeared at the open door of the tract house serving as a union office. It was all over. Joshua stuck out his hand; Dunc hugged him instead, the way he hugged his dad when he hadn’t seen him for a while. He repeated with Samuel.

“Christ, you guys, you — you saved my life!”

“Jes yo’ ass,” said Joshua, and all three of them laughed.

Driving away from the hod carriers’ office for the last time, in the rearview mirror Dunc could see Samuel’s ancient Plymouth bouncing along the dirt track in his dust.

At Sepulveda they went their separate ways.

Chapter Twenty-five

That evening Dunc regaled the family with the story of how his plan to again hide the Mexican laborers in the cornfield, which had gone so perfectly the first time, had gone awry.

Uncle Ben said, “You look pretty beat-up, Dunc. Something ought to be done about that assault at the union office.”

“I learned my lesson. I’m just going to let it lie.”

He called Penny for some loving commiseration and invited her to see Duke Ellington the next night. After another long hot shower he went to bed; there had been only the faintest pink tinge to his urine, so he knew his kidneys were all right.

Next morning the whole family trooped down to see Gus off on the Phoenix-bound Greyhound. Gus and Dunc shook hands.

“Christ, I wish I’d been there yesterday.”

“Then we both would’ve gotten the shit kicked out of us.”

Suddenly they knew it had been a good summer. One that could never be repeated. The women were fussing over Gus, tears on everyone’s cheeks; Dunc was suddenly homesick for his folks. Gus got a window seat, he and the family mouthed silent sentences at each other until the driver climbed in and the door hissed shut. The big vehicle was moving, and Gus was gone.

Dunc found a place to park on a side street a block from the Strip, in front of a small dark bungalow with a dried-out lawn but hot-purple bougainvillea rioting up the front porch posts to give the place a spurious festive air. A ’36 Chevy pickup was parked halfway up the drive. Dim light glowed against the drawn front room shades; they could hear radio music from inside.

“Good place for Philip Marlowe to discover a murder,” said Penny in almost a whisper.

They walked up the inclined street to Sunset holding hands. The air was warm, flower-scented; palm fronds clacked overhead. Dunc was very aware of the swing of Penny’s thighs beneath the clinging red dress.

As they strolled past an Art Deco cocktail lounge called the Purple Cockatoo, a posterboard beside the doorway caught Dunc’s eye. He stopped dead to stare at the photograph of a dapper black-haired man in a tux framed beneath the lettering:

COME IN AND ENJOY THE
PIANO STYLINGS OF
PEPPER PAGLIA

Pepe, who had conned Nicky into letting Dunc go back to the Gladiator Club’s poker room for the fateful meeting with Nitro Ned and Artis in the first place! Pepe, who had sung to his piano riffs as he told Dunc stories as Dunc perched at the piano bar next to the tip glass on its felt coaster.

“That’s him!” he exclaimed. “It’s his photograph.” Penny already knew most of Dunc’s Las Vegas adventures, all except watching Artis die. Penny took his hand and drew him toward the door. “You need to talk to him,” she said. “You’re the only ones still alive.”

The Purple Cockatoo was a narrow room full of smoke and a lot of potted plants with spearlike palmetto leaves, but no cockatoos, purple or otherwise. Two barmen sweated behind a stick alive with the din of the alcohol voices of sharp-dressing men and blondes in revealing dresses and too much makeup.

Dunc shouldered a path for Penny toward a piano bar bathed in a purple spotlight. Pepe was singing the Tony Bennett version of “Cold, Cold Heart.” He looked up, did a double take, and schmaltzed up a dozen bars of the “Notre Dame Victory March.”

“Dunc! And the loveliest lady in the place!”

Penny gave a mock curtsy. “Thank you, kind sir.”

Dunc introduced them, then asked Pepe, “Are you the purple cockatoo they named the place after?”

“The purple spot?” Pepe chuckled. “Management insists.”

He looked just the same as he had at the Gladiator Club, impeccably groomed, slim and elegant, with the white wine, the cigarette smoldering in an ashtray, the glass bowl of greenback tips. Dunc realized all over again how much he liked this man. Pepe gestured them to stools at the almost empty piano bar.

“Same old story. People come to a place like this to pick up women, not listen to the music.” He grinned. “Not like Dunc. Always my biggest fan.”

When a harried waitress in a tight black uniform that showed a lot of breast and leg came by to take their orders, Pepe launched into Frankie Laine’s “Jezebel.”

“Pepper?” asked Dunc at the end of the piece.

“My producer’s idea. ‘Pepe’ sounded too Mexican. Pepper Paglia — possibly Italian, possibly a recording star.”

“You got your record deal!” exclaimed Penny.

He raised sad elegant shoulders. “Not quite yet, Penny.”

Between numbers they drank and talked about Penny going back to college, about Dunc maybe trying San Francisco, about Pepe playing his piano... And finally about Vegas.

Dunc asked, “Did they ever catch Raffetto?”

Pepe’s hands momentarily forgot to play. He shook his head.

“Dunc, I don’t even know! I got a call about my record deal and had to leave before the fight. A bad business.” He raised his glass. “To life!” he said.

“I’ll drink to that,” said Dunc.

There was an explosion of white light that momentarily blinded them all. Pepe was on his feet, face white and drawn, glaring at the photo girl.

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