But the gun still felt like a burden. Not a partner, as it had in the desert. You might just pay them off, and save the killing for later, if they came back for more. When. They would be sure of themselves, then, and more vulnerable.
A few blocks from the house, a fire truck screamed by him, then an ambulance, and then another fire truck. There was a wisp of black smoke ahead of him, and then a column.
He stopped at Fourth Avenue, a block from Capra’s house, which was now burning like a bonfire. He took from his bike bag the monocular he used for birds, to verify the address.
Medics and police were moving a small knot of onlookers away, off the sidewalk, to make way for the ambulance gurney. Lying in front of the house, there was a man in a chair, evidently tied up, covered with firefighting foam. They finished cutting him loose, and he stood, shakily, and they eased him onto the gurney.
It was Qabil. They rolled him toward the ambulance.
No meeting tonight, no shoot-out. Norman reversed his bicycle on the sidewalk and sped home.
He got there just minutes before Rory pulled up with her guests. He reluctantly turned off the cube—no news bulletin yet—and met them at the door.
Lamar and Dove Slidell were both astronomers, out in New Mexico now, classmates and pals with Rory from graduate school. Evidently they’d already said all there was to be said about the Coming, and knew that Rory would just as soon talk about anything else. So it was mainly gossip about mutual friends, and job comparisons. The Slidells worked on a mountaintop where you could actually see the stars. In Gainesville, the night sky was bright gray soup.
Norman tried to appear interested, and accepted the compliments for his cooking, and drank somewhat more wine than the others. Finally, his phone rang, and he excused himself to take the call in the kitchen.
It wasn’t the blackmailers. It was Qabil.
“Look, I know you’ve got company. I shouldn’t be recorded coming into your house anyhow. But we have to talk before I go to work in the morning.”
“Where are you?”
“Down on the corner, where the street splits. Blue Westinghouse with silvered windows.”
“I’ll be there in a minute.” He pushed “end” and thought for a moment, and then rushed back into the dining room.
“I have to run out for a bit, student emergency. Kid’s got an audition tomorrow, broke an A string. Sounds like he might need some serious hand-holding, too.”
“Which student?” Rory asked.
“Qabil. Just down the street.” She nodded, wordlessly, and forced a smile.
Norman got a string from his study and said “back in a minute,” and went out the door and down the street.
The passenger door opened as he approached. He slid in and closed it.
One side of Qabil’s face was blistered, covered with a transparent gel. His right hand was bandaged.
“What happened?” Norman said.
“I’ll get to that. First would you tell me what the fuck is going on?”
“The basics… Willy Joe Capra was going to blackmail me. About you and me.”
“That much I know. He told me in some detail, after he kidnapped me from my own goddamned driveway. Then that Tampa thug Solo, you broke his hand? ”
“In a way, yes.” Crickets loud in the darkness. “I held a gun on him and he did it himself.”
“A gun. You’ve been leading an interesting life, since we parted.”
Parted. Norman tried to keep emotion out of his voice. “What did those bastards do to you?”
“Do to me? What the hell did you do to them ?”
“Me? Nothing. Just the hand.”
“Norm, you can tell me. If you can trust anybody in the world with this, it’s me.”
“I was supposed to meet them at five. I talked to the lawyer, Moore; he said they had something to show me.”
“Yours truly, Exhibit A. So what the hell did you do?”
“I didn’t do anything. I got to about a block away and saw that the place was burning to the ground. I saw the medics cut you loose from the chair, saw you could walk, and got away as fast as I could.” He shook his head. “I’m sorry. I got you into this. I don’t suppose there’s any way to cover it up now.”
“Wait. Before we talk about covering up. You didn’t kill those shits?”
“I didn’t kill anybody. I was ready to, but… the fire. I saw you and figured it was a police thing.”
“No… whatever that thing was, the police don’t have it. I’m getting debriefed tomorrow, and I’m not sure what to say. You didn’t do it?”
“What was it? Some kind of firebomb?”
Qabil touched his face gingerly. “The three guys just blew up. I saw it happen. I haven’t said anything to anybody, just that there was a fire. But I saw it all.”
“They blew up?”
“A window broke, a window behind me. The Tampa scumbag, Solo, raised his gun—it was already in his left hand—and started to stand. Then he just burst into flames.”
“Jesus. Like a flamethrower?” Norman had seen them in use, and he still had dreams about it.
“No—it was like he exploded from the inside out. Not his clothes, his flesh. Then the other two. One, two, three. Staggering around like something out of a movie. Then their clothes started to burn. Capra had a gun in a holster in the small of his back, and the rounds cooked off.
“He fell into the drapes, and they went up like tinder. Some of the furniture was smoldering. Then fire running out of their bodies like burning oil. I was able to half stand up, tied to the chair, and had to kick my way through the front door, fell down the steps, and knocked myself silly. Some civilian sprayed me with a fire extinguisher, maybe saved my life.”
“What the hell could do that? Make people burst into flame like that?”
“I was hoping you could straighten that out. Some new military weapon or something.”
“Come on, Qabil. I haven’t held a military weapon in thirty years.”
Qabil nodded and then had a coughing spasm that ended with a stifled retch. “The smell was disgusting. You know I’m forbidden pork. When human flesh—”
“I remember, Qabil.” He shook his head hard. “It must have been a Mafia thing. Or a gang thing.”
“Well, the gangs…” He cleared his throat. “The gangs don’t have any reason to love him. But they run more to baseball bats and knives. If they had burst-into-flames ray guns, we’d all be in real trouble.
“I thought about the Mafia. But why would a hit man kill three hoods and leave a live policeman as a witness?”
“Maybe he didn’t know you were a—”
“I was still in uniform. But maybe, maybe that was the point. Maybe they want us to know they have this ungodly weapon. Willy Joe was not some godfather type they had to assassinate in a dramatic way. Just a bagman with delusions of grandeur.”
They listened to the crickets for a minute. “What can make a body burn up?” Norman asked. “We’re mostly water, aren’t we?”
“Yeah. Crematoriums need a really hot fire to get things going. But we’ve both seen what napalm does.”
“That’s adding fuel. You said these guys just started to burn from the inside out.”
“I saw that clearly. Their clothes weren’t even on fire, not initially. Then everything was on fire.”
“There’ve been cases of spontaneous human combustion.”
Qabil laughed one “hum” and touched his cheek. “That always turns out to be nothing. Some old person or drunk, or drunk old person, falls asleep smoking. They die without noticing they’ve died. After they’ve smoldered awhile, fat starts to drip out. They burn like a candle then. Like an oil lamp.”
“What about the water, then?”
“I guess it’s like the water in a green stick of wood. If it’s hot enough, the wood burns anyhow.” He scratched his head. “But this was nothing like that. They didn’t smolder or anything. They just ignited, like they were made out of gunpowder.”
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