“Dot might be so.”
“His real name is Stripling. Can you remember that? It’ll be important if they come to ask you questions. The woman is his wife—did she get a look at your face?”
“No,” Neville said. “Who gonna come axing questions? You mean from Nassau or Miami?”
“Remember that name—Nicholas Stripling. He shot two men dead back in Florida.”
“Got-tam!” said Neville.
“Before he came here, he had a surgeon take off his left arm. That’s why he always wore the poncho. That’s why you found the cut sleeve in his garbage—his wife stitches up his shirts to fit the nub.”
Neville’s voice jumped two octaves. “Why a mon get his own arm cut off? ’E muss be stone crazy!”
“No, Mr. Stafford, he did it for money. This is one cold-blooded sonofabitch.”
Rosa walked over carrying a lantern. She and Yancy went into a bedroom and shut the door.
Neville sat down to think. Anyone who for pure greed would give up an arm … a true white devil, like the Dragon Queen said. Maybe her voodoo had worked, after all. What if she’d given Neville a role in the curse, and set the stabbing in motion?
He looked up at the shuddering rafters. Then he turned back to address the monkey: “You con stay wit me like before, but tings got to change. No more smokin’ and nonsense.”
Coquina rolled her eyes and told Neville he was a fool.
Driggs blinked impassively and sucked an orange rind. It felt good to be out of the storm.
Yancy held Rosa close and said, “Baby, I’m so sorry.”
“Totally my fault. Rule number one: Never conspire under the influence of tequila.”
“Did they hurt you?”
“Not really, but it was definitely on the agenda,” Rosa said. “Crazy old bat, first thing she did? Tore off my bra and poured Bacardi in the cups. The bald dude, he was just laughing and playing with himself.”
“What the hell happened before that, at Stripling’s house?”
“Oh, great meeting. She and the boyfriend knew we weren’t for real—they’ve got a woman on the payroll at Immigration in Nassau. They knew ‘Andrew Gates’ was really you, they knew I wasn’t really your wife—and they knew we were trying to set ’em up.”
Yancy sat her on the bed. He kept apologizing until she told him to hush.
“Eve’s boyfriend isn’t a boyfriend,” he said.
“I never saw him—he was in another room. The bald guy’s the one who grabbed me. He’s not a gentleman, either, Andrew. God bless that nasty little monkey for showing up when he did.”
“What I’m trying to tell you,” said Yancy, “is that the boyfriend is really the husband. Nick Stripling’s alive.”
Rosa flopped back on the covers. “Okay. What?”
“He had his own arm sawed off to make everybody think he was dead. It was Dr. O’Peele who did the wet work, right after Nick and Eve sank the boat.”
“While Immigration has her in Nassau.”
“Right. That’s the beauty of the seaplane.”
“They used the condo on Duck Key for the surgery, which explains the bone chips.”
“Right,” said Yancy. “Then, after they get some shark bites on the arm, Eve drives it down to Key West for the switcheroo on the Misty Momma.”
“Wow. Talk about a plan.”
The wind against the ceiling beams sounded like a downhill locomotive. Yancy could feel the pressure in his eardrums.
“After the surgery,” he said, “Nick came to hide out on Andros. He and Eve had already rented the house and started their big real estate project. They bought that sweet stretch of beach, probably using what Nick stole from Medicare. But he wasn’t through with Florida. He snuck back to take care of Phinney and then O’Peele, and then me. Nick’s the dude in the orange poncho, Rosa. He wears it to hide his stump.”
Rosa ran her hands through her hair. Yancy noticed raw scrapes on both knuckles, from fighting the two freaks in the shack.
She said, “The man had his own arm amputated, Andrew. That’s impressive.”
“I’ve heard of doing a finger before.”
“Oh, sure. The old Wendy’s scam.”
“I thought it was Burger King,” Yancy said.
“Whatever. Customer starts gagging and there’s a big scene. Somebody calls the local TV station. But you know it’s a setup because what turns up in the cheeseburger is always a pinkie. That’s the one you don’t really use. An actual meat-rending accident, it’s the thumb or forefinger that gets severed because those are working fingers.”
“Sure, the ones nearest the blades and grinders.”
“Exactly,” Rosa said. “But pinkie cases are automatically suspicious. Somebody claims they found one in a bun, always check the hands of their friends and family. It’s amazing how many dirtbags will chop off a pinkie just to get a piece of a lawsuit.”
“You’ve got to admire the commitment.”
“Because these fast-food companies, they’ll settle almost every time. They don’t want to go to a jury,” she said. “Even if they know they’re getting hustled, they can’t take a chance.”
“Not in South Florida, no way.”
“Even a little finger, Andrew, that’s pretty hard-core. But to give up your whole arm—that’s a new one.”
“We’re blessed to live in such times,” Yancy said.
“You think Caitlin knows?”
“Nope. Only Eve.”
“And where is the fearless Mr. Stripling?”
“Not sure if he’s dead or alive. He was about to shoot me when my new hero Neville stabbed him with my six-hundred-dollar bonefish rod.”
“It just gets better and better,” Rosa said. “And now we’re in a hurricane!”
“Named Françoise, for Christ’s sake.”
“Don’t spoil it, Andrew. Take off your pants.”
The eye of the storm stayed out in the Tongue of the Ocean, feeding on the warm waters. Still there was substantial damage and disruption across Andros as it passed to the east. The winds on Lizard Cay reached seventy-one miles per hour, gusting to ninety.
Yancy found himself struggling to focus on what would have been, under calm heavens, an act of carefree and delicious reflex. The din from even a small hurricane is nerve-racking, and Yancy was additionally distracted by thoughts of the evening’s frenetic events. Rosa told him to relax; Neville and his girlfriend wouldn’t be able to hear them from the other side of the door, which Yancy had locked in case Neville’s monkey got nosy.
It was during light-spirited foreplay when Rosa confided that she’d been reading a smutty novel in which an inexperienced woman becomes enthralled by a lover who bosses her around the bedroom with the same tone one might hear from the nail-gun operator at a slaughterhouse. The woman sportingly signs an enslavement contract, after which the fellow forces her to put on Day-Glo wetsuits and perform contortions that would daunt Olga Korbut.
Rosa said she was sort of enjoying the book. Yancy tried to act intrigued though he’d never been good at fantasy sex; it was difficult to stay in character and not make smart-ass remarks. One time Bonnie made him play the shiftless hitchhiker while she was the naïve Mary Kay associate who got lost in her imaginary pink Lexus. Yancy couldn’t keep a straight face, or anything else, and Bonnie ended up steaming mad.
Adopting the role of ruthless dominator in Rosa’s daydream would require some stagecraft, and in Yancy’s experience there was a hazy line between daring and disgusting. Usually when making love he strived for a purely sensory, uncomplicated experience. Incorporating a game or a skit seemed too much like a class assignment.
For Rosa, however, he’d try anything—first in a morgue and now in a hurricane, the whole damn house heaving on its foundation. Fine.
“Thad always speaks to Juliette like a Russian,” she was saying, referring to the characters in the novel.
“I can’t do a Russian.”
“Any Eastern bloc nation should work.”