“A death-machine if I ever saw one,” Henry said.
Bill nodded and plucked at his lower lip with the thumb and index finger of his right hand. “Ayuh.”
They both watched expectantly as the engine died and the driver’s door opened. A foot encased in a scuffed black engineer boot emerged from the Challenger’s dark innards. It was attached to a leg clad in tight, faded denim. A moment later the driver got out and stood in the unseasonably hot daylight, removing his sunglasses and tucking them into the V of his shirt as he looked around in leisurely, contemptuous fashion.
“Uh-oh,” Henry said. “Looks like a bad penny just turned up.”
Bill Fullerton stared at the apparition with the sports section of the newspaper in his lap and his jaw hanging slightly agape. “Ace Merrill,” he said. “As I live and breathe.”
“What in the hell is he doing here?” Henry asked indignantly.
“I thought he was over in Mechanic Falls, fuckin up their way of life.”
“Dunno,” Bill said, and pulled at his lower lip again.
“Lookit im!”
“Gray as a rat and probably twice as mean! How old is he, Henry?”
Henry shrugged.
“More’n forty and lesson fifty is all I know. Who cares how old he is, anyway? He still looks like trouble to me.”
As if he had overheard him, Ace turned toward the plate-glass window and raised his hand in a slow, sarcastic wave. The two men jerked and rustled indignantly, like a pair of old maids who have just realized that the insolent wolf-whistle coming from the doorway of the pool-hall is for them.
Ace shoved his hands into the pockets of his Low Riders and strolled away-portrait of a man with all the time in the world and all the cool moves in the known universe.
“You think you oughtta call Sheriff Pangborn?” Henry asked. Bill Fullerton pulled at his lower lip some more. At last he shook his head. “He’ll know Ace is back in town soon enough,” he said.
“Won’t need me to tell him. Or you either.”
They sat in silence and watched Ace stroll up Main Street until he had passed from their view.
7
No one would have guessed, watching Ace Merrill strut indolently up Main Street, that he was a man with a desperate problem. It was a problem Buster Keeton could have identified with to some extent; Ace owed some fellows a large chunk of money. Well over eighty thousand dollars, to be specific. But the worst Buster’s creditors could do was put him in jail. If Ace didn’t have the money soon, say by the first of November, his creditors were apt to put him in the ground.
The boys Ace Merrill had once terrorized-boys like Teddy Duchamp, Chris Chambers, and Vern Tessio-would have recognized him at once in spite of his graying hair. During the years when Ace had worked at the local textile mill (it had been closed for the last five years), that might not have been the case. In those days his vices had been beer and petty theft. He had put on a great deal of weight as a result of the former and had attracted a fair amount of attention from the late Sheriff George Bannerman as a result of the latter. Then Ace discovered cocaine.
He quit his job at the mill, lost fifty pounds running in highvery high-gear, and graduated to first-degree burglary as a result of this marvelous substance. His financial situation began to yo-yo in the grandiose way only high-margin traders on the stock market and cocaine dealers experience. He might start a month flat broke and end it with fifty or sixty thousand dollars tucked under the roots of the dead apple tree behind his place on Cranberry Bog Road. One day it was a seven-course French dinner at Maurice; the next it might be Kraft macaroni and cheese in the kitchen of his trailer. It all depended on the market and on the supply, because Ace, like most cocaine dealers, was his own best customer.
A year or so after the new Ace-long, lean, graying, and hooked through the bag-emerged from the suit of blubber he had been growing ever since he and public education parted company, he met some fellows from Connecticut. These fellows traded in firearms as well as blow.
Ace saw eye to eye with them at once; like him, the Corson brothers were their own best customers. They offered Ace what amounted to a high-caliber franchise for the central Maine area, and Ace accepted gladly. This was a pure business decision no more than the decision to start dealing coke had been a pure business decision. If there was anything in the world Ace loved more than cars and coke, it was guns.
On one of the occasions when he found himself embarrassed for funds, he had gone to see his uncle, who had loaned money to half the people in town and was reputed to be rolling in dough.
Ace saw no reason why he should not qualify for such a loan; he was young (well… forty-eight… relatively young), he had prospects, and he was blood.
His uncle, however, held a radically different view of things.
“Nope,” Reginald Marion “Pop” Merrill told him. “I know where your money comes from-when you have money, that is. It comes from that white shit.”
“Aw, Uncle Reginald-”
“Don’t you Uncle Reginald me,” Pop had replied. “You got a spot of it on y’nose right now. Careless. Folks who use that white shit and deal it always get careless. Careless people end up in the Shank. That’s if they’re lucky. If they ain’t, they wind up fertilizing a patch of swamp about six feet long and three feet deep. I can’t collect money if the people who owe it to me are dead or doing time. I wouldn’t give you the sweat out of my dirty asshole, is what I mean to say.”
That particular embarrassment had come shortly after Alan Pangborn had assumed his duties as Sheriff of Castle County. And Alan’s first major bust had come when he surprised Ace and two of his friends trying to crack the safe in Henry Beaufort’s office at The Mellow Tiger. It was a very good bust, a textbook bust, and Ace had found himself in Shawshank less than four months after his uncle had warned him of the place. The charges of attempted robbery were dropped in a plea-bargain, but Ace still got a pretty good dose of hard time on a nighttime breaking and entering charge.
He got out in the spring of 1989 and moved to Mechanic Falls.
He had a job to go to; Oxford Plains Speedway participated in the state’s pre-release program, and John “Ace” Merrill obtained a position as maintenance man and part-time pit mechanic.
A good many of his old friends were still around-not to mention his old customers-and soon Ace was doing business and having nosebleeds again.
He kept the job at the Speedway until his sentence was officially up, and quit the day it was. He’d gotten a phone call from the Flying Corson Brothers in Danbury, Connecticut, and soon he was dealing shooting irons again as well as the Bolivian marching powder.
The ante had gone up while he was in stir, it seemed; instead of pistols, rifles, and repeating shotguns, he now found himself doing a lively business in automatic and semi-automatic weapons.
The climax had come in June of this year, when he sold a groundfired Thunderbolt missile to a seafaring man with a South American accent. The seafaring man stowed the Thunderbolt below, then paid Ace seventeen thousand dollars in fresh hundreds with nonsequential serial numbers.
“What do you use a thing like that for?” Ace had asked with some fascination.
“Anytheeng you want to, sefior,” the seafaring man had replied unsmilingly.
Then, in July, everything had crashed. Ace still didn’t really understand how it could have happened, except that it probably would have been better if he had stuck with the Flying Corson Brothers for coke as well as guns. He had taken delivery of two pounds of Colombian flake from a guy in Portland, financing the deal with the help of Mike and Dave Corson. They had kicked in about eighty-five thousand. That particular pile of blow had seemed worth twice the asking price-it had tested high blue. Ace knew that eighty-five big ones was a lot more boost than he was used to handling, but he felt confident and ready to move up. In those days, “No problem!” had been Ace Merrill’s main guidepost to living.