was sitting on the sofa with her bare feet drawn up beneath her, a melancholic look on her face. She faced the television but it was off, the whole room growing dark with the onset of night.
I tossed my keys on the credenza and took off my shoes. “What? What is it?”
“There was a phone call from some lawyer,” she said dryly. “Your friend John Petras is dead.”
4
IT WAS A FREAK ACCIDENT. DURING A PARTICULARLY
nasty storm, a felled power line landed on the roof of John Petras’s house, sparking a fire. The coroner’s report listed asphyxiation due to smoke inhalation as the cause of death.
A week after I’d received the news, a box was delivered to my apartment stamped with a Wisconsin law firm’s return address. I opened the box to discover Petras’s pearl-handled hunting knife wrapped in newspaper. There was no letter typed on letterhead, no note.
That evening I went to the Filibuster. It was the first time I’d been back since my return from Nepal. The first thing that struck me was how someone had removed all the newspaper clippings and photos of corrupt politicians from the walls. Ricky was tending bar; his eyes nearly dropped out of their sockets upon seeing me.
I grinned and offered a two-fingered salute as I entered and claimed a barstool.
“Holy crap, Tim,” Ricky said.
“Guess you’re still working here, huh, kid?”
“What’s it been?” he said. “A year?”
“At least,” I said.
“Where you been?”
“Nepal. Climbing mountains. And chasing ghosts.”
“No shit? Wow. That’s badass.” He flipped a dish towel over one shoulder. “Can I get you the usual? I still remember how you like it …”
“Actually, make it a Diet Coke.”
“Seriously?”
“And a menu. I’m hungry.”
“Man, that mountain climbing stuff must have rattled your brains around, if you don’t mind me saying.” Ricky slipped me a menu and a Diet Coke.
I glanced around the place and said, “What’s with the empty walls?”
“Yeah,” Ricky said. “Guess you wouldn’t know. Brom’s selling the place.”
“No shit? How come?”
“Never really came out and said. My guess is he’s getting old and doesn’t want the hassle anymore.” He jerked a thumb toward the back room. “He keeps a picture of some beach in Pensacola on his desk in his office. Been looking at it more and more whenever he’s in here. I bet he’s itching to retire while he’s still got a few good years left, maybe get a house on the beach in Florida. Just relax, you know?”
I was still staring at the barren walls. This is what it’s like for a building to get Alzheimer’s, I thought. Taking pictures off the walls and leaving those inky, dark-colored rectangles in the wood is how a building loses its memories, loses what makes it what it used to be.
“You okay, Tim?”
“Fine.” I ordered a crab cake and ate it in silence, while Ricky attended to the other patrons. Behind me, the sound of darts striking the dartboard punctuated each bite of my crab cake. At one point, I heard someone slip coins into the jukebox. An old Creedence
Clearwater Revival song came on.
Something caused me to shiver. I turned around on my stool and looked toward the rear of the bar, straight at the booth where, roughly two and a half years ago now, I’d run into Andrew Trumbauer. What I’d written off as nothing more than a serendipitous meeting was now overshadowed by everything I’d come to know about Andrew. How long had it taken him to find me? How many days had he followed me? Had he been following me straight to the Filibuster? The notion caused my hands to go numb; I set my glass of Diet Coke on the bar before I dropped it.
The booth was currently empty, but if I concentrated hard enough, I could visualize what Andrew had looked like that evening when he’d locked eyes with me from across the room. The way he’d lit a cigarette and grinned at the corner of his mouth, that sly, knowing grin, that perfect Andrew grin …
Then, for no longer than a heartbeat, Hannah appeared in the corner of the bar. She was nude and glistening as if covered by tiny beads of ice, her skin nearly blue, her lips colorless. She was half shaded in gloom, so I couldn’t make out her expression, yet I could see the gleam of her eyes through the shadows. They were wide, staring, heartbreaking eyes.
A hand fell on my shoulder. My heart seized; instantly, I was back on Godesh Ridge, trying to plug up a weeping wound in my abdomen before I bled out into the snow.
“You sure you’re all right?” It was Ricky. “You look like you’re ready to pass out, man.”
I waved him off. “No, no—I’m okay.”
“Yeah?”
“Yeah.” It had been a year since I’d last seen Hannah’s ghost in Nepal on the Godesh Ridge.
“It’s just, I mean, you look spooked.”
“Forget it, Ricky. Just gimme the check, huh?”
I paid the bill and shoved out into the cool night, positive young Ricky’s eyes followed me all the way out the door.
5
PUSHING OPEN THE DOOR TO MY APARTMENT. I
was immediately overcome by a cold breeze. I closed the door behind me and groped for the light switch. I flicked the switch, but the light didn’t turn on. Across the room, the curtains over the balcony doors billowed out. The doors were open.
“Marta?” I called. She was supposed to be at her place tonight, but maybe she’d changed her mind.
I took a step into the room toward the lamp on the end table when movement caught my eye. I froze. Someone was standing in a darkened corner, partially obscured by the billowing curtain. “Who’s there?” My voice was nothing more than a whisper. “Hello, Tim.” It was Andrew. He stepped out from the corner, briefly silhouetted before the panel of light coming through the open balcony doors.
“Jesus—Andrew?” I couldn’t fathom it. “How did you …? What are you …?”
“Been a while, Overleigh. Been about a year since we last … tangoed.” “You’re supposed to be dead.”
“So are you,” he said and took a step forward. Moonlight washed across a distorted, lumpy face, tracked by numerous scars and dents. He shuffled forward with a limp.
“You went over the edge,” I breathed. “I saw you.” “Yes.” His voice was gravelly, injured. “It was quite a drop. I’ll probably never know exactly how long I was unconscious, but when I woke up, the pain … oh, the pain was exquisite. I wished death upon me countless times, but it never came. And soon I realized I had to take things into my own hands.” His hideous, broken face grinned.
His teeth were chiseled pickets filed to points. “Just like always, I had to take things into my own hands.”
I backed up against the door. I could taste bile at the rear of my throat.
“They did the best they could, but what can you expect from a bunch of Tibetan monks?” He laughed. It sounded like a box of glass shaken, shaken, shaken.
“Petras,” I uttered. “You killed John Petras.”
“Shhh.” He brought one crooked finger up to his disfigured lips. Another step closer and I could see one of his eyes was partially swollen, his forehead a mountainous terrain of peaks and valleys.
“Why Petras?” I wanted to know. “I’ve already figured much of it out but not Petras. He was a good man. What’d he ever do to you?”
Andrew’s lower lip dropped—a grotesque expression of awe, which slowly curled into his hideous trademark grin. “You mean you two imbeciles never figured it out?”
“Figured what out?”
“You never recognized each other?” He snickered, a ticking time-bomb sound.
“What are you talking about?”
“John Petras is the reason you were on that mountain. If it wasn’t for Petras, you would have died in the desert after crawling out of that cave, and none of this would have ever happened to you. Driver finds unidentified injured man unconscious by the side of the road. Something like that, anyway. Forgive me, but I don’t remember the newspaper article verbatim.”