Agnes Among the Gargoyles (29 page)

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Authors: Patrick Flynn

BOOK: Agnes Among the Gargoyles
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   "I'm a pathetic soul," says Ivan. "I'm still a virgin. I have lots of problems. I consider myself exempt from doing good."
   Sarah hands him a business card.
   "What's this?"
   "It's a soup kitchen," she says. "It's on the Bowery. Have you ever heard of the Feeney sisters?"
   "You're deranged. You can't expect me to go there and spoon out chicken stew."
   "You're not an accountant," she says merrily. "You're hardly qualified to do the books."
   "I don't see you volunteering," he says gloomily.
   "This film is my good work. I'm trying to show the world that AIDS patients are human beings. I'm trying to clear up the myths. The disease isn't their fault. God isn't visiting a plague on them."
   Agnes thinks that perhaps there is a single mountain man in Tennessee who's been living in a cave and eating bats for the past few years who may actually still believe that stuff. She hopes Sarah airlifts him a print of the film.
   "She's so mediocre," Ivan whispers to Agnes. "Such a product of her time. Charity! It's all the rage, isn't it? Why couldn't I have known her in the Sixties, when free love was the fashion?"
   Ivan wants Sarah to come out after the filming, but she begs off, claiming a date for breakfast with her parents. He has to settle for a distant second-best: Agnes goes with him to the loft where he is staying.
   In no time Agnes is smoking opium from a waterpipe with Ivan's friend Neal, the owner of the loft. Neal clerks at Tower Records during the day, and at night does the sound for a bunch of different bands. The loft is cluttered with recording equipment, guitars and keyboards, computers. The loft itself is unimproved. There is a time clock near the elevator gate. The floor could use a good sanding. There is not much furniture, and what there is sits arranged in a circle in one corner of the loft so that they might as well be sitting in a studio apartment.
   "It's all bullshit," says Ivan. He puffs out his cheeks and takes a deep hit of opium. The bubbling waterpipe reminds Agnes of a set of Christmas lights once owned by the Travertines. "The things we do for love. The fucking Feeney sisters. The fucking Staff of Life kitchen."
   "That's a tough place," says Neal, making a conspiratorial face at Agnes. "They're dykes. They yell at you and shit."
   Ivan asks Agnes what he should do.
   "Follow your heart."
   "Thanks, Julie Andrews."
   "Don't put on attitudes for someone else. Be truthful. Be yourself."
   "Obviously that hasn't worked," says Ivan. "I think it's clear I have to be someone else."
   "Why don't you be me?" says Neal giddily.
   "You're too weird. Look at you! Feasting on your own toenail clippings, your bones brittle from lack of sunlight—that big yellow orb in the sky won't hurt you, you know."
   "At least I've done the deed," says Neal triumphantly.
   "I have no answer to that."
   "You have no balls, my friend."
   Ivan frowns. "Please, Neal. The grownups are talking."
   "I don't even understand why you're so attracted to her," Agnes comments. "You've got nothing but bad things to say about her."
   Agnes's words seem to reverberate around the loft. The drugs are taking effect.
   "I don't even think she's all that bright," he says. "I'm sure I have 200 SAT points on her. But I can't stop thinking about her."
   "I like people less once I see their bad qualities," says Agnes airily. "And if they don't like me—forget about it. I'm incapable of unrequited love."
   "There's that thing again," says Ivan. "Self-respect."
   Agnes is suddenly stoned. Neal unlaces his hightops and sits with his toes curled under, like a monkey.
   "You've got to have lines that people can't cross," says Agnes. "I have them with Tommy."
   "Like what?" says Ivan.
   "The details aren't important."
   "I think I know what she's saying," says Neal.
   "The details are everything," says Ivan.
   "All right," says Agnes. "I won't have sex with Tommy for six months. I want to make sure he doesn't have AIDS."
   "Boy that's depressing," says Ivan. "Is there anything to eat around here?"
   "What's so depressing about it?" says Agnes.
   "I thought Sarah was the weirdest woman around, but you're just as bad. God, probably everybody's just as bad when you get to know them."
   "That's a stoned insight," says Neal.
   "You just enjoy torturing people," Ivan tells Agnes. "Does that poor cop know what he's getting into?"
   The quiet is broken by an ear-splitting bell, the sort that goes off when someone catches a limb in a drill press. Agnes screams. Ivan and Neal fall on each other, laughing.
   "It's only the doorbell," says Ivan with much superiority.
   Neal brings in a young kid, the drummer for a band called Chalk & Cheese. He drops off some master tapes and disks. Chalk & Cheese's record label won't put out the live album the band has recorded, and so they have hired Neal to bootleg them.
   The drummer leaves, and Neal demonstrates his record pressing machine. He mounts the master disks, then heats latex in the tank until it liquefies. An acrid, fluorocarbonish, toxic smell fills the loft. Agnes's eyes water. The machine hums and vibrates, and Agnes, being stoned, fixates on the rumbling in the floor. She feels like she's on one of those foot massagers at Coney Island. Neal squeezes a lever, releasing some latex, and with a great mechanical grinding
yawp!
the two halves of the mother stamper come together. There is a hissing sound, and the molds separate, and Neal lifts out the latest Chalk & Cheese waxing. The record is pressed off-center.
   "Like the first pancake, it's never right," says Ivan.
   "Isn't bootlegging romantic?" Neal asks Agnes.
   "Not like it used to be," she says.
   "In your time, there was music to be liberated," says Neal wistfully. He seems suddenly tired. "Now there's probably too much music. Ah, it's all bullshit anyway."
   Ivan brings over the waterpipe. He pretends to read a warning printed on the side of the bowl. "B
eing stoned may impair judgment. Do not operate heavy
machinery while smoking opium.
We may be the only assholes who've ever actually done that."
   The three of them smoke more opium and drink heavily.
   At three o'clock in the morning, Ivan moans, "I'm going to the Feeneys."
   "It's all bullshit anyway," Neal replies.
   "I'm so horny I could fuck Criz. Did you notice, Agnes, that when I kissed her good-bye I slipped her the tongue?"
   "I'm getting sick," says Agnes.
   Ivan crashes. Neal cuddles up next to Agnes. They watch
I Love Lucy
together. Neal thinks it will impress Agnes that he has the script committed to memory. Lucy reads the book
Making Your First Million in Antiques
and buys an urn she thinks is worth a fortune. Agnes can't focus on the plot. The episode passes in a blur. Urns shatter; Lucy cries; Ricky curses his wife. "Me
cago en la
leche de tu puta madre!
Red-headed whore!" Neal has gone to sleep, his hand twitching spasmodically on Agnes's thigh.
   Agnes lets herself out of the loft. Rush hour has begun. Foot traffic moves at an incredible pace. Agnes gets a running start and merges. Unkempt and blearyeyed, she feels proudly conspicuous. She stops to call in sick to work. She is sure that people are staring at her. She imagines what they must be saying.
   "Look at that woman."
   "Who is she?"
   "A rock star? A Go-Go?"
   "She's one of those club people. What lives they lead!"
   "She's someone, I know it, but I just can't place her."
   "She is somebody. She's somebody who just watched the 'Meager Urnings' episode of
I Love Lucy
with two social-outcast pud-pullers."
   "I think you're right."
Chapter Forty-Nine
MINOTAUR CLAIMS TWO MORE VICTIMS
Tally of Death Stands At Six
   The owner of a fashionable Soho shop, who was recently described in a magazine article as "one of the ten most stylish women in New York," and her roommate, a nightclub chanteuse, were found brutally murdered in their Upper East Side townhouse early Saturday morning. A note found at the scene attributed the slayings to the "Minotaur of the Labyrinth." Police have verified that the note matches those previously written by the Minotaur.
   The Minotaur, a serial killer who preys on women in pairs, has claimed two other victims, two in Brooklyn and two in Washington Heights.
   The bodies of Morganna Ripkin, 40, and Beatrice Slade, 42, of 20 East 75th Street, were found on the floor of Ms. Ripkin's bedroom. As in the other slayings, the killer employed two different methods of execution. Ms. Ripkin was asphyxiated with a decorative pillow. Ms. Slade was hanged from a light fixture. Police say that both corpses were "dismembered" but would not elaborate.
   It is not known at this time whether either woman had been sexually molested.
   The bodies were discovered at approximately 3 AM by James Hull, a friend of the women. Mr. Hull had a key to the apartment, and was in the habit of spending nights there. He is not currently under suspicion.
   According to Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Michael Prawl, the women had been dead less than an hour at the time of the discovery.
   Police theorize that the Minotaur may have gained access to the apartment through a window leading onto a fire escape.
   "They both hated window gates," a neighbor commented. "They said they didn't want to live in a prison."
   Morganna Ripkin was the owner of Redolent Memories, an exclusive shop specializing in restored antique clothing. Her customers included such luminaries as Madelaine Wegeman. Ms. Ripkin was recently profiled in an article published in
New York
magazine, "Fifty Celebrities You've Never Heard Of."
   Beatrice Slade was in the midst of an open-ended engagement at Arnoldo's, a supper club on East 63rd Street. Her show,
Songs Sondheim Wishes He Wrote,
received generally favorable notices.
   When questioned about the progress of the investigation, chief Inspector Patrick Razumovsky was optimistic. "I'm confident that good, solid police work will be the undoing of this maniac."
   Chief of Detectives Larry Codd grew prickly at the suggestion that his department wasn't moving quickly enough. "These serial killers are tough to catch. Some of them get thirty or forty victims under their belts."
   A reporter piped up, "So you've got time, right, Chief?"
   "You know what I mean," said the Chief.
Chapter Fifty
SIX DOWN—TWENTY-FOUR TO GO?????
CODD: "THIRTY, FORTY VICTIMS" A POSSIBILITY
VIOLENCE OF THE MINOTAUR GROWING IN INTENSITY!!!!
Special to the
Graphic
With the slayings of Beatrice Slade and Morganna Ripkin, the violence displayed by the Minotaur has taken a "quantum jump" in the words of a detective close to the investigation. "He's getting angrier," said our source. "The Chesser killing was more violent than Bloch/Foucault. Slade/Ripkin has taken the violence to a new level of depravity."
In order to avoid panic, the public is being shielded from the horrifying details of the latest slaughterfest. The details are not for the squeamish.
Morganna Ripkin was killed first. She was smothered with a pillow that says I LOVE MY WIFE BUT OH YOU KID. Beatrice Slade was then beaten and hung from the ceiling. Ripkin had been asleep; police theorize that Slade arrived home during the Ripkin killing, as she had a late set at Arnoldo's. Once the women were dead, the Minotaur hacked off Ripkin's head and limbs. He placed her head on the pillow with which he had smothered her. He put her arms and legs, along with a plumber's helper, in the toilet. Slade's arms and legs were cut off and stacked with some logs next to the fireplace.
New Yorkers, though terrified, are taking the Minotaur in stride. The feeling is that the Minotaur is more frightening than the Laughing Man was in 1971, but still not as frightening as 1977's Son of Sam. "Sam still gives me nightmares," said one woman who asked not to be identified, "but I think the Minotaur is a comer."
Chapter Fifty-One
Tommy and Agnes go to Tommy's apartment to pick up his last few odds and ends. At the same time, Father Chris is moving in. All of Father Chris's possessions take up about as much space as Tommy's odds and ends. The priest's bed looks like an army cot. Agnes sweeps while Father Chris hangs up his crucifixes, his portrait of the Pope, his framed parchment copy of St. Ignatius Loyola's "Norms of Orthodoxy," a certificate of completion of five-hundred hours of devotion as the shrine of Sainte-Anne-De-Beupre, and a photo taken with another wild-eyed frightening-looking priest at the Passion Play at Oberammergau.
   "Will you still be at St. Basil's?" says Agnes.
   "I'd love to continue teaching, but I'm sure Father Clarence has asked the chancery to assign someone else as his assistant," says the priest morosely. "I came to God very late, you know. Ritual throws me. I can never seem to lay out the right vestments, and I think Father Clarence loses patience with me."
   Tommy moves one of Father Chris's boxes. The bottom falls out, and out spill a dozen copies of
Variety,
the show business bible.
   Father Chris tells them that before he became a priest, before he thought about religion at all, he was an actor. He worked in television. He wasn't famous, but he worked steadily. He was successful. He was also an emotional wreck, and a drug addict. One morning, hung over and racing on Dexedrine, he was thrown from his horse and trampled while on the set of either
The Virginian
or
Cimar
ron Strip—he
doesn't remember which; he did lots of oaters in those days—and woke up in Cedars of Lebanon with a broken back.

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