Read the Big Bounce (1969) Online

Authors: Elmore - Jack Ryan 01 Leonard

the Big Bounce (1969) (14 page)

BOOK: the Big Bounce (1969)
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Wait till I look.

He went in, through the darkness to the back of the house, to the kitchen, where he looked out the window and saw the rear end of the car in the garage. He moved back through the house.

Nancy was sitting on the porch rail smoking a cigarette. He took it from her to throw it away, but he saw the way she was looking at him and he took a drag on the cigarette and handed it back to her.

Well?

They're close by. They won't be gone long.

How do you know?

I just know. Okay?

She shrugged, standing up. He saw the movement and maybe a faint smile, though in the dark he wasn't sure of the smile. She came down the steps after him and they crossed the lawn to the beach.

If the car's there,
Ryan said, they're not far away.

I've been thinking, Jackie. If we go in where we know they're not home, what's the fun?

Ryan stared at her and he heard Leon Woody say, You go in when they're not home, when you know it and have it in writing they're not home.

He kept looking at her until she was about to say something, until he said, Come on,
and they went up from the beach into the trees again, moving in on the house closest to them that showed lights, running hunch-shouldered the same way they had gone in to throw the rocks keeping to the trees and bushes and deep shadows until they were next to the house and could edge up to a window and look in.

Playing cards,
Ryan said.

Gin. She just went down and he's mad.

Come on.

There wasn't anything to see. There wouldn't be, either, Ryan was sure of that. Not when you were expecting something. Like the carpet cleaning job, expecting to see the broads going around without any clothes on. They moved along the beachfront from one house to the next. They saw people playing gin, people reading, people watching television, people eating, people drinking, people talking, and more people drinking.

Maybe we'll catch somebody in bed,
Nancy said.

If they're in bed, they'll have the lights off.

Not everybody.

Would you like somebody watching you?

I've never thought of it,
Nancy said.

They saw people playing bridge and people sitting, not doing anything. They saw a woman alone, reading, and Nancy drew her fingernail down the screen. The woman jumped visibly and sat staring at the window, afraid to move.

When they were in the trees again, Ryan said, That was fun. Maybe we can find some old lady with heart trouble.

Ryan didn't recognize the brown house when they came to it. If they had come up from the beach, he would have, even in the dark. He knew the house was along here, but he wasn't looking for it and by the time they were across the side yard and to the porch, he was too close to the house to recognize it.

They moved around the far side, past dark windows, and came to the back porch and he still didn't recognize the house. He was watching Nancy now as she walked out to the garage and looked in.

As she reached him she said, There's no car in the garage, but let's go in anyway.

Both the front and back doors were locked, but it was still easy. They went in through a living room window off the porch after Ryan poked a hole in the screen with a stick and flicked open the latch; Ryan first and then Nancy. She followed him to the front hall and stood close while he checked the back door, opening it and closing it quietly, feeling better now with a way to go out on three sides of the house.

The light, throwing a shadow on the wall, startled him, turning him from the door.

Nancy had opened the refrigerator.

Beer?
She was hunched over, looking in, offering him a can of beer behind her back. They don't have a whole lot to offer.

They didn't know we were coming,
Ryan said. He popped open the top and took a good swallow of the beer.

Salad dressing, mustard, milk, pickles, jelly, mustard they've got enough mustard, God four jars, and catsup two, three they must live on mustard and catsup.

Maybe they had a party.

As he said it, moving toward the doorway to the hall, he knew where they were and was sure of it even before he stepped into the hall and saw the stairway on the right and the faint outside light coming from the two windows on the landing.

Kitchens aren't much,
Nancy said. She was behind him now. I like bedrooms the best.

It was funny being here. At first, realizing where he was gave him an uneasy, on-guard feeling, as if something were wrong. But it was all right. So it was the same house. It could be the one next door or down the beach; it was a house. Going into it again didn't mean a thing. Right? And Leon Woody would say, Right, man, it don't mean anything. You just walk in the same house and don't know it.
But kidding. He wouldn't really mean it.

They went up the stairs holding the rail, Ryan still in front. At the top he stopped a moment to listen, then went into the first bedroom on the right, the one where he and Billy Ruiz had found the men's clothes. The room was familiar: the window over the back porch, the dresser, the twin beds, the night table where he had put his cigar. He remembered now that he must have left the cigar in the ashtray and he moved between the beds to see if it was still there, not expecting to find it but curious. Nancy went past him to the dresser and began going through the drawers.

Ryan sat on the bed, sipping his beer, watching her. She had opened a drawer and was feeling inside, closing it gently now and opening the next drawer to dig her hands under the clothes and feeling around in there thoroughly. You see, what she does she goes through everything to make sure no valuables are hidden anywhere.
And Leon Woody would say, Yeah, the valuables. Say, man, did you tell her about dumping the drawers on the floor to get at all them valuables?

No, he didn't tell her about that. He finished the beer and went through the bath to the adjoining bedroom, the one the women had used Sunday, and checked the tops of the dresser and the chest of drawers. There were two more bedrooms across the hall. He looked into each but saw nothing worth taking, not a hundred and fifty miles from Detroit without a car. He thought of something then and went back through the second bedroom to the bath and opened the medicine cabinet. The Jade East was still there. He rubbed a few drops of the lotion between his palms, then over his jaw, staring at the mirror but barely making out his reflection in the darkness.

He went into the bedroom where he had left Nancy not hearing a sound in the room and not seeing her at first because he expected to see her standing by the dresser or by the closet. He looked toward the door and as his gaze shifted he saw the movement on the bed, in the bed, that's where she was, in bed with the spread pulled up to her chin. She was watching him, waiting for him to find her, watching him now as he came around between the twin beds and sat down on the empty one.

I give up,
Ryan said. What're you doing?

Waiting for you,
she said, giving him the look with her dark hair on the white pillow. Guess if I have any clothes on.

You're kidding.

Guess.

He began to nod then, slowly. You would, wouldn't you?

You're right,
Nancy said. Know what you win?

Listen, I know a better place.

Where?

My room.

Nope. Right here.

Why?

I don't think it's ever been done before.

I believe it and I'll tell you why,
Ryan said.

In other people's houses after you've sneaked in. That's the new game.

I've heard it's not as much fun, listening for somebody to walk in.

Nancy smiled. Wouldn't that be good? Can you see the look on their face?

Just tell me why,
Ryan said. Okay?

Why. That's all you say. You know, Jackie, you're really sort of a drag. I thought you might be fun, but I don't know

Move over.

First you have to take off your clothes. It's a rule.

Shoes?

Everything.

He began unbuttoning his shirt and pulling out the tails, standing close to the bed now and looking down at her.

Everything,
Nancy said.

In a minute.
Ryan eased down next to her and her hands held the spread tightly up under her chin.

Not till everything's off.

He leaned in closer, placing his hands on the pillow so that she was looking directly up at him now, between his arms.

She sniffed. What's that?

Nice?

You put too much on.

You want to talk or what?

I told you the rule

He leaned in almost all the way, setting the angle so that their mouths would fit just right and feeling her strain a little toward him, and there he hesitated, holding motionless.

Almost touching his mouth she said, What's the matter?

Shhh.

Neither of them moved. The room, the house, was silent.

I didn't hear anything.

Ryan pushed himself up slowly, bringing his hands off the pillow. He touched a finger to his mouth as he rose and moved quietly around the bed to the door. He stood with one hand on the door frame, leaning into the hall, listening. He glanced at her and now he was moving, closing the door and locking it carefully, stepping to the window to look out, hesitating, then pushing open the screen and lowering it to the porch roof. Going out the window, ducking under, he looked at her once more.

You going to wait for them?

Where are they?

He motioned with one hand, pointing down to the floor. Come on.

Then he was out, over the edge of the roof and hanging a moment before dropping. He was in the field bordering the yard, in the high brush, before he turned to see Nancy coming out the window, fully dressed. She stood looking down, undecided, and Ryan smiled. He waited patiently, knowing she would come down because she had no choice, and right now seconds to her were like minutes. He watched her go to her knees and look down again and slowly roll over and let the lower part of her body hang from the roof. It's going to sting your feet, Ryan thought, but it's the only way. He watched her drop and stumble and stand motionless as she came to her feet.

From the edge of the bushes he called softly, Hey!
and waited for her to reach him. He took her arm then and moved through the brush and scrub trees toward the beach, almost running, dragging her after him. As he reached the low rise above the sand he turned to catch her, letting her weight and momentum carry them over the edge so that they fell down to the sand clinging to each other, rolling and coming to a stop with Ryan lying partly on top of her, one leg over hers, resting his weight on his arms beneath her. He could feel her breathing against him as she tried to catch her breath, the nice nose and the partly open mouth close to his face and her eyes closed. He waited until her eyes opened, then waited a little more, looking at her and feeling her body relax.

You get dressed quick.

Her expression was calm, but her gaze held his expectantly, sensing something in his eyes or in the tone of his voice.

You didn't hear anyone,
she said finally. You didn't hear a thing.

Just for a while,
Ryan said, let's not talk, okay?

If we're going to not talk,
Nancy said, I'd rather not talk somewhere else.

You don't like the sand?

I'm not the outdoorsy type, Jackie. You might as well know it.

I don't think I can move.

Try,
Nancy said.

Ryan watched himself at certain times, sometimes when he was alone like standing seven feet off third base and his hat on just right, or walking along the beach or driving a car but usually it happened when he was with certain people. He wasn't aware of himself when he was with Mr. Majestyk. But he was aware of himself almost all the time with Nancy, seeing himself and hearing himself and most of the time he looked dumb. Big jerky dumb guy saying dumb things, trying to impress the girl. He couldn't get in the right frame of mind to feel sure of himself. He could fake it; he could act like the big smooth-o; but he could feel her watching him, still not impressed, maybe laughing at him, and he never for more than a moment felt in control. He was pretty sure she was at ease. But what if she was faking it? What if she was someone else inside, the way she said her mother was someone else looking out through her eyes? Maybe she was faking it. She was being cool and he was being cool, each trying to be cooler than the other until pretty soon, Ryan decided, you get so cool you can't even move because of the chance that anything at all you might do might turn out to be dumb anything. What good was being cool if you weren't you? Whoever you are, Ryan thought.

He was at the wheel, aware of himself acting natural, not telling her where they were going and finally not having to tell her as they pulled in past the big blue-lit Bay Vista sign with the small red NO VACANCY glowing beneath it.

BOOK: the Big Bounce (1969)
11.52Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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