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Authors: Jeffery Deaver

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Thrillers

The Vanished Man (32 page)

BOOK: The Vanished Man
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The Conjurer wagged the finger back and forth. "Sweating, I can see." He held the flame close to Rhyme's face. "Fire.... Isn't it fascinating? It's probably the most compelling image in illusionism. Fire's the perfect misdirection. Everyone watches flame. They never take their eyes off it onstage. I could do anything with my other hand and you'd never notice. For instance..."

 

 

The bottle of Rhyme's scotch appeared in the man's grip. He held the flame under the bottle for a long moment. Then the killer took a sip of liquor and held the flaming finger in front of his lips, looking directly at Rhyme, who cringed. But the Conjurer smiled, turned aside and blew the flaming spray toward the ceiling, stepping back slightly as the stream of fire vanished into the darkness of the veiling.

 

 

Rhyme's eyes flickered to the wall in the comer of the room.

 

 

The Conjurer laughed. "Smoke detector? I got that earlier. The battery's

 

 

gone." He blew another flaming stream toward the ceiling and set the bottle down.

 

 

Suddenly a white handkerchief appeared. He wafted it under Rhyme's nose. It was soaked in gasoline. The astringent smell burned Rhyme's eyes and nose. The Conjurer coiled the handkerchief into a short rope and, ripping open Rhyme's pajama top, draped it around his neck like a scarf.

 

 

The man walked toward the door, silently opened the deadbolt and then

 

 

the door, looked out. Rhyme's nose detected another scent mixed with the gasoline. What was it? A rich, smoky scent.... Oh, the scotch. The killer must've left the bottle open. Except that the smell soon overtook the gasoline's aroma. It was overpowering. There was scotch everywhere. And Rhyme understood with dismay what the man was doing. He'd poured a stream ofliquor from the door to the bed, like a fuse. The Conjurer flicked his finger and a white fireball flew from his hand into the pool of single malt.

 

 

The liquor ignited and blue flames raced along the floor. Soon they'd set fire to a stack of magazines and a cardboard box next to the bed. One of the rattan chairs too.

 

 

Soon the fire would climb up the bedclothes and begin devouring his body, which he wouldn't feel, and then his face and head, which he horribly would. He turned to the Conjurer but the man was gone, the door closed. Smoke began to sting Rhyme's eyes and fill his nose. The fire crawled closer, igniting boxes and books and posters, melting CDs.

 

 

Soon the blue and yellow flames began lapping at the blankets at the foot of Lincoln Rhyme's bed.

 

 

Chapter Twenty-six

 

 

A diligent NYPD officer, perhaps hearing an odd noise, perhaps seeing an unlocked door, stepped into a West Side alleyway. Fifteen seconds later another man emerged, dressed in a lightweight maroon turtleneck, tight jeans, baseball cap.

 

 

No longer in the role of Officer Larry Burke, Malerick began walking purposefully up Broadway. Glancing at his face, noting the flirtatious way he glanced around him-a cruisin' look-you'd suspect that he was a man on the prowl, heading for some West Side bar to defibrillate his ego and his genitalia, both in arrest lately as he approached middle age.

 

 

He paused at a basement cocktail lounge, glanced inside. He decided this would be a good place in which to hide out temporarily until it was time to return briefly to Lincoln Rhyme's and see how much damage the fire had done.

 

 

He found a stool at the far end of the bar, near the kitchen, and ordered a Sprite and a turkey sandwich. Looking around: the arcade games with their electronic soundtracks, a dusty jukebox, the room smoky and dark, smelling of sweat and perfume and disinfectant, the liquor-induced brays of laughter and hum of pointless conversation. All of which transported him back to his youth in the city built from sand.

 

 

Las Vegas is a mirror surrounded by glaring lights; stare at it for hours but all you'll ever truly see is yourself, with your pocks, squinty wrinkles, vanity, greed, desperation. It's a dusty, hard place where the cheery illumi

 

 

nation of the Strip fades fast just a block or two from the neon and doesn't penetrate to the rest of the city: the trailers, sagging bungalows, sandy strip malls, pawnshops selling engagement rings, suit jackets, prosthetic armswhatever can be transformed into quarters or silver dollars.

 

 

And, everywhere, the dusty, endless, beige desert.

 

 

This was the world that Malerick was born into.

 

 

Father a blackjack dealer and mother a restaurant hostess (until her

 

 

growing weight put her behind the scenes in a cash room), they were two of the army of Vegas service people treated like ants by casino management and guests alike. Two of the army who spent their lives so inundated with money that they could smell the ink, perfume and sweat on the bills, but who were forever aware that this astonishing flood was destined to pause in their fingers for only the briefest of moments.

 

 

Like many Vegas children left on their own by parents working long and irregular shifts-and like children living in bitter homes everywhere-their son had gravitated to a place where he found some comfort.

 

 

And that place for him was the Strip.

 

 

I was explaining, Revered Audience, about misdirection--how we illu

 

 

sionists distract you by drawing attention away from our method with motion, color, light, surprise, noise. Well, misdirection is more than a technique of magic; it's an aspect of life too. We're all desperately drawn toward flash and glitz and away from boredom, from routine, from bickering families, from hot, motionless hours on the edge of the desert, from sneering teens who chase you down because you're skinny and timid and then pound you with fists as hard as scorpions' shells....

 

 

The Strip was his refuge.

 

 

The magic shops specifically. Of which there were many; Las Vegas is

 

 

known among performers around the world as the Capital of Magic. The boy found that these shops were more than just retail outlets; they were places where aspiring, performing and retired magicians hung out to share stories and tricks and to gossip.

 

 

It was in one of these that the boy learned something important about himself. He might be skinny and timid and a slow runner but he was miraculously dexterous. The magicians here would show him palms and pinches and drops and conceals and he'd pick them up instantly. One of these clerks lifted an eyebrow and said about the thirteen-year-old, "A born prestidigitator."

 

 

The boy frowned, never having heard the word.

 

 

"A French magician made it up in the eighteen hundreds," the man explained. "'Presti-' As in presto, fast. 'Digit.' As in finger. Prestidigitationfast fingers. Sleight of hand."

 

 

So maybe, he slowly came to believe, he was someone more than odd man out in the family, something more than knuckle bait at the playground. Every day he'd leave school at 3:10 and head directly to his favorite store, where he'd hang out and sop up method. At home he practiced constantly. One of the shop managers would hire him occasionally to put on demonstrations and brief shows for customers in the Magic Cavern in the back of the store.

 

 

He could still picture clearly his initial performance. From that day on Young Houdini-his first stage name-would talk, or bully, his way up onto stage at any opportunity. What a joy it was to mesmerize his audience, delight them, sell them the medicine, trick them. To scare them too. He liked to scare them.

 

 

Finally he got busted-by his mother. The woman eventually realized that the boy hardly spent any time at home and raided his room to learn why. "I found this money," she snapped, rising from her dinner and waddling into the kitchen one evening to confront him as he walked in the back door. "Explain."

 

 

"It's from Abracadabra."

 

 

'Who's that?"

 

 

"The store? By the Tropicana. I was telling you about it-"

 

 

"You stay off the Strip."

 

 

"Mom, it's just a store. That magic store."

 

 

'Where you been? Drinking? Let me smell your breath."

 

 

"Mom, no." Backing away, repulsed by the massive woman in the pastasauce-stained top, her own breath horrific. "They catch you in a casino, I could lose my job. Your father could lose

 

 

his." "I was just at the store. 1 do a little show. People give me tips some

 

 

times." "That's too much for tip money. I never got tips like that when I was a

 

 

hostess."

 

 

'Tm good," the boy said.

 

 

"So was I.... Show? What kind of show?"

 

 

"Magic." He was frustrated. He'd told her this months before. 'Watch." He did a card trick for her.

 

 

"That was good," she said, nodding. "But for lying to me I'm keeping this money."

 

 

"I didn't lie!"

 

 

"You didn't tell me what you're doing. That's the same as lying." "Mom, that's mine."

 

 

"You lie, you pay."

 

 

With some effort she stuffed the money into a jeans pocket sealed closed by her belly. Then she hesitated. "Okay, here's ten back. If you tell me something."

 

 

"Tell you... ?"

 

 

"Tell me something. You ever seen your father with Tiffany Loam?" "I don't know.... Who's that?"

 

 

"You know. Don't pretend you don't. That waitress from the Sands was over here with her husband a couple months ago for dinner. She was in that yellow blouse."

 

 

"1-"

 

 

"Did you see them? Driving out to the desert yesterday?"

 

 

"I didn't see them."

 

 

She examined him closely and decided he was telling the truth. "If you do see them you let me know." And she left him for her spaghetti, coagulating on a TV tray in the living

 

 

room.

 

 

"My money, Mom!"

 

 

"Shut up. It's the Daily Double."

 

 

One day, performing a small show in Abracadabra, the boy was surprised to notice a slim, unsmiling man enter the store. As he walked toward the Magic Cavern all the magicians and clerks in the store fell silent. He was a famous illusionist and was appearing at the Tropicana. He was known for his temper and his dark, scary illusions.

 

 

After the show the illusionist gestured the boy over and nodded at the handwritten sign on stage. "You call yourself 'Young Houdini'?"

 

 

"Yeah."

 

 

"You think you're worthy of that name?"

 

 

"I don't know. I just liked it"

 

 

"Do some more." Nodding at a velvet table.

 

 

The boy did, nervous now, as the legend watched his moves.

 

 

A nod, which seemed to be an approving nod. That a fourteen-year-old

 

 

boy would receive a compliment like this stunned the magicians in the room to silence.

 

 

"You want a lesson?"

 

 

The boy nodded, thrilled.

 

 

"Let me have the coins."

 

 

He held his open palm to offer the coins. The illusionist looked down, frowning. 'Where are they?" His hand was empty. The illusionist, laughing harshly at the boy's bewildered expression, had already dipped them; the quarters were in his own hands. The boy was astonished; he hadn't felt a thing. "Now I'll hold this one up in the air...."

 

 

The boy looked up but suddenly some instinct said, Close your fingers now! He's going to put the coins back. Embarrass him in front of a roomful of magicians. Grab his hand! Suddenly, without looking down, the illusionist froze and whispered,

 

 

"Are you sure you want to do it?"

 

 

The boy blinked in surprise. "1-"

 

 

"Think twice." A glance down at the boy's hand.

 

 

Young Houdini looked at his palm, which was tensed to catch the great

 

 

illusionist's. He saw to his shock that the man had placed something there, but not the coins: five double-sided razor blades. If he'd closed his fingers as he'd planned, Young Houdini would've needed a dozen stitches.

 

 

"Let me see your hands," he said, taking the blades out of them and van

 

 

ishing them instantly. Young Houdini held his palms up and the man touched them, stroked them with his thumbs. It felt to the boy that there was an electric current running between them. "You've got the hands to be great," he whispered for the boy alone to hear. "You've got the drive and 1 know you've got the cruelty.... But you don't have the vision. Not yet." A blade appeared again and the man used it to slice through a piece of paper, which began to bleed. He crumpled the paper and then opened it up. There was no slash and no blood. He handed it to the boy, who noticed that on the inside was an address, written in red ink. As the small audience of onlookers cheered and clapped with genuine admiration, or jealousy, the illusionist whispered, "Come see me," leaning forward, his lips brushing Young Houdini's ear. "You have a lot to learn. And 1 have a lot to teach."

 

 

The boy kept the illusionist's address but he couldn't work up the courage to go see him. Then, at his fifteenth birthday party, his mother changed the course of his life forever by flying into a tirade and flinging a platter of fettuccine at her husband over some recently received intelligence about the notorious Mrs. Loam. Bottles flew, collectibles shattered, police arrived.
BOOK: The Vanished Man
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