Read The White Magic Five & Dime (A Tarot Mystery) Online
Authors: Steve Hockensmith,Lisa Falco
Tags: #mystery, #magic, #soft-boiled, #mystery novel, #new age, #tarot, #alanis mclachlan, #mystery fiction, #soft boiled
The pictures weren’t of me, though. Not one.
They were of Biddle.
Don’t fear the reaper, some tarot readers will tell you. The Death card doesn’t mean deadly
dead
death. It’s about letting go of the past and accepting—even embracing—whatever comes next. It’s about change, they say. And they’re not necessarily wrong. From alive to dead, though—that’s a pretty big damn change. Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar. And sometimes Death is just death.
Miss Chance,
Infinite Roads to Knowing
Story time
again.
It was 1986, and the girl, less little than ever, was standing in front of a mall multiplex in Cleveland, Ohio, thinking about the weird, weird film she’d just seen.
The weird, weird film wasn’t
Big Trouble in Little China
, which she’d also watched that day. That movie wasn’t weird. It was just goofy.
The weird, weird film wasn’t
Labyrinth
or
Poltergeist 2
, which she’d also watched. Those were just dumb.
The weird, weird film—the one she couldn’t wrap her adolescent mind around—was a surreal, disturbing yet oddly hypnotic science fiction fantasy called
Ferris Bueller’s Day Off
.
She’d been at the mall all day. It was her babysitter.
Reading paperbacks in the B. Dalton had gotten her through a few hours. Change-raising every zombie-teen cashier in the food court had killed another while netting her enough money to buy a JC Penney necklace she didn’t really want and could have easily stolen anyway. With what she had left, she’d bought a ticket for
Cobra
and a bucket of popcorn and a jumbo Mountain Dew.
She always paid for the movie she least wanted to see. She felt bad for them. She was about to spend nine hours adrift, changing seats and screens and stories and realities at a whim. Yet she didn’t have ninety minutes for Sylvester Stallone as a leather-wearing criminal-killing cop? Poor guy. Here. Have $3.50. Buy yourself some shiny new bullets.
The girl had seen
Ferris Bueller’s Day Off
first because it was starting when she walked in and the guy from
War Games
was in it. It was a movie about kids who weren’t much older than her, who lived in the same country as her, who had the same skin color and spoke the same language, yet beyond that it was utterly alien. It may as well have been the new
Star Trek
movie. The Search for Who-Knew-What on the strange new world of Suburbia.
These people went to a nice school. They had nice friends. They had their own nice rooms in their own nice homes. They had
nice
.
And they seemed to hate it. All they wanted was to escape from it. So they ran away to the city and had an adventure. An adventure with wacky mishaps and singing and dancing.
The girl knew about adventures in the city. She’d had a lot of them.
The mishaps weren’t wacky, and there was never any singing and dancing.
The first time she saw the movie, she hated it. Yet she found herself coming back to the same theater again and again, catching bits and pieces before sneaking off to see something else.
She ended the day with Ferris Bueller. And the last time he looked out into the audience after the credits and said, “You’re still here? It’s over. Go home!” she burst into tears, and she didn’t know why.
She made sure to dry her eyes before walking outside. Then she sat on the curb and waited.
The mall was closed. The parking lot was nearly empty. Before long, she was alone.
Biddle and the girl’s mother showed up after midnight. They were driving a silver Lincoln Town Car, brand-new. So brand-new it had never even been bought.
Biddle was wearing a tuxedo. The mother—she called herself Carol now—was in the kind of evening gown the lady dancers used to wear on
Lawrence Welk
. She had a big, bushy dome of over-teased ’80s hair to go with it. The hair was red. Clairol 108 Natural Reddish Blonde, actually. The girl had helped dye it four days before.
“Been waiting long?” Biddle said.
Before the girl could answer, Carol told her, “Don’t complain. You’re the one who wanted to get dropped off at the mall.”
“I’m not complaining,” the girl said.
She knew better than to ask about their day. Biddle would tell her later if he was in the mood. So she just sat in the back and breathed in the Newly Stolen Car Smell and rewound and replayed and rewound and replayed
Ferris Bueller’s Day Off
.
Bow bow
, she thought.
Chika chikAAAAA
.
They were staying in a fancier hotel than usual. A big one, with a huge atrium lobby and glass elevators and chocolates on the pillows every day. The girl had no idea what Biddle and her mother were up to, but it had put them somewhere nice and she hadn’t been involved in any way.
That was as close to nice as things ever got. She told herself to appreciate it while she could.
She was looking forward to her chocolate.
When they walked into their room, two men were waiting there. They were in their forties, heavyset, one dark-haired, one bald.
They had guns.
The bald man touched a finger to his lips. “Shhh.”
The door, already closed again, was just five feet behind the girl. It could’ve been a mile. She knew she wouldn’t reach it in time if she tried.
“Aww, geez,” the other man said when he saw her. “Nobody mentioned a kid.”
“Who are you?” Biddle said.
Not “What’s going on?” Not “How dare you?” He didn’t sound happy, but he didn’t sound surprised or angry either.
It didn’t matter. The man with dark hair shoved his gun into his pants—he wasn’t the sort of pro to have a shoulder holster—and walked up to Biddle and punched him in the face.
Biddle stumbled sideways into the wall, his hands pressed to his nose.
“Ow,” the dark-haired man said, shaking his hand. “Don’t make me do that again.”
“The stomach, dummy, the stomach,” his friend told him. “Look—you made him bleed.”
The girl started to cry. It seemed like the thing to do.
“Shut up,” her mother said. She was standing very still, her eyes wide and dry.
“Clean yourself up, then we’re going,” the dark-haired man told Biddle. He glanced at the girl. “All of us.”
“Just leave her out of it, all right?” Biddle said. “She’s got nothing to do with anything.”
The dark-haired man remembered. He hit Biddle in the stomach this time.
They took the Town Car. The men with the guns sat in front. The dark-haired one drove. The bald one watched Biddle and Carol in the backseat. He made sure the girl sat between them.
“You’re not fast enough to jump out,” he told the grown-ups. “And even if you were, just think about who you’d be leaving behind.”
Still, the girl got ready to duck.
Biddle and Carol never moved, though. Twice, Biddle tried to talk, started to say “Look, guys—”
Both times the bald man brought up his hands. One held his gun. The other was putting a finger to his lips daintily, delicately. The second time, the gun was pointed at the girl.
Biddle stopped trying after that.
They drove out of the city, through the suburbs, into nowhere. The roads grew narrower and darker and more deserted.
They turned off onto a gravel driveway. Passed a farmhouse, passed a barn.
They stopped beside a field of tall green stalks. Corn in long, neat rows as straight as iron bars.
Another car was there already. It was big, boxy, ugly. Like the men standing beside it.
There were four of them. Biddle and Carol knew at least one.
“Shit,” Biddle said as the headlights swept over them.
“Don’t let him hurt my baby!” Carol howled. She threw her arms around her daughter. “We’re sorry! We’re sorry! Not my daughter! Please! Not my little girl!”
The men had to drag her out of the car. Biddle got out on his own. He started to say something to the girl before he left, but he thought better of it and just gave her hand a squeeze instead. He looked into her eyes in a way that seemed to say
let this moment last forever
. Only it didn’t, and he and Carol were taken out to the field, around one corner, out of sight.
The girl they left in the backseat. The bald man was told to stay and watch her.
“What am I, Mary Poppins?” he said.
But he seemed relieved.
Half a minute went by in silence. Then the girl heard sounds coming out of the darkness.
Pleading. Weeping. And laughter, too. A man’s laughter, joyless and cruel.
“Oh god oh god oh god,” the girl said. “No no no no no no.”
“Be quiet,” the bald man said. “Everything’s gonna be fine. They’re just talking.”
There was a scream, so brief the girl couldn’t tell if it had been Biddle or her mother.
“Oh god oh god oh god.”
“Be quiet,” the bald man said again. His voice wasn’t gentle but it wasn’t harsh. He looked like he wanted to be home in bed.
Something outside caught his eye, turned his head. The girl turned to look, too.
The dark-haired man was walking back toward the car with Carol. She was crying hysterically, staggering. The dark-haired man had to hold her up with both hands, guide her. His gun was stuck in his pants again.
The bald man opened the passenger-side door. The overhead light came on.
“What’s going on?” the bald man asked.
“She needs to talk to the kid.”
“What? You’re kidding.”
It was obvious the bald man had thought he’d never see the woman again.
“Oh, baby, baby, baby!” she sobbed when she saw the girl. Her knees buckled, and the dark-haired man barely managed to keep her on her feet.
“Roll down your window,” the bald man said to the girl.
She did as she was told.
“You’re okay, baby?” Carol said as she lurched toward the car. “No one’s touched you?”
“I’m okay.”
“Oh, thank god. I just had to make sure you were all right. They say they won’t hurt you, they’ll let you go, if I tell them where I hid the—”
Carol’s knees went again, and she started to crumple.
“Goddamn it,” the dark-haired man said as he strained to keep her from falling.
And then there was a flash of light and a muffled pop and the man was falling backward.
Carol darted toward the car, no wobble to her knees now, and stuck the gun she’d just stolen from the dark-haired man into his bald friend’s face.
“Scoot over and drive or you’re dead,” she said. All trace of panic, desperation,
emotion
was gone from her voice. Her face was blank. A mask stamped out by a machine.
“I…I don’t have the keys.”
“Ohhhhh no,” the dark-haired man moaned as he rolled on the ground clutching his gut. “Ohhhhh no.”
Carol turned just long enough to shoot him again. Then she pointed the gun back at the bald man.
“
They’re still in the ignition, asshole
.”
“Hey!” someone shouted in the distance. “What the hell’s going on?”
The bald man got behind the wheel and started the car. Carol swung in beside him and slammed the door shut.
“Out to the road,” she said. “Not too fast and not too slow.”
The car started moving.
The girl looked out the back window. She could see hazy shapes moving in the gloom. There was another flash and for a split second she could see two men running after them. Something thumped into the back of the car.
“A little faster,” Carol said.
The bald man gave the car more gas. They shot onto the gravel drive, skidded, then straightened out and headed for the road.
“Wait!” the girl said. “What about Biddle?”
“Left at the end of the driveway,” her mother said. “Then hit the speed limit and stay there.”
“We can’t just leave him! We’ve got to go back!”
“Take the first turn you can. Right or left, it doesn’t matter.”
“Mom—”
“Are they following us?”
“But—”
“
Are they following us
?”
The girl looked out the back window again. She didn’t see any headlights.
“No. I don’t think so,” she said.
“Good.”
Her mother never took her eyes off the bald man.
“We’ve got a gun,” the girl said. “We could go back and get him.”
Her mother said nothing.
“Or we could find a phone and call the police. Maybe they could get out there in time to save him.”
No response.
“We can’t just leave him!”
“Shut up.”
“But we’ve got to—”
“Shut up and let me think, dammit!”
The gun wasn’t pointed at the bald man anymore. It was pointed at the girl. Just for a second. But long enough.
The girl shut up and let her mother do her thinking. She assumed none of it was about Biddle.
They drove on and on, taking random turns, until the bald man said, “You know, I’ve got no idea where we are. It’s three in the morning, there’s hardly any houses around here. Just let me out anywhere and no one’s gonna hear from me for hours. What do I know that they don’t know already anyway? And really, you gotta believe me, I didn’t want anything to do with this in the first place. They brought us in to pick you up ’cuz you wouldn’t know us. Me and Phil, we’re not even…”
The thought of Phil—the dark-haired man—shut him up for a moment. When he started talking again, his voice was a throaty warble, and the girl could see sweat glistening on his smooth scalp.
“Look. Really. I can’t hurt you. I
won’t
hurt you. You may as well let me go.”
Carol nodded slowly.
“Yeah,” she said. “Maybe you’re right.”
She looked out the window, scanning the dark countryside around them.