Duma Key(91)



"That's sort of what I'm planning," I said, "but I'm afraid it's not going to be that realistic. I've already done a little advance work. Take a look."

The pilfered X-ray and Sharpie sketch were on the bottom shelf of my workbench. I handed them to Wireman, then sat down again in front of my easel. The canvas waiting there was no longer completely blank and white. Three-quarters of the way up was a faintly drawn rectangle. I had made it by holding the shirt-cardboard against the canvas and running a No. 2 pencil around the edge.

Wireman said nothing for almost two minutes. He kept looking back and forth between the X-ray and the picture I had drawn from it. Then, in a voice almost too low to hear: "What are we talking about here, muchacho? What are we saying?"

"We're not," I said. "Not yet. Hand me the shirt-cardboard."

"Is that what this is?"

"Yes, and be careful. I need it. We need it. The X-ray doesn't matter anymore."

He passed me the shirt-cardboard picture with a hand that wasn't quite steady.

"Now go over to the wall where the finished pictures are. Look at the one on the far left. In the corner."

He went over, looked, and recoiled. "Holy shit! When did you do this?"

"Last night."

He picked it up and turned it toward the light streaming through the big window. He looked at Tina, who was looking up at the mouthless, noseless Candy Brown.

"No mouth, no nose, Brown dies, case closed," Wireman said. His voice was no more than a whisper. "Jesus Christ, I'd hate to be the maric n de playa who kicked sand in your face." He set the picture back down and stepped away from it... carefully, like it might explode if it were joggled. "What got into you? What possessed you?"

"Goddam good question," I said. "I almost didn't show you. But... considering what we're up to here..."

"What are we up to here?"

"Wireman, you know."

He staggered a little bit, as if he were the one with the bad leg. And he had come over sweaty. His face shone with it. His left eye was still red, but maybe not as red. Of course that might only have been the Department of Wishful Thinking. "Can you do it?"

"I can try," I said. "If you want me to."

He nodded, then stripped off his sweater. "Go for it."

"I need you by the window, so the light falls on your face nice and strong as the sun starts going down. There's a stool in the kitchen you can sit on. How long have you got Annmarie for?"

"She said she could stay until eight, and she'll give Miss Eastlake dinner. I brought us lasagna. I'll put it in your oven at five-thirty."

"Good." By the time the lasagna was ready, the light would be gone, anyway. I could take some digital photos of Wireman, clip them to the easel, and work from those. I was a fast worker, but I already knew this was going to be a longer process days, at least.

When Wireman came back upstairs with the stool, he stopped dead. "What are you doing?"

"What does it look like I'm doing?"

"Cutting a hole in a perfectly good canvas."

"Go to the head of the class." I laid aside the cut rectangle, then picked up the cardboard insert with the floating brain on it. I went behind the easel. "Help me glue this in place."

"When did you figure all this out, vato?"

"I didn't," I said.

"You didn't?" He was looking at me through the canvas, like a thousand lookie-loos I'd seen peering through a thousand peepholes at construction sites in my other life.

"Nope. Something's kind of telling me as I go along. Come around to this side."

With Wireman's help, the rest of the prep only took a couple of minutes. He blocked the rectangle with the shirt-cardboard. I fished a little tube of Elmer's Glue from my breast pocket, and began fixing it in place. When I came back around, it was perfect. Looked that way to me, anyway.

I pointed at Wireman's forehead. "This is your brain," I said. Then I pointed at my easel. "This is your brain on canvas."

He looked blank.

"It's a joke, Wireman."

"I don't get it," he said.

viii

We ate like football players that night. I asked Wireman if he was seeing any better and he shook his head regretfully. "Things are still mighty black on the left side of my world, Edgar. Wish I could tell you different, but I can't."

I played him Nannuzzi's message. Wireman laughed and pumped his fist. It was hard not to be touched by his pleasure, which bordered on glee. "You're on your way, muchacho this is your other life for sure. Can't wait to see you on the cover of Time." He held his hands up, as if framing a cover.

"There's only one thing about it that worries me," I said... and then had to laugh. Actually a lot of things about it worried me, including the fact that I had not the slightest idea what I was letting myself in for. "My daughter may want to come. The one who visited me down here."

"What's wrong with that? Most men would be delighted to have their daughters watch them turn pro. You going to eat that last piece of lasagna?"

We split it. Being of artistic temperament, I took the bigger half.

"I'd love her to come. But your boss-lady says Duma Key is no place for daughters, and I sort of believe her."

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