Mr. Mercedes (Unnamed Trilogy #1)(100)
“Yes,” Jerome says. Down the hall another song starts and two little girls—Barbara and her friend Hilda—emit joyous shrieks almost high enough to shatter glass. He thinks of three or four thousand Barbs and Hildas all shrieking in unison tomorrow night, and thanks God his mother is pulling that duty.
“You could come, but I don’t know how to let you in,” she says. “My uncle Henry set the burglar alarm when he went out, and I don’t know the code. I think he shut the gate, too.”
“I’ve got all that covered,” Jerome says.
“When will you come?”
“I can be there in half an hour.”
“If you talk to Mr. Hodges, will you tell him something for me?”
“Sure.”
“Tell him I’m sad, too.” She pauses. “And that I’m taking my Lexapro.”
27
Late that Wednesday afternoon, Brady checks in to a gigantic Motel 6 near the airport, using one of his Ralph Jones credit cards. He has a suitcase and a knapsack. In the knapsack is a single change of clothes, which is all he’ll need for the few dozen hours of life that still remain to him. In the suitcase is the ASS PARKING cushion, the Urinesta peebag, a framed picture, several homemade detonator switches (he only expects to need one, but you can never have enough backup), Thing Two, several Glad storage bags filled with ball bearings, and enough homemade explosive to blow both the motel and the adjacent parking lot sky-high. He goes back to his Subaru, pulls out a larger item (with some effort; it barely fits), carries it into his room, and leans it against the wall.
He lies down on his bed. His head feels strange against the pillow. Naked. And sort of sexy, somehow.
He thinks, I’ve had a run of bad luck, but I’ve ridden it out and I’m still standing.
He closes his eyes. Soon he’s snoring.
28
Jerome parks his Wrangler with the nose almost touching the closed gate at 729 Lilac Drive, gets out, and pushes the call button. He has a reason to be here if someone from the Sugar Heights security patrol should stop and query him, but it will only work if the woman inside confirms him, and he’s not sure he can count on that. His earlier conversation with the lady has suggested that she’s got one wheel on the road at most. In any case, he’s not challenged, and after a moment or two of standing there and trying to look as if he belongs—this is one of those occasions when he feels especially black—Holly answers.
“Yes? Who is it?”
“Jerome, Ms. Gibney. Bill Hodges’s friend?”
A pause so long he’s about to push the button again when she says, “You have the gate code?”
“Yes.”
“All right. And if you’re a friend of Mr. Hodges, I guess you can call me Holly.”
He pushes the code and the gate opens. He drives through and watches it close behind him. So far, so good.
Holly is at the front door, peering at him through one of the side windows like a prisoner in a high-security visitation area. She’s wearing a housecoat over pajamas, and her hair is a mess. A brief nightmare scenario crosses Jerome’s mind: she pushes the panic button on the burglar alarm panel (almost certainly right next to where she’s standing), and when the security guys arrive, she accuses him of being a burglar. Or a would-be ra**st with a flannel-pajama fetish.
The door is locked. He points to it. For a moment Holly just stands there like a robot with a dead battery. Then she turns the deadbolt. A shrill peeping sound commences when Jerome opens the door and she takes several steps backward, covering her mouth with both hands.
“Don’t let me get in trouble! I don’t want to get in trouble!”
She’s twice as nervous as he is, and this eases Jerome’s mind. He punches the code into the burglar alarm and hits ALL SECURE. The peeping stops.
Holly collapses into an ornately carved chair that looks like it might have cost enough to pay for a year at a good college (although maybe not Harvard), her hair hanging around her face in dank wings. “Oh, this has been the worst day of my life,” she says. “Poor Janey. Poor poor Janey.”
“I’m sorry.”
“But at least it’s not my fault.” She looks up at him with thin and pitiable defiance. “No one can say it was. I didn’t do anything.”
“Of course you didn’t,” Jerome says.
It comes out sounding stilted, but she smiles a little, so maybe it’s okay. “Is Mr. Hodges all right? He’s a very, very, very nice man. Even though my mother doesn’t like him.” She shrugs. “But who does she like?”
“He’s fine,” Jerome says, although he doubts if that’s true.
“You’re black,” she says, looking at him, wide-eyed.
Jerome looks down at his hands. “I am, aren’t I?”
She bursts into peals of shrill laughter. “I’m sorry. That was rude. It’s fine that you’re black.”
“Black is whack,” Jerome says.
“Of course it is. Totally whack.” She stands up, gnaws at her lower lip, then pistons out her hand with an obvious effort of will. “Put it there, Jerome.”
He shakes. Her hand is clammy. It’s like shaking the paw of a small and timid animal.
“We have to hurry. If my mother and Uncle Henry come back and catch you in here, I’m in trouble.”