Читать книгу Not Even Past - Dave White - Страница 20
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DONNE CLOSED Skype and exhaled.
“Jackson?” Bill Martin’s voice was far away.
He felt his nerves endings firing—like he’d drank too much Coca-Cola. Muscles tensed.
“Donne? You okay?”
“Yeah,” Donne said.
He dropped his arms to his side and closed his eyes. His ears were burning. He opened his eyes again.
Then he burst through the door back into the front of the bodega. He spun on his heel into a rack of potato chips knocking them over and headed down the aisle toward the cash register. The cashier’s eyes went wide as he stared at what must have looked like a madman rushing at him.
Blood pounded in his ears. He slammed into the counter of the register and reached across, grabbing the cashier by the front of his polo shirt. Donne pulled him close and punched the him in the face. The cashier’s head snapped back and blood burst from his nose.
Donne pulled him in again and unleashed another blow to his jaw. The cashier slipped from Donne’s grasp and smashed into the cigarettes and condoms behind him. They clattered to the floor along with him.
Just before he could hop on to the counter, someone grabbed Donne by the shoulder and held him in place. He pulled against it, the fabric of his T-shirt rubbing and stretching against his neck.
“Where is she?” The words thundered from Donne’s mouth.
The cashier looked up at him eyes wide. He had covered his nose with both hands. His mouth was moving but no sound came out.
“Why do you know her father?” Donne could feel his vocal chords straining. “Where is she? How is she alive?”
The cashier shook his head. Blood was dripped between his fingers. His mouth moved even faster.
Donne pulled free and leapt onto the counter. He was about to jump down into the pit with the cashier when his he was hugged around his waist. His body fell backward and he was lowered to the ground. He tried to get his feet under him, but couldn’t and landed on his ass. Hard.
“Jackson!” Martin’s voice came into the focus. “Jackson! Stop it. Calm the down.”
“I will sue! I will sue all of you. The police. The state. Whoever the fuck! You punched me.”
Donne shook his head as the cashier rambled. He tried to let the world come back to him. His breath was ragged and felt like it was getting caught in the back of his throat. Trying to scramble back to his feet wasn’t an option. Pain shot down his legs from his tailbone.
“Kid. Jackson,” Martin said again. “Breathe, kid.”
Donne looked up at him and the room spun. He felt like he’d had too much to drink, and his stomach lurched left. Focusing on the plain front of the counter, he forced the contents of his stomach to stay on the inside.
“He knows where Jeanne is,” Donne said.
“Okay.”
The cashier was still screaming. He’d changed his tune from suing everybody to just getting in contact with his lawyer. He also wanted paper towels.
“Get up,” Martin said.
Donne got to his knees and started to push up.
“Not you. You.” Martin pointed at the cashier.
“Fuck you,” the cashier shouted.
“Yeah, okay. Listen, get up. Let’s talk.”
The cashier stood. Donne could see him peeking over the edge of the counter. The blood was dripping faster now. Martin tossed him a roll of paper towels from one of the shelves.
“Fix your face.”
The cashier unwrapped the towels and tore them from the roll. He wadded them up and pressed them against his nose.
“Going to be fucking rich.”
Martin nodded. “You haven’t had a customer in here in the last twenty minutes, at least. Why is that?”
The room stopped spinning for Donne. He started to get up again. Martin put a hand on his shoulder.
The cashier spat on to the floor. The wad of reddish phlegm splattered just inches from Donne.
“My friend here,” Martin said. His voice was like a schoolteacher who wanted everyone’s attention. Quiet and calm. “He thinks you know where a friend of ours is.”
“I don’t know anything.”
Martin nodded. “I’m sure. But tell us. Whose computer is back there?”
“It’s mine.”
“Anyone else use it?”
“Just me.” He spit again. It missed Donne but got closer. Donne felt his pulse race again.
“Yeah. I’m sure. Anyone besides you.”
“It look like anyone else is here?”
Martin sighed. “Not today. But ever?”
“Go fuck yourself.
“Nice.” Martin put his hand back on Donne and pushed him back to the floor. “Does the name Jeanne Baker ring a bell?”
“My nose is broken. I need a doctor.”
“Yeah, and your lawyer. I know. Jeanne Baker?”
“I don’t know who that is.”
Martin let go of Donne and leaned against the counter. He looked left, then right. The cashier didn’t seem to want to move out of his way, but did when Martin stuck his shoulder into the guy’s sternum.
“You have a silent alarm, over there. But the switch is still in the off position.”
“You’re not robbing me.”
“My friend beat the hell out of you.”
“I—um …”
“How about Leonard Baker?”
The cashier froze, just for a second. A slight hesitation before reaching for the silent alarm.
“Stop,” Martin said. He pulled out his wallet. Pulled a couple of bills and dropped them on the counter. “Clean yourself up.”
Donne looked at him. Martin put a hand under Donne’s arm and pulled. He got up. Martin tilted his head toward the door.
“Have a good day, sir,” Martin said.
They walked out into the daylight. As they walked to the car, Donne scanned for the two guys in suits. He didn’t see anyone. A kid ollied on a skateboard a block away. That was the only action on the street.
“He hesitated,” Donne said.
“I know.” Martin pressed the button on his keys and unlocked the car doors. “You probably shouldn’t have punched him.”
“He knows something.”
Martin nodded. Pulled open the driver’s side door. He got into the car. Donne walked around and got in on the passenger side.
Bill Martin didn’t start the car.
“Let’s take our time here,” he said. “See if anything interesting happens.”
He leaned back into his seat.
“You got him good,” Martin said. Then he laughed harder than Donne had heard him laugh in ten years.