Westlake, Donald E – Bank Shot

same thing.”

12

MURCH’S Mom stood smiling and blinking in the sunlight in front of

Kresge’s holding her purse strap with both hands, arms extended down and in

front of her so that the purse dangled at her knees. She was wearing a dress

with horizontal green and yellow stripes which did nothing to improve her figure,

and below that yellow vinyl boots with green laces all the way up. Above the

dress she wore her neck brace. The purse was an ordinary beige leather affair,

which went much better with the neck brace than with the dress and boots.

Standing next to a parking meter, peering at Murch’s Mom’s image in an

Instamatic camera, was May, dressed in her usual fashion. The original idea was

that May would be the one in the fancy clothes and Murch’s Mom would take

the pictures, but May had absolutely refused to buy the kind of dress and boots

Dortmunder had in mind. It also turned out that Murch’s Mom was one of those

people who always take pictures low and to the left of what they were aiming at.

So the roles had been reversed.

May kept frowning into the camera, apparently never being quite content with

what she saw-which was perfectly understandable. Shoppers would come

along the sidewalk, see Murch’s Mom posing there, see May with the camera,

and would pause a second, not wanting to louse up the picture. But then nothing

would happen except that May would frown some more and maybe take a step

to the left or right, so the shoppers would all finally murmur, “Excuse me,” or

something like that, and duck on by.

At last May looked up from the camera and shook her head, saying, “The

light’s no good here. Let’s try farther down the block.”

“Okay,” said Murch’s Mom. She and May started down the sidewalk

together, and Murch’s Mom said under her breath, “I feel like a damn fool in

this get-up.”

“You look real nice,” May said.

“I know what I look like,” Murch’s Mom said grimly. “I look like the Good

Humor flavor of the month. Lemon pistachio.”

“Let’s try here,” May said. Coincidentally, they were in front of the bank.

“Okay,” Murch’s Mom said.

“You stand against the wall in the sunlight,” May said.

“Okay.”

Murch’s Mom backed up slowly across the brick rubble toward the trailer,

and May backed up against the car parked there. This time, Murch’s Mom held

the purse at her side, and her back was against the trailer wall. May took a fast

picture, then stepped forward two paces and took a second one. With the third,

she was at the inner edge of the sidewalk-too close to get all of Murch’s Mom

in the picture and with the camera angled too low to include her head.

“There,” May said. “I think that’s got it.”

“Thank you, dear,” Murch’s Mom said, smiling, and the two ladies walked

around the block.

13

DORTMUNDER and Kelp quartered around the remoter bits of Long Island

like a bird dog who’s lost his bird. Today’s car was an orange Datsun 40Z with

the usual MD plates. They drove around under a sky that kept threatening rain

but never quite delivered, and after a while Dortmunder began to grouse. “In the

meantime,” he said, “I’m not making any income.”

“You’ve got May.”

“I don’t like living on the earnings of a woman,” Dortmunder said. “It isn’t in

my makeup.”

“The earnings of a woman? She’s not a hooker, she’s a cashier.”

“The principle’s the same.”

“The interest isn’t. What’s that over there?”

“Looks like a barn,” Dortmunder said, squinting.

“Abandoned?”

“How the hell do I know?”

“Let’s take a look.”

They looked that day at seven barns, none of them abandoned. They also

looked at a quonset hut that had most recently contained a computer-parts

factory which had gone broke, but the interior was a jumble of desks and

machinery and parts and junk, too crowded and filthy to be useful. They also

looked at an airplane hangar in front of a pock-marked blacktop landing strip-a onetime flying school, now abandoned, but occupied by a hippie commune, as

Dortmunder and Kelp discovered when they parked out front. The hippies had

mistaken them for representatives of the sheriff’s office and right away began

shouting about squatters’ rights and demonstrations and all and didn’t stop

shouting until after Dortmunder and Kelp got back in the car and drove away

again.

This was the third day of the search. Days one and two had been similar.

*************

Victor’s car was a black 1938 Packard limousine, with the bulky trunk and

the divided rear window and the long coffin-like hood and the headlights sitting

up on top of the arrogant broad fenders. The upholstery was scratchy gray

plush, and there were leather thongs to hold onto next to the doors on the inside

and small green vases containing artificial flowers hanging in little wire racks

between the doors.

Victor drove, and Herman sat beside him and stared out at the countryside.

“This is ridiculous,” he said. “There’s got to be something you can hide a trailer

in.”

Casually, Victor said, “What newspapers do you read mostly, Herman?”

*************

Dortmunder walked into the apartment and sat down on the sofa and stared

moodily at the turned-oft television set. May, the cigarette in the corner of her

mouth, slopped in from the kitchen. “Anything?”

“With the encyclopedias,” Dortmunder said, staring at the TV, “I could’ve

picked up maybe seventy bucks out there today. Maybe a hundred.”

“I’ll get you a beer,” May said. She went back to the kitchen.

*************

Murch’s Mom brooded over the pictures. “I never looked so foolish in my

life,” she said.

“That isn’t the point, Mom.”

She tapped the one in which she appeared headless. “At least there you can’t

tell it’s me.”

Her son was hunched over the three color photographs on the dining-room

table, counting. The lace holes in the boots and the stripes on the dress made a

ruler. Murch counted, added, compared, got totals for each of the three

pictures, and at last said, “Thirty-seven and a half inches high.”

“You sure?”

“Positive. Thirty-seven and a half inches high.”

“Can I burn those pictures now?”

“Sure,” Murch said. She gathered up the pictures, and as she hurried from the

room he called, “Did you get rid of that dress?”

“You know it!” she sang out. She sounded almost gay.

*************

“The way I figure it,” Herman said, riding along in Victor’s car, scanning the

countryside for large abandoned buildings, “what we got to deal with here is

three hundred years of slavery.”

“Myself,” Victor said, pushing the Packard slowly toward Montauk Point,

“I’ve never really been political.”

“You were in the FBI.”

“That wasn’t for politics. I always thought of myself as being involved in

adventure. You know what I mean?”

Herman gave him a quizzical look and then a slow grin. “Yeah,” he said.

“Yeah, I know what you mean.”

“For me, adventure meant the FBI.”

“Yeah, that’s right! See, for me, it was the Movement.”

“Sure,” Victor said.

“Naturally,” said Herman.

*************

“I don’t like that sound,” Murch said. Sitting there behind the wheel, head

cocked, listening to the engine, he looked like a squirrel driving a car.

“You’re supposed to be looking for abandoned buildings,” his Mom said. She

herself was turning her head slowly back and forth, like a Navy pilot looking for

shipwreck survivors.

“You hear it? Ting, ting, ting. You hear it?”

“What’s that over there?”

“What?”

“I said, what’s that over there?”

“Looks like some kind of church.”

“Let’s go look at it.”

Murch turned in that direction. “Keep your eye peeled for a gas station,” he

said.

This current car-he’d had it seven months-had started life as an American

Motors Javelin, but since he’d owned it Murch had changed some things. By

now, looks aside, it bore about as much similarity to a Javelin as to a javelin. It

growled like some very large and savage but sleepy beast as Murch steered it

through bumpy streets of prewar one family housing toward the church with the

sagging roof.

They stopped out front. The lawn was weedy, the wooden walls needed

painting very badly, and a few of the window panes were broken. “Let’s take a

look,” Murch’s Mom said.

Murch shut off the ignition and listened attentively to the silence for a few

seconds, as though that too could tell him something. Then he said, “Okay,” and

he and his Mom got out of the car.

Inside, the church was very dim; nevertheless, the priest sweeping the central

aisle saw them at once and hurried toward them, clutching his broom at port

arms. “Yes? Yes? Can I help you?”

Murch said, “Never mind,” and turned away.

His Mom explained, “We were wondering if this place was abandoned.”

The priest nodded. “Almost,” he said, looking around. “Almost.”

*************

“I think I have an idea,” May said.

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