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Death Is a Lonely Business (Crumley Mysteries 1)

Page 86

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“I don’t have a nickel,” I said.

“Christ.” Constance grubbed in her purse and took out a quarter and tossed it in the air. ’Tails!”

We were in Laguna by noon, no thanks to the highway patrol that somehow missed us.

We sat out in the open air on a cliff overlooking the beach at Victor Hugo’s and had double margaritas.

“You ever see Now, Voyager?”

“Ten times,” I said.

“This is where Bette Davis and Paul Henried sat having a love lunch early in the film. This was the location, back in the early Forties. You’re sitting in the very chair where Henried put his behind.”

We were in San Diego by three and outside the bullring in Tijuana just at the hour of four.

“Think you can stand this?” asked Constance.

“I can only try,” I said.

We made it through the third bull and came out into the late-afternoon light and had two more margaritas and a good Mexican dinner before we went north and drove out onto the island and sat in the sunset at

the Hotel del Coronado. We didn’t say anything, but just watched the sun go down, lighting the old Victorian towers and fresh-painted white sidings of the hotel with pink color.

Along the way home we swam in the surf at Del Mar, wordless and, from time to time, hand in hand.

At midnight we were in front of Crumley’s jungle compound.

“Many me,” said Constance.

“Next time I live,” I said.

“Yeah. Well, that’s not bad. Tomorrow.”

When she was gone I walked up the jungle path.

“Where have you been?” said Crumley, in the door.

“Uncle Wiggily says go back three hops,” I said.

“The Skeezix and the Pipsisewah say come in,” said Crumley.

The something cold in my hand was a beer.

“Lord,” he said, “you look terrible. Come here.”

He gave me a hug. I didn’t think a man like Crumley ever hugged anyone, not even a woman.

“Be careful,” I said, “I’m made out of glass.”

“I heard this morning, friend of mine down in Central. I’m sorry, kid. I know she was a close friend. You got that list with you?”

We were out in the jungle with just the crickets sounding and Segovia, lost inside the house, playing a lament for some day a long time past when the sun stayed up for forty-eight hours in Seville.

I found my dumb list crumpled in my pocket and handed it over. “How come you want to see?”

“All of a sudden, I don’t know,” said Crumley. “You made me curious”

He sat down and began to read:



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