Dream town, p.36

Dream Town, page 36

 

Dream Town
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  “Yeah, thanks. Nice to meet you, too.”

  Callahan led him outside and over to the Delahaye. Parked behind it was a 1952 baby blue Cadillac Eldorado convertible with whitewalls, tail fins, and a full mouth of chrome teeth on the front end.

  “This Harold’s car?”

  “Yes.”

  “Sweet ride.” It dwarfed the Delahaye size-wise and had all the latest bells and whistles. Compared to his car, the Eldorado seemed to symbolize one thing: Out with the old and in with the new.

  She ran her hand over the Delahaye’s car door.

  “Yeah, but this is still one of a kind,” Callahan said. She looked at Archer, who was just staring at her. “Okay, I know that you’re confused and hurt and…lots of other things.”

  “Look, if you love the guy it doesn’t matter what’s going on in my head.”

  “He’s a nice enough man, but I haven’t known him long enough to know whether I love him or not, Archer.”

  “It usually happens pretty fast when it’s the real deal.”

  She leaned against the Delahaye, frowning at him. “And what would you know about that?”

  “Maybe more than you think. And him giving you that necklace shows he thinks this is something important.”

  She crossed her arms over her chest. “Why did you come over here tonight?”

  “I don’t think it matters, not now anyway.”

  She looked back at the house. Back at…Harold. “He treats me really well, and he’s…he’s.…”

  “Safe, I think is the word you’re looking for. I guess the worst that can happen to him is that he’ll get a paper cut from all the money he has to count.”

  She lifted her eyebrows along with her eyes. “That’s exactly the point.”

  “Yeah, I can see that now.”

  She clasped her hands as though girding herself for what she had to say. To Archer, she looked like she was about to deliver the most important role of her life. And maybe, in a way, she was.

  “I can’t live your way anymore, Archer. I can’t go to sleep every night wondering if you’re going to see the sun come up or not. One time I might not wake up. It’s killing me.”

  He looked down. “I guess I didn’t understand how much it was affecting you.”

  “Then you must be blind,” she said sharply.

  “Maybe I am,” he conceded.

  Her tone became lighter and she managed to smile, if just a bit. “And we don’t even live in the same town. So…”

  There was no fight left in Archer. He knew it and so did she—which was why, he realized, she was no longer coming at him with both barrels. The woman didn’t have to. The battle, if you could even call it that, was over.

  “Look, I hope everything works out. If not with him, then with some other guy.”

  “When are you going back to Bay Town?”

  “I’m not sure that I am.”

  “What?” she said in a startled voice.

  “You don’t want to keep him waiting. Have a good time tonight.”

  Callahan’s mask of lighthearted indifference collapsed, and she stepped forward and wrapped her long arms around him. She cried quietly into his broad shoulder as he absently patted her back and said some words he forgot as soon as he uttered them.

  She kissed him on the lips, gave him a searching look, and said, “Goodbye, Archer.”

  He watched her hurry back up to the bungalow, wiping at her eyes. When she opened the door to go inside he heard the radio playing, a tune maybe about loss, he couldn’t tell for sure. But maybe every damn song ever written was about loss, in some way.

  He put his new hat on, fixed it just so, and climbed into his old, bullet-marked Delahaye.

  “Goodbye, Liberty,” he said before putting the car in gear and driving away.

  Chapter 79

  THANKS, JAKE,” SAID ARCHER. “This means a lot.”

  Archer had always known that Jake Nichols owned the bar on the ground floor of a three-story building. What Archer hadn’t known was that Nichols owned the rest of the building, too.

  They were in the corridor on the top floor right outside of a two-room office. On the pebbled glass was fresh black lettering announcing the space as being occupied by one Aloysius Archer, Private Investigator, duly licensed, bonded, and insured by the State of California.

  “Been trying to lease this crummy space for a year now.”

  “Bet you didn’t offer anybody else a buck a year in rent. I think you would’ve had some takers.”

  Nichols spun around in his wheelchair. “But they wouldn’t have brought down the guy who put me in this glorified baby carriage. A buck a year is more than fair. To me.”

  Archer looked at his name on the glass. “It wasn’t an easy decision. I really like Willie and Connie. And Bay Town isn’t bad.”

  “But LA is its own creature. And something tells me you and Willie will still be working lots of cases together.”

  “Probably so. I’ll need the help.”

  “Hey, let me give you this before I forget it.” He handed Archer a white envelope.

  “What is it?”

  “Old geezer dropped it off earlier today. How’d he know your new office was here?”

  “I put an ad in the paper and made some calls and told a few people. I guess word gets around.”

  “He said he was a retired LAPD dick.”

  “Wait a minute—was his name Sam Malloy?”

  “Yeah, I think that’s right. You know him?”

  “We met. Nice guy.”

  “Well, he made me promise to give you that. And he told me to tell you good luck and thanks for what you did for someone he cared about a lot. I think those were his exact words. You know what he’s talking about?”

  “Yeah, I do.”

  “You want to come down to the bar for a celebratory drink? You know, starting a new phase of life and all. On the house.”

  “Sure, but give me a little bit of time to soak this all in.”

  Nichols looked at him steadily. “Archer, you made the right decision. It was time. I talked to Willie about this. He thinks the same.”

  “It’s actually time for a lot of changes in my life.”

  “Meaning what, exactly? Hey, didn’t you have some gal? Willie mentioned that. What does she think of you hanging out your shingle?”

  Archer touched the lettering on the door. “She doesn’t need to know.”

  “Why not? Wait a minute, are you two not together anymore?”

  “On second thought, I’ll take a rain check on the drink, Jake. Maybe tomorrow?”

  “Okay, Archer. Suit yourself.” Nichols spun around and headed for the elevator.

  Archer unlocked the door to his new office and stepped through, closing the door behind him.

  It was nothing to write home about. The tiny reception area had nothing in it, because Archer didn’t have a receptionist right now and probably would never have one. But with a couple of chairs, a coffee table, and a few moldy magazines, it could be a waiting room for prospective clients. They could sit here and wait until he was ready to see them, or so his dream went.

  His office was twelve by twelve, with plaster walls and lackluster paint on them. A dirty ceiling with a lazy fan frowned down on him. The space held a desk and one chair for him and a pair for clients. There were two file cabinets with nothing in them. There was a little scuffed credenza on which he intended to set up a small bar, so he could have a drink when he wanted, and offer one to clients in case they needed it, which they probably would. One window behind his desk looked out onto a window of another building, where maybe some other poor sap was trying to make an honest buck.

  He sat behind his desk, took out his hip flask, poured some rye whiskey into a glass pulled from his desk drawer, and took a sip. It felt good going down, like a kiss on the cheek or a kind word at just the time you needed it.

  He opened the envelope and found two things inside. The first was a check made out to him from Cecily Ransome. The sum written in was more than he would have charged if he had worked the case for a month, and that was on top of the $500 retainer. The second item was a handwritten note on Warner Brothers stationery.

  Thanks for the advice, Archer. I plan on taking it. And know that you will always have a friend in me. Cecily.

  Ordinarily, Archer would never accept more than he had dutifully earned, other than a small bonus for a job especially well done. He didn’t like feeling that he owed other people. But this one he would take, because it would all be going to Willie Dash. Hospitals and surgeries to dig out bullets weren’t cheap, and the man had more than earned the extra dough.

  He folded up the check and note and put them in his jacket pocket.

  Then he sat back in his chair and stared at the pebbled glass door with his name on it.

  From now on his path in life would be pointed steadily forward, right at the fresh waves coming for him, rather than the choppy ones that had just passed underneath and battered him.

  Hell, they can only hit you once.

  It was all about what was coming up. And whether you could handle it. And even if you couldn’t handle it, it was about how you tried to handle it.

  Being alive and living were also two distinct things, he had come to realize. The former was strictly biological; the latter was everything else.

  Yeah, safety was one thing, an important thing. But actually living was something else. He had decided to pick the something else. And it had cost him plenty, maybe more than even he realized right this minute. Yet he had a pretty good idea.

  It cost me everything else.

  And so Aloysius Archer settled back in his seat and waited for somebody, anybody, to walk through that door.

  Acknowledgments

  To Michelle, thanks for always being there for me, and handling everything else so I can sit and spin stories!

  To Michael Pietsch, Ben Sevier, Elizabeth Kulhanek, Jonathan Valuckas, Matthew Ballast, Beth de Guzman, Anthony Goff, Rena Kornbluh, Karen Kosztolnyik, Brian McLendon, Albert Tang, Andy Dodds, Ivy Cheng, Joseph Benincase, Alexis Gilbert, Andrew Duncan, Morgan Martinez, Bob Castillo, Kristen Lemire, Briana Loewen, Mark Steven Long, Thomas Louie, Marie Mundaca, Rachael Kelly, Kirsiah McNamara, Lisa Cahn, John Colucci, Megan Fitzpatrick, Nita Basu, Alison Lazarus, Barry Broadhead, Martha Bucci, Ali Cutrone, Raylan Davis, Tracy Dowd, Melanie Freedman, Elizabeth Blue Guess, Linda Jamison, John Leary, John Lefler, Rachel Hairston, Tishana Knight, Jennifer Kosek, Suzanne Marx, Derek Meehan, Christopher Murphy, Donna Nopper, Rob Philpott, Barbara Slavin, Karen Torres, Rich Tullis, Mary Urban, Tracy Williams, Julie Hernandez, Laura Shepherd, Maritza Lumpris, Jeff Shay, Carla Stockalper, Ky’ron Fitzgerald, and everyone at Grand Central Publishing, for always exceeding expectations.

  To Aaron and Arleen Priest, Lucy Childs, Lisa Erbach Vance, Frances Jalet-Miller, and Kristen Pini, for getting better all the time.

  To Mitch Hoffman, for continuing to make me dig deep with every book.

  To Anthony Forbes Watson, Jeremy Trevathan, Lucy Hale, Trisha Jackson, Alex Saunders, Sara Lloyd, Claire Evans, Laura Sherlock, Stuart Dwyer, Jonathan Atkins, Christine Jones, Leanne Williams, Andy Joannou, Charlotte Williams, Rebecca Kellaway, Charlotte Cross, Lucy Grainger, Lucy Jones, and Neil Lang at Pan Macmillan, for continuing to send me to new heights.

  To Praveen Naidoo and the crackerjack team at Pan Macmillan in Australia. Number one after number one. You’re the best!

  To Caspian Dennis and Sandy Violette, for always being so supportive.

  And to Kristen White and Michelle Butler, none of this happens without you two!

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  About the Author

  David Baldacci is a global #1 bestselling author, and one of the world’s favorite storytellers. His books are published in over forty-five languages and in more than eighty countries, with 150 million copies sold worldwide. His works have been adapted for both feature film and television. David Baldacci is also the cofounder, along with his wife, of the Wish You Well Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting literacy efforts across America. Still a resident of his native Virginia, he invites you to visit him at DavidBaldacci.com and his foundation at WishYouWellFoundation.org.

  Facebook.com/writer.david.baldacci

  Twitter: @davidbaldacci

  Instagram: @davidbaldacciauthor

  Also by David Baldacci

  ALOYSIUS ARCHER SERIES

  One Good Deed

  A Gambling Man

  Dream Town

  ATLEE PINE SERIES

  Long Road to Mercy

  A Minute to Midnight

  Daylight

  Mercy

  WILL ROBIE SERIES

  The Innocent

  The Hit

  The Target

  The Guilty

  End Game

  JOHN PULLER SERIES

  Zero Day

  The Forgotten

  The Escape

  No Man’s Land

  KING & MAXWELL SERIES

  Split Second

  Hour Game

  Simple Genius

  First Family

  The Sixth Man

  King and Maxwell

  THE SHAW SERIES

  The Whole Truth

  Deliver Us from Evil

  MEMORY MAN SERIES

  Memory Man

  The Last Mile

  The Fix

  The Fallen

  Redemption

  Walk the Wire

  THE CAMEL CLUB SERIES

  The Camel Club

  The Collectors

  Stone Cold

  Divine Justice

  Hell’s Corner

  STANDALONES

  Absolute Power

  Total Control

  The Winner

  The Simple Truth

  Saving Faith

  Wish You Well

  Last Man Standing

  The Christmas Train

  True Blue

  One Summer

  SHORT STORIES

  Waiting for Santa

  No Time Left

  Bullseye

  The Mighty Johns

 


 

  David Baldacci, Dream Town

 


 

 
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