ROBERT REED
GRAFFITI
It was a river town known locally for drunks and evil women, mayhem and
crimes
too sordid to mention in decent company. But in the 1890s, a grisly and unsolved
triple
murder made headlines across the country, and simple shame forced its
good Christian
citizens to act. Originally called Demon's Landing the town
renamed itself Riverview.
Corrupt law officers were replaced with a modern,
professional police force. The town and
county were declared dry. New schools
were staffed with young women of unimpeachable
character. Zoning laws and civic
projects brought a sense of order, while fortuitous fires
drove out the
notorious families. It was even alleged that the mayor, a determined young
pragmatist, hired a wandering mystic to help protect Riverview from the criminal
element.
According to some, the mystic was a wild-eyed, tubercular man with a gaudy name
painted on
his mule-drawn wagon. Yet just a few years later, no one seemed able
to recall his name or
which direction he had taken as he left town. Hopefully he
was never paid for his
questionable work. A terrible crime wave heralded the new
century's arrival. A favorite
school teacher was molested in the most heinous
fashion, the bank was robbed twice in one
year, and both a Methodist minister
and the beloved mayor were shot and killed by thieves.
The only blessing was
that the rejuvenated police force, led by a young man named Bethans,
managed
quick arrests, and under interrogation, every suspect confessed in full. The
murderers
were hanged with suitable fanfare, while thieves and rapists spent
years in the state
penitentiary; and for the first time, the river's vulgar
souls began to say that if you
wanted to have some fun, you'd best have it
somewhere other than Riverview.
The next decades
were built on small events and modest prosperity. Crime wasn't
abolished, but violence
seemed to always end with quick arrests and telling
punishments. By the late 1960s, the
little river town had grown into a tidy city
of fifteen thousand, its elderly brick
downtown nestled against the wide brown
river, handsome older homes hidden on the wooded
bluffs, and higher still, where
the country opened up and flattened, there were the sketchy
beginnings of urban
sprawl.
There was both a public and Catholic high school. Macon Lewis
played quarterback
for the public school's lackluster team. Eddie Cane was his classmate
and best
friend. He lacked Macon's size or cookiness, but Eddie was the better athlete,
one
of the top cross country runners in the state, and because of it, the boys
were social
equals as well as friends.
Macon was six months younger, yet he played the role of older
brother,
introducing his introverted, somewhat artistic sibling to the larger world.
Eddie's
first date and first sex were both arranged by Macon. Eddie got drunk
for the first time
with Budweiser bought by his best friend. As a team, they had
explored the wooded bluffs,
pulled monster catfish from the churning river, and
when Macon heard a crazy rumor about
the old storm sewer beneath Main Street, he
suggested that they sneak down there and have a
look.
"A look at what?" Eddie wondered aloud.
"You like to paint," Macon reminded him.
"Well, there's some really strange
paintings in that sewer. If what I heard is true, I
mean."
They met after dark, armed with their fathers' best flashlights, Macon
shouldering a
heavy knapsack that rattled as they slipped into a deep,
weed-choked gully. The sewer began
where the gully dove into an oversized
concrete tube, the tube's mouth blocked by thick
steel bars aligned in a
crosshatching pattern. There was a small door secured by heavy
padlocks, and for
no conscious reason, Eddie felt relief when he thought they could go no
farther.
It was just a sewer, of course. In eighteen years, he had never wondered what
was
beyond the barricade. But he smiled in the darkness, smiled until Macon
said, "Over here.
We can get inside here."
Freezes and floods had worn away a portion of the concrete wall.
With the help
of a crowbar, chisel and ball-peen hammer, they enlarged nature's work. Then
Eddie, smaller by plenty, slipped easily into the sewer, and with a lot of
grunting and
twisting and breathless little curses, Macon joined him, slapping
his buddy on the back,
then whispering, "Follow me," with a wink that went
unseen.
A trickle of water, antifreeze,
and discarded oil led the way, spilling down a
long slope before turning beneath Main
Street, slowing and spreading until it
was little more than a sheen of moisture and
reflective slime. Modern concrete
gave way to enduring red brick. The sewer had been built
in the 1890s, arching
walls frosted with an excess of mortar, and the mortar was decorated
with
colorful, even gaudy paintings. Holding a big Coleman flashlight in both hands,
Eddie
focused the beam on the nearest work. In clinical detail, it showed a man
and woman making
love. Except they weren't making love, he realized. The woman
was struggling, and the man,
taking her from behind, held a knife flush against
her long and pale screaming throat.
"This
is real," Macon reported. "Everything you see here happened as it's
shown."
Other paintings
portrayed other violent crimes. A man dressed in an
old-fashioned suit was being shot in
the face, pointblank. A second man was
being gutted with a long blade. A third was being
battered from behind with a
baseball bat. And in each case, the painting looked
astonishingly new, and the
murderous person was shown in photographic quality.
It was a kind
of gallery, Eddie realized. Utterly unexpected, and inexplicable.
Yet Macon had a ready
explanation. "The way I hear it, our town once made a pact
with the Devil, or someone just
as good." He illuminated his own face, proud of
his knowing grin. "If there's violent crime
anywhere in Riverview, it appears
here. As it happens. By magic." "How do you know?"
A
mischievous wink, a brighter smile. "Pete Bethans told me." Pete was the
police chief's son
and a third-string running back. "A slow kid," was Macon's
harsh assessment. "You've been
around him. Slow in a lot of ways, but that's why
I believed him. He couldn't invent a
crazy story if his life depended on it."
Eddie nodded, slack-jawed, wandering downstream.
"Chief Bethans comes here once a day, just to check the paintings. Because if
there's
anything new, that means that it just happened." A pause. "Pete's dad
and granddad were
both Chiefs, and Mayor Smith has been mayor for thirty years.
It's supposed to be their
secret."
A face sprang out of the gloom. A boy's face. Distorted, in agony. Eddie
hesitated,
then in horror realized that they knew him. His family had moved into
Riverview a few years
ago, in mid-semester. The boy had sat beside Eddie in
homeroom. For about two weeks, he was
the quiet newcomer. Polite, but distant.
Then came rumors of an unspeakable scandal, and
for no clear reason, his father
drove the family sedan into their garage and shut the door
and let the engine
run. Which was too good of a death, Eddie realized. Shining the beam
past the
suffering face, he saw the father, saw what he had done, and for all the
horrible
things that Eddie might have imagined, this was worse. A thousand times
worse. How could
the boy, or anyone inflicted with this kind of hell, not just
die of shame?
For a long
while, neither boy made the tiniest sound.
Then Macon forced himself to give a nervous
little laugh.
Feeling tired and hot, Eddie started upstream again, his entire body aching
as
he sobbed quietly.
For his benefit, or maybe for both of theirs, Macon said, "That sort
of crap
happens. Every day, all around the world --"
"Not in Riverview."
"Exactly." Macon
gestured at the first painting, the one of a woman being raped.
"These things help the
police keep law and order. And what's wrong with that?"
"You said we made a pact with the
Devil," Eddie replied.
"I was teasing," Macon promised. "Nobody knows what's responsible
for them."
Overhead was the rumble of a big truck rolling down Main Street. They heard it
through a nearby sewer grate.
"Besides," said the quarterback, "these are just pictures."
What did that mean?
"If you can't stand looking at them, don't." Macon was talking to
himself as
much as to Eddie, his voice suddenly large, filling the sewer from end to end.
"If they bother you too much, just shut your eyes!"
From the time he was eight, art
teachers had praised Eddie for his drawings,
particularly for his attention to proportions
and his precise sense of detail.
His doodles were well-received in study hall, and some of
his work had ended up
in the last two yearbooks. People with no special gift liked to tell
him,
without a trace of mockery, that he had a great career as an artist waiting for
him.
Yet Eddie had enough appreciation for art and its demands to know that he
had no future,
save in some narrow commercial venue. Talent was a fire, and he
couldn't feel any fire, and
the truth told, he wasn't even a little sorry for
its absence.
Macon didn't understand about
fire and talent. Eddie was an artist, and when
Macon had his own inspiration, he worked
hard to solicit Eddie's cooperation. It
was several weeks after their secret visit to the
sewer. In two more days, their
school would play crosstown rival Plus. There was no bigger
game every year. As
always, the smaller Catholic school had recruited from across the
county, and
they were a virtual lock for the state's Class B championship. "They creamed us
by five touchdowns last year," Macon complained. "And Haskins is even better
this year.
Throwing, running. He could play us without his front line, and he'd
still beat us
shitless."
Haskins was the enemy quarterback. Big college scouts had been coming through
Riverview for two years now, the All-State senior being the prize and Notre Dame
rumored to
be in the lead.
Knowing his friend's crafty mind, Eddie asked, "What are you thinking?
You've
got a stupid idea, don't you?"
"Not stupid. Brilliant!" Macon felt deservedly proud,
laughing and drumming on
his belly with a happy rhythm. "Who's the heart of the Pius
defense?"
A junior linebacker. A farm boy named Lystrom.
"Exactly. And suppose we make
certain neither Haskins or Lystrom play Friday
night. Just suppose."
"We'll lose anyway,"
Eddie replied.
"Maybe so," Macon allowed. "But not by five touchdowns, and I won't get the
shit
beat out of me."
"So what's this idea of yours?"
"First," said his best friend, "promise
that you'll help me. Tonight. A couple
hours' work, tops. What do you say?"
Eddie never
agreed to help, but he never quite wrestled his way out of the
onerous duty, either. "I'm
not a good enough painter," he kept telling Macon,
right down to the moment when they
reached the sewer's entrance. Arms aching
from carrying paint and brushes, he said, "It'll
take too long, and we don't
have enough light. And besides, someone's sure to find us --"
"The only ones who'd want to find us are home asleep," Macon snarled. "Put that
crap down
and help me. We've got bigger problems here."
Someone had blocked the way in, patching the
concrete and plugging the gap
between the bars with heavy hog-wire. But Macon had a
thorough nature, and he'd
come prepared. Bolt cutters removed the wire, and the new
concrete hadn't set
properly, flaking off without much fuss, leaving enough space for both
of them
to squeeze inside.
The graffiti hadn't changed in their absence. Eddie wondered if
Chief Bethans
bothered coming every day, or if once a week was enough. What if their clever
work went unnoticed? He asked that reasonable question several times, and he was
rebuffed,
Macon finally turning to him, saying, "Paint. Now. And tell me where
to point these damned
lights."
Mimicking the colorful, almost photographic style wasn't simple. Making the
faces
lifelike and plainly recognizable seemed practically impossible. Eddie had
brought a Pius
yearbook and several newspaper photos, and he worked with
deliberation, moving too slowly
for Macon's comfort, finishing the faces by
midnight. Then came portraying the crime
itself. They'd decided on a rape, its
victim blessed with an anonymous face. The police
would be forced to hold the
football stars for days, searching for a nonexistent woman. But
there is no such
thing as a truly anonymous face, and whenever Eddie thought he saw
something
familiar about the nose or jawline or eyes, he would have to retreat and make
changes.
Nobody was to be genuinely hurt tonight. He wouldn't be doing this if
he thought there was
the slenderest chance of harm.
Occasionally, Macon would say, "Hurry."
Besides the patient
trickling of dirty water, the ancient brick sewer remained
silent. Utterly indifferent.
Eventually,
Eddie couldn't hear his friend's calls for speed. Fatigue and worry
vanished. He found
himself going back again, adding details that felt right. The
victim was naked, on her
hands and knees, twisted into a painful, unnatural
position, her naked attackers buried in
both ends; and he worked hard presenting
the dangling breasts and the curl of varicose
veins, then the fearful eyes, blue
and huge, and her sweaty and matted short brown hair.
Hours passed in a moment. Nearly finished, Eddie suddenly pulled back his brush,
realizing
this was what the artist's fire felt like. It was past four A.M. One
flashlight had died,
and the big Coleman's beam was weak, trembling in Macon's
tired hands. But Eddie had never
felt more alert, smiling now, telling his
friend, "All that's left are Lystrom's arms, then
we're finished."
Again, with force, Macon told him, "Hurry."
But before Eddie could moisten
his brush, the Coleman failed. Absolute blackness
descended. Macon cursed, smacking the
battery pack with a flattened, angry hand,
causing a flickering and very weak beam to play
across the painted mortar,
showing the boys what had happened.
Lystrom had his arms.
Painted
in an instant, they were bare and pale and very thick. One hand gripped
the victim's short
hair, jerking hard. But the other hand and arm was what
startled. The arm was swinging,
that sense of motion captured perfectly, a
linebacker's fist being driven hard into the
victim's small, helpless face.
An inch short of panic, the boys gathered up their tools and
paints, then fled,
saying nothing and never looking back.
They reached home before five
o'clock, trading mystified looks before climbing
through their respective bedroom windows.
Both lay in bed for the next two hours, sleepless, trying hard to make sense of
what they'd
seen. Nothing had really happened, they prayed. Paint on bricks
could do nothing, and the
woman was nobody, and it was all in fun, and without
doubt, they encouraged themselves, any
true blame belonged squarely on the other
guy's shoulders.
Their alarms went off just before
seven. Exhausted beneath the covers, they
listened to their radios, to the same limpid
ballad, music fading into silence,
then a shaken voice interrupting the false tranquility.
The bulletin was abrupt, and horrible, and very nearly expected.
A young nun -- Sister
Mayhew, a Spanish teacher at Pius -- had been raped and
savagely beaten, and the incredible
crime happened inside the convent, and en
route to the hospital, she had died of her
injuries.
Her killers were being sought, the disc jockey promised.
And the boys closed their
eyes, and wept, knowing exactly who was responsible
and feeling ashamed for everything,
particularly the sense of their own perfect
invulnerability.
By any measure, it was a
bizarre, inexplicable crime.
Haskins and Lystrom lived at opposite ends of the county, in
every physical and
social sense of the word, and despite playing for the same team, they
were
anything but friends -a competitive rivalry having blossomed into a full-scale
feud. It
was startling to think of them spending time together, in any capacity.
Neither had a
criminal record. And while the linebacker had a genuine temper --
the kind that might kill
out of miscalculation -- his alleged partner was
unaffectionately called Saint Haskins.
But
their guilt was undeniable. Two nuns had clearly seen them escape over the
convent wall. A
third witness saw Lystrom's pickup roll through a stoplight on
Main Street just as Sister
Mayhew was found in her room, in bed, her sweet face
crushed, a plaintive voice naming her
assailants before God mercifully took her.
And as it happened, a sheriff's deputy pulled
Lystrom over before he made it
halfway home, intending to give him a warning for driving
too fast. But there
was fresh blood on the boy's T-shirt, and he acted confused, perhaps
drunken. As
a precaution, the deputy cuffed him and stuffed him into the cruiser's back
seat.
Then came word that the Pius stars were wanted for questioning, that they
should be
approached with the utmost caution; and the deputy, thinking it had to
be a mistake, asked
his prisoner, "What kind of prank did you pull?"
Lystrom unleashed a low wild moan, then
gave a full confession, relating events
with a miserable and accurate and thoroughly
astonished voice.
Minutes later, Haskins was found, naked and shivering, kneeling between
his
mother's washer and dryer, praying so hard that he barely noticed the uniformed
officers
or their handcuffs.
The football game was delayed. There was talk about canceling it
altogether, but
both teams had an open date in two weeks, and there was hope that the noble
aspects of the sport would help the community heal.
Every Catholic school closed for the
funeral.
On the same day, the prisoners were taken to the old courthouse to be arraigned
on murder and rape charges. Both Eddie and Macon slipped out of class, joining
the angry
crowd on the courthouse grounds. They hadn't spoken since the sewer.
Crossing paths, Macon
stepped up and told his friend, "It's your fault. If you
hadn't used a real face --"
"I
didn't know the woman," Eddie interrupted.
"You must have," Macon insisted. "In your
subconscious, at least."
And despite saying, "No, I didn't," Eddie found some secret part
of himself
believing that it should be him shuffling along in chains, gazing at the ground,
listening to a thousand angry people telling him that he should be roasted
alive, or worse.
Daneburg was next week's opponent. Macon was in no shape to play. He threw four
passes
before the coach benched him, three of them intercepted and the last one
launched over the
goal posts. Watching from the stands, Eddie saw the
quarterback sitting alone, shoulders
sloping, his helmet between his feet and
his eyes gazing out at nothing. Eddie felt genuine
pity for his friend. But the
feeling passed. By next Monday the despair and self-doubt had
vanished. Once
again, Macon was strutting between classes, laughing and grinning. Except
he'd
been through an incredible episode, and he had survived, and the experience
showed in
the lean hard face and particularly in the eyes, bright and steady,
incapable of anything
resembling hesitation or compromise or fear.
The game against Plus began before a quiet,
subdued crowd. Macon remained on the
sidelines, watching the larger, swifter opponents maul
his teammates. His
replacement was knocked senseless by Lystrom's understudy. It took two
men and a
stretcher to carry him off the field. Then the coach, having no other choice,
sent
Macon into the war.
People in and around Riverview would talk about the game for years,
with a
mixture of awe and earnest gratitude.
Before the game was finished, the lead had
changed nine times. Macon threw five
touchdown passes and ran for two more, including the
last-second game winner. He
was carried from the field on his linemen's shoulders, and the
image of him --
the hero of a great contest, nothing on the line but pride and poise--would
linger in the public consciousness for decades.
There was a quick trial in January, the
defendants found guilty of second-degree
murder, both sentenced to life terms.
Eddie spoke
to his boyhood friend just once before graduation.
It was May. Macon was having a beer on
the school's front stoop -- the privilege
of fame -- and on a whim, Eddie approached,
asking him, "How can you live with
yourself?"
The piercing eyes regarded him for an instant,
then looked away. A slow,
self-important voice remarked, "It took me a long time to see it.
You've always
been a cowardly little fuck."
What did he mean?
"Eddie," he said, "it happened.
It's done, and it'll stay that way."
"I know," the boy whispered.
"I don't think so." Macon
shook his head, speaking with an easy scorn. "Has it
occurred to you that we aren't
responsible? Not for any of it, I mean. Think.
There's some bizarre force that paints
crimes as they happen. Who knows how? But
maybe the force appreciates using someone else's
hands and paint, and we're not
guilty of anything. Ever think in those terms?"
Never, no.
"You should," was Macon's final advice. "A lot of things come clear and easy, so
long as
you think about them in the right way."
A California college gave Eddie the chance to run
for a degree. He left
Riverview in the summer, returning just twice in the next thirty
years -for
Christmas, then his father's funeral that next spring. More moved back East to
live with her old-maid sisters. He would think about his hometown, sometimes for
hours on
end, yet almost never spoke about it, even to his girlfriend. He
married her after his
junior year. He graduated in the bottom third of his
class, then drifted from career to
career, gradually eroding his wife's patience
and good humor. They parted peacefully
enough, with few tears. A second, less
patient wife arrived some years later, and she never
appreciated his long
silences or far-off gazes. Not long after her departure, Eddie was
sitting in
his apartment, skimming through channels with the volume muted...and suddenly he
saw a familiar scene, the river and far-off bluffs exactly as he remembered
them, but the
nearer buildings mostly new and too tall -- baby skyscrapers
standing rooted on the narrow
floodplain.
Riverview was growing. The reporter told him so, and the video confirmed her
assessment. Good schools and a low crime rate were just two reasons why
corporations liked
that obscure Midwestern town, and the latest convert was
easily the most impressive. A
Fortune 500 computer firm was relocating to
Riverview. A modern campus would grow on the
nearby bluffs, a billion dollars
and thousands of employees pouring into local coffers.
Explaining his decision,
the corporation's CEO and major stockholder used a passive voice,
every word
rehearsed, his praise for Riverview relentless, and unconvincing.
But what
stunned Eddie, what caused him to shout at the television, was a
glimpse of the third-term
mayor as he shook hands with the CEO: The mayor
smiling with utter joy while the other man
grimaced, eyes huge and haunted,
looking like a man trapped. Utterly and forever trapped.
A stranger appeared in Riverview that next spring. He registered at the new
Holiday Inn,
paid for his room with cash, and after two days of sightseeing,
fishing, and antique
shopping in the old downtown, he was seen walking beside a
high chain-link fence, staring
into the forbidden gully.
Security cameras monitored his progress. Videotape caught him
studying the
sewer's mouth, examining the newly installed titanium bars and razor wire, the
various cameras and both of the electrified fences. A cruiser arrived in short
order. The
man was questioned at length. He claimed to be a field biologist
looking for rare plants,
and he apologized profusely for any inconvenience that
he might have caused. Because he had
made no attempt to break into the sewer, he
was released. Neither the officer or his direct
superiors had any reason to
doubt the story. If they punished everyone who was curious, the
public would
surely begin to wonder what made that sewer so special.
Subsequent checks
determined that the intruder had lied. He was not a biologist,
and he had registered under
a false name.
As a matter of policy, the intruder's file was sent upstairs to the new
Chief.
Something in the accompanying photographs bothered him, although he couldn't
decide
what was wrong. His daily meeting with the mayor was at four; he brought
the file with him,
laid it down on the mayor's desk, then felt like an utter
fool when Macon said, "Don't you
recognize him? Even bald, I'd know him. Shit,
it's got to be Eddie Cane!"
The one-time
running back -- still a big slow man, but obedient and cautious --
replied with a reflexive
doubt, "It can't be. Your friend lives in California.
We pay that investigator to keep an
eye on him --"
"Not much of an eye," Macon replied. Then he took a careful, composing
breath
before saying, "Find him. Now."
"And?"
The look said it all. Don't let him out of
town.
Yet despite an intrusive and efficient police department, Eddie wasn't found. He
didn't
return to his motel room, nor was he seen again around town. As a
precaution, new cameras
and a third, hidden electric barrier were installed by
trusted specialists, and through
certain backwater avenues, a contract was put
out on Eddie's life. The Chief, undistracted
by imagination, felt there was
nothing to worry about. But the mayor, made of more paranoid
stuff, barely slept
for the next few weeks, and when the call came at two on a Monday
morning, he
still hadn't shut his eyes.
"Your friend's back," said the Chief, his voice
soft, timorous.
"Where is he?"
A long pause.
"Where the fuck is Eddie?"
"He's already inside,"
the Chief confessed. "The infrared sensors spotted him
... we don't know how he got in...!"
A pause, then he whispered, "Macon?" For
the first time in a century, a Bethans found
himself honestly terrified of the
future.
"He's your good friend," said the Chief. "What do
you think he's doing down
there?"
It had been years since Eddie painted, and he worked with
a quick, unpracticed
deliberation. He was dressed in a bulky rubber suit. In one hand was a
brush,
the other held a long flashlight with a brilliant halogen beam. Water was
running
through the old sewer, ankle-deep after hard spring rains. He didn't
hear footfalls until
the intruders were close, and he never stopped working, not
pressing the pace but making
sure that he had finished painting the leg before a
familiar voice told him, "Step away.
Back from the wall, now."
A second light came on, then others.
There were more men than he
had anticipated. Trusted officers led the way, as if
blocking for their mayor and chief of
police. Everyone wore old clothes and
bulky rubber waders.
"Eddie," said Macon. Not once,
but several times.
"How did you get in here?" the Chief demanded.
Eddie spoke
matter-of-factly. "When I was here last month, I noticed some kind
of pumping system down
by the river. Very new, very expensive. It occurred to me
that you wouldn't want any harm
to come to this place, and you certainly don't
want to be kept out of here by floods. I
checked with the engineering firm you
used. I pretended to have the same need, and without
knowing the importance of
it, they told me that after the pumps stop, there's a two minute
window where
the valves are left open. Not a lot of room in there, but I haven't picked up
too much weight. Have I, Macon?"
Macon had the same handsome face, the same piercing eyes,
but his charm seemed a
little worn, used too often and finally, after all these years, hard
to conjure
on command.
Stepping toward Eddie, he half-smiled and said with quiet force,
"We've been
watching you. Even before I won the election, I had people keeping tabs on
you."
"I never guessed it," he admitted.
"If you hadn't come back, we would have left you
alone."
"No doubt."
"Put down the paint brush, Eddie."
The words, equally serious and
preposterous, seemed funny. He smiled, dropping
the brush into the water, then threw his
beam across the sewer. "A nice little
business you've got here, Mayor." On the old white
mortar was the corporate
giant he had seen on television. He was using a fire ax to chop a
man's head
from his shoulders. "You invited that billionaire to come here, didn't you? You
wined him and dined him, trying to sell Riverview, and when he said, 'No,
thanks,' this is
what happened to him. A sudden, inexplicable murder. And
afterwards, favors won."
No one
spoke.
"How much business comes here because of blackmail?"
Silence.
Eddie shone his light in
Macon's face, without warning. "Who does your painting,
you son-of-a-bitch?"
One of the
nearest policemen took credit with a cocky nod.
Eddie continued. "The poor murderer
wouldn't suspect, would he? How can he know
that you manipulated him? Like a puppet. Which
is probably what you do to your
enemies too, I'm guessing."
The walls were covered with
horrors, so many that they had to overlap, new blood
laid over the old.
Macon came closer,
glancing at Eddie's work with an insult at the ready. "You
don't paint very well anymore."
"I suppose not," he agreed.
"Legs and bodies, but I don't see faces."
"Faces could wait, I
thought."
His lack of urgency bothered Macon. "Without faces, the magic doesn't work. This
is just ordinary ugly graffiti."
His head cocked to one side, the artist remained silent.
"Well," Macon said with finality, "you shouldn't have come back. Not once, and
certainly
not twice."
Eddie glanced at his watch, then with a gray and very reasonable tone, he
asked,
"What if painting these walls wasn't my reason for being here?"
Macon had begun to
turn away, but he hesitated now.
With an angry, impatient voice, the Chief asked, "What do
you mean?"
"Maybe all I wanted was to lure as many of you as possible down here." A grimace
more than a smile now. "Which I've done, it seems."
No one seemed certain how to respond.
"Who's been on parole for a year and a half now?" A slow shake of the head.
"Lystrom."
Nobody
dared speak, or move.
"Haskins would have been out too, but he hung himself fifteen years
ago. In his
cell, alone. I didn't know it myself until a couple weeks ago, frankly." A long
sigh, then Eddie confessed, "For all the guilt I've carried around all these
years, I
really didn't do much of a job keeping up with the news."
"What about Lystrom?" whispered
Macon.
"Hasn't changed much. Still big, if anything even stronger -- prison does that
to men
-- and he still has that linebacker's temper. You should have seen his
face when I told him
the whole story. He didn't quite believe me, not at first,
but just the idea of it made him
furious."
There came a rumble, low and steady. Everyone heard it over the murmur of
flowing
water, and together, in the same instant, they realized it was a truck
on the street
directly above. They could hear it through the nearest sewer
grate, then they heard its air
brakes lock with a prolonged reptilian hiss.
"That would be Lystrom," Eddie announced. "I
had him watching for you to come
down here. We've got a big flatbed with tanks on the back,
and a few thousand
gallons of unleaded gasoline."
Men turned, beginning to run in their
cumbersome waders, sloppy half-steps
taking them nowhere.
A swift thread of crystalline
petroleum fell from the nearest grate, musical and
fragrant, landing on the water and too
light to sink, too different to mingle,
spreading like a spell across the tainted black
water.
Trying to smile one last time, Eddie pointed at the wall, saying, "Look!
Someone's
finishing the painting for me!"
But Macon refused to look. In the end, like a child, he
pretended that what he
didn't see couldn't possibly be real, and what wasn't real would
never want to
hurt little him.