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Shame The Devil Part 2

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Otis shrugged. "Can't do do nothin' else." He hand-brushed his hair back behind his ears. nothin' else." He hand-brushed his hair back behind his ears.

Otis went to the door, yanked it open, and charged out into the sunlight. Frank went out behind him, calling his brother's name.

William Jonas watched the man reach for the door handle of the Ford. Someone yelled, "Richard!" The man looked back at the center of the commercial strip. Two men carrying guns and a duffel bag bolted from a door. Jonas speed-scanned: One of them was white with gray hair and a gray mustache, the other a tall, dark-skinned man with Las Vegaslooking hair. The image of them registered as Jonas returned his sight to the man by the Ford. The man by the Ford pointed his gun at Jonas.

He's scared. He won't shoot....

The man by the Ford steadied his gun with both hands.



Jonas thought of his wife and sons. He closed one eye, aimed, and fired his weapon.

Jonas's first round penetrated the door of the Ford. His second round found its target. The pale white man's sungla.s.ses went funny on his face as he crumpled and swung down, his arm hooked around the window frame. Jonas could see a black line running like a worm down the front of the man's face.

A round sparked off the hood in front of Jonas. He blinked, moved his gun arm, fired at the two men who were standing still and firing at him. He squinted, saw smoke coming from their guns, heard his winds.h.i.+eld spider, kept firing even as a bullet tore into his bicep and another hit his shoulder as he was jerked up and back. He took another bullet high in the chest. It was like a hot needle going in. He screamed as he fell, firing his weapon into the front quarter panel of his own vehicle, feeling the shock of his back hitting the hard, hot pavement and the wind blow from his lungs. He stared up at the blazing sun and listened to the siren grow louder. He fought for breath and got it. He turned his head to vomit. He dropped his Glock and heard the dull sound it made on the street.

G.o.dd.a.m.n plastic gun. Oh, sweet Jesus, I am hit.

Lisa Karras couldn't believe the heat. She had called the weather service, but the temperature given on the recording didn't begin to describe the feeling of actually being outdoors. Not that Jimmy seemed to notice. He was ahead of her, walking faster even as she slowed her pace.

"Jimmy, honey, c'mon. We've got all day. The ice cream store's not going anywhere."

He turned around and jogged backward, pointing to his mother with that evil, beautiful smile of his that couldn't help but break her down.

"I'm not biting for that," said Lisa. "I'm telling you, sweetheart, I can't go any faster than this."

Jimmy turned frontward and broke into a run. She called out to him weakly, but by now he was out of earshot, charging down Alton, halfway to 39th. Fireworks sounded from far away.

"Where you goin', man?"

"I'm going to finish that cop."

"You hear them sirens? The two of us ain't gonna make it if we stay. And I ain't leavin' you here, you know that."

"He killed my brother," said Frank.

"Then we'll just have to come back at a better time," said Otis. "Do him the same way."

Jonas's unmarked blocked the road. A patrol car skidded into the Wisconsin Avenue turnoff, rolled up 39th, and came to a stop behind the unmarked. The driver radioed for backup while his uniformed partner crawled out of the car.

Frank and Otis moved quickly to the Ford. Frank picked up Richard and threw him across the backseat of the Ford. He tossed the duffel bag on top of Richard, ignoring the uniform's shouted commands, and got under the wheel. Otis was already on the pa.s.senger side of the bench.

Frank yanked down on the tree and fishtailed coming out of the s.p.a.ce. Sirens wailed from several directions. They heard the pop of gunshots behind them, and neither ducked his head.

Otis wiped sweat from his forehead, glanced at the speedometer: fifty, sixty... okay, s.h.i.+t, it would be all right. Frank always did know how to handle a ride.

"Gonna be a trick to get us out of here," said Otis. He holstered the .45.

Frank saw a flash of cop car moving toward them on the street called Windom to his right.

"Punch this motherf.u.c.ker," said Otis.

Frank pinned the accelerator. The car lifted, and both of them were pushed back against the seat. The Ford blew through the four-way and caught air coming over a rise.

"Watch it," said Otis, as something small ran backward into the street ahead. "Hey, Frank, man, slow down...."

Something was wrong. There were ambulance or police sirens all over now, and Lisa Karras knew something was wrong. She broke into a run.

"Jimmy!" she yelled, frantic because he was still going toward the intersection of 39th and he was too many steps ahead and it was too hot. "Jimmy!"

He turned and ran backward. She saw his crooked smile and the flush of his cheeks as he tripped back off the curb. She saw surprise on his face, but only for a moment. A blur of white car lifted him and pinwheeled him over its roof. He was hinged at an awful angle as he tumbled over the car.

That is not my little Jimmy, thought Lisa Karras. thought Lisa Karras.

That's just a broken doll.

Frank Farrow gave the cracked winds.h.i.+eld a spray of fluid and hit the wipers. Blood swept away and gathered at the edges in two pink vertical lines.

Roman Otis turned his head, looked through the rear gla.s.s. A woman was in the street, her hands tight in her hair. Her mouth was frozen open, and she was standing over a small crumpled thing.

Frank gave it a hard right onto Nebraska Avenue, downs.h.i.+fted the automatic to low coming out of the skid, and then brought it back up to drive. He pa.s.sed a Jetta on the right and crossed the double line pa.s.sing a ragtop Saab.

"There's Connecticut Avenue," said Otis. "I remember it from the map."

"I see it."

"You ain't gonna make that yellow, partner."

"I know."

Frank shot the red; a car three-sixtied as they went through the intersection and down a steep grade, Frank's hand hard on the horn. Vehicles ahead pulled over to the right lane.

Otis breathed out slowly, checked the backseat, looked across the bench.

"Look - about your brother."

"Forget it."

"Your brother did good, man. Remember it. He kept that cop busy and he did good. good."

Frank was expressionless.

"Frank."

"I said forget it. Where's the switch?"

"Tennyson at Oregon. About a mile up ahead."

Otis closed his eyes. Frank's brother was dead, stretched out under a bag of money. Otis and Frank had just killed five - four whites and a black - including a kid. Maybe even killed a black cop, too. Be hard to find a jury of any racial mix that wouldn't give the two of them that last long walk. And here was Frank, colder than the legs on Teddy Pendergra.s.s, barely breaking a sweat.

Well, no one would ever accuse Frank of being too human. One thing was certain, though: There wasn't anyone else you'd want to be riding with when the death house was calling your name.

TWO.

FRANK FARROW PARKED behind an LTD on a residential street named Tennyson, near Oregon Avenue at the edge of Rock Creek Park. To their right a long stand of trees bordered a huge old folks' home, and across the street to their left stood a row of identical split-level houses. behind an LTD on a residential street named Tennyson, near Oregon Avenue at the edge of Rock Creek Park. To their right a long stand of trees bordered a huge old folks' home, and across the street to their left stood a row of identical split-level houses.

Farrow got out of the Ford, eye-scoping the houses on his left as he went quickly to the LTD and found its key under the driver's-side mat. He popped the LTD's trunk, went back to the Ford, and leaned into the open window.

"I'll get Richard and put him in the trunk. Clean the interior out and follow with the bag. Dump your guns in the trunk, too, and we'll split."

"Any curtain action from those houses?"

"None that I could see. Come on."

They drove through the park, cruised by upper-cla.s.s houses with Jags and Mercedes parked in their driveways, and pa.s.sed over the Maryland line into Silver Spring. Otis found HUR, the station he had discovered in his motel room, on the dial.

"You are," sang Otis, "my stars.h.i.+p; come take me out tonight...."

Farrow took East West Highway across Georgia Avenue and made a sharp left down a street of cinder-block garages set beside the railroad tracks. They parked in front of an unmarked bay between Rossi Automotive and a place called Hanagan's Auto Body. Farrow gave the horn two sharp blasts; the bay door rose, and Frank drove the LTD through.

The garage was cool, clean, and dimly lit. A Hispanic in a blue works.h.i.+rt with the name "Manuel" st.i.tched above the breast pocket dropped a hose to the smooth concrete and walked over to the LTD. Another Spanish, Jaime, rubbed his hands on a ruby shop rag and eyed the men inside the car.

"Where's our gear?" said Farrow to Manuel.

"In the offi."

"You said 'offi,'" said Otis. "But you meant meant 'office,' right?" 'office,' right?"

Manuel nodded and smiled thinly, careful to mask any displeasure at the remark. He had straight black hair and slanted eyes, making him look like a brown-skinned Asian. The other one, Jaime, had bony, unmemorable features, except for a line of tattooed teardrops dripping from his right eye.

Farrow said, "Bring our stuff here."

Manuel returned with two large packs and dropped them at the feet of Farrow and Otis, who had gotten out of the car. Farrow and Otis removed their gloves and tossed them on the concrete. Farrow had retrieved the duffel bag from the trunk, leaving the lid open.

"You listen to the news, amigo?" said Farrow.

"Is on the radio already," said Manuel. "You have trouble, eh?"

"My brother's dead," said Farrow, noticing a nerve twitch in Jaime's cheek. "He's in the trunk of the LTD."

"What you goin' to do about that?" said Manuel.

"I'm not going to do anything," said Farrow. "You are." Farrow picked up his pack and the duffel bag and went into the office. Otis hoisted his pack and did the same.

Farrow changed his clothes quickly - plain work pants, a lightweight short-sleeved s.h.i.+rt, and oilskin shoes. While Otis changed, Farrow took his shaving gear to the office bathroom, placed his Swiss Army knife, his Norelco electric, and a gla.s.s tub of black Meltonian Shoe Cream on a steel shelf welded below the mirror. He used the knife's scissors to cut off the bulk of his mustache, then shaved his upper lip clean with the razor. He dipped his fingers in the shoe cream and ma.s.saged it into his hair until his hair was no longer gray. He looked five years younger - at least. He found a pair of nonprescription black-rimmed gla.s.ses in his shaving kit, put them on, and looked in the mirror: Now he was a different man.

Back in the office, Otis had changed into a brown-on-beige monochromatic s.h.i.+rt-and-slacks arrangement with matching brown weave shoes. He had tied his hair back tightly in a ponytail and wore wire-rimmed shades that darkened in the light.

Otis smiled when Farrow walked back into the room. "Lookin' all Clark Kent on me now."

"You take your share?"

"I took it." Otis picked up his pack. "Too bad about that pizza boy. I know he would have talked when it got hot. Shame, though, we had to do him like we did."

"We did did have to. Come on." have to. Come on."

"Okay, amigo," said Farrow as he and Otis reentered the garage. "Come on over here."

Jaime ground a live b.u.t.t under his boot and followed Manuel to where the hard men stood. Farrow chin-nodded in the direction of two cars parked in the back of the garage.

"That us?" said Farrow.

"Yes," said Manuel. "The Taurus is yours."

"I ask for a s.h.i.+twagon?" said Farrow.

"You asked for something that would not attract attention," said Manuel. "The body is rough, I admit. I did not touch the metal."

"Does it run?"

"It will run, yes. It's a SHO. I took the identifying b.u.mper off. It looks quiet, like an old man's car. But it is very quick. Redline it if you wish."

"How about mine?" said Otis, looking at the two-tone brown-and-beige '79 Mark V parked beside the Taurus.

"The Bill Bla.s.s model," said Manuel, a glint in his eye. "What you asked for. Under the hood is -"

"I ain't never gonna look under the hood, Man-you-el, you know that. Will it take me across country?"

"Were it not for the ocean, it would take you around the world."

"What about the sounds? You put that unit in I was tellin' you about?"

"Yes. You load the disks in the trunk."

Otis said, "Always wanted me a box like that, too."

Farrow reached into the duffel bag and tossed a thick stack of bills to Manuel. "Count it with your fingers," said Farrow. "Go ahead."

Manuel went through the money.

Farrow looked at Jaime and said, "Now you."

Jaime shrugged, took the money from Manuel, licked his thumb and forefinger elaborately, and counted the bills.

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