Read The Dream of the Broken Horses Online

Authors: William Bayer

Tags: #Suspense & Thrillers

The Dream of the Broken Horses (44 page)

'He wants me to confide in him, tell him all my secrets. He can't stand it that I come here. He considers you his rival. That's why he said it wouldn't surprise him if you were the sender.'

'Do you think the man's dangerous?'

'No. What he's doing is cowardly.' '

'Now you're trying to infuriate him?'

'That's right. I want to provoke him, make him go too far. Then, if I'm successful, I'll have him cold. I might even be able to file criminal charges against him.'

'I think sometimes in our sessions you've tried to provoke me, make me go too far.'

'Why would I want to do that?'

'I think it's the way you play people. You mentioned that there's been some trouble between T and you. Want to talk about it?'

'No! I want to talk about my dream. Rather, I want you to talk about it. Solve it for me, Dr. R! Release me from it! Do that and I'll be forever in your debt.'

He tried. I was truly touched, even though I didn't buy much of what he said. It all goes back, he believes, to Mom and Blackjack. Pretty good hunch, I guess. When we parted, I saw something caring and sorrowful in his eyes. Touched again, I thanked him for all he's done for me. 'Sometimes I get so mad at you,' I told him, 'but you know it's not personal. It's my rage at my father transposed to you. Anyway, I just want you to know how grateful I am for all the efforts you've made with me and for putting up with all my shit.'

'Thank you for saying that,' he said.

In the car driving home, it suddenly occurred to me that my horsemanship is such an important part of my identity that it's inevitable that anything important to me would be dramatized in my dreams in terms of riding and horses. I also thought that maybe this analysis idea wasn't so smart after all, that I'm going to have to reconsider going on with it after the first of the year and that maybe I'd do just as well going back to card readers and psychics.

 

Tuesday
: This time the little squirt went too far! And gave himself away! He sent a baggie containing tender, long, blond girlish head hairs mixed with short, rough, curly black ones, the latter presumably pubic. By this he's telling me my worst fear has been realized—Belle's being used as a sex slave in a brothel. But what the little stinker doesn't know is that there're only three people on this earth with whom I've shared my fear: J, R, and himself! So that settles it. W deserves to be strung up by his balls, but that would be too good for him. He'd love all the attention he'd get, the martyrdom.

Still I'm relieved. Now that I'm certain it's him, I don't feel menaced anymore. Rather a sense of clarification, that this is how things stand. A feeling of vindication, too, coupled with a feeling that now the power's swung to me, it's all in my hands now.

Later, at the club, I thrashed Greta 6-1 6-0. And she thinks she's my rival for the Woman's Cup! Feeling her hatred out on the court only encouraged me to battle harder!

Doris called from Florida. I told her about the letters. She wasn't too interested till I told her who sent them. Then she got interested. 'What're you going to do about this?' 'Call him on it, call the man to account.' 'Better be careful, Barb, she said. 'W's powerful. He could do you damage.' 'You don t get it, Mom. It's my turn now, it's me who can do the damage.' 'Listen to me, Barb—don't get high and mighty just because you have the Fulraine name. Since you and Andy split up, it doesn't count for much. You're back to being Barbie Lyman to W's crowd. Don't chew off more than you can swallow.'

She made me so mad I hung up on her.

 

Great stuff! It's nine o'clock and I still can't put the diary down. In two weeks and a day, Barbara and Tom Jessup will be killed, and there're things in her diary that point toward a suspect I hadn't considered.

What could Waldo have been thinking? If he really was the sender, and it certainly sounds like he was, he had to know Barbara was onto him.

Waldo may have been malicious, but he wasn't stupid. There was no other way to interpret the things Barbara was saying to him.

So, how threatened did he feel? And if he felt badly threatened, to what lengths was he willing to go?

Certainly if it came out that he'd sent Barbara horrible anonymous letters, his position in Calista's upper crust would be severely undermined. At the very least, he'd lose his column, the mainstay of his existence, the excuse for his lifestyle and the only rationale for his superficiality.

But would he really kill to protect himself—get hold of a shotgun, pull a fedora down to his eyes, then march into Barbara's love nest and blast her and Tom four times?

That seems improbable considering how devious he was and the cowardice of an attack by anonymous letter. Still, who can know what a man like that might have done if he believed his reputation, the very currency of his life, was in jeopardy?

It's all very strange and the end game stranger still. For Barbara had more than one game going those final days: her game with Waldo, her game with Dad, and her high-risk game with Tom:

 

Wednesday
: 3:00 P.M. at the F. T was waiting when I arrived. He looked upset.

'What's the matter, darling?'

'I can't go on with this. I just can't!'

He told me that last night that awful couple looked at him with scorn. Also how when he paid them, he felt their contempt even more.

'This isn't me, B,' he said. 'I've done my best, but I just can't go on with it.'

'Well, it's a little late to tell me that, T, don't you think? A little late in the game to back out.'

'I never wanted to do this. I only agreed because you asked me.'

'If you didn't want to play, you shouldn't have agreed. If you back out now everything's lost, not to mention the money I've invested.'

'I'll pay you back.'

I laughed. 'You! You can't even afford a decent pair of shoes!' He was so hurt I was afraid he was going to cry. 'I'm sorry,' I told him. 'I'm being mean. You did enough, delving into that pit of sleaze. I love you all the more because it was so hard for you. Let me show you just how much I love you.'

How could he resist, poor boy?

Afterwards I watched him sleep, then went downstairs where there's a cigarette machine, bought a pack, returned to the room, sat down in the crummy easy chair, and watched him some more while I smoked.

I don't know what got into me. I haven't smoked tobacco in five years, not since Belle was taken. But it felt good to draw the smoke in, feel it fill my lungs. I think because I felt so filthy in my soul I wanted to physically dirty myself inside.

When T woke up, he sniffed the air. 'You've been smoking.'

'Yes, my sweet.'

'I never saw you smoke anything but pot.'

'It's a rare occurrence.'

'Please smoke another so I can watch.'

I lit up again, sat back, inhaled deeply, blew out gusts, a few smoke rings, too.

'I wish this were pot,' I told him.

'I'll bring some next time.'

'I'm shocked, shocked that you, a teacher, a sterling example to children, partake of drugs!'

He laughed. 'There's a girl in my house who smokes all the time.'

'Then bring some.'

'We'll share, get high together.'

'Yes, that'll be fun.'

He paused at the door. 'Because I promised you, B, I'll try to see it through.'

'A man of his word. I appreciate that. Just a couple more weeks and I'll release you from your vows.'

Soon as he left, I called W from the room. It was 5 P.M. I knew just where to reach him, at the Townsend bar.

'I know it's you,' I told him.

'What're you talking about, love?'

'I bet your left eyelid's twitching as we speak.'

'Are you crazy, Barb, or what?'

'I've got proof. My detectives tracked the letters back to you.'

'That's absurd!'

'I knew you were a snake, W But I didn't know how poisonous. I truly didn't.'

Silence. Then: 'When you say things like that to me, you're as good as declaring war.'

'Let there be war then. So be it.'

'You forget one thing, love. You may be a hell of
 
fighter on the tennis court, but the field of battle we're talking about is mine. I was born to it, you only sucked your way up, and I can push you back into the gutter any time I please!'

'I'm afraid you're the real guttersnipe, W, as your cozy Happy Few will soon find out! And I'd watch that left eyeball if I were you. When it starts to twitch, everyone in town knows you're lying.'

'Meow! Bye, darling!'

'Yeah, darling—meow to you, too.'

 

Correlating this delicious entry to other dateable ones, I understand it refers to events that took place on Wednesday, August 13, the same day Dad cancelled his afternoon appointments and staked out the Flamingo to determine whether Barbara's affair with Tom Jessup was fact or fantasy.

The thought of him spying on her there raises the hairs on my neck. From what vantage point, I wonder, did he observe the arrivals of their cars, their separate entries to the balcony and room 201, Barbara's post-lovemaking descent to purchase cigarettes, and finally their separate exits?

From his car parked in the Flamingo lot? Too dangerous, I think. From Moe's Burgers across the street? The windows at Moe's were too large, creating danger of exposure if Barbara should suddenly turn and stare. Another possibility is the Shanghai Sapphire, the greasy-spoon Chinese restaurant on the other side of the lot. But the windows there were small and draped, which would have made it hard for him to see. Also, since Barbara reports she phoned Waldo as late as five, it's hard to imagine him sitting there a full three hours.

Then it occurs to me: What if Dad also checked into the Flamingo that afternoon; got himself a room on the second level overlooking the courtyard and pool; pulled a chair up to his window; drew the blinds just the right amount; and thus created a viewing post from which to observe the comings and goings of the respective parties?

This notion's so intriguing I put down the diary and call Kate Evans. When Johnny puts me through, I ask if she still has registry ledgers from that year.

"Sorry," Kate says, "when we switched to computers I threw the old handwritten ones out."

"Kate, about that drawing—"

"Yes?" I feel her grow tense.

"The man you described looked so nice, so kindly, did you think about what I asked you the other day—whether you might have gotten two different people confused?"

A long pause. "Yes, I did think about it. Like I told you, I think that must have been what happened."

"But who, Kate? Who might you have gotten mixed up?"

"I remember there was another man who came around about that time."

"The day of the shootings?"

"Maybe not that day exactly."

"Well, think more about it, will you, Kate? Try to remember, okay?"

"Yes," she promises, "I'll try."

Putting down the phone, I hope against hope that she decides she saw Dad when he came snooping around the motel, and, so frightened by the shooter, transposed Dad's kindly features upon his.

 

I
pick up the diary again. On Monday, August 18, the proverbial shit hits the fan:

 

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