Nowhere to Run
By Ron Faust
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About this ebook
In the baking heat of a Mexican resort town, life is spare but satisfying for David Rhodes, American exile and tennis bum, who is content with his low-key existence. But when a young female American drifter is found raped and murdered at the bottom of the seaside cliffs, Rhodes, an illegal alien, is an easy target and an immediate suspect—particularly to the town’s sadistic police chief. David’s comfortable life explodes in a sudden hell of accusation, imprisonment, and flight that can only end in one final, nightmarish confrontation.
Ron Faust
RON FAUST is the author of fourteen previous thrillers. He has been praised for his “rare and remarkable talent” (Los Angeles Times), and several of his books have been optioned for films. Before he began writing, he played professional baseball and worked at newspapers in Colorado Springs, San Diego, and Key West.
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Nowhere to Run - Ron Faust
PRAISE FOR
RON FAUST
Faust's prose is as smooth and bright as a sunlit mirror.
—Publishers Weekly
Hemingway is alive and well and writing under the name Ron Faust.
—Ed Gorman, author of Night Kills
Faust is one of our heavyweights . . . you can't read a book by Ron Faust without the phrase 'major motion picture' coming to mind.
—Dean Ing, New York Times bestselling author of The Ransom of Black Stealth One
Faust writes of nature and men like Hemingway, with simplicity and absolute dominance of prose skills.
—Bill Granger, award-winning author of Hemingway's Notebook
He looms head and shoulders above them all—truly the master storyteller of our time. Faust will inevitably be compared to Hemingway.
—Robert Bloch, author of Psycho
ALSO BY RON FAUST
Jackstraw
Snowkill
The Burning Sky
The Long Count
The Wolf in the Clouds
Death Fires
Turner Publishing Company
200 4th Avenue North • Suite 950 • Nashville, Tennessee 37219
445 Park Avenue • 9th Floor • New York, New York 10022
www.turnerpublishing.com
NOWHERE TO RUN
Copyright © 2013 by Jim Donovan
Copyright © 1981 by Ron Faust
All rights reserved. This book or any part thereof may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are either products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously.
Cover design: Glen M. Edelstein
Book design: Glen M. Edelstein
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Faust, Ron.
Nowhere to run / Ron Faust.
pages; cm.
ISBN 978-1-62045-434-3
I. Title.
PS3556.A98N69 2013
813'.54--dc23
2013005051
Printed in the United States of America
13 14 15 16 17 18 19 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Mariposa. Quiero ver tu cara.
She did not understand.
A hot sea wind had been blowing for three days and now it blew dust and bits of paper along the street and ballooned the skirt of the girl's djellaba. She smoothed the skirt with her palms and looked up at him. She was slender, and perhaps pretty; he could not tell for sure because of the veil, although he knew that her eyes were large and blue and had a slight oval slant. Her eyes seemed illuminated from within. They were bright and metallic with craziness.
Mariposa, venga aqui.
David was sitting cross-legged on the small second-floor balcony. The street below was a narrow, sloping canyon; gray paving stones, sun-bleached pastel-colored buildings without lanes or alleys between, a pale strip of sky overhead. He looked down at her through the twisted wrought-iron bars of the railing.
Take off your veil,
he said.
She seemed startled by the simple command. She looked up at him and there was something like fear in her crazy eyes. She stiffened and her eyes changed: surprise, fear, appeal—he saw, or believed he saw, all of them in her eyes.
The wind gusted again, carrying the fishy sea odors of plankton and mangrove swamp and sun-rotted kelp. The girl's skirt ballooned again, filled like a parachute. She spilled the air from it by rubbing her palms down the front of her thighs.
Why are you wearing that costume?
David asked.
The effects of his fever swelled and diminished like the wind. For brief periods he felt completely normal, but then he was carried away. All temporal and spatial perceptions were distorted. Time ceased being linear and became a kind of mosaic in which certain areas remained blank and others were filled with color and action.
What is your name?
he asked her.
Strawberry Lassitude,
she said. Her voice was a thin, passive, flute note.
David decided to go down into the street. He got up, went into his room, but then a surge of fever lifted him onto a vertiginous crest, held him there for a moment and then rolled him down into the trough.
He sat on the floor and looked around. He had the feeling that two years were missing from his life. The room, his quarters for most of that time, was now strange to him. There was no real furniture; a seven-foot cardboard wardrobe, straw mats on the tile floor, a couple of boat cushions, a blanket, a charcoal brazier, a tea kettle and skillet, earthenware pots, a ten-gallon jug of agua pura—he could not believe that this was his home.
He drank a glass of water and went to sleep in the heat and wind.
He dreamed of a diamond sun, many faceted and with a hard diamond light. Little flames, each no bigger than the flare of a match, erupted all over his body and as he walked he had to slap them out continually. He looked up at the sky and chanted Rain, rain, rain! and finally the diamond sun turned black and there was a bolt of luminous black lightning and the sky was ripped open. Rain obliquely streaked down and hissed on the hot stones. Steam began to rise, spiraling upward in twists that grew larger and larger until they were great black columns supporting the sky. They began spinning like tornado funnels. Sweat poured from his body. Each inhalation sucked hot mist into his lungs. The heat closed in, exerting a pressure as in deep water—he could not breathe. The rain turned into blood. And the steam was a blood-red color and moving more slowly through the air, billowing and mushrooming with a liquid viscosity.
When he awoke it was night and the girl was gone.
He went up on the roof and looked down over the village to the sea. At night the lights of town and of boats at anchor seemed to be merely reflections of the stars. He felt immersed in a light-flecked, galactic calm. The village (it was called El Jardin de los Reyes—Garden of the Kings) was a confused, angular design of moonlight and shadow which cascaded down the steep hills toward the sea. The sea itself was indigo except for a finely etched crescent of moonlight on top of each wave. It all looked like a very good, meticulously shaded aquatint.
David annihilated himself in the night for an hour and then returned to his room.
Early the next morning he was walking down the steep path to the sea when he saw the girl. She was standing on a ferny plateau above the beach, playing a harmonica. Her djellaba rippled in the wind. He came down the trail's last switchback and paused.
Hello.
She lowered the harmonica, tugged at her veil. Good morning.
He hesitated. Listen, do you need anything? Food, a place to stay, a little money?
No.
Where are your friends?
They went to Guatemala. The police told us to leave.
Why didn't you go with your friends?
The wind told me to stay.
What?
The sun told me that I was not ready.
Yeah,
David said.
What is your sign?
Pardon?
Your sign, your sign,
she said impatiently.
Oh. Pisces.
She nodded slowly. I knew it, yes.
What is your name?
Strawberry Lassitude.
No, I mean your real name.
That is my real name. It came to me in the night.
Oh, Christ,
he said. Her honeyed voice and her crazy eyes and the wary, coiled-spring intensity of her posture tired him. These flute-voiced fey mystics actually admired their madness, sought it, smugly practiced it, and so of course spiraled deeper and deeper into it.
He started down the path, then stopped and turned. Listen, you should wear shoes.
Why?
There is a lot of hookworm around here.
What is that?
A type of worm. They're in the feces of infected animals and humans. They enter your body through your feet, breed, circulate through the bloodstream. They hook onto the walls of your arteries—that's why they're called hookworm.
Were they made by God?
What?
Hookworms were made by God too, weren't they?
I suppose. I suppose,
David said, and he walked on down the path.
That night the girl appeared in the doorway of his room. She was carrying a paper bag of brown rice and asked him to boil some of it for her. She talked rapidly, almost constantly, but did not make much sense. David cooked the rice over the charcoal brazier along with a fish he had speared that afternoon. She shared her rice with him but refused to eat any of the fish, nor would she accept beer or coffee. He did not have any tea. She ate without removing her veil, delicately lifting the lower edge with her right hand while using the fork with her left. He saw that her teeth were good, her lips red and heavy.
In a previous life I was the favorite wife in the harem of a great sheik,
she said.
Yeah?
There was long hair on her calves, and she did not smell clean—sweat mingled with patchouli oil.
She asked if she could rest for a while. Of course, David said. She stretched out on a straw mat. She wanted to know if David wanted to stretch out beside her and rest too. No. She talked drowsily for a time and then she slept.
David went up onto the roof for half an hour, and when he returned, the girl was still sleeping. He quietly leaned over and lifted the veil. He half expected to see some scar or deformity, but her face was ordinary, almost pretty. There was only a small plum-colored birthmark on her left cheek; it was roughly heart shaped and no bigger than a dime.
The girl suddenly opened her eyes and screamed. She screamed three times, short, shrill bursts, and then she began weeping. She covered the birthmark with her palm and cried and sobbed with an anguish that confused him. He had never seen anyone suffer this way. Her misery, and the noises expressing it, were so intolerable to David that she hardly seemed human anymore and he thought of killing her as one might kill a dog that had been hit by a car.
She could not be consoled. She wept for a long time and then, exhausted and pale, graceless, she got her bag of rice and went out the door and down the stairway.
David walked out onto the balcony. The girl stood below, clutching her paper bag, sobbing harshly, looking up and down the street, and then she started off into the shadows.
Sorry,
he called. Really. Strawberry?
A small gray lizard was spread-eagled against the east wall of his room. David thought that there was something sacrificial in the lizard's cruciform pose, its immobility. It had tiny webbed hands, warty skin, and eyes mounted in blunt cones with each working independent of the other. Gyroscopic eyes. An iridescent fly went too close and the lizard's tongue unrolled like a paper snake—a miss.
David heard footsteps on the stairs, silence as his visitor paused on the landing, and then there was a slow, heavy rapping on the door. The lizard scurried down the hall and vanished into a hole between two tiles.
A heavy-fisted pounding that threatened to splinter the door panel. Policia!
David got up, crossed the room and opened the door.
Vigil,
the man said, emphasizing the throaty, aspirant g so that his name did not sound like the usual vee-heel, but closer to vee-keel. He showed David an ornate gold shield that contained an eagle with a snake in its beak—an Aztec, and now national symbol. The shield identified him as a captain in the Mexican Federal Police. He was tall, about David's height of six feet, and thin, with a narrow, pock-scarred face and kinky brownish hair and protuberant green eyes. He waited, staring at David.
I'm sorry. Come in, Captain.
The policeman walked slowly to the center of the room and turned in a three-hundred-and-sixty degree circle, looking at everything. Very . . . bohemian,
he said with evident distaste.
I have coffee,
David said. Or, if you'd prefer a drink . . .
I smell patchouli oil,
Vigil said, staring at David with an expression somewhere between irony and contempt. Do you anoint yourself with that foul-smelling grease?
I had a guest last night. She uses it.
I thought perhaps you used it as an aftershave. Or for insect repellent. No doubt you're troubled by vermin here.
David started to say that he was troubled by vermin at this very moment, but he bit off the words; he wouldn't get away with it, not with this cop. The federal police had as much power as they elected to exercise.
David walked past him and opened the wood-louvered doors which led out onto the balcony; sunlight burst in, flooded across the floor, and splashed halfway up the back wall. The captain stood chest-deep in light.
I usually keep the place closed up at this time of day,
David said. The heat, and the exhaust smells.
Yes, yes,
Vigil said impatiently, and then he waded through the light to a wooden crate in the corner (David used it for a table) and picked up the small obsidian knife. He tested it with his thumb.
I wonder how many human chests this dull knife hacked open,
he said.
None. It's a fake. I made it myself. I had hoped to sell it to a tourist.
Yes? It looks authentic. Did you know that it has been estimated that when the Aztecs dedicated their temple of war, the priest sacrificed twenty thousand human beings?
I didn't know that.
Twenty thousand hearts cut out, from dawn to dusk in a single day. Incredible. With knives such as these. How could it be?
And then with irony: I am not questioning the slaughter in a moral way, you understand, but
—he held up the knife—but only the technological aspects.
Sort of Third World pluck, isn't it?
David said.
The Aztecs were cruel, but they were great too. Very great.
They made the sun rise on time,
David said.
Vigil stared contemptuously at David for a time and then he suddenly grinned. That's very funny,
he said without mirth. You are a funny man.
His teeth were long and crooked and spiky. He had a ferocious wolf-grin. His