bar, I saw.”
“Get vodka. Whisky smells too much. Can give you away. Don’t forget your gloves.”
Did the thin man give an exasperated sigh?
A few minutes later Lewis returned with a bottle of vodka. True, the clear liquor didn’t smell as much as the whisky but Hart could tell that Lewis had had himself a hit. He took the bottle in his gloved hands and poured the liquid on the wound. The pain was astonishing. “Well,” he gasped, slumping forward. His eyes focused on a picture on the wall. He stared at it. A jumping fish, a fly in its mouth. Who’d buy something like that?
“Phew . . .”
“You’re not going to faint, are you, man?” Lewis asked as if he didn’t need this inconvenience too.
“Okay, okay . . .” Hart’s head dropped and his vision crinkled to black but then he breathed in deeply and came back around. He rubbed the Ivory soap over the wound.
“Why’re you doing that?”
“Cauterizes it. Stops the bleeding.”
“No shit.”
Hart tested the arm. He could raise and lower it with some control and not too much pain. When he closed his fist, the grip was weak but at least it was functioning.
“Fucking bitch,” Lewis muttered.
Hart didn’t waste much anger at the moment; he was more relieved than anything. What ended up being a shot arm had almost been a shot head.
He remembered standing in the kitchen, scratching his face through the stocking, when he’d looked up to see movement in front of him. It turned out, though, to be a reflection of the young woman moving up silently from behind, lifting the gun.
Hart had leapt aside just as she’d fired—not even aware he’d been hit—and spun around. She’d fled out the door as he’d let go with a couple of rounds from his Glock. Lewis, who’d been standing next to him—and would have been the next to die—had spun around too, dropping a bag of snacks he’d pilfered from the refrigerator.
Then they’d heard a series of cracks from outside and Hart knew she was shooting out the tires of both the Ford and the Mercedes so they couldn’t pursue her.
“Got careless there,” Hart now said ominously.
Lewis looked at him like he was being blamed, which he was—the skinny man was supposed to be in the living room, not the kitchen, at the time. But Hart let it go.
“Think you hit her?” Lewis now asked.
“No.” Hart felt dizzy. He pressed the side of the Glock pistol against his forehead. The cold calmed him.
“Who the hell is she?” Lewis repeated.
That was answered when they found her purse in the living room, a little thing with makeup, cash and credit cards inside.
“Michelle,” Hart said, glancing at a Visa credit card. He looked up. “Her name’s Michelle.”
He’d just got shot by a Michelle.
Wincing, Hart now walked across the worn rug, dark tan, and shut off the living room lights. He peered carefully out the door and into the front yard. No sign of her. Lewis started into the kitchen. “I’ll get those lights.”
“No, not there. Leave ’em on. Too many windows, no curtains. She could see you easy.”
“What’re you, some wuss? Bitch is long gone.”
Grim-faced, Hart glanced down at his arm, meaning, you want to take the chance? Lewis got the point. They looked outside again, through the front windows, and saw nothing but a tangle of woods. No lights, no shapes moving in the dusk. He heard frogs and saw a couple of bats flying obstacle courses in the clear sky.
Lewis was saying, “Wish I’d knew that soap trick. That’s pretty slick. Me and my brother were in Green Bay one time. We weren’t doing shit, just hanging, you know. I went to pee by the railroad tracks and this asshole jumped me. Had a box cutter. Got me from behind. Homeless prick . . . cut me down to the bone. I bled like a stuck pig.”
Hart was wondering, What’s his point? He tried to tune the man out.
“Oh, I whaled on that dude, Hart. Didn’t matter I was bleeding. He felt pain that day. Come off the worst