No Such Creature

Free No Such Creature by Giles Blunt

Book: No Such Creature by Giles Blunt Read Free Book Online
Authors: Giles Blunt
Tags: Mystery
have seen it, though. I’m kicking myself about that.”
    It took a moment for this to register. When Ms. Davies looked up at him, it was with a frown of puzzlement. “But you said you hardly knew him.”
    “I know. That’s what makes it so weird. In retrospect, I mean.”
    Zig reached into his satchel and handed her a parcel loosely wrapped in brown paper. She slipped off the rubber bands and unfolded the paper, contemplating the framed rectangle in her hands.
    “It’s from Elvis,” she said.
    “Uh-huh. Isn’t that amazing? Melvin come over to my place one afternoon last week and give it to me. I was kinda surprised at the time, because I knew he was a real Elvis fan. And I couldn’t figure out why he wanted to give it to me.”
    Monica Davies seemed frozen in that hunched-over position. Not a muscle moved. A tear detached itself from her eyelash and splashed onto the picture. She rubbed it away with a neatly painted index finger.
    “Like I say,” Zig said, “Melvin hardly knew me, but he give me this thing. I was surprised, but I didn’t think too much about it until I heard the news. Then it kinda made sense. They say people give away things that are precious to them, you know. Anyway, I thought I’d come here and give it to his wife or family or whatever.”
    “You’re very kind,” she said, and wept a little into a Kleenex.
    “I’m just sorry I didn’t realize what it meant at the time. I coulda done something maybe.”
    “How could you know?” she said softly. “What does anybody know about anybody?”
    For the entire next day Max was sullen as only Max could be. Here they were strolling the brightest, gaudiest blocks in the world—neon cowboys, a Manhattan skyline, the temple of Luxor—and Max was ignoring it, muttering to himself like a gargantuan baby. Owen kept trying to interest him in the criminal history of Las Vegas, the colourful, murderous life of Bugsy Siegel, but Max would not snap out of it.
    That night in his bunk, Owen could hear Max talking to himself in the Rocket’s master bedroom. He reached for a paperback in an effort to ignore him: The Magus , a novel with which he was flat-out in love. Owen was soon absorbed in the story.
    “I have of late, and wherefore I know not, lost all my mirth …”
    Max was reciting loudly enough to make sure Owen could hear.
    “… forgone all custom of exercise. And indeed it goes so heavily with my disposition that this goodly frame the earth seems to me a sterile promontory.”
    Yeah, yeah, keep it up, Max. I know you’re upset.
    Owen fitted the buds of his iPod into his ears. This little gizmo was the legacy of a raid they had pulled on a dinner party in the Hamptons a couple of years ago. It wasn’t one of the video models, but it was still a little gem. Owen dialed up a pod-cast of flutey New Age stuff, supposedly for meditation but perfect for reading. By the time he had finished the story of Conchis and the Nazis and switched out his light, all was silent in Denmark, the curtain having apparently come down on Hamlet and his depression. Owen drifted off to the whirr of the Rocket’s air conditioner and the traffic on the distant Strip.
    He was awakened sometime during the night by a cry ringing in his ears—loud enough that his heart was jacked up and his eyes wide open. He lay still, hearing nothing but the rattle from the AC. Then another shout.
    Max and his nightmares. A burst of incoherent cries got Owen out of bed and into his bathrobe. He opened the bedroom door.
    “Max?”
    Max was cowering against the head of the bed, striped pyjamas soaked in sweat, his face pressed into a pillow balanced on his knees.
    “Max?”
    “Wuh-hah!” He thrashed at the air with one hand, clutching the pillow with the other. A quiver shook his massive frame.
    Owen went over and laid a hand on his shoulder.
    Max heaved with a great intake of breath and lifted his head from the pillow. His eyes opened, glazed and bloodshot.
    “The Butcher,” he

Similar Books

Scourge of the Dragons

Cody J. Sherer

The Smoking Iron

Brett Halliday

The Deceived

Brett Battles

The Body in the Bouillon

Katherine Hall Page