Bright Futures: A Lew Fonesca Mystery (Lew Fonesca Novels)

Free Bright Futures: A Lew Fonesca Mystery (Lew Fonesca Novels) by Stuart M. Kaminsky

Book: Bright Futures: A Lew Fonesca Mystery (Lew Fonesca Novels) by Stuart M. Kaminsky Read Free Book Online
Authors: Stuart M. Kaminsky
join him in a morning brew. I shook my head no. He shrugged and got another beer. Maybe a steady diet of bottled beer had contributed to the departure of Zo’s wife.
    “I can’t afford to be in bed,” Augustine said in that musical Robert Preston voice.
    “You ever play the Music Man?” I asked.
    “Yes, dinner theater. You want me to sing ‘Seventy-Six Trombones’?”
    “Maybe later.”
    “How’s the investigation going? Corkle wants to know.”
    “I’m working on it.”
    “I know. You’re in the home of one of Philip Horvecki’s few friends.”
    I looked at Zo who, with pursed lips, appeared to be deciding if a burp were in order.
    “My eye aches,” said Augustine.
    “I’m sorry. You should take something for it.”
    “I am. I’ve got a container of painkillers that begin with the letter B. Make my life easier. Tell Corkle you can’t find anything so I can go back to simply taking care of his nuttiness. I’m in pain and may never have three-dimensional vision again. I’m in desperate need of a Corkle Pocket Fishing Machine.”
    “You are?”
    “No, but I still seem to have something resembling a sense of humor.”
    “I don’t have a sense of humor,” I said.
    “It’s my turn to be sorry. Do we understand each other? Do we share the common language of English? Corkle wants to protect his grandson from anyone who might be unhappy about his paying you to look for an alternative to jolly Ronnie Gerall. We’ve been over this.”
    “We have. Can I buy you a cup of coffee or a sandwich?” I asked. “The Hob Nob is five minutes away. Great sandwiches.”
    “I’m supposed to be threatening you,” Augustine said. “I can’t do it if you feel sorry for me and offer me coffee and sandwiches. Tell the little man I’m sorry.”
    “For what?” I asked.
    “Playing the role,” he said.
    Augustine turned off his phone before I could ask him what he meant. I turned back to Zo Hirsch. It couldn’t have been more than ten seconds later that a rock came through the window, showering the room with glass. I turned to the window again and watched Augustine drive out of sight to the metallic clank of a piece of dragging undercarriage.
    I handed the phone back to the stunned Zo Hirsch who seemed to be baffled by the gift. Then he hung it up.
    “What did he do that for?” Zo asked.
    “His job,” I said. “Sorry.”
    “His job is to throw . . . forget it. It’s just another piece of crap thrown at me.”
    “Want another beer?” Hirsch asked, looking at the rock near his feet.
    “No thanks, but I do have a question.”
    “Ask.”
    “You were a friend of Philip Horvecki?” I said.
    “Phil the Pill, Phil the Eel,” he said, sitting down in what appeared to be his favorite chair. “Much beloved by all who knew him. He was almost a saint.”
    He looked at me and waited.
    “I’m lying,” he said.
    “I know,” I said.
    “Phil Horvecki was an asshole.”
    “You weren’t friends?”
    “He was on the bowling team I manage,” said Zo. “Zo’s Foes. Phil Horvecki was a man of many alibis, always ready to criticize the play of others. He will be easily replaced. I wish he had had a funeral so I could stand up and say it. Rest in peaceyou A-number-one asshole. I did have an occasional beer with him and some of the other bowlers. Small group got together at Bennigan’s on Monday nights after our league games.”
    “Was he friendly with any of the bowlers?”
    Zo was smiling now.
    “The cost of further information is your forgetting to deliver your papers till the end of the week.”
    “What papers?” I said.
    “Just me,” said Zo. “But I wouldn’t call the relationship friendly. We shmoozled.”
    “Shmoozled?”
    “Talked.”
    “About?”
    “Who knows? We have a deal?”
    “Not yet,” I said.
    “He told me about people he had cheated out of property. He didn’t think it was cheating. He went after old people, mostly.”
    “Old people who might want to kill him?”
    “Old

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