Via Dolorosa

Free Via Dolorosa by Ronald Malfi

Book: Via Dolorosa by Ronald Malfi Read Free Book Online
Authors: Ronald Malfi
pillow and looked at the vague dimple in its center. Had she been sleeping on that pillow just moments ago? Had she perhaps reentered the hotel room while he was in the shower, crawled atop the bed to rest and, no doubt, to think…and then slipped quietly back out once she heard the shower shut off? His wife?
    I have got to stop doing this to myself, he thought.
    A half hour later, Nick found himself hunting out a stool at the restaurant bar. The bar and the restaurant itself were not very crowded as the storm had just begun to let up. The more adventurous guests had donned thick, waterproof coats and hats, having grown determined following two days of boredom and inactivity to champion the waning storm. Nick did not mind the silence. He selected a stool at the bar, uninterested in sitting very close to any of the other patrons.
    “Well,” Roger said, sliding down the bar. “Looks like we survived the worst of it.”
    “I guess that’s lucky for some of us,” Nick said.
    “It’s always sad, no matter how many times it happens a season, when the bar empties out and the guests go back out into the island.”
    “They’ll always be back, though,” Nick said. “Eventually.”
    “Scotch and water?”
    “Thanks.”
    “Just so you know, Mr. Granger left an open bar tab for you with me. I’m supposed to put all your drinks on it.”
    “Damn it,” Nick said. “Don’t do that.”
    “Mr. Granger insisted, Nick.”
    “I won’t drink if he’s picking up the tab.”
    “He’s a stubborn old bastard,” Roger said.
    “Sure, he told me so himself. But don’t make me walk half a mile to find another bar, man.”
    “Fair enough,” Roger said. “Just, when you see him, don’t let on that I said anything.”
    “Sounds like a plan.”
    Roger disappeared and returned two minutes later with a short, wide glass of scotch chocked with ice.
    “Thanks, Roger.”
    “No problem. You want a menu?”
    “No,” he said. “Not hungry.”
    “Your wife meeting you?”
    “She’s…I don’t know…”
    “Well,” Roger said, suddenly intentionally busying himself with a dishtowel that he’d swiped up off the countertop, “let me know if you change your mind and want something to eat.”
    “You’re a pusher.”
    “I’m trying to make a living.”
    “Sure,” Nick said. “As a pusher.”
    “Can I ask you something? You don’t have to tell me if you don’t want to.”
    “What is it?”
    “What happened with you and Granger’s son?”
    Something deep within him stiffened. He was abruptly face-to-face with young Myles Granger: he could see every crease in the boy’s face, every pore and pock and drying scab on his face. Unshaven…but there was not much to shave. His eyes were dead blue…and there was something of…perhaps a hint of vague accusation in them, as well.
    “You really save the kid’s life?” Roger went on.
    “We were in the same platoon over in Iraq. We broke off into teams and were ambushed marching into Fallujah. Our entire squad was killed. Except for Myles Granger and me. Myles, though…he was hit pretty badly. I could tell just by looking at him that there was maybe a chance he might live but that he’d lose his legs. He didn’t want to lose his legs. He screamed about his legs.” Almost reflectively, he said, “He screamed over and over about his legs.” Nick tasted his drink, and said, “He died two days later in triage.”
    Roger pressed his lips together and shook his head. It was a universal reaction—what more could one do?
    “He was the only guy I saw still moving around in the dirt when the smoke cleared and I could see anything at all. I made my way to him and grabbed him and carried him down an alleyway. He was screaming and wanted me to kill him, to put my gun to his head and kill him. He said he knew he was going to die and he just wanted it to hurry up, so why couldn’t I put my gun to his head and bring it to him as quickly as possible? He was trailing blood in the

Similar Books

The Hero Strikes Back

Moira J. Moore

Domination

Lyra Byrnes

Recoil

Brian Garfield

As Night Falls

Jenny Milchman

Steamy Sisters

Jennifer Kitt

Full Circle

Connie Monk

Forgotten Alpha

Joanna Wilson

Scars and Songs

Christine Zolendz, Frankie Sutton, Okaycreations