policemanâs street corner instructions to keep moving, keep moving, the sweet passing laughter of women he could at least dream about.
The woman heâd been playing eye games with got off about three blocks before he did, and as usual he felt a vast and personal disappointment, as if sheâd been the woman heâd been meant to marry only she hadnât understood this and had gone shopping for rutabagas instead, and with not so much as a glance back at him. Not a glance.
The city changed abruptly. Where the stone and brick and wooden business buildings had given way to wide streets lined with forbidding iron gates and what passed for mansions in a midwestern town this size, so then did the mansions give way. Now the streets narrowed and the houses grew smaller and uglier in appearance, immigrant houses already sixty years old, older than the townâs incorporation itself. Wild, filthy children ran the streets, and a cornucopia of garbageâthe red of tomato rinds, the yellow of gutted squash, the tainted brown of sun-rotting fly-infested beefâfilled curbstones and gutters alike.
Mothers bellowed harshly for their children, threatening enormous violence if the kids did not show their faces soon. Drunks wound and wove amid it all, one poor bastard puking into a garbage can, puking blood. There were cats and dogs and a few horses, all rib-gaunt and glassy-eyed from malnutrition, and here and there you saw a man smack a woman hard in the face or belly, and you saw a woman bash a man with a broom. White faces, black faces, brown faces, red faces, all showed the toil taken by living here. The sadness so easily became rage, and the rage so easily became despair. This was the part of city life Guild hated, the eternal poor and their eternal doom.
When he stepped off the platform of the streetcar, he took from the pocket of his coat the piece of paper John T. Stoddard had given him containing Victor Sovichâs address.
The house stood two stories tall. It looked as though it had once been green. Now there was so much grime it was hard to tell what color it was. Not a single window remained intact. Cans, newspapers, pages of magazines, and plump brown dog turds covered the thin grass of the front yard. A small mulatto child, perhaps a year and a half, lay naked on the front step, fondling himself and crying.
A woman with a leaf-shaped paper fan bearing the name of a funeral home on its front side leaned in the doorway, watching Guild approach. Next to her squatted a dog with dirty white fur. From what he could see of the woman, she looked Mexican.
âHello.â
âWhat do you want?â
âIâm looking for a man named Victor Sovich.â
âI donât know a man named like that.â
Beneath the thin white cotton of her dusty dress, a beautiful, breathtaking set of breasts rose and fell with her breathing.
Guild sensed eyes watching him from all the windows of this tightly packed neighborhood. A word from her and two or three young men would no doubt appear, and Guild, if he wasnât quick and ruthless enough with his .44, would most likely be sorry.
âI have some money for him. Five hundred dollars.â
He felt sorry for the quick, cheap light in her brown eyes. She had so little money, the child at her feet obviously malnourished, that mention of it made her almost ugly with desire. âMoney you say?â
âMoney. Five hundred dollars.â
âFor this Victor?â
âFor Victor. Yes.â
Guild would never be sure what happened next. No matter how many times he tried to reconstruct it, he just couldnât get the sequence straight.
Apparently Victor Sovich had been hiding in the vestibule right behind the woman. No other position would have allowed him to catapult out of the house. Or maybe he didnât catapult out of the house. Maybe Sovich came from behind him. Or from the side.
Not that it mattered.
The man with the fancy