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ENVY THE NIGHT
EXCERPT
Frank Temple III walked out of the county jail at ten in the morning with a
headache, a citation for public intox, and a notion that it was time to leave
town.
It wasn't the arrest that convinced him. That had been merely a nightcap
to an evening of farewellsFrank hanging from the streetlamp outside of
Nick's on Kirkwood Avenue, looking down into the face of a bored cop who'd
seen too many drunks and saying, "Officer, I'd like to report a missing pair of
pants."
It hadn't been the hours in the detox cell, either. Frank was one of six in the
cell, and one of just two who managed not to vomit. Sitting with his back
against the cold concrete block wall listening to some poor son of a bitch retch
in the corner, Frank considered the jail, the people who checked in and didn't
check out the next morning, the way he would. He considered the harsh fluorescent
lights reflecting off gray and beige paint, the dead quality of the air, the
hard looks the men inside developed to hide the hopelessness. It would be
the same when the sun rose as when it set, except you wouldn't be sure when
that happened, couldn't even use the sun to gauge the lack of change. He considered
all of that, and knew that if he could understand only one thing about
his father, it was the decision he'd made to avoid this place.
This was the second time Frank had been in a jail. The first was for a drunk
driving charge in a small North Carolina town two years earlier. He had failed
the Breathalyzer but requested field sobriety testing anyhow, his booze- addled
brain sure that he could pass. After watching Frank stumble and stagger
through the first exercise, the cop put an end to it, said, "Doesn't look like your
balance is too good, kid." Frank, leaning against the car for support, had
waved him closer, as if about to impart a secret of the highest magnitude. The
cop leaned down, and when he was close enough, Frank whispered, "Inner ear
infection."
He had the cuffs on and was in the back of the car before he was finished
explaining the connection between one's sinuses and one's balance. His was
not a receptive audience.
So this was the second trip to a jail, and even if his father hadn't found a
coward's way to avoid a life sentence, the number would be the same. Frank
wouldn't have visited. But he also couldn't hide the thought, listening to those
drunks mumble and belch and vomit beside him, that maybe the reason he
put himself in situations like this was because he wanted a taste. Just a taste,
that was all, something he could walk back into the free world with and think
that's what it would've been like for him.
He'd been chased into the night of drinking by one disturbing phone message
and one pretentious professor. The message had come first, left by a voice
he hadn't heard in many years.
Frank, it's Ezra. Ezra Ballard. Been a long time, hasn't it? You sound older on
your message. Anyhow, I'm calling because, well . . . he's coming back, Frank. I
just got a call from Florida telling me to open up the cabin. Now, I'm not telling
you to do anything, don't even care if you call me back. I'm just keeping my word,
right? Just keeping my word, son. He's coming back, and now I've told you.
Frank hadn't returned the call. He intended to let it go. Knew that he
should, at least. By the end of the day, though, he was done in Bloomington. A
single semester of schoolhis fifth college in seven years, no degree achieved
or even threatenedand Frank was done again. He'd come here to work with
a writer named Walter Thorp (Walt to my friends, and I hate all of them for it),
whose work Frank had admired for years. Bloomington was closer to home
than Frank had allowed himself to come in years, but Thorp was a visiting
professor, there for only one semester, and he couldn't pass up that chance. It
had gone well, too. Thorp was good, better even than Frank had expected, and
Frank had worked his ass off for a few months. Read like crazy, wrote like
crazy, saw good things happening on the page. The last week of the semester
brought an e-mail from Thorp, requesting a meeting, and Frank used that as
encouragement to push Ezra Ballard's call out of his mind. Focus on the future,
don't drown in the past.
That was his mantra when he went to the cramped office on the third floor
of Sycamore Hall, sat there and listened as Thorp, glancing occasionally at that
gold watch he always wore on the inside of his wrist, complimented Frank's
writing, told him that he'd seen "great strides" during the semester, that Frank
clearly had "powerful stories to tell." Frank nodded and thanked his way
through it, feeling good, validated in his decision to come here, to ignore that
phone call.
"I've never done this for a student before," Thorp said, arching an eyebrow,
"but I'd like to introduce you to my agent."
Frank couldn't even feel the elation yet; this was that much of a surprise.
Just looked back at Thorp and didn't speak, waited to see what else would be said.
"In fact," Thorp added, tracing the edge of his desk with a fingertip, eyes
away from Frank's, "I've already mentioned you to him a few times. He's interested.
Very interested. But he was wonderingwe both were, reallyhave you ever given
thought to writing nonfiction? Maybe a memoir?"
Frank got it then. He felt his jaw tighten and his eyes go flat and he stared
at the old- fashioned window behind Thorp's head and wondered what the great
writer would look like flying through it, landing on the terrace three floors below.
"I only ask because your story, and the way it intersects with your father's
story, well, it could be quite compelling. To have that in addition to your own
narrative gifts, Frank, is quite a package. Natehe's my agenthe thinks the
market would be fantastic. You might even be able to get a deal on just a synop
and a few sample chapters. Nate thinks an auction would be possible, and that's
the sort of circumstance where the dollar figures can go through the"
He had the good sense not to follow Frank out the door and down the steps.
Ten hours later, Frank was in the jail, all the amusement left in his
drunken mind vanishing when the booking officer looked up from the paperwork
and said, "No middle name?"
Nope, no middle name. Too bad, because going by your middle name was
an easy thingprovided you had one. But he didn't. Just that Roman numeral
tacked on the end, Frank Temple III, the next step in the legacy, a follow- up
act to two war heroes and one murderer.
They'd put him into the detox cell then, left him there to wait for sobriety,
left him with swirling thoughts of his father and Thorp and the message. Oh,
yes, the message. He'd deleted it, but there would be no need to play it again
anyhow. It was trapped in his brain, cycled through a dozen times as he sat
awake waiting for morning.
He's coming back.
He was not allowed to come back. Frank and Ezra had promised one another
that, agreed that they'd let him live out his days down there in Miami so
long as he never tried to return, but now there was this phone call from Ezra
saying that after seven years the son of a bitch had decided to test their will,
call that old bluff.
All right, then. If he would return, then so would Frank.
* * *
He was northbound by noon, the Jeep loaded with his possessions. Except
loaded wasn't the right word, because Frank always traveled light so he could
pack fast. The quicker he packed, the easier it was to ignore his father's guns.
He didn't want them, never had. Through nineteen states and who knew how
many towns in the last seven years, though, they'd traveled with him. Other
than the guns, he had a laptop computer, two suitcases full of clothes, and a
pile of books and CDs thrown into a cardboard box. Twenty- five years of life,
it seemed like he should have more than that, but Frank had stopped accumulating
things a long time ago. It was better to be able to move on without being
burdened by a lot of objects that reminded you only of where you'd just been.
West through Illinois before heading north, to avoid the gridlock and
construction that always blanketed Chicago, then across the state line and into
Wisconsin as the sun disappeared, the destination still hours ahead. Tomahawk,
a name Frank would've dismissed as cliché if he'd written it for a North
Woods lake town. The town was real enough, though, and so were his memories
of it.
His father wouldn't be there. Devin Matteson would be. If Ezra's call was
legitimate, then Devin was returning for the first time in seven years. And if
Frank had an ounce of sense, he'd be driving in the opposite direction. What
lay ahead, a confrontation with Devin, was the sort of possibility that Grady
Morgan had warned him he had to avoid. Grady was one of the FBI agents
who'd brought down Frank's father. Grady was also a damn good man.
Frank had been close to him for a while, as close as he had been to anyone
for a few months during the worst of it, but then the media sniffed that relationship out
and Frank left Chicago and Grady behind. They hadn't talked much since.
He drove past Madison in the dark and pushed on. He hadn't eaten all day,
just drank Gatorade and swallowed ibuprofen and drove, hoping to do it all in
one stretch, with just a few stops for gas and to exercise sore muscles. Before he
reached Stevens Point, though, he knew he wasn't going to make it. The hangover
had killed his appetite, but he'd needed food if he was going to stay awake,
and now the fatigue was beginning to overpower him. There was a rest stop
ahead, maybe the last one he'd see for a while, and he pulled off and parked.
Lowered the driver's seat as far as it would go, enough to let his legs stretch a
bit, and then he slept.
* * *
It was a Big Brother kind of thing, no doubt about it, but Grady Morgan had
kept an active monitor on Frank Temple III for seven years. It wasn't proper,
or even really legal, because Frank had no role whatsoever in anything that
could still be considered an active investigation for Grady. But nobody had noticed
or cared or commented yet, and as long as they didn't, he'd keep watching.
Without a touch of remorse. He owed the kid at least this much.
The feelers Grady had out there in the world, computers that ran daily
checks on Frank's fingerprints and Social Security number, had been quiet for
a long time. As had the phone lines and the e-mails and the mailbox. No word
from Frank in quite a while, and there were times when Grady ached to speak
to him, check in, but he didn't. He just went to work every day and eyed the
calendar that showed retirement was not far away and hoped that Frank
would continue to stay off the radar screen. Grady didn't want to see a blip.
Here was one. The wrong kind of blip, too, an arrest in Indiana, and when
it first came through to his computer Grady felt an immediate sick swirl go
through his stomach, and he actually looked away from the screen for a moment,
not wanting to read the details.
"Shit, Frank," he muttered. "Don't do this to me."
Then he sighed and rubbed a forehead that was always growing, chasing
the gray hair right off his skull, and he turned back to the computer screen and
read the details of the arrest. When he got through, he let out a breath of relief.
Public intoxication. That was it. The second arrest in seven years, the second
time Grady had felt this chill of sorrow, and the second time he could roll
his eyes and chalk it up as No Big Deal, Kids Being Kids.
He hoped.
As he pushed back from his desk and walked to the window and looked out
at the Chicago skyline, he sent a silent request to Frank Temple III somewhere
out there across the miles.
Tell me it was just fun. Tell me, Frank, that you were out with some buddies
having beers and chasing girls and laughing like idiots, like happy, happy idiots.
Tell me that there was no fight involved, no temper, no violence, not even a closed
fist. You've made it a long way.
A long, long way.
Frank III had been eighteen years old when Grady met him. A slender,
good- looking kid with dark features contrasted by bright blue eyes, and a maturity
that Grady hadn't seen in a boy of that age before, so utterly cool that
Grady actually asked a psychologist for advice on talking to him. He's showing
nothing, Grady had said. Every report we've got says he was closer to his father
than anyone, and he is showing nothing.
He showed something in the third interview. It had been just him and
Grady sitting in the Temple living room, and Grady, desperate for some way to
get the kid talking, had pointed at a framed photograph of father and son on a
basketball court and said, Did he teach you how to play?
The kid had sat there and looked at him and seemed almost amused. Then
he'd said, You want to know what he taught me? Stand up.
So Grady stood up. When the kid said, Take that pen and try it to touch to
my heart. Hell, try to touch it anywhere. Pretend it's a knife, Grady hadn't
wanted to. All of a sudden this was seeming like a real bad idea, but the kid's
eyes were intense, and so Grady said what the hell and made one quick thrust,
thinking he'd lay the pen against the kid's chest and be done with it.
The speed. Oh, man, the speed. The kid's hands had moved faster than
anybody's Grady had ever seen, trapped his wrist and rolled it back and the
pen was pointing at Grady's throat in a heartbeat's time.
Half- assed effort, Frank Temple III had said. Try again. For real this time.
So he'd tried again. And again, and again, and by the end he was working
into a sweat and no longer fooling around, was beginning to feel the flush of
shame because this was a child, damn it, and Grady had done eight years in the
Army and another fifteen in the Bureau and he ran twenty miles a week and
lifted weights and he could beat this kid . . .
But he couldn't. When he finally gave up, the kid had smiled at him, this
horribly genuine smile, and said, Want to see me shoot?
Yes, Grady said.
What he saw at the range later that afternoona tight and perfect cluster
of bulletsno longer surprised him.
Seven years later, he was thinking about that day while he stared out of the
window and told himself that it was nothing but a public intox charge, a silly
misdemeanor, and that there was nothing to worry about with Frank. Frank
was a good kid, always had been, and he'd be absolutely fine as long as he
stayed away from a certain kind of trouble.
That was all he needed to do. Stay away from that kind of trouble.
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