The Albuquerque Turkey: A Novel (15 page)

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Authors: John Vorhaus

Tags: #Mystery & Detective, #Crime, #Fiction, #Mystery fiction, #Santa Fe (N.M.), #Swindlers and swindling, #Men's Adventure, #General

BOOK: The Albuquerque Turkey: A Novel
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“Procrastinate later, that’s my motto.”

Procrastinate later? Mirplo? The world had become strange.

16
Paper-Packing Papa
 

I
met Woody for a hike the next day at a trailhead near Two Mile Reservoir in the foothills east of Santa Fe. He claimed that exercise helped him think, but for me, climbing a steep defile at seven thousand feet seemed to yield no more than oxygen-debt stupidity. Still, I soldiered on without complaint.
Trying to be staunch for your old man, Radar? What’s up with that?

“Keep your eyes peeled for jackalopes,” chirped Woody as we passed through bands of sagebrush and Gambel oak. “These hills are lousy with ’em.” I didn’t reward him with a laugh, for this was less a joke than an attempt to salve old wounds with old microculture. He glanced at me, studied my studied nonreaction, and let it go. A pair of hawks turned circles in the sky, searching for a chipmunk lunch, or maybe baby jackalopes. The trail reached a high meadow that sloped up gently toward the steeper peaks of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. A lone stand of ponderosa pines stood in the middle distance, and Woody set off for it at a brisk pace. “I like hiking,” he said. “Feels good. Holds the wolves at bay.”

“Wolves?”

“Of age. You know, infirmity.”

“Is this going to be another riff on how you’re a feeble old man? Nobody’s buying that yarn, you know.”

“And I’m not selling. But I’m no springing chicken, as your friend Mirplo would say. I just want you to have reasonable expectations.”

“Okay,” I said, “here’s what I expect. I expect us to work together professionally, button up Wolfredian, and then part company. Understood?”

“Vividly. If that’s what you want.” We hiked on. The ponderosa pines drew close.

“Suppose you tell me what
you
want,” I said.

“But you know that, Radar. The chance to make amends.”

“Man, they’re made,” I said out of sheer exasperation.

“Now who’s selling yarns?” He cracked a grin, but I didn’t crack one back. “Look, Radar,” he said, “I know you’ve got a book on me, one with old pages, like Where did he go when he left? and new ones, like Why couldn’t he just come back clean? They’re your pages; read them as you see fit. But at least let it cross your mind, son, that when I say I want to make amends, I’m telling it exactly as it is. And if you’re having a problem with that, I would point out two things. First, you’ve never had a son, or been estranged from one, so you have no idea how that feels.”

“And second?”

“For how hard you’ve been working to get away from me, you’re still here.”

“You’re saying I need you?”

“I’m saying you need answers.” We entered the shadow of the trees. Woody settled down on a fallen log, sighing as he sat. “How about you get some now?”

Charles Woodrow Hoverlander, called Woody since childhood, parlayed his gift for hand magic into a nightclub gig at Grossinger’s during that Catskill resort’s dowager days in the late 1970s. His was a close-up act, and he made lots of new friends that way. Later, he alerted his new friends to a variety of imaginative/ary opportunities, seeding plausible-sounding investment schemes with the latest blue-sky ideas from
Popular Science
. Steam-powered cars, flywheel energy systems, underwater radio, cryonics. Woody’s pitch was smooth as his magic
act palaver, and he fooled almost everyone. Not my mother, though, Sarah Hoverlander née Blake, the local girl manning the front desk. She kept her keen lavender eyes on everything, including a certain paper-packing guisard long on salesmanship and short on specifics. She saw through him like scrim, but saw him also as just the sort of wild card she’d always wanted to draw. So, with the Borscht Belt unbuckling all around them, she Bonnied his Clyde and they hit the road, wafting across America wherever love and opportunity led them. Hasty nuptials preceded the birth of their only child, named (so one story goes) for the proprietary military technology
*
that covered the hospital cost of his parturition.

But their essential natures cast a pall across fidelity. Woody worked sweetheart scams to the point of blurring the line between razzle and romance, and Sarah, no matter how many alternatives she sampled, could never satisfy herself that she’d cut to the best card in the deck. The times didn’t help: In the golden years between the Pill and AIDS, it was assumed that you’d sleep around, and neither lightly taken wedding vows nor a chubby bright toddler challenged that assumption much. Not even the tacit démarche of “don’t ask, don’t tell” could keep their relationship from foundering on the rocks of their mutual, and mutually earned, mistrust.

“Then I did a real stupid thing,” said Woody.

“What’s that?”

“I fell in love.” He shook his head in self-mockery, as if that were the daftest move a man could make. “As it turns out, I was also falling apart. Gambling, dope, a few other things. Donna was my church wife. She put me on a path. For my own good, she made me purge my past.”

“Made you?”

“We co-conspired.” He shrugged. “What can I tell you? I thought it might work.”

“And did it?”

“Oh, sure. Often for weeks at a time. When I’d polished off her supply of second chances, she kicked me to the curb.”

“Why didn’t you come home?”

“Home? What home? Your mother had died. You were better off without me. I was still a mess, you know. Not a good influence.”

“So now we’re back to how you did me a favor by staying away?”

“Who knows, Radar? Who can say? Frankly, I wasn’t thinking about you all that much. I was lost in my own shit. Emphasis on the word
lost
. Emphasis on the word
shit.

“Which you got out of, eventually.”

“Yeah. Honey helped. I guess you know that. Mostly I just grew up. Figured out the difference between my career and self-destructive larks.”

“Larks, huh? You make it sound so breezy.”

Woody eyed me beneath hooded brows. “I don’t have your gift for language, son. If you don’t like my choice of words, choose your own, but if that’s where you’re going to draw your line, I have to say, I think you’re being petty.”

Which, in fairness, I was. “What about later?” I asked. “Post-lark. You could’ve come and seen me then.”

“Could I? I wonder if I’d have been welcome.”

The plain honesty of the thought made us both uncomfortable; rather than open the can of worms of whether he was welcome now, we started brainstorming ways to button up Jay.

Usually on the snuke, it’s best to create an identity from whole cloth. Not only does this let you build a consistent narrative, it muddies the evidence trail after the fact. Here, though, we were both known to the mark, so we’d have to build a con on the platform of our true selves and improvise outward from there. It cut off many options. Just the same, I found myself enjoying the exploration and quickly became lost in the comforting pleasure of combating a knotty problem in the company of a like mind. The more we explored various classic and
handmade zazzles, the more I realized how much farther down my road my father was. Whatever scam I mentioned—Mozart’s Widow, Thai Gems, Rip Deal—Woody knew it, had worked it, and could deconstruct its strengths and weaknesses in intimate detail. He was like a museum of the con.

Most of what we examined we quickly dismissed. Long cons—your pyramids and Ponzis—were just out of the question, for Wolfredian’s patience couldn’t be counted on to stretch that far. And no short con we could think of suited the twin ends of leading him on while sucking him in. Nevertheless, we dug into these, exploring various high-ticket versions of the Pigeon Drop and the Badger Game. When we’d scraped the bottom of that barrel and discovered nothing more than barrel bottom, we sank into a silent funk. The air beneath the ponderosas, formerly tranquil and perfumed, now took on an oppressive, foreboding quality. I got up and walked around, agitated. I’d taken it as read that once I fell into this thing, I’d be able to think my way out. Now I was not so sure.

High overhead, in the sunlit boughs of the pines, a pair of Western Tanagers flitted back and forth, snatching insects from the air and punctuating the silence with their hoarse, flat calls
of pit-er-ik, pit-er-ik
. The term “free as a bird” crossed my mind (a measure of how runaway my train of thought), accompanied by a mind’s-eye action shot of Vic Mirplo happily constructing his
Albuquerque Turkey
. Could he really have it so made? True, trolling for patrons was no day at the beach, but at least his choices were his own, not constrained, as mine were. On top of everything else, he was getting good at what he did. He might really make it big. Yeah, he was definitely on that road. Hmm …

“Know what?” I told Woody, “I think we’re oversolving the problem.”

“How so?”

“What’s Wolfredian after? What does he think he wants?”

“A giant whale,” said Woody. “A big, dumb one he can fornicate out of a fortune.”

“So let’s do that. Let’s give him a whale.”

Woody shook his head. “You don’t know Vegas like I do, son. It’s not like in the movies, where planeloads of degenerates fly in with suitcases full of cash. Real whales are rare. Even when you find them, it takes months to build a relationship with them. Sometimes years. No way we have that long a leash.”

“We don’t need it. We’ve got Nana’s Attic. Fresh meat. New on the market.”

“I’m not following you.”

“Really?”

“Don’t dick me around, Radar.” Woody stood up, pulling at his pants to air a pocket of sweat. “Just tell me what’s on your mind.”

So I did. I told him about Vic, how he was growing as an artist and starting to gain traction. “Suppose he got hot,” I said. “So hot, so fast that he suddenly had more money than he knew what to do with.”

“That could work,” said Woody, thoughtfully. “Jay has a soft spot for artists.”

“Really?”

Woody waved it away. “He fancies himself a collector. It’s not important. Go on.”

I went on. “So suppose Vic drags his newfound wealth into Vegas on the arm of the Gaia’s newest casino host.”

“Who? Allie?” Why would he ask that? Was he pinging me?

“Me,” I said, harshly. “I told you, she’s out of the picture.”

“Pity,” said Woody. “Some of the best hosts are pretty gals.” A pause, then, “But you and Vic are friends. What if Wolfredian twigs to that?”

“That’s part of the gag. Wolfredian hires me as a host, and I lure in my friend with all the fresh cash. All I have to do is fake a public record that his cash is cash, not flash.”

“Can you do that?”

“I’d better can. Without the public record we’ll never be able to sell Vic—excuse me,
Mirplo
—as a shooting star.” Already my mind was
ablaze with the fake websites and fictive press releases I’d need in order to support Mirplo’s meteoric rise. I tended the blaze for a few moments, and when I next looked at Woody, he was beaming. “What?” I asked.

“Nothing,” said Woody. “Just, I knew you’d think of something.”

“How could you know that?”

“You’re a Hoverlander, son.” That sort of struck me sideways. All my life I’d been Radar Hoverlander, but I’d never been
a
Hoverlander before. It felt rather good. Like joining the Rotary. But I shrugged it off; Woody may have been fluffing me.
*
“So,” continued Woody, “how do we leverage Mirplo into a raid on Wolfredian’s mint?”

“We’ll burn that bridge when we come to it,” I said, in unconscious echo of Vic. “In the meantime, we buy time, because Jay sees us being good boys and running his script. So I’ll set up the backstory, and you set up the mark. How does that sound?”

“That sounds just fine,” said Woody.

We spent some time sketching out the details of the snuke and divvying up our responsibilities. I had to admit that it felt great to be back working on this sort of thing again.

But the great feeling didn’t last.

Because when I got home, Allie was gone.

*
Radar target enhancers—
“Now available for the first time to the investing public!”

*
Inflating my ego to cloud my judgment.

17
True Believers Sell Best
 

N
o, I mean
gone
gone. Pots and pans gone. Hangers and hairbrush gone. Gone as grunge. Gone as pay phones. Gone. I called her cell right away. I wanted to lead with “What the fuck?” but all I said was, “Allie? Honey?”

“Hello, Radar,” she said, with a timbre of reserve I’d never heard before. “Is Woody with you?”

“No.”

“Good. But anyhow we shouldn’t talk long. We have to get used to not talking at all.”

“What are you talking about?”

“That’s funny,” she said. “I’m gonna miss the funny.” There was a wistful hitch in her voice. “Clean break, Radar. That’s what we’re trying to sell. You know true believers sell best.”

The line went dead.

Imagine you’re me, standing in the half-empty living room—half empty because she took the damn bookshelf—of your formerly cozy formerly home. You’d agreed to a mock breakup with your darling con artist girlfriend because it seemed like the smart play, the safe play. But now you’re there, turning stuttering circles on shaky legs, wondering where the
mock
in the mock breakup went. “You know true believers sell best,” she’d said. Was that a pep talk or a kiss-off? You don’t know. Your analytical circuits are blown. In your current state of mind, you couldn’t process a knock-knock joke.

Knock, knock
.

Who’s there?

Who’s where?

You stagger to a chair and subside into it. You rub your eyes, run your fingers through your hair; you find you’re massaging your scalp. Or maybe trying to hold in your brains. You cast around mentally for a paper bag to breathe into. Then, right in the middle of your panic attack, a sound cuts through the stale air. It’s the soothing jingle of dog tags; someone’s waking up from a nap.

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