We were at the outside bar at
the Boathouse on the waterfront below the Gilman Hotel. Inside, the music was
pumping along to flashing lights and the twinkling constellation of the giant
glitter ball, all of which explains why we were outside. The bar was a
semi-circular affair, backed by windows that allowed patrons to see what was
going on inside, and looked out onto the wide Atlantic, with the phosphorescent
blur of Devil Reef in the middle distance. I was sitting with Winston and getting
outside of a tumbler of bourbon; Charlene Masters had confronted me as I’d
walked in – hysterical and mascara-smeared – and had smacked me hard across the
face, before vanishing to the ladies powder room. All of her friends had closed
ranks and now there was a constant to-ing and fro-ing from that location that
was fuelled by a growing and palpable animus.
I took a swig and winced: she’d scratched me up pretty good, and when an
Innsmouth gal scratches something, if it’s not good at healing, it tends to
stay that way. Fortunately for me, that’s a talent I have in spades.
‘Maybe
you should splash some of this hooch on that,’ said Winston, ‘could get
infected.’
I shook
my head. ‘Naw. I’ve got better uses for it.’
Sherman
Sargent, manning the bar, gave me a wry smile and leaned forward to give me a
re-fill. He mooched away to the far end of the bar to polish glasses, and I
turned to Winston:
‘Why
did you do it, Gilman?’ I said. ‘Why’d you try to shoot that guy?’
Winston
shrugged and swirled his drink. ‘Just wanted to see what would happen,’ he
replied. ‘Not every day you get to shoot phantom bullets.’
‘I
dunno,’ I said, ‘I think it was a bad move...’
Winston
put his glass down on the bartop. ‘I was speaking to Ephraim in California the
other day,’ he said, ‘and he was telling me about this Russkie cat who wrote plays, called Chekov – just like the Star Trek
guy. According to him, if you put a gun on the table in the first scene, you
have to shoot it before the end of the third act, or the audience gets
disappointed.’
‘So,
you figured, since you’d brought it along, you may as well use it?’
He
smirked at me and signalled Sherm’ for another round. ‘I’m my own audience,’ he
grinned.
I shook
my head and gulped my drink. Through the windows behind the bar, I could see
Boothe dancing with a couple of sophomore chicks. I say “dancing with”, it was
more like “dancing near”, but he seemed content to be doing the Bat-tusi in
their general vicinity and their giggles were at least some sort of attention.
The
door to the bar deck opened and a tide of heat and sound rolled out carrying
Ned Pierce with it. Sherm’ hurried to make sure the door shut fast behind him.
Ned was dressed in a white suit, his shirt opened to the waist, his
amber-coloured afro sparkling with some kind of twinkling gel. He struck a
dance pose which was becoming very familiar at the time and began singing in a falsetto
voice, hoarse from overuse:
‘Well you can tell by the way I usually
work, I’m a wanted man, no tiny fork...!’
Then he
ran out of lyrics and began humming and thrusting his hips to an imagined beat,
punctuated by occasional high-pitched ‘oohs’ and ‘ahs’.
‘You
sure those are the right words, Ned?’ I asked.
‘Oh!
Hey guys!’ He broke out of his dance fugue. ‘Sure I’m sure: I’m hip. You guys
are missing out on some hot disco action.’
‘Dunno
about the action,’ I said, noting the sweat that was drenching Ned, ‘I’ll take
your word about the temperature though.’
Ned
clambered onto the barstool next to mine, radiating a warmth that made me lean
sideways. ‘Hey, Sherm’,’ he said, ‘grab us a brewski will you, my good man?’
‘I
ain’t your man,’ grumbled Sherman, ‘and I ain’t good.’ Even the addition of a “Disco Fever” bowler hat to Sherm’s
barman’s outfit didn’t lift his lugubrious spirits an iota. He smacked a beer
bottle down on the bar and unclipped the cap with a deft claw movement. It
rattled tinnily on the Formica as he moved off to stir the ice cubes.
‘Thanks
dude!’ Ned inhaled his beer.
Winston
leaned across me to grab Ned’s attention. ‘Hey Ned,’ he purred, ‘you want
action, howzabout you gather the gang together and let’s go party? Leave all
this high school stuff behind?’
‘Sounds
good,’ said Ned, ‘whereabouts?’
‘I’ve
got one of the suites upstairs reserved,’ outlined Winston, ‘you get the guys
together and we’ll meet you up there.’ He tossed a Gilman House room key over
to Ned, who dropped his beer bottle in order to catch it.
‘Are
you sure though?’ he said. ‘I mean, this is a pretty cool scene right here...’
Winston
plonked the briefcase down on the bartop and drummed his fingers on the
leather.
‘What I
got in here,’ he said, ‘is gonna make this shindig look like a kindergarten
playgroup. Whaddaya say?’
Ned’s
eyes boggled; well, they boggled more.
‘Okay,’ he said and waved the key, ‘we’ll see you there.’ He slid off the
barstool and scurried damply back into the disco inferno.
Beside
me, Winston finished his drink and tucked the briefcase under his arm. ‘You
comin’?’ he asked.
‘Sure,’
I replied, ‘I’m just gonna sit here for a bit first though, finish my drink.’
‘Okay,’
he said, ‘but don’t mope around for too long. Or you’ll miss out on your
share.’ He hefted the bag and got up to go.
‘Winston,’
I said as he put his hand on the door, ‘for the record, I think it was a bad move to shoot at
that guy. I mean, he’s plenty pissed as it is; it never helps to put the boot
in without good cause.’
‘Pfft!’
he dismissed my comment. ‘He’s that upset, he can come here and try to talk
about it. I think he’ll find that he gets nowhere real fast!’
I shook
my head. ‘I don’t know, man – I’ve got a bad feeling about that dude...’
‘Let it
go, B.,’ Winston threw wide the door and the music and steam rolled out once
more, ‘you worry too much about stuff!’ Then he was gone.
I sat
around for awhile, finishing my bourbon and wondering vaguely what Doreen was
up to, seeing as she wasn’t here at the dance. I noticed that Charlene’s
friends seemed to be forming an embassy of some kind to bring their concerns
over to me, so I decided to slip out and avoid the confrontation...
I was
crossing the lobby of the Gilman House foyer, heading to the elevators, when a
voice broke the mouldy hush.
‘Benson
Waite! You come along here, young man!’
I
stopped and turned slowly on my heel. Standing near the entrance was a
gathering of black-coated figures, foremost among them Abner Gilman, scrimshaw-handled
walking-stick in hand and boot-blacked hair shining in the dim light. I took a
tentative step forward and realised that I was approaching a delegation of the Esoteric Order of Dagon temple elders. I
was suddenly rueing my decision to leave: facing Charlene’s mob of girlfriends
was far better than fronting the Pelagic
Knights of Y’ha-nthlei with no preparation.
‘Um,
yes sir,’ I said slowly approaching, ‘how can I help, Mr Gilman sir?’
‘You
can stand right there and wait for me to put you to work,’ he said, peering
into the gloomy corners of the foyer through his grotesquely-thick lenses, ‘we
got trouble a-comin’ boy and it’s gonna take all hands to be rid of it!’
To Be Continued...
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