Triptych Page 90
He said, “You know what that’s like?”
Angie didn’t answer. She watched him open the tin, check the contents.
“John thought he had it hard. He didn’t know what hard was.” Michael waved a bag of white powder in the air. He was back to being that guy again, that normal guy he projected out to the world so that they wouldn’t figure out what a monster he was.
He said, “This is good stuff. You want some?”
She tried to shake her head.
“You didn’t want that last drink, either.” He smiled like it was funny. “Remember that, Angie—Ken’s big party? I got you a drink.”
She couldn’t remember, but she nodded anyway.
“Roofies, baby.” He sat down on the couch, putting the tin on the coffee table between them. “You gulped down a mouthful of roofies.”
Rohypnol. He had drugged her.
Michael laughed at her expression. He took a razor blade and a small mirror out of the tin and tapped some of the powder onto the glass. Angie watched as he chopped the coke with the blade. “You ever have a kid?” he asked, not looking at her. “I bet you’ve had about sixty abortions by now.” He kept cutting the coke, businesslike. “My son has problems. You know that.”
Angie willed her body to move. She was gasping with pain by the time she managed to sit up. At least she had managed it, though. At least she was no longer lying helpless on the floor.
“He’s retarded,” Michael told her, cutting the powder into four lines. He took a rolled dollar bill out of the tin and inhaled one of the lines. He made an “ahh” sound, then told Angie, “This is some good shit. You sure you don’t want some?”
She shook her head again.
“Don’t like being out of control? That’s what you said at Ken’s party when I handed you that drink.” He chuckled. “You drank it anyway, didn’t you? Could have put it down, but you gulped it like a damn fish.” He held out the mirror, offering, “Sure?”
“You broke my nose.”
“Your loss.” He put the mirror back on the table.
“Just let me go.” She was trembling so hard she could barely speak. “I won’t tell anybody.”
“You can’t honestly think you’re getting out of here.”
“Where’s Jasmine?”
“You’ll find out soon enough.” He leaned his head back on the couch, studying her. “Don’t you want to know about John?”
“What about him?”
“Half that prison plowed John’s ass. I bet he has AIDS.”
Angie took deep breaths, coughed from the effort. Her wrist was throbbing with every heartbeat. The rope was tightening around her skin as it dried in the heat of the cabin.
“So, Tim, right?” He let out a short breath. “We got the diagnosis six years ago.”
Angie tested the ropes around her wrists, gently pulling to see if there was any give. “That must have been…hard.”
“It’s always about money, isn’t it?” He indicated the mirror on the table, the lines of coke. “That’s how I paid for it. Give the girls a little bump, let them help pay for my boy to learn how to tie his fucking shoes. State insurance won’t cover half the shit he needs. What am I going to do, let my child waste away in some home?”
Angie didn’t answer. Her mind processed his words, tried to make sense of them. Had Michael been selling dope to the girls, taking it in trade when he felt like it? He had been in Vice for at least ten years. His son couldn’t be more than eight. Tim had nothing to do with it.
“Then I had all that cash and nowhere to park it. Can’t put it in my account because Uncle Sam might get curious. Can’t leave it lying around because Gina might ask questions.” He pointed his finger at Angie. “Then, I figured, why not open up some accounts for my good old cousin Johnny? I already had his social security number from all that court shit my mom had lying around.”
Cousin. Angie didn’t know if Michael meant they were related or he was just using slang.
Michael said, “Wasn’t like I had to worry about him getting out.”
She felt her eyes wanting to close and fought to stay awake.
“Where are your questions, Angie?” The coke had made him more alert, talkative. “Come on, girlie. Ask your questions.”
Angie’s mind reeled. She couldn’t think of anything but, “You knew Aleesha Monroe.”
“Yeah, we go way back.”
Angie waited for him to figure out that she had lied before, but he was too wrapped up in his own story to take apart hers.
He said, “First day in uniform, I got a call to the Homes—got stuck in the freaking elevator. All the old-timers were busting a gut by the time they got me out, and there was Leesha, laughing right along with them. At least, she was laughing until she recognized me.” He wagged his finger. “Nobody laughs at Michael Ormewood, Angie. Nobody laughs at him, and sure as shit nobody pushes him away.”
Angie felt a trickle of blood sliding down the back of her throat. She gagged at the taste of it.
Michael said, “She was a whore in high school and she was a whore fifteen years later. Bitch would suck off a dog for the swill in a spoon.” He was smiling again, that smile that said he was in charge. “What they don’t realize is you have to control it. Take it when you want it, not when you need it.” He meant the coke. “Don’t smoke it, don’t shoot it, don’t get too greedy.”
Michael was stupider than she thought if he believed he could control an addiction. She asked, “Why did you kill Aleesha?”
“She pissed me off. Tried to change the rules.”
“You didn’t want to pay her.” Angie had been around enough prostitutes to know the score. “Did Jasmine piss you off, too?”
“Jasmine…” He smiled. “I wonder what your boyfriend would think if he found out I stashed her up in Aleesha’s place while I drove him back to the station?” He watched her closely, seemed to be feeding off her reaction. “Remember when we were going over my reports? You were wearing that tight skirt up to your slit, flashing your tits every time you leaned over? She was in my trunk the whole time, Angie. The whole time you were rubbing up against me, she was in the trunk of my car, pissing herself thinking about what was going to happen.”
Angie parted her lips, let some of the blood drip out. One of her back teeth was throbbing. It was probably broken.
He had stopped speaking, and she wondered if the coke was starting to wear off. She couldn’t tell how much time had passed since he’d snorted the line. Maybe he was one of those people who had the opposite reaction to the stimulant. Maybe he was so in control of himself that it didn’t matter.
He was silent for so long that Angie felt her eyes closing, felt her body relax into some kind of sleep. Michael started talking again and she jerked awake.
“They all act like they’re so fucking good, but all it ever takes is one hit, one snort, and they’re hooked. They keep coming back, begging at your feet. All of them. Especially John.”
Angie had to clear her throat a few times before she could talk. “Is that why you framed him?”