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Land of the Blind

Jess Walter




  Land of the Blind

  A Novel

  Jess Walter

  Dedication

  To Bruce, Kristie, and Ralph,

  and in memory of Carol

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  I:It is Customary With This Sort of Thing to Start With a Body

  1 | He Sits Alone

  2 | She Likes Snow

  II: Statement of Fact

  1 | Eli Boyle’S Dandruff

  2 |You Must Forgive

  3 | His Pitiful Presence

  4 |I Shot Someone

  5 | I Smoked Weed

  6 | Muhammad Eli Disappeared

  7 | I’ve Been Thinking

  III: Criminals Are Not Early Risers

  1 | Caroline, Go Home

  2 | The Truth Hurts

  3 | Pete Decker’s Apartment

  4 | Clark Anthony Mason

  IV: Statement of Fact

  1 | Nobody Emerges Whole

  2 | The Least Unhappy

  3 | Dana Brett’s Rack

  4 | I Had Sex

  5 | The Davenport Hotel

  V: Six Months Without a Dead Body

  1 | It’s the Ex-Wife

  2 | He Sleeps Peacefully

  3 | Alone is Easy

  4 | Dupree is Waiting

  5 | The Cold Returns

  VI: Statement of Fact

  1 | Who am I

  2 | The Empire Club

  3 | My Brother Died

  4 | What I Meant

  5 | She Was Beautiful

  6 | What Happened Next

  VII: Even Assholes Deserve a Break

  1 | The Dead Guy

  2 | The Dwarf Listens

  3 | Pete Decker Scowls

  4 | She’s Lost Clark

  VIII: Statement of Fact

  1 | You’re Probably Wondering

  2 | It Was Unbelievable

  3 | I Got Drunk

  4 | Running for Office

  5 | After the Election

  6 | We Never Learn

  7 | What Eli Wanted

  IX: Anything You Say

  1 | She Finishes Reading

  2 | She Finds Him

  Acknowledgments

  Other Books by Jess Walter

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  In the land of the blind the one-eyed man is king.

  —Erasmus, Adagia

  IT IS CUSTOMARY WITH THIS SORT OF THING TO START WITH A BODY

  1 | HE SITS ALONE

  He sits alone in the interview room, his unshaven face in his hands, a guy about her age and not exactly bad looking, for a loon anyway. He’s familiar and yet she can’t place him. It is the kind of familiarity that grates like an unwelcome song. She gives him names: Dave. Steve. Rocco. It is none of these. The Loon wears dirty blue jeans and a long-sleeved black shirt with the top two buttons open. He is tall and square shouldered, and even though his clothes are a mess, they fit. They are not the clothes of a bum. He seems…if not successful, at least employable. His hair is dark and long and tousled and the only thing keeping him from being handsome is a missed haircut or two.

  And the eye patch, of course. The patch is black and covers his left eye, its strap slicing through his long hair. And even the eye patch isn’t so much a flaw as an alarming accessory, making him seem untrustworthy and roguish. A pirate, Caroline thinks.

  Caroline Mabry is a police detective, although for the last several months she has not been a very good one. She has burned out on the job or lost her way or stopped believing in it, and while her colleagues were polite at first, there were no illusions once she was put on swing shift—swig shift it is called, the refuge of burnouts and department drunks six months from retirement.

  Certainly she’s too young for swig shift, just thirty-seven, and yet here she is, stuck on a Friday night watching some lunatic sweat and shift and get his story as straight as his addled mind will allow. The Loon looks around the walls of Interview Two—her favorite, and even that is depressing, that she actually has a favorite interview room. It occurs to her that if she saw this pirate in a bar instead of sitting at a table in a police interview room, she would want to talk to him. Jesus. When did she begin looking at suspects and derelicts (not bad looking; employable) as potential romances?

  The desk sergeant comes toward her with a clipboard.

  “So that’s him?” Caroline asks.

  “That’s your guy. Fuckin’ nut. Want me to run him off?”

  “Nah. It’s probably nothing, but if we don’t talk to him and it turns out there’s something here—” She doesn’t finish the thought.

  “Want me to stick around? Or I could send someone back.”

  “Nah,” she says, “I got nothing else to do. I’ll listen to his UFO story and then I’ll call the bin.”

  The desk sergeant is only too happy to take an order that requires no work from him. “Your call.”

  Caroline turns back toward the interview room. “He wouldn’t give you a name?”

  “Nope. And no ID.”

  “Run his prints?”

  “Yeah. No record. No warrants. Nothing. Just a guy who wants to talk.”

  “Does he look familiar to you?”

  “Sure. He looks like a pirate.” The sergeant walks back toward his desk.

  Caroline returns to the door of the interview room and watches the nervous guy chew his nails. That’s what you get when you volunteer for swig shift—UFO abductions, ninja attacks, black helicopters, listening devices, ghosts, Bigfoot, transgender experiments, pirates, and worst of all, the perpetually, chronically, criminally lonesome: those loons flirting with the edge, tired and confused, and, above all, alone—snap-eyed, breathless people who claim to have information about a murder (usually Kennedy’s or Princess Di’s or Jimmy Hoffa’s or Elvis’s or Jesus’) but who really just want to talk about when daylight savings time begins and why the Safeway moved and how the children never call and what channel Wheel of Fortune is on.

  She watches this Loon, in his black shirt and eye patch, its strap nested in his bushy hair, and thinks there is something different about him, something she can’t quite name. Of course, it could be nothing more than her fascination with the place he was arrested. The clipboard duly reports that This Particular Loon was picked up at 8:03 P.M. when patrol responded to a guy scaling the scaffolding of the old Davenport Hotel—the twelve-story Spanish Renaissance landmark that is the most famous building in Spokane, even though it has been sitting vacant the last fifteen years.

  Like any native, Caroline has always known about the hotel, but she really became aware of it in college, when she was researching a paper on the writer Thomas Wolfe and found in his journals that he “arrived into Spokane in good time and to the Davenport Hotel and a bottle of Scotch and conversation,” and left the next morning “west from Spokane through country being more barren all the time.” The effect on Caroline of reading this entry was something like finding a picture of one’s parents when they were young and good looking, and experiencing a shock and a sense of loss because they had once lived interesting lives. She was shocked to find that her hometown was considered—in the 1920s, at least—Seattle’s jazzy sister, that Teddy Roosevelt and Charles Lindbergh and Ethel Barrymore had happily come by rail, that Calvin Coolidge and Douglas Fairbanks and Amelia Earhart and, yes, Thomas Wolfe, looked forward to a night at the Davenport as an outpost between the deep forest and the desert scablands.

  By the time Caroline was an adult the Davenport Hotel, like Spokane, was long out of style, stripped of its silver service and gilded furnishings, its gardens and tropical birdcages, and remodeled in the plastic-and-shag fashion of fifties mot
els, the final indignity being the family swimming pool that replaced the rooftop tennis courts and putting greens. The hotel had closed in 1985, the same year Caroline read Wolfe’s brief account in college. Five years later, she responded to her first call at the empty hotel—rousting some bums—and she couldn’t believe that this dark, abandoned husk, its marble staircases covered with pigeon shit, was the same place Wolfe had once sought out.

  For fifteen years, she watched attempts at renovating the Davenport come and go like an addict’s promises—Caroline herself was a dues-paying member of the Friends of the Davenport. Then, finally, just after the turn of another century, the remodeling began in earnest, and Caroline caught power-washed glimpses of cornices and sills, lathe-and-plaster guts of old rooms slid through telescoped tunnels into street-level Dumpsters, replacement chandeliers and banisters carried in, the gunk scraped out of the swimming pool. Even a cynic like Caroline—no great fan of symbols—imagined that if the project were ever finished, it could signal nothing less than Spokane’s long-awaited rebirth.

  So maybe she finds some vague significance in the fact that the Loon was caught haunting the Davenport. He had apparently climbed a construction fence to some scaffolding and into an unlocked window. A bus driver saw the Loon crawl through the window and called the police, who found the disoriented man staring out a window on the twelfth floor, head in his hands. According to the report, he was crying.

  From the notes and the desk sergeant’s brief description, she can imagine what happened next: The patrol officers had the guy lie facedown on the floor. Distraught and unaccustomed to this sort of treatment, he didn’t get down at first and they were rough with him: a knee in his back, firm grasp of his wrist. He didn’t fight. The officers handcuffed him and determined two things—he didn’t have a weapon, and he was an EDP, Emotionally Disturbed Person. They shone a flashlight in his one good eye, and the pupil did what a good pupil does: shrink. So he wasn’t overdosing on drugs—more likely a mental patient skipping his meds. He had no identification and seemed unwilling or unable to give them his name. In response to questions, he simply shook his head.

  The patrol officers became progressively friendlier with the Loon, offering to take him back to his group home or his parents’ house or his drug treatment center or his pirate ship, to whatever institution he had escaped from. But to every question he responded by sitting quietly, as if he were not even in the same room.

  The patrol officers were more perturbed than anything. They could lock the Loon up for breaking and entering, but he had stolen nothing from the old hotel and hadn’t even cracked a window getting in. Assuming he had no warrants, they’d just as soon let him go back to raiding Dumpsters. One of the cops decided to level with him. Look here, Patch, he said, if you don’t tell us what’s going on, we’re gonna have to charge you with breaking and entering, or trespassing. Or mayhem.

  Murder, joked his partner.

  This caught the Loon’s attention. He made eye contact.

  What we’re trying to tell you is that you need to cooperate or you’re going to jail, the patrol officer said.

  Okay, said the Loon, his first word.

  The cop asked who the guy was and what meds he skipped, what he was doing in the hotel and if they could take him home.

  The Loon didn’t acknowledge the questions. Instead, he took a deep breath and said: I’d like to confess.

  The cop laughed. I don’t think that’s necessary, he said. We caught you in the building. You might be a foot or two past the confession point.

  But the Loon had latched onto the idea and wouldn’t let it go. Do I talk to you, or to a detective? To whom do I confess?

  The patrol cop made eye contact with his partner. To whom? This over-educated crazy pirate motherfucker was going to make them create paper. All he had to do was tell them where he lived and he’d be home free. They could do this easy, but he was just obstinate enough to make them create a bunch of unnecessary paper.

  Look, said the cop, I’m not sure what kind of detective you think is going to want to hear about you breaking into an empty building—

  The Loon interrupted the cop. Homicide, he said.

  2 | SHE LIKES SNOW

  She likes snow. At least that’s what Caroline has begun telling people who ask why she stays in Spokane instead of going west to Seattle or south to California. The very fact that people continue to ask why she stays in Spokane must mean something, although she doesn’t know exactly what. Foolishly or vainly, or both, she had imagined that the question implied she had so much on the ball—that she was so tall and attractive and ambitious—that Spokane was too small and slow a city for someone of her talents. For years she talked about going to law school or trying to get a job with the FBI, but the timing never seemed right; she got caught up in being a police officer, in the romantic idea of it, and briefly in the romantic idea of her old, married patrol sergeant.

  But now, at thirty-seven, the question of why she stays has taken on other meanings. Caroline has never married, and she feels the accelerated pace of female aging and worries that features that were once sharp have begun to look severe. She has noticed that older women have one of two kinds of necks: big, bullfrog jowls or tent poles under stretched skin. And while she still draws looks from men, she’s not sure whether that proves something good about her or something bad about men. And each morning she stands in front of the mirror to see which neck she is growing. She’s just finished her fifteenth and hardest year as a police officer, a year in which her mother passed away from cancer. Her two-year relationship with her bartender boyfriend died of less natural causes, and she found herself buried in a long and painful and personal case—the murders of several prostitutes. Now, the old question carries with it an unbearable weight—and an unspoken still: Why are you (still) in Spokane? Then, standing in line one morning at a coffee shop, she heard a couple of telemark skiers defend Spokane, and soon she was giving the answer she heard one of them give: I like the snow. And it says something about her life and her lack of friendships and meaningful relationships that no one has ever said, “But Caroline, you hate snow.”

  It’s snowing now, light flakes coming in at an angle and temperature of thirty-three degrees, hitting the ground and dissolving right away. Standing in line for a coffee, Caroline watches the windblown flakes and thinks of their precariousness, the conspiracy of temperature and airspeed that created them, and their frailty, making it all the way to earth only to disappear. She pays for her tea and a black coffee for the Loon and walks across the small courtyard to the empty Public Safety Building. She checks her watch: 9:00 P.M. The Loon has been stewing twenty minutes. Her old married mentor, Alan Dupree, used to say that bad guys are meat: the tougher they are, the longer you cook ’em. This guy is soft, loose at the bone. Twenty minutes ought to be plenty of time for the Loon to give up whatever he’s got to give.

  She opens the door and steps inside, removes her jacket and sets it on the chair behind her. The good-looking Loon looks up, reaches for his eye patch, and smooths it absentmindedly, the way a person might pat down a cowlick.

  Well, she thinks, here we go. “I’m Caroline Mabry,” she says. “Sergeant Burroughs said you want to talk to a detective.”

  Up close he is jittery, and his cheeks are hard and sunken beneath a week’s growth of whiskers. But he doesn’t stink like a derelict. His features are less sharp than she first thought, and he is more familiar. “Are you—?” he begins.

  “A detective?” Caroline nods. “I am.”

  “Good,” he says. “Okay. Right. Okay. Before we start, is it possible to…can we…is there any sort of off-the-record? I mean…can we set some ground rules?”

  “Sure.” Caroline smiles and lies with a practiced nonchalance that worries her. “We go off the record all the time.”

  “Okay.” He closes his eye and nods. “Well, then…I want to confess.”

  “That’s what I hear. And this has something to do with a homicide
?” She makes a wager with herself. Robert Kennedy. No, John Lennon. No, wait. He’s the Son of Sam.

  The Loon nods. “Yes,” he says. “A homicide.”

  “A recent case?”

  “I don’t want to talk specifically.”