Chapter 56
February 2, 1990 - Asbury Park, New Jersey
Marty knew Conrad would have put a lot of money on his head and so he left the area and went into hiding in Trenton. But he had also put money out on Gentner; he had given them a number to call - a switchboard answering service that he had hired. A friend of a friend reached out to Tony, told him Gentner had been known to keep a low profile at a rundown duplex in Asbury Park. He even had an address to go with it. Tony called the number and simply left a time and a number for Marty to call. When Marty called him back Tony passed on what he had about Asbury Park. Marty used Western Union to wire $5000 to Tony to share with his informant as he wished.
*****
Marty drove slowly into a biting wind coming in off the ocean, carefully counting house numbers. Conrad had lived on this street. It was a street lined with squat, redbrick apartments and two-family duplexes; it was far enough from the beach to have been in another town. Dirty children played on the sidewalk, and all the cars he saw were at least ten years old. Gentner's place was above a garage in a rear yard, at the end of a dirt driveway.
He parked his Grand Am on the street, walked back. He'd worn a leather jacket, but could already feel the cold penetrating any openings it could find. As he passed the front of the house, he caught movement from the corner of his eye. He turned to see a boy of about six watching him from behind a curtained window. Other than having his thumb in his mouth, the boy was expressionless.
The backyard was overgrown, strew with broken toys. A swing set sagged in one corner of the yard. He went up the white wooden steps to the apartment, knocked, and listened. He shaded his eyes and looked through a window, but the blinds were tightly closed. He knocked again. There was no sound from inside.
"Mr. Kenney ain't there, if that's who you're looking for."
He turned. A woman stood at the rear of the main house, holding open the screen door, the boy from the window at her side. Behind her, a dog that was at least half German Sheppard was trying to squeeze past her leg. She pushed it back.
He went down the stairs slowly, watching the dog. The woman stamped her foot, drove the dog back, then stepped outside with the boy and shut the screen door behind her. The boy glanced at Marty, then ran past him and clambered up the ladder of the swing set. Marty shivered. The boy wore only a T-shirt, jeans and sneakers. Inside the dog began to bark. It leaped against the screen door, shaking its frame.
"It's okay," the woman said. "He can't get out. He's just not used to strangers."
She was in her early twenties, a little over five feet tall, with light brown hair cut short, pale blue eyes. She wore jeans and a man's blue chambray work shirt with the sleeves rolled up. She folded her arms over her breasts and watched him.
"I'm sorry to bother you," he said. "My name's Marty Piatkowski, people call me Marty or Ski, and I'm a friend of Conrad Kenney's."
"You looking for him?" Her voice held the rhythms of Appalachia. Child bride transplanted to the Jersey shore.
"Do you know where he is?"
"He's not here. At least not now, I don't know where he went either."
"You own this property?"
"Why?"
She was watching him closely, suspicious, but maybe intrigued.
She met his gaze without looking away, and for the first time he saw the toughness there. This was a woman who would hit back if she had to, and would make it count.
"His sister asked me to look in on him," he said. "She lives up in Maine. She hasn't heard from him in a few weeks. He missed her birthday. He always calls her. She called him, got no answer and called me, asked if I'd stop by. We grew up together, the three of us. I haven't seen him in maybe eight years, but . . . well, you know."
"You live around here?"
"Naw, Patterson."
"You rich?"
He smiled at her, said, "No, not by a long shot."
"Live in Patterson, you must have some money."
"It's an old house. My parents left it to me."
"Paulie, get back inside. It's too cold out to be playing in a shirt," she said, and in the next breath asked, "What's Conrad's sister's name?"
"Martha," Marty knew that much about Conrad.
"And you two are friends?"
"I haven't seen Martha in twenty years, but yes, we're friends."
She scratched an elbow, looked past him at the garage, as if she were considering everything he'd said, trying to figure out if he were lying.
He waited while she held the door open for Paulie to scoot inside.
"Well, like I said, he's not here. And he hasn't been for quite a while. He may have moved out, for all I know."
"Why do you say that?"
"It's been at least a month since I saw him. The mail's been piling up. I've been taking it in. People, you know . . . they see you're away, they'll break in, rob you blind. It's bad around here. It's not like home."
"Where's that?"
"West Virginia."
"That's beautiful country."
"Yeah, but nowhere to spend the rest of you're life."
He smiled at that, liking her more now, sensing the intelligence beneath the pose.
"So, how long have you been here?"
She unfolded her arms; put her hands in her back pockets.
"About three years, now. But we've only been in this place" -- she nodded back at the house -- "for about nine months."
"You know Conrad well?"
"He was living here when we moved in. I know him to say hello to and all that but it's not like we socialized."
"Is your husband home?"
She brought her left hand around so he could see there was no ring.
"So you don't own the property?"
"No, I rent. We all rent around here."
The dog had stopped barking and was watching him intently through the screen door. He could hear a television on somewhere inside.
"Miss . . ."
"Johnson."
"Miss Johnson, do you mind if I take a look in the garage?"
"Go ahead. It's unlocked. There are some things of ours in there, but it's mostly Conrad's stuff."
She looked back at the house.
"If there's something you need to do . . ." he said.
"It's the baby. I put her to bed just before you got here. I don't like to leave her alone for this long without looking in on her."
"Go on," he said. "Don't worry, I won't take anything."
She gave that a small smile, started back to the house. He watched her hips as she walked, knew she was aware of his eyes on her. He felt himself stir, and remembered except for the bicycle girl, it had been eight years.