Trumps of Doom

Read Online Trumps of Doom by Roger Zelazny - Free Book Online Page B

Book: Trumps of Doom by Roger Zelazny Read Free Book Online
Authors: Roger Zelazny
Ads: Link
to think about it some more...
    Ghostwheel? I mulled it over, dismissed it, thought about it again.   Ghostwheel .   .   .   No.   Untried.   Still developing.   The only reason it had occurred to me at all was because it was my pet, my major accomplishment in life, my surprise for the others.
    I was just looking for an easy way out.   I would need a lot more data to submit, which meant I had to go after it, of course.
    Ghostwheel .   .   .
    Right now I needed more information.   I had the cards and the diary.   I didn’t want to fool with the Trumps any more at this point, since the first one had seemed something of a trap.   I would go through the diary soon, though my initial impression had been that it was too subjective to be of much help.   I ought to go back to Melman’s for a final look around, though, in case there was anything I had missed.   Then I ought to look up Luke and see whether he could tell me anything more-even some small remark-that might be of value.   Yes .   .   .
    I sighed and stretched.   I watched the river a little longer and finished my tea.   I ran Frakir over a fistful of money and selected sufficient transformed coinage to pay for my meal.   Then I returned to the road.   Time to run on back.
     

CHAPTER 5
    I came jogging up the street in the light of late afternoon and halted when I was abreast of my car.   I’d almost failed to recognize it.   It was covered with dust, ashes, and water stains.   How long had I been away, anyhow? I hadn’t tried to reckon the time differential between here and where I’d been, but my car looked as if it had been standing exposed for over a month.   It seemed intact, though.   It had not been vandalized and . . .
    My gaze had drifted past the hood and on ahead.   The building that had housed the Brutus Storage Company and the late Victor Melman no longer stood.   A burnt-out, collapsed skeleton of the place occupied the comer, parts of two walls standing.   I headed toward it.
    Walking about it, I studied what was left.   The charred remains of the place were cold and settled.   Gray streaks and sooty fairy circles indicated that water had been pumped into it had since evaporated.   The ashy smell was not particularly strong.
    Had I started it, with that fire in the bathtub? I wandered.   I didn’t think so.   Mine had been a small enough blaze, and well confined, with no indication of its spreading while I was waiting.
    A boy on a green bicycle pedaled past while I was studying tie ruin.   Several minutes later he returned and halted about ten feet from me.   He looked to be about ten years old.
    “I saw it,” he announced.   “I saw it burn.”
    “When was that?” I asked him.
    “Three days ago.”
    “’They know how it started?”
    “Something in the storage place, something flam-”
    “Flammable?”
    “Yeah,” he said through a gap-toothed smile.   “Maybe on purpose. Something about insurance.”
    “Really?”
    “Uh-huh.   My dad said maybe business was bad.”
    “It’s been known to happen,” I said.   “Was anybody hurt in the fire?”
    “They thought maybe the artist who lived upstairs got burned up because nobody could find him.   But they didn’t see any bones or anything like that. It was a good fire.   Burned a long time.”
    “Was it nighttime or daytime?”
    “Nighttime.   I watched from over there.” He pointed to a place across the street and back in the direction from which I had come.   “They put a lot of water on it.”
    “Did you see anyone come out of the building?”
    “No,” he said.   “I got here after it was burning pretty good.”
    I nodded and turned back toward my car.
    “You’d think bullets would explode in all that fire, wouldn’t you?” he said.
    “Yes,” I answered.
    “But they didn’t.” I turned back.
    “What do you mean?” I asked.
    He was already digging in a pocket.
    “Me and some of my friends were playing around in there

Similar Books

Smoke and Mirrors

Marie Treanor

The Insiders

Rosemary Rogers

Can't Buy Me Love

Elizabeth Powers

The One Percenters

John W. Podgursky