"You ought to go out there and start counting red cars," Arnie said coldly.
"You bet," Junkins said. "But we sent our samples to the FBI lab in
color."
"Give that man a Kewpie doll," Junkins said. He lit a cigarette and looked at
Arnie through the smoke. He had abandoned any pretence of good humor; his
gaze was stony.
Arnie clapped his hands to his head in an exaggerated gesture of
exasperation. "Autumn Red, great. Christine's a custom job but there were
Fords from 1959 to 1963 painted Autumn Red, and Thunderbirds, and
Chevrolet offered that shade from 1962 to 1964, and for a while in the mid-
fifties you could get a Rambler painted Autumn Red. I've been working on
my '58 for half a year now, I get the car books; you can't do work on an old
car without the books, or you're screwed before you start. Autumn Red was a
popular choice. I know it"—he looked at Junkins fixedly—"and you know it,
too. Don't you?"
Junkins said nothing; he only went on looking at Arnie in that fixed, stony,
unsettling way. Arnie had never seen looked at in that way by anyone in his
life, but he recognized the gaze, He supposed anyone would. It was a took of
strong, frank suspicion. It scared him. A few months ago—even a few weeks
ago—that was probably all it would have done. But now it made him furious
as well.
"You re really reaching. Just what the hell have you got against me anyway,
Mr Junkins? Why are you on my ass?" Junkins laughed and walked around in
a large half-circle. The place was entirely empty except for the two of them
out here and Will in his office, finishing his hoagie and licking olive oil off
his hands and still watching them closely.
"What have I got against you?" He said. "How does first-degree murder
sound to you, Arnie? Does that grab you with any force?"
Arnie grew very still.
"Don't worry," Junkins said, still walking. "No big tough cop scene. No
menacing threats about going downtown—except in this case downtown
would be Harrisburg. No Miranda card. Everything is still fine for our hero,
Arnold Cunningham."
"I don't understand any of what you're—"
"You… understand… PLENTY!"
Junkins roared at him. He had stopped next
to a giant yellow hulk of a truck—another of Johnny Pomberton's dumpsters-
in-the-making. He stared at Arnie. "Three of the kids who beat on your car
are dead. Autumn Red paint samples were taken at both crime scenes,
leading us to believe that the vehicle the perpetrator used in both cases was
at least in part Autumn Red. And gee whiz! It just turns out that the car those
kids trashed is mostly Autumn Red. And you stand there and push your
glasses up on your nose and tell me you don't understand what I'm talking
about."
"I was in Philadelphia when it happened," Arnie said quietly. "Don't you get
that? Don't you get that at all?"
"Kiddo," Junkins said flipping his cigarette away, "that's the worst part of it.
That's the part that really stinks."
"I wish you'd get out of here or put me under arrest or something. Because I'm
supposed to punch in and do some work."
"For now," Junkins said, "talk is all I've got. The first time—when Welch got
killed—you were supposed to be home in bed."
"Pretty thin, I know," Arnie said. "Believe me, if I'd known this shit was
going to come down on my head, I would have hired a sick friend to sit up
with me."
"Oh, no—that was
good,"
Junkins said. "Your mother and father had no cause
to doubt your tale. I could tell that from speaking to them. And alibis—the
true ones—usually have more holes than a Salvation Army suit. It's when
they start to look like suits of armor that I get nervous."
"Holy Jumping
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