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Depoy, Phillip Too Easy ISBN 13: 9780440224952

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9780440224952: Too Easy
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Flap Tucker, who has a gift for visualization, has been hired by a beautiful nightclub owner to investigate the murder of a Georgia banker, but in a world of gnarled kinships, family secrets, and dirty money, Flap stumbles upon another murder. Original.

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Recensione:
Phillip DePoy has published short fiction, poetry, and criticism in Story, Southern Poetry Review, Xanadu, Yankee, and other magazines.  He is the author of Messages from Beyond, an essay and photo collection, and Easy, the debut novel in the Flap Tucker mystery series.  He lives outside Atlanta, where he is the artistic director of the Townsend Center for the Performing Arts at the State University of West Georgia.
Estratto. © Riproduzione autorizzata. Diritti riservati.:
1: Dinner and Drug Traffic

What do you say to your dinner date when there's a gunshot out the window on a hot summer night?

"'Scuse me, sugar.  How's your swordfish?"

You take a look out the window, down to the street.  There's a guy with his arm jammed inside somebody's open car door.  It's not the first time you've seen this ballet.  He's grabbing the steering wheel, shoving it hard toward the curb so the guy in the car can't drive away.  He's speaking very calmly for a man in his situation.

"You don't drive away without you give me my money, man--else I take my gun and shoot you and your little dog too."

The guy in the car sees the error of his ways.  The car sputters to a halt.  Money exchanges hands.  You go back to your dinner.  The world begins anew.

I don't have that many friends over--a lot of them don't like the neighborhood.  Dalliance is the exception--to almost anything.  Nobody in the world has a friend like she is to me.  We grew up together, starting out down in south Georgia.  On this particular evening, however, she found the disturbance in the street annoying.

"Why don't you move?"

"Where?"

"Some quieter place?"

I sat back down.  "I always liked the beach."

She took a bite of the swordfish.  I'd grilled it on the hibachi out the back window of the spare room.  My place is just off Ponce de León, a grand old Atlanta street that we've all agreed to mispronounce.  The building's only got four apartments in it.  From one end to the other I've got a glassed-in sunroom; a living room where most of the furniture is junk--kind of hobo hip.  I've got a fine stereo hidden away; a dining room with a fairly useless bay window--there's nothing to see but the drug traffic; a galley kitchen, although I don't think the apartment would float if it came to it; and two bedrooms.  I use one for sleeping, and sometimes the spare room is an office.  I have a profession: Flap Tucker, Lost and Found.  Plus, it's a great place to barbecue.

Dally took a sip of the wine.  It was the 1983 Château Simard--not as good as, say, an '86 Cantenac Brown, which is a wine I would personally pop my own mother for--but the Simard's a steal at twenty bucks a bottle.

She lifted her glass to me.  "Try Savannah."

I popped an asparagus in half.  "Hmm?"

"Savannah.  Tybee Island.  It's quiet."

"How am I going to afford a vacation?"

She polished off the wine and reared back in the chair.  "Well, what if it's more like a working vacation?"

I should have known.  "You got work for me."

She nodded.  "You got a dessert for me?"

"Raspberry Surprise."

"I'll bite.  What's the surprise?"

I stood up.  "I couldn't find any raspberries so we got no dessert.  Are you surprised?"

"You're not really much for the sweets, are you?"

I went for another bottle.  "I don't see the point."

She went into the living room.  "The point is, you get a little denouement.  A meal is like a story, pal."

I brought in the new bottle.  "I know your theories on the subject.  I'd rather talk about this job you think you have for me."

"Oh, I don't think I have it--and you're gonna really want to go when I tell you."

"You said that the last time ...  and I still haven't gotten paid, by the way."

She hoisted the bottle out of my hand and gave it a gander.  "You don't want for the finer things."  She didn't want me talking about the "last time."

I knew what she was doing.  She was just trying to get me up and out of the apartment.  I'd have to admit I'd been a little sluggish since our last business: a rude little whack name of Lenny--who got away.  I mean, we foiled his evil scheme to get rich selling off the sacred treasures of Tibet--but he got away.  I hate loose ends.  He killed people, I found him ...  and he still got away.  I guess I'd have to admit to feeling pretty bad on that particular score.

I settled in across from her.  I was in an overstuffed chair that used to belong to my grandmother, who helped to raise me--such as that raising was.  She was just about as odd as you'd want to be.  She used to get messages from the static between radio stations.  Sometimes the message was for her to buy six boxes of Bon Ami cleaner; sometimes the message was for her to take off her clothes and run down the center lane.  She also suffered from clinical depression.  The sad fact was she wasn't all that unusual in my family.  I had a cousin that they locked up and threw away the key, far as I knew.  What I'm saying is that I'm the sanest one in the bunch--which will give a person the idea of just how much trouble there is in that bunch.  My grandmother wasn't even the worst.  Still, it was a good chair, and I figured the nut juju was just about gone: she'd been passed away for fifteen years.

I zipped a glance at my dinner companion, then stared into my glass, beaded bubbles winking at the rim.  "What's the job?"

"The usual.  All you gotta do is find something nobody else can find."

I took a sip.  "'Oh, how feeble is man's power that, if good fortune fall, he cannot add another hour, nor a lost hour recall.'"

"Huh?"

"John Donne."

She blinked.  "Okay."

"When you're a layabout like me, you can invest a couple of hours now and again reading poetry ..."

"...  looking for lines the dollies'll go for."

"Dollies?"

"You heard me.  If you've got time for poetry, my guess is that it's makin' time for dollies."

I shook my head.  "You are one sad setback for the feminist movement."

"Bite me."

"Gladly, but first tell me about the job."

"First tell me about the poetry."

"Brother Donne is trying to tell you that people want the good times to stay--but they don't last.  And once they're gone, you can't bring 'em back.  I can't find a lost hour, and it's what most people want."

"Don't you get philosophical with me, mister.  And I thought Donne was a metaphysical poet, not a pessimist."

I had to smile.  She pretends not to know, but she knows.  "What's the job?"

"You're eager."

"I'm out of cash."

She set her glass down on the table between us.  "Two boys, twins, got in a little trouble in Tifton."

"You can't get into big trouble in Tifton."

"Be nice.  I think I like these boys.  Somebody else thinks they killed a banker down there, but they didn't.  It was his wife.  She's a siren."

I took a bigger sip.  "I thought they mostly operated on the rocks wrecking the big boats."

"The boys think she made a sound in his ear that cracked open his skull."

I nodded.  "Like a siren."

"Yeah."

"So who's nuttier, the boys or this ...  dolly?"

She smiled.  "Hard to say.  Do you want to hear more or not?  You want me to tell you the story?"

"Do I get to go to the beach?"

"The boys might be somewhere on Tybee Island."

"Then I want to hear more."  I leaned back in the chair.

Dalliance Oglethorpe--descendant of the founder of Georgia, and owner of Easy, my favorite nightclub in the city--is absolutely one for a story.  In fact, she will not give you two cents for a job unless a story goes with it.  She's incapable of saying, "Here's the job: Go find some twins."  She has to tell you a story with a beginning, a middle, and an end.  What am I going to do?  I love her, so I listen.
2: A Story

Dally's story went as follows:

There was once a banker who lived in Tifton.  He saw a spirit once out on the ocean, and he fell in love with her.  She was dressed in white, her hair was gold, and her face was pale and sad.  She sat in a golden boat.  Night after night he went down and paced the shores and begged her to come onto land and marry him, but she never answered.  Finally he called out to her with a promise that a lot of young men make:

"I'll never stop loving you and I'll always be kind."

At that the spirit vanished from the water.  There was a musical sound on the rocks, and the woman stepped ashore, followed by servants carrying bags of gold and jewels, her dowry--she was very rich.  They married, and were happy, until they went to the christening of a newborn, and the beautiful spirit began to cry.

Her husband was embarrassed.  "Stop.  Why are you crying? "

"The poor baby.  It's entering into a world of great sorrow and sadness.  When I think of all the suffering...

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  • EditoreDell Pub Co
  • Data di pubblicazione1998
  • ISBN 10 0440224950
  • ISBN 13 9780440224952
  • RilegaturaCopertina flessibile
  • Numero di pagine288
  • Valutazione libreria

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