Way Down on the High Lonely

Way Down on the High Lonely by Don Winslow Page A

Book: Way Down on the High Lonely by Don Winslow Read Free Book Online
Authors: Don Winslow
Tags: Fiction, General, Thrillers
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indignantly.
    Neal took Wallace by the shoulders and spoke softly into his ear. “He’s not here, is he, Paul? I am, and the guys outside are, and you are. Now, I’m losing my patience with you.”
    “He said he had friends who would find me and …” Wallace said in a hoarse whisper. He started to cry again.
    “But we found you, Paul,” Neal said just as quietly. “And we’ll put that hood back over your head, and put you down on your knees, and it will be blackness for ever and ever.”
    “It was about a month ago, that part was true.”
    “Good …”
    “At the Filly Ranch.”
    “Where’s that?”
    “Just off Highway 50, between Sparks and Fallon.”
    Neal let him go and walked toward the door. He took two hundred-dollar bills—expense money—out of his wallet and let them drop to the floor.
    “Sorry for all the trouble, Paul. Now, do you believe we could find you again if we wanted to?”
    “Yessir.”
    “Is there anyplace you can go now, out of state?”
    “I have a sister in Arizona.”
    “Go there. First thing in the morning.”
    “Yessir.”
    “Don’t even think about trying to warn Harley.”
    “To hell with him.”
    Not yet, Paul. Not until I find him.
    Neal left the cabin, walked as fast as he could to the old Nova, and headed for the Filly Ranch.
    It being the middle of the morning, the neon sign over the purple prefabricated building was turned off, but Neal could make out the design: a caricature cowboy with a lascivious smile and his tongue hanging out of his mouth about to “mount” a buxom lady with long hair, long legs, and a bit between her teeth.
    Four trailers were parked around the place, some junker cars sat on blocks, a big butane tank shone silver in the sun behind the low, flat building. Neal Carey had never been on a ranch, but this sure as hell didn’t look like one, not even one he had seen in the movies.
    He followed the path marked with white-painted stones up to the front door and rang the bell.
    A short woman with curly red hair answered the door. She was wearing a high-collared western shirt, a studded denim jacket, and jeans. She had a matching turquoise necklace and bracelet on, pointy lizard cowboy boots, and the smile of a professional greeter.
    “Hi,” she said. “I’m Bobby. What’s your name?”
    “Is this the Filly Ranch?” Neal asked her.
    She caught the tone of puzzlement in his voice.
    “What were you expecting, honey? Horses?”
    “Sort of.”
    She gave him an all-men-are-stupid-but-some-more-than-others look and said, “Listen carefully: horse, whores, horses. A female horse is a filly. We have female whores here. Get it?”
    “I think so.”
    “Well, do you want it?”
    “How much?”
    “Another romantic. Fifty dollars a ride. You want them to do tricks, it’s extra. We got a menu inside. Also air-conditioning. Also showers, which I would highly recommend to you.”
    “I’ve been on the road awhile,” he explained.
    “Ain’t we all.”
    He followed her into a room called the corral and sat down on the orange vinyl cushion of a cheap, low sofa. The room was dark, low ceilinged, and close. A small bar ran across one side. Two nickel slot machines were shoved against the opposite wall. Various posters of horses were glued to the plaster. Lava lamps bubbled on glass coffee tables alongside an assortment of porn magazines. A potbellied cowboy with long black hair, a black hat, and sunglasses sat in a chair with his feet on a stool and a revolver in his lap. Neal made him for the bouncer.
    “I’ll call the roundup,” Bobby said. She pushed a button on an intercom by the door.
    “The what?” asked Neal.
    “The roundup,” she repeated, sounding every bit as bored as she was, “is when we bring all the fillies into the corral so you can pick one out.”
    Neal tried a hunch. “Do you have a girl named Doreen?”
    “If you want one. I mean, honey, they’ll answer to any name you like, except that they do get a little spooked at

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