All the Flowers Are Dying Read Online Free Page A

All the Flowers Are Dying
Book: All the Flowers Are Dying Read Online Free
Author: Lawrence Block
Tags: Fiction, General, Mystery & Detective, Private Investigators, Hard-Boiled, New York (N.Y.), Scudder; Matt (Fictitious character)
Pages:
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bed. End of story?”
    “She says it’s not just sex.”
    “They watch
Jeopardy
together?”
    “If they do,” she said, “I bet he knows all the answers.”
    “Everybody knows the answers.”
    “Smartass. The questions, then. He knows all the questions. Because he’s superintelligent.”
    “It’s a shame we’ll never get to meet him,” I said. “He sounds like a whole lot of fun.”
     
3
     
    The Greensville Correctional Center is located just outside of Jarratt, Virginia, an hour’s drive south of Richmond. He pulls up to the gate-house, rolls down his window, shows the guard his driver’s license and the letter from the warden. His car, a white Ford Crown Victoria with a moonroof, is immaculate; he spent the previous night in Richmond, and before he left this morning he ran it through a car wash. This car’s a rental, and it hadn’t gotten all that dirty in a few hundred miles of highway travel, but he likes a clean car, always has. Keep your car washed, your hair combed, and your shoes shined, he likes to say, because you never get a second chance to make a first impression.
    He parks where the guard indicates, no more than thirty yards from the main entrance, over which the facade is filled with the institution’s name
:
GREENSVILLE / CORRECTIONAL / CENTER
.
The name’s scarcely necessary, the structure could hardly be anything else, squat and rectilinear and hinting at confinement and punishment
.
    There’s a briefcase on the seat beside him, but he’s already decided not to take it inside, to avoid the nuisance of having to open it time and time again. He opens it now, takes out a small spiral-bound notebook. He doubts he’ll need to take notes, but it’s a useful prop.
    Before leaving the car he checks himself again in the rearview mirror. Adjusts the knot of his silver tie, smoothes his mustache. Tries on a few expressions, settling on a rueful half-smile.
    He locks the car. Hardly necessary, as the likelihood of someone breaking into a car in a prison parking lot in the very shadow of the guards’ tower strikes him as infinitesimal. But he always locks the car upon leaving it. If you always lock it, you’ll never leave it unlocked. If you’re always early, you’ll never be late.
    He likes catchphrases like that. Pronounced with the right degree of certainty, even of solemnity, they can make a remarkable impression on others. Repeated over time, their effect can verge on the hypnotic.
    He strides across the tarmac toward the entrance, a trimly built man wearing a gray suit, a crisp white shirt, an unpatterned silver tie. His black cap-toe shoes are freshly shined, and the rueful half-smile is in place upon his thin lips.
     
     
    The warden, one John Humphries, is also wearing a gray suit, but there the resemblance ends. Humphries is the taller by several inches and heavier by fifty or sixty pounds. He carries the weight well and has the look of an ex–college athlete who never lost the habit of gym workouts. His handshake is firm, his authority unmistakable.
    “Dr. Bodinson,” he says.
    “Warden.”
    “Well, Applewhite’s agreed to see you.”
    “I’m glad of that.”
    “For my part, I wish I had a better sense of your interest in him.”
    He nods, grooms his mustache with his thumb and forefinger. “I’m a psychologist,” he says.
    “So I understand. Yale doctorate, undergraduate work at UVA. I was at Charlottesville myself, though that would have been before your time.”
    Humphries is fifty-three, ten years his senior. He knows the man’s age, just as he knew he’d graduated from the University of Virginia at Charlottesville. The Internet’s wonderful, it can tell you almost anything you need to know, and this particular bit of knowledge is responsible for his having included UVA on his own résumé.
    “Yale tends to impress people,” he says, “but if I ever amount to anything in this world, the credit should go to the education I got here in Virginia.”
    “Is that
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