The Jigsaw Man - By Gord Rollo
T H E JIGSAW
M A N
G O R D R O L L O
L E I S U R E B O O K S
1 =
N E W Y O R K C I T Y
This novel is dedicated to my father, James Rollo, who gave
me my love for reading and helped inspire my first steps to—
ward becoming a writer. While this book might not exactly be
his cup of tea, I think he'll get a kick out of it....
No book is ever truly written alone, so I'd be remiss if I didn't
acknowledge some of the people who have helped make this
happen: Gene O'Neill, MichaelLaimo, J. E Gonzalez, Da
vid Nordhaus, Brian Keene, Jimmy ZJohnston Shane Stal-
ey, and Don D 'Auria I also want to give a shout-out to my
brothers Tony, Brian, and Stuart, and a special thank-you to
my wife Debbie for putting up with me.
P R O L O G U E
The Reason
Drummond Brothers Rock and Bowl,
North Tonawanda, New York
Hell of a place, Drummond's, an old-fashioned, family-run
bowling alley suffering from an identity crisis of late. The
comfy wooden tables and chairs have been replaced with ugly
black plastic stools with shiny chrome legs; the soft overhead
fluorescent lighting with purple and red retina-destroying
spotlights; the soothing background music with bass-heavy,
blow-out-your-eardrums heavy alternative rock. People used
to come here with family and friends to bowl, have some good
clean fun, and the best damn cola floats in Western New
York. Now the rowdy young crowds come to get drunk, fight,
shot put the bowling balls at their buddy's head, and scream
out obscenities and pickup lines over the horrendously loud
musk.
If old Mr. Drummond were still around to see what his
sons had done to the family business, he'd have burned the
place to the ground, his good-for-nothing prodigies still
trapped inside. Still, the Rock and Bowl, with all its gaudi-
ness and utter contempt for its humbler beginnings, was
making money hand over fist—even the old man couldn't
have argued with that.
Thursday night. A big crowd.
Two guys sitting at the end of the bar, a bit older than the
usual early twenties crowd, three more friends standing at
their backs cheering wildly as the seated pair raise their frosty
mugs to their lips and start chugging.
The phone rings on the wall behind the bar, twice, three
times, hard to hear over the pulsing hypnotic beat of Rob
Zombies " L i v i n g D e a d G i r l " blaring on the overhead speak
ers. Finally, the overweight bartender waddles over, answers
it, cupping his free band around the earpiece to hear what the
caller wants. His face drains ofcolor as he slowly turns to look
at one of the beer drinkers.
He lays the phone down on the back counter, approaches
the group offve men joking and arguing over who won the
chug contest, and leans over the bar to interrupt them.
"It's the police," he tells the thin drunk sitting on the right.
"Lookinforyou. You'd better come take this"
The man looks worried but is still trying to play it cool in
front of his friends. He rises to his feet, almost trips over the
chair, and stumbles and weaves his way toward the far end of
the bar where it's open and he can walk around to grab the
phone. Fear has him by the short hairs but he isn't sure why.
For a moment, vertigo hits hard and the noisy room starts to
spin. He grabs the counter to steady himself, closing bis eyes
tightly until the nauseous sensation passes. Then, the phone—
"Hello?"
MichaelFox?"A cold voice. Irish accent.
"Ub-bub. Who's this?"
The inebriated man listens quietly for several minutes,
swaying on his feet, threatening to go down at any minute.
He remains upright, it's the phone that drops to the floor,
already forgotten as the man screams and runs for the exit.
Outside, ifs raining hard. He's bad far too much to drink
tonight to be sprinting but that doesn't stop him from trying,
the police officer's words still haunting him, urging him on—
ward.
"I'm sorry, Mr. Fox, but there's been an accident. ... "
PART ONE
T H E B R I D G E
C H A P T E R O N E
Asleep in the gutter, middle of the afternoon, the con
crete curb not a very comfortable pillow. I don't actu
ally remember waking up, but I know I lay there for
several minutes in the grip of the dragon, shaking like I
had Parkinson's, waiting for the pain in my bones to go
away before even trying to open my eyes. W h e n I did,
it was a mistake, the sunlight burning into my head,
setting my drug-saturated brain on fire. My skull felt
like it was going to crack wide open. Part of me