- •I took the case. Somebody had to do it and I’m too poor to keep my hands clean.
- •Chapter 2
- •I also let that pass. Danny has an exaggerated opinion of my decadence.
- •I started to put my sweater back on.
- •I didn’t wait long, fortunately, because money does not guarantee taste, as this sitting room proved.
- •I decided the walk would do me good. Besides, I didn’t think I had the exact change for a bus or the patience for Quarter parking.
- •I handed her my private investigator’s license. She looked at it for a minute.
- •It was too much. I had to burst out laughing. I was remembering why he had left me. It was back in sixth grade. This only caused Barbara to look more concerned. Maybe I had gone crazy.
- •I didn’t see her again until after lunch. We ran into each other in the bathroom.
- •I handed him over. He let out a breathy mew at being moved, but he didn’t seem to mind too much. Cordelia pulled her jacket around him. He was a little marmalade cat with big green eyes.
- •I shrugged to show that it wasn’t important. I turned back down the way we came.
- •It was Danny.
- •It was Monday morning again. But this was the last Monday morning that I would have to deal with bright and early, at least for a while.
- •I walked out of the door and into one of the guards.
- •I dialed Sergeant Ranson’s number. Some bored clerk answered.
- •I tripped instead, doing what I hoped they wouldn’t notice was a shoulder roll. I used my landing as an excuse to make some noise.
- •I was sitting there feeling very dirty, not to mention sorry for myself, when Danny Clayton walked by. Without recognizing me, I might add.
- •I told them my story with only a slight interruption for dinner. It took me over two hours, between my fatigue and Ranson’s questions.
- •I started to protest, but was interrupted by the phone. Danny picked it up, then handed it to me. It was Ranson.
- •Visiting hours wouldn’t start for a while, so my first destination was Sergeant Ranson’s office to see if she had arrested Milo and cohorts yet.
- •I had to say something or I’d start sniffling.
- •I started laughing. It wasn’t that funny, but it was too absurd for my present state of mind.
- •I shuddered. It wasn’t a pleasant thought.
- •I looked up. Miss Clavish was standing there, in her prim navy blue dress, wearing white gloves and holding a large shotgun. That was the thunderclap—she had fired over our heads and into the wall.
- •I started to protest, to say that as long as Barbara Selby was in this hospital, I wasn’t dropping out, but Ranson waved me silent.
- •I slowly sat up, then slid off the examining table and assumed a standing position.
- •I picked up my canvas bag, found the keys that Ms. (it had to be Ms., not Miss, after that shotgun trick) Clavish had removed from my door. I locked up and we left.
- •I finished in the bathroom in time to hear the tail end of her last message. It was a male voice saying he’d see her real soon and that he loved her and so on.
- •I stuck my head in.
- •I went back into the living room and put on the Brandenburg Concertos to lend a cultured air to this affair. Danny nodded approval at my choice.
- •I knew that by “in time” she meant Barbara more than she meant me. I was glad that Barbara hadn’t been forgotten.
- •I picked up the heavy platter and carried it out to the table.
- •I heard my answering machine being played back.
- •I made introductions. Torbin explained his plans for the next few days. Good food, great movies, and perhaps a few lessons on makeup. I didn’t ask whether he meant Frankie or me.
- •I got in, leaving my door open, and turned the ignition. The engine hummed smoothly, all the usual clanking sounds gone.
- •I quickly put the tools away. Ben was staring at the unchanging marsh when I came back.
- •I spotted Ranson.
- •I noticed a patch of yellow under one of the rags. I picked it up. A half-empty tube of horse liniment. Equus Ben-Gay. No, I couldn’t do that. Not even to Karen Holloway.
- •I saw Frankie at the far edge of the light. He was standing by himself, waiting, it seemed.
- •I nodded. She opened the door. The hallway was empty.
- •I kissed her on the mouth. Then I put my arms around her and held her. She returned the embrace and the kiss for a moment, then she broke off.
- •It wasn’t a disaster, it was delicious. Fortunately, neither Ranson nor I had bet on it being inedible.
- •I looked at her like she was crazy.
- •I was close enough to see Cordelia’s face. The barrel of Ben’s gun was pressed against her neck. Her eyes were a blazing blue against the stark paleness of her skin.
- •I remembered Alma, small, pale blond, and eight months pregnant. David, their son, pale like his mother, was three.
- •I refused to bow my head. I had nothing to pray for.
- •I jerked. Other hunters with other guns aiming at other people.
- •I nodded, knowing I was asking too much.
- •I nodded. “Eight months.”
- •I puzzled for a minute.
- •I was hungry. All I’d had to eat so far today were the crawfish on the pier.
- •I put my hand on her arm to stop her.
- •I shrugged.
- •I led the way and lit some candles and a hurricane lantern to light the kitchen. I started the wood stove. It was chilly in here.
- •I turned back to her, but she stood there, no words coming forth.
- •I washed my face, but I still looked like shit.
- •I shook my head. Ranson had to be right, it couldn’t mean anything.
- •I pretended to think for a minute.
- •I shrugged. I didn’t want Cordelia to be hit, but I couldn’t write Danny’s death warrant to save her. The thug lifted his hand again.
- •I stood beside her, next to the door, not wanting to let her go. I started to give her directions.
- •Voices carried from the lawn. I stopped, afraid that, if I could hear them, they could hear me.
- •I’m still alive. Oh, shit, how am I going to pay for this, was my last thought.
- •I was. Even the goulash that Barbara was eating looked appetizing. The nurse did the usual nurse things to me, then went off to see about getting me some food.
I got in, leaving my door open, and turned the ignition. The engine hummed smoothly, all the usual clanking sounds gone.
“It’s great, Ben. Sounds better than it ever did. Thanks.” I turned off the ignition and got out. He flashed me a grin and gave his thumbs-up sign. A memory of the younger man in bright sunshine, flashing that same smile and same gesture to a novice crab catcher caught me by surprise. “You didn’t fail,” I said. “You had it taken from you. You loved Alma and you loved David and you were the best friend a tomboy growing up could ever have had. You didn’t fail. Don’t ever say that.”
“Thanks, Mick,” he said, then turned to look over the unchanging marsh. “It weren’t your Dad’s fault. I didn’t know to tell you or not what really happened. Not your Dad’s doin’. There was someone else on the road that night. His fault.” His voice broke. “That son-of-a-bitch. That son-of-a-bitch drunken driver. Why did he leave me behind?”
“I don’t know, Ben,” I tried to answer.
“Maybe I shouldn’t of told you.”
“It’s okay. I knew.”
“Ol’ Jones Johnson tell you?” he asked.
“Who?” Then I started to remember Jones. The town drunk with whiskey breath and old clothes that always scared away kids like me. “I remember him.”
“He found the wreck and called the cops. He told me ’bout the other driver there. Jonesy saw him lyin’ on the road ’fore they took him away. A tragic mistake, they said. Four people die and other people alive but with no lives left and it was jus’ a tragic mistake. The other driver was from a rich family. Money buys a lot of things, don’t it? Murder turns into a mistake.”
“I’m sorry.” Holloway money. Cordelia’s father. I could again hear Thoreau’s words from the dinner party. The cracks were widening on my shaky ground.
“That son-of-a-bitch didn’t go to jail. I did. I didn’t have no reason to go home, no wife and kids there, so I stayed out, drinkin’, and angry. A fight here and there. It didn’t matter. Nothin’ mattered.”
“Ben, I’m sorry,” I repeated still aware of how hollow and inadequate the words sounded. I stepped toward Ben and put a hand on his shoulder, unsure of how to comfort a man who had always before comforted me.
He glanced at me, quickly wiping his eyes again. “At night, lots of time, I lie awake,” he said. “Thinkin’ how it might be. Alma and me with four or five kids. David in high school, maybe college. Sometimes he’s a football star. Sometimes the real smart one, glasses and good at science. Robert, or Paula if she was a girl, our next kid, oh, all sorts of things. I was so proud of them kids.” He paused, clumsily brushing at his eyes. “Them kids that ain’t here. You must think ol’ Ben’s crazy, dreamin’ like that.” He glanced at me, quickly wiping his eyes again.
“No, I don’t,” I replied. “I sometimes wonder…wonder what it would be like if Dad were still here. If he were here for me to visit, not just this…shipyard.”
“Oh, Jesus,” he sobbed. “They should all of ’em be here.” He covered his face with his hands to hide the tears he didn’t think he should shed.
“Go ahead and cry, Ben. It’s all we can do now,” I told him. Tentatively, I put my hand on his other shoulder and held him in an awkward embrace. I was too aware of the barriers between us to completely reach out to him. How can a promiscuous lesbian hold a Catholic family man? If he really knew me, knew who I had become, he would hate me, I found myself thinking. No, he wouldn’t. Ben is better than that, I countered. But the uncertainty lingered, stiffening my embrace of him, scaring me away.
Ben rested his head on my shoulder, harsh sobs racking his body.
I felt a tremendous emptiness, not only for those who weren’t here, but for the distance between Ben and me. We were inexorably linked by memory and tragedy, but it was an intersection we had both traveled beyond; I wondered if any road could ever take us back.
Ben returned my hug, as shy and stiff as I was. We stood, no longer a young man and a child, but as an uncertain woman with an older man, trying to connect. Then his hand moved, not much, really just a change in pressure. Meaning shifted. His arms tightened about me. I tensed.
Ben broke away, probably as startled and embarrassed as I was. He hastily wiped his eyes, then shoved his hands in his pockets, and walked a few yards away from me. There was a deep, heavy awkwardness in the air, secrets best buried floating about.
“Yeah, I really admired your dad,” Ben said to remind us both who I was. “Honest as the day was long. And a real hard worker. Yeah, he was a good man.”
“It’s okay,” I said, getting over the shock. Desire doesn’t fit into a neat compartment. It looms unexpected and messy and had caught me unaware and unprepared at times. Now Ben. That was all, I told myself. But it wasn’t the simple act of desire that had taken us so aback. That Ben could think of wanting me, however fleetingly, meant that I had grown from a girl into a woman, irrevocably beyond innocence. Who were we now? And could those people connect or would we be left with only the tag ends of recollection?
“I’m not really offended,” I added, though still unsure of my feelings.
He looked at me, discomfited with my mentioning what had happened. “Certain things a man and a woman ought not to talk about,” he finally replied, retreating into the man talking to his partner’s child. “Like I said, I got a lot of admiration for your dad and I won’t do nothin’ that would upset him.”
“It’s okay,” I repeated, “we’re all adults here,” a line my father used at times.
He kept his hands resolutely in his pockets. “I may not be real good at keepin’ out of fights in bars, but I ain’t gonna start pawin’ Lee Robedeaux’s daughter. God can take me right now before I do that.”
“I know. I trust you, Ben,” I said.
“Maybe you shouldn’t,” he answered, walking still farther away. “You’re a nice girl. There’s certain kind of low-life you better stay away from.”
I could accept that statement and we would both walk away from each other. But maybe if I could break this barrier, the others wouldn’t be so hard. Let’s talk about who we are now, I thought. If we can do that, perhaps we can talk about death and black nights of the past. Maybe I could finally have a friend from there meet me here in my present.
“You’re not low-life. Besides, I’m almost thirty. Don’t think of me as some blushing little sixteen-year-old.” Not that I ever blushed at sixteen.
“Don’t tell me nothin’ that’d make your dad shamed of you,” he broke in, trying to cling to the past.
“I’m not a virgin,” I stated.
“Don’t tell me that,” he said angrily, slamming down the barrier. “You wouldn’t tell your dad that.”
“Yes, I would,” I countered, angry at being rejected and confined by what he wanted to believe about me.
“That’s nothin’ he’d want to hear. You not married. You’d break his heart. Just like…” He stopped, confused and hurt, seeing more of his world crumbling.
“Just like my mother. And you’re wrong. Dad would understand. He’d want to. He wouldn’t have married her if he couldn’t.”
“You don’t know your dad like I do, young lady. You just shamed him. Is that what you want?”
We stood glaring at each other, the grown-up child and the grown old man.
“Let’s not…” I said, not wanting this battle, with no winners.
“I don’t know. I just don’t know no more,” Ben mumbled, shaking his head sadly.
“The world changes, doesn’t it? Too quickly for both of us,” I answered, trying to get back to the small common ground we had.
“Yeah, I guess, I guess so. I’m sorry if I got out of hand. Ol’ Ben’s been out of touch for a while and, yeah, I guess things’ve changed. You got a right to live your life, Mick. Don’t need Ben’s approval.”
“No,” I replied. “But I would like your friendship. Is that possible?”
I extended my hand. He turned and looked at me, then took a few hesitant steps in my direction. He reached out and took my hand. We shook hands solemnly, like the time we had shaken hands when I was eight and Ben had agreed to give me a secret ride into town so I could get a birthday present for my dad.
“’Course we can be friends. I’d never turn my back on Lee’s daughter.”
“And I would never turn my back on Dad’s partner and best friend.”
We had run into a wall, a barricade, that I could see no way past. But in some small space we could be friends, some small, confined part of the past.
“You can stay out here, if you like,” I said as we let go of each other’s hand. “No electricity, but there’s still running water. Key’s still hidden…”
“In that ol’ hollow stump. Some things never change,” he finished for me. “Thanks, Mick. I might take you up on it. I got me some work at Bob’s Catfish Shack. Doin’ odd jobs and stuff. Get my meals there. I need to be headin’ that way now.”
“Let me give you a lift,” I said.
“Naw, it’s okay.”
“Got to try out the engine and make sure it’s really fixed,” I kidded.
“Well, now, that’s true,” he agreed with a grin.
