she put tiny pebbles inside the valve stems on his tires, then screwed the caps back on, while she bled on her $50 silk blouse. Then she watched him drive away, hoping that the tires wouldnât go flat until he got on the freeway.
It was a pots ân pans divorce, and she sent him a check for his half of all they owned. As far as Nell knew, her ex was still living in Miami, where heâd gone to work for an uncle at a Cadillac dealership. After sheâd taken back her maiden name and joined the San Diego P.D., heâd called her late one night to suggest that they consider reconciliation, asking if she missed him.
Nell said she missed him like a yeast infection, and that she no longer got misty remembering their high school homecoming dance, and that if he ever crossed her path again she was going to show him a few tricks sheâd learned at the police academy, like ripping out his fucking eyeballs and feeding them to the cat.
As it turned out, breaking her nose was the only good thing he ever did for her. As she matured physically during her eleven years as a San Diego copâafter sheâd got into jogging and regular workoutsâher face narrowed and her cheeks hollowed, giving her a more refined look. And with that refinement a slightly bent nose was sexy indeed. In those days other female cops told her that if they could get a nose like that theyâd date Norman Mailer. In more recent years they changed it to Mike Tyson.
Nell regularly jogged along the Embarcadero in those days, loving the spangled sunlight that ricocheted off the bay and caressed her bare legs. No headset for Nell; she liked to hear the groans of sailboats straining at their moorings, and the zing of halyards against metal masts. Jogging along the Embarcadero was an utterly sensual experience.
Later in her S.D.P.D. career when sheâd worked as a detective, Nell began to dress better. In winter she liked cable turtle-necks, and double-pleated trousers worn with blazers or tweed jackets. A loyal Nordstromâs customer since the chain opened in the San Diego area, she wore slim-girl things off duty: stirrup trousers and walking shorts.
Nell promised herself that she was always going to dress well and live well, and that no son of a bitch was ever going to punch her in the face again, not without wearing handcuffs and getting some big-time payback before she got him to jail. And for sure heâd be wearing the cuffs with his palms outward , because once Nell had the misfortune to arrest a Plastic Man clone whom she cuffed palms inward for his comfort. While she was outside her patrol car completing her report, heâd managed to jackknife his body and pull his cuffed hands around his legs and feet. Then he drove off, crashing ten minutes later during a high-speed pursuit by the Highway Patrol. Her most humiliating day. After that, Nell Salter wasnât the kind to worry a whole lot about a male prisonerâs comfort.
Other events began to change her in subtle ways, as inevitably happens to young people in law enforcement. One of these changes resulted from a phone call by a parole board representative who wanted her opinion concerning the impending release of a man sheâd arrested for battering his family. The man had not only broken his wifeâs nose, but had cracked four of her ribs. During his rampage heâd also managed to fracture the skull of his eight-year-old daughter and puncture the childâs spleen.
He had not served even half of his sentence, but it turned out that his kidney disease was causing the state to have to pay for dialysis treatments, and what with the budget crunch, the parole board thought about springing him. Despite premonitions, Detective Nell Salter had allowed herself to be persuaded not to oppose the release. She was told how, like everyone from Manson murderers to Watergate conspirators, heâd found Jesus perched on his bunk in that little prison cell.
What really
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