brown to disguise all the knotholes and splinters.
It was not quite seven, and none of the habitual sports enthusiasts were in evidence. Most nights, especially in the summer months, the place is filled with noisy teams of bowlers and softball players in company uniforms. In winter, theyâre forced to improvise. Just this week a group of revelers had invented a game called Toss the Jockstrap, and a hapless example of this support garment was now snagged on the spike of a dusty marlin above the bar. Rosie, who is otherwise quite bossy and humorless, seemed to find this amusing and left it where it was. Apparently her impending nuptials had lowered her IQ several critical points. She was currently perched up on a bar stool, scanning the local papers while she smoked a cigarette. A small color television set was blaring at one end of the bar, but neither of us was paying much attention to the broadcast. Rosieâs beloved William, Henryâs older brother, had flown to Michigan with him. Rosie and William were getting married in a month, though the date seemed to drift.
The telephone rang from its place on the near end of the bar. Rosie glanced over at it with annoyance, and at first I thought she wouldnât answer it at all. She took her timeabout it, refolding the paper before she set it aside. She finally answered on the sixth ring, and after sheâd exchanged a few brief remarks with the caller, her gaze jumped to mine. She held the receiver in my direction and then clunked it down on the bar top, probably devastating someoneâs ear drum.
I pushed my dinner plate aside and eased out of the booth, careful that I didnât snag a splinter in the back of my thigh. One day Iâm going to rent a belt sander and give all the wooden seats a thorough scouring. Iâm tired of worrying about the possibility of impaling myself on spears of cheap plywood. Rosie had moved to the far end of the bar, where she turned down the volume on the TV set. I crossed to the bar and picked up the receiver. âHello?â
âHey, Kinsey. Cheney Phillips. How are you?â
âHowâd you know where I was?â
âI talked to Jonah Robb, and he told me you used to hang out at Rosieâs. I tried your home number and your machine picked up, so I figured you might be having dinner.â
âGood detective work,â I said. I didnât even want to ask what had made him think to discuss me with Jonah Robb, who was working the Missing Persons detail at the Santa Teresa Police Department when Iâd met him three years before. Iâd had a brief affair with him during one of his wifeâs periodic episodes of spousal abandonment. Jonah and his wife, Camilla, had been together since seventh grade. She left him at intervals, but he always took her back again. It was love junior high school style, which became very tedious for those on the periphery. I hadnât known what the game was, and I didnât understand the role Iâd been tagged to play. Once I got the message, Iâd opted out of the situation, but it left me feeling bad. Whenyouâre single, you sometimes make those mistakes. Still, itâs disconcerting to think your name is being bandied about. I didnât like the idea that I was the subject of conversation in the local police locker room.
âWhat are you up to?â I said to Cheney.
âNothing much. Iâll be going down to lower State Street later tonight, looking for a guy with some information I want. I thought you might like to ride along. An old girlfriend of Lornaâs tends to hustle her butt in the same neighborhood. If we spot her, I can introduce you . . . if youâre interested, of course.â
My heart sank as visions of an early bedtime evaporated. âIt sounds great. I appreciate the offer. How do you want to work it? Shall I meet you down there?â
âYou can if you like, but itâs probably better if I
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