cook, watch TV, start a load of laundry, or use the john without moving more than eight or ten feet.
I returned to the couch with my wine and the bowl of hot popcorn, propped my feet on the coffee table, and watched the remainder of the movie. At 11:00, when the news came on, I left the apartment and followed the same circuitous route through the alley until I reached the shadowy street where Iâd hovered before. Beckâs Mercedes was still visible, parked at the curb. The rear window was fogged over with condensation as pale as gauze. Instead of Beck in silhouette, I saw Rebaâs legs. Her head was apparently down near the steering wheel, one foot propped on the dashboard, the other on the passenger-side door, thus providing her leverage while Beck labored in the confines of the leather-bound front seat. I went back to my place, and when I checked again at midnight, the car was gone.
8
The gates to the Lafferty estate were open, and when I cruised up the drive, I saw Reba waiting on the porch step, the cat at her feet. She had a brush in her hand and she groomed the cat while he strutted back and forth, arching his back against the bristles. When she caught sight of me, she kissed him and set the brush aside. She crossed to the front door, opened the screen, and leaned in to tell her father or the housekeeper she was on her way out. I couldnât help but smile as she bounded down the walk. She was happy, in high spirits, and I remember thinking, Thatâs what sex will do for you, kid. She wore desert boots, jeans, and a nubby dark blue sweater with a large cowl neck. She looked as giddy as a young girl. Her father had said she was difficultâârecklessâ was his wordâbut Iâd seen no hint of it in my dealings with her. She possessed a natural exuberance and it was hard to picture her drunk or stoned. She opened the car door and slid onto the passenger seat, smiling and out of breath.
âWhatâs the catâs name?â
âRags. Heâs a love. Seventeen years old and he weighs in at eighteen pounds. The vet wants him on a diet, but pooh on that.â She put her head back. âYou donât know how good it feels to be out. Like coming back from the dead.â
I pulled away from the house, shifting gears as I headed down the drive and through the gates. âDid you sleep well?â
âI did. Talk about a treat. Prison mattresses are about this thick, like lawn-chair pads, and all the sheets are gross. The pillow was so flat I had to roll it up and wad it under my head like a towel. Iâd get in bed at night and my body heat would activate this strange smell in the bedding.â She wrinkled her nose.
âWhat about the food?â
âNot too bad. Iâd say the food ranged from passable to gross. What saved us was they let us have these electric coils in our cells. You know the ones you use to heat up a single cup of tea? We figured out all kinds of things to make with oursâTop Ramen, soups, stewed tomatoes in a can. I never even liked stewed tomatoes until I got down there. Some days, the cells stank; scorched coffee or bean sludge crusted on the bottom of the pan. Most of the time I disconnected and blocked everything out. I created this invisible force field that I kept between me and the rest of the world. Otherwise, Iâdâve gone bonkers.â
âDid you have friends?â
âA couple and that helped. My best friend was Misty Raine, with an e on the end. Sheâs a stripperâbig surprise with a name like thatâbut sheâs an absolute hoot. Before California, she lived in Vegas, but after she was released and got off parole, she moved to Reno. She says the action there is better than Vegas. Sheâs been good about keeping in touch. God, I miss her.â
âWhat was she in for?â
âShe had a boyfriend who taught her how to lift credit cards and forge checksââhanging paperâ as
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