face?â
âLook?â said Bernie.
I didnât get it either. It was just Bernieâs normal face, the best face in the world.
âLike maybe you think Iâm delusional,â Sherry said. âIf Iâm delusional, how do you explain this?â She held out her hand. A huge ring glittered and sparkled on one of her fingers. âRic gave it to me Saturday night.â
âSo youâre engaged?â Bernie said.
âEngaged? What would an engagement ring be doing on this finger?â She stuck up her middle finger, possibly to give Bernie a better view. âWeâre talking four flawless carats here, Bernie.â
âVery pretty.â
âThatâs an understatement.â She took a sip of coffee, the ring clinking in a pleasant way on the cup, then glanced across the street. âThat your car? The old, beat-up Porsche?â
âI wouldnât really say beat up,â Bernie replied.
âRicâs got the biggest collection of Porsches in the state,â said Sherry.
âHow many can he drive at once?â Bernie said.
âI donât get it.â
I was with her on that. âDoesnât matter,â Bernie said. âWhat makes you think heâs cheating?â
âThis,â said Sherry, fishing through her purse and handing Bernie a little slip of paper.
âA credit card receipt?â
âFrom the Wagon Wheel Motel in Ocotillo Springs. It fell out of his pocket when he was taking care of the check.â
âAt the restaurant?â
âYes.â
âSaturday night?â
âI thought that was clear.â
âA . . . complicated evening,â Bernie said.
âIâm not paying you to tell me that,â Sherry said. âIâm paying you to find out what he was doing at that goddamn motel.â
âWeâll need a picture of him,â Bernie said.
She turned her phone so we could see. A smiling, fleshy-faced dude appeared on the screen. He had one of those mustache-and-chin-beard combos, not a look I find appealing, hard to say why.
âWant me to email it so you can print it out?â Sherry said.
âIâll remember,â said Bernie.
Money changed hands, and in the right direction.
⢠⢠â¢
âWorldwide Recycling Solutions,â Bernie said. âLooks more like a junkyard.â
We were out in Mesa Negra, not the nicest part of the Valley, with junkyards out the yingyang. This one looked like the best of them to me, bigger than the others, rows and stacks of crushed and twisted metal going on and on, all enclosed by a high fence topped with razor wire. Could I leap it if I had to? Even though leaping is my very best thing, I wondered about that.
We sat in the Porsche, yes, a real old one, which is how we roll when it comes to Porsches, but in no way beat up, except for the dents you could hardly see. This was called sitting on a place, one of our best techniques at the Little Detective Agency. Another is grabbing perps by the pant leg, usually my job, except for that one time when Bernie . . . Iâd rather not think about it. But I was still thinking about it and nothing but when a dude in oil-stained denims appeared in the junkyard. He opened the gate, and a big, bright yellow SUV came rolling through, the fleshy-faced, mustache-and-beard-combo guy at the wheel.
âNot a wallflower,â Bernie said. A bit of a puzzler, until I noticed a flower or two, dusty and droopy, growing out of pavement cracks by the Worldwide Recycling Solutions gate. They werenât growing on a wall. Bernie, right as usual. And I was in the picture! We were off to a good start, whatever this was about. Cheating boyfriends? I donât think we have that in the nation within the nation, which is what Bernie calls me and my kind. For some reason, my mind wandered back to a night when Iâd caught the faint sound of she-barking from across the canyon behind
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