“What does Ms. Patterson drive?”

“A new black BMW,” Savannah said. “Her housekeeper has an old brown Ford. It was the first and last time Mrs.

Kercher saw that yellow car. Too bad she didn’t see who drove it.

“I think it was Laredo’s car. You can’t park on the street in Brideport. Before the police showed up, Hank Asporth moved Laredo’s car to the driveway next door. Nice old Hank takes in his neighbor’s mail. He knew the saleslady wouldn’t be back that night.”

“Do you really think he’d have time to move a car and clean up any sign of a struggle before the police came?”

“That’s the hitch. It doesn’t seem likely, does it?” Savannah said. “Do you think he had help?”

“If he did, the police didn’t mention another person.

Wouldn’t Hank have produced him as a witness? You know, ‘Officer, George and I were watching the movie all afternoon.’ Did Mrs. Kercher say she saw another car in Hank’s driveway?”

“No. I asked her. The only car she remembers was the yellow Honda in the drive next door. But what was Laredo’s car doing there?”

“Maybe your sister parked it over there so Hank wouldn’t see her coming,” Helen said.

“Why would she do that?”

Savannah had created more questions and found no answers. “I’m going to scrub floors at Ms. Patterson’s and see if I can find out anything more.”

“I’ll call Steve and see if I can get that charity bartender’s gig,” Helen said.

“At least we’re making money while we’re detecting.”

Savannah dumped her soda can in the trash. “Back to work.”

Helen called Steve from a pay phone. He wasn’t there.

“Call back after eleven tonight,” a woman said. She slammed down the phone.

Helen’s life seemed to be nothing but phone abuse, personally and professionally. In the boiler room, she hadn’t made a sale all morning. She longed for the quiet of survey duty. But Vito had put his foot down: “No sales, no surveys.”

Tonight, she was working the boiler room.

The jittery Nick was not sitting next to her. He did not show up for work. Helen wondered how much longer he would last. Shellie, a bouncy blond cheerleader type, took his seat. Helen found her more irritating than the junkie.

Shellie oozed enthusiasm, squealing with delight when she said, “Yes, sir, Tank Titan is guaranteed to help reduce large chunks, odors and wet spots.”

Helen felt a mean, secret satisfaction when she heard Shellie say, “Ewww. That’s disgusting.” She dropped the phone like it was covered with slime.

“What did he want?” Helen said.

“A blow job. Vito’s got to take that line about wet spots out of the sales pitch.”

Helen was taking her own lumps. A Texas woman screamed, “It’s eight fifteen at night. We’re getting ready to settle into bed. We’re tired. We don’t appreciate calls this late.”

They packed it in early, deep in the heart of Texas.

Bill, the next caller, was rested and ready. Helen was halfway through her spiel when he said, “You have a good product there, Helen, but I have a better one. Have you ever thought of exploring the Amway opportunity? I could sponsor you. I’m an IBO—independent business owner, and—”

“Uh, thanks, Bill. I gotta go. My doorbell’s ringing, Helen said. The words came automatically. It was what she always said to telemarketers, back when she had a phone.

Helen didn’t think the night would ever end. But it finally did. At ten twenty, she was sitting out by the Coronado pool with Peggy and Margery. The lights on the turquoise water were as romantic as ever. The palm trees whispered night secrets. But Helen did not enjoy her evenings there anymore.

Fred and Ethel, the new tenants in 2C, infested her enchanted place. Even the most harmless conversation triggered one of their diatribes.

Tonight, they were smugly swigging root beer. Helen, Margery and Peggy were drinking cheap white wine. Pete was sitting on Peggy’s shoulder with his head under his wing. He couldn’t stand Fred and Ethel, either.

Conversation was a struggle. There were long, uncomfortable silences. Peggy broke one by saying, “I think the starter’s going on my car. I’m going to need a new one.”

“That’s what you get for driving a foreign car,” Fred said.

“You pay for that foreign prestige. Nothing beats American-made. That’s what I always say.”

Helen didn’t see much prestige in Peggy’s green Kia, but she couldn’t say that without hurting Peggy’s feelings.

“American-made isn’t what it used to be,” Ethel said. Her eyes were small and hard as BBs. “You ask me, it’s the American workers. They want too much money for too little work.”

No one asked her. The conversation lay there like a dead fish.

Margery, who usually had an opinion on everything, puffed quietly on her Marlboro. Peggy said nothing. Even Pete stayed silent.

Helen studied Ethel’s tightly permed hair. How did you get a style like that, she wondered? Did you go into a beauty shop and say, “I want to look like a complete frump?”

“Our son, Fred Jr., is coming for a visit,” Ethel said. “He’s single. He’s a good Christian man, Helen. Doesn’t smoke or drink and fears the Lord.”

“Uh, thanks, but I’m dating someone.”

“What’s his name?” Ethel said. It was a demand and a challenge.

“Phil,” Helen said. “Lives nearby. You must have seen him.”

Peggy choked on her wine. “I think I’ll turn in.” Pete woke up and screeched his approval.

“We’re tuckered out, too,” Fred said. “Think we’ll head inside.” He patted his gourd-like gut as if it were a baby. Ethel followed respectfully behind him.

When Helen heard their apartment door slam she said, “How can you stand them?”

“It doesn’t hurt to spend some time with normal people, Margery said.

“Normal does not have to mean boring,” Helen said.

She left her landlady sitting alone in the darkness. It was soothing to walk through Phil’s perpetual pot fog to her own apartment. She breathed in the sharp, oily sensimilla smell.

Phil was too laid-back to criticize his neighbors. He was too invisible to bother them. Fred and Ethel could take a leaf from his book. A spiky green leaf.

Thumbs, her six-toed cat, greeted her at the door. Helen scratched his gray ears until he purred. Then she found some change. It was getting harder to find a pay phone. They all seemed to be occupied by kids making drug deals or Canadians too cheap to use their hotel phones.

It was eleven thirty when she finally called Steve. He answered on the first ring.

“I hear you’re looking for servers for charity parties, Helen said.

“Where’d you find out about us?” His voice was abrupt and demanding. Helen wondered if it was his New York accent, or if the guy was just rude.

“Tammy at Gator Bill’s gave me your card,” she said.

“Tammy has a good eye for talent,” Steve said, sounding friendlier.

How could Tammy spot a talent for bartending by watching Helen drink club soda?

“Ever tend bar before?” Steve said.

“Yes,” Helen lied.

“It’s not hard. We’ll put you on a portable bar outside by the pool. It will be just your wine, beer, liquor and your soft drinks. Your blender drinks and specialty martinis will be at the main bar. You won’t have to do those.”

Helen relaxed. Even she could open a beer.

“You’ll be working with your movers and shakers. We got your doctors, your lawyers, your school board members, people like that. They live in your better areas, like Brideport. They bankroll your worthy causes. Saturday night, it’s the Langley School in Lauderdale.”

Вы читаете Dying to Call You
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×