contacted a realtor today. We’re putting our place on the market. I can’t take this anymore.”

“If that’s the case, why did you call me?”

“Because I-I…” She was unable to say the words aloud. All she could do was wave her hands helplessly in the air.

“What does your husband say about this?” Des asked gently.

“Richard still doesn’t know about it,” she confessed.

“And is that loaded gun still in his nightstand drawer?”

“Yes,” Felicity said faintly. “What I thought I’d tell him was

… I thought that I’d like to live closer to work. Mystic or Stonington.”

“I wish you wouldn’t do this, Mrs. Beddoe. You can’t let fear rule your life.”

“But I’m not comfortable here anymore,” Felicity said, shooting a nervous glance over Des’s shoulder at Jay Welmers’s house. “You can understand that, can’t you?”

“I totally can. But if you leave, he wins.”

“Let him,” she snapped. “I’ll still have my husband in one piece.”

“You need to stay. If you leave, it means that I’ve failed, and I don’t handle failure well.”

Felicity Beddoe said nothing in response. Just stood there wringing her hands, utterly distraught.

“Look, why don’t you give me another chance before you pack up the moving van? Just one more chance, okay?”

“If you’d like,” Felicity allowed, her voice lacking conviction. “Go ahead.”

Des followed the sound of the chain saw. She found Jay Welmers out in front of his garage in the driveway, cutting the sycamore up into logs and loading them into a garden cart. The big, flabby financial planner-make that onetime financial planner-was not used to such demanding physical exertion. His red face was flushed a dangerous shade of purple, and he was positively drenched with sweat. His bulging gut stuck wetly to the front of his pink polo shirt, and his shirttail had worked itself loose from his tartan slacks, revealing a whole lot of fat white booty crack when he bent over. Most unappealing. His rottweiler, Dino, was chained to the post of the front porch just as before, barking at Des madly. The boys were nowhere to be seen.

“Good afternoon, Mr. Welmers,” she said, tipping her hat at him politely.

“It’s my tree,” he declared without so much as looking at her. “It’s on my side of the property line. I can do what I please.”

“I thought you wanted to be neighborly.”

“I do,” he grunted, heaving a heavy log into the cart.

“That being the case, it seems to me you could have mentioned something about this to Mrs. Beddoe before you did it.”

Jay paused to swipe at his purple face with a sopping-wet hankerchief. “She won’t speak to me. Hangs up as soon as she hears my voice. You call that neighborly? You call that fitting in? Besides, what business is it of hers if I want to prune one of my trees?”

“She thinks you did it so that you can see through Phoebe’s bedroom window.”

“She’s crazy!” Jay erupted. “Why would I do that? I’d have to be some kind of a pervert!”

Des took off her hat and twirled it in her fingers for a moment. “Are you?”

Jay went back to loading the cart with logs. “You’ve got a lot of nerve asking me that.”

“Okay, then I’ll ask you something else: Why don’t you pull this stuff when her husband’s around?”

“How would I know when he is or isn’t around?”

“You look through their windows, that’s how.”

“You know, I don’t think this is fair at all,” he protested angrily. “From the second you came over here you’ve made up your mind that I’m in the wrong. You don’t care what I have to say.”

Young Ricky came out the front door of the house now, dribbling a basketball. His black eye had faded to a sickly shade of yellow. “Hey, trooper,” he called to her, waving.

“How’s it going, Ricky?” she called back.

“Where do you think you’re going?” Jay demanded as the boy started down the driveway.

“Nowhere,” Ricky replied, sticking out his pugnacious, bully-boy chin. Clearly, it was a defensive pose that came from dealing with his father. “Just over to Trevor’s.”

“Well, don’t you stay there for dinner,” Jay ordered, jabbing at the air with his finger. “She’s always feeding you, and I don’t like it. Understand?”

Ricky said he did, and kept on going down the driveway. Jay grabbed up his chain saw and headed into his vast three-car garage with it. Des followed him. There was one car parked in there, a Ford Explorer. A tractor mower sat in the space next to it, alongside the boys’ bicycles. The rest of the garage was used for storing trash barrels and tools and empty beer cans. Lots and lots of beer cans. As Jay hung the chain saw up on a hook on the wall, Des hit the button that lowered the automatic garage doors behind them.

“What do you think you’re doing?” he demanded.

“Giving you some free advice,” Des replied pleasantly, as the doors slammed tightly shut. The overhead light stayed on. Otherwise, they would have been standing in the dark. “For your own good-I think you should let this thing go. You’re heading down a slippery slope.”

“So are you, honey,” he warned her, his eyes flicking over to the closed doors.

“I’m telling you straight up, Mr. Welmers. No good is going to come out of this.”

“And I’m telling you-mind your own damned business.”

“Sir, this is my business. You’re driving good people out of Dorset.”

“That’s not my problem,” he said with a shrug. “I have my rights.”

“So do other people,” Des countered. “Your son Ricky, for instance.”

“What about Ricky?”

“Where did he get that black eye, Mr. Welmers?”

“He gets in fights. I told you.”

“I know you did. I just didn’t happen to believe you.”

“That’s your problem, not mine.”

“Okay, I’m schooled to you now,” Des said, nodding her head at him. “In your choice little corner of the world, it’s never your problem. You do whatever you feel like doing, and if somebody else objects, that’s their problem. You’re not going to cut Mrs. Beddoe any slack, are you? No matter how I put it to you, you just won’t let her up. Does that about cover it?”

Jay raised his chin at her, his nostrils flaring. “Not totally, no. I’d be a lot happier with a resident trooper who isn’t looking to stir up trouble. Maybe you don’t fit in here yourself, young lady. Have you thought of that?”

“Not really,” Des said, raising an eyebrow at him. “But I sure am standing here wishing you’d elaborate on it.”

“Okay, now you’re getting all touchy,” he said, with a faint smirk on his face. “Right away, you think this is about race.”

“Don’t kid me, Mr. Welmers. I’ve been black all my life. And it’s always about race.” She moved in closer to him. “You think I’d be more at home in the projects, is that it?”

“I didn’t say that.”

“I wish you would,” she said, shoving him in the chest with her hand.

“Hey, you can’t lay hands on me that way!”

Des shoved him again, rougher this time. “What’s the matter, don’t you like colored folks touching you?”

“Cut that out, lady!”

“Say it, Mr. Welmers.” She shoved him again, right up against the garage wall. Her face was only inches from his now. “Say what you really mean. Or aren’t you man enough?”

“I’m man enough to tell you to leave people like us alone!” he roared back at her.

“People… like… us.” Des smiled at him, her huge wraparound smile, the one that could light up Giants Stadium. “Thank you so much for that, Mr. Welmers. That was just lovely.” Now she removed her hat, placing it carefully on the hood of the Explorer, whirled and punched Jay Welmers in the nose-a strong right that came all the way up from her hip. She could feel the cartilage crunch under her fist. He let out a strangled, high-pitched sob as the blood began to spurt out of his nostrils, but he stayed on his feet. Until she punched him in the stomach, putting her full weight behind it. Now he fell to his knees and threw up, instantly filling the garage with the smell of his

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