“Uh, Marc? Yeah. Marc came over today. He brought Conan to see Dexter. They, uh, they went, uh, outside together.”
“Something the matter?”
“No. Why?”
“I don’t know, you just don’t seem… too sure of yourself all of a sudden.”
“I-I’m sure of myself. Whatta you mean?” Kendra frowned a little.
“Well, don’t get upset.”
Kendra relaxed a little. Her frown receded. “I’m relaxed, I’m not upset.”
Anna smiled. It was that crush again. Kendra got ruffled every time Marc came up in the conversation.
Suddenly she flashed on the photograph of Kendra smiling with Steven Regent’s cock in her mouth. She took a deep breath.
“Kendra,” she said hesitantly.
“What?”
“We… we need to talk.”
“About what?” Kendra said.
Anna put her elbows on the table and joined her hands under her chin.
“Mommy? You don’t look so good all of a sudden.”
Anna didn’t feel so good.
“Excuse me,” she said as she left the table. She went into the bathroom, closed the door, got down on her knees at the toilet, and vomited.
Reznick sat up straight in the recliner with a sharp cry, his fingers digging into the vinyl upholstery of the armrests, his body drenched in sweat. His T-shirt clung to him and his shorts were so wet, they felt soiled.
He lifted his hands, palms up, and inspected them. They were not wearing blood-soaked work gloves.
It took him several seconds to realize that he’d been sleeping and having a nightmare.
He reached for the glass of vodka on the lamp table, but it was empty except for a little water left over in the bottom from melted ice cubes.
Reznick straightened up the recliner and stood, went to the kitchen for more vodka. But the bottle stood on the counter, empty. He narrowed his eyes as he looked at the bottle, trying to remember finishing it off. He could not.
He put the empty glass on the counter, grabbed his keys and wallet off the table, and left the trailer. He got in his car and drove down to the Handi-Spot market again, where he took a bottle off the shelf. Then he grabbed a second bottle. He thought about it a moment. He put both bottles back on the shelf and instead chose a liter of vodka.
He’d lost that feeling he’d had earlier, that wonderful buoyant feeling, that mind-numbing sensation that liquor bestowed. He wanted it back.
Reznick paid for his purchase and left the store.
A banner advertising Coca-Cola was stretched overhead in the parking lot and it snapped and fluttered in the scorching wind. The wind engulfed him like the fiery breath of a dragon. He got in the car and drove back to the trailer park, his mouth watering for another drink.
Sherry and Lissa shared a joint at the bar. Sherry already felt good, having just had Lissa give her a fix from her kit. She was trying to stretch them out, though. She didn’t
“You heard the news, didn’t you?” Sherry said. “The news about Arnie Garvis?”
“No, what news?”
Sherry told her what she’d heard on the radio that morning.
Lissa’s eyes widened a little. “No shit? Then David was right. They really
“Yep. And now I’m scared shitless. Andy says I’m just paranoid, but I don’t think so.”
“About what? I don’t know what you mean.”
“About them coming back for
“Oh, yeah. But… well… if they were gonna kill us, don’t you think they would’ve done it that night? When they came to get Arnie? That makes more sense to me.”
“Yeah,” Andy said as he came into the kitchen. “Now
Andy went to the refrigerator and got a beer, popped it open, and drank.
“Well, I can’t help it,” Sherry said. “It worries me.”
“I’m gonna get started with this,” Andy said.
“Okay, Lissa, you ready to go?” She stood and turned to him. “We’re goin’ to the movies. We’ll be back in a couple hours.”
“I won’t be done by then.”
“Yeah, I know, but that’s when we’ll be back.”
“Okay.”
The wind whistled around the corners of the trailer like some kind of howling beast. The trailer shuddered against it.
“You don’t mind if we take your car, do you?” Sherry said. “You got air conditioning, I don’t.”
Lissa said, “No, I don’t mind. I’d prefer it.”
Sherry went to Andy and gave him a warm kiss. “See you later. You be careful with that shit, okay?”
“Hey, I’m always careful,” he said. “I can’t make any money off that shit if I’m dead.”
The girls got their purses, left the trailer, and went out into the suffocatingly hot, windy evening.
Josh Garner punched in Steven Regent’s cell phone number for the twentieth time that day. Once again, he received Regent’s recorded voice, asking him to leave a message.
Garner severed the connection and looked at his watch. He could not understand where Steven might have gone all day long.
He punched in the number of Steven’s trailer. He got the answering machine.
“Jeez, Steven, where the hell are you?” he said. “I’ve been calling your cell phone all day. I’ve got this woman coming over, this MILF – she’s incredible, Steven, you’ve got to see her. I met her in the bakery at WinCo, of all places. She’s a knock-out, and she’s open to anything. I was hoping to get you over here, but she’s gonna show up any minute now, and you’re nowhere to be found. Look, just give me a call when you get in, okay? And it doesn’t matter how late it is. By now, I’m worried. Even if it’s late and you wake me up, go ahead and call. Just let me know you’re okay. Talk to you later.”
He turned the phone off and put it on its base on the kitchen counter, frowning. He’d never known Steven to simply disappear for a day. He was completely devoted to his work and would never just drop it and vanish for a while.
Garner was worried. He could not shake the feeling that something was wrong.