and showing off his tight physique under the red Fila shirt.

A giggle, the bat of an eyelash, and he knew she'd agree to dance with him.

He could feel the big breasts, now, as they did the slow dance to an Enrico Macias ballad, the discotheque finally quiet after hours of rock. Nice soft mounds flattening against his chest. Twin pressure points, the hardness in his groin exerting a pressure of its own. She knew it was there and though she didn't press back, she didn't back away from it either, which was a good sign.

She ran her hand over his shoulder and he let his fingers explore lower, caressing her tailbone in time with the music. One fingertip dared going lower, probing the beginnings of her gluteal cleft.

'Naughty, naughty,' she said, but made no attempt to stop him.

His hand dipped lower again, moving automatically. Cupping one buttock, nice and rubbery, all of it fitting into his palm. He pinched lightly, went back to massaging her lower back in time with the music, humming in her ear and kissing her neck.

She raised her face, mouth half-open, kind of smiling. He brushed her lips with his, then moved in. There was a tangy taste to the kiss, as if she'd eaten spicy food and the heat had remained imbedded in her tongue. His breath, he knew, was bitter with alcohol. Three gin and tonics, more than he usually allowed himself. But working the murder case had made him nervous-all that reading, not knowing what he was doing, petrified of looking stupid-and now that it was over he needed the release. His first night back in Tel Aviv since the hassle with Asher Davidoff's blonde. It wouldn't be his last.

In the end it hadn't turned out bad. Sharavi had asked him to write up the final draft of the report, wanting him to be some damned secretary. The thought of all those words had made his knees go weak and he'd surprised himself by opening his mouth.

'I can't do it, Pakad.'

'Can't do what?'

'Anything. I'm going to quit the police force.' Blurted it out, just like that, though he hadn't come to a decision about it yet.

The little Yemenite had nodded as if he'd expected it. Stared at him with those gold-colored eyes and said, 'Because of the dyslexia?'

It had been his turn to stare then, nodding dumbly, in shock, as Sharavi kept talking.

'Mefakeah Shmeltzer told me you take an extraordinary amount of time to read things. Lose your place a lot and have to start over again. I called your high school and they told me about it.'

'I'm sorry,' Avi had said, feeling stupid the moment the words left his lips. He'd trained himself long ago not to apologize.

'Why?' asked Sharavi. 'Because you have an imperfection?'

'I'm just not suited for police work.'

Sharavi held up his left hand, showed him the scars, a real mess.

'I can't box with bad guys, Cohen, so I concentrate on using my brains.'

'That's different.'

Sharavi shrugged. 'I'm not going to try to talk you into it. It's your life. But you might think of giving yourself some more time. Now that I know about you, I could keep you away from paperwork. Concentrate on your strengths.' Smiling: 'If you have any.'

The Yemenite had taken him for a cup of coffee, asked him about his problem, gotten him to talk about it more than anyone ever had. A master interrogator, he realized later. Made you feel good about opening up.

'I know a little bit about dyslexia,' he had said, looking down at his bad hand. 'After '67, I spent two months in a rehabilitation center-Beit Levinstein, near Ra'nana-working on getting some function back in the hand. There were kids there with learning problems, a few adults too. I watched them struggle, learning special ways to read. It seemed like a very difficult process.'

'It's not that bad,' Avi replied, rejecting the pity. 'A lot of things are worse.'

'True,' said Sharavi. 'Stick around Major Crimes and you'll see plenty of them.'

The girl and he had been dancing and kissing for what seemed like hours but had to be only minutes because the Macias song had just ended.

'Anat,' he said, escorting her off the dance floor, away from the crowd, away from her loser buddies, to a dark corner of the discotheque.

'Yes?'

'How about going for a drive?' Taking her hand.

'I don't know,' she said, but coyly, clearly not meaning it. 'I have to work tomorrow.'

'Where do you live?'

'Bat Yam.'

Deep south. Figured.

'I'll drive you home then.' Her back was to the wall and Avi put his arm around her waist, leaned in and gave her another kiss, a short one. He felt her body go loose in his arms.

'Umm,' she said.

'Would you like another drink?' Smile, smile, smile.

'I'm not really thirsty.'

Вы читаете Kellerman, Jonathan
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