The Bellagio fountains were dancing as I sat at a light. Every time I pass them I think about
Somebody’s got to do it.
I pulled into the driveway at the house I share with Tim in Henderson, the headlights illuminating the banana yuccas by the front door. I’ve been here two years now, having moved from Jersey when Tim broke up with Shawna, his almost-fiancee, and needed a roommate. I needed an escape from a relationship gone bad, and I’d been getting too comfortable in my job at the Ink Spot. It was time to move on and run my own shop. I’d also still been living with my parents, who’d announced out of the blue that they were selling the house and moving to Florida. Personally, I think it was their way of saying, “You’re thirty years old, and you can’t live with us anymore,” although I would’ve been happier if they’d just come out and said that rather than plan to move fifteen hundred miles away to a town that rolled up its sidewalks at six p.m. and had a grocery store with its parking lot divided into sections named after the states. My parents always parked in New Jersey. It was easy to remember.
I knew I wouldn’t live with Tim forever, but it was a nice place to hang my hat for a while.
It was dark inside. I parked in the garage next to Tim’s Jeep and let myself in quietly, so I wouldn’t wake him. I pulled off my jeans and black blouse, which might survive a washing, might not, and put on a pair of cotton pajama bottoms and an oversized T-shirt. The bedside lamp let off a golden glow, casting shadows on the paintings on the walls. I’d indulged myself with works by college friends, splashes of color in oil and acrylic. My own work was in my parents’ house in Port St. Lucie, Florida.
My mother still hadn’t gotten over my being a tattooist. She told all her new friends in the retirement community that her daughter was an artist but neglected to tell them what kind.
Sister Mary Eucharista would give her a pass. I had a harder time forgiving her for not accepting who I was.
Tim said I should get over it. But who was he to talk? He’d followed in Dad’s footsteps and had always been the favorite.
I shut the light off, as if it would shut out my thoughts, too.
It worked after a little while, and I fell into a deep sleep.
Tim was scrambling eggs when I emerged the next morning, rubbing sleep from my eyes. He grinned and took another plate down from the cupboard.
“Hey there, night owl.”
I groaned and slid onto one of the kitchen chairs. My bag was still slung over the back.
“So how was the show?”
“Fine,” I said on reflex, then, “Well, there was a little excitement.”
He dished the eggs out and put a plate and fork in front of me as he sat down with his own. “What happened?”
I told him everything: how I witnessed the cork shooter and the mysterious nameless detective and Trevor going to the hospital and the queen-of-hearts tattoo and Trevor’s pin and Eduardo telling me what to draw. I managed to eat all my eggs while I talked and pulled the sketch from my bag, handing it to him as I chugged a glass of orange juice.
He studied it for a second, taking a drink of his own juice, then put it on the table between us.
“You did that?”
“Yeah, what of it?”
“Nothing, except it’s good. Great if it looks like the guy it’s supposed to be. You could have a second career if you want to give up the shop.”
I chuckled. “Mom would love that, wouldn’t she?”
“No kidding.” Tim shoveled more eggs in his mouth before asking, “So who is he?”
“Some ex-drag queen named Shanda Leer.” I couldn’t remember his real name-I knew Kyle had told me-but I remembered his stage name because now I got it. “Chandelier, you know,” I said. “Shanda Leer.”
Tim chuckled. “How do they come up with those names?” he asked.
I shrugged. “Beats me. Kyle kicked him out of the club because he started hanging with drug dealers or something.”
Tim frowned. “Huh?”
I told him how Kyle said there was some sort of lab in the desert.
“Probably not just speculation,” Tim said, but then he grew quiet.
I wanted to push it, find out just what was going on out in the desert, but I could tell he’d closed down on that subject. So I tried a new one. “Who’s the detective who wouldn’t give me his name?”
Tim drank some more juice, buying time. I could tell he didn’t want to tell me.
“Come on, big brother. What is it with you two? Did you get into a fight on the playground or something?”
“He’s Shawna’s fiance.”
Shawna, as in Tim’s old flame, the one who wanted a diamond but got a house instead, so she moved on. Guess she finally got her wish.
“So, why would that matter to me? Why not tell me his name?” I asked.
Tim sighed. “He thinks I’m an ass. Even though I’ve reminded him that if Shawna and I had gotten married, he wouldn’t be with her now.”
Good point, although Tim
“How’d he meet her?” I asked.
Tim made a face. “We had a barbecue here, right before Shawna moved out. They met then. Maybe it was love at first sight.”
He didn’t sound bitter. Maybe the reason he didn’t marry her was because he just didn’t want to. Maybe it was that simple.
“She’s a pit boss now,” he volunteered during my silence.
“Really?” Shawna had been a blackjack dealer, like Tim had been when he met her. He’d had more fun trying to catch people cheating at the table than he did dealing, and finally figured he would go to the police academy so he could go after real bad guys.
“She got promoted a few months ago.”
I didn’t really care, and I could tell he was just making conversation.
“What’s the guy’s name?” I asked.
“Frank. Frank DeBurra.” He paused. “I’m surprised he was there. Must be putting in some overtime.”
“Why surprised?”
“He’s with Metro Homeland Security.”
“Huh?”
Tim chuckled. “Yeah, LVPD’s got its own homeland security force. All those threats, you know.”
I didn’t know, but he didn’t elaborate.
Before I could ask, he tapped at the sketch. “You know, come to think of it, if DeBurra was the responding officer and he talked to you last night, he won’t be happy if he knew you gave this to me.”
I nodded. “Yeah, I thought of that. But I didn’t know his name. How was I supposed to get it to him if I didn’t ask you?”
“Okay, we’ll go with that story. But you could’ve just called the department and asked for the detective on the scene last night.”
“That would be too much trouble.”