Duke raped the girl twice; after the second climax, she appeared dead. “You die on me already?” he asked, and stuck his knife right into her anus. She bucked and wailed. “Guess not!” Then he worked on her some more with the knife, for good measure, until she was dead.
“Later, baby,” Duke said when he was done. He popped open the back door. “Happy landings. And give Saint Pete a great big kiss from Duke.”
He shoved her out the door. The wind rushed. The naked body tumbled off the road into high grass.
Duke leaned forward, grinning. He put his arm around Erik. “You know somethin’, I ain’t had me this much fun since high school.”
Erik just drove.
Up ahead, the green road sign read “Lockwood 15 miles.”
—
Chapter 6
Ann fingered the plane tickets wistfully. “I want you to get those Delany ’rogs out tonight; give the assholes enough time to stew but not enough time to do the work, and also get the responses out to Winters’ document requests. Tonight.”
“Tonight?” asked the associate. He was young and lean, he had the hunger in his eyes. “That’ll be tough.”
“You’re the one who wanted to be a litigation lawyer. Get the stuff out tonight.”
The associate nodded, attempted a smile.
“I’ve looked through the documents you marked as privileged,” she went on, yet her fingers did not come away from the tickets. “I think we’re probably right, but I’m uneasy about those six internal memoranda on the maintenance procedures. If the bolts cracked while the plane was in flight, that’s fine. We’ve just got to make damn sure the bolts were maintained according to SOP. So we need to get with these guys and track down a solid basis on anything Jolly Roger might be preparing in anticipation of litigation.” Jolly Roger was what they called the opposition firm. They were well named. Ann’s firm was better named: the Snake Pit.
“Well,” replied the associate, “it wasn’t addressed to inside counsel, so we may be a little weak there.”
“I know, but these in house guys might’ve made a call to the addressees and asked for the junk on the memo. I’ll leave it to you and Karl to make the final decision.”
“Gotcha,” said the associate.
“And remember, when I come back we’ll only have a week to get the preliminary jury instructions out for the JAX Avionics trial. You’ll have to hump on that too.”
“Right,” said the associate.
“I’m out of here,” Ann said. “Good luck. I’ll leave my number with the paralegals in case you need me.”
“Okay, Ann. Hope you have a good time.” He paused, smiled. “You flying Air National?”
“Hell, no. The Atlantic Ocean’s a bit too cold for my tastes.” The associate laughed and left.
Ann felt strangely at ease with the idea of being away from the firm for a week. Usually, she couldn’t let go of things. Today, though, she couldn’t wait to. She was a partner now—the associates served
She turned off her office light and closed the door.
Suddenly, she shivered. It wasn’t cold.
What was it?
For a second, she felt as though she were leaving the firm for good.
«« — »»
Martin and Melanie were packing when she got home. Their excitement was clear—they were hustling about with big smiles on their faces, Melanie’s stereo pounding away.
“I’m home,” she said. She held up the tickets.
“Hi, Mom!” Melanie greeted.
Martin came and kissed her. He looked longingly at the tickets. “This is going to be great,” he said.
“I was recently thinking along those same lines.”
“Everything tied up at work?”
“Yep. For the next nine days, I’m not a lawyer.”
“And I’m not a teacher.”
“And I’m not a student!” Melanie added.
«« — »»
“The itinerary’s all planned,” she said at dinner. Martin had cooked one of his favorite culinary inventions, which he called “Poet’s Seafood and Pasta in a Bowl.” It was simple but quite good: pasta twists in olive oil, a little garlic, and powdered red pepper, heaped with steamed shrimp and cherrystone clams.
“When do we go to the Louvre?” Melanie asked, and speared a shrimp.
“Days two through four. It’s a big place, honey. It takes days to see it all.”
“We can have lunch in the cafe where Sartre met deBeauvoir. What an inspiration,” Martin said. “Maybe I should bring a typewriter.”
“Bring a pad and a pencil, Martin,” Ann suggested. “Sartre wrote
“Good point.”
“Can we go to the Metal Urbain?” Melanie asked. “It’s a famous New Wave club in Pigalle. All the great bands play there.”
“Uh,” Ann faltered.
Martin gave her a look.
“Of course, honey.”
“None taken, so long as you pay,” he joked. But it was no joke. The last time she’d been to Taillevent, with a client from Dassault, the check for two had been about $700.
“We’ll also be going to the Orsay Museum of Modern Art, where they have all the expressionistic stuff, and the Centre Pompidou.”
“This is gonna be neat as shit!” Melanie exclaimed.
Martin laughed. “It’ll probably even be neater than that.”
But Ann felt disheartened. She’d seen all those places when they’d had Dassault as an auxiliary client, and she’d never really cared. Yet Melanie, her own daughter, longed to see these museums, and Ann had never even considered it.
She plucked her last clam out of the shell when the phone rang.
“I’ll get it,” Martin said.
“It’s probably that guy with the creepy voice,” Melanie ventured.
“No, let me get it,” Ann insisted. This was one thing she wanted to get to the bottom of.
“Hello?”
The line seemed to drift. She thought of wastelands. She heard a distant rushing like trucks on the freeway.
The ruined voice sounded wet, exerted. “Ann Slavik?”