with a rag.
I turn to the woman in disbelief. “What was that?”
Megan is matter-of-fact. “That’s John.”
“You’ve got to be kidding.”
Megan’s answer encompasses the feminine dilemma, and seems to draw us both together in it.
“It’s what we’ve known since seventh grade,” she says.
“Boys are stupid.”
A wild laugh escapes me, while Mr. Terminate remains impassive, body language boulderlike and calm, as if he has not just eaten a glass ashtray and spit it out in our faces. He is waiting for an answer, but the question remains—
What is the question?
Is this some kind of brain-dead buffalo love, or has he made me, in the same way he might have made Steve Crawford for an undercover cop?
The bartender finally sets down the white wine and Salty Dog but waits a moment longer, keeping his hands on the drinks.
“What can I get your friend?” he asks Megan.
“We don’t really know each other,” I explain.
“Well, you should. Two beautiful ladies?”
I introduce myself as Darcy DeGuzman and it rolls right off my tongue.
Her
name is Megan Tewksbury, and she would like to pay her bill. But the bartender lingers, drawing things out.
“So, Darcy, another beer?”
White, built, maybe forty—he’s giving me a very friendly look. Is he trying to pick me up? It’s my lucky day. His black T-shirt says
Does Not Play Well with Others.
His lip is pierced, and he sports a bearded braided thing hanging off his chin.
The Darcy part likes it that some oaf is looking at me. I hope he makes a move, just to see what it would be like. This never happens in normal life, when I am Special Agent Ana Grey. Even on a weekend, even at a car wash, looking like everybody else in a tank top and shorts, my first reaction to a guy staring is,
What are
you
up to?
Not exactly a turn-on.
Megan: “What do I owe you, Rusty?”
“No worries. I’ll just run a tab.” To me: “What’re you doing here, girlfriend?”
“I must have read the guidebook wrong,” I say, flirting.
Rusty grins. “Don’t fret. We get a lot of nice folks stopping in après the market. Megan has a booth there. She’s a regular. Guess what
she’s
sellin’?”
Megan carries the drinks away. “Nothin’
you’ll
ever afford.”
“She sells homemade hazelnut brittle!” Rusty shouts. “She’s a nut.” He winks. “Lives on a nut farm, along with some goats and about a hundred cats and dogs. Got a whole thing going where she rescues animals.”
“She’s an animal lover?” My head swivels back toward the woman, who is now sitting at a table with the man who ordered the Salty Dog.
“Who is she with?”
“That’s the boyfriend. His name is Julius Emerson Phelps.”
Broad-shouldered, six three, hard-built but with enough gut to put him over two hundred pounds. It would be difficult to pinpoint his age. Young girls would find the implication of sexual mastery in his craggy smile and wish for his attention, while men of my grandfather’s generation would resent having to relinquish their grip on the world to a male who still looks young. I make him for a middle-aged farmer with a ponytail; he must be some type of an agro guy, because there’s a flying ear of corn on his cap.
Above the rows of liquor bottles, in a mirrored sign for Becks, I watch Megan Tewksbury drape a possessive arm over Julius’s shoulders. They are talking cheek-to-cheek without really looking at each other, eyes scanning the room. I am surprised to see myself in the mirror—looking happy. My cheeks are flushed from the heat and noise and sexual signals snap-popping off the crowd. I’m feeling all warmed up, looking for a friend. Someone local, who would be a way into the community. Megan? Approachable?
Not while they’re nuzzling. I nip at the mug and observe. The beer is cold, and after a while I realize that it has been going down nicely with the wigged-out nasty metal guitar band coming from the jukebox.
The mirror shows it is Julius Emerson Phelps
Amanda Ashley
J. J. Cook, Joyce Lavene, Jim Lavene
Tad Hills
John Creasey
Katherine Garbera
Stewart Meyer
Michelle M. Pillow
Starry Montana Sky
Jason D. Morrow
Scott Nicholson