Rachel Alexander 09 - Without a Word

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Authors: Carol Lea Benjamin
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pleaded and my mother said, “We’ll see,” but in the morning, the dog was gone. She never said what she did with him, no matter how many times I asked, no matter how hard I cried. “See,” my sister had said the next night when my parents were out of earshot, “I told you so.”
    I thought it was strange that Leon hadn’t asked me why on earth I’d gone to Bechman’s office. He hadn’t asked me why I wanted Celia’s last name either. What if he did ask questions? What if he asked me how far I’d gotten or what I thought? What could I say to him, that at this point I had no reason to think that Madison hadn’t killed her doctor, nor any reason to feel hopeful about finding Sally, alive or dead? Or would I mention I’d put some terrible doubt in the mind of Ms. Peach in the hope that next time I showed up, she’d break a few laws on behalf of a kid she clearly couldn’t stand?
    “Well, then,” I’d said after thanking him, “I’ll see you around eight.”
    “Instead of ringing the bell,” he said, “call my cell when you’re on the way and I’ll wait for you out front,” he’d said.
    I told him I would.
    The dog Dashiell had just been playing with was gone, and now he was chasing an Irish setter in great circles around the perimeter of the run. Suddenly they stopped, dropped and began to wrestle in the dirt. Some people think adult dogs don’t need to play, that play is only for puppies. If they visited the dog run, they’d change their minds fast. Not only was playing good for dogs, honing muscles, reaction time and social skills, but like exercise and gaming for humans, it was a stress buster, the best there was. It seemed to have the same effect on the onlookers, too. There was always someone leaning on the fence and looking in, watching the dogs living in the moment.
    I’d taken the long way around, walking Dash past the chess players at the southwest comer of the park. Two of the kibitzers were kibitzing here now, at the run, their arms hanging over the fence, watching a different kind of game. The woman was tall and horsey, long face, long nose, big chin and hair pulled back so tight it made her ears seem to stick out. Her coat looked worn, even from across the run, and while it wasn’t cold out, and that may have been why she had it unbuttoned, it might not have fit across her considerable girth. The man was small, shorter than I am, lost in a hunter’s orange jacket at least two sizes too big for him, a watch cap on his head, the hood over the cap, aviator glasses, unlaced workman’s boots with unmatched socks peeking over the top. They might have both been homeless, having picked their outfits out of the trash, neither willing to look a gift horse in the mouth. Even if your coat won’t close, or the color of it gives the impression that someone is about to start shooting deer in Washington Square Park, you can’t be fussy about size and color when winter’s coming and you’re lucky enough to find something you can get into that will keep you warm.
    When I got home, I checked my Brooklyn directory and located Lincoln High, way the hell at the far end of the borough. Then I checked under Abele, to see if Celia lived in Brooklyn. There was a Claire Abele on Bedford Avenue, a Richard Abele in Brooklyn Heights, and that was it. I tried the Manhattan directory next. There were six Abeles in Manhattan, Audrey, Harrison, J., Louise, Philip and a C. Abele on Bethune Street, a block from Leon’s apartment and just a short walk to her former job as receptionist for Drs. Willet, Bechman and Edelstein.
    Of course the Celia Abele who had worked for Dr. Bechman at one time could live in Queens, the Bronx, on Staten Island or in New Jersey. She might have relocated to Denver, Colorado, or Wake Forest, North Carolina. Nothing said she’d remained close by or that she even had the same last name now that she did then. For all I knew, she’d left her job to get married to an Eskimo who lived

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