now? Since youâre playing tennis and all? If Charlie wants to, of course.â
âI do,â said Charlie.
But maybe not loud enough. âNow you know my tennis schedule?â Leda said. âWhat a detective you are!â
She was dead-on right about that. But even I knew her tennis schedule: she was carrying her racket! Leda was making me real nervous, hard to explain how, exactly, and unless she was planning to spill more info on Agatha the cat, I wanted her en route to the tennis court, and pronto.
Meanwhile, weâd fallen into one of those strange silences you sometimes get, and no one seemed to be in a good mood all of a sudden, except for me. Yes, Agatha was a bothersome new development, but other than that I was tip-top.
The woman in the car looked over, caught Ledaâs eye, and pointed to her watch. Leda adjusted her racket on her shoulder, her eyes going to Bernie, then Charlieâand finally me, for some reason. âAll right.â She leaned down and gave Charlie a kiss on the forehead. âYouâll have to be the mature one.â
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This was living! Me, Bernie, and Charlie zooming through open country in the Porsche. Yes, Charlie had the shotgun seat, and I was on the horrible shelf in back, but it was never as horrible when Charlie was the one up front. Also the sun was shining, but not too hot, and the cooler was loaded with picnic supplies. You canât ask for more.
âWhere are we going, Dad?â Charlie said.
âWeâre on a case,â said Bernie.
âWow! Youâre taking me on a real case?â
âWell, yeah, sort of.â
âAre we gonna catch a bad guy?â
âOh, no, nothing like that. I just want to take a look at something out in the desert.â
âWhat kind of something?â
âA hole in the ground.â
âWith a body in it?â
Bernie laughed, tousled Charlieâs hair, somehow making the Indian feather thing stand up taller and wackier than before. âJust an empty hole,â Bernie said. âBut can you guess what was in it?â
âTreasure!â
Bernie laughed some more. It was great to see him so happy.
âEasy, big guy.â
That was me, or at least the front part of me, somehow in the front seat, sort of wedged in between Bernie and Charlie? What a nice surprise! But maybe not now, was that the point? I drew back to the horrible little shelf, tried to make myself comfortable. Sometimes pawing at a seat back makes you more comfortable.
âChet!â
I got a grip.
âTreasureâs not a bad guess,â Bernie was saying when I tuned back in. âIn this case, the treasure was in the form of a cactus.â
âA cactus, Dad?â
âSaguaro,â Bernie said. âLike that one over at three oâclock, only not quite as big. Wonder if it has a chip inside.â
âHuh?â
âSome of them do.â
âChipsâlike to eat?â
Bernie laughed again, went into a long explanation about chips, and GPS, and the whole history of mapmaking, which Iâm sure was fascinating. When he was done, Charlie said, âAre there chips in the cooler?â
âBarbecue flavored.â
âCan I have some?â
âNow?â
âYeah.â
âWhy not?â
âMom hates that.â
âHates what?â
âMe saying âwhy not.â She says I say it too much.â
âWhy?â
Silence. Then all of a sudden Charlie was laughing and laughing. Human laughter is just about the best thing they do, and kid laughter is the best of the best. We pulled overâtwo-lane blacktop, no traffic, picnic spots out the yingyangâpopped open the cooler, and found the chips.
âAnd maybe Chet wants a treat,â Charlie said.
Charlie: had to love him, and I did.
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My treat turned out to be a bone from Orlando the butcher. Iâve met a number
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