1) Don’t go to bed with a woman who has more problems than you.
2) Divorcées and widows can’t get enough.
3) Catholic girls are better in the sack because they’re full of guilt and stay on rock and roll right down to the finish line.
4) Black women have more powerful libidos than white women and are always eager to get it on with white men.
5) Old ladies make outstanding mistresses because they are not only mature but their parts are tender and they are ever so grateful (this observation was made by Benjamin Franklin).
This is the counsel that millions of men and boys have heard and probably on occasion taken seriously. Once in a long while, inside a late-night bar or the cab of a long-haul semi or a foxhole when trip flares are floating down over a piece of third-world moonscape, you might hear a cautionary word connected to reality. Someone who has strayed from his marital vows, or betrayed his lover’s trust, or destroyed his family or someone else’s, will describe to you in painful detail the nightmare that can be yours if you make one wrongheaded decision.
If the errant lover or husband is willing to tell you everything, he will confess his naïveté. He will say he had no idea how many lives would be affected by his decision. He will acknowledge that none of the players was either all good or all bad but were little more than children. This is not a welcome revelation for those men who wish to feel that the cuckold precipitated his own fate or that he was saving the adulterous wife from an abusive marriage or that he was lured into the situation. It’s no fun to discover you’ve been swindled. It’s even worse when you discover that the swindler is you.
Clete arranged to meet Felicity at the stone cabin on Sweathouse Creek Sunday evening and got there before she did. The sun was gone, and the air was cold and smelled of the creek and the lichen on the stone walls of the canyon. When she arrived, she was wearing a long dark dress with tiny white flowers and a white lace hem, and a knitted white sweater and a tiny hat like a woman from the early twentieth century would wear. Her hand was shaking when she turned the key in the plated lock on the door.
“Are you okay?” he asked when they were inside.
“I’m not sure,” she said. “We just made our first visit to Angel’s grave. Something happened that really bothers me. Caspian cried. I’ve never seen him do that.”
“That’s the way people behave in those situations,” he replied. Those situations? They were talking about the murder of a child. What was he saying?
“Caspian never shows his feelings,” she said. “He always has this little smile on his face, like he knows something you don’t.”
“The reason I wanted to talk to you, Felicity—”
“You don’t have to tell me. It’s written all over you. You made a mistake. I’m a nice lady and deserve better. We have to be mature people about this and be objective and say good-bye. Blah, blah, blah. Usually, men choose a restaurant to say these things so the woman can’t yell and throw things.”
“I wasn’t going to say that. I was going to tell you how much I like you, and like being with you, and like the way you talk and carry yourself. You’re grieving over your daughter, and a guy like me seems like a safe harbor for a little while. I don’t want to hurt you, that’s all. You don’t know my history. Dave and I put some guys down real hard. They’re not coming back.”
“Why did you want to meet?”
“Because I want to know why you haven’t split from your husband. Or maybe I wondered if you want to split with him now. I’m not good at figuring things out sometimes.”
She sat down on a cloth-covered couch by the far wall. Through the window behind her, Clete could see the limbs of a cottonwood thrashing in the wind and the flicker of lightning on the canyon wall. “When I married Caspian, I was a good girl. I was mad at my father for going to South America and getting himself killed. I strayed sometimes, but I felt sorry about it later and tried to do right. Caspian said he loved me and he’d never slept with another woman. I didn’t believe him, but after a while I thought he was telling the truth. Caspian’s money could have bought him any woman he wanted, but the only love he cared about was the one he couldn’t have — the love of his father.”
“I can relate to that,” Clete said. “Except you got to grow up and stop resenting people for what they did to you when you were a kid. You got a drink?”
“Are you talking about me resenting my father? Is that why we’re out here?”
“No, I just need a drink. What do you have?”
“There’s some Bacardi and Coca-Cola in the refrigerator. Why don’t you lay off it for a while?”
“I don’t feel like laying off it. Go on with what you were saying.”
“Oh, Clete, I feel like such a fool when I talk this way,” she said, putting her hands in her lap and lowering her head. “I told you I was angry at my father, but the truth is, I loved him and I was proud of the name he gave me and I wanted to be brave like the woman who died in the arena. I used to go to church and try to be charitable toward people, and I thought marrying Caspian would be wonderful and we’d live in all the magical places we talked about. I slept around and I was selfish, and any criticism others make of me is justified. What bothers me most about Angel’s death is that she’s dead and I’m alive.”
Clete was putting ice and four inches of rum in a glass of Coca-Cola, trying to concentrate on what she was saying. From the kitchen, he could not see her face, but her tone had changed — it held a plaintive element that was making him feel worse and worse. A storm had moved out of the south end of the Bitterroot Valley, and he could feel the barometer dropping and the air turning colder outside.
“Are you listening?” she said. “I always thought about death, even when I was a little girl. Then I met Caspian and thought we’d live in Hawaii or Malibu or Martha’s Vineyard. He asked me to sign a prenuptial agreement and said it was because of his father and his father’s distrustful and stingy ways. I should have known better, I guess. We were happy, even though I couldn’t have children. I thought, after we adopted Angel, we’d be a real family. That’s not how it turned out.”
“That’s why you adopted her?”
“No, it was Caspian’s idea. That’s when I thought he had a kinder and more loving side. It’s what I thought today when he cried at her grave.”
Clete took a long drink. He was standing in the kitchen under the light fixture, unable to take the glass from his mouth, his shadow like a pool of ink around his feet. He drank until the glass was almost empty, wishing he could melt and seep through the cracks in the floor and disappear into the wind and rain starting to streak the windows. A bolt of lightning struck somewhere up on the mountain, the rocks and ponderosas and larch trees in the canyon trembling yellow and gray and shadowing against the canyon walls.
“You regret getting involved with me?” he asked.
“No, not at all. Sit down next to me. Please.”
“I got to have a refill.”
“No one can drink that much alcohol.”
“I can. I’ve made a lifetime study of it. Did you ever try to leave him?”
“And go where?”
“To the state employment office, if nowhere else.”
“I haven’t explained myself very well. I was always afraid of death. When people left me, I felt as though I’d died. It was like being inside a dark house that didn’t have any doors. You ever felt that way?”
“You’ve heard about the Serenity Prayer, right? I use the short version: ‘Fuck it.’ ”
“Except it doesn’t work that well, does it?”
“When that doesn’t, this does,” he said, lifting his glass.
“Sit down.”
“I’d better go. I thought we’d talk things out. You already said it all. You got feelings for your husband. The guy lost his daughter. I’m sorry for any harm I’ve caused y’all.”
“You sit down, Clete, and sit down now. Please don’t be hard on yourself. You still don’t u
nderstand.”
He sat down next to her, his knees turned toward her, his weight sinking deep into the cushions. “Understand what?”
She picked up his left hand in both of hers. “When you made love to me, I felt like I had gone off the planet. I haven’t felt like that in years. I felt like I was seventeen again. I felt like the world was brand-new.”
“I’m old, Felicity. I don’t delude myself. Once in a while a guy like me gets lucky. I know my limitations.”
“I want you. That’s what I’m trying to say. I feel sorry for Caspian, but I want you.”
“You can do better.”
“I want you, not somebody else. You appreciate a woman. You’re respectful. You’re loving. You think that’s lost on me? Take off your coat.”
“I don’t want to,” he said.
“You spilled your drink on it. If you get stopped, the police will think you’re drunk. I’ll clean it for you.”
He stood up and removed his seersucker coat and laid it on the coffee table. She looked at the shoulder rig he was wearing and at the snub-nosed blue-back .38 he carried in a nylon holster. “Why do you need that?” she asked.
“Because not to carry it is to say I believe in the world. I don’t believe in the world, at least not the one I’ve seen. I don’t like authority, either. Anyone who wants to control other people is out to fuck you over. So I carry my own authority.”
She took his coat into the kitchen and ran cold water over the rum-and-Coke stain, then blotted it with a paper towel and put it on a hanger. She went into the living room and stood in front of him, backlit by the electricity flickering outside. “Is my conduct embarrassing to you?” she said.
“What conduct?” he asked, looking up at her.
“This.”
He looked away, then back. “You’re beautiful.”
“You don’t think I’m an adventuress or a Judas?”
“A guy with my record can’t judge anybody.”
“You do like me, don’t you? I don’t look too old or heavy and wrinkled?”
“You’re not any of those things. You’re like New Orleans, Felicity. You’re an orchid in a garden that never saw sunshine.”
Her mouth parted. “No one ever said anything like that to me.”
“You’re every man’s dream. Give yourself some credit.”
She spread her knees and knelt on his thighs and held his head against her breasts and kissed his hair. “Oh, Clete,” she said. “Don’t go away from me. Not now, not ever.”
He didn’t know what to say or do. He closed his eyes and saw an image deep in his mind that made no sense. He saw his father’s milk truck driving away from him, the melted ice draining over the back bumper, swinging in a thick, dirty spray on the street.
* * *
On Monday afternoon I looked through the upstairs window and saw three cruisers pull up in front of the north pasture, and one deputy get out and unchain the vehicle gate. The three cruisers went inside the pasture, and the deputy chained the gate behind them. The vehicles drove through the grass and came to a stop thirty yards from Clete’s cabin.
Earlier in the day, Albert Hollister had dumped and scrubbed out and refilled the water tank by the barn. The horses were drinking out of it when Sheriff Elvis Bisbee and two uniformed deputies and a man in a suit stepped from the vehicles and fanned out and approached the cabin, each with the heel of his hand resting on the butt of his sidearm. The horses backed away from the tank, their skin twitching the way it does when they’re attacked by blowflies.
By the time I got downstairs and out the front door, I could see two deputies shaking down Gretchen against a cruiser, running their hands under her arms and inside her thighs. Clete was arguing with Bisbee, up close and personal, his face red, his hands barely held in check at his sides, like a ballplayer getting into the face of an umpire.
I went through the pedestrian gate, past the horses and the barn. “Hold on,” I said.
The sheriff turned around. So did the plainclothes. I realized he was the uniformed deputy who had ridiculed Gretchen.
“No, sir, Mr. Robicheaux,” the sheriff said.
“No, sir, what?” I replied.
“This time you back off.”
“What’s she charged with?” I asked.
“Put it in the plural,” he replied.
“You want me to tell him?” the plainclothes said.
“What’s your name?” I said.
“Detective Jack Boyd.”
“Sheriff, this is the same guy who called Miss Gretchen ‘butch’ up on the hillside,” I said.
“Then she can file a complaint,” he replied.
“I asked you what she’s charged with.”
“How about vandalizing a motel room?” said the sheriff. “How about kidnapping and assault and battery? How about conspiracy to commit kidnapping? Her partner in this is Wyatt Dixon. How do you like that?”
“Who’d they kidnap?” I said.
“A guy named Anthony Zappa,” the sheriff said. “Know the name? He worked for Love Younger.”
Behind him, the two uniformed deputies were hooking up Gretchen. Her shoulders looked wide and stiff against her shirt, her midriff showing.
“That’s ridiculous. She’s not a kidnapper or someone who vandalizes motels,” I said.
“She only kills them?”
“You’re talking about the guy on the river, the one who shot at her from a pickup truck? That was self-defense.”
“Yesterday evening Zappa was taped to a chair in a motel on West Broadway. He bailed through a window, probably because he was being tortured. In the meantime, the clerk chained up his Harley and dragged it down the street and left it burning in the middle of an intersection. When I asked if you knew Anthony Zappa’s name, I used the past tense.”
“He’s dead?” I said.
“He was when we found his body up Rattlesnake Creek this morning.”
“She was with me last night,” Clete said.
“Where?” the sheriff said.
“Here, at the cabin,” Clete replied.
“It’s funny you say that,” the sheriff said. “Detective Boyd came out here when we first got the report on the motel incident. Except your Cadillac was gone, and so was her pickup. Where were you, Mr. Purcel?” Clete started to speak. The sheriff raised his hand. “You lie to me again, you’re going downtown, too,” he said.
The deputies were putting Gretchen behind the wire-mesh screen in a cruiser, her wrists cuffed behind her.
“You’re charging her with homicide?” I said. I saw his eyes waver, his confidence slip. “What are you not telling us?” I asked.
“What makes you think we need to tell you anything?” Jack Boyd said.
“I’m asking you for the same information you give out to the news media,” I said.
“You’re not the news media,” he replied.
I looked at the sheriff and waited.
“Take her in,” he said to Boyd.
“Yes, sir,” Boyd said. “Sheriff, I made a joke to Bill Pepper. I didn’t mean for the girl to hear it. I was wrong. I hope that clears up the matter once and for all.”
“All right, Jack. I’ll see you back at the department.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Miss Gretchen is not a ‘girl,’ buddy,” I said. “That’s a term you guys can’t seem to lose. I also think you guys have a way of keeping your distance from Love Younger. Don’t feel bad. I grew up in the same kind of environment. People with money got a free pass on just about everything, sometimes including homicide.”
“It doesn’t work that way here,” the detective said. His black hair was shiny, his eyes liquid and iniquitous, his sideburns flaring like grease pencil on his cheeks. Inside his narrow-cut suit coat, he wore a white snap-button shirt with silver stripes in it. I could hear the wind channeling in the trees and the horses nickering by the barn. There was something wrong with the procedure, the way Bisbee and the detective were going about i
t, the circuitous nature of their conversation. And the sheriff knew that I knew.
“What was the weapon?” I said.
“That’s not your business,” the detective said.
I looked at the sheriff again.
“You heard Detective Boyd,” he said.
“You don’t have a warrant for the cabin, do you?” I said.
His eyes were empty, the white tips of his mustache lifting in the breeze.
“What was the weapon?” I repeated. Clete was staring at me now.
“Did you hear what the sheriff said? Butt out,” the detective said.
I waited for the sheriff to speak. He put a cigarette in his mouth but didn’t light it. “Put her in the interview room when you get back to the department,” he said to the detective. “I’ll wrap up things here.”
“If any of your people hurt my daughter, you’re going to wish your mother used a better diaphragm,” Clete said.
“You’re about to find yourself under arrest, Mr. Purcel,” the sheriff said.
“Try it. See what happens if one of these guys puts his hands on me.”
The detective and one of the uniformed deputies drove away, Gretchen leaning forward on the backseat, her wrists cuffed behind her. When she twisted her head and looked through the rear window, I thought of a balloon snipped loose from its string, floating away in the wind stream.
“The judge wouldn’t give you a warrant for the cabin, would he?” I said to the sheriff.
“We’re still in the early stages of the investigation,” he said. “You made a remark about the integrity of my department. I want you to take that back.”
“I think the problem is yours, sir, not mine.”
He lit his cigarette and puffed on it thoughtfully, the smoke drifting from under the brim of his hat, his pale blue eyes fixed on the horses. “Did you know Albert Hollister did time on a Florida chain gang?”
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