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"Box, you mean. Like a prize fighter?"
"Yeah," I said.
She reached up and squeezed my bicep. I flexed automatically.
"You must have been a pretty good one," she said.
"I was."
"You ever like a champion or anything?"
"No."
"How come?"
"Pretty good," I said, "is not the same as very good."
She drank some more. Her b.r.e.a.s.t.s were now pressing steadily on my arm.
"You ever go to college?" she said.
"Yes."
"What'd you study?" she said.
"How to run back kicks," I said.
She smiled at me.
"You're a funny guy," she said.
"Everybody says that."
"You're kind of old for me," she said.
"Everybody says that, too."
"But I like you," she said as if I hadn't spoken.
"Well, I like you too, Sandy."
She stopped and looked hard at my face. "You're kidding me, aren't you?"
"I kid everybody a little," I said.
She thought about that.
"You want to go someplace?" she said.
"And?" I said.
"And have s.e.x," she said.
"That's a very nice offer," I said. "But Susan Silverman and I have agreed to have s.e.x only with each other."
Sandy's face was very close to mine in the crowded room. She had a wide mouth and a lot of teeth. She had turned in her seat so that she had one thigh on each side of my leg. Her chest was against my arm. In another minute we wouldn't have to go anywhere to have s.e.x.
"You're not kidding, are you?"
"No."
She stared at me some more.
"Well," she said. "G.o.dd.a.m.n. You are a funny guy."
"Yeah," I said. "Everyone always says it just that way, too."
Chapter 15.
IT HAD STARTED to get dark as I walked across the leafy campus. It was a nice fall evening with just enough coolness to make my jacket feel useful. The campus was empty, and I was woefully out of place on it. I had a momentary vision of myself, a middle-aged man with a broken nose and a thick neck and a gun on his hip walking alone, remote below the darkened sky.
The Phi Gam house was a big brick house of Georgian design. The front door led into a foyer. To the right was a living room. To the left was something that appeared to be a library. Straight ahead a stairway ascended to the next floor. There were half a dozen young women in the living room. The library was empty. All of the young women turned and looked at me when I came in.
I said, "h.e.l.lo."
Several of them said, "Hi."
One of them said, "Are you looking for somebody?"
They all had the quality of voice kids that age use when they're talking to somebody's parent. I walked into the living room and sat on the arm of a couch. There was a big television set on one wall. The girls were watching Hard Copy.
"My name is Spenser," I said. "I'm a detective and I'd like to talk with you about Melissa Henderson."
One of them said, "Melissa?"
"Yes, did you know her?"
"Sure, she lived here."
The girl doing the talking had on a black tee-shirt and gray sweatpants. She was dark haired, dark skinned, wore no shoes, and her toenails were painted red.
A pale blond woman said, "How do we know you're a detective?"
The dark girl said, "What the h.e.l.l else would he be, Kim? Coming in here asking about Melissa?"
Kim was sticking to her guns.
"I think he should show us some identification," she said. "You know what Mrs. Cameron said."
Several of the girls groaned. Kim was apparently the sole law-and-order candidate in the group.
"Mrs. Cameron?" I said.
The dark girl said, "She's the housemother. She gave us all a big talk about how we had to be careful about people coming around after Melissa was killed."
"Why?"
"People would be poking around, she said, making trouble."
"What kind of people?" I said.
Another girl spoke.
"Like you," she said and we all laughed except Kim, who was looking severe. Severe is not easy for a twenty-year-old kid.
I said, "Don't hurt my feelings, now. But what's wrong with me?"
"Not a thing," the dark-haired girl answered. "I don't think Mrs. Cameron knows why we're supposed to be careful. She's just doing what Old Lady Corcoran told her."
"Old Lady Corcoran being?"
"The dean."
"Oh, her," I said.
And we all laughed again, except Kim.
"So what was Melissa like?" I said.
"Crazy," the other girl said. She had on a man's white shirt and blue cotton gym shorts. There were two big pink rollers in her hair.
"Crazy how?"
Kim got up suddenly and walked out of the room. I suspected that my moments were numbered.
"All ways," Pink Rollers said. "Anything you wanted to try, she was ready."
Talking about the woman they had known made them all remember what had happened to her and they were suddenly silent.
"Was she rebellious?" I said.
"h.e.l.l, yes," Dark Hair said. "She'd try anything if someone told her not to."
"She have a boyfriend?"
"I think so."
"Know his name?"
"No. Melissa used to call him the Prince. She was kind of cozy about him. She never brought him around."
"He a college guy?"
n.o.body knew.
"Might he have gone to Taft?"
n.o.body knew.
"Anyone she was unusually close to, a roommate, somebody that might know?"
n.o.body knew of such a person. Melissa had roomed alone. She had lots of friends, several among those present. But no especial one friend.
"Tell me more about Crazy," I said.
Behind me a woman said, "Just what is going on here?"
I turned halfway and looked over my shoulder at a woman in her late sixties with silver hair and rimless gla.s.ses. She had on a dark flowered dress with a white collar and modest high heels and a string of pearls. She was a housemother if I ever saw one.
I said, "Mrs. Cameron, I presume."
"I'm the housemother here. Off-campus visitors require my permission."
"You sure know how to make a guy feel welcome," I said.
"I'll have to ask you to go."
"How do you know I'm not somebody's professor come down to help them with their paper on Provenqal poetry?"
"Please leave."
"Or somebody's dad. How would you feel coming in here and kicking out somebody's dad who just stopped by to see how you were spending his thirty thousand a year."
"I know who you are. You are not welcome."
I looked at the young women.
"I think Kim has ratted us out," I said. They all laughed.
"Oh, come on, Mrs. Cameron," Pink Rollers said. "We like him. We invited him to stay."
"Take that up with Dean Corcoran, Marsha," Mrs. Cameron said.