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The Witch Of Agnesi Part 23

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She shrugged an all-in-a-day's-work shrug. "I drove myself to the hospital. I know I said I'd call, but right then I wasn't in the mood for company."

All through the long quiet before and the recita-tion after, Armen had divided his attention between the road and Wendy's face. In that time, he'd driven past the school, past the turn onto Coyote, and now the double rows of poplars loomed dark, like a small mountain range against the starlit sky. He turned so he could see both Wendy and Bonnie and not drive Alice into a ditch. "Maybe we should stay with you . . . in case he shows up tonight."

Good thinking, Callahan. "I second that." "I second that."

Shaking her head, Wendy made a small earthquake of her red curls. "Absolutely not. I won't hear of it. I'm going to take one of the b.a.s.t.a.r.d's softball bats into my bedroom."

She curled her hand around an imaginary haft. "If the son of a b.i.t.c.h shows up, I'll make him wish he was never born."



She shoved Armen hard enough that he had to cor-rect his steering. "I won't be the victim again."

How to put this delicately? "You said yourself it's been a h.e.l.l of a day. I'm just wondering if you're mak-ing a clear-headed decision here." "You said yourself it's been a h.e.l.l of a day. I'm just wondering if you're mak-ing a clear-headed decision here."

"My mind is made up." For the third time that night she leveled her good eye at Bonnie and glared. "And don't be so stupid as to park in the shadows thinking I won't see you."

So much for that plan. "You're sure?" "You're sure?"

Wendy sighed a bless-your-heart sigh. "Take my word for it. He won't bother me tonight."

Although she never could have explained it even to herself, Bonnie took the woman's word.

THE DECISION TO SPEND THE NIGHT AT ARMEN'S TRAILER seemed to make itself. Neither of them wanted to take that long trek back to Black Forest. The kicker came when Armen reminded her the grey futon opened into a bed. At least she wouldn't be exiling the poor man from his bed onto an uncomfortable couch.

As she lay under Armen's downy quilt staring up at his white-on-white four-poster canopy, he entered the bedroom wearing heliotrope silk pajamas with a gold griffin on the breast pocket. She wore a silk royal-blue pajama set Armen had laboriously selected for her from his closet.

"Very continental, Mister Callahan. Hugh Hefner has nothing on you."

He turned and struck a pose straight from Gentle-man's Quarterly Gentle-man's Quarterly. "Thank you for validating something I've felt for a very long time. You know, of course, what that would make you?"

Bonnie smiled and pulled the covers to her chin. "I'm n.o.body's bunny, Callahan. And don't you forget it."

The chuckle he let loose carried no shred of repen-tance or self-consciousness. "Oh, I don't know. You look pretty much the cottontail to me."

Abruptly, he leaned over, and planted a warm, moist, lingering kiss on her lips. Before she could re-spond or even reciprocate, he made for the door. He waved over his shoulder. "Sleep tight. Don't let the Cimex Lectularius bite."

Sleep tight, my sagging f.a.n.n.y. b.u.m foot or no b.u.m foot, she wanted to go after the big tease and give back as good as she got. b.u.m foot or no b.u.m foot, she wanted to go after the big tease and give back as good as she got.

Then the lights went out, and the door clicked shut.

"Sweet dreams yourself, Mighty Mouse," she whis-pered.

She lay in the dark, her hands behind her head.

Where's all this going? Wasn't it just this morning I told myself the last thing I wanted was a romantic relation- ship with a colleague? "Bonnie Pinkwater, you better sort this out before it goes too far," she said out loud. "Bonnie Pinkwater, you better sort this out before it goes too far," she said out loud.

Just who do you think you're fooling? Here you lay between Armen's sheets, your head on his oh-so-soft down pillow, the taste of his kiss still on your lips.

The truth was-the sign for too far was already dwin-dling in the rearview mirror.

SHE WOKE FEELING LIKE SHE LAY IN THE HAND OF G.o.d, Armen's down pillow curled about her ears. She wriggled the toes of her good foot, luxuriating in the soft warmth of the comforter. Giving in to a feeling that rose like a geyser from her abdomen, she squealed in delight.

"I heard that," Armen called from the next room.

"You shouldn't be listening." She peeled back the covers and stretched like a Cheshire cat. Her eyes blurred, and the room went soft as a yawn overtook her face.

"What time is it?"

"Almost nine."

I'm starving.

She grabbed her crutches and stumbled into the living room. "Is there any of that enchilada ca.s.serole left?"

When they'd arrived at the trailer the previous night, they each grabbed a spoon and burrowed into the cold dinner; no one had mentioned microwaves or the use of plates.

Even though he still wore his pajamas, Armen had been awake long enough to scrub the spoons and coffee cups from the night before. He wiped his damp hands on a dish towel and tossed it into the dish drainer.

"On the table."

As if he'd antic.i.p.ated her request, along with the ca.s.serole, knives, forks, plates and napkins were in evi-dence.

He regarded her admiringly. "I must say you look better in those pajamas than I ever have."

She didn't feel very pretty, standing there with her bedroom hair and a crutch tucked under each arm, but the pajamas did feel exquisite. Maybe clothes do make the woman. Maybe clothes do make the woman. "You are just shameless, Armen Callahan." "You are just shameless, Armen Callahan."

Standing at the coffee maker, his back was to her. He turned around holding a cup in each hand. "I have no idea what you're talking about."

"Then I'll tell you. I'm a semi-invalid. My hair is a mess. G.o.d knows how many folds and creases are still in my face from sleeping the sleep of the dead. And you . . ." She swung up one of the crutches and pointed at him. ". . . wise smart about looking good in paja-mas." But please, don't say you were only kidding. But please, don't say you were only kidding.

"That's my story, and I'm sticking to it." He peeled back the plastic wrap and ladled a glop of enchilada onto a plate. "Come eat."

She gathered the crutches into one hand and was preparing to sit when something about the uncluttered s.p.a.ce on the tabletop disturbed her. "I don't suppose you have the paper delivered."

Armen wiped at his mouth with a paper napkin. "As a matter of fact, I am a daily student of current events. I'll go get it." He tossed down his napkin and stood.

"Sit yourself back down. I'm already up." Before he could protest, she snagged her crutches and made for the door. As she opened it, white-yellow sunlight stole her vision.

Armen called, "I like a woman who knows what she wants and goes after it."

Once outside, she wasn't as sure. At her home in Black Forest, she could have strode out her front door naked, but here with the nearest neighbor in spitting dis-tance, she felt exposed. Suck it up, Pinkwater. You're covered from head to toe, and the d.a.m.ned paper can't be more than ten feet away. Suck it up, Pinkwater. You're covered from head to toe, and the d.a.m.ned paper can't be more than ten feet away. Sure enough, off to her left, almost at the end of the faux-aquarium car-port lay a blue plastic bag-the morning and only edition of the Sunday Gazette. It would be the work of fifteen seconds to retrieve. Sure enough, off to her left, almost at the end of the faux-aquarium car-port lay a blue plastic bag-the morning and only edition of the Sunday Gazette. It would be the work of fifteen seconds to retrieve.

She had the paper in her hand and had taken a few steps back when a high-pitched voice rang out. "Mis-sus Pinkwater?"

The hair on the back of Bonnie's neck rose straight up.

s.h.i.t, s.h.i.t, s.h.i.t.

Clutching the paper to her breast, as if it might con-ceal her, Bonnie turned around.

Lindsay Robinson, a girl in Bonnie's third period Geometry cla.s.s, looked as if she couldn't decide what she wanted most to stare at. Her gaze shifted from Bonnie to Armen's trailer to her own feet.

Just bluff your way out of this. "How you doing, Lindsay? Soooooo, you live in this trailer park?" "How you doing, Lindsay? Soooooo, you live in this trailer park?"

Color rose into the girl's cheeks. "Right here." She pointed to the tan and brown double-wide. "Mister Callahan is our neighbor."

As if on cue, Armen poked his head out of the door. "Did I hear my name being used in vain?"

Now the girl had two pairs of pajamas to try not to stare at.

s.h.i.t, s.h.i.t, and double s.h.i.t.

The three of them stood as if frozen in time. There was no telling how long the awkward scene might have continued, but Armen's attention was drawn to the rut-ted dirt lane at the end of the car port. "What's that?"

Then Bonnie saw it, too. Alternately, the path was bathed in first red then blue light. She hadn't heard it before-probably embarra.s.sment had made her deaf-but now she recognized crowd sounds. Grateful to escape before Lindsay asked something truly mortify-ing, she hobbled toward the end of the trailer.

A young blond boy on a BMX bike came up fast on the right.

"What's going on?" Bonnie shouted.

In a spray of dust the bike spun to a halt. Half-facing her, with at least fifty-percent of his attention on the lights, he bellowed, "Cop cars . . . at the Poole place."

CHAPTER 14.

SHAMELESSLY, BONNIE TOOK ADVANTAGE of her new status as a cripple to edge her way to the front of the crowd. Either unable or unwilling to elbow through at her side, Armen waved her on.

In the short time she and Armen spent changing out of their pajamas, the gawking mob had spilled across the rutted lane and onto properties opposite and adjacent Jesse Poole's double-wide-one pair of enter-prising youngsters perched atop a trailer, little children astride their parent's shoulders, people cross-legged on the roofs of pickup trucks.

Within a border of caution tape, a section of the powder blue trailer's white lattice skirt had been re-moved. Down on one knee Franklin Valsecci peered beneath.

Jesse stood at the back end of the concrete parking slab, book-ended by two state patrol officers. Bonnie recognized the blond pair from a multiple murder she had the misfortune of stumbling upon some sixteen months previous. Male and female, the Aryan giants towered over Jesse. From the boy's body language, Bonnie found it impossible to tell if he was in trouble or just standing out of the way.

Maybe both.

The crowd around her seemed to have already made up its mind. Murmuring grew louder. A palpa-ble animosity filled the air. A woman pulled her young daughter close. A tall black man in paint-splattered white coveralls scowled. People who'd been Jesse's neighbors and possibly even friends now stared at him like he'd been transformed into something unholy.

This isn't good.

Pressing close against painter-man, Bonnie craned her neck to see beneath the trailer.

"It's a corpse," Painter-man's deep voice boomed. He nodded toward the trailer without looking at her.

Franklin stood, and revealed the disturbing truth. Unmistakably, a body lay partially hidden in the gloom behind the lattice. Someone had crammed the corpse into the narrow recess. A blue-jeaned leg and corre-sponding white tennis shoe protruded into the morning light. Across the bottom of the shoe, in red block let-ters, the word Samurai was printed from toe to heel. The corpse's face was obscured by gloom, but Bonnie didn't need to see a face to identify the corpse. A shaft of sunlight reflected starkly off the blond-on-brunette highlighted hair.

Oh G.o.d, Edmund, how the h.e.l.l did you end up here?

Franklin spotted her. She tried to disappear back into the obscurity of the crowd, fully expecting him to read her the riot act for being at yet another crime scene. Much to her surprise, he signaled her forward.

He lifted the tape to let her within the cordon. "I never thought I'd hear myself saying this, but I'm glad you're here." He steered her to the trailer. "This is a lot to ask, but do you think you could handle a quick look at Edmund?"

She nodded.

Evidently, the plan was for her to squat down. Using her crutch as support, she lowered herself to one knee.

This close she could make out Edmund's face. The boy's eyes were wide open, staring upward. He ap-peared to be snarling, lips curled away from his upper teeth. Dear G.o.d, he died in pain or in extreme fear. Dear G.o.d, he died in pain or in extreme fear. Even though she knew Edmund was almost surely a murderer, her heart broke for this clever boy who played video games and collected comic books. Even though she knew Edmund was almost surely a murderer, her heart broke for this clever boy who played video games and collected comic books.

And what about his parents? "How did he die?" "How did he die?"

"We won't know for sure until the crime scene guys clear the scene, and we can extract the body. There's no violence evident."

The body? Edmund Clark Sheridan had been re-duced to this common denominator. "But his face?" Edmund Clark Sheridan had been re-duced to this common denominator. "But his face?"

"Don't go there, Missus P. Very few of us go peace- fully into that dark night." From inside his jacket, Franklin extracted a penlight and shone it on Edmund's flannel shirt. "Look in the breast pocket."

Maybe twenty percent of a silver circlet was visible sticking out of the boy's wide flannel pocket. It was enough. A cobra's ruby eyes glittered.

"It's a necklace, a choker." She wanted to be any place but here. She certainly didn't want to say what she had to say next. "It belongs to Ali Griffith. She wore it to Knowledge Bowl last Thursday."

Franklin must have seen how much it pained her to finger a student. Tight-lipped, he said, "I'm sorry, Missus P."

She swallowed down the storm of emotions flood-ing her. She needed to know everything as if in the knowing she could turn confusion into order. "Who found the body . . . Edmund?"

Franklin nodded toward Jesse. "Poole called it in. About six o'clock this morning."

She gave Franklin a questioning glance and looked past him to the blond officers who still had Poole be-tween them.

Jesse's anxious gaze darted from her to the crowd. Gone was the grieving but confident young man from the previous night. Also gone was the angry sopho-more from Thursday morning's fight. The new Jesse looked beaten down, defeated.

"And you arrested him?" How much is one young man supposed to endure? How much is one young man supposed to endure? Even as she regarded Jesse she tried to ignore an inner voice that whispered, Even as she regarded Jesse she tried to ignore an inner voice that whispered, He could easily have murdered Edmund then called it in. Remember, Edmund stole Jesse's pickup and tried to frame him. He could easily have murdered Edmund then called it in. Remember, Edmund stole Jesse's pickup and tried to frame him.

Franklin helped her to stand. "He's not under ar-rest. We have to ask him some questions."

An angry shout came from the crowd.

"You need to do something, youngster." Bonnie whispered like she was walking through a graveyard. "These folks seem woefully unaware of the subtle dif-ference between apprehension and questioning. This could get ugly."

"Can you blame them? They need to believe their children are safe. That we, and by that I don't include you, have everything under control."

"They d.a.m.n well need to know Jesse didn't murder Edmund."

"I can't promise them that. Can you?"

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The Witch Of Agnesi Part 23 summary

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