Scott stood.
Her eyes darted around the crowded lobby like a lost child looking for her parents. She spotted him and almost ran to him. She was crying before she threw her arms around him.
"Oh, Scott. Thank God you came."
She clutched him tightly for a long moment, then he felt her slim body sag in his arms. She sobbed into his chest. After all that time, she was back in his arms. She felt good even if she didn't smell good. She finally wiped her face on his shirt and looked up at him.
"I'm sorry, I must smell awful after three days."
"You didn't shower?"
"With those women? You wouldn't believe how many prostitutes are in Galveston. I was so afraid."
He released her. "Did they hurt you?"
"The women?"
"The police."
"They brought me here in handcuffs, they took my clothes, hosed me down… Scott, they sprayed me for lice."
"Why didn't you hire a lawyer to get you out of here?"
"I don't have any money."
"On TV, they said Trey earned millions."
"None of it's mine."
"You could've put your house up to secure bond."
"It's not mine either. Nothing is. The house, the cars, the yacht-everything belongs to… Why would someone kill Trey? This is all like a bad dream."
"It's real. But I'm here now, Rebecca. I'll take care of you."
She glanced around as if worried they had made a mistake and would throw her back in jail. "Can we leave now?"
"Not out the front door. Reporter."
Scott went back to the bail window, signed for her personal effects, and asked Sarge if Rebecca could leave out a back door. Sarge obliged. While he took her around back, Scott walked outside and past Renee Ramirez just as her cell phone rang. She answered and said, " What? He's here? I didn't see a lawyer go in." She hung up and hurried inside, trailed by her cameraman. Scott got into the Jetta and drove around back where he found Sarge with Rebecca. He opened the door for her like a hotel doorman.
"Hope you enjoyed your stay, ma'am."
Sarge shut the door and gave them a little salute. Scott drove around front just as Renee Ramirez and her cameraman came running back out.
"Duck down."
Rebecca ducked her head until they had exited the parking lot. When she came back up, she said, "What happened to the Ferrari?"
"Repoed. I lost everything. Sold the house to avoid foreclosure when the bank called the note."
Scott drove past the bail bonds and low-rent law offices that lined 54th Street, bit players in the tragedy that was the American criminal justice system. He stopped at a red light at Broadway. They sat in silence until the light turned green. He stepped on the gas pedal, and she spoke in a soft voice.
"Scott, they think I killed Trey. Why? "
"I don't know. But I'll find out."
Scott parked on Seawall Boulevard fronting the Gulf of Mexico.
"Let's walk."
They got out. Rebecca lifted her face to the sun and closed her eyes, inhaling the fresh sea air like a lifer pardoned after thirty years behind bars.
"I'm free. Thank God. I thought I was going to die in there."
Three days in county jail-she'd never make life in prison. They walked down the wide sidewalk. Across the boulevard to their left were bars, restaurants, hotels, condos, and swim shops; to their right was the beach, seventeen feet below. The air was warm and the sky blue. The breeze blew strong and brought the smell of the sea to shore. Above them, white seagulls floated on the wind currents then suddenly dove down to the water and swooped back up with fish in their beaks. Down below on the beach, colorful umbrellas lined the narrow strip of sand. Sunbathers lay on towels, surfers rode the low waves, and tourists tiptoed through the tide. Waves crashed against the jetties or died out in the sand. Girls in bikinis and boys in swim trunks rolled past on rollerblades and skateboards. Parents pedaled children in surreys. To anyone who observed them, they were just another couple strolling the seawall on a fine summer day, not a lawyer and his ex-wife who stood accused of murdering her lover. A police cruiser with lights flashing and siren wailing sped past. Rebecca froze until it was out of sight then turned to him.
"Scott, I can't go back to that jail."
"Don't worry. You won't."
That assurance and the fresh air seemed to relax her. A block further down, she pointed at a structure being built atop pilings embedded in the beach.
"Ike took down the Hooters and Murdoch's Pier. They're rebuilding Murdoch's."
A few more steps and she gestured at two rows of vacant pilings extending into the Gulf.
"And that's all that's left of the Balinese."
For almost four decades after the Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibiting the manufacture, sale, transportation, and importation of intoxicating liquors in America took effect in 1920, sinners flocked to Galveston Island for booze, prostitution, and gambling. Galveston became known as "Sin City." And no venue on the Island offered more sin than the Balinese Room, a swanky South Sea-themed speakeasy situated at the end of a wooden pier extending six hundred feet into the Gulf of Mexico. Two Sicilian-born barbers who became bootleggers named Salvatore and Rosario Maceo brought sin and stars to Galveston, Texas. Frank Sinatra, Bob Hope, Jack Benny, and Groucho Marx played the Balinese, where a bartender concocted the first margarita. Proud locals dubbed their lawless island the "Free State of Galveston" where sin reigned supreme until 1957 when the Texas Rangers raided the Balinese Room and shut down vice on the Island. The Balinese's glory days came to an end, but the red building on the 21st Street pier had remained a Galveston landmark until Hurricane Ike washed it out to sea.
"Remember that spring break?" Rebecca asked.
He did. They had come to Galveston with a group from SMU, he the former football star and she the reigning Miss SMU. They had partied at the Balinese Room and had sex on the beach. Every night.
"I could never drive past the Balinese without thinking of that week," she said.
"Why, Rebecca?"
"Those nights on the beach-"
"No. Why'd you leave me?"
Twenty-two months and eleven days he had waited to ask her that question.
"Scott, I…"
"I kept your letter. You said-"
"Don't, Scott. I'm not that person anymore."
"Rebecca, what did you need from me that I didn't give you?"
"It wasn't you, Scott. It was me."
"Was it because I lost everything?"
"It was because I was lost. I didn't know who I was. I was playing a role. All my life I had played a role. Little Miss Texas. Miss Dallas. Miss SMU. Miss Cheerleader. Mrs. A. Scott Fenney, the most beautiful woman in Highland Park. I felt like I was always onstage… or in a cage. Like an animal in the zoo, everyone staring at me. When the cage door opened, I ran." She faced him. "I'm sorry, Scott. I know I hurt you… both of you."
They walked another block before Rebecca spoke again.
"Can I see her? Boo."
EIGHT
"And Scotty Junior was a girl named Boo," Rebecca said.
Scott had parked in the shade of the beach house, but they had not gotten out. They sat and watched Boo on the beach. She had changed into a white swimsuit and was building a sand castle with a little shovel and bucket. Her head of red hair bobbed like a buoy in the Gulf.
"Last time I saw her, she had her hair in cornrows."
"That lasted a while then she went to the ponytail."