“He’s right,” I said. “Those houses are on highways, too, mostly, where cars are going by too fast to take time to notice anything.”
Lou nodded and said, “He’s right, yeah, but I see more of a tie-in than just that. Outside the city limits means the sheriff’s department handles it; inside means the local cops. Or some in town, some out means a combined investigation. I think staying outside town proper has to do with these people being afraid of what our police chief might do if he got into the fray.”
“Oh, Lou, are you kidding? That fat nincompoop wouldn’t do a damn thing.”
“That’s just it. The chief wouldn’t do a damn thing himself, but he would call in the Criminal Bureau of Investigation. He always does in a murder case. He did about those rapes last year, remember?”
“And Brennan’s not much for calling in the CBI.”
“No. Like I said, he likes to fool around with a case himself, especially in an election year.”
“And you think these B-and-E artists are sophisticated enough to consider that angle?”
“Why not? Besides, they’re obviously local people and would’ve known that just from living in town and paying attention.”
“I don’t know. I live in town and I didn’t know that.”
“Maybe you’re not paying attention.”
“Keep that up and you won’t get another beer. Listen, Lou, why is it obvious they’re local people? Why can’t they be out of Davenport or Rock Island or some place, and drive down now and then for a hit?”
“Mallory. You aren’t thinking. And you who used to be a cop yourself.”
“I still don’t get you.”
“I figured it from what you told me about last night-them coming back.”
I thought for a moment, then said, “Damn! What’s wrong with me? Of course they’re local! They knew me! They knew where to look for me…. They wanted me to know that; to know they would come around and work me over if I caused them any trouble. And anybody who wasn’t local would’ve split right after the job, would’ve headed back for wherever it was they worked out of. Lou, what about that car, that red-white-and-blue GTO?”
“License number three? What about it? You heard me last night when I said it was stolen, didn’t you?”
I nodded. “But who was it you said the car belonged to? It was somebody I know….”
“Car belongs to Pat Nelson. You remember Pat, don’t you? Went to school with us, a little ahead of us.”
“I remember him. Had a run-in with him once.”
“Oh?”
“That’s neither here nor there, but did you ever consider Nelson could’ve been in on the robbery and reported his car stolen because he knew it’d been seen there?”
“After the fact, you mean? No, he called it in earlier than that, a good hour before you saw that car at Jonsen’s.”
“I don’t know. I still think it could stand some looking into. Nelson’s been in trouble ever since he was a kid.”
“True enough,” Lou agreed. “Reform school when he was barely in his teens, if I recall.”
“That’s right. You going to look into it?”
“Probably. Are you?”
“Probably.”
“You want to do it together, Mal?”
“That’s what I’d like, but we better work separately, or Brennan might cause us some headaches. We can just keep each other up on what we’re doing.”
Lou nodded.
“What ever happened to Nelson?” I asked. “I mean, what’s he been up to lately?”
“Think he has a job with that silo company down in South End. He’s married, you know.”
“Who to?”
Lou grinned. “Don’t tell me I’m the first to break it to you.”
“Break what to me?”
“He’s married to your old girl friend. Debbie Lee. Only she’s Debbie Nelson now. They got a kid, I think.”
“Yeah, right,” I said. “I just didn’t figure that marriage would’ve lasted this long.” I shook my head. “Debbie Lee. Been a long time since I thought about her. My old flame.”
“That dates back a ways, doesn’t it?”
“Hell, yes. My first love. Junior high. American Bandstand and going steady and dances Friday night at the YWCA. Jesus, I haven’t thought about those days in years.”
“Well, neither has she, I’d bet. You ought to look her up.”
“No,” I said, “no, I don’t think so. Married women tend to have husbands.”
At this point the conversation drifted into other areas, mostly concerned with briefing each other on what we and friends of ours had been up to in recent years. At five-thirty I talked Lou into staying around for supper and while he called home to tell his folks, I got a couple steaks and some fries together, his share of which he wolfed down gratefully. Lou was pretty ragged from living at home. “You can love your parents without liking them,” is the way he explained the situation to me.
At seven Lou and I were watching an old rerun of Star Trek when the phone rang. I answered it.
“Is this Mallory?” A female voice. Soft.
I said it was me.
“Mal? Can I see you? I have to see you.”
“Who is this?”
“Debbie. Remember? Debbie Lee… Nelson now. Can I see you? I can be over in ten minutes.”
I held the receiver out and looked at it for a second. Then I shrugged, brought it back, and said, “Okay.”
She hung up.
So did I.
“Who was that?” Lou said.
“You wouldn’t even believe it,” I said.
I showed him the door.
12
I was thirteen when I fell for Debbie Lee. It happened at a sock hop after school in the gym at the junior high. In certain obscure areas in Iowa hinterlands, this bizarre ritual is still practiced.
Debbie was just an inch short of five feet tall and looked like something her parents might’ve won at a high-class carnivaclass="underline" heart-shaped face, enormous blue eyes, appropriate Kewpie lips, cap of curly blonde hair, the living doll cliche come to life.
Also, she was cuddly looking, just a trifle plump (baby fat), and she wore pink a lot. Especially fuzzy pink sweaters. And even at thirteen she could fill a sweater out, one of maybe ten girls in the whole seventh grade who could. I think that was what was so appealing about her, really; not only did she look like the sort of picture-book princess a thirteen-year-old boy could worship with knightlike purity and devotion, but she was also the stuff wet dreams are made of, the possessor of a body designed to further madden an already puberty-deranged adolescent.
I expressed my love for Debbie, at that first junior high sock hop, by asking her for each slow dance; she accepted every time, and we would dance to the strains of “Wonderland by Night” or “Blue on Blue” (the only two slow tunes in the record collection of the acned fat kid who emceed every hop). It was heaven! Here I was, holding Debbie Lee in my arms (sort of-you could’ve driven a truck between us, actually)-though I wouldn’t dream of hanging onto her like the “steadies” in the eighth grade who, rumor had it, “made out” frequently…. Well, I would dream of it, but I wouldn’t dare try it. We didn’t say a word to each other-“yes,” “no,” and “thanks” all being communicated by nods of the head-but nevertheless, true love it was, and I had optimistic enough an outlook to hope Debbie shared my feelings.
This, of course, is where the go-between comes in. Every junior high love story has a go-between. Our go-between, Debbie’s and mine, was a girl named Darla whose complexion looked like the surface of the moon. Her hair was a ghastly reddish fright wig, her nose a beak, her eyes beady, her teeth buck. She was not attractive.
Which is what being a go-between is all about. The go-between is a girl who can’t get a boy to save her life, so she becomes the best friend of an attractive girl and serves a function somewhere between agent and pimp, getting far more than her ten percent of the boy’s attention. In fact, the boy will spend much more time talking to the go-between than to his actual girl friend. At least that’s the way it was back in those days before the first shot of the sexual revolution had been fired. In my case, I went steady and broke up with Debbie Lee three times before ever saying a word to her.