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With five hundred mills in his system he sank into a fitful sleep. Waking sometime after noon, he rose and made the same path to the guest room he’d made earlier. This time, Shel was there. And his heart skipped at the sight of her.

She sat on the bed cross-legged, her red hair hanging loose about her shoulders, a cigarette in her hand. She was dressed in a T-shirt three sizes too large, her arms sticking out of the billowing sleeves like a little girl’s. She wore sweatpants, too, a pair of heavy socks. The same pants and socks he’d seen on the floor earlier.

“How long you been home?” he asked.

She turned to look at him. Her eyes were beginning to betray her age. They were too serious for the tomboy face. She’d started putting henna in her hair, too, to ward off the gray. All in all, though, she remained a looker. Frank, who was ten years younger, returned her gaze and thought, I need you. Every minute, every day, I need you. You’re all I got.

“I woke up, you were gone,” he said.

“That’s not true. I’ve been here all morning.”

“Don’t do this,” Frank said.

Shel cocked her head. “Do what?”

“Make out like I’m nuts.”

“Frank, what’s going on?”

“You weren’t here.”

She turned to face him squarely. “I went out to stretch my legs for a while. Just to the road and back. That what you mean?”

“Yeah, sure,” he said, misery in his voice. “That must be it.”

They stared at each other. Shel turned away first. Frank moved to where her gaze landed and pounded flat-hand at the wall.

“Quality Sheetrock, here. You bet. Lamefuck plaster job, though. Second-rate latex. A color they call ecru.”

“Frank, good God, what is it?”

He crossed the room, knelt down and wrapped his arms about her, settling his head into her lap. “I’m sorry,” he said, eyes shut tight. “It’s just…”

She put her cigarette to her lips and stroked his hair. “I know,” she said softly, exhaling smoke.

His grip weakened. He looked up at her. She rose from the bed and searched for her jeans. “I’ll make you some lunch,” she said. “How’s that sound?”

Good things happen to those who stick with it, he thought. “Yeah, sure,” he said. “Sounds first-rate.”

* * *

In the kitchen she fixed up sandwiches and soup. She regretted lying to him- of course she’d slipped out that morning, and not just for a little walk. She’d needed time with her thoughts. Danny was getting out today and, well, that was a lot to deal with. She did not mean to trick Frank. Things were just hard right now.

The last thing she wanted to do was make out like he was crazy.

It wasn’t that she thought he was unbalanced, just vulnerable. He had trouble piecing things together, he flew into easy rages. His hunger for human contact was only exceeded by his inability to make it count for much. Shel couldn’t say if all that added up to something a psychiatrist would put a name to, but after living with it at close quarters for a little over two years, she could testify that it signified at least a broken soul, if not exactly a sick mind.

She’d met him while working at a brunch and dinner spot in Port Costa overlooking the strait. She’d been out of prison four years, and it had taken that long to get half her confidence back. A convicted felon, she’d been turned down so often by casinos and even card rooms she’d returned to waitressing just to get by. It had taken some effort, untangling all that bitterness and loneliness, wandering town to town, just like she had before Danny. And him still being inside and all, her being too broke, too ashamed, to go down and visit him in Arizona. The letters, well, they were just letters.

Finally, she worked her way up to a nice place- starched formal shirt, red bow tie and cummerbund, a tony wine list. One day Frank wandered in, for Saturday brunch. He had a boy with him, a three-year-old named Jesse.

Frank was sweet like a pound mutt and reasonably good looking, rangy and dark with an easy smile, reminding Shel of Montgomery Clift in The Misfits. But it wasn’t his looks that charmed her. It was the way he interacted with his son.

She never meant for it to amount to much, just some company once in a while, till Danny got out again. Sex was tense, haunted by guilt. Mostly they just took walks with Jesse or did the playground bit as Frank talked through his problems. He was in his sixth month of rehab. His wife wouldn’t go. She binged on crank, disappeared for days, sometimes leaving Jesse alone in the house till Frank showed up to find him soiled and crying. What do I do? Frank wondered. Turn her in? Keep trying? She’s not evil, he’d say, just strung out.

Shel, once upon a time a collector of strays herself, said she saw his problem. Like her mother before her, she’d taken in a hard case or two over the years, knew how easy it was to draw the line, how hard it could be to honor it. Danny’d been the first whole human being she’d ever loved. And that was why she’d loved him madly.

Frank, at that point, was more distraction than attraction, to steal a line from her mother. Truth be told, Shel’s interest focused on the boy. Jesse had blond hair that erupted like crabgrass from his head, emphasizing ears so large he’d be ten before they matched the rest of him. He played like a puppy. He squinted when he smiled, and the smile would stop you dead.

The few occasions Frank stayed over, wanting moral support because his wife had been gone longer than usual this time, Shel secretly left the bed in the middle of the night and padded down the hall to the living room where she’d fussed up covers on the couch for Jesse. She plopped down on the rug and just sat there in the glow of the night-light, watching the boy sleep on his stomach, hands bunched beneath his chin, breathing in and out. Every now and then she’d reach over, brush a strand of hair from his face, or lay her palm upon his back, simply to feel the warmth of his body. Any person who can create a child so beautiful, she told herself, has light inside. Maybe, she thought, once Danny’s out again, him and me, we can try.

Frank’s old lady finally got wind there was another woman in the picture. She didn’t bother to flesh it out. She disappeared for good this time. Being the woman she was, she took Jesse with her.

Frank came a little unhinged then. Later, Shel would tell herself that if there’d been a time to walk away, that would have been it. But her favorite parable growing up had been the Good Samaritan. And the Good Samaritan didn’t interrogate the lost, beaten, dying man he found by the side of the road, didn’t ask who he was, where he came from, whether what happened wasn’t really his own damn fault. He just picked the man up and took him to the next safe place. Samaritans and victims are wedded together. They share a bond almost as fierce as love, or so she soon found out.

She joined in, searching up and down the county for Jesse. The thought of the boy out there alone, with only a wild woman on drugs to fend for him, it haunted her. And, privately, she felt pangs of guilt- if not for her, the boy’s mother wouldn’t have snatched the boy and run.

Together, she and Frank stapled handbills to telephone poles, pinned them up on community service message boards or tucked them under windshields at supermarket parking lots. They checked emergency rooms and SRO dives, questioned liquor store clerks and streetwalkers and chatty tweaks. This went on for nearly two months. Then one day a couple of detectives showed up, telling Frank to collect his coat and come along.

At the station the detectives had Frank identify some clothing found out on the rim of Honker Bay. “Kid’s corduroys, woman’s blouse and bra. Give it a sniff, chief. Tell us something.” Trembling, Frank inspected the stuff and said yes, he recognized it. That earned him free admission to an interview room. He spent the next four days in there, being grilled, the detectives convinced his wife and Jesse were dead. And Frank was the killer.