“Why is that the plan?”
“I’d be good at it.” Russ pulled open the door to the diner, wagged a finger at the waitress as he aimed for a booth. “Bickford’s been good to me. It gave me a home, a living, and more, it gave me Seline and CeeCee. I want a chance at helping it grow—and stay stable, to pump up the tourist trade here and there.”
“You would be good at it.” Brooks sat back as Kim served them coffee without being asked, and as Russ chatted her up.
He’d probably been born for it, Brooks realized.
“Mayor Conroy,” Brooks murmured as he lifted his coffee.
“Chief Gleason.”
“Ain’t it a kick in the nuts? We’re the grown-ups. Especially you, Daddy.”
“Daddy times two, come September.”
“Again? Really?”
Pride and pleasure shone on Russ’s face. “As real as it gets.”
“Hey, congratulations, Russ. You do good work in that department.”
“We’re keeping it quiet for another month, but word’s getting out.” He leaned forward a bit. In the Monday-morning quiet of the diner, ears were always pricked for gossip. “Seline’s sick as three dogs in the morning. A couple of the other teachers—including your dad—noticed she was, well, we’ll say glowing some.”
“He didn’t say a word to me, and I saw him for a bit yesterday.”
“She asked him not to. Your dad’s a vault.”
“He is that.”
“So, with me being an old married man and father of one and a bump, I have to live vicariously.” Russ wiggled red eyebrows. “Hot date this past weekend?”
“I got called in just before eleven to help break up a fight at Beaters. Justin Blake, apparently taking on all comers.”
“Boy’s a troublemaker.”
“That plus belligerent, spoiled and still underage. I’m adding substance-abuse problems. His daddy didn’t appreciate me putting his firstborn in a cell.”
“Lincoln’s an older troublemaker, with the money to back it up. I’m surprised they served the kid at Beaters.”
“According to all the witnesses I talked to, they didn’t. He shoved his way in, already lit, then got rowdy when they wouldn’t serve him and tried to haul him out. Anyway, Blake dragged himself and his lawyer down to the station.”
“Doesn’t sound like a fun-filled Saturday night for you.”
“Or most of Sunday,” Brooks added. “But the kid’s out on bail. He’ll have to go to alcohol school, do some community service, pay a fine and damages. Barely nineteen, and booted out of two colleges, already with two DUIs and more moving violations than I can count. He can’t drive, legally, for another year, but it doesn’t seem to stop him from getting drunk or high, then going someplace else to pick a fight.”
“Ah, youth.”
Brooks gestured with his coffee. “We were never that stupid, or that arrogant.”
“We were pretty stupid, but no, not that. We never got behind the wheel after we got piss-faced on beer we were too young to buy and drink.” Russ sat back, shoved a flop of his carrot-juice mop off his forehead. “You need a Saturday night off, son. You know Seline’s got a list of eligible friends she’s dying to pair up with you.”
“I’ll kill you first, and as chief of police, I know how to get away with it.”
“Just saying. Unless you’re still bumping hips with Sylbie.”
“That’s done. Good and done.”
“Then—”
“Actually, I’ve spent some time recently with Abigail Lowery.”
“No shit?” Eyes bright, Russ edged forward again. “Do tell, and I mean do.”
“I’ve got to get to work.”
“You can’t drop that and not follow through.”
“Let’s just say she’s interesting, mysterious, sexy without trying to be. She’s got a dog who looks big enough and smart enough to operate heavy machinery. And she can handle a Glock.”
“Then why’s she spending time with you?”
“I keep getting in her way. I’ve got to get to work. Pay for the coffee, and I’ll vote for you.”
“That’s what I like to hear. Hey, come on over for dinner, bring the lady.”
“I’m still working on her getting used to letting me into the house,” Brooks said as he slid out of the booth. “Getting her out of it’s going to take more doing.”
In the late afternoon, Brooks took some personal time and ran the errands to complete a mission. By the time he’d finished them and drove to his parents’ house, his father had changed from his work clothes to his gardening clothes.
Sunny and Loren worked on one of the front beds, plugging in young, colorful annuals.
Both of them wore hats, his father’s a battered ball cap that went back to Brooks’s third-base days, his mother’s a wide-brimmed straw with a clutch of red flowers tucked in its ribbon.
He loved the way they worked together, hip to hip, with music spilling out of the screened windows and doors—all wide open, though there was still a chill to the air.
When Brooks pulled in, Loren pushed to his feet, rising up on his long legs. Healthy color in his face, Brooks thought, easy smile, hair curling out from under the cap showing plenty of gray but still thick.
One day, maybe, he’d stop seeing his father as he’d been in the hospital before the bypass. Stop seeing him pale and gray and old and a little afraid.
His mother got to her feet as well, planted her hands on her hips. Brooks remembered the fear in her eyes, too. She’d talked a good game as they’d waited and paced and prayed. But the fear had lived in her eyes.
Now they looked like they were supposed to, he thought. Grubby from gardening, happy to see him, and still hip to hip.
He got out, hoped to hell he hadn’t made a big mistake, and retrieved the travel crate from the back of the car.
“Hey, there,” his father began.
“Hey, back. Hi, Ma.”
“What have you got there?”
“I brought you a present.” As he spoke, the contents of the crate woke with a yip that trembled with nerves and joy.
“Oh.” Sunny actually put her hands behind her back. “Brooks, I told you, I’m not ready for—”
“He comes with a return policy. You know Petie out at the county pound? He’s bending the rules just a little so you can have a look at the pup here, and he at you, before all the papers I filled out get finalized.”
“Brooks, I just can’t … Oh, God, look at that face.”
“Petie says it looks like he’s got some shepherd and some retriever in him, and God knows what else. But he’s got a sweet nature, and some balls. The literal ones have to go, that’s the rules, but he’s a brave little bastard.”
“Oh, Brooks. Loren, do something.”
“We ought to let him out, don’t you think?” Loren put an arm around Sunny’s shoulders. “At least take a real look at him.”
“Some help you are. All right, let him out of there. It’s not right he has to be in a cage like a criminal.”
“That’s the thing.” Brooks set the crate down, opened the door and scooped out the bundle of wiggling, licking, yipping delight. “He’s about ten weeks old. If he doesn’t find a home in another month, say, it’s curtains. The green mile. Riding the lightning.”
Deliberately, Sunny folded her arms. “Stop.”
“Dead dog walking,” Brooks added as his mother sighed and his father struggled not to laugh. “What?” Brooks held the dog’s nose up to his ear. “You sure? Okay. He says he wants me to tell you … ‘Nobody knows the trouble I’ve seen,’” Brooks sang in somber tones.
“Oh, give me that pup.” Sunny stepped forward, gathered up the dog, who trembled with the force of love at first sight as he lapped at her face. “Oh, damn it. Damn it. Damn it,” she said a third time, with the words soft and muffled against the pup’s fur.
Beside her, Loren gave his son a thumbs-up before he ruffled the dog’s ears. “Has he had his supper?”
“Not yet, but I’ve got everything you need in the car. That is, if Ma’s willing to save his life.”
“I should’ve at least tried out spanking with you.” She held the pup up so his paws ran in the air and his tail wagged. “Loren, he’s going to dig in the flower beds and poop on the floor. He’ll chew everything he can get those milk teeth on.”