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“What’d you need me for?” Regent said.

“She’s bringing a friend.”

“A friend?”

“Yep.”

“Have you seen this friend?”

“Not yet.” Garner took a few more gulps of beer, and the bottle was empty. He turned and put it on the counter behind him. “And there’s no guarantee with the friend.”

“What do you mean, there’s no guarantee? You mean she might be ugly as a jar of warts?”

“No, Alicia says she’s a real looker. But she’s curious.”

“Oh. Curious.”

“Yep.” He opened the refrigerator, took out another beer, twisted it open with a phut sound. “She doesn’t know if she’ll do anything, or if she does, how far she’ll go with it. So she may just end up watching.”

“I hope not. You got some good weed?”

“Good weed and good whisky. We’ll get them well-lubricated.”

“What time are they coming?”

“Should be here any time.”

Regent opened his second beer a few seconds before the doorbell rang.

“The ladies have arrived,” Garner said as he left the kitchen.

“Either that or some really fast Chinese food,” Regent said as he followed him.

Alicia was a busty, blowsy dark-blonde with a lot of freckles all over her body, but oddly none on her face, who liked to laugh and drink. She wasn’t a great looker – in fact, she was quite plain with a chubby face to match her plump body – but she was an animal in front of the camera, and the members of MILFParade.com loved her. She had loyal fans who sent her money and gifts. She wasn’t much to look at, but there was little, if anything, she wouldn’t do in front of the cameras. Her friend Beverly was a short, slender brunette with a beautiful face and a body that filled her green tank top and blue shorts quite nicely. She had a great tan and shapely legs, a tight ass, and nice round breasts that weren’t too big and weren’t too small. She had a long slender neck and an exotic face, with almond-shaped eyes – she almost looked Asian. Unlike Alicia, Beverly was a looker.

Garner poured drinks and said the food was on the way, but in the meantime, “Drink up!”

* * * *

Reznick parked across the street and wished the sun would go down faster. After dark, he was just another car parked at the curb, but in daylight, he was plainly visible sitting there staring at the house to his left across the street.

First, he’d followed Alicia Carey to an apartment complex on Hilltop where she had picked up a woman. She’d stayed there for a while. Then he’d followed her and her friend here, to this house on Jupiter Street in a subdivision of streets named after planets.

He turned his head to the right. He was parked in front of a house not unlike the one he was watching. Ranch-style, a semicircular driveway with an entrance and an exit, double doors with beveled glass in the rectangular windows. A landscaped yard with an old-fashioned tire swing hanging from a branch of a big old oak in the front yard.

The yard across the street looked much the same, but without the swing. The double doors didn’t have any glass in them. The drapes were drawn on the large window in front. But Reznick had learned a great deal could be seen through the narrow slit between closed drapes.

Of course, he couldn’t walk over there and start peering into windows in the light of the late day. So he waited.

* * * *

Regent worked on Alicia’s friend, Beverly.

“You look like you could use some more whisky,” Regent said.

“Oh, no, really, I probably shouldn’t,” she said as he poured more into her glass on the coffee table.

“More ice?” he said.

She laughed and shook her head. “I really shouldn’t, but… yeah, more ice.”

He scooped his hand into the ice bucket Garner had brought out and dropped a few cubes into her glass.

“I understand you’re curious about what we do,” he said as he handed her the glass.

“Oh, yeah, well… yes, I am.” She laughed. She was clearly nervous. Her second drink should relax her.

“You married, Bev?”

“Oh, no. Not the marrying type. I enjoy being single.” She sipped her drink, then sipped it again, a little more fully the second time.

“Good for you. Kind of frees you up to… well, to experiment.”

She grinned and leaned toward him and said, “Yes, that’s right.” The whisky was kicking in. She put a hand on his arm and said, “I don’t mind a little experimentation now and then.”

“You ever been with another woman?”

“I tried it once,” she said. “It wasn’t bad, really. But I’ve never gotten around to doing it again.”

“Ever been with her?” he said, nodding to Alicia, who was standing across the room looking at a large painting on the wall, talking with Garner.

“No.”

“Would you like to be?”

“Well… I dunno.” She smirked. It was a flirtatious smirk. Another sip from her glass, followed by a couple gulps.

Regent smiled.

She said, “Do I get to experiment with you a little?”

“I think that could be arranged,” he said.

She put her drink on the end table. They kissed, and she was aggressive – her tongue plunged into his mouth and she sucked his tongue into hers. Her hands moved all over him as they kissed, all over his back, his chest, his face and hair.

Suddenly, she was on him, straddling his lap and pulling at his pants.

“Whoa,” he said, pulling his head back. “Let’s save it for the cameras.”

“Really?” she said. Her eyes got big for a moment, then narrowed and crinkled up. She curled up against him, her head on his chest. “I don’t know if I can do that.”

“Oh, sure you can. Easiest thing in the world. Now, why don’t you finish that drink so I can pour you some more.”

* * * *

Reznick waited for the dark, then got out of his car. He was parked between street lights, so he was hidden by darkness between them when he crossed the silent, empty street. He stepped up on the sidewalk in front of the house, then turned right, his sneakers quiet on the concrete. He turned left, walked up the driveway, on the far side of the cars parked there.

Crickets chirped somewhere, and a frog croaked nearby. There were gardenias growing in front of the house, and the hot, humid night air was thick with their sweet fragrance.

The garage and the house were attached, but the garage was set back from the front of the house. There was a side window on the house that appeared to look into the same room as the large front window, and Reznick went to it. He peered through the sliver of space between the drapes. Couch, coffee table, chairs, fireplace, television – it was a living room. An empty living room – there was no one there.

Reznick cocked his head and listened closely for something, anything.

Was that the hint of voices he heard? Laughter?

They had gone to the rear of the house.

He doubled back and crossed the front of the garage, then turned left around its corner. He walked down a narrow passageway between the side of the garage on his left, and a six-foot-tall wooden fence on his right. The fence divided this yard from the neighbor’s. He came to a gate that matched the fence in height. He fumbled around in the dark for a latch. He found it a moment later and flipped it up, pushed the gate open and went through. He closed the gate behind him, latched it, then walked on until he came to the end of the garage.

He stopped at the garage’s back corner and very carefully, slowly, peeked around the edge. There was no one there, but he saw a window with light in it. He stepped around the corner and saw that the window’s drapes were open, and there were people on the other side of the window moving around, and Reznick quickly stepped back behind the cover of the garage’s corner.