Dark Rivers of the Heart
worst moment and start sliding around. It has to remain stationary."
"After that much glue, you'll probably need a small nuclear device to get it off."
Head cocked in curiosity, Rocky watched them through the back window of the cab.
The adhesive required longer than usual to bond, either because Ellie used too much or because of the cold. In ten minutes, however, the microwave transceiver was fixed securely to the truck bed.
She opened the collapsible receiving dish to its full eighteen-inch extension. She plugged one end of the utility cord into the base of the transceiver. Then she hooked her fingers into the narrow gap that she had left in the rear window of the cab, slid the pane farther open, and fed the electrical cord into the backseat.
Rocky pushed his snout through the window and licked Ellie's hands as she worked.
When the cord between the transceiver and the window was taut but not stretched tight, she pushed Rocky's snout out of the way and slid the window as shut as the cord would allow.
"We're going to track somebody by satellite?" Spencer asked as they jumped off the back of the truck.
"Information is power," she said.
Putting up the tailgate, he said, "Well, of course, it is."
"And I have some heavy-duty knowledge."
"I wouldn't dispute that for a moment."
They returned to the cab of the pickup.
She pulled the utility cord from the backseat and plugged it into one of the two sockets in the cigarette-lighter adapter. She plugged the laptop into the second socket.
"All right," she said grimly, "next stop-Vail."
He started the engine.
Almost too excited to drive, Eve Jammer cruised the Vegas night, searching for an opportunity to become the completely fulfilled woman that Roy had shown her how to be.
Cruising past a seedy bar where flashing neon signs advertised topless dancers, Eve saw a sorry-looking, middle-aged guy step out the front door. He was bald, maybe forty pounds overweight, with facial skin folds to rival those of any shar-pei. His shoulders were slumped under a yoke of weariness. Hands in his coat pockets, head hung low, he schlepped toward the half-full parking lot beside the bar.
She drove past him into the lot and parked in an empty stall.
Through her side window, she watched him approaching. He shuffled as if too beaten down by the world to fight gravity any more than he absolutely had to.
She could imagine how it was for him. Too old, too unattractive, too fat, too socially awkward, too poor to win the favors of a girl like those he so much desired. He was on his way home after a few beers, bound for a lonely bed, having passed a few hours watching gorgeous, big-breasted, long-legged, firm-bodied young women whom he could never possess.
Frustrated, depressed. Achingly lonely.
Eve felt so sorry for that man, to whom life had been grossly unfair.
She got out of her car and approached him as he reached his ten-year-old, unwashed Pontiac. "Excuse me," she said.
He turned, and his eyes widened at the sight of her.
"You were here the other night," she guessed, making it sound like a statement.
"Well
yeah, last week," he said. He couldn't restrain himself from looking her over. He was probably unaware of licking his lips.
"I saw you then " she said pretending shyness. "I
I didn't have the nerve to say hello."
He gaped at her in disbelief. And he was slightly wary, unable to believe a woman like her would be coming on to him.
"The thing is," she said, "you look exactly like my dad."
"Which was a lie.
"I doc He was less wary now that she had mentioned her dad, but there was also less pathetic hope in his eyes.
"Oh, exactly like him," she said. "And
and the thing is
the thing is that
I hope you won't think I'm weird
but the thing is
the only men I can do it with, go to bed with and be really wild with
are men who look like my father."
As he realized that he had stumbled into a bed of good fortune more exciting than any in his most testosterone-flooded fantasies, the jowled and dewlapped Romeo straightened his shoulders. His chest lifted. A smile of sheer delight made him look ten years younger, though no less like a shar-pei.
In that transcendent moment, when the poor man no doubt
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