O Is for Outlaw
other night."
"Last night," I said, as if she didn't know.
"Really. Did he give you that?"
"It's on loan. That's why I'm looking for him, to give it back," I said. "I tried calling, but his phone's been disconnected."
She'd taken out a mascara wand, leaning close to the mirror while she brushed through her lashes, leaving little dots of black. As long as she was wangling for information, I thought I'd wangle some myself.
I said, "What about you? Are you a friend of his?"
She shrugged. "I wait on him when he's in and we shoot the breeze."
"So nothing personal."
"I have a boyfriend."
"Was that him?"
"Who?"
"The guy in the watch cap, sitting at the booth out there?"
She stopped what she was doing. "As a matter of fact, yes. What makes you ask?"
"I was thinking to cop a joint when I saw you sit down. Is he local?"
She shook her head. "L.A." There was a pause and then she said, "How long have you dated Mickey?"
"It's kind of hard to keep track."
"Then this is recent," she said, turning the question into a statement to offset the inquisition.
I started fluffing at my hair the way she'd been fluffing hers. I leaned close to the mirror and checked some imaginary eye makeup, running the flat of one knuckle along the lower edge of one eye. She was still waiting for an answer. I looked at her blankly. "Sorry. Did you ask me something?" She took a pack of unfiltered Camels from her jeans and extracted a cigarette. She applied a flame to the tip, using a wooden match she had scratched on the bottom of her shoe. "I didn't know he was dating."
"Who, Mickey? Oh, please. He's always on the make. That's half his charm." I could picture the ashtray in his apartment, the numerous unfiltered Camel cigarette butts, along with the array of kitchen matches that looked just like hers. "He's so secretive. Jeez. You never know what he's up to or who he's doing these days. "
She said, "I didn't know that about him." She turned to face me, leaning her backside against the sink with her weight on one hip.
I was warming to the subject, lies tumbling out with a tidy little mix of truth. "Take my word for it. Mickey doesn't give you a straight answer about anything. He's impossible that way."
"Doesn't that bother you?" she asked.
"Nah. I used to be jealous, but what's the point? Monogamy's not his thing. I figure what the hell? He's still a stud in his way. Take it or leave it. He's always got someone waiting in the wings."
"You live in L.A.?"
"I'm mostly here. Anytime I'm down, though, I stop by his place."
The information I was doling out seemed to make her restless. She said, "I have to get back to work. If you see him, tell him Thea said 'hi."' She dropped the cigarette on the floor and stepped on it. "Let me know if you find him. He owes me money."
"You and me both, kid," I said. Thea left the room. I confess I smirked when she banged the door shut. I caught sight of myself in the mirror. "You are such a little shit," I said.
I leaned on the sink for a minute, trying to piece together what I'd learned from her. Thea couldn't know about the shooting or she wouldn't have been forced to try to weasel information out of me. She must have hoped he was out of town, which would go a long way toward explaining why he hadn't been in touch with her. It wasn't difficult to picture her in a snit of some kind. There's no one as irrational as a woman on the make. She might seize the opportunity to screw around on her steady boyfriend, but woe betide the man who screwed around on her. Given the fact that Mickey's phone was out, she must have driven down to his apartment to collect her personal belongings. She certainly hadn't warmed to the idea that he and I were an item. I wondered how Scottie Shackelford would feel if he found out she was boffing Mick. Or maybe he knew. In which case, I wondered if he'd taken steps to put a stop to it.
Chapter 17
----
I came out of the ladies' room and paused inside the doorway to the bar, glancing to my left. Scott Shackelford was no longer sitting in the booth. I spotted him at the bar, chatting with the bartender, Charlie. The crowd was beginning to thin out. The band had long ago packed up and departed. It was nearly one-forty-five and the guys looking to get laid were forced to zero in on the few single women who remained. The busboys were loading dirty glassware into plastic bins. Thea was now standing at the bar with Scott, using a calculator to add up her tips. I zipped up the front of
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher