The Darkest Evening of the Year
which would conjure him in a sulfurous cloud even if whispered, Lottie never spoke of the disease.
“The girl says to Mookie, ‘No more cancer,’ and then she says, ‘It won’t come back.’”
The wind…the chimes.
“Amy?”
“She’s a strange child,” Amy said.
“Mookie says she’s got troubling eyes.”
“I thought beautiful.”
“I haven’t seen her myself.”
“Beautiful but bruised,” Amy said.
“Let’s hope she’s right.”
“What?”
“About Baiko’s cancer.”
“I suspect she is,” Amy said. “I’m sure she is.”
She stood by the driver’s door of her Expedition and watched Dani Chiboku drive away with the two latest rescues.
The day remained sunny, but she could no longer feel its warmth.
A moving shadow wiped the sun glare off the Expedition.
When Amy looked up, the covey of eastward-racing clouds seemed to be too high to cast such a shadow.
A change was coming. She didn’t know what it would be, but she knew it would not be a change for the better.
She did not like change. She wanted continuity and the peace that came with it: day folding into night, night into day, dogs saved and passed to loving homes, and more dogs saved.
A change was coming, and she was afraid.
Chapter
29
T he client was waiting for them east of Lake Elsinor, out where the merciless desert had met its match in the relentless tract-house builders.
Bobby Onions drove them to the rendezvous in his cool Land Rover because no way in hell would he ride in Vernon Lesley’s Chevy, which Bobby called “wimp wheels, a losermobile.”
Vern refrained from mentioning that every time he needed an extra hand, Bobby was available for hire, which suggested that clients were not standing in line outside Onions Investigations.
Inexplicably, the freeway traffic was light. Whatever the reason, Vern knew the explanation wasn’t that the Rapture had occurred, that the saved had been taken straight to Heaven.
Mrs. Bonnaventura, who lived in the crappy apartment next to Vern’s crappy apartment, believed in the imminence of the Rapture. Housebound by emphysema, she kept two things close to her: a wheeled tank of oxygen, which she received through nasal cannula, and a small bag that she had packed for the miraculous ascent.
In the bag were a Bible, a change of underwear, photos of dead loved ones—family and friends—whom Mrs. Bonnaventura intended to track down without delay upon reaching Paradise, and breath mints.
She knew she wouldn’t need the oxygen tank in Heaven, where she would be restored to her youth, and she couldn’t explain to Vern why she packed the underwear or the breath mints. She’d said, “I just don’t want to take any chances, it would be so embarrassing.”
When she talked about meeting God, Mrs. Bonnaventura glowed. The prospect of a divine howdy-do delighted her.
Vern didn’t believe in the Rapture, and he was neutral on the existence of God. But one thing he knew for sure: If God existed, meeting Him after death would be so terrifying that you’d probably die a second time from sheer fright.
Even someone like Mrs. Bonnaventura, who had lived a mostly blameless life, when ushered into the awesome presence of the Creator of the infinite universe and also of the butterfly, would discover ten thousand fearsome new layers of meaning in the word humility.
Mrs. Bonnaventura said God was pure love, as if this quality of the Lord made meeting him a less weighty event, as if it would be like—but even nicer than—meeting Oprah Winfrey.
Vern figured that if God existed, a God of pure love, then for sure there had to be a Purgatory, because you would need a place of purification before you dared go upstairs for the Ultimate Hug. Even a sweet woman like Mrs. Bonnaventura, rapturing directly from this life to God’s presence, would detonate as violently as antimatter meeting matter, like in that old episode of Star Trek.
Interrupting Vern’s theological musings, piloting the Rover with one hand, rubbing the back of his neck with the other, Bobby Onions said, “So what’s the story with the bounce?”
“Bounce?”
“The woman.”
“What woman?” Vern wondered.
“What woman could it be?” Bobby said impatiently. “Redwing.”
“You said someone you’re investigating, you call a monkey.”
“That’s a man or a woman. Besides, I’m not investigating her anymore.”
“So why do you call her the bounce?”
“When a woman has the right stuff in the
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