said, "I'd just as soon drive back to Meriwether."
Trahearne laughed loudly, breaking the quiet in the
cab , and said , "Don't worry. Melinda's a saint. She
forgives me even before I transgress. So come in and
let's have a homecoming drink. " Then he slapped me
on the shoulder and climbed out, shouting, "Whiskey,
woman!" His great voice echoed across the shallow
valley. Across the creek, a light appeared in an upstairs
window of his mother's house, and the dark blot of a
woman's head came to the window.
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"In which order?" the woman in the doorway asked,
her soft, unaccented voice unhoned by even a hint of
rancor.
"Order be damned," Trahearne shouted back. "Celebrate, love, the sailor, home from the sea, the hunter home from the hill."
"On his cliche or bearing it?" she answered happily.
As the big man limped up the redwood steps to the
deck, I followed with his suitcases and my duffle like
some faithful native bearer. ·
"Who's that behind you?" his wife asked. "Gunga
Din?"
"Come, Gunga Din, you swine, sahib needs water
for the whiskey," he said as he came back to help me
with the bags.
"Thanks," I said, then paused on the steps to ease
the amphetamine trembles in my legs. Traheame and
his wife embraced in the doorway as she fondly
murmured you maniac, and she chuckled as she led him
through the doorway. In the silence, the creek whispered in its rocky bed, and the face at the far window seemed to be staring at me. I crept up the stairs in silent
guilt, away from the face.
By the time I reached the doorway, which opened
directly into a living room as big as a house, Trahearne
had fallen into a huge leather lounge chair and propped
up his feet. His wife was behind a small bar, rattling ice
cubes. Across the room, in a fireplace large enough to
roast a Volkswagen, three four-foot logs crackled
merrily against the mountain chill. From where I stood,
it looked like a cozy little fire.
"A drink, Mr. Sughrue?" Traheame's wife asked.
"A beer, please," I said, and she opened a bottle and
poured it into an earthenware mug, then brought the
drinks around, Traheame's first, then mine.
As she handed the mug to me, she said, "I'm afraid
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Traheame has the social grace of a stone. I'm Melinda
Trahearne." She held out a rough hand, which I shook
as I introduced myself. "Make yourself at home," she
said, then smiled. "Walk around until your butt wakes
up , then have a chair."
"Thanks," I said as she walked back to Traheame.
So I stood around like a knot on a log while she sat on
the arm of his chair and fiddled with his sparse hair. She
was so obviously pleased to see him home that I did my
best not to watch them, not to overhear her whispered
greetings.
I had been so wound up with Betty Sue Flowers
that I hadn't thought about what Trahearne's second
wife might look like, and even as I tried not to look at
her, she seemed a rather plain woman of about thirty,
not at all what I would have expected if I had thought
about it.
She wasn't ugly, just plain, and she looked as if she
had just come in from a hard day's work in the fields.
Her hair was a dull shade of brown, neither dark nor
light, and she wore it in a closely cropped tangle that
made her nose seem too long, her mouth too wide, and
her eyes set too far apart. Except for a streak of
pinkish-gray clay across her forehead, her face was
unpainted, and even in the soft light, her tan seemed
sallow, the skin color of a convict or a barmaid. She
wore a pair of baggy jeans and a loose velour sweatshirt, so I couldn't tell about her body; she didn't seem fat or skinny but she moved with the sort of controlled
grace rich girls seem to learn as soon as they take their
first steps. Her bare feet, too, were slender and elegant,
well-manicured, although her hands were as rough and
hard as a brick mason's, and her eyes were an odd
shade of blue-green, which might have made them
striking, but they didn't seem to match her hair or
coloring.
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She glanced at me, caught me watching her, and her
smile was generous, her teeth as straight and even as
money could buy. If her voice hadn't been completely
without accent, I might have thought that she was one
of those rich East Coast girls who majored in English
Lit and field hockey at one of the seven sisters. As I
watched, she slipped off the arm of the chair to stand
behind Trahearne, her strong hands kneading the thick
muscles of his shoulders. It looked like it felt good, but
he groaned.
"Enough, woman," he said, "the cure surpasseth the
disease." Then he patted her hands to hold them still.
"Sissy," she said, laughing as she walked over to pick
up his bags. When she lifted them, heavy as they were,
her shoulders didn't dip, and she carried them toward a
dark hallway as if they were empty. I knew they
weren't. As she walked away from me, the firm outlines
of her hips swayed with a force of their own beneath the
baggy jeans. As I turned back, I caught Trahearne
watching me watch his wife.
"How long have you two been married?" I asked,
then applied my mouth to a worthier project, my beer.
"Nearly three years," Traheame answered without
interest.
"Seems like a nice lady,"
"Yeah," he answered. "A nice lady." His voice
seemed to drift away with fatigue.
"Maybe I should unhook the cars and hit the road," I
said.
"Nonsense," Melinda said from the hallway.
"You've been on the road too long, and I insist that you
at least stay the night."
"Thank you, ma'am," I said, "but I don't want to
impose."
"No imposition at all," she said graciously. "The
basement is filled with guest rooms-it's private, quiet,
and you can come and go without bothering us at . all.
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There's a wet bar, an icebox full of beer, a small
kitchen, and two color televisions. You must stay."
"Well . . .
" I said.
"Oh to hell with him," Trahearne growled. "He's
some kind of ultimate redneck country boy, and he
can't sleep except under the stars. Besides, he's never
been married and he's scared shitless of domestic
strife. "
"Don't be silly," Melinda said, then laughed. "The
only strife in this household is the sound of Trahearne's
snores. " She walked over and picked.up my duffle bag.
"Come on, I'll show you your room."
"And I'll show myself to bed," Trahearne said as he
stood up. "Good night, C. W. , and all that social grace
crap," he added, then lumbered toward the hallway
like a wounded bear.
"In the morning," I said, then followed his wife
through the large, open kitchen to the stairway.
Downstairs , a large room with full-length glass walls
on the daylight side filled most of the basement, and the
bedrooms lay down a hallway that followed the track of
the upstairs hall. Melinda carried my bag to a small
bedroom beside the bathroom , then led me back to the
game room to show me the bar and the small kitchen.
"Please make yourself at home here," she said.
�·You'll find everything you need for breakfast in the
icebox. For lunch too. I'm sorry, but because Trahearne and I work at different hours, we only eat one formal meal at dinner. Usually around seven. Until
then, I'm afraid you'll have to fend for yourself."
"I'll be fine," I said.
"I'm sure you will, Mr. Sughrue," she said. "Bachelors always make the best houseguests. They're more capable of fending for themselves than most married
men, it seems." She smiled slightly. "You never
married?"
"No, ma'am."
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"Do you mind if I ask why not?"
"I don't mind," I said, "but the truth is that I don't
rightly know why not. I've never jumped out of an
airplane on purpose. Even in jump school they had to
kick me out. I guess nobody ever kicked me into
marriage."
"I've done some skydiving," she said softly, "and
found marriage to be just as exciting."
"You seem to be happy," I said.
"Yes, I am," she said. "And as I'm sure you noticed,
I'm very fond of my husband."
"Yes, ma'am. "
"And he seems fond of you," she said. "I'm pleased
about that. I don't begrudge my husband's friends. I
only hope we can be friends too." Then she held out
her hand again.
"Yes, ma'am," I said as I shook her hand.
"Of course, if you cail me 'ma'am' again, I'll have to
knock the shit out of you," she said calmly, then burst
out in a fit of giggles.
"I guess I could break down and call you Miz
Melinda," I said, and we both smiled.
"That's an improvement," she said, then wished me
pleasant dreams.
As she left me, her voice echoed in my head, words
and phrases that seemed to have no meaning-"my
husband" and "icebox"-but I didn't pay any attention
to myself.
The drive and the Desoxyn had left me too rattled to
sleep, so I sat down in front of the television to drink
beer and catch the late movies by cable from Spokane.
Although they were quiet for twenty or thirty minutes,
after that the Trahearnes made a great deal of commotion for a couple not engaged in domestic strife. Since I began in the business, I always did the whole number,
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so I had done more divorce work than I should have,
more than my share back in the days when I still had a