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"Stick to the subject. Both of us have felt guilty all these years about a woman who didn't have the courtesy to drop a postcard indicating she was alive. Do you feel like you've been had, maybe just a little bit?"

"What do you guys say at meetings? Live and let live?" he said.

"She was Raphael Chalons's punch?"

"More than that," he said. We were in the guest bedroom, where he was packing his clothes in a suitcase, preparing to move to an apartment he planned to use while he supervised the reconstruction of our destroyed home south of town. "She had a kid. Almost nine months to the day after Chalons rescued her at that farmhouse."

"What happened to the kid?"

"Guess?"

I stared at his back as he bent over his suitcase, arranging his shirts and balled-up socks. "Valentine Chalons?" I said.

"That's the way I'd read it." He straightened up, his long-sleeve white shirt still fresh and clean, even after a long drive from New Orleans through heavy traffic.

"And Raphael Chalons raised him? And that's what all this bullshit has been about — the Chalons family doesn't want anyone to know Val's mother was a prostitute?"

"You don't buy it?" Jimmie said.

"No."

"Why not?" he asked.

"The old man doesn't care what anybody thinks of him."

"Maybe Val does."

"It's something else."

"Why not ask Ida?" he said.

"I don't plan on seeing Ida."

"You might see her whether you want to or not. She's in New Orleans. I put her up at a friend's house on the lake."

"Don't you ever tire of grief?" I said.

"She wants to see her son. Whores have souls, too," he replied.

"What was the cost of a postage stamp in 1958?" I said.

He straightened up from packing his suitcase and looked at me, a ray of sunlight falling across his prosthetic eye, which remained fixed and staring in the socket, like the eye of a stranger. "Thanks for the use of the room," he said.

That night the temperature dropped suddenly and chains of dry lightning pulsed inside the clouds, flooding our yard with a white brilliance that turned the tree trunks the pale color of old bone. On the edges of sleep I kept waiting to hear the small pet door in the back entrance swing on its hinges, signaling that Snuggs and Tripod had sought shelter from the impending storm. I got up and pushed open the back door and immediately felt the weight of a tree branch that had fallen on the steps. I cleared it away and went out into the yard in my skivvies, the canopy flickering whitely above my head. Both Snuggs and Tripod were inside the hutch, which I left open at night so Tripod could come and go as he wished.

"Let's go, fellows," I said, and hefted up one in each arm. They both lay back against the crook of my arms, content, enjoying the ride, their feet in the air, heavy and compact as cannon balls.

Then at the corner of my vision I saw a shadow move behind a row of camellia bushes in my side yard. I started to turn my head but instead looked straight ahead and went inside the house. I removed my .45 from the dresser drawer and, still in my skivvies, went out the front door and circled around the side of the house.

Lightning rolled silently through the clouds overhead, flaring suddenly in a yellow ball, as though igniting a trapped pocket of white gas inside each individual cloud. "Come out," I called to the darkness.

The wind gusted off the bayou and all the shadows in the yard thrashed against one another except one. A figure stood at the rear of my property, his silhouette framed against the bands of light on the bayou's surface.

"I can drop you from here," I said.

The figure hesitated, measuring his chances, a sheaf of compacted leaves cracking under his weight. Then a tremendous explosion of thunder shook the trees, the electricity died in the clouds, and the figure's silhouette disappeared inside the shadows.

A voyeur? A disoriented reveler from one of the bars downtown? An imaginary visitor from a sea of elephant grass in a forgotten war? It was possible. I searched along the bank of the bayou and saw no footprints, although someone had recently broken down a banana tree on the edge of my neighbor's property.

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
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