‘She never told me that.’
‘What’s it cost to drive there? Fifty bucks? Fine. Will
you go? You said you’d go. Please? I won’t be able to stop
thinking until I know someone’s talked to her.’
I knew this to be true, at least, because her daughter
suffered from the same tenacious worry streak: Amy could
spend an entire evening out fretting that she left the stove
on, even though we didn’t cook that day. Or was the door
locked? Was I sure? She was a worst-case scenarist on a
grand scale. Because it was never just that the door was
unlocked, it was that the door was unlocked, and men were
inside, and they were waiting to rape and kill her.
I felt a layer of sweat shimmer to the surface of my
skin, because, finally, my wife’s fears had come to fruition.
Imagine the awful satisfaction, to know that all those years
of worry had paid off.
‘Of course I’ll go. And I’ll stop by St. Louis, see the
other one, Desi, on the way. Consider it done.’ I turned
around, started my dramatic exit, got twenty feet, and
suddenly, there was Stucks again, his entire face still slack
with sleep.
‘Heard the cops searched the mall yesterday,’ he said,
scratching his jaw. In his other hand he held a glazed donut,
unbitten. A bagel-shaped bulge sat in the front pocket of his
cargo pants. I almost made a joke:
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