The bad guys would know right away. Would he hesitate to kill them?
I’d thought I had shrugged those reflections off a long time ago, but I guess I hadn’t. I drove down to the intersection of my street, slowed down and made the turn.
I’d never had a big dog in my life. Where would you walk one on a leash? How long would you stay out? I circled the block twice without seeing any signs of Bettie and her greyhound, then finally turned in to my driveway and went up on the porch and eased into a rocker. I sat there for five minutes and it was like waiting for a snake to strike. I was tense all over. My muscles had tightened into a
Then I heard the
Like water spilling from an overflowing jar, the tension went away when I saw Bettie and Tacos come into my direct line of vision and I got up, walked off the porch and waited for her on the sidewalk.
Tacos told her she had company ahead. I heard the nearly muted whine of pleasure.
How the heck would a dog know about us?
So I wouldn’t startle her, I said, “It’s me, your new neighbor,” then added softly, “Jack.”
She wore black sunglasses and their blank lenses bore down on me. “I heard all about you a little while ago. The ladies over at the station house keep everyone well informed.”
“I know a lot of them.”
“So they mentioned. They all like you too. Did you know that?”
“Well, I’ve never been arrested.”
“They don’t arrest policemen, do they?” she asked me.
“The heck they don’t,” I told her.
She was carrying some mail and a few grocery items in an ornamented wire basket and I slid my fingers under the handle and took it from her.
I said, “You handle your dog and I’ll carry your groceries up the stairs. First good deed I’ve done all day.”
Slowly, she turned her head and appeared to look down at Tacos. “Strange,” she said softly.
“What is?”
“Tacos never moved to stop you from taking my basket from me.”
“Should he?”
“He’s extremely protective.”
“So am I,” I said with a grin. “He knows a kindred soul.”
I don’t know why, with her heightened senses, she couldn’t hear my heart beating. My own breath seemed muffled and the muscles in the small of my back had tightened annoyingly. But the oversized greyhound seemed to realize that
At the door she slid the key into the lock, turned the knob, let the dog enter ahead of her and said to me, “Won’t you join us for a cold drink, Jack?”
I didn’t answer her for a few seconds and she said, “We are neighbors now, you know.”
“And you have one oversized greyhound dog with big vampire teeth, if anyone made any moves against you.”
“Yes,” she agreed quite pleasantly. “That’s because he loves me.”
The minute delay in my answer almost spoke what was in my mind but hadn’t reached my tongue yet. I asked her, “How heavy is Tacos anyway?”
“A hundred and twenty pounds,” she told me. “All muscle, extremely bright, but too big to race and not enough dog plumage to stay warm while pulling a sled in heavy snow.”
“Where did you get him?”
“He was about to be put down. I rescued him at the track just in time. I wish I could have taken more of the animals, but this one licked my hand and gave me a knowing, pleading look and he became mine and I became his.”
“No offense,” I said, “but what is a ‘knowing’ look, when you’re blind?”
Without hesitation, she said, “Just that he knew I
I nodded and said a quiet, “Oh. I see.”
Her head turned and she looked at me. Behind her dark glasses I knew her eyes had somehow found mine. “Do you really?”
“Really,” I murmured.
“Have we met?” she asked abruptly.
“Now why would you ask that? This is my first time here.”
Without answering me, she walked to the kitchen. The layout of her place was the same as mine, the two houses built on identical architectural plans.
I heard the refrigerator open and shut and she came back with two glasses of iced tea and handed me one.
Then she sat on the edge of a big ottoman, sipped her tea a moment, and said, “A long time ago I had an accident. That is what I have been told. I have no memory of it at all, nor anything prior to twenty years ago.”
“Aren’t you interested in finding out any details?”
Bettie shook her head gently. “I’ve been told I have no living relatives.”
“
“Yes,” she agreed. “He was the one who... let’s say