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Dead and Gone - Andrew Vachss [62]

By Root 439 0
beads the same shade as the lipstick and the skirt went over her head, then around her neck.

She leaned against the wall, extended one perfect leg just a little, shot her hip. “What do I look like now?” she asked.

“I’m not a fashion consultant,” I told her, seeing the trap surrounding the cheese.

“But not a little girl?”

“Not hardly.”

“Well, will you teach me to play?”

“I … Looks to me like you already know how.”

“You know what I mean, Burke.”

“I’m not sure I do,” I said. “The way you climbed into all that … stuff, it can’t be for the first time. If your point is that you’re not a little girl, I got it. I wasn’t confused about that before, Gem.”

“Yes. But … you said … lines. There are always lines. Some people are drawn to them. As if there was a mystical place near the border, where the lines are drawn. But you … you don’t want to go near such places.”

“No.”

“Because you once did and …?”

“There’s a difference between venturing close to the rim and being thrown there.”

“The … choices, again, you mean?”

“When you’re a kid, there are no choices. That’s the biggest fucking lie they ever tell. Like sticking a pistol in your face, cocking it, and asking for a loan.”

“Yes. It was that way for us, too. The choice—to be a soldier in the Khmer Rouge—it was no choice at all.”

“Adults have—”

“Stop it! I respect your pain. But it is not all the pain that the world knows, Burke. There could be no ‘resistance’ in my country. The people outside the cities, they never had weapons. They never had communications. The Khmer Rouge came with weapons. And with orders. If you did not join the killing, you were one of ‘them’: those who should be killed. You could try to flee. Many did. But how could you fight? Moral choices are for those with power. You can judge the monsters, not the victims. We were all children, then. Without power, without recourse. With no one listening for so long. So we did whatever we could to survive.”

“I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to—”

“We were all children,” she said again.

Then the schoolgirl who had cried for what had hurt me a million years ago came over to me. I held her against me while the woman in the hooker’s outfit cried for her lost and ravaged people.

I couldn’t comfort Gem. Couldn’t make it stop. So I did the only thing I could—stayed the course. She cried herself to sleep. Silently, the way she must have learned in the jungle.

She was so taut, she vibrated. I pulled the bedspread up so it covered her shoulders, kept my arm around her, waited. Her body didn’t so much relax as unstiffen. Slowly, in sections. She was breathing regularly, in measured little gulps, but so shallow that her rib cage hardly flickered. Gradually, her right knee came up, rested on my thigh. Her hand explored my chest. Finally, she tucked the tips of her fingers into my armpit and shuddered slightly, and her body went soft with deeper sleep.

I must have drifted off with her after a while. Her butterfly kiss on my cheek woke me. I looked over her shoulder at the digital clock on the side table: 11:44. We’d been out for hours. “It’s not too late,” she said against my face. “For what?”

“To learn to play pool!” she said, a sweet stubbornness in her voice.

“You mean tonight?”

“Yes!”

“Gem, look. I—”

“You said you would.”

“And I will. But let’s … compromise, okay?”

“How?” she asked, propping herself on one elbow, watching me.

“I’ll take you, okay? But not in that outfit.”

“Why not?”

“Come on, little girl. You walk into a poolroom dressed like that, I’ll be in a half-dozen brawls before we get near a table.”

“Huh!” she snorted. But ruined the effect with a giggle.

“Come on. All you need to do is—”

“I will change my clothes,” she said, almost formally. “But it took a very long time to apply all this makeup. I will not remove it.”

“All right,” I said quietly, wondering if she knew what her crying had done to the paint job … if she’d glance at herself in a mirror before we left.

I grabbed a quick shower. Changed into chinos and a pullover. I was just about finished when Gem came into my room, wearing a

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