Good Morning, Killer - April Smith [8]
“You are so cynical about relationships.”
“I’ve been there,” Andrew said into the phone wedged between shoulder and ear. “In fact, I’ve been there so often my name is permanently inscribed in the relationship crapper.”
“Is that supposed to be inspiring?”
“I never make promises.”
“Really?”
We had pulled up and parked. Our car doors slammed and we drew in our jackets against the uncertain weather. The sky was full of moving clouds like squirting inks, charcoal and mauve. It was 4 p.m. A brief white light struck the puddles platinum.
“I thought you promised to move in with me,” I said. “Sooner or later.”
“Wasn’t it the other way around?”
“I don’t want to lose my lease.”
We crossed the street. When he spoke again, his voice had dropped to that somber do-not-argue pitch. “It’s my father’s house. I can’t sell it.”
“Isn’t that love?” I poked his ribs.
“Isn’t what?”
“Giving it up?”
When I looked over he was watching me deeply, enigmatically.
“I’m just looking for safe passage, hon.”
“Meaning?”
“An expression my dad used to say when he had to tell us something. ‘Give me safe passage.’ And you’d say, ‘Okay.’ And he’d say, ‘I know you’re smoking cigarettes and it ain’t gonna cut it.’”
“Like, don’t get mad at me.”
“Like, help me through this.”
“So, Andy—is there something you need help getting through?”
He laughed sardonically. “The fucking day.”
The walk-through streets, a maze of lanes too tiny for cars, had become prized for their bohemian hipness. Five years ago this area was a slum, but entertainment and foreign money was moving in, building eclectic houses like the Kents’—small, but well-proportioned and impeccably postmodern, with a Xeriscape garden made of cacti and rocks.
“What’s the point of a garden,” Andrew asked as we walked up the gravel path, “without flowers?”
“Saves water.”
“These people can’t pay for water?”
Andrew was an azalea man. The shade garden behind the one-story cottage in Sunset Park was the legacy of his father, who had also been a Santa Monica police officer. Sergeant E. Prescott Berringer, originally from North Beach, San Francisco, made his own beef jerky and brewed his own beer, and so did Andrew, who maintained the backyard meticulously, a shrine. You could eat off the potting table, and you never saw so many different-sized clippers and shears oiled and sharpened and hung in their places. Sunday mornings, when we first started going out, I would try to be cheery and helpful with the weeding and whatever, but it didn’t come naturally, like tending someone else’s child. Andrew took my tools away. “That’s okay,” he’d say, “I’ll do it,” and ignore me for a couple of hours.
One day Andrew told me he had been adopted, and I applied that like a balm to his remoteness and silences, all my discouragements and puzzlements and questions. It made the bond to his father sizzlingly poignant. There was a photo in the bedroom of Andrew (eight years old) and E. Prescott, both wearing Dodger jerseys. He said they often dressed alike. Mom was meek, and Dad, I guessed from the curly blond hair and cocksure posture, played around. The father-and-son photo hung next to a plaque Andrew received when he made detective. It read, “The Homicide Investigator’s Oath,” and listed Ten Commandments, including “Thou Shalt Not Kill.”
At the time, I took all this to mean that Andrew was a person of discipline.
A frosted glass door was opened by the mother of Stephanie Kent, the girl who Juliana was supposed to have met at the bus stop yesterday. Mrs. Kent, hearing our business, wrapped her arms around her waist, as if we had brought an icy wind.
“You mean Juliana isn’t back?”
“We’re optimistic that she will be.”
“My God, what could have happened to her? Anything could have happened! I have to tell you, this is not like Juliana.”
“No?”
“How is Lynn doing? I haven’t talked to her since last night.”
Andrew gave the compassionate cop shrug. “Hard times.”
“The longer Juliana’s missing, the worse it is, isn’t it?” said Mrs. Kent knowingly. “My husband is