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The Trouble With Eden - Lawrence Block [75]

By Root 928 0
insane or criminal, that a husband or lover might turn up at any moment, either genuinely jealous or in some prearranged variant of the badger game. If the woman was interested in simple uncomplicated emotionless sex, he either suspected her motives or felt himself degraded by the experience. If she showed some personal interest in him that extended beyond the arena of the bedroom, he couldn’t help worrying she would try to trap him into something he did not want.

Lambertville was unlikely territory for pickups. Unescorted women were rare in the bars and cocktail lounges. Trenton was not all that far. He was a safe driver, and drink never made him abandon safe habits; if anything, he drove more slowly and carefully when aware he had had too much. And one never knew what one might find in a downtown bar, and if nothing else the drive there and the barhopping and the drive back would burn off some of the nervous energy that ran through him.

He walked almost to the car before changing his mind. No, he decided. Not tonight.

He walked back to the main drag into the bar of the Lambertville House. The place had been a hotel since Revolutionary times. It was now largely residential, renting the bulk of its rooms inexpensively to pensioners. The public rooms downstairs were comfortably and attractively furnished, and the restaurant did a brisk lunch business through the week. The bar, modern and not too brightly lit, was less crowded than he had thought it would be. He stopped briefly at a table to exchange a few words with two couples he knew slightly, sloughed off an invitation to join them, and made his way to the back of the bar. The bartender had just placed his drink in front of him when someone spoke his name.

He turned. There was a woman in the corner booth looking his way. She looked familiar but he could not

place her. He picked up-his drink and carried it the booth.

“You are Hugh Markarian, aren’t you? I thought I recognized you. I don’t think we’ve met, but you were pointed out to me once or twice. I’m Melanie Jaeger.”

“How do you do?”

“Sully Jaeger’s wife.”

“Oh, Sully’s wife. The name didn’t register at first. I gather you and your husband are put scouting the competition.”

“No, I’m alone,” she said.

“Oh.”

“I’m not sure where Sully is,” she said. She pushed a strand of light brown hair out of her eyes. “I felt like getting out on my own for a change. I think people ought to do that now and then. Don’t you, Hugh?”

“Why not?”

“Of course it gets lonely sitting by yourself.”

“May I join you?”

“Do you think you’d enjoy it?”

He looked at her. There was a feline quality to her face, the pointed chin, the sharply arched eyebrows. She ran the tip of her tongue over her upper lip, her eyes holding his as she did so. He tried to remember if he had heard anything about Melanie Jaeger. Sully’s wife. Not only Sully but Sully’s wife must be above suspicion—

“Yes,” he said levelly. “I think I’d enjoy it.”

“Then sit here next to me. These booths are small. I sort of shoved the table that way to give myself more room.”

“People need all the room they can get.”

“I know. I try to give myself all the room I need. You didn’t recognize me at first, did you? Of course not, since you never met me. Of course someone may have pointed me out to you, the way you were pointed out to me.”

“No. I would have remembered.”

“Because you have a wonderful memory?”

“Because you’re wonderfully memorable.”

She turned toward him, smiled -warmly at him. She was wearing cocoa brown hot pants and a matching top. Her midriff was bare, and her skin looked to have the texture of velvet. She was slender and compactly built, and her breasts looked disproportionately large for her frame.

“I’m not wearing a bra,” she said.

“I didn’t think you were.”

“I saw you looking and I thought you might be wondering. But I’m not. See?”

She leaned against him, her breast pressing against his upper arm. The warmth of her flesh was delicious.

He began talking, hardly sure what he was saying. Something about the town or the weather, something meaningless.

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