Chapter
4: Taking It To The Streets
Monday, August 10,
2009
The Presidio
0700 (local)
As if preordained (and
who says it wasn’t?), the DLI made Mac a generous offer. Not
generous enough for me to be a golf bum, but generous nevertheless.
She accepted and they even have temporary housing we can use while we
finish finding our new home.
That’s my job. Mac starts
hers today.
“Hey babe, you ready to be Colonel MacKenzie
again?”
“You know, I never realized how much I’d
miss that name. You OK with that?”
“Just fine, I
understand completely. You’ll always be ‘Colonel
MacKenzie’ to me. Well, when you’re not ‘sweetie
pie’ or ‘snookums’.” Which earned me the
anticipated swat on the six.
“Have a great first day,
Mac. Don’t scare them and don’t let them scare
you.”
“Harm, I’m a Marine, I can handle
it.”
Now, why did I know she was gonna say that?
I’m
scheduled to meet the Real Estate Broker we decided to work with at
1000, so I settle down with the newspapers and some coffee. San
Francisco Chronicle, The Monterey County Herald, The Coastal Weekly,
The Carmel Pine Cone (also a weekly). From the biggest world news to
the smallest domestic scrabble (gee, I didn’t know you could
get written up in the Pine Cone for having a loud argument in your
back yard), it’s all there. I soak it up, convinced we’ve
made the right decision.
Now all we have to do is find a
place to live.
Promptly at 1000 Karen Summers is ringing the
doorbell. We pour over the listings she brings up on her laptop and
narrow our search to eight for today.
The Presidio
Harm
and Mac’s temporary quarters
1630 (local)
I’m
beat. And slightly overwhelmed. Looking for housing in DC or London
wasn’t this hard. Maybe ‘cause I had the Navy helping me.
Wow, people do this everyday? Just go out and buy a house?
I can
tell Karen is more than a little surprised that a man my age has
never owned a home, but gets a bit more comfortable with the concept
when I explain I’ve been in the military my whole life.
We
actually saw some ones that have possibilities. I did all the work on
my loft, I know my way around tools. In fact, I liked working on my
loft. It made it more ‘mine’. And it let me get exactly
what I wanted. Like that shower I’m still missing. (First item
on any house we buy: big new shower.)
Karen prints out the
listings of the ones I consider worthy of Mac’s attention and
promises to be back tomorrow with another set of
possibilities.
“Honey, I’m home,” I guess
it’s Mac’s turn to say the classic line. I pull her into
my arms and ask, “how was the sexiest teacher in Monterey’s
first day?”
She tells me how she thinks this is gonna
be a great job as I watch her change into jeans and a sweatshirt.
We go into the kitchen and I tell her about my house
hunting.
“The biggest thing is bathrooms. Because of the
chronic water shortage around here, most places only have two baths,
if that. I don’t know about you, but I think we gotta have at
least two baths.”
“If we can get them for under a
million.”
“Well, yeah, there is that. The price
range is at the top of what we can afford, but I don’t want to
compromise so much that we won’t be happy.”
“Tell
you what, I’ll ask around the DLI. Do you know anybody at Fort
Ord or the Naval Reservation? Let’s work our networks. If we
can do a direct purchase we can save a lot on the
commission.”
“Sounds like a good plan to me, Mac.
Let’s forget it for the rest of the night. I’ve been
living it all day and I’m crisp.”
She saunters
over to me, carrot in hand. Now carrot in mouth, moving in a most
un-carrot-like way. “You want any help forgetting your day?”
I
grab the carrot and sling her over my shoulder, fireman carry style.
“And all these years I didn’t think you liked
vegetables.”
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
The
Presidio
Harm and Mac’s temporary quarters
1000
(local)
Once again Karen is right on time. We scan her laptop for
the day’s possibilities and make our choices. Off we go for
another fun-filled day of house hunting. Come on, fate, now is *not*
the time to lie down on the job.
I cut the day short after
five houses, pleading other obligations (like preserving my sanity).
Back at our quarters I start to work the phone. There’s
gotta be people I know at Fort Ord and the Reservation. Two hours
later, and many long distance calls to far-flung friends, I’ve
got a list of ten people I actually do know and twenty more that are
‘a friend of a friend’ who’ll be getting a call to
expect mine.
OK. Enough. I’ve hit my limit for the day.
Time out. Guitar time out. Yeah, that’ll do it.
I’m
sitting on our front step noodling a little blues when Mac walks up
with a General in tow. I automatically come to attention (I think
it’s gonna take a long time to get out of that habit).
“Harm,
meet General Franklin, he’s the Provost here at the
DLI.”
”Sir,” I extend my hand to shake
his.
“The General has been so kind as to give me a list
of all the personnel scheduled to be rotated out. Some of whom have
lived on the Peninsula for a long time.”
“And own
homes?” I ask, hopefully.
“Yes, Captain,”
(god, it’s good to hear that again), “we try to keep what
housing stock we have in our family, so to speak. It’s a tough
market out there. Cutting out the commission can make the difference
between getting a place and not.”
“So I’ve
discovered in the last two days.” Thank you fate, I knew you
were just taking a nap and hadn’t deserted us entirely. “Thank
you for this, General. I’ll get on it first thing tomorrow
morning.”
“Good luck. And Captain, when you find
something, write an offer for it immediately. Things don’t last
long here. Some of the realtors’ web sites promote that they
update their listings twice a day, if that tells you anything.”
Holy
moley. Yep, it sure does.
“Well, I’ll be seeing
you around,” he smiles as he strides off.
“I think
I’m gonna need to get an ear piece for the phone, Mac. I’ve
got 30 people to call and now this list.”
She pats my
crooked ear. “We wouldn’t want any damage to come to that
darling little part of your anatomy, now would we?” As I find
myself being led inside by selfsame part. She kicks the door shut,
pulls my head down within her tongue’s reach and gives it a
gentle swipe. “I know how sensitive it is.”
Damn
right she does. Buying the ear piece can wait for an hour or
so.
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Harm and Mac’s
temporary quarters
1700 (local)
I’ve been on the
phone nonstop since 0500 (time zones and all). Thank god I got that
ear piece. But I now have a list of 15 homes in our price range;
appointments to see nine of them tomorrow.
Wow, when fate
steps in, she sure doesn’t mess around.
I’m
stretched out on the couch when Mac walks in. “Hey, good to see
that at least one of us is working hard,” she teases.
“Maaac,
I think my initials have become AT&T. If I hadn’t bought
that ear piece I don’t think I’d have an ear left. But
I’ve got nine viewings set up for tomorrow and six more on
Friday.”
“In our price range?”
I
nod.
“In Pacific Grove?”
Nodding
again.
“In the part of Pacific Grove we wanted?”
Big
grin.
“Eeeck!” She does a little dance. There’s
nothing quite like a Marine getting giddy.
And then getting on
my lap. “You know, I think we better refine our ‘wishes,
wants and can’t live with’ list. You might have to make
an offer on a place before I get a chance to see it.”
Oh
no, no way am I gonna do that. Commit us to buy a house she hasn’t
even seen?
“No, Mac. I’ll draw up an offer
contract tonight that gives you 24 hours to view the property, but I
won’t buy ‘our’ home without you seeing it
first.”
“Harm, if you find the perfect place, you’ll
know it. Don’t let it slip through your hands because of
doubts. You know me better than you know yourself.”
She’s
right about that part, although much of her will always be a mystery
to me. Bud says women are just like that. Over the years I’ve
come to agree with him.
“OK, I’ll try the 24 hour
clause first. I’ll use all my persuasive skills. But if I’m
convinced it’s perfect and won’t last 24 hours, I’ll
take the leap.”
“Harm, you’ve outrun dirty
nukes, HALO’ed into enemy territory, defended the SecNav in the
World Court, I think you can find the courage to do this if you have
to.”
Well, when you put it like that.
Thursday,
August 13, 2009
2525 Laurel Street
Pacific Grove
1400
(local)
This is it. It’s perfect. Needs some work (fine
by me, that way it’ll be exactly what we want and more
affordable now). Just a few short blocks from Washington Park, where
we hear the monarchs stop on their migration.
Word has it
that they cover the trees so thoroughly you can’t see the
leaves. Don’t hurt the trees; just rest there awhile and do
their reproductive cycle thing. It’s one of the big
insect-world mysteries, but even though it’s the
great-great-grandchildren of the ones that leave in the spring, they
come back to the same place each fall. Some tagging efforts have
shown they come back to the same tree! Wow, that’s loyalty for
you.
In any case, the house is perfect. Three bedrooms, two
baths (one big enough that I can have my Harm-sized shower), charming
little yard full of flowers (everyone seems to be very big on flower
gardening around here) and a garage. Well, it’s only a one car
garage, but at least it has a garage. It looks like something Hansel
and Gretel might come across, minus the crone.
The only
drawback is the owner won’t go for the 24 hour clause. “How
‘bout I give you $500 to hold it for three hours?”
“OK,
but not a minute more.”
More land speed records are
achieved. Another speeding ticket is obtained (I’m gonna just
hide this one from Mac), and I’m back at the Presidio, pacing
outside her classroom.
The door opens, the students pile out
(hard to think of them as students since they vary from Ensigns to
Commanders or the equivalent in the other branches) followed by
Mac.
“I’ve found it. It’s perfect. But I
*really* want you to see it. Mac, we’re talking about a whole
lot of money. More than you or I have ever spent on anything. I’ve
got a hold on it ‘til 1700. When can you get away?”
“How
far?”
“Ten minutes, well, probably more like 18 if
we obey the speed limits.”
“You got another
ticket, didn’t you,” she makes it a statement, not a
question.
How’d she know?
Sheepish grin is all
I’m gonna answer.
“Let’s go right now. I
have an hour before my next class.”
Now I know most
women, hell, most sane people, would want to take more than 20
minutes looking at a house that they’re gonna spend over
$600,000 on, but Mac knows her mind and has never had trouble making
decisions. (Well, except that Brumby or me one, but that wasn’t
her fault, she wasn’t working with complete information.)
I
circle the neighborhood so she can get a feel for the nearby area.
Then I drive from the park down Laurel to the house. I pull up in
front of it and gesture with my eyebrows (there’s no ‘For
Sale’ sign).
“This one? This one!?!” She’s
leaping out of the car and running up the walkway. “It has a
garage!”
I’m knocking on the door.
“Well,
that was no three hours.”
“No, ma’am. Didn’t
want to keep you waiting.”
We walk through the house,
the owner giving us the privacy to do so alone.
“The
kitchen’s too small, but this isn’t a load-bearing wall.
We can take it down and make it one big space with the dining room.
More our style. This bathroom’s OK, could use some new
fixtures, but look at the master bath. We can have our big shower
again. The rubber ducky will rule once more! A guest room and a room
for an office.”
We walk outside. “I’d want
to replace the sliding doors with french ones, but the yard is just
the right size. Big enough to give us a sense of privacy, but not too
big to be a burden to take care of.”
“Yeah, especially
since it’s already landscaped to the nines. And a little brick
patio. So you can barbecue steaks for me.”
She spins
around with her hands on her hips. “You pulled me out of class
for this? Are you out of your mind Harmon Rabb Jr.?”
“You
don’t like it?” I’m dumbfounded.
She marches
up to me with full Marine attitude. “I don’t like that
you haven’t signed an ironclad, airtight, there’s no way
they can get out of it contract yet! It’s perfect.” She
rewards me with a hug and kiss.
“Now, let’s do
that and get me back to the DLI or I’ll be late for
class.”
Friday, August 14, 2009
Harm and Mac’s
temporary quarters
1000 (local)
Well, sure, there’s
lots of paperwork and running around to do with buying the house. I
remember what it was like with Harriet, but there’s even more
out here. California takes its real estate very seriously (some might
say too seriously). With Mac working, I’ll be riding herd on
all that stuff. Keeping her filled in, but doing all the
legwork.
Nonetheless, it’s time to face facts. I need a
job. OK, guess it’s time to Google ‘lawyers in Monterey
County’. Well, there certainly are plenty of them.
Scrolling
down the page I start thinking. ‘Family law’ translates
to divorce. Too depressing.
‘Personal injury’
brings to mind the image of ambulance chasers, sleazy guys lurking in
hospital emergency rooms.
‘Elder Law’ attorneys.
Great, just the way I wanted to spend my day: updating wills to cut
out little Johnny ‘cause he hasn’t visited Grandma in
three years.
‘Medical malpractice’; don’t
have the skills.
‘Child custody and visitation rights’;
and I thought divorce was depressing?
‘Probate’,
good god, can’t I at least stay in the land of the living?
‘Commercial litigation’, that might be
acceptable. One developer suing another when they’re probably
both at least partially culpable.
‘Intellectual
property rights’, now that sounds interesting. An emerging
field; not a lot of case law. Yes, that sounds like something I could
get into. Especially if it’s keeping the big bad corporation
from screwing the little guy.
‘Criminal Defense, Violent
Crime’. Not in this life.
‘DUI Defense’.
Ditto on that one.
OK, ‘commercial litigation’ and
‘intellectual property rights’ are the top of my hit
list. I print out the local firms’ web sites that say they
specialize in this sort of work and go about updating my resume.
My
resume. For the Navy it looked great. Even better if you had the
clearance to read the classified version. For civilian law it looks a
little thin to me. Stable, (Chegwidden having successfully erased the
six-month CIA tour) but thin. Yeah, some capital cases, but mostly
DOD, DDO, UA, things that are gonna look trivial to a civilian
lawyer. What did Renee say years ago: “missing a movement, is
that a criminal offense or an intestinal disorder?”
I do
the best I can with it, considering I can’t put in any of the
juicy classified stuff, trading heavily on the SecNav at the World
Court case.
OK, I’ve reached my limit for the day. Time
for time out.
Once again sitting on our front step noodling a
blues tune on my guitar. It’s 1700 and the foot traffic passing
by has picked up considerably.
“If you put a hat out
there you might get some spare change, flyboy.” Mac’s got
her ‘it’s the weekend and I’m ready to play’
look on.
“I figure the hell with this lawyering stuff,
Mac. I’ve been doing it far too long. Time to get back to my
true Delta roots. The blues. I’ll play for change in the square
in front of Fisherman’s Wharf.”
“Your true
Delta roots? That would be the La Jolla delta, Harm? And might I
remind you that the last time we were over there there were two
mimes, one clown making balloon toys and an organ grinder complete
with monkey?”
“No plan is without its flaws,
Mac.”
She bends over, ruffles my
now-longer-than-military-regs hair and kisses my forehead. “You’re
cute. Wanna wash my back?”
Don’t need that
invitation twice.
Monday, August 17, 2009
MacKenzie-Rabb
temporary quarters0800 (local)
Mac’s just left and I’m
enjoying my second cup of coffee. Figure calling any of these
attorneys before 0900 is a waste of time.
After an hour I
can’t put it off any more. Usually I’m pretty, well, no,
really self-confident. But this looking for a job thing has me
feeling like an awkward teenager again. Maybe ‘cause I’ve
never really had to do it. The Navy wanted me; the CIA wanted me;
Mattie needed me; the Navy wanted me back.
Now I’ve
gotta convince someone they need me.
Kinda scary.
Taking
a deep breath, I make the first call. Get through to the head guy
(don’t know if that’s a good sign or not) and immediately
e-mail him my resume. I listen as he reads through it.
“Wow,
so you were a regular GI Joe for 24 years?”
“Well,
actually ‘GI Joe’ usually refers to Army personnel; I was
Navy.”
“Defended the Secretary of the Navy at the
Hague for war crimes. That had to be quite a rush.”
‘A
rush?’ “It was a challenge and there was quite a lot on
the line.” Like American credibility in waging the war at
all.
“And you were a pilot, too? Flew jets off aircraft
carriers?”
“Yes, when I was younger.”
“Why
do I get the feeling this resume has been sanitized? Like there’s
a whole bunch in your background that mere mortals like me can’t
see.”
I swallow. “I can neither confirm nor deny
that, sir.”
“Wow! I knew it! Hey, I’m free
for lunch today. Wanna join me?”
I’m not sure if
he’s interested in me as a lawyer or a character out of some
movie plot (this is California, after all). But what do I have to
lose?
“Sure, shall I meet you at your offices, say
1230?” Fortunately, 1230 and 12:30 sound alike. Gotta start
getting used to using civilian time.
I arrive at his offices
on time. They’re a little ‘off’. Maybe it’s
the surfing posters on the walls. Could be the pink streak in the
receptionist’s hair. Might be the raggae music playing. I’m
wearing a suit. He’s wearing a t-shirt, blue jeans and
flip-flops.
“We’ll be back in about an hour,
Moon,” he says as we walk out the door.
“Her name
is Moon?”
“Actually it’s Moonbeam, but I
usually just shorten it to Moon.”
He says this like
‘it’s Alexandria, but I shorten it to Alex’.
Over
lunch it becomes painfully apparent that he’s way more
interested in my military career than any possibility of us becoming
law partners. Which is good since I wouldn’t partner with this
guy for a walk across the street.
We part amiably enough and I
head back to our temporary quarters.
For the rest of the week
it’s the same story. Go to lunch, get pumped for details about
Afghanistan or the Hague or what life on a carrier is like. All by
guys who clearly believe blue jeans and flip-flops are the attire de
jour for attorneys in Monterey.
I’m not working with
someone who takes depositions in flip-flops, I don’t care if
everyone else does.
Friday, August 21, 2009
Harm and
Mac’s temporary quarters
1730 (local)
I’ve
grilled salmon for me and steak for Mac. Salad, baked potatoes and
steamed broccoli (Mac turns up her nose but eats some anyway)
complete the simple meal.
She’s been laughing at my
week’s encounters. “Hey, look at it this way, Harm, you
got five free lunches.”
True, I didn’t pay money,
but I paid.
“So, what’re ya gonna do now?”
“I
think I’m gonna try private practice. With the contacts at Fort
Ord and the Naval Reservation we made house hunting, it should give
me a start.”
“Not to mention the DLI and the Naval
Postgraduate School. A lot of their work will be handled by JAGs, but
they all have family and friends whose wouldn’t.”
“General
practice. Not I-SUE-NAVY stuff.”
We’re putting away
the dishes, cleaning up the kitchen.
“So you see
yourself as a general practitioner?” she asks.
“Well,
yeah, sort of.”
“Like a doctor?”
Oh,
I think I like where this is going.
“Sort of.”
“Good,
‘cause I’ve had this itch all day that I think needs to
be scratched, but I want a professional to do it.”
“Mac,
I’m just the pro you need.”
Chapter 5:
The Maltese Eagle -- An Open and Shuteye Case
Spade
and Archer Law Offices
Monday, Sept. 14, 2009
0900 (local)
I’m
sitting at an old-style oak desk, in a second story room overlooking
Lighthouse Avenue. Funny, I don’t remember renting an office.
Who’s ‘Spade’? And who’s ‘Archer’?
I
look down to see a cigarette burning in between my fingers and
quickly extinguish it. What’s that all about? Then I notice my
jacket, shirt, trousers and tie. Not to mention the fedora perched on
top of the nearby coat rack. Hey, I like them. I’ve always
liked the retro ‘40’s look. Just never owned any. Wonder
where these came from?
In bustles a woman who has all the
indications of being my secretary/receptionist, except that she could
be Harriet’s twin.
“Sam, there’s a woman out
in the lobby wanting to see you.”
‘Sam’?
“She’s
just your type: gorgeous, looks wealthy and wringing her hands. Says
her name is Miss Mac, but I wouldn’t take that one to the
bank.”
No, my type is gorgeous, looks great in Marine
green and always comes up with the dispassionate plan.
“OK,
send her in,” I hear myself say. Now why would I say that?
Maybe the urgent need for clients and the income they provide might
have something to do with it.
She slinks in. Oh clearly this
is a woman who knows how to slink to get what she wants. And since
she looks just like Mac, I may be the guy to give it to her.
“Thank
you for seeing me on such short notice, Mr. Spade, but I didn’t
know where else to turn.”
‘Mr. Spade? Sam Spade?’
OK, this is a crazy dream but I’ll just go along, not that I
have much choice.
She pours out her little tale of a missing
sister, twisting her hanky and hiking her skirt at every
opportunity.
“I’m afraid she’s fallen in
with unsavory characters. This Joel Cairo fellow and this tall fat
man who seems to always wear white. They want something from her, I
can just feel it. But I don’t know what.”
The
dabbing at the eyes is particularly effective. Good thing these ‘40’s
trousers are generously cut.
“You’ve done the
right thing, miss. You gave us this joker Cairo’s address, I’ll
have my partner (whoever he/she might be) follow him tonight. We’ll
find your sister.” I pat her shoulder as I walk her out the
door.
Did I mention that the venetian blinds are like 2”
wide and wooden? That a floor-standing fan seems to be the only ‘air
conditioning’? And that looking out on Lighthouse Avenue lets
me see the only shops I recall proudly stating they’ve been
‘serving Pacific Grove since 1941’.
As dreams
goes, this one’s tremendously detailed.
Sam’s
apartment
Later that night
The phone wakes me up (when did
I start drinking bourbon to get to sleep?).
“Spade, you
better get down to Cannery Row. It’s Archer. He’s been
shot.”
“Gonna make it?”
“Nope.”
Damn.
I’m not surprised to see that Singer is the detective
in charge of the Archer murder when I arrive at Cannery Row.
“What
do you know about this, Spade?”
“He was working a
case, guess it went sour.”
“You think?”
“Don’t
know any more than that.” Lying to the police about an ongoing
murder investigation is not the most intelligent course of action,
but hey, this is only a dream, right?
“I find out you
know more, Spade, I’ll have your license. And your butt in my
jail for a good while.”
Singer always was easy to get
along with.
I head back to my apartment, only to find the door
open. Drawing the gun I didn’t know I had, I enter. Calmly
sitting in my favorite easy chair is Clayton Webb. Who, as soon as he
opens his mouth, sounds like Peter Lorre.
“Mr. Spade. So
good to meet you. Please excuse my entering your abode, but I didn’t
want to linger in the hallway.”
Oh no. Breaking and
entering is much better than lingering.
“I believe you
have something that belongs to me.”
“I don’t
know who you are or what you’re talking about.” I’m
heading over to the bourbon bottle again. When did this become a
habit?
“Joel Cairo,” he hands me a card that reeks
of lavender.
Hey, I’ve got absolutely nothing against
gays. Consenting adults get to do whatever they want. But this card
reeks. If I put it in my wallet *I’ll* smell like lavender. Not
the way I want to smell.
“And I’m talking about
the Maltese Eagle. The one Miss Mac, the younger, stole from the Fat
Man. But he stole it from me first. It’s mine and I want it
back.”
I wish Mac would roughly roll over in bed. Or I
had to get up to pee. This dream is getting way outta
control.
There’s a knock at my door. Why am I not
surprised to see a suddenly much taller and heavier Secretary Nelson,
in a white suite, standing in my doorway. With Miss Mac in tow.
Apparently this Mac doesn’t know hand-to-hand combat like mine
does, or Sidney Greenstreet’d be on the floor.
“Well,
I see we’re all here. How cozy,” the Fat Man concludes.
Tossing Mac into my only other chair he turns to me. “That gun
doesn’t mean a thing, Spade. The only thing that matters is the
Maltese Eagle.”
OK, I’ll bite. “What’s
the Maltese Eagle?”
The Fat Man starts in on a tale,
only to be interrupted by Cairo and Mac, about a priceless Eagle,
solid gold that has been smuggled out of the Mideast.
“They
have eagles in the Mideast?” I ask.
No one bothers to
answer me.
“My sister had a line on it. She got the
pigeon here (more birds??) to give it to her. She sent it to me via
parcel post, but he,” she points accusingly at Cairo, “stole
it back.”
“Then he,” Cairo sends the same
accusing point to the Fat Man, “absconded with it from
me.”
“Which would leave it with you, sir, if I’m
not mistaken.” It’s getting late and this dream is going
on waay too long.
“One would think.” A new voice
is heard from. A new person has entered my quickly becoming crowded
apartment. Well, well. If it isn’t Admiral Chegwidden.
“It
was too easy getting it away from you. And sending it to Spade was
the best plan I could come up with at the moment. He wouldn’t
have a clue and I could retrieve it when I wanted.”
He
walks over to the packing boxes stacked in the corner of my
apartment. Selects one, opens it and pulls out a 10-inch tall wrapped
irregular object.
Suddenly everyone in the room has a gun
drawn.
“You saps,” Chegwidden scoffs. “Have
you no idea what this really is? It’s not solid gold. It’s
not ancient. It’s the eagle the Navy gave me when I got my
first star. The only value it has is to me. How you fabricated this
other tall tale, I’ll never know.”
“Why, I
paid good money for that intelligence in Istanbul,” the Fat Man
sputters.
“My sources gave me their words with their
dying breaths.”
“I’m gonna kill my
sister.”
Just to complete the party, Singer, or
Detective whoeversheis, shows up. “Spade, thought you’d
wanna know we’ve cleared you in Archer’s death.”
Yeah,
that makes me feel real warm inside, given I didn’t even know
the man.
“But who are all of these guys?” Who have
suddenly hidden their guns.
“Just some old friends who
dropped by and probably stayed too late. I think they’ll be
leaving now.”
They slink, lope, lumber, flit and walk
out the door.
I lock it. Strip down to my boxers (at least I’m
wearing boxers in this dream) and climb in bed. No Mac to hold onto
so I settle for a pillow. Talk about your lame
substitute.
Rabb-MacKenzie temporary housing
Monday,
Sept. 11, 2009
0700 (local)
“Ohhhhh,” I
groan.
Mac sits up next to me and puts her palm on my
forehead. “You OK? It doesn’t feel like you have a
fever.”
“I think I have a hangover.”
“From
what? You didn’t have anything to drink last night.”
Briefly
I tell her about my dream. “Maybe this going solo isn’t a
good thing”
“Don’t be silly, Harm. It was
just a dream.”
“How would you feel if I said that
about your visions?” yes, said a bit pugnaciously.
“Those
are different.”
“OK. But if anyone even resembling
Harriet asks me about a job, I’m running as fast as I can in
the opposite direction.”
She holds me tenderly. “That’s
fine. Just run straight to me and we’ll take care of it
together.”
I sigh. You know, maybe a second story office
on Lighthouse wouldn’t be a bad idea after all. Or I could get
used to taking depositions with lawyers in blue jeans and flip-flops.
No, I think I’ll look into the office on Lighthouse
first.