“Right here in this corner,” said Paige, referring to her own paperback. “Arrived with Jerry Jeff Walker. Played six-string for tips while writing his early songs.”
“Wow,” said Rebecca, and they all gazed at the ground under their feet with a sense of reverence usually reserved for mangers.
Teresa stood up. “I’ll get the next pitcher.”
And so it went. Another pitcher. Then another. Then liquor.
“How’d we get so drunk?”
“It’s a fuckin’ mystery,” said Rebecca, slamming a shot glass down on the table.
“Sam, how come you aren’t drinking as much as we are?” asked Teresa.
“Lost its luster. Half the men I prosecute are wife-beating alcoholics.”
“Prosecute? I thought you were a public defender.”
“Was. But I kind of got tired interviewing clients in jail who asked me if I liked to take it in the ass.”
“I can see how that would get tedious,” said Rebecca. Then she asked if any of the others owned an SUV. They said they didn’t and asked why. Rebecca wanted to know if anyone else had a problem with men who liked to pull up at stoplights next to female drivers in taller vehicles so the women have a clear view of them beating off.
“How often does this happen?” asked Maria.
“More like how often doesn’t it happen.” She turned to Paige. “So what kind of work do you usually get as a vet?”
“Patch up cats shot with BB guns and dogs set on fire and pelicans who’ve been thrown fish filled with needles and M-80s.”
“Who would do such things?” said Teresa.
“Obviously the work of women,” said Sam.
“I wouldn’t necessarily go easy on our own kind,” said Maria.
“You’re right,” said Sam. She raised her glass for a toast. “Fuck Dr. Laura.”
“Hear! Hear!”
The alcohol got the best of Maria. “Do you remember…” she said, then stumbled into forbidden territory.
The other four glowered at her. “We never talk about that!” snapped Teresa. The others nodded.
“Excuse the hell out of me.”
They all sighed and sagged.
“Nothing exciting ever happens to us,” said Rebecca.
Teresa suddenly straightened up and got out her organizer. “We should make a list.”
“Of what?”
“Things to do as a group to break out of our ruts. Adventures, risks.” Teresa clicked her pen open. “Okay. New bylaw. Everything that goes on the list we all have to do together. No exceptions.”
“Sounds like disaster,” said Sam.
“The psychology of group behavior. It’ll embolden us to do things we’d never attempt as individuals.”
“That’s how we got suffragettes,” said Rebecca.
“And lynchings,” said Sam.
“I don’t think I want to lynch anyone,” said Maria.
“What about your ex-husbands?”
“New bylaw,” said Teresa. “Those in favor?”
“Aye.” “Aye.” “Aye.” “Aye.” “Nay.”
“What sort of things do we put on the list?” asked Paige.
“Stuff like sky-diving,” said Maria.
Teresa sat poised with pen. “Item number one. Anybody?”
“Sky-diving,” said Rebecca.
“Sky-diving,” Teresa repeated as she wrote. “Number two?”
“Okay, I’ve changed my mind. Let’s lynch my husbands.”
“I’m being serious.”
“So am I.”
“Who’s got ideas, besides Maria, who needs to get in the proper spirit?”
“Get a tattoo.”
“Use a powerful man before he uses you.”
“Watch the New Year’s ball drop in Times Square.”
“Skinny-dip.”
“Shoplift.”
“That’s going too far,” said Sam.
“We’ll give the stolen item right back,” said Teresa. “It’s the principle of the thing.”
“I know,” said Rebecca. “Let’s get arrested at a protest.”
“What kind of protest?”
“Rocks and bricks and Molotov cocktails.”
“No, I mean what cause?”
“World peace.”
“Anything else?”
“Let’s meet Ralph Krunkleton.”
“That’s a great idea,” said Teresa. “We’ve read what? Five of his books now?”
Rebecca nodded hard. “He’s our newest favorite author, now. New.”
“You might want to slow down on those shots.”
“Why for?”
Sam grabbed the purse off the back of her chair. “I’m going to the rest room.”
“It’s outside around the corner,” said Paige.
Sam walked down the corridor under the lobby, mumbling to herself; they were her friends and all, but their judgment was stinking up the joint. Sam found the door to the men’s room, stopped and looked around for the women’s. They were usually in pairs; she was hoping this wasn’t one of those places with some artsy unsymmetrical layout. She kept walking. Where was it?
A man came around the corner. She could ask him. As he walked closer, Sam got a better look. Trim, muscular, flowing black hair, tight tennis shirt, solid chin. Rrrrrrrow! This could be two birds with the same stone. She’d ask where the women’s room was, and it would also be a perfectly innocent icebreaker.
The man smiled as he got closer, great teeth.
“Excuse me,” said Sam. “Can you tell me where—”
The man took off running.
“My purse!” Sam broke into a sprint.
People lounging by the pool sat up and turned as the pair raced by the tiki bar, the man glancing over his shoulder, darting down the garden path, crashing through palm branches. He came out in the alley for the service vehicles, climbed up on a Dumpster and jumped over a fence. He ran another few yards, slowed up and turned around to see Sam jump down from the fence. He cursed and took off again. They were soon running along the wharf, past oyster bars and sailboats and antique shops. Sam was twenty yards back, not gaining but not falling off the pace either. They came around a street corner, running up a sidewalk by a multilevel parking deck with fresh graffiti: They paved over paradise and put up a parking lot. The man looked back again. Sam was still there. What was her problem? He ran through the streets of Old Town. Historic wooden cottages, gingerbread trim. He stopped and panted in front of a picket fence with pineapple-shaped holes. He looked back. Finally lost her. No, wait, there she was, coming around the place with the Bahamian shutters. He took a deep breath and charged south on Elizabeth Street, coming to an iron fence too tall to scale. He ran along it until he found an open gate. Ten seconds later, Sam dashed in the gate. They zigzagged through the cemetery, Sam catching glimpses of him between palm trees, above-ground crypts, whitewashed mausoleums and royal poincianas. The man stumbled, chest heaving. Sam cruised at the comfortable aerobic pace of daily after-work runs. The man finally put out his arms as he crashed into a crypt with a cement cherub on top. He turned and braced his back against it and flicked a stiletto knife open. Sam broke stride and stopped a few feet away. The man waved the knife weakly in the air, his back slowly sliding down the side of the crypt until he was in the sitting position, gasping for breath, the knife resting in a hand on the ground that he no longer had the strength to raise.
Sam stepped forward and picked up her purse without interference. She turned and started walking away, the sound of desperate breathing behind her, then a single, barely audible word.
“Cunt.”
Oops.
Sam stopped and stood a few moments with her back to him. The man was beginning to catch his breath and pushed himself to his feet. He picked up the knife. “Yeah, you heard me.”
Sam spun around. She took a half-hop step at the start of her run, like a gymnast beginning a floor exercise, and galloped toward him with measured strides. She hit the brakes three feet away, where she correctly anticipated the knife swing. It lacked energy, and the blade floated by without menace. Before the man could begin the backslash, Sam planted her left foot and cocked her right leg to her flank, the way they taught her at the police academy when they let the prosecutors work out. The man only saw a blur as the side kick punched his lower ribs. Something snapped inside. He flew back against the crypt and went down to stay this time. The show was over, but Sam took the key-chain tear gas out of her purse anyway. She heard gagging and high-pitched screaming as she soaked him down good, for instructional purposes.