For Roxanne, with grateful thanks for bringing my muse back home.
I suppose you could say it started with a kiss. Yes, that was it, with a kiss. But not the warm lips, soft murmurs, and low-light romance kind of kiss. That came later. No, it was the kiss of fender against fender, and the tortured squeal of tires on tarmac in harsh daylight.
It was a warm day in August. No, I tell a lie. It was a hot day in August. Hot, but wet, the first rain we'd had for several weeks, and I think it was the rain that led to the crash. Contributory factor, at least, but it wasn't my fault, it wasn't Roxanne's fault, and it wasn't the fault of the driver of the eighteen-wheeler.
I guess we have to blame the idiot in the stolen Mustang. Him, and the booze and drugs he'd consumed. I don't know if he'd ever been told that excess booze would kill him, but it did. The two-lane blacktop meandered through the woodland, an attractive road to drive, even in the rain, but a road that demanded attention; attention it was getting from me, from the dusty Ford up ahead, and the eighteen-wheeler we'd just overtaken on a straight stretch. We were comfortably below the posted limit, heading upgrade and, for me at least, content.
The Mustang was heading downgrade. Way too fast, explained partly by the black-and-white chasing him, lights and siren working overtime. The Mustang driver lost it on the downgrade curve, and the back end started to try to overtake the front as the car tried to take the bend. The Ford driver had no chance, but tried, tried very hard, to get out of the way. She - I didn't know it was a woman at the time - managed to get part-way onto the shoulder, almost losing it under heavy braking, but the Mustang still hit her, only it was a glancing blow and not the head-on she'd just avoided. The Mustang spun, across the carriageway, into the opposite guardrail, and bounced off straight into the front of the eighteen-wheeler.
I'd managed to brake by then, pulling in behind the Ford, which was now in the ditch where the Mustang had forced it. The driver was getting out, and I stepped out of the pickup, noting only that it was a woman, a young woman, and attractive, too. Tall, well-made. Very well made, curved in all the places where a woman ought to be curved.
"You okay?" I said.
She looked shaken, pale, but she nodded. "Yes, I think so. Not so sure about the car, though. What about the truck driver? Is he okay?"
"Let's find out, shall we?" We made our way downgrade, to where the driver of the eighteen-wheeler was still sitting in his cab, staring at the pieces of Mustang, and driver, scattered around him. The police car had stopped short of the carnage, and the two cops got out. The younger one trotted upgrade towards us, holding up his hand.
"I wouldn't go any closer, folks. Not pretty. Hi, Jack, how you doin'?"
"Pretty good, Pete." Pete Winslow, we'd been in high school together. "Mustang driver dead?" I asked. He had to be, the mess the car was in.
Pete nodded. "Yeah, he's dead."
"What about the truck driver?" said the woman. "Is he okay?"
"Looks like it," said Pete, glancing over his shoulder to where the truck driver was talking to the other officer. He turned back to us. "Are you both okay?"
"I am," I said, "it all missed me. Ma'am?"
The woman gave us a wry look. "I'm okay, but I don't think I'm going anywhere with my car in the ditch."
"If it's okay, I can probably pull you out," I said.
"Look," said Pete. "Can I just get your name and address, please, ma'am. I don't think we'll need you at the moment. My partner and me, we saw what happened, and if we need any statements we'll get them later. Is that okay?" A few minutes later, details taken, Pete trotted off to join his partner. I turned to the woman.
"Okay, let's have a look at your car. My name's Jack Allen, by the way."
"Roxanne Delacour. Hi." She gave me a wry grin. "Hell of a way to get acquainted." She gestured. "Let's go check the mess."
It didn't take long. There was no way the Ford was going anywhere, not under its own power. The front suspension was damaged where a rock had caught it on the way into the ditch.
"Damn," said Delacour, turning to me. "Any chance of a ride?"
"No problem. What about the car?"
"It's a rental, from the airport. Dunno if it was premonition or what, but I paid extra for collision insurance, so it can take its chances. Guess I'll need to tell somebody, so it can be collected. I'll have to wait until I can find a phone, 'cause my cell needs charging."
"Here, use mine. I'll just go tell the law what's happening. Anything you've got in the car that you need, just shove it in the back of the cab on my pickup. Okay?"
Pete saw me coming and moved to meet me. I gestured towards the Ford.
"Suspension's damaged. No way it's moving under its own power. Lady says it's a rental, and she's calling the company now. I said I'd give her a ride, okay?"
He nodded. "Coroner's coming, and the wrecker's on its way. Al always has one of those front axle carrier doodads on his truck, so we'll get him to take the Ford into Corby, after we finish scraping Mustang off the road. Rental company can take it from there. No need for you to stick around, Jack, I know where to find you, and I got the lady's details if we need either of you."
"Okay, Pete, thanks." I gestured towards the wreckage. "Anyone we know?"
He shook his head. "Never seen him before. Least, as far as I can tell."
"Okay, Pete, I'm off. See ya." But Pete's attention was back at the crash. I made my way back to my pickup. Roxanne Delacour was waiting, holding my phone. She gestured with it.
"The rental company want to know where the car is. First time I've been in these parts, so I'm not sure."
"They still on the line? Let me speak to them." A couple of minutes later and that problem was sorted, and I helped Roxanne Delacour move her things into the pickup. Carry-all, another bag, and what looked like a laptop case. It only took a moment, and I helped her into the cab and went round to the driver's seat. "Okay, Ms Delacour, where am I taking you?"
"Corby, please. And I need to find somewhere to stay for a couple of nights."
"Motel? Or better?"
She grimaced. "Cheap!"
"Mountain Vista Motel, then. It's quiet, it's clean, and I know the folks who run it."
"Great, let's go." She frowned.
"Something up?"
"Tomorrow, I need transport. I have a job interview with Alton Software at one. Does Corby have car rental?"
"It does, but I'd be glad to give you a ride. Just say when."
She frowned. "Don't you have work to do? Or are you on vacation?"
"I'm working part-time at the moment. Tomorrow is free."
"If you're sure?" And I could hear the doubt.
"Absolutely. I'll collect you from the motel and take you to your interview, and I'll take you back to the motel, later." She stared at me for a long moment, and I grinned. "There's a price. Will you have dinner with me tomorrow evening? I would have said tonight, but I have a prior commitment."
"Let me get this straight," she said, her tone dry. "In return for my letting you give me a ride to my interview, and back again, you'll take me to dinner?"
"Yep."
She looked at me again, and then smiled. A good smile, that lit her face. "Can't see any major flaws. Yes, please."
"Great! Right, let's go see Marie and José at the motel."
An hour later, Roxanne Delacour was relaxing in room 5 at the Mountain Vista Motel, and I was on my way home. I'd managed to have a quiet word with Marie and José and asked them not to say anything about my business. They wondered, but I had known them for a long time; in fact when José came out of the Army, I'd staked them. My investment had paid off well, because the restaurant that Marie opened next door drew diners from miles around. If I didn't want them saying anything about how I made my living to Roxanne Delacour, well, they wouldn't.
Back home, I rang my partner.
"Bill? It's Jack. Tomorrow, the interviews? Remind me of the names, please. Uhuh, yes. Okay, got it. Thanks." I paused for a moment, then went on. "Bill, I need a favor. Will you sit in for me on the interviews, please? Yes, I have a reason. I might even tell you, sometime soon. Great! I owe you one, buddy. Not tomorrow night, sorry. I have a dinner engagement. Maybe Saturday, or Sunday? Okay, I'll look forward to it." I hung up and sat back, staring at the three names I'd written down.
Alan Chester, Peter Koslowski and Roxanne Delacour. Ms Delacour was not only very attractive, but a little bit of a mystery, too. I wondered what went on in the mind behind the gray eyes, under the shining mane of copper-colored curls. Maybe tomorrow I'd find out.