Chapter 3 A Stranger in the Room
I stepped out of the Crown Vic and walked slowly to the door of the Airstream. I still wasn't sure what I was going to do with Sally Baynes. She was too damn sure of herself for my liking. My home was a one bedroom affair. If she was staying, there wasn't much doubt about where she thought she'd be sleeping. Any other woman that looked like her wouldn't cause me a moment's doubt. But Sally wasn't any other woman.
When I opened the door I caught a whiff of something cooking. It smelled good, a rarity in that kitchen.
"What's that you're making?" I asked as I stepped into the little galley.
"You didn't have much in the refrigerator or the cupboard. I made do with what I could find. It's venison and macaroni stir-fry."
I nodded approvingly. "Let me get washed up."
I took the time to have a shower and change. If I was going to have a regular visitor, I would have to make arrangements to re-fill my water more often. Currently, I was filling from Hurley's well.
I pulled on a clean t-shirt and cargo shorts before padding barefoot to the kitchen. Sally was just dishing up the meat and pasta concoction when I arrived. I opened two Cascades and put them on the table. She had made a tossed salad to go with whatever it was we were eating.
"This is good," I said. "What's in it?"
"Ground venison I borrowed from Uncle Hurley, macaroni, canned tomatoes, chopped onion, tomato sauce with Tabasco and a bit of Worcester sauce. I didn't expect you to have any of that."
"I put some Worcester with Tabasco and cheese in my scrambled eggs," I explained.
"Oh, gourmet breakfast, huh," she teased.
"Well, this is good. Thanks."
"You're welcome. Now can I stay?"
I stopped eating and looked at her.
"Do you have any idea of what you're letting yourself in for?"
"Probably not, but nothing worth having comes without risk."
"Very philosophical," I grumbled. "Hurley tells me you were a cop."
"Yeah. I suppose he told you about my problem with them."
"He did."
"And I suppose he told you about my ex-husband."
"He did not. Should I be worried about him?"
"No. He's harmless, useless and worthless."
"Why'd you marry him then?"
"Young, dumb and horny."
I finished the last of the meal and leaned back in my chair. "You don't strike me as dumb. Not with a degree and ten years on the force. More likely you married a con-man. Had you fooled for a while, I expect."
"He did. Unlike you, he was a talker. He could talk the birds out of the trees."
"And one young woman out of her ... innocence."
"Hah! I'm afraid I wasn't quite that innocent."
"And since then?"
She shrugged. "Mostly window shopping. Nothing I'm proud of, except lately I've been a good girl."
"I'm no different. I'm not a monk, but I'm not stupid either. I'll admit that much."
"Doesn't this trailer get a little small after a while?" she asked, quickly changing subjects.
"It's big enough for me. It has everything I need and costs me almost nothing to run. I don't pay taxes because they don't know about me and I don't use any county services. If someone comes looking for me, they're going to have to look very hard, assuming they know where to look."
"Not much of a life, is it?"
"It isn't always by choice, Sally. There will come a day when I'm done and I'll want to disappear. I'm hoarding enough to make that possible sooner rather than later."
"They pay you that well?" she asked, surprised.
"They do. But I'm not averse to liberating some additional funds from the people I encounter. They tend to favor cash transactions."
She rose and collected the dishes, putting them in the sink. I got up as well and grabbed a towel.
"You wash and I'll dry," I volunteered. We were done in five minutes.
She wandered back into the living area and clicked on the TV. Watching her, I got the impression she wasn't paying any attention to it.
"Does my lifestyle bother you?" I asked.
"A little. I understand some of it. You're protecting yourself. Not just from the people you're after, but from being hurt again. This little aluminum ship you live in is a part of that. If you have to, you can hook it up and go somewhere else. No ties that bind."
I nodded. She was right. She was exactly right.
"You don't relate to that, do you," I said, not making it a question.
"No. I need a place to land. Something fixed. Something I can count on."
Norton was on the rug in front of us, lying with his head on his paws, eyes open, watching us. I wondered what he was thinking.
"And that's what makes me hard to live with. I wouldn't wish my life on any woman."
"That's making a big assumption that no woman could cope with you."
"It would take someone very ... different. Very tough minded. I tried it once. I let myself fall in love. I got stupid at the same time. I let her become part of my life. It cost her her life. I've promised myself I won't go through that again."
"Hurley said her name was Elizabeth and that she was very beautiful."