California Girl

California Girl Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: California Girl Read Online Free PDF
Author: T. Jefferson Parker
too, Clay?” asked Katy.
    Clay nodded, sipped his wine. “Mandatory.”
    “What will you do with it?” asked Meredith.
    “The government,” said Eileen. “You know—State Department, Foreign Service, Diplomatic Corps—even military. Wherever they might need you.”
    Andy knew that Clay was already being paid by the government to finish his studies at the language institute. The whole family knew, and it had been a day of quiet celebration when news of Clay’s acceptance to the institute arrived by special delivery. Roger Stoltz had helped expedite the application through his friendship with Dick Nixon.
    Later Clay had told Andy it was a CIA “scholarship.” He had no way of proving it but Andy believed him. Clay had told him he had applied to the agency. Wanted to do some undercover work, maybe fuck up the Communists without having to go to war or drop the big one on them. But first he had to finish school, and the agency was paying for it because he picked up languages like a dog picked up dirt. And because his grades for two years at UCLA were straight A’s, though he never studied more than fifteen minutes a week, tops. He’d taken some firearms training from this old marine instructor, and could outshoot Deputy Nick with both eyes closed. And learned some hand-to-hand stuff that would shrink your sphincter. And if Andy said one thing about it Clay would never tell him another secret as long as he lived.
    Andy had kept these secrets because he believed in secrets. They came naturally to him, like taking written words seriously or drinking alcohol or wanting Meredith Thornton, who now, out of sight under the tablecloth, placed a warm hand on his thigh.
    Then looked at him with the most puzzling and beautiful expression he’d ever seen.
    And though he’d looked into those dark brown eyes for what seemed like weeks at a time, he saw something new in them now, something delighted and determined and full of joy.
    “Meredith,” said Clay. “What are you thinking about over there?”
    “I hate it when Andy asks me that,” she said with a laugh. Max and Monika Becker laughed, too. Meredith’s face reddened and her hand eased off Andy’s leg.
    “You’re a lovely young lady,” said Clay. “You’re what, a senior now?”
    “Thank you. Yes.”
    She looked at Andy again. Bloomed into a smile that made his heart stumble.
    Then pumpkin pies.
    Max Becker talked more about the international Communist conspiracy, and this new organization called the John Birch Society. He’d heard about it from Roger Stoltz, who was starting up a local chapter. It was a group of conservative men and women who wanted to expose the Communists for what they were—subversives, atheists, and murderers intent on ruining the United States of America by undermining the freedoms that made it great.
    Monika added that she thought Roger Stoltz was a good man and a patriot and he had promised to come over later in the evening.
    Karl nodded agreeably but drifted off into a memory so clear and painful that Andy thought he saw Alma Vonn’s tiny image flickering in his black eyes.
    Nick put his arm around his pregnant wife and set a hand on her very large bulge.
    Clay and Eileen left the table early and changed shoes in the mudroom to take a walk around the property because Eileen was from Maine and had never been in an orange grove.
    David smiled through his mustache and helped his mother with the dishes.
    The Vonn girls helped Max and Meredith clear the table.
    Andy watched Meredith with a vague ache in his heart and a very specific and painful one in each of his nuts.
    “She’s a beautiful girl,” said Katy. “You’re lucky.”
    “I know.”
     
    AFTER THE FEAST Andy asked Karl Vonn if he could talk to him a second on the front porch.
    Vonn didn’t even hesitate. “Sure,” he said.
    Without asking, Andy poured Karl a glass of wine, then one for himself. They sat on rattan chairs with a round rattan table between them. It wasn’t
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