Bus Tour. The T-shirts. Salons had started offering Beauty Killer manicures again. At least some people were happy that she was at large. Portlandâs cottage industry around the Beauty Killer dropped off considerably when she was locked up. Now they seemed to be making up for lost time. And with Halloween just two days away, it would only get worse.
Archie closed the paper and saw his own photo on the back page of the front section. It was part of a story about the history of the task force. The photo was a younger version of himselfâback when heâd first taken over the Beauty Killer Task Force, when he was still married, before the gray in his hair, and the scars that Gretchen Lowell had left on his chest. He had never been handsome. His nose was crooked from a car accident when he was a teenager. His features were just asymmetrical enough to appear off-kilter for no identifiable reason. His eyes were dark and deep-set, so that he never really looked happy even when he was.
Archie felt Ginger lift her head from his foot and he glanced down to see that her triangular ears were upright and angled toward the door. He was putting down the newspaper when he heard the first knock.
It was Susan. She always knocked the same way: two short knocks, with a pause, followed by three short knocks.
âI know youâre in there,â she called through the door.
Ginger stood up and trotted to the door and then stopped and looked expectantly back at Archie.
Archie tightened the belt around his terry-cloth robe, got to his feet, and followed Ginger to the door.
He hadnât planned on letting Susan in. He was going to stand his ground, and explain that it was Saturday morning and no one had been disemboweled or beheaded and he wasnât working. But she had a way of circumventing the best of his intentions.
She pushed past him and headed for the kitchen. She was wearing a silver skirt that looked like it was made from tinfoil, black tights, black Converse sneakers, and a red hooded sweatshirt, unzipped, over a black tank top. Ginger, whom Susan sometimes walked, pranced along at her feet, panting happily. âDo you have any coffee?â Susan asked.
Archie closed the door behind her. Susan was already getting a mug out of the cupboard. âHelp yourself,â he said.
Susanâs clothes smelled like cigarettes. Archie had noticed it the moment heâd opened the door. Susan smoking cigarettes this early in the morning was never a good indicator.
He watched as she poured herself the last cup of coffee from the pot and then stooped down to pat Ginger on the head.
âHappy birthday,â she said in Archieâs direction. âI forgot your present.â
âYou didnât have to get me anything,â Archie said.
Susan straightened up and looked at him. She held the mug between her hands and blew on the coffee. Her eyes were red and her mascara was smeared. She looked like sheâd slept in her makeup. âLeoâs not answering his phone,â she said. âWe had an argument last night. He left. This morning I went by his place. He didnât answer the buzzer. And I fucking leaned on it,â she added. âIf heâd been home, he would have answered.â
Archie wanted to ask what the argument was about, but he didnât. âDo you have a key?â he asked.
She glanced away. âNo.â
Archie took a deep breath. He didnât want to overreact. It was true that Leo might be in danger, but it was also true that Leo had his demons. Before Leo and Susan had started seeing each other, Leo had been linked with every exotic dancer and party girl in town. He was at clubs every night. He was not given to monogamy. For all Archie knew, Leo had spent last night with Star. Archie searched for a kind way to phrase it: âHe stays out sometimes, right? Maybe he found somewhere else to crash.â
âWe had a fight,â Susan said. âOutside the
Douglas E. Schoen, Melik Kaylan