up the line.
âJay, this is Arlee calling.â
âYes, maâam.â
Jayâs office is one of the smaller rooms in the house. It sits opposite the kitchen on the other side of the house, where, at least once a week, Eddie Mae has a pot of red beans on the stove. He can smell the pork fat and brown sugar from here, the smoky scent passing through two walls and filling every inch of the room. The window behind his desk heâs propped open with an ancient text on Texas civil statutes, borrowed from his library upstairs. Itâs strikingly uncluttered for a lawyerâs office. But he hasnât carried a full caseload since his wife died; heâs been turning away all new business and clearing out the old. His entire practice has come down to a single class action suit, Pleasantville v. ProFerma Labs , a case he kept because it was local, close to home, and close to his kids; he wouldnât have to travel, and there would be no trial, that much he was sure of. Last year, when two explosions from ProFermaâs chemical plant threatened to burn one of Houstonâs most storied neighborhoods to the ground, it was Jay Porter whom the residents of Pleasantville called, what should have been a slam dunk. Half the city had watched the smoky scene on their television sets, orange embers flying into folksâ backyards, lighting up roofs and wood-frame houses, and Jay was sure the case would never see the inside of a courtroom. ProFerma had every incentive to settle the matter quickly. But a year and a half later, theyâre no closer to a deal. The company has yet to make a serious offer. Arlee Delyvan was the first to sign on as a plaintiff.
She was one of âthe original thirty-seven,â one of the three dozen or so families whoâd settled into the first homes in Pleasantville when the neighborhood was built in â49. Dr. Delyvan, whoâd been a pediatrician, bought a four-bedroom, ranch-style home on Tilgham. It came with a his-and-hers two-car garage, with room enough for his Ford and his wifeâs blue Lincoln Continental. Mrs. Delyvan, a widow, is in her late seventies and volunteers part-time at the Samuel P. Hathorne Community Center, where sheâs calling from now. As Jay is ever in the business of maintaining his clientsâ trust, he takes their calls, day or night, no matter the topic.
âYou heard about the girl, I guess,â she says. âAlicia Nowell?â
It takes a moment for the name to land. When it does, Jay swallows a clump of dread thatâs suddenly lodged itself in the back of his throat. âI heard something on the radio this morning, yes, maâam,â he says.
âTheyâre saying somebody might have grabbed her out here.â
âThatâs what I heard.â
âWell?â
She waits for him to say more, to put two and two together, or in this case, two plus one . Alicia Nowell makes three girls now who have gone missing in and around Pleasantville. The first one in â94, the second last year. Two girls, more than a year apart, is a mean coincidence. Three girls is officially a problem.
Jay puts his client on hold and tells Officers Young and McFee that he wants a look at the amended incident report whenever itâs ready. He has Eddie Mae see them to the door. Then, sitting down in the rolling slat-back chair behind his desk, he again picks up the line. Mrs. Delyvan sounds heated, her voice hushed, but stern. Nobody, not anyone on the radio, not the newspaper, no one has mentioned a word about the other girls, both of them local, raised in Pleasantville, their families about to pass another Christmas with no answers.
âThis one was from south of here, Sunnyside,â Arlee says, spitting out the word like an unwanted seed. âBut a child is a child, and hereâs another one who seems to have just disappeared off our streets.â She sighs heavily into the phone. âHer parents have been