Stone Rain
to be personal letters, none with return addresses.
    I lightly thumbed them. “Fan mail?”
    “Hmm?” Trixie said. “Oh, sometimes men write to me ahead of time, tell me what they want. They don’t want anything showing up in the ‘sent messages’ in their Outlook Express, if you know what I mean, in case the wife happens to read it.”
    “Sure.”
    She saw the recall envelope for, it seemed, the first time. “Oh shit, not another. Never buy a German luxury car, at least not a GF300. I thought the GF stood for ‘goes fast.’ Now I think it’s for ‘get fixed.’ It’s been recalled for the fuel injection, a power seat, cruise control glitches. Who’s got time to get all those things fixed? Open that, see what it’s for while I try to find this thing.”
    I opened the envelope, pulled out the paperwork. “Let me see here. Uh, okay, you’ve got extra-sensitive air bag sensors. Slightest hit on the front bumper can set them—”
    “Here it is.” Trixie slapped a newspaper clipping onto the table, then scooped all her mail back into the purse. I picked up the clipping. It was a column, with a guy’s head shot, and a name in bold caps: “MARTIN BENSON.”
    The headline read, “Council Misses Boat on Harbor Review.”
    “Something about the Oakwood harbor? What do you have to do with that?” I asked.
    “Nothing. I don’t care about the story. I just wanted you to see who the asshole was.”
    “Martin Benson.”
    “Yeah.”
    “What paper is this from?”
    “The
Suburban
.”
    Oakwood’s local, community newspaper. Light on news but heavy on inserted ads, it was delivered free to most of the town’s households.
    “I don’t remember this guy from when we lived there,” I said. When we had a house in Oakwood, I’d at least turn the pages of the
Suburban
before dropping it into the recycling bin.
    “He’s a new guy. Trying to make a name for himself. By fucking me over.”
    “Why don’t you start at the beginning.”
    “Okay, this Benson guy, he hears through the grapevine what kind of business I might be operating in my home.”
    “You mean, like, a house of pleasure and pain.”
    “I offer pain. But some people do find that pleasing.”
    “Where do you think he heard about it?”
    Trixie shrugged. “Any number of people know. Clients. Former neighbors.” She gave me a look.
    “Not guilty,” I said.
    “He did a piece on Roger Carpington. He’s already out, you know. Maybe he told him something off the record, like, ‘Hey, you know what goes on in your supposedly respectable neighborhood?’”
    Carpington was a former Oakwood town councillor who’d lost his position after being convicted of accepting money to vote the right way on a housing development. Carpington had never been a client of Trixie’s, as far as I knew, but the man who’d been paying him off had been. He might have told Carpington about his recreational activities before having the life squeezed out of him by a python. (Hey, it’s a long story.)
    “But the thing is,” Trixie went on, “it doesn’t fucking much matter where he found out. The fact is, he suspects something.”
    “Okay, so how do you know that?”
    “He called me, says he wants to interview me. I say, what about? He says he’s doing a column about Oakwood’s kinkier side, thinks I might be able to help him out with that.”
    “Maybe he doesn’t want to write about you. Maybe he just wants a freebie.”
    “Yeah, well, if I thought strapping him down and giving him forty whacks would keep him quiet, I’d do it. But I think he’s the real deal. He wants to do a story.”
    “What did you tell him?”
    “I said I had no idea what he was talking about and hung up.”
    I had some more latte-thingy. “So did that take care of it?”
    Trixie shook her head. “He calls again, says he’d like to do the story even if I remained anonymous. So he can still do his story about kinky suburbanites. So I tell him again, I’ve got nothing to say. Then,
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