Kenneth nodded, turning to the house. Claire was standing at the living-room window. He waved and she waved back.
“I guess we’re ready, then.”
The boy stepped forward and hugged Rodney, then ran to the other side of the truck and got in.
McEban extended his hand. “As far as Rita goes,” he said, “we just have to try to think a step ahead of her.” He winked, and Rodney smiled for the first time, and stayed standing in the street, watching as they pulled out.
For the first couple of blocks the boy poked quietly through the mess on the dash, finally finding a pair of yellow cotton work-gloves which he slipped on and held up against his face, and then dropped his hands into his lap. “Is my colt okay?” he asked.
“Sure he is, he’s coming along just right. I’ve been working with him while you were down here visiting. Sacking him out a little bit every day, picking his feet up.”
Kenneth was watching the houses drift by in the side window. “You think he remembers me?”
“He was asking about you before I left. He said to say yo.” McEban could see the side of his face lift into a smile. “I probably shouldn’t have, but I invited some girls to come over and stay in your room while you were gone. I got lonely.”
“You did not.”
“It was the Sherwin girls. I let them paint your ceiling pink and stick up a bunch of those stars that glow in the dark.”
The boy was comfortable now, relaxing into the seat. “That’s going too far,” he said.
“Which part?”
“The ceiling part.”
At a stop sign McEban said, “Your uncle Paul’s moving to Africa.”
“Right.”
“He really is. To Uganda.”
“Is he taking Jenny Sherwin with him?”
“I’m not kidding this time.”
The boy screwed his face, locating the continent in his memory. “I did a report on Africa last year, but I don’t know all the names of the countries. Is it close to the pyramids?”
“No, it’s south of there. I’ll show you in the atlas when we get home.”
On the main drag there were mostly delivery vans, ranch and oilfield trucks. The boy lifted his gloved hands and scratched at the glovebox. “What’s this look like?” he asked.
“An orangutan.”
“That’s what I think too. I went to Denver,” he said, staring straight ahead.
“I thought they captured you in Cheyenne.”
“I went to Denver first. I had a Denver omelet with a man, and he showed me where the Rockies play.”
“Is there anything else you need to tell me?”
“What do you mean?” He pulled the gloves off, pairing them in his lap.
“This guy you had breakfast with in Denver. He didn’t act funny or anything, did he?”
“He was a good guy.”
“You could tell me.”
“I would.”
“Are you hungry?”
“Not yet.”
He turned east onto the interstate. “How’d you get along with your brother and sister?”
“They’re half.”
“All right.”
“I think I’ll like them better when they get older.”
McEban reached his chew off the dash and the boy leaned over to steer while he settled a fresh pinch under his lip.
“It’s too bad Rodney married such an ugly woman, all wart-faced and bald and big-eared.”
“Girls don’t go bald.”
“Some of them thin out a little.”
“I think she’s got really pretty ears.”
“When was the last time you and me had waffles?”
Kenneth shook his head. “I don’t think I’ve had waffles. Have you ever made any?”
“There’s an IHOP over in Cheyenne. They’ll put strawberries or blueberries or about anything you want on your waffles. And they got Frontier Days going on this week. I thought since we were over there anyway eating waffles we might take in a rodeo or two, maybe a concert if there’s anyone we like.”
The boy sat quietly and McEban thought he was picturing his breakfast, the week’s possibilities.
“I’ll be better next summer,” he said. “I’ll be a whole year older then, and three weeks won’t seem like too long.”
“You don’t have to come down here next summer, or ever again, unless you want to. I told your dad they could all come and stay with us for awhile.”
The sun was just off the horizon, the shadows long and dark to the west.
“What if my mom wants me to?”
“Have I ever lied to you?”
“No.” He found the sunglasses on the dash and put them on. “Can you get waffles with a banana sliced on top?”
“I bet you can.”
“I think that’s what I’d like.”
A HIGH, mottled cloudshelf was keeping the day cool, and Marin found she enjoyed driving the big flatbed north on I-90, sitting up above the passenger cars, Einar napping on the seat beside her.
He woke as she ramped down into Billings and told her where to turn, and they drove up into the Heights. They were looking for an antique store he remembered, and when they couldn’t find it she pulled into a parking lot in front of a coffee shop. Einar craned around, looking out the windows.
“There should be a sign.” He was alarmed, disoriented. “A big sign with red letters.”
“I’m surprised,” she said, “but the drive wore me out completely.” She spoke calmly. She laid a hand on his thigh. “Can we go inside?”
He was staring at her hand, which seemed to anchor him. He nodded and followed her into the shop.
She ordered a cinnamon latte, got him to try a sip, and he ordered one too. They carried their coffees to a table by the front window.
“I know this is the spot.” He sat staring out at the truck.
“I’m sure it was.” She kept her voice soft and even, reaching across the table to pat his hand.
He pulled it away. “You’re not sure at all.” He held the hand like it had been stung. “You’re sitting there thinking your brother’s lost what little mind he has left.”
“That’s not true. Stores go out of business every day, Einar. When was the last time you were up here?”
“I was here with Ella.”
“Well, for Christ’s sake. How long ago was that?”
He took up his coffee cup in both hands, sipping. “I guess it could’ve changed owners.” He looked toward the young man running the espresso machine. “Maybe it was that boy’s father who sold antiques. Remind me to ask him if it was.”
“I’ll ask for their phone book,” she said. “We’ll find a good place, maybe even better than the store that used to be here.”
He had a froth mustache and she tapped her own lip, but he didn’t notice so she licked the corner of her napkin and leaned across the table to wipe his mouth. He let her.
“I’m sorry you lost her so young,” she said.
“You mean Ella?” He was calming down now.
“I had Alice almost my whole life.”
“I never understood how she could want a bald man.” He turned his hat up on the end of the table, scratching absently at his stiff gray hair, and when he saw her looking at his head he said, “Charlie Newland’s who I’m talking about. He and Ella sort of partnered up for awhile.”
“You don’t mean like bridge partners, or they went fishing together?”
“No. I mean the other.” He sipped his coffee. There was a line at the counter now. “This is a nice place,” he said.
“We’ll come again if you like. The coffee’s good.”
“I don’t really think I was ever what you’d call good help in bed, so she had it coming, I guess, and Charlie, he had that shriveled arm he got from having polio when he was a kid. Maybe he thought he had it coming too.”
She started giggling, and that got him started, and finally a young woman waiting in line came over to ask if everything was okay, and Marin told her it was far better than that.
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