Authors: Rachel Howzell Hall
I shrieked through it all, and closed my eyes as Mom whipped past me, leaving the bedroom for the bathroom. She swung her arm across the countertop, and everythingâtoothpaste tubes, lotion bottles, the big jar of Vaselineâcrashed to the tile floor. She screamed again, then kicked the bathroom door with her bare foot. The door banged against the wall, and the doorknob cracked the plaster. Mom shouted, then, screamed and cried out to the ceiling, “Why? Oh God! Why?”
Unable to stand it, I covered my ears with my hands. I crouched in the hallway until Mom's cries became sobs, until sobs became whimpers. She stripped off her nightgown and, with swollen red eyes, stared at her reflection in the mirror. Her chest heaved as she panted, as she tried to catch her breath.
Too scared to move, too scared to speak, I watched her from my spot in the hallway. I couldn't tear my eyes away from my mother's body. Couldn't look away from the jagged scar beneath her belly button, or from the stretch marks that traveled like bumpy highways from her waist down to her thighs. Mom moaned, then leaned against the counter. She muttered, “Okay then,” and stepped into the bathtub, pulling closed the plastic curtain. The shower knobs squeaked, and water pelted the porcelain walls. Steam licked the ceiling, and the fragrance of melting soap drifted out to the hallway. “Did you eat?” she asked.
I hugged my knees tighter.
Mom poked her head from behind the curtain to look at me. She frowned at what she saw: a thirteen-year-old girl with red eyes and a runny nose, in a tight ball. “We're going out to dinner,” she told me. “We need to get out of this place. I need to ⦠Go get dressed.”
We ate at Sizzler that night. Mom gave me her cheese toast and the pineapple slice that came with her Hibachi Chicken. She asked me about school and friends, my latest journal entry and visit to Dr. Sherrod. As we drove home, she kept the patter light and trivial. Before we climbed out of the car, though, she turned to me. Her eyes glistened with tears as she tried to smile. “I'm sorry, Lulu,” she whispered. “Please forgive me.”
Unsure of a proper response, I nodded.
We never mentioned those pills, the dark, or her tears ever again.
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37
After Macie had flitted away to buy dresses at Neiman Marcus, I sat and drank a cup of coffee: tall drip, lots of sugar, nothing fancy. A silver Range Rover rolled past with Lena behind the wheel. An Old Playa in an Adidas tracksuit who had climbed out of his Corvette thirty years ago, and was finally making his way out of the parking lot, passed my table. He winked at me and said, “Why is a fine young lady like you sitting out here all alone?”
“Just enjoying the sun.” I stretched so he could see my badge and gun.
Nothing to see here, old man, keep it moving.
His eyes widened and he nodded his farewell as he shuffled to join the crew at a chess table.
“Elouise!” Lena, dressed in a zebra-print skirt and matching sunglasses, a black tank top and silver python stilettos,
click-clacked
to where I sat.
I lifted my sunglasses just to appreciate all of her shine. “Looks like you were baptized in the River Beyoncé this morning.”
“And you,
ma chérie,
look like stir-fried shit. Extra-crispy.”
We hugged.
She settled in the chair abandoned by Macie, then used my napkin to wipe down the table before setting down her Birkin bag. “My ex-mother-in-law is sick. Diabetes. Or, as she calls it, the Sugar. She begged me to drop by since she's
convinced
that she's dying of
the Sugar
.” She sat back in her chair and fanned her face. “She hasn't talked to Chauncey since his wedding. Not that she accepts that he's, once again, a married man.”
Lena's ex-husband, Chauncey, a former sports agent, had fallen in love with someone else. And now Chauncey and his husband (a personal trainer ridiculously named Brando Goochâwho smartly took Chauncey's last name of Meadows) owned a gym in Connecticut. He had found his happily-ever-after and Lena had been left with baseball jerseys, a few signed basketballs, and accidentally discovered love letters written by the man who had stolen her husband's heart. Lena had made millions in the divorce, but that hadn't matteredâshe had loved Chauncey and he had dogged her after they had been together for fifteen years.
“What's going on with you?” she asked. “And what's the deal with all of this?” She waggled her fingers at my face. “You got the Sugar, too?”
“Oh. Lots of stuff goin' on.” I twisted my wedding ring and tried to smile.
Lena folded her arms. “Spill it.”
I waved my hand. “Nothin' new to spill, really. Just same ol', same ol'. Did you send Chauncey and Brando Gooch Meadows a gift?”
She rolled her eyes. “I still refuse to believe that they sent me an invitation. Fuckers.” And then she launched into a medley: her ex-mother-in-law's weekly dialysis treatments, selling a signed Derek Jeter jersey on eBay for three times its worth, Chauncey's wedding pictures on Flickr, which then led back to the pitiful health of her ex-mother-in-law.
Lena sighed, then said, “Chauncey's always acted like he was the center of the universe, but when he was with me, he treated her better. When he was with me, I would have made him move her into the house. When he was with me⦔ She stopped, puffed out air, then bit her lip. “
N'importe quoi.
”
But with ragged breathing, misty eyes, and a twitching nose, Lena's feelings for Chauncey were far from “whatever.”
I drew in air, then said, “Howâ¦? When Chauncey did what he did, how did you feel? I know: I was there and saw you and how everything exploded and you threw books and phones and everything at him and then he filed the restraining order ⦠But that was then. Looking back now, howâ¦?”
Lena didn't speak for a moment, then said, “Bamboozled. Didn't see it coming.
You
didn't see it coming. This man had never flirted with another woman, so another
man
?” She tapped the table with her fingernails and chuckled to herself. “And when I found out that his mistress was a âmister.' Again: you were there. And you were there when the Santa Monica Police Department came to the house.”
Humiliation. Fear. Anger. And five stitches for Chauncey above his left eyebrow.
“You didn't want to give him a second chance?” I asked.
She smirked. “Did he ask for one?”
“If he had asked, what would you have done?”
Lena gazed out to the parking lot, then gave a one-shouldered shrug. “I would've forgiven him. I wanted what my parents had back in Brooklyn. You know: church on Sundays, taking the kids to ballet and karate on Wednesdays, pizza night Fridays. And he had promised me all of that. And even after ⦠everything, I still wanted him to keep that promise.”
“But he didn't keep that promise.”
She forced herself to smile. “But he's keeping it with someone else. Doesn't matter that it's a guy he's keeping it with. I just care that he ain't keeping it with me.”
I leaned forward, elbows on the table, chin in hand. “I think that Gregâ”
The Motorola squawked from my hip. “Lou, you there?” It was Colin.
I grabbed the radio and toggled the switch. “Yeah, one minute.”
Lena gaped at me. “You think that Greg is
what
?”
I squinted at her but didn't speak.
Her eyes widened. “Oh, shit, Lou!”
“But I can't talk about it right now.”
“When can we talk about it then?”
“Soon. Swear.” I toggled the radio as Lena continued to gawk at me.
“How was your coffee date with Macie?” Colin asked.
“She came half-naked, and I think I caught a cold by proxy.”
“The girl has a crush on you.”
“I'm a sexy beast. Who can resist? Check a name for me?”
“Yep.”
“Max Yates. Y-a-t-e-s.” To Lena I said, “This may take a while.”
She pointed at me. “You
will
tell me what Greg is up to.”
I rolled my eyes. “I think you already know what he's up to. And/or into.”
Kiss-kiss, hug-hug, and she
click-clacked
back to the parking lot.
The radio squawked, followed by Colin's voice. “A trio came up with that name. Two are old white guys. One is African American.”
“The black guy,” I said. “How old is he?”
“Twenty-four.”
“Got any priors?”
“A couple of parking and speeding tickets. Nothing serious. So who is Max Yates?”
“Macie Darson's boyfriend. Works at Crase's car dealership.”
“The Darson girls certainly like the guys with the cars that go boom.”
“Don't they? He's the one who hooked Monie up with the baby Lexus.”
“Great. Mystery solved. So: Renata Reese.”
“Monique's BFF.”
“Want me to go over and talk to her? It'll give you some time to breathe.”
“I tried breathing once. Highly overrated. Don't think I'll try it again.”
He said, “Ha,” but didn't mean it. Something was up.
“Sure,” I said. “Go talk to Renata Reese. Anything else?”
“You got a delivery. From your hubby.”
I tugged at my earring. “Yeah? What is it?”
“The fanciest muffin basket I've ever seen.”
“Hunh.”
“Luke wants to know if he can have one.”
I said, “Sure,” again, then added, “And you take one, too, and anybody else who wants one.” Nothing says, “I'm boning a Japanese girl at this very moment” like a basket of fancy muffins.
Colin shouted back to Luke, “She says you can have one.” Then he came back on the line. “So, Renata Reese.”
The world had blurred before me and I swiped at my eyes. My lungs filled with air and I pushed it all out in a single huff. Also, I had been sitting in one space for too long. “I'll go with you,” I said, standing. “Watch you work. See if you've learned anything.”
Moving again, and filled with caffeine and sugar, I drove to meet Colin at a dingy pink house around the corner from the Darsons. Another homicide detective stood with him on the sidewalk. Thomas Jefferson (mother had high aspirations for her little black boy) was taller than me and had skin oilier than a skillet in a soul food joint. Neither he nor Colin was smiling.
“Hey, Jeff,” I said. “What's going on?”
“Hello, Elouise.” Jefferson glowered at me as though I had been shopping for shoes as the levees broke and the city flooded.
“Renata's gone,” Colin said.
I cocked my head. “By your tone, it doesn't sound like her departure was planned. And with Jeff here⦔ I peered at Jefferson with new eyes. “Oh, crap. Is she dead?”
“Don't know,” Jefferson said. “My LT sent me out since your team is all over the city. Anyway, the girl's mom can't find her. Her car's still parked here but she's been missing since around midnight. And it looks like there may be blood inside the car. The mom saw that and called it in.”
“So there's blood but no body,” I said.
Jefferson nodded. “I'll show you.”
Colin and I followed him down the block to where two patrol officers kept a small group of onlookers at a distance. A mint green Ford Taurus, as beaten as a gypsy cab in Beirut, was now surrounded by yellow tape. There were scratches in the paint. Black scrapes on both fenders. A missing left headlamp. A dent the size of a man's foot in the driver's-side door. And several drops of blood on the inside of the driver's-side window.
“You look in the trunk yet?” I asked Jefferson.
“I was just about to when Taggert drove up,” he said, pulling on latex gloves. “The mother is looking for the extra set of car keys.”
And we stood there, staring at the beat-up Taurus, not saying much but hoping that the congealed red droplets on the window had come from a cherry Slurpee and not from Renata.
A thin black woman in an emerald green pantsuit hurried from the pink house. She had keys in one hand and the tiny fist of a butterscotch-colored toddler wearing a diaper and a Raiders shirt in the other.
“That the mom?” I asked Jefferson.
“Yeah. Her name's Nova West, and that's Renata's son, Jalen.”
Nova West looked too young to be a mother but was obviously old enough to be somebody's grandmother. She held out the car keys long before she reached the yellow tape. Jefferson thanked her and patted the top of Jalen's head. Nova threw a look at me and then an anxious look at the Ford Taurus. She smelled of soap and flowery perfumeâI'm sure she had been expecting to go to work like she probably did every Friday morning.
Jefferson unlocked the car door and pulled an inside lever. The trunk sprung open and we clicked on our flashlights and huddled around to look inside.
A plastic bag of bottled water. Old
Vibe
magazines. Fast-food containers. Clothes â¦
I stepped back and said, “Okay.”
Jefferson sighed, relieved to find trash in the trunk instead of a dead girl.
I peeked beneath the car and threw light on the slick asphalt. “Did it rain last night?”
“Fog,” Colin said, “but no rain.”
“Maybe the sprinklers kicked on this morning,” I said, staring at a dark puddle that should not have been thereâespecially since the rest of the asphalt was dry.
Colin peered beneath the car, noticed the puddle, and whispered, “Fuck⦔
Jefferson was clearing out the trunk and placing all of the contents on the sidewalk. “Nothing's here.”
“Unfortunately, I think you're wrong.” I returned to stand at the trunk. “Let's move that rug.”
Jefferson pulled out the black square of carpet and then the plank that hid the spare tire compartment. He took a step back and muttered, “Oh, shit.”