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The women saw her getting in his van. Warfield would remember them together. Hurriedly he dressed.
Reba McClane felt the cool bark of a tree trunk’s shadow, and then the sun again as she wandered across the yard. She could always tell where she was by the heat of the sun and the hum of the window air conditioner. Navigation, her life’s discipline, was easy here. She turned around and around, trailing her hands on the shrubs and overgrown flowers.
A cloud blocked the sun and she stopped, not knowing in which direction she faced. She listened for the air conditioner. It was off. She felt a moment of uneasiness, then clapped her hands and heard the reassuring echo from the house. Reba flipped up her watch crystal and felt the time. She’d have to wake D. soon. She needed to go home.
The screen door slammed.
“Good morning,” she said.
His keys tinkled as he came across the grass.
He approached her cautiously, as though the wind of his coming might blow her down, and saw that she was not afraid of him.
She didn’t seem embarrassed or ashamed of what they had done in the night. She didn’t seem angry. She didn’t run from him or threaten him. He wondered if it was because she had not seen his private parts.
Reba put her arms around him and laid her head on his hard chest. His heart was going fast.
He managed to say good morning.
“I’ve had a really terrific time, D.”
Really? What would someone say back? “Good. Me too.” That seemed all right. Get her away from here.
“But I need to go home now,” she was saying. “My sister’s coming by to pick me up for lunch. You could come too if you like.”
“I have to go to the plant,” he said, modifying the lie he had ready.
“I’ll get my purse.”
Oh no. “I’ll get it.”
Almost blind to his own true feelings, no more able to express them than a scar can blush, Dolarhyde did not know what had happened to him with Reba McClane, or why. He was confused, spiked with new fright at being Two.
She threatened him, she did not threaten him.
There was the matter of her startling live movements of acceptance in Grandmother’s bed.
Often Dolarhyde did not find out what he felt until he acted. He didn’t know how he felt toward Reba McClane.
An ugly incident as he drove her home enlightened him a little.
Just past the Lindbergh Boulevard exit off Interstate 70, Dolarhyde pulled into a Servco Supreme station to fill his van.
The attendant was a heavyset, sullen man with muscatel on his breath. He made a face when Dolarhyde asked him to check the oil.
The van was a quart low. The attendant jammed the oil spout into the can and stuck the spout into the engine.
Dolarhyde climbed out to pay.
The attendant seemed enthusiastic about wiping the windshield; the passenger side of the windshield. He wiped and wiped.
Reba McClane sat in the high bucket seat, her legs crossed,
her skirt riding up over her knee. Her white cane lay between the seats.
The attendant started over on the windshield. He was looking up her dress.
Dolarhyde glanced up from his wallet and caught him. He reached in through the window of the van and turned the wipers on high speed, batting the attendant’s fingers.
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