now that Baileyâs back in custody. Somebody must have felt pretty smug all these years. Once the investigationâs opened up, who knows where itâll go?â
âYouâre right. I wouldnât like to be in your shoes.âShe rubbed her arms as if she were cold and then laughed at herself uneasily. âWell. I better get back downstairs and see how Motherâs doing. She was napping when I left, but she tends to sleep in short bursts. The minute her eyes open, she wants me Johnny-on-the-spot.â
âGive me time to wash my face and Iâll be right down.â I walked her to the door. As I passed my handbag, I caught sight of the envelope Clemson had given me. âOh. This is for your father. Jack Clemson asked me to drop it off.â I plucked it out and handed it to her.
She glanced at it idly and then smiled at me. âThanks for the drink. I hope I havenât bored you with the family history.â
âNot at all,â I said. âBy the way, whatâs the story on Jean Timberlakeâs mother? Will she be hard to find?â
âWho, Shana? Try the pool hall. Sheâs there most nights. Tap Granger, too.â
Â
After supper, I snagged a jacket from my room and headed down the back stairs.
The night was cold and the breeze coming off the Pacific was briny and damp. I shrugged into my jacket and walked the two blocks to Pearlâs Pool Hall as if through broad daylight. Floral Beach, by night, is bathed in the flat orange glow of the sodium vapor lights that line Ocean Street. The moon wasnât up yet, and the ocean was as black as pitch. The surf tumbled onto the beach in an uneven fringe of gold, picking upillumination from the last reaches of the street lamps. A fog was rolling in and the air had the dense, tawny look of smog.
Closer to the pool hall, the quiet was broken by a raucous blast of country music. The door to Pearlâs stood open and I could smell cigarette smoke from two doors away. I counted five Harley-Davidsons at the curb, all chrome and black leather seats, with convoluted tailpipes. The boys in my junior high school went through a siege of drawing machines like that:hot rods and racing cars, tanks, torture devices, guns, knives, and bloodlettings of all kinds. I should really check one day and find out how those guys turned out.
The pool hall itself was two pool tables long, with enough space between to allow folk to angle for a tricky shot. Both tables were occupied by bikers: heavyset men in their forties with Fu Manchu beards and long hair pulled back in ponytails. There were five of them, a family of road pirates on the move. The bar ran the entire length of wall to the left, the barstools filled with the bikersâ girlfriends and assorted town folk. Walls and ceiling were covered with a collage of beer signs, tobacco ads, bumper stickers, cartoons, snapshots, and bar witticisms. One sign proclaimed Happy Hour from six to seven, but the hand-drawn clock under it had a 5 at every hour. A knee-slapper, that. Bowling trophies, beer mugs, and racks of potato chips lined the shelf behind the bar. There was also a display of Pearlâs Pool Hall T-shirts on sale for $6.99. A leather bikerâs glove hung inexplicably from the ceiling,and a Miller Lite mirror on the wall was festooned with a pair of ladyâs underpants. The noise level was such that a hearing test might be in order later.
There was one empty stool at the bar, which I took. The bartender was a woman in her mid-sixties, perhaps the very Pearl for whom the place was named. She was short, thick through the middle, with graying, permanent-curled hair chopped straight across the nape of her neck. She was wearing plaid polyester slacks and a sleeveless top, showing arms well muscled from hefting beer cases. Maybe, at intervals, she hefted some biker out the door by the seat of his pants.
I asked for a draft beer, which she pulled and served up in a Mason jar.
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