use the office phone?â
âIâll call from the motel.â
âBe sure we know how to get in touch with you,â she said, with a faint note of uneasiness. I could see a hint of panic in her eyes at the notion that I might leave town without making arrangements for Agnesâs removal.
âIâll leave the motel number with Mrs. Haynes.â
I drove back to the Vagabond, where I put in a call first to Sergeant Pokrass at the sheriffâs department, advising her that Agnes Grey had indeed turned up.
Then I placed the call to Irene Gersh and filled her in onher motherâs circumstances. My report was greeted with dead silence. I waited, listening to her breathe in my ear.
âI suppose I better talk to Clyde,â she said finally. She did not sound happy at having to do this and I could only imagine what Clydeâs reaction would be.
âWhat do you want me to do in the meantime?â I asked.
âJust stay there, if you would. Iâll give Clyde a call at the office and get back to you as soon as possible, but it probably wonât be till around suppertime. Iâd appreciate it if youâd drive back out to the Slabs and put a padlock on Motherâs door.â
âWhat good is that going to do?â I said. âThe minute Iâm gone, the little turds will break in. The louvres in one window are already gone. Frustrate these kids and theyâll tear the place apart.â
âIt sounds like theyâve already done
that.
â
âWell, true, but thereâs no point making life any more difficult.â
âI donât care. I hate the idea of trespassers and I wonât abandon the place. She may still have personal belongings on the premises. Besides, she might want to go back when sheâs feeling like herself again. Did you talk to the sheriff? Surely thereâs some way to patrol the area.â
âI donât see how. You know the situation better than I do. Youâd have to have an armed guard to keep squatters out and whatâs the point? That trailerâs already been trashed.â
âI want it locked,â she said with an unmistakable edge.
âIâll do what I can,â I said, making no attempt to disguise my skepticism.
âThank you.â
I gave her the telephone number at the Vagabond and she said sheâd get in touch with me later on. I changed back into jeans and tennis shoes, hopped in the car, and headed over to a hardware store where I bought an oversize padlock of cartoon proportions that weighed about three pounds. The clerk assured me it would take a blasting cap to pop it off the hasp. What hasp? I thought. While I was at it, I bought the whole mechanismâhinged metal fastening and the corresponding stapleâalong with the tools to install the damn thing. Nothing was going to keep those kids out. Iâd seen at least two holes punched into the trailer shell. All theyâd have to do was enlarge one and they could crawl in and out like rats. On the other hand, I was getting paid to do this, so what did I care? I picked up some nails and a couple of pieces of scrap lumber and returned to my car.
I drove north on 111, doing the eighteen-mile return trip to the Slabs. Offhand, I couldnât recall the name of the road I was looking for so I kept my speed down and spent a lot of time peering off to my right. I passed a grove of date palms on my left. Beyond, in the far distance, I could see the vivid green of fields under cultivation. Somehow the countryside looked different, but it wasnât until I spotted the sign reading SALTON SEA RECREATION AREA that I realized how far Iâd overshot the mark. The road to the Slabs had to be ten miles back. I spotted a gravel side road ahead on the left and I figured it was as good a place as any to make the turnaround. An old high-sided truck was approaching, kicking up a trail of dust in spite of the fact it was only moving ten
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