thump each other on the back the requisite number of times and Pete tells him heâs looking good.
âYou know the three Ages of Man, donât you?â Hodges asks.
Pete shakes his head, grinning.
âYouth, middle age, and you look fuckin terrific.â
Pete roars with laughter and asks if Hodges knows what the blond said when she opened the box of Cheerios. Hodges says he does not. Pete makes big amazed eyes and says, âOh! Look at the cute little doughnut seeds!â
Hodges gives his own obligatory roar of laughter (although he does not think this a particularly witty example of Genus Blond), and with the amenities thus disposed of, they sit down. A waiter comes overâno waitresses in DeMasioâs, only elderly men who wear spotless aprons tied up high on their narrow chicken chestsâand Pete orders a pitcher of beer. Bud Lite, not Ivory Special. When it comes, Pete raises his glass.
âHereâs to you, Billy, and life after work.â
âThanks.â
They click and drink. Pete asks about Allie and Hodges asks about Peteâs son and daughter. Their wives, both of the ex variety, are touched upon (as if to prove to each otherâand themselvesâthat they are not afraid to talk about them) and then banished from the conversation. Food is ordered. By the time it comes, they have finished with Hodgesâs two grandchildren and have analyzed the chances of the Cleveland Indians, which happens to be the closest major league team. Pete has ravioli, Hodges spaghetti with garlic and oil, what he has always ordered here.
Halfway through these calorie bombs, Pete takes a folded piece of paper from his breast pocket and places it, with some ceremony, beside his plate.
âWhatâs that?â Hodges asks.
âProof that my detective skills are as keenly honed as ever. I donât see you since that horror show at Raintree Innâmy hangover lasted three days, by the wayâand I talk to you, what, twice? Three times? Then, bang, you ask me to lunch. Am I surprised? No. Do I smell an ulterior motive? Yes. So letâs see if Iâm right.â
Hodges gives a shrug. âIâm like the curious cat. You know what they sayâsatisfaction brought him back.â
Pete Huntley is grinning broadly, and when Hodges reaches for the folded slip of paper, Pete puts a hand over it. âNo-no-no-no. You have to say it. Donât be coy, Kermit .â
Hodges sighs and ticks four items off on his fingers. When heâs done, Pete pushes the folded piece of paper across the table. Hodges opens it and reads:
1. Davis
2. Park Rapist
3. Pawnshops
4. Mercedes Killer
Hodges pretends to be discomfited. âYou got me, Sheriff. Donât say a thing if you donât want to.â
Pete grows serious. âJesus, if you werenât interested in the cases that were hanging fire when you hung up your jock, Iâd be disappointed. Iâve been . . . a little worried about you.â
âI donât want to horn in or anything.â Hodges is a trifle aghast at how smoothly this enormous whopper comes out.
âYour nose is growing, Pinocchio.â
âNo, seriously. All I want is an update.â
âHappy to oblige. Letâs start with Donald Davis. You know the script. He fucked up every business he tried his hand at, most recently Davis Classic Cars. Guyâs so deep in debt he should change his name to Captain Nemo. Two or three pretty kitties on the side.â
âIt was three when I called it a day,â Hodges says, going back to work on his pasta. Itâs not Donald Davis heâs here about, or the City Park rapist, or the guy whoâs been knocking over pawnshops and liquor stores for the last four years; they are just camouflage. But he canât help being interested.
âWife gets tired of the debt and the kitties. Sheâs prepping the divorce papers when she disappears. Oldest story in the world. He
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