lights a Parliament, staring at the Nowell girlâs face.
Sheâs pretty.
But they all are at that age.
Seventeen, eighteen, god donât make much ugly, not for girls like these, with mothers and fathers who check their beds at night, make sure the front and back doors are locked. In Lonnieâs experience, itâs time and circumstance that sully a complexion. She must have aged ten years the first time her daddy let her walk out of the house and into the car of some boy who couldnât be bothered with more than a honk from the driveway, the dented tail end of his Le Mans already pulling out into the street. âShe looks like the others,â she says, exhaling smoke. On his desk, Jay has the newspaper open to the same page. He called Lonnie first thing this morning, hoping she could help, remembering that sheâd written about the other girls when she was still at the Post. âYou know her?â
Jay shakes his head. âShe wasnât from the neighborhood.â
âYeah, I read that.â
The article was written by Gregg Bartolomo, a beat reporter she used to see here and there around the offices on Texas Avenue, back before she unceremoniously jumped over to the Post in â92, at the promise of, among other things, a promotion and an expense account, both of which sheâd happily trade now for the chance to be gainfully employed again. She hasnât landed anything solid in the year since the warm day in April when the venerable Post folded, catching the city of Houston and the paperâs staff by surprise. The Chronicle piece says thatthe girl was raised in Sunnyside, and that she lives with her mother and stepfather, Maxine and Mitchell Robicheaux, both of whom were questioned by law enforcement. Itâs more information than came out at the neighborhood meeting last night, Jay tells her. Either there are aspects of the investigation that the Hathornes were purposefully keeping from the folks in Pleasantville, or thereâs information the cops are purposefully keeping from them.
A graduate of Jesse H. Jones High School, Alicia Nowell has a part-time job at a Wendyâs on OST, just east of 288. She was not scheduled to work on Tuesday, November fifth, but sheâd left her apartment that afternoon. The information about her clothing is repeated here, that she was last seen in a long-sleeved blue T-shirt and jeans. There is no mention of the Hathorne campaign or whether the missing girl has any connection to its staff. The cops are treating this as a missing person case, but because the girl is eighteen, itâs suggested that she could have simply walked off somewhere of her own volition. A boyfriend is mentioned, a young man who is a student at Lamar University in Beaumont, some ninety miles away.
âSad,â Lonnie says.
âFolks in Pleasantville think itâs starting up again.â
âYou talk to Arlee Delyvan?â
âLast night.â
âShe took it hard, Arlee.â
âTheyâre scared.â
âOught to be.â
Through the phone line, Jay hears her exhale, working up to something.
âLook, I was going to call you,â she says.
âOne of these days.â
âHow are the kids?â
âFine,â he says. He never knows how to answer that question.
âMaybe Iâll come by sometime.â
âYou should.â
There is a pocket of silence between them, deep enough to hold regrets for both of them, their relationship having thinned over the past year or so. Jay is unable to remember who stopped calling whom first. She came to the funeral, of course, but theyâd barely spoken, Jay sitting with Ben and Ellie all the way up front by the cherrywood casket, a few feet from where Jay had recited his wedding vows. It was the first eulogy Bernieâs father, Reverend Boykins, had declined to deliver in his own church; heâd woken that morning barely able to stand. Jay wouldnât
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