But I did know someone who might be able to figure it out.
“Neil, there’s some food in the cabinets when you get hungry,” I said, heading for the front door. “Remember to stay out of the refrigerator. I’ll BRB.”
Then I left the apartment and went to see Michio Sata.
EIGHT
Outside the building, I called Vicki from my headphone as I walked to my car. She didn’t pick up. Probably blocking my calls because I had acted like a cretin. I left her a message.
“Look, babe, I’m sorry I was an asshat. It’s just that I love you so much, I can’t stand thinking about you with other guys. Call me old-fashioned, but the only man you should be with is me. When I picture some tool like Neil…”
No. That wasn’t an apology. That was continuing the fight.
“Erase. Restart. Vicki? I’m sorry. I knew when I married an SLP that you would spread your legs for other men…”
That didn’t sound good either.
“Erase. Restart. Vicki, I’m sorry, but how can I help feeling jealous knowing you’re sucking some other guy’s…Shit. Erase. Restart.”
“This isn’t working, Talon.”
Uh-oh.
“Vicki? Were you listening to that?”
“If you’re not mature enough to accept what I do for a living, maybe we shouldn’t be together.”
I felt my heart stop. “Vicki…I’m sorry…”
“I’ve been discussing this with my therapist. She doesn’t feel like this marriage is healthy for either of us.”
I leaned against the hood of my Corvette. My Corvette, paid for because she boffed other men. “You discuss this with your therapist?”
“Don’t you discuss it with your therapist?”
Both of our jobs required us to see therapists once a week, Vicki to retain her SLP license, me to remain a peace officer.
“No. We don’t discuss anything. We spend the session watching hyperbaseball.”
“My therapist thinks it’s unhealthy for me to feel guilty about my profession because you’re too insecure—”
“Insecure? I’m always one hundred percent sure of myself! Aren’t I?”
“—too insecure to realize sex is simply a biological need that is completely wholesome and natural and impersonal. It’s no more intimate than a massage.”
“Then why can’t you become a masseuse?”
“Dammit, Talon, you’re acting so twentieth century. Other animals don’t get jealous. This is your hang-up, and it’s ruining our marriage.”
I didn’t like where this conversation was heading.
“Ruining? I thought our marriage was solid. We rarely ever fight about this.”
“You mention it at least once a week.”
“That’s not a lot. Is it? Do you really think I’m insecure?”
“Maybe we need to take a break from each other for a while.”
I thought about Aunt Zelda, and the speedy conviction that awaited me. “Maybe we’ll get a break, whether we want one or not.”
“So you agree with me?”
“What? No. I don’t agree at all. But something came up at work that may—”
“Is it Neil? Did you help him? Is he okay?”
“You sound awfully concerned about Neil, babe.”
“There you go again. He’s just a sad, lonely little man.”
A sad, lonely little man who nailed my wife today, while I was mowing our lawn.
“He’s in love with you,” I said.
“He’s just got a crush. That’s all.”
“No. It’s love. I asked him.”
“You had no right to do that!”
“You say sex is harmless, but this tool would jump off a building for you. Is that harmless?”
“Where is Neil? You didn’t do anything stupid, did you?”
“Can you give me a little credit, maybe?”
“I’m calling him.”
“Vicki…”
She hung up.
“That went well,” I said to my car. I stared out into the urban jungle, green buildings scraping the sky, thousands of anonymous biofuel scooters flooding the roads. My city. Vibrant, alive, and beautiful in its way.
The thought of living here without Vicki was unbearable.
The thought of living anywhere without Vicki was unbearable.
I climbed in the Vette and plotted a route to Sata’s house. One crisis at a time.
Michio Sata lived in the northwest suburbs, in the city of Schaumburg. The twelve-lane highway was predictably stop-and-go, bikes clogging everything. Even the frog-leg lane was full, the kermits going slightly slower than the rest of traffic, probably because they enjoyed stopping every so often and bouncing around like idiots.