Dragonfly Vs Monarch. Charley Brindley
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“All right.” Rigger knelt down, swallowing his pain and moving as smoothly as a twenty-eight-year-old man should have been able to. He picked up the little dog. “Come on, pup. You can play in the bathroom for a while.”
Wolf—Appearance – 10, Likability -10, Attitude – 10, Usefulness – 0.
When he came back from putting the dog in the upstairs bathroom, he found Rachel standing in the middle of the living room, gazing at the artwork.
“Henry likes your pictures.” She turned the Barbie doll toward Rigger.
“Thank you, Henry.”
Rigger watched the woman remove her coat, drape it over a chair-back, and take a bibbed apron from her handbag. The apron still had a K-Mart price tag attached. She yanked off the tag, stuffed it into her pocket, slipped the neck strap over her head, and tied the apron strings in the back. Her apricot blouse contrasted nicely with the short tan skirt. It wasn’t the same outfit she wore before. Neither were her red peep-toe pumps.
“I’ll start in the kitchen. That’s always the worst.”
She didn’t wait for a response before walking away toward the formal dining room, which opened onto a large sunny kitchen. Her heels tapped across the hardwood floor that shimmered under a new coat of wax.
Rigger sat on the edge of his chair and looked at Rachel. “Well, what are we to do?”
“Henry Bouvier got to have operate.”
“Right now?”
“Yes, she’s dying.”
Rigger blinked. Building a dollhouse of cushions was what he’d expected. “Who’ll do the surgery?”
She looked at him, her brows knitted as well as a four-year-old can do that sort of thing.
“Operate,” he explained. “Who’s going to operate on her?”
“You are,” she said matter-of-factly, as if that should have been obvious. “But first she has to go to the bathroom.”
“Wolf is in the upstairs bathroom, but there’s another one, just down that hall.” He pointed toward a hallway to the right of the fireplace.
Rachel looked intently into Henry’s eyes. A small volume of two-way optical twittering went on for several seconds.
“Nope,” Rachel said, “has to be the upstairs bathroom.”
“Okay, but—”
The girl jumped up and ran toward the stairs, giving the kitchen a quick look.
“Hey,” Rigger said in a loud whisper.
She stopped, turning toward him, her foot on the second step.
“You forgot Henry.” He picked up the doll from where she lay at his feet.
Rachel ran back, grabbed Henry from his hand, and ran again for the stairs. With another glance toward the kitchen, she bounded up the steps.
Rigger smiled. Wolf—Appearance – 10, Likability – 10, Attitude – 10, Usefulness – 10. Perfect score.
Five minutes passed. He listened to the too-loud cleaning noises coming from the kitchen. Another five minutes, and Rigger began to wonder if Rachel was all right.
The woman came in from the kitchen, wiping her hands on a towel. “Where’s Rachel?”
“Um…in the bathroom.” Rigger looked at the stairway, then at the hall. “It’s down there.” He pointed toward the hall on the right side of the fireplace, where the downstairs bathroom was.
“Well, I probably need to do that next anyway.” She started for the hall.
“Wait!”
She stopped and stared at him.
“How did you do in the kitchen?” He went to inspect her work. She followed.
“Oh, man,” she mumbled loud enough for him to hear. “I hope this isn’t going to be one of those kind of jobs.”
After a cursory inspection of the kitchen, he glanced over the woman’s right shoulder, watching the stairway. “Looks pretty good.”
Her face took on a quizzical expression.
“I’m sorry,” he said. “I never asked your name.”
“Katrina. Katrina Raider.”
He held out his hand to her. She took it. Her hand was limp and cold in his. He let go.
“I’m Rigger.”
“Glad to meet you. How many bedrooms you got in this place?”
He regarded her, wondering why she asked that.
“It’s a professional question. I’ve got to clean them, you know.”
“Oh. Three.”
“You sleep in all of them?”
Rigger knew this wasn’t a joke. “Yes.” He saw Rachel tiptoeing down the stairs with Henry and smiled. “But not every night.” He waited until the girl took a seat on the hearth. “Come on, I’ll show you where they are.”
“Hi, Mama,” Katrina said as she and Rigger walked into the living room. “What’cha been doing?”
Rigger marveled at how sweet she was to the girl and contrasted that wonderful camaraderie he saw between them with the resentful, almost spiteful way Katrina talked to him. He envied a relationship so close, a mother and her little girl could call each other ‘Mama.’
“Thinking,” Rachel said.
“About what?”
“That house with a yard back grass you told about.”
“You mean grass back yard.”
“And monkey box.”
“Monkey bars.”
“And sand box.”
“Is that your gadget?” Katrina asked Rigger, nodding toward the mantel.
Rigger looked at it, then back at her. “Excuse me?”
“I said, what is that gadget?”
He walked to the fireplace and reached for the object. It was an electromechanical device suspended in a solid block of clear Lucite. It measured exactly three and a half inches square. He rotated it to catch the light, admiring the precision milled parts and tiny gold-etched circuit paths running zig-zags over the octagonal silver cover.
“It’s a triple-stabilized, self-calibrating