'Hi, Mr Sanders. Gee, I didn't even see you at the - ' She flapped her band back toward the flattened-down field and the big tent, now half collapsed and looking forlorn. Although not as forlorn as Mr Sanders.
'I was sitting in the shade.' That same hesitant voice, coming through an apologetic, hurting smile that was hard to look at. 'I had something to drink, though. Wasn't it warm for October? Golly, yes. I thought it was a good afternoon - a real town afternoon - until that boy...'
Oh, crispy crackers, he was crying.
'I'm awful sorry about your wife, Mr Sanders.'
'Thank you, Sammy. That's very kind. Can I carry your baby back to your car for you? I think you can go now - the road's almost clear.'
That was an offer Sammy couldn't refuse even if he was crying. She scooped Little Walter out of the Papoose - it was like picking up a big clump of warm bread dough - and handed him over. Little Walter opened his eyes, smiled glassily, belched, then went back to sleep.
'I think he might have a package in his diaper,' Mr Sanders said.
'Yeah, he's a regular shit machine. Good old Little Walter.'
'Walter's a very nice old-fashioned name.'
'Thanks.'Telling him that her baby's first name was actually Little didn't seem worth the trouble... and she was sure she'd had that conversation with him before, anyway. He just didn't remember. Walking with him like this - even though he was carrying the baby - was the perfect bummer end to a perfect bummer afternoon. At least he was right about the traffic; the automotive mosh pit had finally cleared out. Sammy wondered how long it would be before the whole town was riding bicycles again.
'I never liked the idea of her in that plane,' Mr Sanders said. He seemed to be picking up the thread of some interior conversation. 'Sometimes I even wondered if Claudie was sleeping with that guy'
Dodee's Mom sleeping with Chuck Thompson? Sammy was both shocked and intrigued.
'Probably not,' he said, and sighed. 'In any case, it doesn't matter now. Have you seen Dodee? She didn't come home last night.'
Sammy almost said Sure, yesterday afternoon. But if the Dodester hadn't slept at home last night, saying that would only worry the Dodester's dadster. And let Sammy in for a long conversation with a guy who had tears streaming down his face and a snotrunner hanging from one nostril. That would not be cool.
They had reached her car, an old Chevrolet with cancer of the rocker panels. She took Little Walter and grimaced at the smell. That wasn't just mail in his diaper, that was UPS and Federal Express combined.
'No, Mr Sanders, haven't seen her.'
He nodded, then wiped his nose with the back of his hand. The snotrunner disappeared, or at least went somewhere else. That was a relief, 'She probably went to the mall with Angie McCain, then to her aunt Peg's in Sabattus when she couldn't get back into town.'
'Yeah, that's probably it.'And when Dodee turned up right here in The Mill, he'd have a pleasant surprise. God knew he deserved one. Sammy opened the car door and laid Little Walter on the passenger side. She'd given up on the child-restraint seat months ago. Too much of a pain in the ass. And besides, she was a very safe driver.
'Good to see you, Sammy.'A pause.'Will you pray for my wife?'
'Uhhh... sure, Mr Sanders, no prob.'
She started to get in the car, then remembered two things: that Georgia Roux had shoved her tit with her goddam motorcycle boot
-probably hard enough to leave a bruise - and that Andy Sanders,
brokenhearted or not, was the town's First Selectman.
'Mr Sanders?'
'Yes, Sammy?'
'Some of those cops were kinda rough out there. You might want to do something about that. Before it, you know, gets out of hand.'
His unhappy smile didn't change. 'Well, Sammy, I understand how you young people feel about police - I was young myself once
-but we've got a pretty bad situation here. And the quicker we estab
lish a little authority, the better off everyone will be. You understand
that, don't you?'
'Sure,' Sammy said.What she understood was that grief, no matter how genuine, did not seem to impede a politician's flow of bullshit. 'Well, I'll see you.'
"They're a good team,' Andy said vaguely. 'Pete Randolph will see they all pull together. Wear the same hat. Do... uh... the same dance. Protect and serve, you know.'
'Sure,' Samantha said. The protect-and-serve dance, with the occasional tit-kick thrown in. She pulled away with Little Walter once more snoring on the seat. The smell of babyshit was terrific. She unrolled the windows, then looked in the rearview mirror. Mr Sanders was still standing in the makeshift parking lot, which was now almost entirely deserted. He raised a hand to her.