Seeing Red

“Last I heard, you were both staying here.”

She looked beyond Hank toward the café that shared the parking lot with the motel. “It would be warmer inside, and I think you probably shouldn’t drive just yet. Can we continue in there?”

Hank nodded dumbly and let himself be guided toward the café. Kerra looked over her shoulder at Trapper. “Coming?”

He was on the verge of saying something caustic or profane about her turning into Mother Teresa, but she had a look in her eye that warned him not to press his luck.

He secured her car and the maroon sedan. He closed the driver’s door of Hank’s minivan, which had been left standing open when Hank launched his assault. He caught up with Hank and Kerra inside the café. Other than a couple of old-timers sitting at the counter and arguing the merits of Fords and Chevys, they had the place to themselves.

They claimed a booth. Hank practically fell into one side of it. Kerra slid in across from him and Trapper moved in beside her.

In an undertone, she said, “Your cheek is still bleeding.”

He blotted it again with his shirt cuff. “Hurts like a son of a bitch.”

He and Hank remained locked in a mutually antagonistic stare until the waitress came with menus. “We’re only ordering drinks,” Kerra said to her.

“Not me,” Trapper said. “I’m starving. Cheeseburger, fries, coffee, please.” Looking at Kerra, he said, “Long as we’re here, eat. You haven’t had anything.”

She ordered a grilled cheese sandwich.

Hank told the waitress he would have only a Coke.

“Come on, let me buy your lunch,” Trapper said. “Peace offering.”

“Thanks all the same, but I can’t stay. I’m needed out at the site.”

“Want anything for that face, honey?”

Trapper, who’d been about to ask Hank what site he was talking about, realized that the waitress was still there and addressing the question to him. He smiled up at her. “No thanks. I’m fine. My new kitten scratched me.”

She gave him an arch look. “He must be a bobcat.”

Kerra leaned across Trapper. “A paper towel soaked in cold water would help.”

“Sure, honey. I’ll be right back with that.”

She left. Trapper asked Hank, “Site of what?”

“The new tabernacle. Foundation has been poured. They’re putting up the I-beams today, and there’s a problem with placement. The plans have one right in the middle of the choir loft.”

“I didn’t know you were building a new tabernacle.”

“No, I’m sure you didn’t,” Hank said with testiness. “Furthermore, you didn’t care. You don’t care about anything except—”

Hank broke off when the waitress returned with the makeshift compress. Trapper thanked her and gingerly laid it against his throbbing cheekbone. “You were saying?”

Hank propped his elbows on the table and covered his face with both hands. Trapper wondered if he was praying. Eventually Hank lowered his hands and noticed the smear of Trapper’s blood across his right knuckles. He pulled a napkin from the dispenser on the table and wiped at it. “Never mind.”

“No,” Trapper said. “You’d built up a full head of steam. Don’t stop there. Let’s hear it.”

“Why? Anything said wouldn’t make a dent, Trapper. You don’t care about anything except yourself and whatever it is that’s eating you. I just wish you’d have left Dad out of it.”

“Glenn is in it because his best friend was nearly killed. Oh, and, by the way, he’s also sheriff of this county.”

“Yes, but you haven’t made his job any easier. You’ve pulled one shenanigan after another. He’s been more focused on keeping you in line than he has been on capturing the men who attacked The Major. Whatever the stunt was that you pulled this morning—”

“I retained a lawyer to represent the suspect.”

Hank gave Kerra a knowing look before returning his accusing gaze to Trapper.

He removed the compress from his face and wadded it into a ball. “All right. It was a little bit of a stunt.”

“Whatever you did,” Hank said, “coming so soon after Dad’s troubling talk with The Major, sent his blood pressure—”

“Wait. Troubling talk with The Major? When was this?”

“Early. He went to the hospital before breakfast. Came back to the house to eat before going to work. According to Mom, he was upset.”

Kerra said, “He apologized to me for his mood, said it had been that kind of morning.”

Trapper remembered Glenn being particularly choleric when he’d greeted them at the elevator. “Why would a visit with The Major have upset him? He’s doing so much better.”

“I’m surprised you’ve noticed his improvement,” Hank said. “When did you work in time to see your ailing father, when you’ve been so busy wreaking havoc and making people miserable?”

“Okay, look, I’m maggot shit, and you’re a saint. That’s well known. But bring yourself down to my level long enough for us to talk about Glenn instead of my character flaws.”

“That’s what I’m trying to tell you. He hasn’t been…right…since you showed up.”

Trapper was having a hard time holding down his own temper. He didn’t raise his voice, but he leaned forward and spoke with emphasis. “Don’t lay all this on me, Hank. The night I walked in on Glenn unannounced and told him about Kerra’s upcoming interview with The Major, he was guzzling Jack straight from the bottle. While I may have been an additional aggravation to him this week, I’m not the source of his problem. It was in place before the events of this week.”

Trapper knew he’d struck a nerve when Hank glanced at Kerra, clearly uneasy.

“What’s going on with him, Hank?” Trapper asked.

He hesitated, then, “I don’t know. Something.”

Trapper settled back against the booth, concern over Glenn replacing his anger with Hank. “Maybe he’s sick, real sick, and is keeping it to himself.”

Hank dismissed that. “Mom would know. She monitors everything from his daily baby aspirin to his bowel movements. The past few years he’s had some health issues. High blood pressure, high cholesterol. Normal for a man his age, more nuisances than illnesses. Until today.”

“Pressures of the job getting to him?” Trapper asked. “He told me he needed a man in his CAP department who was younger and smarter than him.”

“He may be resisting aging in general,” Kerra said. “It works on the minds of some people more than on others.”

“All those could be factors,” Hank said. “I think there’s more to it than that, though. But I don’t know. That’s the bottom line: I don’t know.” He struck the tabletop with his blood-stained fist to underscore the words.

“He doesn’t confide in me. Won’t. Whenever I urge him to, he says something cutting like ‘when I need a priest, I’ll turn Catholic.’ Stuff like that. But whatever is bugging him, he didn’t need any more stress.” The last was addressed to Trapper.

“It wasn’t my fault that The Major got shot.”

“No, but have you made a terrible situation better or worse?”