Stone Rain

No kidding. I’d been home only a couple of days, having returned from my father’s fishing camp, where, not to understate it or anything, all hell had broken loose. It was the third time in as many years that I’d found myself in a pickle—now there’s a word for it—for which I had no training, and where I was in way over my head.

 

I had promised Sarah, and myself, that no more would I allow myself to get sucked into dangerous situations, not that I had wanted it to happen those other times. I wasn’t cut out for it. I was, and am, a writer of so-so science fiction novels, paying the bills writing features for the Metropolitan newspaper, where Sarah is, depending on the day, my editor. At a large daily newspaper, you can get chewed out by so many people higher up the food chain than yourself that it’s hard to narrow down the bosses to whom you report to just one person.

 

“Yeah,” I said, “very stressful. But he doesn’t make it any easier, acting like that. And I swear, he’s hitting me up for ten, twenty bucks every day, it seems. And it’s just entertainment. Renting movies, seeing movies, buying video games. I don’t spend what he does on enter—”

 

“Drink,” Sarah said.

 

I obeyed. “Do we have another bottle of this stuff?” I asked. Sarah nodded. “Where’s Angie tonight?”

 

Angie was in her second year at Mackenzie University, but since the school was in the city, and we lived in that city, she was not in residence.

 

“Class,” Sarah said. “Evening lecture or something.”

 

“I hardly ever see her around here. Sometimes I don’t even think she comes home every night.”

 

“She has a boyfriend,” Sarah said. The comment hung in the air for a while, which gave me time to consider its implications. “And she’s nearly twenty,” Sarah said. “If she boarded at university, if she’d gone clear across the country somewhere, you’d never know when she came home and when she didn’t.”

 

I finished off my glass, got up, and went to the fridge. “Where’s the other bottle?”

 

“It’s in there, just look,” Sarah said. “Did I tell you about the foreign editor thing?”

 

“What foreign editor thing?”

 

“They posted it. They need a new foreign editor. Garth’s going to the editorial board, where he can write ‘on the one hand this, on the other hand that.’”

 

“Are you sure there’s another bottle?”

 

“Do I have to come over there myself and embarrass you?”

 

“Look, I’m either going blind or there’s no wine in here at—hang on, here it is. Okay, so, you want that job?”

 

“It’s a step up from features editor. More staff, bigger stories, a larger budget to watch over.”

 

“More headaches.”

 

“It’s a good step for me. If I ever want Magnuson’s job.” Bertrand Magnuson, the managing editor, who gave every indication that he was barely tolerating me. I’d gotten some big stories since joining the Metropolitan, but they’d had a way of falling into my lap. That didn’t count, in Magnuson’s book.

 

“You want that job?” I asked. “Magnuson’s?”

 

“Eventually, why not? The paper’s never had a woman managing editor, has it?”

 

“I don’t think so.”

 

“There’s only one little problem,” Sarah said.

 

“What’s that?”

 

“I find it hard keeping all those foreign countries straight. All those -stan places.”

 

“That could be a problem,” I said, rooting through the drawer for the corkscrew.

 

“What are you doing?”

 

“Where’s the fucking corkscrew?”

 

“It’s here on the table, Sherlock.”

 

I sat back down, went to work opening the bottle. Sarah said, “You’re going to have to help me. Quiz me on foreign events. I’ve been working with the Metro file so long, I don’t know what’s going on anyplace in the world other than this city.”

 

“Hitler’s dead,” I said. “And Maggie Thatcher? Not a prime minister anymore. Oh, and there was that guy? The one who walked on the moon? The moon counts as foreign, right?”

 

“You’ll help me?” She wanted me to be serious for a moment.

 

“I will help you.”

 

Sarah watched as I refilled our glasses. Then she asked, “When are you seeing Trixie?”

 

“We’re having coffee tomorrow,” I said.

 

“What’s her problem?” Sarah asked.

 

“I don’t know. I called her up after I got back from Dad’s place. You know we’d had this lunch, she was about to tell me something when I got that call that something had happened to my father, so she never got into it. So when I called her after I got back, she said she was in some kind of trouble. She didn’t want to go into it over the phone.”

 

“What do you think it could be?”

 

I shrugged. “No idea.”

 

“I mean, what could she possibly need your help with? What kind of problem could a professional dominatrix have that would require your expertise?” She gave that a moment. “You’re no good at knots.”

 

“I told you, I don’t know. I must have insights in areas even we don’t know about.”

 

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