‘Whoa, soft!’ Blake said. Carla had never heard him speak with such simple awe.
‘Me, me, me!’ Rachel bugled, dancing around impatiently.
The big lady set Blake down. ‘Lick that ice cream while I lift your sister,’ she told him, ‘but don’t get cooties on it, okay?’
Carla thought of telling Blake that eating after people, especially strange people, was not okay. Then she saw Johnny’s bemused grin and thought what the hell. You sent your kids to schools that were basically germ factories. You drove them for hundreds of miles on the turnpike, where any drunk maniac or texting teenager could cross the median and wipe them out. Then you forbade them a lick on a partially used ice cream? That was taking the car-seat and bike-helmet mentality a little too far, maybe.
The horse lady lifted Rachel so Rachel could pet the horse’s nose. ‘Wowie! Nice!’ Rachel said. ‘What’s her name?’
‘DeeDee.’
‘Great name! I love you, DeeDee!’
‘I love you, too, DeeDee,’ the horse lady said, and put a big old smackeroo on DeeDee’s nose. That made them all laugh.
‘Mom, can we have a horse?’
‘Yes!’ Carla said warmly. ‘When you’re twenty-six!’
This made Rachel put on her mad face (puckered brow, puffed cheeks, lips down to a stitch), but when the horse lady laughed, Rache gave up and laughed too.
The big woman bent down to Blakie, her hands on knees covered by her riding skirt. ‘Can I have my ice cream cone back, young fella?’
Blake held it out. When she took it, he began to lick his fingers, which were covered with melting pistachio.
‘Thank you,’ Carla told the horse lady. ‘That was very kind of you.’ Then, to Blake, ‘Let’s get you inside and cleaned up. After that you can have ice cream.’
‘I want what she’s having,’ Blake said, and that made the horse lady laugh some more.
Johnny insisted that they eat their cones in a booth, because he didn’t want them decorating the Expedition with pistachio ice cream. When they finished and went out, the horse lady was gone.
Just one of those people you meet – occasionally nasty, more often nice, sometimes even terrific – along the road and never see again.
Only here she was, or at least her truck was, parked in the breakdown lane with traffic cones neatly placed behind her trailer. And Carla was right, the horse lady
He flipped his blinker and pulled onto the ramp as Carla had suggested, parking ahead of Doug Clayton’s Prius, which was still flashing its four-ways, and beside the muddy station wagon. He put the transmission in park but left the engine running.
‘I want to pet the horsie,’ Blake said.
‘I also want to pet the horsie,’ Rachel said in the haughty lady-of-the-manor tone of voice she had picked up God knew where. It drove Carla crazy, but she refused to say anything. If she did, Rache would use it all the more.
‘Not without the lady’s permission,’ Johnny said. ‘You kids sit right where you are for now. You too, Carla.’
‘
‘Very funny, Easter bunny.’
‘The cab of her truck’s empty,’ Carla said. ‘They
‘Don’t know, but nothing looks dinged up. Hang on a minute.’
Johnny Lussier got out, went around the back of the Expedition he would never finish paying for, and walked to the cab of the Dodge Ram. Carla hadn’t seen the horse lady, but he wanted to make sure she wasn’t lying on the seat, maybe trying to live through a heart attack. (A lifelong jogger, Johnny secretly believed a heart attack was waiting by age forty-five at the latest for anyone who weighed even five pounds over the target weight prescribed by Medicine.Net.)
She wasn’t sprawled on the seat (
‘Hello there …’ For a moment the name didn’t come, then it did. ‘… DeeDee. How’s the old feedbag hanging?’
He patted her nose, then headed back up the ramp to investigate the other two vehicles. He saw there
Carla rolled down her window, a thing neither of the kids in back could do because of the lockout feature. ‘Any sign of her?’
‘Nope.’
‘Any sign of
‘Carl, give me a ch—’ He saw the cell phones and the wedding ring lying beside the partially open door of the station wagon.
‘What?’ Carla craned to see.