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Groaning in need, he ended the kiss with several rough glances of his lips across hers. He kissed his way down her throat and chest and nuzzled her

 

breasts as he filled his hands with them. His open mouth sought the raised center of one and tugged on it through the fabric of her gown. It beaded

 

against his flicking tongue.

 

Reflexively, her body bowed off the bed. His hands slid between the pillow and her head, his palms cradling it, his thumbs meeting beneath her chin. He

 

tilted her face up and fastened his mouth to hers again, giving her a scorching, searching kiss as he moved to lie between her spreading thighs.

 

Avery’s body quickened to the splendor of feeling the full extension of his sex stroking the dell of her femininity. There was even a certain sexiness to the

 

friction of his cotton briefs sliding against her silk underpants.

 

Heat shimmied through her and was conveyed to him through her skin. His kiss delved deeper, and the rocking motions of his body grew more

 

desperate. Too impatient to be leisurely and inquisitive, her hands clutched his sleek, supple back. She fitted his calf muscles into the arches of her feet

 

and receptively angled her hips up.

 

Hostile, hard, and hot, Tate slid his hand into the damp silk prohibiting his entrance.

 

The telephone rang.

 

He withdrew his hand, but she still lay trapped beneath him. While they lay breathing heavily against each other, the phone continued to ring.

 

Eventually, Tate rolled to the edge of the bed and jerked the receiver to his ear. “Hello?” After a brief pause, he cursed. “Yeah, Jack,” he growled. “I’m

 

awake. What is it?”

 

Avery emitted a small, anguished cry and moved to the far side of the bed, putting her back to him.

 

TWENTY-SIX

 

“I’m coming.”

 

Eddy left his comfortable hotel room chair and rounded the matching hassock. Stacked on top if it were computer readouts, newspaper clippings,

 

demographic charts. Thinking the knock signaled the arrival of his room service order, he pulled the door open without first checking the peephole.

 

Fancy stood on the threshold. “I’d pay to see that.”

 

Not bothering to conceal his annoyance, he barred her entrance by placing his forearm on the doorjamb. “See what?”

 

“You coming.”

 

“Cute.”

 

“Thanks,” she replied cheekily. Then her blue eyes darkened. “Who were you expecting?”

 

“None of your business. What are you doing so far away from home, little girl?”

 

The bell on the elevator down the hall chimed, and the room service waiter emerged, carrying a tray on his shoulder. He approached them on soundless

 

footsteps. “Mr. Paschal?”

 

“Here.” When Eddy stepped aside to let him in, Fancy slipped inside, too. She went into the bathroom and locked the door. Eddy scrawled his signature

 

on the bottom of the tab and showed the waiter to the door.

 

“Have a good night.” The youth gave him an elbow-in-the-ribs grin and a sly wink.

 

Eddy closed the door a little too suddenly and a little too loudly to be polite. “Fancy?” He rapped on the bathroom.

 

“I’ll be out in a sec.”

 

He heard the commode flush. She opened the door while still tugging the tight, short skirt of her tube dress over her hips. The dress was made of stretchy,

 

clingy stuff that conformed to her body like a second skin. It had a wide cuff across the top that could be worn off the shoulders. She was wearing it way

 

off.

 

The dress was red. So was her lipstick, her high-heeled pumps, and the dozens of plastic bangle bracelets encircling her arms. With her mane of blond

 

hair even more unruly than usual, she looked like a whore.

 

“What did you order? I’m starved.”

 

“You’re not invited.” Eddy intercepted her on her way toward the room service tray the waiter had left on the table near the easy chair. He gripped her

 

upper arm. “What are you doing here?”

 



“Well, first I was peeing. Now I’m going to scope out what you’ve got to eat.”

 

His fingers pinched tighter and he strained her name through his teeth. “What are you doing in Houston?”

 

“It got boring at home,” she said, wresting her arm free, “with nobody but Mona and Mother around. Mother’s in a stupor half the time. The other half she’s

 

crying over Daddy not loving her anymore. Frankly, I doubt he ever did. You know he thought she was knocked up with me when they got married.” She

 

lifted the silver metal lid off one of the plates and picked up a cherry tomato a garnish for his club sandwich.

 

“What’s… hmm, a chocolate sundae,” she cooed with pleasure as she investigated beneath another lid. “How do you eat like this late at night and keep

 

your belly so nice and flat?”

 

Her practiced eyes moved down his smooth, muscled

 

torso, seen through his unbuttoned shirt. Suggestively, Fancy licked her lips.

 

“Anyway, Mother believes Daddy has the hots for Aunt Carole, which I think is downright scandalous, don’t you?” She shivered not from repugnance, but

 

with delight. “It’s so, so Old Testament for a man to covet his brother’s wife.”

 

“The sin of the week, by Fancy Rutledge.”

 

She giggled. “Mother’s positively morose and Mona looks at me with the same regard she would have for a cockroach in her sugar canister. Grandma,

 

Grandpa, and the little spook were due back, which would only make things worse, so I decided to split and come here, where all the action is.”

 

Wryly, he said, “As you can see, there’s not much going on tonight.”

 

Undaunted, she curled up in the easy chair he’d been occupying and popped the tomato into her mouth. It was the same vibrant color as her lips. Her

 

teeth sank into it. The juice squirted inside her mouth.

 

“The truth of the matter is, Eddy darlin’, I ran out of cash. The automatic teller said it couldn’t give me any money ‘cause my account’s overdrawn. So,” she

 

said, raising her arms over her head and stretching languorously, “I came to my best friend for a little loan.”

 

“How little?”

 

“A hundred bucks?”

 

“I’ll give you twenty just to get rid of you.” He withdrew a bill from his pants pocket and tossed it into her lap.

 

“Twenty!”

 

“That’ll buy you enough gas to get home.”

 

“With nothing left over.”

 

“If you want more, you could get it from your old man. He’s in room twelve-fifteen.”

 

“Do you think he’d be pleased to see me? Especially if I told him I’d just come from your room?”

 

Not deigning to answer, Eddy consulted his watch. “If I were you, I’d start home before it gets any later. Be careful driving back.” He headed for the door to

 

let her out.

 

“I’m hungry. Since you’ve been so stingy with your loan, I won’t be able to afford supper. I believe that entitles me to some of this sandwich.” She took a

 

wedge of the triple-decker sandwich from the plate and bit into it.

 

“Help yourself.” He pulled a straight chair from beneath the table, sat down, and began eating a wedge of the sandwich. He perused one of the computer

 

readouts while he chewed.

 

Fancy slapped at it, knocking it out of his hand. “Don’t you dare ignore me, you bastard.”

 

The glint in his eyes looked dangerous. “I didn’t invite you here, you little whore. I don’t want you here. If you don’t like it here, you’re welcome to leave any

 

time the sooner the better and good riddance.”

 

“Oh, Eddy, don’t talk like that.”

 

Her knees landed on the carpet as she scooted out of the chair. Suddenly contrite, she walked forward on them until she reached him. She stretched her

 

arms up and slipped her hands inside his shirt, laying them on his bare chest. “Don’t be mean to me. I love you.”

 

“Cut it out, Fancy.”

 

His request went unheeded. She wedged herself between his knees and kissed his stomach. “I love you so much.” Her mouth and tongue moved avidly

 

over his sleek, hairless belly. “I know you love me, too.”

 

He grunted with involuntary pleasure as her long nails lightly scratched his nipples. She unbuckled his belt and unfastened his trousers.

 

“Jesus,” he moaned when she lifted his hard flesh out of his underwear. His fingers dove into her wealth of blond hair. He roughly twisted bunches of it

 

around his knuckles. From above, he watched her red, red lips slide down over his stiff organ. Her mouth was avaricious, without temperance, modesty,

 

or conscience an amoral mouth that had never been denied or disciplined.

 

He gasped her name twice. She raised her head and appealed to him, “Love me, Eddy, please.”

 

He struggled to his feet, drawing her up with him, against him. Their mouths met in a carnal kiss. While her hands worked frantically to get his shirt off, he

 

reached beneath the tube for her panties. Flimsy things, they came apart in his hands.

 

She cried out with surprise and pain when he crammed two fingers up inside her, but she rode them with crude pleasure. She had already shoved his

 

trousers and underwear past his knees. He pushed them to his ankles and walked out of them as he lifted her to straddle his lap.

 

Together they fell onto the bed. He shoved up her dress and buried his face in the delta of her body while she wormed her way out of the stretchy tube.

 

Before she had even gotten the dress over her head completely, he began squeezing her breasts, sucking and biting and twisting her nipples.

 

Fancy writhed beneath him, exulting in his rowdy foreplay. She raked her nails down his back and dug them into his buttocks hard enough to draw blood.

 

He cursed her, called her ugly gutter names. When she drew back her knees, the stiletto heel of her shoe cut a jagged, six-inch gash into the bedspread,

 

but neither noticed or would have cared.

 

Eddy splayed her thighs wide and thrust into her with enough impetus to drive her into the headboard. His body was already slick with sweat when she

 

wrapped her limbs around him and matched his frenzied bucking. Their bodies slammed together, again and again.

 

Eddy’s face contorted with a grimace of ecstasy. Arching his back, he put all his strength behind his final lunge. Fancy climaxed simultaneously.

 

“God, that was great!” she sighed as they rolled apart moments later.

 

She recovered first, sat up, and frowned at the sticky moisture on her inner thighs. She left the bed in search of the small purse she had brought in with

 

her. She took from it a package of condoms and tossed it at him. “Use one of these next time.”

 

“Who says there’ll be a next time?”

 

Fancy, who was unabashedly admiring her naked body in the dresser mirror, gave his reflection an arch smile. “I’m gonna be black and blue tomorrow.”

 

She proudly touched the teeth marks on her breasts like they were small trophies. “I can already feel the bruises.”

 

“Don’t let on like you’re bothered by it. You get off on being punished.”

 

“I didn’t hear you complaining, Mr. Paschal.”

 

Still in her heels and bracelets, she strutted to the table and inspected the remnants of the tray. There was nothing left of the sundae except a puddle of

 

white foam muddied by chocolate syrup, with a cherry floating on top.

 

“Oh, piss,” she muttered, “the ice cream’s melted.”

 

From the bed, Eddy began to laugh.

 

Avery woke up before Tate. The room was deeply shadowed. It was still very early, but she knew she wouldn’t go back to sleep. She tiptoed into the

 

bathroom and showered. He was still asleep when she came out.

 

She took the ice bucket and the room key with her and slipped out the door in her robe. Tate enjoyed jogging every morning, even when he was out of

 

town. When he returned, he consumed quarts of ice water. It wasn’t always easy to come by in a hotel. She had started having it waiting there for him

 

when he returned from his jog, hot and dehydrated.

 

She filled the bucket from the ice machine down the hall and was on her way back to their room when another door opened. Fancy stepped out and

 

quietly closed the door behind her. She turned toward the elevators, but drew up short when she saw Avery.

 

Avery was shocked by the girl’s appearance. Her hair was hopelessly tangled. What was left of her makeup was smudged and streaked. Her lips were

 

bruised and swollen. There were scratches on her neck and across her chest, none of which she had made an attempt to hide. In fact, after recovering

 

from her initial shock of seeing Avery, she defiantly tossed back her hair and threw out her chest to better display her wounds. “Good morning, Aunt

 

Carole.” Her sweet smile was in vile contrast to her debauched appearance.

 

Avery flattened herself against the corridor wall, at a loss for words. Fancy swept past her. She smelled unwashed and used. Avery shuddered with

 

disgust.

 

The elevator arrived almost immediately after Fancy summoned it. Before stepping into it, she shot Avery a gloating smile over her bare, bruised

 

shoulder.

 

For several seconds Avery stared at the elevator’s closed doors, then looked toward the room Fancy had come out of, although she already knew who it

 

belonged to.

 

Tate was wrong about his best friend. Eddy wasn’t as scrupulous as Tate believed. Nor was he as bright.

 

TWENTY-SEVEN

 

From Houston the campaign went to Waco, and from Waco to El Paso, where Tate was the undisputed champion of the Hispanic voters. The Rutledges

 

were received like visiting royalty. At the airport, Avery was handed a huge bouquet of fresh flowers. “Sehora Rutledge, como estd’?” one of their greeters

 

asked.

 

“Muy Men, gracias. Y usted? Como se llama?”

 

Her smile over the cordial welcome faltered when the man turned away and she happened to lock gazes with Tate.

 

“When did you learn to speak Spanish?”

 

For several heartbeats, Avery couldn’t think of a credible lie in any language. She had minored in Spanish in college and was still comfortable with it. Tate

 

spoke it fluently. It had never occurred to her to wonder if Carole had spoken it or not.

 

“I… I wanted to surprise you.” “I’m surprised.”

 

“The Hispanic vote is so important,” she continued, limping through her explanation. “I thought it would help if I could at least swap pleasantries, so I’ve

 

been studying it on the sly.”

 

For once, Avery was glad they were surrounded by people. Otherwise, Tate might have pressed her for details on where and when she had acquired her

 

knowledge of Spanish. Thankfully, no one else had overheard their conversation. Tate was the only one she could trust completely.

 

Being with Jack, Eddy, and a few of the campaign volunteers as they traveled from city to city had provided her with no more clues as to who Carole’s

 

coconspirator was.

 

Carefully placed questions had revealed little. Innocently, she had asked Jack how he had managed to get into the ICU the night she regained

 

consciousness. He had looked at her blankly. “What the hell are you talking about?”

 

“Never mind. Sometimes the sequence of events still confuses me.”

 

He was either innocent or an adroit liar.

 

She had tried the same ploy with Eddy. He had answered by saying, “I’m not family. What would I be doing in the ICU?”

 

Making threats on Tate’s life, she had wanted to say.

 

She couldn’t say that, so she had mumbled something about her confusion and let it go at that, turning up nothing in the way of opportunity for either of

 

them.

 

She hadn’t been luckier in discerning a motive. Even when Tate disagreed with his confidants and advisers, as he often did, they all seemed devoted to

 

him and his success at the polls.

 

In lieu of a campaign contribution, a private business-man had loaned the entourage his private jet. As they flew from El Paso to Odessa, where Tate was

 

scheduled to speak to independent oil men, the key personnel aired some of their differences.

 

“At least talk to them, Tate.” Eddy was being his most persuasive. “It won’t hurt to listen to their ideas.”

 

“I won’t like them.”

 

The argument over whether or not to hire professional campaign strategists was becoming a frequent one. Weeks earlier, Eddy had suggested retaining

 

a public relations firm that specialized in getting candidates elected to public office. Tate had been vehemently opposed to the idea and remained so.

 

“How do you know you won’t like their ideas until you’ve heard what they are?” Jack asked.

 

“If the voters can’t elect me for what I am ”

 

“The voters, the voters,” Eddy repeated scoffingly. “The voters don’t know shit from Shinola. What’s more, they don’t want to. They’re lazy and apathetic.

 

They want somebody to tell them who to vote for. They want it drummed into their feeble little minds so they won’t have to make a decision on their own.”

 

“Great confidence you’re showing in the American public, Eddy.”

 

“I’m not the idealist, Tate. You are.”

 

“Thank God I am. Rather that than a cynic. I believe that people do care,” he shouted. “They do listen to the issues. They respond to straight talk. I want to

 

get the issues across to fee voters without having to filter the language and phraseology through some bullshitting P.R. jargon.”

 

“Okay, okay.” Eddy patted the air between them. “Since that subject is a sore spot, let’s table it for now and talk about the Hispanics.”

 

“What about them?”

 

“Next time you’re addressing an audience of them, don’t lean so hard on their integrating into our society.”

 

“Our society?”

 

““I’m thinking like an Anglo voter now.”

 

“It’s important that they integrate into American society,” Tate argued, not for the first time. “That’s the only way we can keep society from being

 

distinguished as yours, ours, or theirs. Haven’t you been listening to my speeches?”

 

“Stress that they maintain their own customs.”

 

“I did. I said that. Didn’t I say that?” he asked everyone within hearing distance.

 

“He said that.” It was Avery who spoke up. Eddy ignored her.

 

“I just think it’s important that you don’t broadcast the message that they should give up their culture in favor of Anglo America’s.”

 

“If they live here, Eddy if they become citizens of this country they’ve got to assume some of the customs, primarily the English language.”

 

Eddy was undeterred. “See, the Anglos don’t like hearing that their society is going to be invaded by the Hispanics, any better than the Hispanics like

 

having Anglo customs crammed down their throat, including a new language. Get elected first and then make a point of that integration bit, okay? And try

 

to avoid addressing the drug trafficking problem that exists between Texas and Mexico.”

 

“I agree,” Jack said. “When you’re a senator you can do something about it. Why wave die drug problem like a red flag now? It gives everybody room to

 

criticize that you’re either too harsh or too soft.”

 

Tate laughed with disbelief and spread his hands wide. “I’m running for the U.S. Senate, and I’m not supposed to have an opinion on how to handle the

 

illegal flow of drugs into my own state?”

 

“Of course you’re supposed to have an opinion,” Jack said, as though he were humoring a child.

 

“Just don’t bring up your plans to remedy the problem unless specifically asked to. Now, as for this Odessa crowd,” Eddy said, consulting his notes.

 

Eddy was never without notes. Watching him organize them, Avery studied his hands. Had those hands inflicted the scratches and bruises on Fancy, or

 

had she come to him for refuge after another cowboy had worked her over?

 

“For God’s sake, try to be on time to every engagement.”

 

“I explained why we were late to that breakfast speech this morning. Carole had been trying to reach Mom and Dad, and finally caught them at home. They

 

wanted to know everything that was going on, then we each had to talk to Mandy.”

 

Eddy and Jack looked at her. As always, she felt their unspoken criticism, although she had done her best not to cause them any inconvenience on the

 

trip. Out of spite, she said to Jack, “Dorothy Rae and Fancy sent you their love.”

 

“Oh, well, thanks.”

 

She slid a glance at Eddy when she mentioned Fancy’s name. His eyes focused on her sharply, but he returned his attention to Tate. “Before we land, get

 

rid of that tie.”

 

“What’s the matter with it?”

 

“It looks like shit, that’s what’s the matter with it.”

 

For once, Avery sided with Eddy. Tate’s necktie wasn’t the most attractive one she’d ever seen, but she resented Eddy being so tactless about pointing it

 

out.

 

“Here, switch with me,” Jack suggested, tugging at the knot of his tie.

 

“No, yours is worse,” Eddy said with characteristic candor. “Switch with me.”

 

“Fuck you both and fuck the tie,” Tate said. He flopped back in the airplane’s plush seat. “Leave me alone.” Resting his head on the cushion, he closed his

 

eyes, effectively shutting out everybody.

 

Avery applauded him for telling them off, even though he had shut her out, too. Since the night in Houston when they had come so close to making love,

 

Tate had taken even greater strides to keep his distance from her. That wasn’t always easy because they had to share a bathroom, if not a bed. They

 

went to ridiculous pains to avoid being seen unclothed. They never touched. When they spoke, they usually snapped at each other like two animals who

 

had been sharing the same cage for too long.

 

Tate’s even breathing could soon be heard over the drone of the airplane’s engines. He could fall asleep almost instantly, sleep for several minutes, and

 

wake up refreshed a skill he had developed while in Vietnam, he had told her. She liked watching him sleep and often did so during the night when she

 

found her mind too troubled to give over to unconsciousness.

 

“Do something.”

 

Eddy had leaned across the narrow aisle of the airplane and roused her from her woolgathering. He and Jack were glaring at her like interrogators.

 

“About what?”

 

“About Tate.”

 

“What do you want me to do? Start picking out his neckties?”

 

“Convince him to let me retain that PR. firm.”

 

“Don’t you feel that you’re doing an adequate job, Eddy?” she asked coolly.

 

Belligerently, he thrust his face close to hers. “You think I’m ruthless? Those guys wouldn’t take any of your crap.”

 

“What crap?” she shot back.

 

“Like your screening Tate’s calls.”

 

“If you’re referring to last night, he was already asleep when you phoned. He needed the rest. He was exhausted.”

 

“When I want to talk to him, I want to talk to him right then,” he said, jabbing the space between them. “Got that, Carole? Now, about these professionals ”

 

“He doesn’t want them. He thinks they build a phony, plastic image and so do I.”

 

“Nobody asked you,” Jack said.

 

“When I have an opinion about my husband’s campaign, I’ll bloody well express it, and you can go to the devil if you don’t like it!”

 

“Do you want to be a senator’s wife or not?”

 

A silent moment elapsed while they collectively cooled their tempers. Eddy went on in a conciliatory tone, “Do whatever it takes to get Tate out of this

 

rotten, short-tempered mood, Carole. It’s self-destructive.”

 

“The crowds don’t know he’s in a foul mood.”

 

“But the volunteers do.”

 

“Jack’s right,” Eddy said. “Several have noticed and commented on it. It’s demoralizing. They want their hero on top of the world and radiating a lust for

 

life, not moping around. Get him right with the world, Carole.” Having concluded his pep talk, Eddy resumed his seat and went back to scanning his notes.

 

Jack frowned at her. “You’re the one who’s put him in this blue funk. You’re the only one who can get him out. Don’t play like you don’t know how, because

 

we all know better.”

 

The heated exchange left Avery feeling frustrated and unable to do anything about a bad situation they clearly blamed on her.

 

It was a relief to land and leave the compact jet. She plastered on a smile for the crowd that had gathered to meet them. Her smile dissipated, however,

 

when she spotted Van Lovejoy among the press photographers. He turned up everywhere Tate Rutledge went these days. His presence never failed to

 

unnerve Avery.

 

As soon as it was feasible, she stepped into the background, where it would be harder for the lens of a camera to find her. From that vantage point, she

 

looked out over the crowd, constantly on the alert for anyone looking suspicious. This crowd was largely comprised of media, Rutledge supporters, and

 

curious onlookers.

 

A tall man standing at the back of the crowd arrested her attention, only because he looked familiar. He was dressed in a tailored western suit and

 

cowboy hat, and she first took him for one of the oil men Tate was there to address.

 

She couldn’t pinpoint where or when she had seen him before, but she didn’t think he’d been dressed as he was now. She would have remembered the

 

cowboy hat. But she had seen him recently, she was sure of that. The barbecue in Houston, perhaps? Before she could cite the time and place, he faded

 

into the throng and was lost from sight.

 

Avery was hustled toward the waiting limousine. At her side, the mayor’s wife was gushing like a fountain. She tried to pay attention to what the other


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