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had turned out ugly-not homely but down-to-the ground ugly. This little
trick of nature didn't bother the dog, either.
Conroy continued to grin as he lifted a paw in what both he and Michael
knew had nothing to do with subservience.
"I'm not going to shake that paw. I don't know where it's been. You
went back to that s.l.u.t again, didn't you?"
Conroy slid his eyes to the left. If he could have whistled between his
teeth, he would have.
"Don't try to deny it. You've spent all weekend rolling in the dirt and
s...o...b..ring over that half-breed beagle tramp. Never a thought to the
consequences or my feelings." Turning away, Michael rooted in the
refrigerator. "If you knock her up again, you're on your own. If I've
told you once, I've told you a thousand times. Safe s.e.x. It's the
eighties, bucko."
He tossed over a slice of bologna, which Conroy caught nimbly and
swallowed in one gulp. Softening, Michael tossed him two more before he
settled down with his coffee-soaked shredded wheat.
He liked his life. Moving to the burbs had been the right decision for
him. It had exactly what he wanted: A nice patch of lawn he could
grumble about mowing, a few leafy trees, and what remained of the
previous owner's flower bed.
He'd given gardening a shot, but when he'd proven inept, had abandoned
it. That suited Conroy as well. No one got antsy when he dug up the
snapdragons.
He'd bought the small brick rancher on impulse, right after the end of
his brief and ill-advised affair with Angie Parks. He'd learned
something from her, other than kinky s.e.x. And that was that Michael
Kesseiring was and always would be middle cla.s.s.
It had been strange to watch her on the screen after he'd been replaced
with a twenty-year-old hockey player. It had given him an eerie, almost
creepy feeling to see her depiction of Jane Palmer, and to realize that
she'd played that part with hith all during the three frenzied months
they'd been lovers.
He'd gone alone to the theater. A kind of test to make certain he'd
gotten rid of any residual, and unhealthy, attraction for her. When
she'd bared those beautiful b.r.e.a.s.t.s, he'd felt nothing but discomfort.
Though it had been by proxy, he knew he had been to bed with Emma's
mother.
And he had wondered, sitting under the dark cloak of the theater, if
Emma would see the movie.
But he didn't like to think of Emma.
There had been other women. No one serious, but other women. He had his
work. It no longer amazed him that he had both a talent and an
affection for law enforcement. Perhaps he didn't have his father's
patience and skill with paperwork, but he thought well on his feet,
accepted the long, often monotonous hours of legwork and stakeouts, and
had a healthy enough respect for his life not to be trigger-happy.
"I got shot at yesterday," he said conversationally to Conroy. The dog
began, disinterestedly, to scratch for fleas. "If that pervert had
gotten lucky, you'd be out in the cold, pal. Don't delude yourself into