look happy about it. I climbed out of the Jeep, giving him a wide berth. His eyes followed my every move.
The man studied my Jeep with the same amount of beady fascination as Ringo studied me. Not long ago, some of Jimmyâs relatives had decorated the Jeep with a series of Pima story-telling designs, and now the entire history of the Pima Indians marched across its hood, doors, and rear. A set of steer horns mounted on the hood finished off the Jeepâs fashion statement.
âIâm Lena Jones, the private detective,â I said, when the man finally faced me again. âIf youâre Dwayne Alder, weâve already talked on the phone.â
His eyes gave me the usual lustful once-over, then stopped when they reached my face. I was used to it. I had been told that the one-inch-long scar from the bullet that had almost killed me was the only flaw in an otherwise perfect set of features. The scar could have been removed in one short visit to any plastic surgeon, but Iâd chosen to keep it, hoping that someone might eventually recognize it and tell me my real name. You see, the name I use is not really mine. It had been given to me thirty years earlier by a particularly unimaginative social worker.
âAre you Mr. Alder?â I tried again.
âYeah, yeah, thatâs me,â he said, finally shifting his eyes away from my forehead. âCall me Dwayne. Câmon, letâs get inside the office before we fry. Ringo, you stay.â
Ringo whined, but sat obediently in the shade of the tires.
It was much cooler inside and the purple faux leather chairs surprisingly comfortable, but the reek of burnt rubber that blended with the smell of stale tobacco kept my breaths shallow.
âIâm here about your son,â I said. âYour neighbors arenât too happy with him.â
âI donât care about the neighbors. Miles is a good boy.â
He shifted around on his chair as if fleas bit his butt, and plucked nervously at his scrawny red beard. âSure, Miles got hisself into some trouble years back, but he was runninâ with a rough crowd then.â
If I had a dollar for every time I heard the parent of some felonious teen blame it on his friends, I would be skiing in Switzerland right now, not melting in the Arizona heat.
âTwo stints at Adobe Mountain Correctional Facility arenât exactly a little trouble, Mr. Alder. And as for that rough crowd you say corrupted your son, my sources maintain that Miles was the ringleader. Whatever mischief they perpetrated, he initiated. Itâs time to face facts and get that kid some help, because heâs not going to recover from his attraction to fire without it. Now, I know the ATF hasnât been able to come up with enough evidence for an arrest, but donât you think you have a moral obligation to your community? Every time that dump goes up, hundreds of little babies suck in lungs full of toxic fumes.â
Alder hitched his pants. âYeah, thatâs too bad, but there ainât nothing I can do about it.â
âCouldnât you get Miles another job? Some place where he wouldnât be exposed to, ah, flammables?â
More beard-plucking. âLike flipping burgers at MacDonaldâs or something? The kidâs gotta learn how to run the business. My health ainât so good. Emphysema. Iâm going to have to retire pretty quick now.â
âYou donât have any other children?â
âTwo girls. Why?â
âHow about training one of them to take over?â
Alder looked at me like Iâd just grown two heads. âLet a girl run a tire dump?â
I tried not to sigh. âBetter a girl than a firebug. Look, Mr. Alder, in a day and age where women fly the Space Shuttle, I think with the proper training one of your daughters might be able to run this place.â
Yep, Iâd grown two heads, all right. âI donât need you to be telling me how to raise