repossessed it. I havenât made any of the mortgage payments and the house is about to be foreclosed. Thatâs Bertâs contribution to the family welfare.â
âYou didnât make the mortgage payments?â the lawyer had asked, as though she had done something unfamilial.
She had stared at him, making him shift uncomfortably. âIt isnât my house, as Bert often reminds me. I didnât borrow on it. Foreclosure is sixty days away.â
âAnd when they foreclose?â
âBert wonât have anywhere to live.â
âNeither will you,â he challenged.
âIâm moving in with my father,â she said. âAlone. My father doesnât like Bert.â
Actually, she planned to rent a small apartment when the time came, but that was no oneâs business but hers. As it turned out, nothing she had said made any difference, for the lawyer totally ignored it, as did la raza judge. Typical. As time passed, more and more of the elected magistrates were women, but they were still too few and far between.
She shut the garage door and went into the house, rubbing her forehead. If Bert followed his usual pattern, heâd spend the afternoon with his drinking buddies, maybe Larry, but just as likely that had been misdirection on his part. The police would show up sooner or later, and he wouldnât want her to know where he really was. During the afternoon heâd go through stage one, which was boisterous conviviality, and stage two, slightly morose nostalgia, and when they ranout of beer, heâd move on to stage three, which might bring him home to tear the house apart, looking for liquor or money he thought he might have hidden sometime in the past. He was always sure one of his old caches was still there and if he didnât find one, it was because Benita had stolen his money or thrown out his liquor. Thatâs usually when he hit her, if she was around. Stage four involved belligerence and violence, and she had this cube-thing to protect. Bert had the car, however, and she had no way to go except, maybe, call a cab, and they were so expensiveâ¦
An audible click. Like that little relay switch. There was money. There, beneath her hand, was money. Quite a lot of money. She had planned to leave after the foreclosure, because that would focus Bertâs belligerence on the bank rather than on herself. But here under her hand was the opportunity to do it now. So call a cab. Pack a bag. Take Sasquatch to a kennel so Bert couldnât take out his temper on the dog. The money was right there, and even though she hadnât earned it yet, she planned to earn it, she could start earning it!
Right away, here came the marching ghosts. Mami and Papa wouldnât approve. It wasnât fair to Goose and Marsh. The children might not like the ideaâ¦
She felt a flash of that same pain sheâd felt up in the hills, momentary, fleeting, like a splinter being pulled out, a momentâs pang, but then the ache went away, and so did the ghosts, leaving her mind even clearer than before. How very strange. Almost as though she wereâ¦emptied out. Like a garbage can, all emptied out and washed with hot water and soap. Sheâd never been able to banish the ghosts before!
Unbidden, a picture of the aliens came into her mind. They would do her a welcome reversal. A good turn. Yes. They would banish her ghosts. They would go down all her nerves and synapses and exorcise her. They would leave her in clarity. Delicately, as though handling fine crystal, she set the thought aside, knowing it to be true. Obviously, they didnât want a hag-ridden envoy. They wanted someone with her wits about her!
She had almost a month accumulated leave coming. Asshe went up the stairs, she planned what to do next: first, call Marsh or Goose at home, tell them there was an emergency. Sheâd take her new suit sheâd saved up for. Several pairs of slacks, the neat