Fun With Problems

Fun With Problems by Robert Stone Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Fun With Problems by Robert Stone Read Free Book Online
Authors: Robert Stone
Tags: Fiction, Short Stories (Single Author)
down the wooded driveway behind them. "Think it's cool?" From somewhere in the middle distance they heard the whine of a chain saw. Someone cutting firewood. Cordelia, without her bomber jacket or tweed cap, was jumping up and down out of high spirits and to keep warm.
    "Let it go," Margaret told him. "Maybe we can take it when we're weathervane shopping. Open the door, please."
    "Deadbolt?"
    "He didn't use two keys."
    Slash tried and failed to open the door with a credit card. Then he applied the Halligan bar his cousins had stolen from a West Virginia state police car. The door, lopsidedly, fell open.
    "Open fuckin' sesame! Perfecto Garcia!"
    Margaret brushed past him and the couple followed her. Inside, they put on their rubber gloves and took up items as Margaret directed. As she watched through a window, they carried furniture and bric-a-brac outside and stashed it in the rental truck on padded mover's quilts.
    "
Doucement,
" Margaret advised them. "Gently."
    After their exertions her two assistants both began to tremble with cold and the drug.
    "Let's go," Cordelia whined. She had begun jumping again, in the Bowers' living room, and was working herself into a state. "Let's go before some asshole comes. Like joggers or..."
    Donny, annoyed, grabbed her arm to hush her and discourage her bouncing. Cold as it was, they watched Margaret unbutton her leather coat and take a pearl-handled straight razor from one of the pockets and hasten into the bathroom. Very shortly she emerged. Her face was contorted with what appeared to be rage.

    "Let's go, Slash," Cordelia said, pulling him toward the door.
    They stood just outside the crippled, half-open door. They could hear Margaret screaming inside, the smash of glass and crockery, the rending of cloth.
    "What?" he demanded. "What the fuck?"
    "You've never seen her do this before? This is like her signature mode." She moved from the door with an expression of pity and distaste. "Oh, Jesus, I hate it."
    "Does what? What's she doing?"
    "You'll find out."
    Slash stepped inside and came out again.
    "Jeez," he said, "she's cuttin' it up pretty good. She's wired. Bad."
    Cordelia shook her head and sighed impatiently.
    "Yeah, she's like loot and pillage."
    He and Cordelia stood shivering, watching the driveway, until Margaret appeared. She looked quite composed, if a little unsteady and breathing audibly. Donny and Cordelia said nothing.
    "Okay," Margaret said. "
Tout finis.
Let's roll."
    They had driven the truck only a few miles along the highway when Donny saw a flashing bluey in his rearview mirror. A startling burst of siren rose and fell. Cordelia, crouching behind the seats, cursed and moaned.
    "What?" Donny asked Margaret.

    "Were you speeding?"
    "No way."
    "Well, pull over." She turned back to Cordelia. "Relax, dear. We'll survive."
    The cruiser that had pulled them over belonged to the town cops. There was only one of them, quite a young man. He wore cheap sunglasses, so Margaret could not be sure how stupid he was.
    "I only wear handcuffs when I'm being fucked," Margaret whispered. She was joking to encourage them. The cop got out and stood just to the rear of the driver's side door, looking in at Cordelia.
    "License and registration," he told Donny. Donny had a forged but well-made Virginia driver's license. The cop gave them all the once-over and stepped back and away to read the documents. He did not return them. From her side, Margaret leaned across Slash to address the young policeman.
    "A problem, officer?"
    He looked at her without apparent expression.
    "Where you all coming from?"
    "From Princeton, New Jersey," Margaret declared. "Actually, we're on our way home."
    "Where to?"
    "Across the bay. I have a house in Fredericksburg."
    "What about you, sir?" the cop asked Slash.
    "Little Creek, Virginia. See, we're driving her. Moving some furniture." He was blinking stupidly in all directions. Margaret gave him an elbow.
    "Didn't take Ninety-five?"

    "Thirteen is so much more

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