that too. I could just imagine how effective heâd been to date.
âGlen didnât seem very sympathetic,â I said.
âWell, no. I canât blame her for that, but then Kittyâs had it rough and I donât think Glen understands the toll it can take on a kid like her. Bobbyâs had every advantage money could buy. Why shouldnât he have itmade? I tell you what bothers me. I mean, anything Bobby does is excused. Anything Kitty does is the crime of the century. Bobbyâs screwed up. Donât kid yourself. But when he fouls up, Glen can always find a way to rationalize what heâs done. Know what I mean?â
I shrugged noncommittally. âI donât know what heâs done.â
The drinks arrived and Derek took a sip from his as though he tasted martinis for a living. He nodded judiciously and set the glass down with care in the center of his cocktail napkin. He touched a knuckle to the corners of his mouth. His movements were becoming liquid and his eyes were beginning to slide around in their sockets like marbles in oil. Kitty had apparently gotten crocked in exactly the same way, only on downers instead of gin.
The bartender took a couple of beers out of the cooler and moved down to the other end of the bar to serve a customer.
Derekâs voice dropped. âThis is just between you and me and the lamppost,â he said. âBut the kidâs been cited twice on drunk-driving raps and he got some little gal knocked up over a year ago. Glen wants to treat it like youthful hijinksâboys will be boys and all that sort of crapâbut let Kitty cross the line once and all hell breaks loose.â
I was beginning to see why Bobby thought their marriage wouldnât last. We were playing hardball here, parent vs. parent in the semifinals. Derek tried on a smile that was meant to charm, shifting over to neutral ground.
âSo where do you start on a thing like this?â he asked.
âI donât know yet. Usually I nose around, do a background check, uncover a thread, and follow where it leads.â I looked at him, watching while he nodded as though Iâd actually said something significant.
âWell, I wish you luck. Bobbyâs a good kid, but thereâs a lot going on. More to that kid than meets the eye,â he said with a knowing look. His speech wasnât slurred, but the consonants were getting soft. The winsome smile flickered back with its sly message. His whole manner implied that he could have said plenty, but discretion held him back. I didnât take him seriously. He was doing some kind of maneuvering, apparently unaware of how transparent he was. I took a sip of wine, wondering if there was anything else I might learn from him.
Derek glanced at his watch. âI better get home. Face the music.â He tossed the rest of his martini back and eased himself off the barstool. He pulled out his wallet and sorted through several layers of bills until he found a five and a ten, which he placed on the bar.
âWill Glen be mad?â
He smiled to himself as if he were considering a number of replies. âGlen is always mad these days. Itâs been a hell of a birthday, I can tell you that.â
âMaybe next year will be better. Thanks for the drinks.â
âThanks for coming down here. I appreciate your concern. If I can do anything to help you, you just let me know.â
We walked the half-block to my car and then parted company. I watched him in my rearview mirror as he ambled toward the visitorsâ parking lot on the far side of the hospital. I suspected he was pretending more motor control than he actually had. Weâd only been in the Plantación for thirty minutes and Iâd watched him down two martinis. I started my car and did a U-turn, pulling up next to him. I leaned across the seat and opened the door on the passenger side. âWhy donât I give you a lift?â
âOh no,