Iâd make a separate holding file for them until I could decide if any might be of use. I shoved the trash back in the bag and tossed it in Henryâs garbage can. I let myself into my apartment and checked my answering machine. There was one message.
âHi, Kinsey. This is Ash. Listen, I talked to my mother yesterday about this business with Lance and sheâd like to meet with you, if thatâs okay. Give me a call when you get in and weâll set something up. Maybe this afternoon sometime if that works for you. Thanks. Talk to you soon. Bye.â
I tried the number at the house, but the line was busy. I changed into my jeans and made myself some lunch.
By the time I got through to Ash, her mother was resting and couldnât be disturbed, but I was invited to tea at 4:00.
I decided to drive up the pass to the gun club and practice target shooting with the little .32 I keep locked in my top desk drawer in an old sock. I shoved the gun, clip, and a box of fifty cartridges into a small canvas duffel and tucked it in the trunk of my car. I stopped for gas and then headed north on 101 to the junction of 154, following the steep road that zigzagsup the mountainside. The day was chilly. Weâd had several days of unexpected rain and the vegetation was a dark green, blending in the distance to an intense navy blue. The clouds overhead were a cottony white with ragged underpinnings, like the torn lining on the underside of an old box spring. As the road ascended, fog began to mass and dissipate, traffic slowing to accommodate the fluctuating visibility. I downshifted twice and pulled the heater on.
At the summit, I turned left onto a secondary road barely two lanes wide, which angled upward, twisting half a mile into back country. Massive boulders, mantled in dark-green moss, lined the road, where the overhanging trees blocked out the sun. The trunks of the live oaks were frosted with fungus the color of a greened-out copper roof. I could smell heather and bay laurel and the frail scent of woodsmoke drifting from the cabins tucked in along the ridge. Where the roadside dropped away, the canyons were blank with fog. The wide gate to the gun club was open and I drove the last several hundred yards, pulling into the gravel parking lot, deserted except for a lone station wagon. Aside from the man in charge, I was the only person there.
I paid my four bucks and followed him down to the cinder-block shed that housed the restrooms. He opened the padlock to the storage room and extractedan oblong of cardboard mounted on a piece of lathing, with a target stapled to it.
âVisibilâty might be tough now in this fog,â he warned.
âIâll chance it,â I said.
He eyed me with misgivings, but finally handed over the target, a staple gun, and two additional targets.
I hadnât been up to the practice range for months, and it was nice to have the whole place to myself. The wind had picked up and mist was being blown across concrete bunkers like something in a horror movie. I set up the target at a range of twenty-five yards. I inserted soft plastic earplugs and then put on hearing protectors over that. All outside noises were damped down to a mild hush, my breathing audible in my own head as though I were swimming. I loaded eight cartridges into the clip of my .32 and began to fire. Each round sounded like a balloon popping somewhere close by, followed by the characteristic whiff of gunpowder I so love.
I moved up to the target and checked to see where I was hitting. High and left. I circled the first eight holes with a Magic Marker, went back to the bench rest and loaded the gun again. A sign just behind me read: âGuns as we use them here are a source of pleasure and entertainment, but one moment of carelessnessor foolishness can bring it all to an end forever.â Amen, I thought.
The hard-packed dirt just in front of me was as littered with shells as a battlefield. I saved my
J.A. Konrath, Bernard Schaffer