sink, you give me an honest answer to whatever question I ask?â
The second brow rose to join the first. A slight rounding of her cheeks hinted at unexpressed mirth. âHow very traditional of you. Questions. I truly dislike answering questions. Couldnât we just play strip pool instead?â She eyed him pensively. âNo? Too bad.â
The base of her stick tapped the floor as she thought briefly. âVery well. For every ball you sink, I will give you an honest answer. But in return, for every game
I
win, you will grant me one day of grace out at the meadow; no harassment, no poking around. Peace and quiet to do my work.â
He pondered that for a moment. It seemed like a pretty good bargain; he only had to sink individual balls to get his reward, she had to win entire games to reap hers. âDone,â he said, and gestured toward the table. âLadies first?â
Baba shrugged. âAll right,â she said. âAlthough Iâm no lady.â She assumed the classic stance, with her left hand forming a bridge to support the cue while her right supplied power to the stick. Liam was mesmerized by the sight of her bottom swaying as she bent over the table, but the resounding crash of balls colliding and ricocheting around the felt tabletop focused his attention back where it belonged. The innocent-looking cue ball spun slowly to a stop as three colored rounds plopped into the nets, one after another.
âThatâs solids,â Baba said brightly, and proceeded to run the table, sinking all of her balls with effortless ease, one after another. The steady
thunk
of her stick against the cue ball sounded like a clock tolling midnight. Liam just stood there, mouth open, as he lost the game without ever getting the chance to make a move.
âI think Iâve been hustled,â he finally said, as the eight ball slid neatly into the corner pocket.
The dark-haired woman shrugged again, eyes twinkling. âHey, the stakes were your idea, not mine, Sheriff.â She took a long swallow of beer, then started racking the balls again. âBut I expect you to hold up your end of the deal and give me the day I won.â
âFairâs fair,â Liam said. âAs long as you donât do anything illegal.â
âWho me?â Baba gave him her best attempt at an innocent look. A man two tables over tripped on his own cue and fell into the guy next to him, almost starting a fistfight. Liam snorted, not impressed.
âMy break,â he said. Heâd been playing pool in this bar since he was in high school, sneaking down the big elm tree outside his bedroom window to come hang out with his friends. If he couldnât manage to sink a ball when it was his turn, heâd turn in his badge and take up spot welding.
He blocked out the chatter from the neighboring tables and the music from the front room. The elusive ribbon of scent that teased him from Babaâs direction was harder to ignore, but he bent over the smooth green felt and inhaled the odor of chalk dust and spilled beer instead. The cue ball shot off the tip of his stick with a solid, meaty thud and turned the geometric precision of the amassed balls into spiraling chaos. The number three ball raced away from its fellows and slid into the corner pocket with a satisfying whoosh, like a rabbit diving into shelter with a coyote hot on its heels.
Liam felt a slightly predatory rush himself as he straightened up, cocking his head at his opponent. âStripes,â he said. âAnd my first question is this: who did you think was responsible for causing all those people to get so out of control at the meeting, and why?â
He bent down to take his next shot, gesturing with the stick toward the side pocket. âFive ball,â he said. âWell?â
Baba shrugged. âA waste of a perfectly good question, Sheriff, since I was going to tell you that anyway. But I should make it clear from the