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The Meeting
A week later, Zelda doesn’t know if Edward is alive or dead.
Her calls to Roxy go unanswered. As do her calls to Jackson, to Zarita, her
texts to Zarita, her emails to Zarita. Roxy’s plan has worked: to cut her off
from Edward, to free him up for harvest.
She’s at the coffeehouse, searching local news sites for
accident reports, when her cell phone rings, an unidentified number. She’ll
take anything.
“Hello!”
“Hi. Is this Zelda Cameron?”
“Yes?”
“Hello! It’s Carson Alameda. Roxy’s ex.”
“Sure! Carson. Hi.” Anything.
“I have news regarding Edward.”
“Oh God! Is he okay?”
“Yes. Relatively speaking. Listen, I have some details for
you, but I really need to see you in person. Could you drop by my office today?
Maybe four o’clock? I’m in Los Gatos.”
“Yes! Anything.”
“Good. It’s right off of Main and North Santa Cruz…”
Carson’s in a modest two-story, a boxy white building with
bits of Spanish Mission trim. Zelda checks in with the receptionist, and Carson
comes out to meet her. His hair has grown a little grayer, but he retains the
strong-chinned handsomeness, the smoky blue eyes. He wears a silver suit, a tie
of maroon and chocolate.
“Hi Zelda. Please, follow me.” He leads her upstairs to a
windowless conference room with a family-size table. One end of the table
offers a large monitor hooked up to a laptop.
“Please. Sit here. I need you to see the screen. First of
all, you should know that I am representing Mr. Svaretz in this matter. Let’s
begin with the medical report.” He hits a button on the laptop. An X-ray
appears: two ghostly stripes, a large bone abruptly cracked into two pieces, a
thin bone still intact but with visible fissures.
“The right tibia,” says Carson. “A compound fracture. The
right fibula, a greenstick fracture. From evidence at the site, it appears that
he landed on the edge of a tree stump.”
Zelda covers her mouth. One of those odd empathetic chills
runs from the middle of her spine to her groin.
“Better the leg than the skull. The fall was twenty feet. He
could have been killed.”
Zelda chews on a fingernail and hums her concern.
“They placed six pins in his tibia. He’ll have a year of
therapy, much of it painful. In the end, however, he should be able to regain
complete mobility.”
“Could I… Is he receiving visitors?”
Carson taps a finger on the tabletop. “Not sure, actually.
Let’s address that later. Now. Being a lawyer’s ex-wife, Roxy had her property
equipped with security cameras, including this one on the deck of the
treehouse. I would ask that you watch this carefully.”
Carson expands the picture to full screen and hits the play
arrow. The shot comes from the eaves behind Zelda, aimed at the slide. For a
security camera, the image is well-defined. You can see the features on
Edward’s face. He is holding up his hands, speaking in a nervous but
intelligible manner. All you can see of Zelda is her back, and her words are
barely discernible. Her voice rises and falls in wild, mewling arcs, like a cat
preparing for a fight. Edward slowly backs away; Zelda paces forward, her voice
climbing in volume and pitch. When Edward pivots toward the slide, Zelda lets
out a barbaric scream and charges. She strikes Edward on the shoulder, sending
him into the gap between the slide and the railing, and then she’s gone, too,
her momentum pulling her over. The rest is a faint audio of thuds and cracks,
interrupted by Edward’s shrieks.
“But I… I slipped! It was an accident.”
Carson pulls the play bar back and uses a frame-forward
device to analyze the action. “Notice your feet, just before the charge. Firmly
planted, knees bent, like an athlete. And then…” He nudges it forward, one
step, two, a lunge. “And here, the moment of impact. Your forearm strikes Mr.
Svaretz’s shoulder and drives through, with such force that both of you are
hurled from the deck. The intent to cause harm is fairly obvious.”
He plays it back one more time, making certain to include
the shrieks at the end. Then he closes the frame and reaches into his jacket
pocket.
“This is a flash drive containing the X-ray and a copy of
the video.” He pulls a brown envelope from a folder. “This is a restraining
order. You are not to come within three hundred yards of Edward Svaretz or his
current residence on Alameda Lane.” He gives her a few seconds to scan the
paper, then sits in a chair next to Zelda’s. Zelda can smell coffee on his
breath.
“Let me be clear, Zelda. If not for the affection that
Edward, Roxy and I generally feel for you, you would, at this moment, be in
jail. What you saw on that video is criminal assault.”
“But I didn’t mean to…”
“‘I didn’t mean to.’ I once had a divorce client who spoke
those words. What he didn’t mean to do was to shoot his wife in the head. You
have a problem, Zelda. Do not take it
lightly, and for God’s sake, get some counseling. If you break this restraining
order, I will file charges, and you will end up in prison. Are we clear?”
Zelda looks up at Carson’s gray-blues and begins to cry.
“Just nod your head.”
She does. He pats her on the shoulder.
“I’m sorry about all… this. Feel free to stay here in the
room as long as you want. And do give me a call if you have any questions.”
He hands her a box of Kleenex and leaves.
Zelda sits on a bench in the town park. Orange light washes
the facades of the stores across Main Street. She runs her finger along the
flash drive. The drive is a magic lamp, and it contains the evil Zelda. She
recalls that the Los Gatos Creek Trail is two blocks away, and gets up to begin
the long walk home.
Photo by MJV
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