K is for Killer
Page 65I gave her the number, which she recited into the telephone. I could have taken her to Rosie's with me, but I didn't trust Rosie to be polite. With William gone, I was worried she might revert to her former misanthropy.
Danielle hung up the phone and took off her jacket, which she folded neatly and put on one end of the sofa. She came over to the counter, clutching her oversize shoulder bag. Somehow she seemed as graceful as a colt, all arms and long legs and bony shoulders.
I passed her a mug of tea. "I have a question for you."
"Hold on. Let me say something first. I hope this is not too personal. I wouldn't want you to take offense."
"I really hate sentences that start that way," I said.
"Me too, but this is for your own good."
"Go ahead. You're going to say it anyway."
She hesitated, and the face she made conveyed exaggerated reluctance. "Promise you won't get mad?"
"Just say it. I can't stand the suspense. I have bad breath."
"That haircut of yours is really gross."
"Oh, thanks."
"Mr. Dickhead," I supplied.
"Yeah, him. Anyway, I'm a great cutter. I did Lorna's hair all the time. Give me a pair of scissors and I can turn you into a vision. I'm not fooling."
"All I have is nail scissors. Maybe after dinner."
"Come on. We got fifteen minutes until the pizza gets here. And look at this." She opened up her shoulder bag and let me peek. "Ta-da." Inside she had a brush, a little hair dryer, and a pair of shears. She placed the hair dryer on the counter and clacked the scissors like a pair of castanets.
"You came over here with that stuff?"
"I keep it with me all the time. Sometimes at the Palace I do haircuts in the ladies' room."
I ended up sitting on a kitchen stool with a hand towel pinned around my neck, my hair wet from a dousing at the kitchen sink. Danielle was chatting happily while she trimmed and clipped. Snippets of hair began to tumble around me. "Now don't get scared. I know it looks like a lot, but it's just because the whole thing's uneven. You got great hair, nice and thick, with just the tiniest touch of curl. Well, I wouldn't call it curl so much as body, which is even better."
"So why didn't you get your license?"
"I lost interest. Plus, the money's not that hot. My father always said it'd be a great fallback position if the economy went sour, but hooking's better, in my opinion. A guy might not have the bucks to get his hair blown dry, but he's always got twenty for a BJ."
I mouthed the term BJ silently. It took me half a second to figure that one out. "What are you going to do when you get too old to bonk?"
"I'm sure you 11 go far."
"You gotta start somewhere. What about you? What will you do when you're too old to bonk?"
"I don't bonk now. I'm pure as the driven snow."
"Well, no wonder you get cranky. What a drag," she said.
I laughed.
For a while we were silent as she concentrated on her work. "What's the question? You said you had something you wanted to ask."
"Maybe I better check my cash supply first."
She pulled my hair. "Now don't be like that. I bet you're the kind who kids around to keep other people at a distance, right?"
"I don't think I should respond to that."
She smiled. "See? I can surprise you. I'm a lot brighter than you think. So ask."
"Why would she do that? She always traveled with a guy. She never spent her own money when she went someplace."
"What guy?"
"Anyone who asked," she said, still clipping away.
"You know where she was headed?"
"She didn't talk about that stuff."
"What about a diary or an appointment book?"
Danielle touched her temple with the tip of her scissors. "She kept it all up here. She said otherwise her clients didn't feel safe. Cops raid your place? They got a search warrant, you're dead, and so's everybody else. Quit wiggling."