BLUE MUD
Hutch left Starsky's apartment around two in the morning. He was clutching Ollie, the big Teddy Bear that Terri had left him. He left Starsky wandering around the kitchen clearing up the bottles and the Monopoly Board and its paraphernalia; when Hutch had started to help he had been rebuffed with a gruff "I want to do it OK?" Ken knew better than to insist.
Driving home Hutch tried to swallow
back the tears that were welling up; he concentrated on the road
ahead and finally parked in front of his Venice Place apartment. He
went heavily up the stairs and resigned himself to a short night's
sleep.
He knew that he was weeping for Terri; for himself and most
of all for Starsky. He'd never seen his partner let down the
shutters as far as he had this time. Starsk, who so often hid his
true feelings behind angry outbursts or sullen silence. "Come to
think of it, "Hutch said to himself, "he has temper tantrums like
an unhappy frustrated kid. Maybe this will be some kind of catharsis
for him." He put Ollie gently on the bed and started to undress; he
wondered why Terri had not left the teddy bear to Starsky –
something to hold now she was no longer there. The Monopoly handbook
had been kind; a gentle reminder of how much she had loved her big
curly haired bear. Hutch lay down beside Ollie and let sleep take
over.
Once Hutch was out of the door, Starsky
let himself go for the first time since he had left the hospital
room. Since Terri died they had been occupied with finding Proudholm
and that had kept his mind off his misery. The funeral had been tough
going. He met Terri's widowed mother for the first time at the
funeral; she had flown in from Seattle only the day before the
ceremony. She'd been so shattered by her daughter's death that
Starsky felt he had to be strong for her. Nancy had shown no sign of
blaming him for the tragedy and many mothers would have done. Her
daughter had been shot and killed by a madman who wanted to hurt
Starsky. Walking to the graveside Nancy had turned to him, her eyes
red and swollen with her grief and said: "She loved you David. She
spoke about you all the time when she called me. You made her happier
than she had ever been with a boyfriend. I can't hold it against
you." Starsky had taken her hand and as they walked on he said: "I
asked her to marry me. I don't know that I'll ever have the
courage do that again with any woman I meet. She's left a big hole
in my life too."
He had stood next to Nancy all through the
brief and touching ceremony. Terri's friends read poetry that she
had loved. Starsky, his voice hardly audible and choking back the
tears had recited a line from Shakespeare:
"'Age can not
wither her, nor fortune stale her infinite variety…' she's
beyond that now. We will all remember her young and full of life. We
will all remember her care for the kids in her class – especially
Sally. We will all remember her for her refusal to let anything stop
her from doing……….." His voice broke off; he couldn't go
on. He stood in silence, head bowed and shoulders shaking; Hutch went
over to him and put an arm around his shoulder. The others walked
slowly back to their waiting cars. Nancy turned to Starsky and said
"I hope you will come and see me before I go back to Seattle. There
is something I want you to have." Starsky nodded.
When all the others had gone Hutch stayed at his friend's side but he left Starsky to himself for a few seconds. He saw a silhouette of misery standing by the grave. Looking uncomfortable in his dark suit; Starsky obviously hadn't shaved for a couple of days and that added to his air of dejection. Starsky reached into a pocket and to Hutch's surprise pulled put a black skull cap and placed it precariously on his thick curls. He started to say something and Hutch decided to give him his space so he took a couple of steps back and listened. Starsky was praying aloud; Hutch did not understand a word of it because the prayer was in Hebrew. He waited respectfully until he'd finished and then took up position at his side. Starsky put the kippa back in his pocket, wiped his eyes with the back of his hand and turned to Hutch. "I had to do it. She wasn't Jewish but I had to say it. We say prayers for the dead to give ourselves comfort and that's the only one I ever knew."
"I didn't know you had it in you."
Starsky shrugged "I said it for my father – nearest male
relative etc. I guess I'll say it for my mother. I hope to God I
never have to say it for you and I pray that there will be someone to
say it for me when the time comes."
Hutch was stunned.
"Come
on, let's go and get changed into something more comfortable. We
still have a flake to find." Starsky sounded grim and Hutch knew
that he needed to get this thing finished.
Now he was alone. Really alone! He'd
meant it when he asked Terri to marry him; and he'd been equally
serious when he'd told her he was going to quit the force. He
shuffled around the apartment, picking up the debris of the evening
and sniffed. He had a lot of thinking to do and decisions to make. He
was scared and he didn't know how to deal with this new fear –
this feeling that he had been helpless to prevent the woman he loved
from dying. He was scared of his future if he did quit the force; and
scared of how he would be able to deal with it if he didn't.
He
pulled another beer out of the fridge and slumped onto his couch. The
bottle was emptied in about four long slugs and he went to get
another; seeing that there were only two left he took them both back
to the couch and finished off what he and Hutch had started – he
got really drunk.
He woke the next morning with a stiff back and a headache that rivaled all the migraines he had ever had rolled into one; his first real hangover! He wandered into the bedroom and found his prescription bottle, swallowed a couple of pills and fell onto the bed to sink back into deep sleep.
Hutch woke with a sore head; but he'd had plenty of hangovers before and knew that an Alka Seltzer and a cup of coffee would do the trick. He drank them and started to get ready for another day at work. With Proudholm finally off the streets the guys had a breather. Hutch knew that he'd be landed with having to make the report but he didn't begrudge Starsky this one; why should Starsk have go over it all again, he had suffered enough.
He reached for the 'phone to call Starsky and see if he wanted to ride to the precinct with him; then he thought better of it and set out on his own.
The Torino was not in its usual spot front of the entrance. Hutch reckoned Starsky would have put it in the parking area and he drove round to put his car there too. The Torino was not there either; but Starsky's black Harley was. "Oh oh." Hutch muttered under his breath "Looks like we're going out on patrol on that."
Dobey's office door was closed when
Hutch came into the Squad Room. Starsky wasn't to be seen and he
could hear low voices coming from behind the door. He heard the outer
door of Dobey's office close and turned in time to see Starsky
walking towards the stairway down to the street. He ran after him,
but Dobey, coming out of his office by the Squad Room door stopped
him. "Leave him. He's requested a few days leave. He says he
doesn't want to see anyone for a few days. He said he'll call you
when he's ready."
Hutch watched the receding figure as Starsky
disappeared down the stairs. He could tell by the set of his
partner's shoulders that things were bad.
Hutch sat at his desk and rolled a report form into the typewriter and got on with the chore.
It was a quiet day. Hutch and a couple of the others spent most of the morning discussing a few of the cases that had been dealt with while he and Starsky were going after Proudholm. A couple of rapists pulled in – but the cases probably wouldn't hold because the victims were too scared to testify in court; a kid brought in for picking pockets at the airport and a couple of pimps who had beaten on their hookers.
Around twelve thirty Hutch put his head round Dobey's door and said "I'll be at Huggy's if you need me." Dobey grunted.
The Pits was noisy with the usual
lunchtime crowd. Huggy was serving three people at once and Anita,
the new waitress, was going from table to table taking orders and
chatting with the clients. Huggy was Hutch come in and waved him over
to a booth in the corner by the pinball machine.
"What's
happening my man? Where's Starsky?"
Hutch explained that
Starsky had requested a few days and gone off without explanation.
"I'm worried about him Huggy. He's taken it very
badly."
"You're telling me! I've never seen him so down.
Not that you look like Mr. Sunshine either."
Hutch smiled wanly.
"Last night we carried out Terri's last wishes. We played
Monopoly 'til midnight and then we opened the packages she'd left
with Starsky. I got her bear, Ollie; Starsk got a book about winning
Monopoly. I could see by his face that he had hoped that Ollie would
be for him."
"Give it to him then."
Yeah, when he's
ready I think I will."
Hutch drank his beer slowly and asked for
another. "Oh and Huggy, I'd better eat something, bring me a
cheese salad sandwich."
He picked at the sandwich, eating by necessity and with little enthusiasm. His instincts told him to go over to Starsky's place – but he remembered what Dobey had said and he knew that for once he should ignore his instincts.
When he left the precinct Starsky
steered the big motor bike out towards the Pacific Highway. He still
had his badge in his pocket and his gun strapped to his side. Dobey
had refused his resignation in no uncertain terms. Starsky was
fighting the urge to throw both symbols of his job into the first
trash can he saw.
He roared along the highway (one eye on the
speedo) and came off at the ramp that would take him down to the
Santa Monica Pier. He parked the bike and went over to the big Ferris
wheel that dominated the beach. He was terrified of heights. Every
time he and Hutch found themselves on a roof Starsky had to fight
back the feelings of terror. Looking out of third floor window gave
him the heebie-jeebies; but this was something he had to do, for
Terri. She'd been willing to go on a roller-coaster slide despite
the bullet in her head, to prove their love; as soon as he'd
consented she'd proved her point and they didn't take the ride.
One day, long before she'd been shot, she'd wanted to go on the
Ferris Wheel but Dave had been so frightened by the idea that she had
given up trying to persuade him. He remembered her disappointment.
He'd told her "You go, I'll watch." Now she was gone. She'd
told him that she would always be there for him. "When you're
scared…" now he was going to test it out. He took a deep breath
and reached into his pocket for the change to buy his
ticket.
Standing in line he was tempted to walk away; but he'd
grown up believing that you should never run away however tough the
situation. He arrived at the front of the line and allowed the barker
to secure the bar across him. He asked the man to let him have a
gondola to himself and the crowd was small enough for that to be ok.
The thing began to move. Slowly Dave felt himself rising into the
air. He swallowed hard against the rising nausea in his throat. He
fought to keep his eyes open. As the wheel took him up high above the
pier and the beach he plucked up the courage to look around him. The
view was breathtaking. On one side the ocean stretched away to a far
horizon, on the other the city of Santa Monica spread out beneath him
and for a brief moment as the wheel prepared to descend he could see
the mountains that rose behind the urban sprawl. The downward journey
made him feel sick again and he swallowed hard. As the gondola began
to glide towards the setting down point he thought he heard a voice
beside him; "You see Dave;
you could do it. I told you I'd be there when you needed me." He
turned to the seat beside him; but it was empty.
He walked away
from the Wheel and back to his bike. He headed up the coast road to
the little beach he'd once found when he had been in need of
comfort. He guided the bike down the track and parked it when he
could take it no further. He pulled off his jacket, his holster and
his shoes and socks and locked them into the saddlebags. He ran down
to the beach and felt the warm sand between his toes. He started to
jog along the firmer sand at the water's edge. As his pace
quickened he felt some of the misery release itself. Finally a stitch
in his side made him pull up short. There were some rocks shaded by a
beachside palm tree. He sat under the tree and let go. There was
no-one to see him racked with sobs, pouring out his heart, and
finally raging against a world that allowed men like Proudholm to
destroy the lives of others.
He sat on his rock and screamed
"Terri! Terri! Terri!" until his was hoarse with the effort.
He pulled himself as together as he best could manage and started back to the waiting bike
Hutch hadn't heard from Starsky for
three days now. Dobey had received a call asking for a few more days
leave and the Captain had immediately put Starsky down on
unrestricted compassionate leave. From the background noise, he told
Hutch, it sounded like Starsky was calling from a payphone – he had
heard traffic and sea gulls in the background.
"In the meantime,
Hutchinson, there are still a few unfinished threads to tie up in the
rape case that and Edwards and Pike brought in. I'm assigning you
to give them a hand."
Hutch knew that there would be no point in
arguing. Both men knew that Hutch couldn't work properly with any
temporary partner so it was best that he worked alongside the other
two. Edwards and Pike were experienced enough to be able to handle
the case, but neither of them had that spark of insight that seemed
to get Starsky and Hutch to the crux of a case faster than many of
their colleagues. Dobey called the other two detectives into the
office and told them that Hutch would be working on the case.
Pike
looked at Hutch and said "Sure you can handle it without your
buddy?" Hutch turned on him angrily. "What's that supposed to
mean?"
"I just meant that you must be feeling pretty lonely
without your friend around."
Pike had only joined the Ninth
about six months ago; right from the start he'd had a strange
fascination with the way Starsky and Hutch worked in such apparent
harmony. He'd started suggesting that they were "closer than some
people realized." When Hutch had first gotten wind of the
insinuations he had gone after Pike; but Starsky held him back.
"Forget it. When the time is right I'll sock him one where it
really hurts!"
Pike looked steadily at Hutch and said.
"Must have been hard for you when he was so close to that
girl."
That did it; Hutch slapped him hard across the
face.
"Hutchinson!" Dobey stood up.
"What Captain? Are
you going to tell me that I was out of line?" Dobey sat down
again.
"Keep your mouth shut Pike, or next time you'll answer
to me."
Hutch gave Pike a sour look and started for the door.
"If I didn't know better, "he said, "I'd think maybe you
were jealous."
Nobody saw the look of embarrassment in Pike's
eye.
Pike and Edwards drove a green LTD.
Hutch followed them as they made their way to the last crime scene.
"You're really stupid sometimes, you know that?" Edwards
said to his partner. "Those guys are very close; but no way is
there anything sexual in it; as for your crack about Terri; show some
respect. I've known Starsky for five years now and believe me she
was the love of his life. I've never seen him so torn apart as he
is right now. He won't even let Hutch near him; and believe me that
worries the big blond more than anything else."
Pike said nothing. He was looking in the side mirror and watching Hutch driving behind them. The guy was gorgeous. Big blond, those cool blue eyes… Pike could feel himself getting aroused just thinking of Hutch. He knew that he'd better keep quiet.
The two cars pulled into a parking lot in front of a half-ruined warehouse – yet another company victim to the recession that was hitting the country in the wake of the oil crisis. Half the roof was gone and the walls showed the tell-tale traces of fire damage. The owner had set fire to it himself in the desperate hope that the insurance payment would keep his family and those of his four employees afloat for a few more months. When the police arrived to arrest him for arson; he shot himself in front of his wife and two kids. Hutch had been one of the arresting officers; Starsky was in the hospital after a freak fall had dislocated a shoulder. Hutch re-ran the horror film of the owner's suicide through his mind as he got out of the car. Six months after that incident these lousy remains of a warehouse had been the theater of another tragedy. Two teen-age girls had been brought here and brutally raped.
Pike and Edwards were already inside
and crouching by a bale of wire. Bloodstains on the ground bore
witness to just how brutal the attacks had been. The three of them
were there to find any tiny detail that could convict the suspects if
their victims were still too afraid to testify. It was the old, old
story; rape victims are given a hard time in court. The prosecution
takes a pleasure in finding evidence that they led the men on.
"Wasn't the skirt you were wearing very short?" "Why did you
let him buy you a drink?"
Starsky had once said that he could
see why the women were so often reluctant to be put through that kind
of ordeal. "As if being physically raped isn't enough; they have
to go through it mentally as well. In public!" He'd added
something that showed just how deeply he took things. "It explains
why they won't testify; but it doesn't excuse."
Hutch looked at the blood stains. He
turned slowly and retraced the possible path that the rapists and
their victims might have taken to get to this corner. A few feet away
he spotted another bloodstain.
"Did the lab take samples from
all the stains?"
Pike looked at him. "Sure they did. I stood
here and watch the M.E.'s assistant take swabs from both of
them."
"What about that one over there?"
Edwards came to
where Hutch was standing. "Shit! I don't think anyone saw that
one."
"Let's hope it's not too late." Hutch ran to his
car and radioed for lab support.
When he came back he heard
Edwards saying "…'s why they're First Class and you and I are
Third Class Pike; they're damned good at their job!"
Starsky was in Terri's old apartment. The lease had another few weeks to run and she had always paid her rent three months in advance. He drifted around the room, touching a piece of furniture; staring at the pictures on the wall. He had promised Nancy that he would pack Terri's things and send them to Seattle. Nancy told him to keep whatever he wanted and to send the clothes to a Goodwill Store. Starsky had already donated Terri's clothes to a new charity store set up by a women's group that worked with victims of domestic violence.
He was holding a small vase in his
hand. The first time he saw it Terri had taken it out of a cabinet to
put the single rose that he had brought her the day after they first
spent the night together. He let the tears fall.
He wandered into
the bedroom; still holding the vase. The bed seemed empty without
Ollie. He put down the vase and threw himself face down on the
bed.
Hugging one of the pillows he buried his face in the other
one and inhaled the scent of her hair that still lingered there. "Oh
Terri. How am I going to make it without you?"
He cried himself
to sleep.
When he woke it was getting dark
outside. He went into the kitchen and found a white candle and lit
it; just as he kept a candle burning for her in his own apartment. He
decided to spend the night here. He was too unhappy, too fragile and
prone to tears to feel safe on his bike in the night
traffic.
Tomorrow is the
next day of the rest of my life. I guess for a while I'll take it
all one day at a time.
In
the kitchen he found teabags and made himself a cup of tea; he wasn't
hungry. He couldn't remember the last time he'd eaten anything
and frankly he didn't give a damn.
He sat and hugged the mug if tea;
sipping it slowly each sip reminding him the times that they had sat
here, enjoying being with one another.
He went over to the little
Mexican cupboard that Terri used as a cocktail cabinet and found a
half full bottle of "gold" Tequila. He didn't bother to look
for a glass.
Slowly, stopping now and then to wipe away the tears;
he finished the bottle
When he awoke he looked around and took
a while to remember where he was.
His head hurt and he went to see
what pain relief he could find in Terri's bathroom.
He stopped
dead in front of the sink. Her toothbrush was still in the glass;
there were make-up bottles and a spray of her favorite perfume. He
took a deep breath and opened the cabinet. The best he could find was
Tylenol. He took the bottle of pills back to the kitchen and emptied
onto the counter. One, two,
three, four, five…..I wonder how many it would take?
He stopped himself before the idea became attractive. Mechanically he
put all but two of the capsules back into the bottle and snapped it
shut. He poured himself a glass of water and swallowed the
painkillers, then went to lie down on the couch before he fell down.
Later that afternoon his head felt
more like it belonged to his body. He galvanized himself mentally and
set about sorting through Terri's stuff. He started a pile to go to
Nancy and a pile for himself. After a while, passing in and out of
the bedroom with books or discs or ornaments he stopped and looked at
the two piles. Slowly he transferred most of the things from his pile
to Nancy's. He decided to keep the vase; Terri's book of
Shakespeare's sonnets and the volume of his complete works that
Starsky had given her for her birthday. He selected a couple of discs
"James Taylor" and "Pet Sounds". If Nancy didn't want the
record collection she could sell it.
He went into the kitchen and
pulled out the two cartons that he had brought over a few days
earlier and went back to the bedroom to pack them.
Once he had finished he made a call to the local woman in charge of the victim support group that had taken her clothes. "Sarah? Hi, it's Dave Starsky….Yeah…It's not easy...I…I…" he paused and drew a deep breath as if he felt he had to get it all out in one. "Sara, could you arrange for someone to come and clear the apartment? There must be a need for furniture and stuff. I'm going away for a few days; I'll leave the key in the same place as last time, Ok. Thanks. Hey of you need a cop anytime you know who to call. What? No, I decided it would do more honor to her memory of I didn't quit. Yeah…yeah…" His voice trailed off and he hung up before the sob that was rising in his throat choked him.
He went down to the bike and headed home.
Hutch's car was outside and for a moment Starsky felt like turning around and driving off before his partner heard the unmistakable tones of a well-tuned Harley.
He put the bike on its stand and went up the steps and let himself in.
Hutch was sitting on the couch. Starsky closed the door and made for the bedroom without a word. Hutch tried to follow him but the door closed in his face.
"Starsk? Hey Starsk; Dave; look I
just wanted to make sure you were OK"
From behind the door he
heard the muffled reply. "I said I'd call when I was ready to see
anyone. Leave me alone."
"No!" Hutch listened at the door.
Starsky was moving about in the room and Hutch could hear the deep
sniffs that meant his friend was fighting back the tears. He knocked.
Nothing. He took a deep breath and quietly opened the door.
Starsky
was packing a small suitcase. He turned as Hutch came into the
room.
"Please Hutch. I'm going away for a coupla days; I'll
call you when I get back. Promise. Please leave me alone right now."
Hutch looked at him gently. He had a
four day beard and he looked thin and pale.
"How come you've
given up eating and shaving?"
Starsky sat on the bed; still
stuffing socks and underwear into the case. "I haven't been
hungry." He fingered his beard, "And this is a sign that I loved
her. I don't know the correct period for a woman I didn't even
marry; there may not be one since she was a shiksa; but I'm not
shaving for a while. That what you wanted to know?"
Hutch sat next to him. "OK I won't
push it. Are you going East?"
"No, North. I'm taking her
stuff up to Nancy."
"Call me when you get back."
"Yeah."
Hutch left the apartment; the vision of Starsky unshaven and haggard stayed with him the rest of the day.
Starsky finished packing and went over
to the 'phone. He dialed and leaned against the kitchen counter
while he waited for the call to connect.
"Hi Nancy, it's Dave.
I'll be leaving in about an hour. No I don't really know, I'll
call you when I get to Seattle and you can tell me how to find you."
He went to the bedroom and took his bag down to the garage. He ran the Torino out of the garage and then put the Harley inside and closed the door.
He drove over to Terri's apartment knowing that this was the last time he would set foot in it. He had already sold Terri's car; giving the proceeds to the Marshall Center's sports fund. He slipped the Torino into the space in the garage allocated to Terri's apartment and went into the building. It took him three trips to get all the stuff down to the car and packed into the trunk. He went up one more time and resisting the temptation to take one more look inside left the key in the pre-arranged hiding place.
He drove away and headed for the
Hollywood Freeway. He stayed with it until the exit for US 101 and
headed north towards the Interstate 5.
The sign told him he had
another nine hundred and twenty eight miles ahead of him. He switched
on the car radio/cassette player and slipped in a tape that he had
compiled with all the tunes that he and Terri had called their own.
By the time reached Sacramento he was tired. He spotted a decent looking motel and checked in. He became aware that at last he was hungry; he looked at his watch, seven fifteen; he had not idea how long it was since he'd eaten more than a slice of toast or an apple or a lump of cheese. "Is there somewhere I can eat around here?" He asked the clerk. "We have a restaurant or there's a Bar'n'Grill a couple of miles into town. Starsky was too tired to think of driving again that night. He parked the Torino in front of his room and went inside. The decor was the same bland stuff you find in any motel on an Interstate highway. Starsky didn't even notice the color of the bedspread. He went into the bathroom and peed. He went back out and into the motel restaurant.
At first glance the place seemed to be
exclusively filled with happy couples; but looking again he saw that
he was not the only person eating alone and most of the others looked
like they were traveling salesman. He looked at the menu. He hadn't
eaten for so long he knew that he shouldn't push it. He ordered a
steak and a salad.
The waitress was a woman in her mid-fifties;
the motherly sort. "You OK hon?" she asked him.
"Yes. Thank
you."
"How do you want your steak?"
"Medium"
"You
want a potato on the side?"
"No, thanks just a salad."
"Honey
you look like you haven't eaten properly for a long time."
"I
haven't." He tried not to sound impatient but the last thing he
wanted was pity. "I've had a long drive and I'm tired. Could
you bring me a beer please?"
"Sure." She went over to the
bar and returned with his beer. "If there's anything I can do…"
The tone of her voice made it obvious exactly what she meant by
that.
Starsky decided to ignore her. He ate his dinner and passed
on a dessert; paid the check and went to bed.
He was up with the dawn and decided to grab breakfast at a coffee shop further along the road – he'd need to re-gas the Torino soon. About forty miles on he saw a rest stop; gas station, diner and a small store. He filled the tank and went into the diner and ordered coffee and a waffle with maple syrup. The waffle stuck in his throat but he finished the coffee and drank a refill.
The road was beautiful. He and Hutch had once driven back from San Francisco but not on the Highway. As the road headed north through California and on towards Oregon the landscape unfolded around him. He had never seen anything like it and yearned to be able to just take off and explore. Next vacation, I'll drag Hutch up here.
He broke the journey just short of Portland. The motel was tacky and the food bad, but he didn't care. Late the next day he was approaching Seattle itself. Nancy had told him to ring as soon as he left the Interstate at exit 164A. He pulled over by a payphone and dialed her number. She explained how to find her house in a southern suburb of the city and an hour later he pulled up outside her neat two-storied house.
She came across the lawn to greet him
and told him to put his car behind hers on the drive. She smiled at
him as he got out of the car "Well that will give the neighbors
food for thought." As she spoke she pointed to the car. "Not that
Terri hadn't told me about your taste in cars."
He grinned.
"You should see my motor bike!"
"Terri never mentioned it."
She said quietly.
"She didn't know about it! I was saving it
for when we were married." He busied himself by taking his bag and
the cartons out of the trunk. Nancy understood how fragile he was.
She helped him with the cartons and then they sat down in the kitchen
and had coffee and home-made chocolate cake.
"Terri was always telling me that I
wouldn't be able to resist you chocolate cake." He helped
himself to a second slice.
"Did she tell you that she thought
that if there was any crook had a chance of corrupting you it would
be with chocolate?"
They both laughed.
Nancy touched his wrist. "Dave I want you to understand something. Losing a child is something no mother can survive easily. It isn't the normal scheme of things; our children are supposed to bury us; not the other way around. But I have learned something. If I do not make myself accept it and get on with my life I will be insulting her memory. I think that you need to start doing the same."
"I know. I think maybe bringing all
this to you; clearing her apartment; it's a kind of clearing
exercise for me. But it's so hard…" He didn't try to fight
the tears.
She put a hand on his and squeezed it. "Listen to me
David. I do not hold you responsible for Terri's death; and if I
don't, neither should you." He looked up at her, big blue eyes
swimming with tears; he looked so vulnerable. She held his hand a
little tighter. "Go and take a shower. I'm taking you out to
dinner."
Starsky stayed with Nancy for three
days. She showed him all Terri's childhood photos; her high school
yearbooks; her prom photo and the photos taken when she graduated
from Berkeley. Class of '69. Dave stroked the photo. "She didn't
tell me she was at Berkeley during the uprising. Maybe she thought
the cop would disapprove."
"Would you have done?"
"Hell
no! I was out there; I got wounded and came home before I could get
killed. I hated it. I was called up and I wasn't together enough to
know about burning my draft card. Mind you I never much liked the
idea of living in Canada."
His face clouded. He could see Hutch
sitting on the kitchen counter with the 'phone cord around his neck
trying to get them places with a football team in Vancouver. "You'd
have to be penguin to want to live there." Nancy smiled.
The day Starsky left he had another chocolate cake in a Tupperware box on the passenger seat. "Try not to eat it all before you get home." Nancy blew him a kiss and he backed off the driveway and drove off in the direction of the highway back south.
He found a motel in a town just south of Portland and stayed the second night at the motel with the kind hearted waitress. She wasn't on duty that night so he was able to eat without being propositioned.
He arrived home tired but feeling strangely rested. He went straight to bed and slept better than he had in a very long time.
Hutch was sorting through his expense
slips and trying to make sense of a bill from a diner when the phone
on his desk rang.
"I'm home. You wanna come round a bit
later?"
"How about right now?"
"Coffee's on and if
you're quick there might be some chocolate cake left."
Hutch went into Dobey's
office.
"Starsky's back. I'm going over there now."
Dobey
looked up. "Tell him to take his time, Hutch. I can always put him
on sick leave if he needs it."
"He sounded pretty cheerful to
me; but then you never know with Starsky."
"That's what I
mean. Edith and I were talking about her cousin last night. His wife
died of cancer a couple of months ago. He took it very badly and then
a couple of weeks later he seemed as bright and as cheerful as ever.
He's in the hospital having treatment for severe depression after
he tried to kill himself a few weeks ago."
"Oh come on Captain…"
"Starsky's
taken it hard; and he blames himself. He's always been an up and
down sort of character. I just don't want him to put too much
pressure on himself."
"I'll let you know." Hutch left
the office and went to the men's room before setting out for
Starsky's apartment.
Pike was in there, he'd apparently just
stepped into the urinal and he turned to see who had come in. Hutch
had a strange feeling. He stepped into the urinal and unzipped his
fly. He started to pee and became aware that Pike was staring at
him…at his cock!
"You have a problem, Pike?"
The other
man did not turn away. Hutch looked at him and saw that he was not
using the urinal although he too had his zipper open. Pike was
staring at Hutch and his erection was plainly on show. He reached a
hand towards Hutch's crotch but the blond stepped back and zipped
himself up.
"I don't know what you're into Pike and I don't
care. Your private life is your affair; I'm not interested in that
kind of thing."
Pike turned away, his face was red and
Hutch saw a tear run down his cheek. "I'm sorry Ken but I've
really fancied you ever since I joined the Ninth Precinct. I was
jealous of Starsky until I heard how involved his was with Terri. I
hoped that while Starsky was way I might get to know you
better."
"He's back and if I were you I'd ask for a
transfer."
Hutch left the men's room and went down to his car. He didn't know what to feel; like Starsky he believed in live and let live. He wasn't interested in having sex with a man and it had never entered his mind that a man would want him. Starsky had once said something very sensible about the way most 'straight' men react to homosexuality. "The truth is, most men are so vain and so sure that everyone will be attracted to them that if a gay man comes into the room they feel threatened. They are worried that the gay man will make a pass; and at the same time their pride is wounded if he doesn't." Sometimes that curly head seemed to be full of philosophy and Hutch wondered were some of it came from considering his buddy had hardly had a brilliant high school record.
He parked behind the Torino.
Starsky
was sitting on the couch with his back to the door. Hutch closed the
door quietly and went up to his partner and put his hands on the
broad muscular shoulders.
"How are you doing?"
"I've
felt a whole lot better; and I've felt worse." Starsky went over
to the kitchen and returned with a tray laden with the coffee pot,
mugs a big half-eaten chocolate cake and a couple of plates. "Nancy
made the cake," he looked sheepish, "I had to put it on the back
seat or I'd have eaten the lot before I got to Portland."
Hutch took the tray and watched his
friend sit down. He was still thinner than usual and his beard was
luxuriant mass of dark curls covering half his cheeks and his chin.
His mouth was almost hidden in the whiskers.
"I wish I could
grow a beard like that. Mine always look like overgrown
stubble."
"The penalties of being a blond!" Starsky laughed.
Hutch waited for Starsky to speak; he
didn't want to push anything. They sat in silence munching
chocolate cake and sipping coffee. They both broke the silence at the
same time.
"The drive………."
"You won't
believe…….."
Starsky looked at Hutch and saw the expression on his face; "Woo, he has something on his mind, better let him go first." He thought. Aloud he said "You go first I was just going to make some crappy remark about driving through three states."
Hutch was quiet for a second. "Starsk,
have you ever thought that other people might wonder about
us?"
"Wonder about us…about what about us?"
"Well we
work very closely and we spend a lot of time together and…….."
"And
I love you, but I've told you before you're not Kosher! Well
maybe that's no excuse any more; Terri wasn't either."
"That's
what I mean. Do you ever wonder of other people think we're
gay?"
"No I don't. I know we aren't and I don't give a
flying fuck what bizarre fantasies someone else might have about us"
He stopped and looked at Hutch who had an embarrassed smile on his
face. Oh shit! Oh no Hutch I didn't mean to upset you."
"Not
me dummy. I don't want to have an affair with you. I've told you
before I prefer blonds! No someone made a pass at me while you were
away."
"So you're complaining?"
"It was a man!
Another cop."
"Oh oh. Should I ask who?"
"Pike. He's
made a lot of nasty remarks about us in the last few weeks and while
you were off I worked with him and Edwards on that rape case. Pike
was a bit weird with me and this morning he made a pass at me in the
men's room"
Starsky restrained himself from teasing
Hutch about being an uptight WASP; he could see that Hutch was
embarrassed. "Hey remember what I once told you. Some enchanted
evening etc. He thought you were the one, that's all. Next time he
tried to fly to your side I'll swat him!"
For the first time
in a long while Hutch heard Starsky laugh. He sighed.
"It won't
come to that; I told him that I'm not interested and I advised him
to get a transfer."
"Well done, buddy."
Starsky stayed quiet for another few
minutes and then said "Listen, I want to be on my own over the
weekend but why don't you come a collect me on Monday morning.
"
"You're coming back to work? "
"Well what else do
you expect me to do; drive a bus?"
Hutch got the message and stood up. See you on Monday; eight o'clock Ok."
"Monday at eight."
Hutch went from Starsky's apartment to The Pits. The new waitress came onto him and they spent the weekend together.
Starsky's weekend could not have been different.
After Hutch had left he went and took a
shower then dressed in his dark suit. He took a velvet pouch out of
the bureau drawer and went down to the car. The sun would be set in
less than an hour.
He pulled over on a quiet street and parked the
car and set off to walk the last mile to the synagogue that he'd
been visiting ever since Terri died.
He went in quietly, covering
his head and draping his prayer shawl over his shoulders; he took his
position with the other men and swayed gently in rhythm with the
chanted prayers. He still felt a little ashamed that he was no longer
able to join in; but the rabbi had reassured him that if he wanted to
it would come back to him with time.
When the minyan was complete
the rabbi called on the assembled men to say Kaddish for "David's
fiancée." Starsky recited the prayer and let the tears
flow.
After the prayers were over Rabbi Stern came over to him.
"David, my wife would like to come and share the Sabbath meal with
us." Starsky thanked him shyly and they went across the road to the
Stern's house.
Inside, Mrs. Stern and her daughters were putting
the last touches to the table. Mrs. Stern lit the Shabbat candles and
silently said the prayer that has been passed down through so many
generations of Jewish women. They passed the chollah and a cup of
wine, each taking a piece of bread and a sip of wine before passing
them to his or her neighbor. Finally they sat down and Mrs. Stern
served dinner. She had made gefilte fish to start followed by a
salmon cooked in the oven. A fish meal meant that they could eat
apple pie à la mode for dessert.
Dave felt strangely safe
with this devout and kind hearted family. The rabbi and his wife
questioned him gently and tactfully about his own religious
upbringing.
"I guess I dropped out after my Bar Mitzvah. " he
laughed. "I had to say Kaddish for my father when I was
fourteen…"
"How did he die?" Mrs. Stern looked
concerned. "It is terrible for a young boy to have to do such a
thing."
"He was shot ma'am. He was cop. I saw it
happen…."
Rabbi Stern refilled Starsky's glass and pushed it
towards him. "You have lost two loved ones in the same way. I think
I understand why you are coming to see me."
"I want to understand. I want to
learn the things I've forgotten."
"You only have to ask
David; I will always be happy to give you my time."
"Thank
you." They let him finish his meal in silence.
Starsky turned to the Rabbi before
getting into the car; "I'd like to join with you all for
Kippur."
"We will be happy see you whenever you want to come
to the Temple, David. Don't wait for the High Holidays"
The rabbi and his wife watched him walk back to his car. "Remind me to tell him that we don't mind if he drives on the Sabbath." They both laughed and walked back to the house.
Starsky drove home with an unfamiliar feeling of peace. "Maybe I'm learning to live with it. Oh God I hope I can make it."
The 'phone was ringing when he came
in. He picked up the receiver and pinched his nose "the number…"
"Davey, Davey darling I'm so worried about you. You didn't
call last week and not tonight either."
"Momma; I'm here.
I've been away for a while."
"Oh darling, when your father
died I thought that my life had come to an end. You'll get over it
baby."
"I know momma. I'm working on it. Guess where I've
been?"
"If you were in a bar…"
"No momma. I was in
the synagogue. I went to Shabbat service."
"Davey; if you are
teasing me."
"Momma; you know I wouldn't do that to you; not
about that. I went to Temple; I ate dinner with the Rabbi and his
family. He has two daughters momma – aged five and nine!" He
stopped and held the receiver away from his ear as Lily gave her a
tirade on joking about that kind of thing. He had never told her that
Terri wasn't Jewish.
"Momma….listen to me…mom…mom….mommy
darling! Listen I've had a tough week and I'm tired. I'm going
to bed and I'm going to have a quiet weekend then Monday I go back
to work."
He let her talk for a few more seconds and then blew
her a kiss and put the 'phone back on its hook.
He undressed and hung his suit up carefully – I'll be using it more than I thought.
He slipped between the sheets and for the first time since Terri died he slept all through the night.
Saturday, Starsky decided to give some attention to his housekeeping; a quick inspection of the fridge revealed congealed piece of pizza, a moldy lump of cheese and half a carton of rancid milk. He made a quick list and set off for the local store.
Coming into the kitchen he put the two
brown sacks that he was balancing in his arms on the counter and
sorted his purchases between fridge and cupboard. He made himself a
pot of tea and sat down to drink it while he went through the mail
that had accumulated during the time that he had been away –
mentally and physically. There were a couple of bills but that was no
problem they were paid automatically by the bank. Another envelope
revealed his pay slip; they had at long last gotten the raise that
had been promised months ago. The rest of the stuff was fliers and
junk mail – he tossed it into the garbage pail in the kitchen along
with the empty envelopes. He went over to his desk and filed the
bills and the pay slip.
He looked around and decided that the next
stop was the bathroom. He peed and then set about clearing away old
towels. He sorted his laundry and took a load into the kitchen and
set the washing machine into motion. Hutch went to the local
launderette but Starsky valued being able to deal with is underwear
in private.
Next he took the vacuum cleaner out of the closet and
turned the radio up high so that he would hear it while he cleaned
the floors. He sang along with a couple of songs.
Vacuuming
finished he turned the radio back down and flopped onto the couch.
They were playing a track from Pet Sounds "Wouldn't it be nice if
we were married…" He forced himself to listen to it and took a
certain pride in the fact that he wasn't crying when it
finished.
He reached for his book and read for about an hour –
until his stomach reminded him that lunch wasn't a bad idea from
time to time. He went into the kitchen and made an omelet that he ate
from the pan, leaning on the counter.
Rabbi Stern had told him to
listen to his heart and to his body; to follow his feelings and to
"indulge yourself a little." His body was saying "rest me" so
he went back to lie on the couch. He switched on the TV. A cop show –
he tried to watch it but he knew that things never worked the way
they did on the screen. Forty minutes for the hero to solve a crime
and maybe start work on another; and no sign of a private life. He
flipped the remote control; a Bogart film – he settled back to
watch his hero drag Katherine Hepburn and an old steam boat up an
African river.
That evening he grilled himself a steak and poured a glass of wine. He played solitaire for a while and read for a couple of hours. He was in bed and asleep by ten thirty.
Sunday he went to "his beach" and jogged for about a half hour. The he went home and showered and the rest of the day was much like Saturday had been.
When Hutch arrived on Monday morning
Starsky was running late – for the excellent reason (that he would
never tell Hutch) that he had indeed been running! Hutch let himself
in as Starsky was about to start shaving off his by now luxuriant
beard. Looking at himself in the mirror he couldn't help thinking
that he looked like an old fashioned Jew; like the men who had lived
a couple of blocks away when he was a kid. All
I need is the ear locks and the wide-brimmed hat.
The image made him laugh.
He started to work up a thick lather of
shaving soap and reached into the cabinet to take out his razor.
Hutch walked into the bathroom in time
to see Starsky checking the blade of an old-fashioned a cut throat
razor; seeing the reflection of his face in the mirror Starsky held
the razor in mid-air.
"What in the hell are you doing? Starsky
you can't possible think of…"
"Don't tell me you like
this beard!"
Hutch mugged at him sheepishly.
"Hey; hey
Hutch, you thought I was going to cut my throat! Oh that's good,
that's really good. Believe me buddy if I was gonna kill myself I'd
find a quiet spot and blow my brains out. In fact if you're good
one day I'll show you the beach I had in mind."
"What do you mean 'had in mind'?"
Starsky didn't answer. He started to
lather the beard and skillfully shaved it off; each stroke of the
razor bringing his youthful face back into view from behind the
whiskers.
He looked up at Hutch in the mirror; his big blue eyes
wide with concentration and a little humor twinkled there. When he
had finished and wiped the last traces of shaving cream off his face
he went into the bedroom and dressed. Still smiling he turned to
Hutch.
"I wouldn't have done it you know. There's too much
life out there to live."
"I don't know Starsk; there was a
time when I really worried about your psychological safety."
"It felt bad. You know what it felt like? It felt like I was trying to swim against a tide of thick blue mud that was going to bury me alive if I didn't fight back. I decided to fight. Now let's get to work!"
The two of them went down the steps to
where their cars were parked side by side.
"Flip you for it."
Starsky said. Hutch took a coin out of his pocket and
flipped.
"Heads" said Starsky – he never chose tails. Hutch
looked at the coin and took a second to think about it. "Hey how
about that, looks like it's the Striped Tomato today. Starsky
opened the door and slid behind the wheel. He touched Hutch on the
arm so that the blond turned to look at him.
"You're a lousy
liar, you know that? Thanks buddy."
He gunned the engine and
reversed fast enough to slam Hutch against the dashboard.
"Gotcha!"
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