
He looked up again, this time squinting his eyes against the hateful light, but the Seneca was gone, and even the buzz of its engine (also aggravating — all sounds were aggravating when he was getting one of these bitchkitties) was fading. Chuck Thompson with some flyboy or flygirl wannabe. And although Junior had nothing against Chuck — hardly knew him — he wished with sudden, childish ferocity that Chuck's pupil would fuck up bigtime and crash the plane.
Preferably in the middle of his father's car dealership.
Another sickish throb of pain twisted through his head, but he went up the steps to the McCains' door anyway. This had to be done. This was over-fucking-due. Angie needed a lesson.
But just a little one. Don't let yourself get out of control.
As if summoned, his mother's voice replied. Her maddeningly complacent voice. Junior was always a bad-tempered boy, hut he keeps it under much better control now. Don't you, Junior?
Well. Gee. He had, anyway. Football had helped. But now there was no football. Now there wasn't even college. Instead, there were the headaches. And they made him feel like one mean motherfucker.
Don't let yourself get out of control.
No. But he would talk to her, headache or no headache.
And, as the old saying was, he just might have to talk to her by hand. Who knew? Making Angie feel worse might make him feel better.
Junior rang the bell.
2Angie McCain was just out of the shower. She slipped on a robe, belted it, then wrapped a towel around her wet hair.
