smiled. Iona glanced at Natalie, who put up two fingers. Pierre put up two fingers, too.
âTwo then,â Iona said and strolled back to the coffeemaker.
Pierre hunkered forward and said in a hushed voice, â On va prendre racine ici .â (Weâll be stranded here.)
Natalie shrugged.
And in the booth north of them, Owen Nelson asked Dick Tupper, âWas that French ?â
Dick lifted halfway from his seat, imitated a good stretch and yawn as he turned just so, and interestedly stared at them fuming silently in their booth. Returning to his seat, he told Owen, âLooks like theyâre having a tiff.â
Owen tilted out of the booth to watch Iona deliver the coffee, carefully placing the saucers and cups on each side of the tasseled loafer. Sitting up again, he said, âI say the shoeâs involved.â A paper napkin was farmerishly stuffed under his green workshirt collar, and he patted his mouth with it. âYou donât know âem, do ya?â
âOh now, donât go introducing yourself again.â
Owen got up. âThatâs how I met Slim Pickens that one time.â
Owen Nelson was in his thirties and a salt-of-the-earth guy whose height and girth were sufficient to make him a third-string offensive tackle for the famous University of Nebraska Cornhuskers, though he never lorded that fact over the locals but was a friend to all and sundry. Owen inherited his dearly departed fatherâs gas station kitty-corner from the café, and townsfolk all thought the world of him, but he was frankly not much of a mechanic, so those whoâd reached the age of reason generally just rented his hoist and tools.
Owen was friendliest with Dick Tupper, a purveyor of cattle whose ranch was three miles north of town and who was just lately wealthy, having sold off four hundred acres of sorghum and soybeans to an agriculture conglomerate. Dick was a fine-looking, hard-bodied, mustached man just past fifty, and the sole misery of his life was that a decade ago his perpetually unpleasant wife ran off to Idahoâs Salmon River Mountains with a wildlife manager named Calvin who wanted to be a fishing guide. Thenceforth Dick lived like a widower, still feeling married and faithful and carrying on like a chilly Lord Byron in spite of the divorce sheâd gotten. But his fiftieth birthday was a jolt to his system, and since then heâd been meeting flirtatious and lonesome husband-seekers in Internet chat groups and driving as far as Lincoln to share rack of lamb and I-and-Thou talk in the halo of glimmering candles. With that history as his guide, and in just a short glimpse, Dick was able to postulate that Natalie was unhappy with her hulking companion, and he too got up to introduce himself.
Pierre gloomily registered the two menâs genial approach and urgently told Natalie, â Ne fais pas de mouvements brusques .â (Donât make any sudden moves.)
Owen stood aside to free his workshirt of the stained paper napkin and shyly told Dick, âYou go.â
âExcuse me,â Dick told them. âWe donât mean to intrude upon your precious time here together, but we havenât seen you in these parts and I was wondering if you had some problem on the road or you had people here or just where it is you hail from.â
Pierre and Natalie stared at him in silence. Eight, maybe nine seconds passed. The Young and the Restless was the only sound. And then Owen shouted, âWants to know who you are!â
Dick nodded toward the gas station owner and said, âThatâs Owen.â Extending his hand to Natalie, he said, âMy nameâs Dick Tupper.â
His hand was held out there for a moment before Natalie cautiously took it. âNatalie Clairvaux,â she said.
Dick turned to Il Penseroso for a handshake. âPleased to meetcha.â
Pierre said with sarcasm, âHi.â
âDidnât catch your name.â
Pierre