trainers. A long T-shirt hung almost to her knees, and she had a sweatband on, as if she was going to go out running at any minute. Her clothes were bold and startling, but she herself seemed nervous, as if she didnât want to be noticed. It was really odd.
Andy was there again, but the other visitors Deet hadnât seen before.
One of them was a pleasant-looking young woman with a girl a little younger than P. J.
âWhen can Daddy come home? Whatâs Daddy doing in here? Why canât he come with us?â she asked her mom, twisting around one of the uprights that formed the entranceway to the visiting room.
Deet thought the mother might be embarrassed to have her little girl ask something like that in public, but the mother answered cheerfully, didnât try to hush the little girl or speak softly herself.
âWell, you know when you do something wrong, you have a time-out? Well, Daddy did something wrong and heâs having a time-out.â
The little girl nodded gravely and went on twisting herself around the pole.
Andy smiled. He bent over and whispered in Deetâs ear, âGood explanation.â
There were lots of kids visiting that day. A tightlipped, gray-haired woman had brought two kids, about eight and ten, Deet guessed. The kids looked at home in the waiting room, as if theyâd been visiting the jail for a long time.
The oldest, a boy, sat down beside Deet and looked at him with frank curiosity. âWho are you visiting?â he asked Deet.
âMy dad.â
The boy nodded. âWeâre visiting my mom. She was arrested for embezzling.â
âOh,â said Deet, feeling a little shocked. Embezzling sounded like a pretty sophisticated crime. Sort of premeditated. Now it was his turn to tell what Dad was in for. Why couldnât he be as up-front as this kid? Why couldnât he just say,
Oh, bummer, embezzling. My dad was busted for drugs. My dad was arrested with methamphetamines. My dad
⦠Forget it. He couldnât say
anything
like that, so he asked, âWill she be here long?â
âTwo more months. Embezzlement is a white-collar crime and it has a presumptive sentence.â
Deet tried to look as if he knew what the boy was talking about.
âThatâs my grandma, and thatâs my sister Meghan.â
âWhatâs
your
name?â asked Deet, for something to say.
âIan Foster Carmichael,â the boy said, chin up and eyes bright. Having a mom in jail hadnât damaged
his
self-image, Deet thought. Meghan looked like Jamâlong, wispy blond hair, brown eyes, fidgety. In her hair was a purple plastic barrette that sheâd obviously been adjusting herself, because it was crooked and the hair was bunched up under it. Deet wished the grandmawould unclasp it, brush down Meghanâs hair, and put it back in right.
The last visitor to come in was a tall, wild-haired black woman with a little boy, maybe two years old, on her hip. After sheâd taken off his snowsuit, he was all over the waiting room, his mom loping after him, calling out commands he ignored. âMichael, sit your sorry ass down in this chair!â
He was so fast and his mom was so gangly that Deet felt himself laughing, for the first time since Dad had been sent to jail.
Andy picked up the little boy so she could sign in, throwing him high in the air over his head, making him shriek with laughter. Andy was the kind of person who saw what was needed and did it.
Deet could see it was going to be really noisy today, locked in that little room with all those kids. That was good, because the more noise there was, the less uncomfortable he felt.
When it was time to go into the visiting room there was a different routine. A guard stood in front of the archway before they went in and waved a wandlike thingover them, up and down on both sides, to check for metal or something.
This guard was tall and must have been an athlete, because he had the
Andrew Lennon, Matt Hickman