"Can I Use Your Phone?"
Harold Dempsey had spent most of his sixty-three years refining his handshake—firm, warm, and just long enough to say “I’m your man” without seeming overeager. Time hadn’t been cruel, but it hadn’t been kind, either: his button-downs strained over a soft belly, and his jowls hung heavy beneath his chin. Still, he wore a tie every day and polished his shoes until they gleamed. That afternoon, after a routine meeting with a chain of supply stores in a town that might as well have been named Oblivion Junction, he checked into the Westernaire Motor Lodge. The two-story brick building looked tired, its carpets threadbare. Room 117 smelled faintly of bleach, with an undercurrent of something unplaceable. He was bone-tired, his undershirt damp against his back, and all he wanted was a hot shower. He shed his suit and left it in a heap on the vinyl armchair, then wrapped the laughably small towel around his waist with practiced ease. The water pressure was more trickle than torrent, but he sto...