9
Kat was too stunned to make sense of what had
happened; she could only lie on her back in the grass and stare
dazedly at the sky. Then, gradually, she became aware that someone
was calling her name, that someone was brushing the hair from her
eyes, stroking her face.
‘Kat. Look at me. I’m right here. Look at me.’
Slowly, she focused on Adam. He was gazing down at
her, undisguised panic in his eyes. He was afraid, she thought in
wonder. Why?
‘Kat!’ he yelled. ‘Come on, say
something.’
She tried to speak and found all she could manage
was a whisper. ‘Adam?’
Through her confusion, she heard the sounds of
running footsteps, shouting voices, calls of ‘Is she okay?’
‘What happened?’ she asked.
‘Don’t move. There’s an ambulance coming—’
‘What happened?’ She
struggled to sit up. The sudden movement made the world lurch
around her. She caught a spinning view of bystanders’ faces, of
debris littering the lawn. Then she saw what was left of her house.
With that glimpse, everything froze into terrible focus.
The front wall had been ripped away entirely, and
the inner walls stood exposed, like an open dollhouse. Shreds of
fabric, couch batting, splintered furniture had been tossed as far
as the driveway. Just overhead, an empty picture frame swung
forlornly from a tree branch.
‘Jesus, lady,’ murmured someone in the crowd. ‘Did
you leave your gas on or something?’
‘My house,’ whispered Kat. In rising fury she
staggered to her feet. ‘What did they do to my
house?’
Then, as if there hadn’t been enough destruction,
the first flicker of fire appeared. Flames were spreading from what
used to be the kitchen.
‘Back!’ shouted Adam. ‘Everyone back!’
‘No!’ Kat struggled
forward. If she could turn on the garden hose, if the pipes were
still intact, she could save what little she had left. ‘Let me go!’
she yelled, shoving at Adam. ‘It’s going to burn!’
She managed only two steps before he grabbed her
and hauled her back. Enraged, she struggled against him, but he
trapped her arms and swung her up and away from the house.
‘It’s going to burn!’ she cried.
‘You can’t save it, Kat! There’s a gas leak!’
The flames suddenly shot higher, licking at the
collapsing roof. Already the fire had spread to the living room,
had ignited the remains of her furniture. Smoke swirled, thick and
black, driving the crowd back across the street.
‘My house,’ Kat sobbed, swaying against Adam.
He pulled her against him and wrapped his arms
tightly around her as though to shield her from the sight and
sounds of destruction. As the first fire trucks pulled up with
sirens screaming, she was still clinging to him, her face pressed
against his shirt. The roar of the flames, the shouts of firemen,
seemed to recede into some other, distant dimension. Her reality,
the only one that mattered, was the steady thump of Adam’s
heart.
Only when he gently released her and murmured
something in her ear was she wrenched unwillingly back into the
real world. She found two uniformed men gazing at her. One was a
cop, the other had an Albion Fire Department patch on his
jacket.
‘What happened?’ asked the cop.
She shook her head. ‘I don’t know.’
‘She’d just gotten home,’ said Adam. ‘We went
inside, came back out again for a minute. That’s when the house
blew up. She caught the worst of it. I was standing behind
her—’
‘Did you smell gas?’
‘No.’ Adam shook his head firmly. ‘No gas.’
‘You’re sure?’
‘Absolutely. The fire started after the
explosion.’
The cop and fireman looked at each other, a glance
that Kat found terrifying in its significance.
She said, ‘It was a bomb. Wasn’t it?’
They didn’t say a word. They didn’t have to. Their
silence was answer enough.
It was after midnight when they finally pulled into
Adam’s driveway. They’d spent two hours in the ER getting their
cuts and bruises tended to, two more hours in the Bellemeade police
station, answering questions. Now they were both on the far side of
exhausted. They barely managed to stumble out of the car and up the
front steps.
Thomas was waiting at the door to greet them. ‘Mr.
Q.!’ he gasped, staring in horror at Adam’s torn suit. ‘Not
another brawl?’
‘No. Just a bomb this time.’ He raised his hand to
cut off Thomas’s questions. ‘I’ll tell you all about it in the
morning. In the meantime, let’s get Dr. Novak to bed. She’s staying
the night.’
Thomas nodded, utterly unruffled. ‘I’ll prepare the
guest room,’ he said, and went up ahead of them.
Slowly Adam guided Kat up the stairs. Her body felt
so small, so fragile, as he helped her up the last step, and down
the corridor. By the time they reached the south guest room, Thomas
had already turned down the covers, placed fresh towels on the
dresser, and closed the drapes. ‘I’ll see to your room now, Mr.
Q.,’ he said, and discreetly withdrew.
‘Come. Into bed with you,’ said Adam. He sat her on
the covers, knelt down to take off her shoes.
‘I’m such a mess,’ she murmured, staring down at
her clothes.
‘We’ll clean these in the morning. Right now, you
need some sleep. Can I help you off with your clothes?’
She looked up at him with a faint expression of
amusement.
He smiled. ‘Believe me, my intentions are purely
honorable.’
‘Nevertheless,’ she said, ‘I think I’ll manage on
my own.’
Adam sat down beside her on the bed. ‘It’s gone too
far,’ he said. ‘Doing your job is one thing, Kat. And I admire your
persistence, I really do. But now it’s turned ugly. This time you
were fortunate. But next time . . .’ He stopped,
unwilling to finish the thought.
But it didn’t matter. Kat had already fallen
asleep.
She was still asleep when Adam looked in the next
morning.
Quietly he sat down in the chair beside her.
Sunlight winked through the curtains, the beams dancing around the
walls and the polished furniture. He’d forgotten how charming this
guest room could be, how lovely it looked in the morning light. Or
perhaps it never had been this lovely
before; perhaps, with this woman sleeping beside him, he was seeing
the room’s charm for the very first time.
There was a knock on the door. He turned to see
Thomas poke his head in.
‘I thought perhaps she would like some breakfast,’
whispered Thomas, nodding at the tray of food he was
carrying.
‘I think what she’d really like,’ said Adam, rising
to his feet, ‘is to be allowed to sleep.’ He followed Thomas into
the hall and softly closed the door behind him. ‘Did you collect
her clothes?’
‘I’m afraid they’re quite beyond repair,’ Thomas
said with a sigh.
‘Then would you arrange to have some things sent up
to the house? She’ll probably need her entire wardrobe replaced. I
doubt anything survived the fire.’
Thomas nodded. ‘I’ll put a call in to
Neiman-Marcus. A size six, don’t you think?’
With sudden clarity, Adam remembered how slender
she’d felt against him last night, climbing the steps to the guest
room. ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘A six sounds about right.’
Downstairs, Adam lounged about the dining room,
sipping coffee, picking at his breakfast without much appetite. He
listened with amusement as Thomas made phone calls in the next
room. A complete wardrobe, Thomas said. Yes, undergarments as well.
What cup size? Well, how should he know?
Thomas hung up, and came into the dining room, looking distressed.
‘I’m having a problem with, er . . .
dimensions.’
Adam laughed. ‘I think we’re both out of our depth,
Thomas. Why don’t we wait until Dr. Novak wakes up?’
Thomas looked relieved. ‘An excellent idea.’
They heard the sound of tires rolling over gravel.
Adam glanced through the window and saw a blue Chevy pull up in the
driveway. ‘Must be Lieutenant Sykes,’ he said. ‘I’ll let him
in.’
He was surprised to find both Sykes and Ratchet
waiting at the front door. Apparently they came as a matched set,
even on Saturdays. They were even similarly dressed in strictly
nonregulation golf shirts and sneakers.
‘Morning, Mr. Q.,’ said Sykes, pulling off his
sunglasses. He held up a briefcase. ‘I got what you wanted.’
‘Come in, please. There’s coffee and breakfast, if
you’d like.’
Ratchet grinned. ‘Sounds great.’
The three men sat down at the dining table. Thomas
brought out cups, saucers, a fresh pot of coffee. Ratchet tucked a
napkin in his shirt and began to adorn a bagel with cream cheese.
Not just a dab here and there, but giant slabs of it, topped with
multiple layers of lox. Sykes took only coffee, heavily sugared – a
favorite energy source, he said, from his patrolman days.
‘So what do you have?’ asked Adam.
Sykes took several files from the briefcase and
laid them on the table. ‘The files you asked for. Oh, and about the
explosion last night—’
‘Not a gas leak?’
‘Definitely not a gas leak. Demolitions went over
what was left of the house,’ said Sykes. ‘It appears there was a
pull-friction fuse igniter, set off when the front door opened. The
igniter gets pulled through a flash compound, lighting a
sixty-second length of fuse. That in turn leads to a blasting cap.
And a rather impressive amount of TNT.’
Adam frowned. ‘A sixty-second fuse? Then that
explains why it didn’t go off right away.’
Sykes nodded. ‘A delay detonator. Designed to blow
up after the victim is in the house.’
‘They aren’t fooling around. Whoever they are,’
Ratchet added, around a mouthful of bagel.
Adam sat back, stunned by this new information.
Until now he’d hoped for some simple explanation. A faulty furnace,
perhaps; a natural gas leak whose odor he hadn’t detected. But here
was incontrovertible evidence: Someone wanted Kat dead. And they
were going to extraordinary lengths to achieve that goal.
He was so shocked by the revelation that he didn’t
realize Kat had come down into the dining room. Then he looked up
and saw her. She seemed swallowed up in one of his old bathrobes,
the flaps cinched together at the waist. She glanced around the
table at Sykes and Ratchet.
‘You heard what Lou said?’ asked Adam.
She nodded. Then she took a deep breath. ‘So I
guess it’s time to face the facts. Someone’s really trying to kill
me.’
After a silence, Adam said, ‘It does appear that
way.’
Hugging her arms to her chest, Kat began to move
slowly around the room, thinking as she paced. She stopped by the
window and gazed out at the sunwashed lawn and trees.
‘Believe me, Kat,’ said Sykes. ‘Bellemeade
Precinct’s got all cylinders going on this. I’ve spoken with the
detectives. They’re checking all the possibilities—’
‘Are they really?’ she asked softly.
‘There are a lot of angles to consider. Maybe it’s
someone you gave expert testimony against in court. Or an
ex-boyfriend. Hell, they’re even questioning Ed.’
‘Ed?’ She laughed, a wild, desperate sound. ‘Ed
can’t even program a VCR. Much less wire a bomb.’
‘Okay, so it’s probably not Ed. Not him personally,
anyway. But he has been questioned.’
She turned to look at Sykes. ‘Then everyone agrees.
It’s a bona fide murder attempt.’
‘No doubt about it. It only takes one look at your
house. Or what used to be your house.’
She looked out again, at the trees. ‘It’s because
of them.’
‘Who?’
‘Nicos Biagi. Jane Doe. It’s because of what’s
happening in the Projects.’
‘You could have other enemies,’ said Sykes. ‘And
you lost your purse, remember? One of those punks could’ve gotten
into your house—’
‘And set a sixty-second delay detonator?’ She shook
her head. ‘I suppose they picked up a case of TNT at the corner
grocery store. Lou, they were kids. I grew
up with kids just like them! They wouldn’t mess around with flash
compounds or blasting caps. And what’s their motive?’
‘I don’t know.’ Sykes sighed in exasperation. ‘They
did rough you up—’
‘But they didn’t kill us! They had the chance, but
they didn’t.’
Adam looked at Sykes. ‘She’s right, Lieutenant.
Those kids wouldn’t know about fuse igniters. This bomb sounds like
a sophisticated device. Built by someone who knew what he was
doing.’
‘A professional,’ said Ratchet.
The word was enough to make Kat blanch. Adam saw
her chin jerk up, saw the tightening of her lips. She was
frightened, all right. She should be. In silence she moved to the
table and sat down across from him. The bathrobe gaped open a
little; only then did he realize she was naked beneath that
terrycloth. How defenseless she looked, he thought. Stripped of
everything. Even her clothes.
And at that moment, defenseless was exactly how Kat
felt.
She sat hugging the robe to her breasts, her gaze
fixed on the tabletop. She heard Sykes and Ratchet rise to leave;
dimly she registered their goodbyes, their departing footsteps.
Then there came the thud of the front door closing behind them.
Closed doors. That’s what she saw when she tried to look into the
future. Closed doors, hidden dangers.
Once, life had seemed comfortably predictable.
Drive to work every morning, drive home every night. A vacation
twice a year, a date once in a blue moon. A steady move up the
ranks until she’d assume Davis Wheelock’s title of Chief ME. A sure
thing, he’d told her once.
Now she was reminded that there were no sure
things. Not her future. Not even her life.
‘You’re not alone, Kat,’ said Adam.
She looked up and met his gaze across the
tabletop.
‘Anything you need,’ he said. ‘Anything at
all—’
‘Thanks,’ she said with a smile. ‘But I’m not big
on accepting charity.’
‘That’s not what I meant. I don’t think of you as
some charity case.’
‘But that’s exactly what I am at the moment.’ She
rose and began to pace. ‘Some sort of – of homeless person! Camping
out in your guest bedroom.’
To her surprise, he suddenly laughed. ‘To be
perfectly honest,’ he admitted, ‘you do
look a little threadbare this morning. Where did you find that
bathrobe, by the way?’
She glanced down at the frayed terrycloth and
suddenly she had to laugh as well. ‘Your linen closet. I had to
wear something, and I figured it was either this or a towel. Where
are my clothes, by the way?’
‘A lost cause. Thomas had to throw them out.’
‘He threw out my clothes?’
‘Some new things are being delivered.’
She caught his amused downward glance, and realized
the robe had sagged open again. Irritably she yanked the edges back
together.
She sat down and noticed the stack of papers on the
table. ‘What’s all this?’
‘Lieutenant Sykes dropped it off. They’re police
files. Or, rather, photocopies of files.’
‘He gave them to you?
That’s highly irregular.’
‘It’s also just between us. He and I have what you
might call a mutual back-scratching arrangement.’
‘Oh. So what’s in the files?’
Adam picked up the top folder. ‘I have here Nicos
Biagi. And Xenia Vargas. And Jane Doe.’ He looked up at her, almost
apologetically. ‘I’ll be honest with you, Kat. I didn’t ask for
these files on your behalf, but on mine. For Cygnus. I can’t argue
away the facts. That is my drug out there,
killing people. I want to know how they got it.’
She focused on the top file. ‘Let’s see what’s in
there.’
He opened Nicos Biagi’s folder. ‘Names and
addresses. His family might know where he bought the drug.’
‘They won’t talk. Even Sykes couldn’t get it out of
them.’
‘Does that surprise you? They probably smelled
cop a mile away. So I’m going to ask
them.’
‘I wonder what odor they’ll pin on you.’
‘The smell of money? It’s very persuasive.’
‘Adam, you can’t walk into the Projects with a
bulging wallet!’
‘Can you think of a better incentive?’
‘You go in there without protection, and they’ll
have you for an appetizer.’
‘Then how am I supposed to reach these people?’ he asked, pointing to the
folders. ‘I went through a half-dozen private detectives, trying to
trace Maeve. So I don’t have a lot of confidence in so-called
professionals. I know that some friend of Nicos, or of Xenia
Vargas, has to know the answers. You’re the one who said it, Kat.
If we can’t pinpoint how the drug’s getting out of Cygnus, perhaps
we can figure out whom it’s going to. And how he’s getting
it.’
‘Are you sure you really want to find out?’ she
asked. ‘What if the answer turns out to be a nasty surprise?’
‘You’re referring to Maeve?’
‘Her name did cross my mind.’
He sighed. ‘It’s something
I’ll . . . have to face.’
‘That’s why you’re doing this yourself, isn’t it?
Why you don’t just hire a PI to do the legwork. You’re afraid of
what some outsider will find out about your daughter.’
He looked away. ‘You know, I used to think I could
protect her. Pull her off the streets and put her in some sort of
program. But it’s not going to happen. She refuses to be helped.
And in the meantime, people are dying, and I don’t know if she’s
the one responsible . . .’
‘You can’t protect her, Adam. One of these days,
she’ll have to face the music.’
‘Don’t you think I know that?’ He shook his head in
frustration. ‘All these years, that’s exactly what I’ve been doing!
Protecting her, bailing her out. Paying her bills when she bounced
her checks. Booking her appointments with therapists. I kept
thinking, if she just had enough attention, if I could just do the
right thing – whatever that was – that somehow she’d pull out of
it. She wouldn’t end up like Georgina.’
Georgina. She thought of
the name she’d seen, inscribed on the plaque in Hancock General.
The Georgina Quantrell Wing.
She asked, gently, ‘How did your wife die?’
He was silent for so long, she thought perhaps he
hadn’t heard the question. ‘She died of a lot of things,’ he said
at last. ‘The official diagnosis was liver cirrhosis. But the
illness really went back to her childhood. A father addicted to
martinis and work. A mother addicted to pills and cigarettes.
Georgina looked for comfort wherever she could find it. By the time
we met, she’d already been through two husbands and Lord knows how
many bottles of gin. I was twenty-four at the time. All I saw was
this – this absolutely stunning woman with an adorable daughter.
Georgina was adept at covering up. If she had to, she could go off
the bottle for weeks at a time, and that’s what she did before the
wedding. But after we got back from the honeymoon, I noticed she
was having a few too many highballs, a few too many glasses of
wine. Then Thomas found the stash of bottles in the closet. And
that’s when I realized how far it had gone . . .’ He
shook his head and sighed. ‘Fourteen years later, she was dead. And
I’m still trying to deal with the aftermath. Namely, Maeve.’
‘You stayed married to her through all that?’
‘I felt I didn’t have a choice. But then, neither
did she. Self-destruction was in her genes, and she didn’t have the
will to fight. She just wasn’t strong enough.’ He paused, and added
quietly, ‘Unlike you.’
He looked at her then, and she found her gaze
trapped in the blue-gray spell of his eyes. They reached out to
each other across the table and their fingers touched, twined
together. They held on, even through the ringing of the doorbell
and the sound of Thomas’s footsteps crossing the foyer to answer
it.
Only the polite clearing of a throat made them
finally look up. Thomas was standing in the doorway. ‘Mr. Q.?’ he
said. ‘The wardrobe consultant is here from Neiman-Marcus. I
thought perhaps Dr. Novak would like to look over the
selections.’
‘Wardrobe consultant?’ said
Kat in surprise. ‘But all I really need right now is a pair of
jeans and a change of underwear.’
‘You needn’t take the consultant’s advice,’ said
Thomas. ‘Although . . .’ He glanced at her bathrobe.
‘I’m certain she’ll have a number of, er, helpful suggestions.’
Kat laughed and pushed back from the table. ‘Bring
her on, then. I guess I need to wear something.’
‘When you’ve made your selections, Dr. Novak,’ said
Thomas, ‘just leave the bathrobe with me. I’ll see that it’s
properly taken care of.’
‘Whatever you say,’ said Kat.
‘Very good,’ said Thomas and he turned to leave. As
he walked out of the room, he muttered with undisguised glee,
‘Because I’m going to burn it.’
Protection was what they needed in South Lexington.
And when it came to hostile territory, Kat decided, the best to be
had was from the natives. So it was to Papa Earl’s apartment they
went first, to have a talk with his grandson, Anthony. The boy
might not hold any real power in the Projects, but he’d know how to
reach those who did.
They found him slouched in his undershirt, watching
Days of Our Lives in the living room.
‘Anthony,’ said Papa Earl. ‘Katrina wants to talk
to you.’
Anthony raised the remote control and changed the
channel to Jeopardy.
‘You listening, boy?’ barked Papa Earl.
‘What?’
‘Katrina and her friend, they come to see you.’
Kat moved in front of the TV, deliberately blocking
Anthony’s view. He looked up at her with sullen dark eyes. It was
heartbreaking to see how little was left of the child she used to
babysit. In his place was a tinderbox of rage.
‘We want to ask the big man a favor,’ said
Kat.
‘What big man you talking about?’
‘We’re willing to pay up front. Safe passage,
that’s all we ask. And maybe a friend or two to watch our backs. No
cops involved, we swear it.’
‘What you want safe passage for?’
‘Just to talk to some people. About Nicos and
Xenia.’ She paused and added, ‘And you can tell Maeve we’re not
after her.’
Anthony twitched and looked away. So he was the one
who had warned her, she decided. ‘How much?’ he asked.
‘A hundred.’
‘And how much does the big man get?’
The kid was sharp. ‘Another hundred.’
Anthony thought about it a moment. Then he said,
‘Move outta the way.’ Kat stepped aside. He pointed the remote
control and switched off the TV. ‘Wait here,’ he said. He stood up
and walked out of the apartment.
‘What do you think?’ asked Adam.
‘He’s either going to come back with our
bodyguards,’ said Kat, ‘or a hit squad.’
‘Don’t know what I’m gonna do ’bout that boy,’ said
Papa Earl. ‘I just don’t know.’
Ten minutes passed. They all sat in the kitchen,
where Bella banged pots and pans on the stove. The smell of old
cooking grease, of frying sausages and simmering pinto beans, was
almost enough to drive them out. Those smells brought back too many
memories for Kat, of stifling summer evenings when the smells from
her mother’s stove would kill whatever appetite she had, when the
heat from the kitchen seemed to suck the air out of every room.
Now, as she watched young Bella, she saw the ghost of her own
mother, squinting into the haze of hot oil.
A door banged shut. Adam and Kat turned to see
Anthony come into the kitchen. With him were two other boys, both
about sixteen, both with the cold, flat expressions of foot
soldiers.
‘You got it,’ said Anthony. ‘Just this one day. You
want to come back again, you pay again. They’ll watch your backs.’
He collected his two hundred dollars from Adam. ‘So where do you
want to go first?’
‘The Biagi flat,’ said Kat.
Anthony looked at the boys. ‘Okay. Take ’em
there.’