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The gun had landed several feet from his arm. I picked it up, aimed it at Irving.

He didn’t move. His face was pulp.

A few feet away, Ben Dugger moaned. I went to see how he was doing.

CHAPTER 35

“WRONG,” I SAID. “By light-years.”

Dugger smiled. “About what?”

“About you. About lots of things.”

It was eleven A.M., three days after I’d watched Cheryl Duke die.

During that time Robin had left one message on the machine. Sorry I missed you. I’ll try to call again… No home number was listed for her friend Debby, and when I tried Debby’s dental office, I got voice mail informing me the doctor was out for a week.

For three days my life had been stagnating, but Ben Dugger had traveled: from the ambulance I’d called, to the E.R. at St. John’s, to three and a half hours of surgery – tying together blood vessels in his thigh – to recovery, then two nights in a private room at the hospital.

Now this place, bright yellow and vast and dim, the air sweet with ci

The room was on the third floor of his father’s mansion. Doting nurses hovered round the clock, but he seemed mostly to want to rest.

I’d phoned yesterday to request permission, waited half a day for the call back from a woman who identified herself as Tony Duke’s personal assistant’s assistant, had been allowed through the copper gates an hour ago.

I’d driven up, sat scrutinized as the closed-circuit camera rotated for several minutes, then the tentacles parted and a mountainous bouncer type in a fudge brown suit stepped out and showed me where to park. When I exited the car he was there. Escorted me through a fern grove and a pine forest to the peach-colored, blue-roofed house. Stayed with me as we entered the building, exerting the merest pressure at my elbow, propelling me across an acre of black granite iced by two tons of Baccarat chandelier hanging three stories above, the entry hall commodious enough for a presidential convention. Flemish paintings, carved, gilded baseboards and moldings, gold velvet walls, the elevator cut so seamlessly into the plush fabric that I could’ve walked past it.

Finally, this room, with its canary-colored damask walls. Bad color for recuperation. Dugger looked jaundiced.

He coughed.

I said, “Need anything?”

Smiling again, he shook his head. Pillows surrounded him, a percale halo. His thin hair was plastered across his brow, and beneath the sallowness his skin tone was dirty snow. The IV taped to his arm dripped, and the instruments monitoring his vitals blinked and bleeped and graphed his mortality. The ceiling above him was a trompe l’oeil grape arbor painted in garish hues. Silly in any context, but especially so now. If not for the way I felt, I might’ve smiled.

“Anyway,” I said. “I just wanted to-”

“Whatever you think you did, you made up for it.” He pointed shakily at his bandaged leg. Irving’s stray bullet had passed through his thigh, nicked his femoral artery. I’d tied back the wound, stanched as much of the bleeding as I could, used the cell phone in the pocket of Irving’s sweatpants to call 911.

“Not even close to a tie,” I said. “If you hadn’t shown up-”

“Hey, it’s a soft science,” he said. “Psychology. We study, we guess, sometimes we’re right, other times…” Weak smile.

The door opened, and Dr. Rene Maccaferri marched in. Those same appraising eyes. White lab coat over black turtleneck and slacks, pointy little lizardskin shoes on too-small feet. He looked like a goombah playing doctor, and I told myself I could be forgiven my theories.

Mr. Wrong.

Maccaferri ignored me, checked the monitors, approached Dugger’s bedside. “They taking good care of you?”



“Too good, Rene.”

“What’s too good?”

“I’m not used to it.”

“Try,” Maccaferri told him. “I talked to the vascular surgeon. He’ll be over today to look you over, monitor you for infection, make sure no thromboses. You look good to me, but better to make sure.”

“Whatever you say, Rene. How’s Dad?”

Maccaferri’s thick, black, fuzzy-caterpillar brows knitted, and he glanced at me.

“It’s okay, Rene.”

“Daddy is about the same,” said the doctor, turning to leave.

“Okay, Rene. Thanks. As always.”

Maccaferri stopped at the door. “There’s always, and there’s always.”

Dugger’s eyes went moist.

When the door closed I said, “I’m sorry to add to your burden.”

Both of us knew what I meant: Life had thrown him a double dose of grief. Anticipation of the loss to come, pining for the sister he’d never really gotten to know.

Meeting her, losing her.

He turned his head to the side and fought back tears. “I know the road to hell’s paved with good intentions, but I’m one of those people who still takes intention into account. Whatever you did, it was because you cared about Lauren – My throat’s a little dry, could you please hand me that 7UP?”

I poured soda into a paper cup, held it to his lips.

He drank. “Thanks – How long did you actually treat her? Tell me about that – tell me anything you can.”

He’d shared his story. I had no option but to reciprocate. I recited, speaking automatically, while another lobe of my brain remembered.

The anxiety in his eyes when Milo had questioned him about Lauren. What I’d taken for guilt had been pain – a solitary ache.

Lauren and I agreed to do it the right way, not just spring it on everyone. There was Anita to think about – Dad’s illness has plunged her lower than I’ve ever seen her, and she doesn’t do well with change. And Dad, himself. I was concerned about the impact. So was Lauren, she wanted whatever happened to go smoothly or not at all. She said Dad knew about her – years ago, when Lauren’s mother wrote to him, he called, wanted to meet Lauren, but her mother put it off, said Lauren had emotional problems, she wasn’t ready. Dad tried a couple more times, then Dad backed off. That was just like him – make his offer, then not push. Maybe it’s a character flaw – emotional laziness, I don’t know. Sometimes, growing up, I felt Dad was too laid-back – as if he didn’t care. But on balance it was better than his trying to dominate Anita and me… In Lauren’s case, maybe if he would’ve pushed… How can you second-guess? By the time Lauren did build up the courage to meet me and tell me who she was, Dad was sick and weak. I was worried abut the shock. Maybe I – What’s the use…? Right from the begi

I said, The phone booth.

He nodded, winced. Moved his leg and his breath caught. That was part of our… arrangement. When we built up the courage to bring Lauren to Dad’s house. She’d call me at Point Dume, and if it was okay – relatively quiet at the house – I’d pick her up. I told people she was my friend – childish, I know. I think we both liked the cloak-and-dagger aspect. I would have so liked to know her better – longer… My little sister.

At that point he’d broken down and sobbed, and I’d turned away, feeling low and intrusive, until his voice drew me back.

Don’t worry, I’ve had enough therapy not to be ashamed of my feelings. I guess what I want you to know is that Lauren had value to me – dammit, she deserves to be cried over. Maybe that’s what bothers me the most. There’s no one left to cry for her but me. That time you and Sturgis showed up at my apartment and told me what happened to her – it was as if my entire world was imploding. I’m not the most spontaneous person, but right then I could’ve just… gone mad. Of course, I didn’t. Too controlled… too much at risk… The thing about Lauren was that she made me feel like a kid – something I rarely felt when I actually was a kid. The two of us were pla