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"So instead of getting a hundred percent of the settlement, they wind up with sixty because forty goes into some shyster's pocket."

"Like I said: perfectly legal. Lex scripta is all that matters. But you have to take into account that a lot of those people wouldn't have wound up with a dime if the ads hadn't spurred them to action."

"Swell system. You sleep okay at night?"

Tom felt his jaw clench. "You're not going to do your Mr. Sanctimonious impersonation again, are you? What about your pal Joey?"

"Not my pal."

"You ever inculpate him about his cell phone scam?"

"That's different."

"Really? How? He bilks thousands. I want to play around with a bogus twenty and you get on your high horse. How come he gets a pass but not me?"

"I don't like what Joey does but, because of the way he was raised, he doesn't know any better. He thinks that's how life is. But that's only a side issue. Joey's not my brother. You are. And you and I were raised with the crazy notion that doing the right thing mattered—mattered more than just about anything else. And the right thing is the right thing, even if the law says otherwise. Remember?"

Tom tried to remember. But his boyhood days growing up in the tiny town of Johnson, New Jersey, were a blur. Echoes of Dad's voice flitted through his head, but he couldn't hear what he was saying. Probably because he hadn't been paying attention at the time.

All he'd wanted was out. He'd seen Philadelphia and Manhattan and Baltimore and D.C. on class trips and had known immediately that Johnson was not the place for him.

And then he remembered the night he'd almost been killed, and Dad shouting at him. First, because he was scared that Tom had almost killed himself, and then because of how he'd almost done it.

He'd come across this Trans Am with the keys in the ignition. Sixteen, no license, but he knew how to drive. So he'd taken it for a spin. Everything was going fine until he went into a curve a little too fast and wound up wrapping the car around a tree.

Just one of those teenage things.

"Oh, yeah. I forgot. Saint Jack. Daddy's boy. He never had to worry about you going for a joyride."

"No, he didn't."

Tom had been out of the house by then, but it irked him to think that his kid brother had spent his high school years as some kind of namby-pamby geek. A teenager, especially a boy, was supposed to shake things up, give his parents a few gray hairs. All part of the rite of passage.

"Didn't think so."

Jack gri

"Bullshit."

He raised his hand, palm out. "Truth."

"Dad never mentioned—"

"That's because he never knew. Nobody knew. After I learned to hotwire a car—a lot easier in those days than now—I set a challenge for myself. The game was to borrow the ride, take it for a spin, then return it to the exact same spot with no one the wiser."

"And no one ever spotted you, no one ever looked out their window and noticed their car missing?"

Jack shrugged. "I did my homework."

Tom had to admit he was impressed. Maybe Jack hadn't been such a sissy boy after all.

4

As much as Jack liked to walk and enjoyed cooler weather, it felt good to step into the hotel lobby.

"When's check-out?"

Tom hesitated, a look of uncertainty flitting over his face.

"Wait here while I find out."

Jack didn't see why he shouldn't accompany him to the registration desk, but didn't argue. As he stood alone in the virtually deserted lobby, a wave of sadness swept over him.

Had things gone as pla

He felt his throat constrict.

Shit. Shit-shit-shit!

Tom's voice drew him back to the here and now.

"I'm going to stay another night."

"What?"

"I just checked to see if I could extend my stay and they said no problem. Seems the hotel's practically deserted. New York, it appears, has suddenly lost its cachet as a destination city."

"But why are you staying?"

Tom shrugged. "I don't know. Just feel I should. Then I can drive down to Johnson with you tomorrow."

Oh, hell.

"Why do you assume I have a car?"

Tom looked surprised. "The Phantom Joyrider doesn't own a set of wheels? I don't believe it."

"Lots of New Yorkers are wheelless. A car is more of a hassle—an expensive one—than a convenience in a city like this."

"But that doesn't answer the question: Do you own a car?"

"Yes."

Abe was going to drive him out to La Guardia this afternoon. They'd switch tickets and then drive out. As a recent arrival—he'd say he'd just dropped someone off—he'd be under less scrutiny.

"Are you driving down to make arrangements for the wake tomorrow?"

"Yes."

"Can I hitch a ride?"

How could he say no?

"Of course you can."

Tom gave him a tight smile. "There. Wasn't that easy?"

"But what about your wife—wives—and kids? Aren't they coming?"

"Sure. I'll hook up with them at the wake."

Jack couldn't see any way out of this. Even if Tom was his only living relative, an hour and a half cooped up with him in a car…

And then he had an awful thought. Gia and Vicky were pla

"You should know that I'll have a couple of other people along."

Tom's eyebrows rose. "Is that so? Who, pray tell?"

"A woman I know and her daughter."

He gri

"We've already got plans."

"Well, if they include di

He'd pla

"Okay. But not here."

"Why not? It's excellent. I ate there last night and—"

"Sorry. We've got reservations at Lucille's tonight."

"So? Break them."

"Can't."

Jack didn't understand Tom's wistful look as he glanced toward the entrance of Joe O's.

"It'll be so easy. I'll just charge it to my room and—"

"Yeah, but the problem is I know the guy who's playing Lucille's tonight. He asked me to come down and listen, fill a couple of seats for him."

Actually the singer, Jesse Roy Bighead DuBois, had told Jack he'd have a surprise for him if he showed. Wouldn't say what, but he'd piqued Jack's curiosity.

But with all that had happened, Jack had forgotten about Jesse and his gig. When Gia had reminded him this morning, telling him she'd call and cancel their reservation if he wanted, his first impulse had been to say yes. But when he considered his other options, sitting with Gia and listening to some blues while having di

Tom frowned. "Playing what?"

"He fronts a blues band. Of course if you don't like blues—"

Hope-hope-hope.

"I'm a blues aficionado. Count me in."

Jack repressed a sigh.

But then, maybe it wasn't right to leave his only sib alone two nights in a row.

Or was it?