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Daddy? Should I go back there? Is that what I should do?

But the answer was obvious.

That would be the wise thing, Susan.

Fu

32

Amelie decided to visit Roch in the hospital: just once, because she had to.

It was safe; she was safe from him there. Anyway, she thought, the whole world is pretty much safe from Roch, now and forever.

He looked up sullenly from the bed. Roch had lost a lot of weight; his singed hair had been cropped short. He looked like a convict, Amelie thought … which she guessed he was, or at least potentially. She hadn’t pressed charges, but the holding company that owned the warehouse was pretty pissed off. (Even though their insurance must have paid them off in full—the fire must have been like hitting a Vegas jackpot, considering the condition of the property.)

But Roch didn’t care. He just looked up at her with his hollow eyes. And Amelie felt perversely guilty for coming here at all … she was still that vulnerable to his anger.

“I’m going away,” she said.

He didn’t answer. Silence was one of the few weapons he had left.

She went on, “I know this is a shitty time and all, considering what happened, but I don’t think I owe you anything anymore. I guess that’s pretty obvious. I mean, it’s too bad what happened, but it isn’t my fault.”

“I almost killed you,” he said. The words were slurred with medication, but totally sincere. She felt his anger simmering inside him. He had been insulted in a way he could barely comprehend. The last insult, Amelie thought, if only he would let it be. “I should have,” he added.

Well, maybe she had made a mistake, coming here. But it was important, not just for Roch’s sake but for Amelie’s: important to talk to his doctors … important to see him; important to prove to herself that she need never be afraid of him again. The doctors called it “a spinal cord injury sustained during his fall,” but Amelie knew it was really more than that. It was her protection. It was a guarantee that Roch would never be able to hurt her again.

Still—she felt sorry for him, lying broken in this hospital bed.

It should not have been possible, this surge of pity.

Mysterious.

She had talked to John about Roch, not long before all this happened. John had encountered Roch only that one time, in her apartment, but John had guessed a few things about him. He asked, “Was your mother an alcoholic?” and Amelie said, “Well—you could say that. She drank pretty heavy sometimes.”

“Before Roch was born? When she was pregnant?”

“Probably. I think so. Why?”

He told her, “There’s a condition called ‘fetal alcohol syndrome.’ Sometimes it causes retardation. Sometimes it has other effects, more subtle.”

“You think Roch has that?”

“It’s possible. All that unfocused anger. The alcohol interferes with fetal development, particularly the development of the brain. It has a sort of scattering effect on the neurons. The glial cells—”

Amelie waved her hand. “Maybe Roch has that. I don’t know. Does it matter? Lots of people have lots of problems. When it comes down to it, what matters is what you do—right? Not what you are.”

And John had smiled a strange, distant smile and nodded his head slowly. “Yes, Amelie. That’s what matters.”

She told Roch goodbye now, and left the room.

Amelie had stayed on at the big house north of the city. Kyriakides had said it was okay. But enough, she thought, was enough. John was back from the hospital now. And Benjamin—

Benjamin was dead.

Well, maybe that wasn’t exactly true. John wasn’t Benjamin anymore; but he wasn’t exactly John, either. Privately, Amelie figured he was something that John and Benjamin had both needed to become. Maybe something they had been all along. Something more basic, more raw, more true.

Maybe what she had loved about Benjamin was this becoming. Benjamin had been half finished and wholly i

Almost finished.

She packed two Tourister suitcases. She could come back for her other stuff later, when she found a place. Her little Sanyo stereo … Kyriakides could keep it, or Susan, or John. She didn’t care.





On her way out, she stopped off at the big study where Dr. Kyriakides was scribbling away in some kind of notebook, his glasses practically toppling off the end of his nose. She stood in the doorway until he noticed her.

He spotted the suitcases. “You’re leaving?”

She nodded.

“Do you have a place to go?”

“I can rent a room until I find an apartment. Maybe I can get my old job back.”

“I want you to know—you’re free to room here as long as you like.”

“I think it would be better to get away.”

Kyriakides frowned … Something he wants to say, Amelie thought … then he cleared his throat.

She waited.

He said, “Amelie … I know about the pregnancy.”

“Christ!” She was appalled. “Who told you that? It was Collingwood, right? The clinic doctor told Collingwood and Collingwood told you. Jesus!

So much for fucking privacy!”

“This is an unusual situation,” Kyriakides said. “I assume it’s John’s child?”

Amelie considered walking out. She didn’t owe Kyriakides anything. He hadn’t earned this conversation.

Some impulse restrained her. “Benjamin’s child,” she said. An important distinction. “You bet it is.”

“Calm down. I didn’t engineer this invasion of your privacy for the sake of voyeurism. The point is, I want to help.”

“Help?”

“Help the child. I can arrange for money, a place for you to stay—”

“I don’t want to be a fucking research project!”

“I don’t want you to be. It’s just that I feel like a grandfather to this child. I’ve thought about it a lot. About the past, the present. I think now I might not have given John everything he deserved. I would like a chance to do better. Even in a small way. This is—” He spread his hands on the desk. “This is important to me.”

He means it, Amelie thought. The offer was absolutely sincere. She couldn’t say exactly why it bothered her so much. Still—“I appreciate it,” she said. “But we’ll be fine.”

“You can’t be sure of that.”

“I’m not totally alone. I have friends. If I need help, I’ll get in touch.” With John, she thought privately, or whatever John was now. He had earned that co

“You don’t understand what I’m offering.”

The tone was imperious. She frowned. “Maybe I don’t.”

“You wouldn’t have to work. No more tawdry little restaurant jobs. No more cold-water apartments. All that would be over. And there’s nothing I want in exchange. No deal to make. Nothing to give up. Just say yes.”

She picked up her luggage. “Thank you anyway.”

She turned to leave.

His voice boomed after her: “What can you give to that child? You have nothing! My God! One more slutty welfare mother with one more worthless infant-is that what you want to be?”

“I’m not good enough for you?” She turned to face him. “You want me to be something better. You want this baby to be something better. But you don’t even know what that word means. You talk about people like they’re bugs, insects. You say you hate them because they’re cruel and stupid, but you can take a life and twist it all out of shape—how are you different?”

“I’ve seen more cruelty than you have. Cruelty and destructive stupidity. God help us, is it wrong to want to change that?”