Author's disclaimer: Not being a member of the legal profession, I am extremely dubious about the usefulness of this, however:
The guyz are owned by Pet Fly, et al. I am stealing them for a while, and make no promises about returning them.
Author's notes: This is a long mutha of a story, so, in order to avoid overloading the server and pissing off the listmom and archive elves, I'm posting it in three chunks throughout the day. It *is* finished. Please be patient.
This story is dedicated to Pumpkin, just because.
Many, *many* thanks go to my beta-readers: Paulette, Nancy, Emily and Linda. They have stuck with me through the ten-month gestation of this story, and I appreciate their help more than I can ever say. Paulette was especially helpful with certain plot developments, and I am deeply in her debt. All errors, however, are solely mine.
This story breaks from the episodes in late third season -- please pretend that Night Shift and Sentinel Too, part 1 have not happened.
If you are offended by reading about the occasional Bad Scientist, bail now.
Comments and criticisms are welcome, if not actively solicited.
Those Who Can
I stayed by the truck and let Jim walk through the neat rows of white
stones alone. When we'd climbed out of the truck he had looked at me
for a second, his request clear in his eyes. I could come this far,
but he had to be alone now. So I leaned against the hood, the metal
warm against my back, and nodded.
"I'll be here when you're finished."
He moved quickly through the damp grass, his steps marking a dark trail
through the long blades. He stopped by one stone, a little brighter
than the rest, and bowed his head, standing there completely motionless.
I'm always amazed at how still Jim can be, especially when he gets upset.
Some people bounce off the walls, others can't shut up, but Jim... Jim
closes the blinds and dims the lights and retreats so far inside himself
that I used to wonder how the hell he managed to find his way back.
The clouds were moving fast. We'd had rain and sun on and off all morning,
and the pavement was damp. Must've rained right before we pulled up.
Jim squatted down, picked up a pebble from the ground and placed it on
top of the stone, running his hand over the polished surface. What did
the granite feel like to him? Was it as smooth as it looked, or did
thousands of tiny imperfections mar the surface and make it into a microscopic
Grand Canyon that only he could feel? I thought about asking him, but
knew I never would. Not now. I'd have found that information interesting
a couple of months ago, but now it didn't matter.
A sudden shaft of sunlight spilled from the clouds, so bright it made
me squint. The grass and new April leaves on the trees sparkled, like
someone had suddenly decided to turn on their little white holiday lights,
regardless of the season. Jim practically glowed, the light picking
out his winter-pale cheek and jaw, making the blue of his jacket almost
iridescent. That weird plucking sensation in my chest made me turn away
for a minute and frown at the small, ugly buildings almost hidden behind
the trees.
When I turned back, Jim was retracing his steps across the grass. He
stopped a foot in front of me and tilted his head as he studied my face.
"What is it?" I rubbed at my mouth. "Did I miss something when I washed?"
He smiled and cupped his hand around my chin, lifting my face a little.
"No, you didn't miss anything, Chief." Then he released me and jerked
his head toward the truck. "Let's go. Simon'll have both our hides
if we don't show our faces soon."
We were a mile down the road before I asked. "You feel better, now?"
He pursed his lips for a minute, like he was considering the question.
"Yeah, I feel better."
"Good."
The play punch to my arm was gentle, like his smile and the expression
in his eyes.
The phone had rung at 6:38 on a Wednesday evening.
I was chopping onions at the cooking island and keeping an eye on the
browning beef, trying to get the stew going. We'd both missed lunch and
were starving. Crime doesn't wait for the good guys to finish their
hot dogs, or in our case, let them take more than a bite.
Jim stood by the kitchen table, sorting through the day's mail. He likes
to do that first thing when he gets home. Me, I could let it pile up
for days before I bother to look at it, but not Jim.
"Hope it's not Simon," Jim muttered, frowning at the back of an envelope.
The phone rang a second time and he reached for the receiver. "Ellison."
A short pause, then "Cynthia?"
There was something in his tone of voice that made me look up. Jim isn't
the kind of person who shows much emotion on the surface, but I've gotten
pretty good at reading him over the past couple of years. He was surprised
and cautious, maybe even a little bit pleased.
I figured it was an old flame, someone pre-Carolyn, who had heard that
he was available and decided to touch base. Some women are always searching
for a good-looking escort for the upcoming holiday parties. Jim didn't
date a lot, and it worried me. I mean, the guy wasn't getting any younger,
and I hated the idea of him growing old alone. Not that I was doing
any better, but Jim... well, Jim has such a hard time really connecting
with people. Maybe his luck with women would change.
Then he said "How's Neil?" and I shelved my previous thoughts. It sounded
like Cynthia was already taken.
"What?"
Jim went still. He stood there, listening, completely motionless except
for that muscle twitching in his jaw. Whatever the news was, it was
bad.
"Where is he?" He closed his eyes briefly, then nodded. "I'll be there
in two hours, depending on the traffic- But- No, I don't want to wait
until the weekend. What about tomorrow? Are you sure? All right.
I'll be there by ten. And Cynthia? Thanks for letting me know."
Before I had a chance to ask him what was going on, he had punched in
another number.
"Simon? Jim. I've got to take off tomorrow... No, we're both fine.
I've got to go to Seattle on some personal business. No, it can't wait."
I could hear Simon's voice booming out of the receiver. Jim waited until
Simon paused - probably to breathe - and continued. "Okay, I'll come
in when I get back - probably mid-afternoon. Yes, sir."
He put the receiver down and turned, heading for the balcony. His shoulders
were hunched protectively and he moved slowly, like he'd been beaten
up a day or two before and all his muscles had had a chance to stiffen.
As I said, Jim doesn't show his emotions much, but you can read him if
you know what to look for. Right now he was hurting.
I went back to making dinner. Of course I wanted to ask him about the
phone call, but it was too soon. All I'd get would be a growl, or he
might just ignore me completely. So I kept an eye on him as he stood
there in the cold, staring out over the dark harbor.
I don't think he moved once during the half-hour it took to get dinner
on the table. I dished up the stew and cut up the cornbread, then went
to see what state he was in.
"It's time to come in, Jim. Dinner's ready." Damn, it was cold out
there. It was that raw, biting kind of cold that works its way into
your joints and makes you feel like you're eighty. "C'mon, man. You
must be freezing." I nudged his shoulder and he shivered.
"Dinner, Chief?" He sounded remote, and then he shivered again.
I grabbed his arm, and even through the thick wool of his sweater the
chill bit into my fingers. "Yeah. Dinner," I said, steering him back
inside. "Did you zone, Jim?"
"Zone? No. I was just thinking."
"Let's get you warmed up. How about a hot shower?"
"I'm fine. I don't need a shower." With another shiver he sat down
and cupped his hands around the bowl, leaning over it and warming his
face in the steam. He looked like a character out of a Dickens novel,
his face pale and pinched from the cold, clasping his bowl of gruel.
Hell, I'm not even sure what gruel is, but Jim looked like he was all
alone in the world, without a friend to help him. Which was stupid when
I thought about it, because I'm his friend, and I'd do pretty much anything
for him.
"Who was on the phone?" I asked after a while, when it looked like Jim
was going to sit there all night, doing his Oliver Twist impression.
But Jim hadn't even touched his dinner, much less asked for more.
He scooped up a big spoonful of stew. "An old friend," he said, and
downed it in one gulp.
"You going to Seattle to see her?" He stared at the wall and took another
bite, although his throat and jaw were so tight I wondered how he could
swallow.
I waited. Jim was pretty patient, but I could out-wait him when I had
to. He ate some more, frowned, rubbed his forehead, and stared at the
wall, working himself up to tell me what was going on. He pursed his
lips, right on schedule, and then sighed and looked at me.
"She's an old friend, Chief." His gaze slid over my shoulder. "Cynthia
called to tell me that her husband, Neil, is sick, and he'd like to see
me."
"What's the matter with him?"
"They're not sure, yet. He's in the hospital. They're doing a bunch
of tests."
"Oh. Hope it's nothing serious."
He shrugged and ate another spoonful. Guess that was all he was going
to say for now. That was okay. I had a two hour drive in the morning
to find out the details about these old friends.
"So, what time are we leaving?" I said casually. He looked so lost in
thought that I wondered if he'd even pick up on what I was saying.
"Around seven thirty..."
"Okay." I started to clear the table. Like an automaton, he picked
up his dishes and carried them to the sink. I thought I'd managed to
get away with it pretty neatly, and then his head snapped around and
he glared at me.
"Now just a minute, Sandburg. You aren't coming with me."
"C'mon, man, think for a second. You could use the company on the drive,
and I can read just as easily in the hospital as here."
"Forget it," he said as he filled the sink, squirting dishwashing liquid
into the hot water like it was going to cleanse his soul, or something.
"Jim-"
"I said forget it, Chief." The dishes clattered and soapsuds flew.
"No way. You might as well accept the fact that I'm going with you."
I grabbed a couple of plates and started to dry. "Even if I have to
sleep in the truck overnight and freeze my ass off."
There was silence. Well, not really silence, because Jim was making
a lot of noise with the bowls and pots, but he didn't say anything for
a while. I just kept drying and didn't look at him. It was only a matter
of time before he agreed. I mean, he knew it was for the best.
I reached for a bowl and he nudged me with his elbow. "I'm leaving at
seven thirty, Chief. If you're not ready to go, I'm leaving without
you. Got it?"
"Got it."
"Besides," he threw over his shoulder as he dried his hands and walked
over to the couch, "you haven't got enough ass to freeze off in the first
place."
"Like you'd notice, man," I muttered as I walked to my room.
"I notice everything, Sandburg."
Yeah, right. Jim Ellison really noticed my ass.
We were on the road for almost an hour before I asked him.
"So, how long have you known Cynthia and Neil?"
He didn't look at me, but his fingers tightened on the steering wheel.
I sighed, dreading another round of dragging information out of my way
repressed partner. I mean, Jim's gotten pretty good at telling me some
things, but others throw him right back into silent macho mode. Sometimes
I wonder if one day he's just gonna snap the steering wheel in half.
All that repression isn't good for a guy.
I was getting ready to ask again, and point out the fact that he might
as well spill his guts now and save us the trouble of sparring about
it, when he shrugged.
"Cynthia was my high school science teacher."
"Oh, yeah?" This was interesting. "How'd you meet her husband?"
He shrugged again. "I was working on some projects, and he helped out."
"And?"
"And what?"
"And how did you become such good friends?"
Jim glanced at me sharply. "You're a nosy little shit, Sandburg."
"And you're a close-mouthed big asshole, Jim," I snapped. "But that
doesn't answer my question."
"It wasn't supposed to," he said, and there was a hint of laughter in
his voice - the first I'd heard from him since last night's call.
"Oh, yeah, right. Ellison Avoidance Strategy number one thousand thirty-five.
Insult your partner so that he gets pissed off enough to drop the subject."
"You're learning, Darwin." He didn't even bother to hide his grin.
"Man, my life would be so much easier if I didn't have to deal with this
crap from you."
He opened his mouth, like he was going to make some smart comment back,
then closed it firmly. And that was that. I wasn't going to get anything
else out of Jim for the rest of the trip. I spent the next hour staring
out the window, wondering how many people would get upset at the news
that their high school science teacher's husband was ill. Upset enough
to stand out in the freezing cold until a friend dragged them inside.
Upset enough to offer to drive down to Seattle that evening. Upset enough
to take off a day of work to visit him.
I glanced over at Jim. What else did the man have hidden away in that
mysterious mind of his? For everything that I knew about Jim, there
were times I felt I didn't know him at all. This was one of those times.
As much as I hate the smell of hospitals, they're a hell of a lot worse
for Jim. All that blood and illness and death concentrated in one place,
distilled in a medical crucible... Dialing down can only do so much,
and once or twice I've seen him pass by a patient's room and reel like
he's been struck. When I asked him about it, he just muttered something
about the stench of decay, and wouldn't discuss it further. So I stuck
close to him as we took the elevator to the fifth floor and walked down
the long echoing corridor to room 530.
Jim paused about a yard from the door. I was looking at him closely,
and saw him squeeze his eyes shut for a second, then take a deep breath.
He was a couple of shades paler than he'd been when we'd walked into
the building.
"You gonna be okay, Jim?" I spoke softly.
"Yeah, I think so."
"You sure?" It was pretty obvious that I didn't believe him, but he just
darted me a glance and patted my arm before squaring his shoulders and
peering into the room.
I hung around by the door. I'm not usually shy or anything, but I suddenly
got this weird feeling of being an outsider. Yeah, I know I'm almost
always an outsider, but this was different somehow. Before I had a chance
to figure it out, Jim called.
"Chief? C'mon in."
The private room reeked of fake hospital cheerfulness, like flowers on
a grave. A guy in his late sixties was sitting up in the bed, an IV
tube snaking from his left arm. Other than that, he looked healthy.
Going bald and kind of paunchy, but healthy.
Jim flashed a smile my way. "Neil, this is my partner, Blair Sandburg.
Blair, Dr. Neil Morgan."
We shook hands, and Morgan gave me an assessing look. One of those laser-eyed
once-overs where you swear he can see your brand of underwear and doesn't
think much of your choice. Then he smiled and sat back, waving to a
chair along the wall.
"Good to meet you, Blair. Why don't you both have a seat?" He craned
his neck. "I'm sure there's another chair around here somewhere."
There wasn't, so Jim sat in the chair, grimacing as the vinyl cushion
murmured threateningly. Another thing I hate about hospitals is the way
all the chairs sound like whoopie cushion wannabes. I perched on the
wooden arm. It wasn't comfortable, but I'd been invited to stay, and
I was damned if I'd lose an opportunity to find out more about Jim's
past just because my butt would have an extra crease for a couple of
days.
Morgan's smiled faltered as he looked over at Jim.
"Thanks for coming, Jim. I know it's not convenient for you, but the
doctors have almost finished their tests, and I don't think the news
is going to be good. I wanted to talk with you while I still feel relatively
human."
Jim leaned forward in the chair, his shoulder brushing my arm. "You
know you only had to ask, Neil. I owe you and Cynthia a lot."
Morgan's smile vanished, and his gaze slid to another corner of the room.
"I wouldn't say that."
"I would." Jim looked puzzled and shifted his shoulders the way he does
when something unexpected happens, like he's trying on a new thought
for size and isn't sure if it fits.
"Cynthia's looking forward to seeing you," Morgan said, way too brightly.
"She said you sounded good on the phone last night."
"She sounded like herself. Very kind and completely in charge." Jim
sat back in the chair, relaxing a little.
"That hasn't changed. You should see her with the doctors - they don't
know what hit them."
They shared a chuckle and a knowing glance before turning thoughtful.
"What did you want to tell me, Neil?"
Morgan shook his head slowly. "There's so much... Cynthia!" His frown
was immediately replaced with a broad smile as his wife walked in.
She wasn't a beautiful woman, and probably never had been. But she had
one of the most interesting faces I've ever seen. Thin, with short-cropped
dark hair turning gray and deep-set dark eyes, containing a wealth of
experience. Whether it was good or bad experience, I couldn't tell.
Jim was on his feet like a shot, and I was only a beat behind. His arms
rose half-heartedly, then dropped to his sides. But she said his name
fondly and pulled him into a hug. After a second or two he responded,
his arms going around her, and he held her for a long minute. It was
really beautiful to see Jim open up like that. Eventually she patted
his back and he released her reluctantly.
"It's good to see you, Jim." She glanced over at me, so I stuck out
my hand.
"I'm Blair Sandburg, Jim's partner."
"Cynthia Morgan." She gave me a firm handshake and a smile, then turned
to her husband.
"I told you he would come," she said, chiding him gently, fussing with
his blanket and IV.
"And of course you were right."
She shot Jim an amused glance. "Have you two been catching up on old
times yet?" With a wave of her hand, she motioned us to sit, while she
perched on the edge of the bed, her hand stroking her husband's arm.
"We just got here," Jim said. "We haven't had much time to do anything."
There was an awkward pause in the conversation. I've noticed there often
is a period like that when old friends who haven't seen each other for
a while finally get together. Kind of like they have to re-adjust themselves
to the way they were the last time they saw each other. I thought I'd
help smooth things along.
"Jim said that you were his high school science teacher, Cynthia."
She flashed me another big smile. "That's right. Jim was my prize pupil
for three years."
"Jim? You're kidding, right? Jim doing science? I mean, Jim hates
the lab when-" I shut my mouth quickly, before I said something about
our tests. But honestly, could you see Jim Ellison as a prize pupil
in science? I glanced at him. He had turned his face away, but his neck
was so red it was practically glowing. Shit. I'd really put my foot
into it now. Both feet. No, both legs. Up to my sorry ass.
"Hey, man, I'm sorry. I didn't mean to imply... I just never thought
you were interested in science..." My voice trailed off weakly, and I
seriously considered the merits of sinking through the floor right about
then.
"Don't sweat it, Chief," he murmured, keeping his head down and waving
his hand dismissively.
"Actually," said Cynthia, with an understanding little smile, "Jim was
immensely talented in an area that is often neglected in the sciences.
He could take a theoretical concept, design a series of experiments to
test it, and then make whatever mechanical device or instrument was required.
I remember," she gave Jim a fond glance, "when we were studying earthquakes
and plate tectonics. Jim built a platform that shook so that the class
could test the inherent strength of various types of structures. After
he built the prototype, he modified the design so that I could vary the
speed and intensity of the vibrations, and made it more durable. In
fact, the school is still using Jim's machine."
"Well, you gave me the idea for it and without Neil's help-"
"Jim." Cynthia shook her head and her expression softened. "You don't
have to apologize for what you love to do. Your father isn't here."
Jim went pale so fast it was like someone had pressed a switch.
"Hey, it's okay." I grabbed his shoulder and searched his face, waving
off Cynthia who had hopped off the bed and was hovering in front of us.
"Just do your breathing, Jim..." His color returned quickly, but I waited
until he gave me a nod before I released him and glanced over at Cynthia
and Neil.
They were as pale as Jim had been, and their horrified expressions were
almost funny. Except that they weren't.
Cynthia recovered first, her words tumbling out almost unintelligibly
as she tried to apologize. Jim shook his head and held up his hand and
her voice cut off. Out of nowhere, I had the sudden urge to giggle,
which I stomped down real fast, like light speed. No way was this amusing.
I met Jim's eyes, and for a second I swear I could see the sixteen-year-old
Jim looking back at me. It was like a door had cracked open, showing
a glimpse of some glittering mysterious chamber behind it, and then swung
closed. Jim's mouth slowly quirked into a sorta-grin.
"Dad didn't want me to waste my time on 'science stuff,'" he explained,
almost bashfully. "So I told him I was putting in extra football practice
with some of the guys. Cynthia and Neil let me use their garage to work
in. That's all there is to it."
"I guess motorcycles and cars weren't the only things you enjoyed tinkering
with."
Jim shrugged. "Motorcycles and cars were okay, but they weren't very
challenging after a while. This was a lot more interesting."
"I'll bet," I muttered. "You've got some 'splaining to do later, man."
Jim's face pinked up again, and I could feel the heat from his embarrassment
radiating off him. He opened his mouth, then closed it and shot me a
beseeching look. I almost hit the floor. Jim Ellison, ex-Army Ranger,
all-round tough guy, cop extraordinaire, was silently begging me to change
the subject.
Well, hell.
I checked out Neil and Cynthia. They were staring at their hands and
looked like their skin hurt - they kinda squirmed without moving - the
way you do when you are so embarrassed that there's no way to crawl
out of that hole you've managed to land in under your own steam.
Okay. Sandburg to the rescue.
"So, Neil, what's your doctorate in?" It wasn't a very graceful transition,
but they both perked up at my question, and avoided looking at Jim.
That was okay. I didn't think Jim really wanted to be looked at for
a while.
"I was a research entomologist for the University of Washington," he
said, sharing a shy look with Cynthia.
"Bugs, huh? That's cool. What kind of research did you do?"
Neil explained about his work with house flies. It was pretty interesting,
and he and Cynthia relaxed and got over their embarrassment as he talked.
He was obviously a born teacher, articulate and enthusiastic, but never
allowing his love of the subject to blind him to the needs of his audience.
I asked a couple of questions, which seemed to tickle him no end.
Finally he wound up with the results of his last study, glanced at the
time and gave a rueful smile.
"Sorry, Blair. I tend to get carried away. Both Cynthia and Jim know
better than to get me started." He shrugged and took his wife's hand.
"Hey, it was interesting. Besides, the work you've done could be instrumental
in reducing the frequency of disease transmission in poor areas, and
man, that's a real problem in a lot of countries."
"That's true," Neil offered slowly, looking intrigued, "although that
wasn't the focus of my research. But it's an interesting application
of the territoriality studies. You could extrapolate-"
"Neil," interrupted Cynthia, giving his hand a squeeze, "I don't think
Jim or Blair drove all the way from Cascade to discuss flies with you
all morning." Neil chuckled, and she continued. "It was an interesting
observation, Blair. I didn't think the police were particularly interested
in disease transmission as a rule."
Jim didn't move or gasp or anything, but I was suddenly completely aware
of him sitting beside me. He was breathing slowly, leaning forward,
his hands clasped between his knees, his arm almost touching my leg.
"I'm not a policeman," I said, forcing myself to look anywhere but at
Jim. "I'm a grad student in anthropology at Rainier."
"But I thought- Jim said you were his partner..."
"We misunderstood," Neil said quickly, his glance darting between us,
like we were a pair of particularly interesting flies he was studying.
And, weirdly, there was something that looked suspiciously like hope
in his eyes. "We didn't realize you meant partners in a more... domestic
way."
Oh shit. I don't know exactly what shade of red I ended up at, but it
must've been way past scarlet. I couldn't help sneaking a peek at Jim,
wondering if he was going to go ballistic at the thought, or just die
in an orgy of embarrassment. But he wasn't blushing at all. It didn't
even seem to faze him that his friends had paired us up as a couple.
He just calmly explained that I was an observer at the PD working on
my dissertation and then he gave them the cover story we'd concocted.
They both apologized, and Jim shrugged it off like it was no big deal.
Unlike my gaffe with the science thing.
Which was great, but then I had to wonder why I was doing the coy virgin
routine. I mean, me, blushing 'cause someone thought Jim and I were
lovers? Please.
But I had blushed. And then some. Guess who was going to have to do
some serious meditation tonight.
By the time I tuned back in to the conversation, they were talking about
people who had been in Jim's classes. Who had done well for themselves,
who had been less fortunate, whose life had taken an unexpected turn.
Jim seemed interested, asking about a few people, telling what he knew
about others. It was calm and civilized and peaceful, and rang as false
as a cracked bell.
I must have drifted a bit. Listening to the life stories of people I
didn't know or care about doesn't hit the red in my fascinating topics
meter, but I'm pretty good at appearing interested, even if my mind's
a million miles away. Actually, my mind wasn't a million miles away.
It hadn't even left the chair I was sharing with my partner. It was
stuck on one issue.
I couldn't figure out why Jim didn't ask Neil and Cynthia why they had
called. Yeah, I know he had asked Neil earlier and been interrupted
by Cynthia's arrival, but he hadn't even alluded to it once she was there.
I was still puzzling this out when some medtech in a lab coat poked her
head into the room and announced that Neil was expected downstairs for
some more tests. He grimaced, and Cynthia patted his hand. I peeked
at Jim, and saw a shadow cross his face. Like he knew something he wasn't
even admitting to himself, much less telling.
I suddenly felt cold.
"Can we take you to lunch?" he asked Cynthia as he got up. I followed
suit, trying to surreptitiously rub my numb butt. Those wooden chair
arms are real killers on the circulation.
"Thanks, Jim. But I think I'll stay here with Neil."
There was a really awkward pause.
"Can we-" began Jim, his voice cutting out on him like a cold engine.
He cleared his throat. "I'd like to visit again, Neil..."
Neil nodded. "I'll be here, at least through next week. Any time during
the weekend would be fine, and it would give me something to look forward
to."
We said our goodbyes and walked out the door. As soon as Jim was in
the corridor, his shoulders slumped and he stumbled once. I grabbed
his arm, wondering if I could manage to lower him gently to the floor
if he passed out on me, but he just shook me off and headed down the
hall.
Forty silent minutes down the road, I sighed and turned to Jim. He was
driving with grim-faced determination.
"So you liked science," I started. I felt so stupid.
Jim glanced over at me - the first time he'd looked at me since we'd
gotten into the truck - and gave a tiny shrug. "Yeah."
"Why didn't you tell me, man! I mean, from the way you complained
about the tests and all, I thought you hated science." My gut felt like
it was filled with hot lead. "And you let me ramble on and on about
testing procedures, and I actually..." My throat dried up and I tried
a hard swallow. "I actually boasted to you about designing the machines
for the damn tests..." I looked out the side window. It wouldn't take
much just to open the door and slide out of the truck. So it was going
sixty...
"It was a long time ago, Chief."
I took a deep breath and let it out slowly, but I could still feel my
face grow warm. "You should have said something, Jim. This was an important
part of your past."
"It wasn't important. Nothing came of it." His voice was calm and quiet,
and I don't think that Jim was even aware of the bitterness underscoring
his words.
"From where I was sitting it looked pretty important."
Jim shot me another glance. He was trying for granite-jawed unreadable
as his expression of choice, but it didn't work. Not with me. I was too
used to looking past that particular expression to be fooled. No, the
look in his eyes, the way he squinted slightly, the tilt of his head
all told me that Jim was hurting bad.
"From where you were sitting, Sandburg, I'm surprised you could think
of anything but your numb little butt. That chair arm must've been hell
to perch on for so long." His lips curled into a tiny smile that softened
the expression on his face.
"Yeah, well, we all have to make sacrifices." I shrugged, not surprised.
Jim wasn't going to talk about it now. But I still had one question.
Not for his sake - for mine. "Jim..." I looked at the door handle again.
One quick jerk and I could be outta there...
"Yeah, Chief?" he said, his voice kind.
"Um... When we did the tests, and I told you I'd designed and built
some of the machines..." Aw, jeez, I was blushing more than the first
time I'd had a boner in a bathing suit and some girl had laughed when
she noticed it. "Did you... Did you notice any improvements that I
could have made?" I wasn't sure if he even understood that last sentence
- it had come out all in a rush.
He was silent for a while, and I finally gathered up enough courage to
look at him. He was frowning, his lips pursed thoughtfully.
"Well," he began slowly, "I suppose you could have used a larger motor
on the light machine, to make the cylinders rotate more smoothly, but,"
he turned to me, almost apologetically, "I really didn't pay attention
to how you made them. I was concentrating on the tests..."
"Yeah, of course you were... Sorry I asked." Good one, Sandburg. Why
would Jim even think about your damn machines when he was trying to learn
more about his senses?
There was a long pause. "So," Jim said, "what kind of motor did you use?"
"You'll never believe it!" I laughed, feeling like this huge weight had
just lifted off me. "I found one of those old rotating globes at a rummage
sale for thirty-five cents. The globe was shot, but the base and motor
were fine..."
The ride home passed quickly.
I glanced around my office to make sure I had everything and closed my
backpack. If I hauled ass and wasn't too particular about speed limits,
I'd make it to the station on time. Then the phone rang. Just my luck...
"Sandburg," I said, hoping that it wasn't a student who needed me to
sit and listen to some tale of woe.
"Hey, Chief." The familiar voice was a touch impatient. "You just leaving?"
"I was half-way out the door, Jim, when I had to stop and answer the
phone. I'll be there in fifteen, no, make that ten minutes."
"Hold on, Mario. Why don't you meet me-" His voice cut off abruptly.
"Jim? You still there?" The line sounded fine - no crackling or hissing.
"You okay?"
"Yeah, I'm fine," he said, not sounding fine at all. "You know, I'm
in the mood for a change. Why don't I drive over and we'll check out
that vegetarian place you were telling me about? I'll be there soon."
"Okay. That sounds good." I put the phone back in the cradle, then
walked over and locked my office door. Jim had just used a code we'd
worked out a couple of months ago. If he said the words 'mood' and 'vegetarian'
together in a phone conversation, it meant that there was something weird
going on, not immediately dangerous, but I was to stay behind locked
doors until he got here.
I'd laughed when he'd proposed the code, but then I'd remembered some
of the cases we'd worked on and decided it was a good idea. And I sure
wasn't laughing now.
I sat down and tried to read, but all I could think of was Jim's warning.
Finally, after fifteen minutes that felt like an hour, there was a knock.
"Hey, Sandburg, let's grab some lunch." It was Jim's voice.
I unlocked the door and Jim walked in, giving me a quick once-over, like
he expected to see parts of me missing. He closed the door behind him
before he spoke.
"You okay?"
"Yeah. What's with the warning, man? I never expected you to actually
use the code. What happened?"
"I thought I heard something..." He suddenly looked uncertain, then
he grabbed the phone and dialed. "Rhonda, it's Ellison. Has Simon left
for the meeting yet? No, I'll catch him when he gets back. Thanks."
He hung up the phone and stared at the receiver.
"Well?" I wished for the millionth time that I could read Jim's mind
and find out what the hell was going on. Sometimes it takes him so damn
long to come up with the words.
"I'm not sure," he said, frowning. "I thought I heard something when
we were talking."
"Did you hear it when you spoke with Rhonda?"
"I think so..."
"What did it sound like? Static? Clicking? Voice or modem bleed-over
from another line?"
He shook his head, his frown deepening. "I can't describe it."
"Can you make the sound?"
He opened his mouth, then shut it quickly and snorted. "Not a chance,
Sandburg. But it didn't sound like the usual line noises. It reminded
me of..." He perched on the edge of my desk and stared at the corner
of the room.
I waited.
Finally he turned and looked at me. "Like some sort of wiretap..."
I took a deep breath. "A wiretap?" I thought about it for a minute.
"Okay, I know you heard it when you were on the phone with me, but isn't
it more likely that if it is a wiretap, your PD line is the one being
tapped?"
"No." He shook his head. "I was on the phone all morning, and I only
heard it when I talked with you."
"But this is stupid, Jim! Why would anyone want to tap my phone?" I
stared at it, sitting innocently on my desk, and suddenly wanted to chuck
it out the window.
"Been sleeping with the Chancellor's wife, Chief?"
"Really funny, Ellison." I glared at him, and he raised his hands and
shrugged. I paced around the piles of books on the floor. "Dammit,
Jim, what if this is someone like Brackett? Or some old case who's decided
to settle the score? Or even..."
"Don't fly off the handle, Sandburg. I could be wrong," he broke in.
"What?"
"I could be wrong," he mumbled, his face turning pink. "I could have
over-reacted a little. It could be something the phone company's doing
on the lines."
I just stared at him.
"I'm hungry. Let's get some lunch." He stood up and grabbed my coat,
throwing it to me. I caught it automatically, but didn't put it on.
"Hold it." He glanced at me and then looked over at the wall, chewing
on his lip. I walked over to him, not fooled for a minute by his change
of subject. "Are you saying that you were so worried about me that you
drove all the way over here just because you thought that maybe
my phone was being wiretapped?" His face grew pinker, and then he took
a deep breath and shrugged.
"Maybe I did. Or maybe I just wanted to try that vegetarian place...
What's the name? The Happy Hooker?" He tried to leer, but it didn't
work. He aimed a swat at my butt, but I dodged it. "Now move your ass,
I'm starved."
I grabbed my backpack and headed out the door. "It's the Happy Cooker,
Jim, and I didn't think you were listening when I was talking about it."
"I wasn't."
"Very funny, man."
Jim just smirked. As we walked down the hall, he put his hand in the
middle of my back. It felt good there. And that afternoon he called
in a few favors with some people in the phone company - we'd know if
my phone was tapped in a day or two.
I passed the mailman on my way out of the building on Saturday morning,
grabbed our mail and dumped it on the seat of the truck when I climbed
in. Jim just gave me one of his long-suffering looks and pulled away
from the curb. I hate those looks. Like he has to put up with so much
from me. Like his life is all smooth sailing except where I'm concerned.
As if.
I glared at him for a minute, and then he shot me one of his Jim Ellison
specials - first a chuckle, a little, low 'heh heh heh' that always makes
me grin. Then he reached over and nudged me in the arm, like he was
almost petting me. And finally, he gave me one of those shit-eating grins
of his, his eyes bright, his eyebrows wiggling. I caved and laughed
at him, and he just turned and looked out the windshield, the corners
of his mouth twitching.
I always cave when he does it, even when I'm seriously pissed. Maybe
that's why he doesn't do it very often. At least there was no discussion
this morning about whether or not I was going with him to the hospital.
It didn't mean I was expecting to be with Jim every second; I'd even
brought some work along so that he and Neil could talk in private. I
picked up the mail and began to sort through it.
"Bill. Bill. Ad. Bill. Postcard from Naomi... Hey, she's in Puerto
Vallarta!"
"Must be nice, Chief."
"Yeah, nice and warm, man..." I finished reading the postcard and turned
to the next letter. "Oh, wow... I got an answer."
"An answer? To what? Whether or not you're going to get lucky tonight?"
"You have such a one-track mind. It's from Dr. Emil Bertson at the
Institute of Anthropological Studies..." I ripped open the envelope,
ignoring Jim's wince. Dammit, if he wanted every letter opened with
a letter opener, then he should keep one in his truck. I started reading.
"Careful with your garbage, Sandburg!" Jim growled and swatted at the
envelope, which had somehow ended up in his lap. "This isn't your room..."
"Okay, whatever." I went back to my letter. Surely Bertson wasn't implying...
I heard Jim's curse a fraction of a second before he hit the brakes.
Then I hit the door and everything got kind of confusing for a bit.
When things finished squealing and sliding and bouncing, we were stopped
on the side of the highway, me clutching the dashboard, Jim holding the
envelope...
"What the hell was that for?" The truck was in park, and besides,
it had stalled, so I decided it was safe to let go of the dash. I stretched
my fingers and looked around for my letter. It had to be here somewhere...
"Jim?"
He was staring at the envelope, his expression blank.
"Jim? What's wrong?"
"Where's the letter?" I found it on the floor and handed it to him.
He looked closely at the pages, turning them over and over. Then he
gingerly sniffed a page and wrinkled his nose.
"What is it?"
He gave me this really weird look, like something hurt but he wasn't
sure what, and then he picked up the envelope.
"This has been opened and then resealed."
"Maybe Dr. Bertson wanted to add-"
"It's been carefully steamed open and then resealed in almost exactly
the same place. And this," he lifted up the letter, "has been wiped
clean. The only fingerprints on it are yours."
I nodded to show that I was following him, but I didn't say anything.
He wrinkled his nose again. "And whoever opened it was wearing British
Sterling aftershave."
"Maybe Dr. Bertson..."
He shook his head. "I don't think so. I smelled the same scent on a
letter you got on Wednesday, and it wasn't from the same guy." He looked
at me thoughtfully.
"Wednesday? What letter..." I smacked the seat, suddenly remembering
who the letter was from. "Dammit, that was personal! You mean someone
opened my private mail and read it?"
"Guess it wasn't from someone who'd normally wear British Sterling, huh?"
I threw him a disgusted look. "Would you give it a break, Jim? This
is serious!"
He stared out the windshield for a minute, his lips pursed. He didn't
say anything, but I knew what that look meant. It was the closest he
could get to an apology.
"They must be doing this while the mail's in the post office," he offered
slowly, still looking out onto the highway. "They didn't have a chance
to get into our mailbox today."
"They? They who?" I balled up my fist and banged the door in frustration.
"One of Brackett's cronies? Or Oliver's? Did someone else put two and
two together about your Sentinel abilities? Dammit, Jim, I'm not going
to let anyone mess with you! If it's some screwball federal agent, rogue
or not, I'm taking you somewhere you'll be safe!"
He blinked and solemnly turned to me. "Chief, it isn't my mail that's
being opened..."
The bottom dropped out of my stomach, landing somewhere way down in my
gut. Not a good feeling.
"But why me, Jim?" It came out as a whisper. "Why the hell would anyone
be interested in me, unless it was to get to you?"
"I don't know, Blair."
Oh shit. Jim called me by my name. He must really be worried. I glanced
over and caught him staring at me, a frown creasing his face. For Mister
Stoic, that was pretty much like having hysterics in public. He reached
out and gave my shoulder a quick squeeze, then started up the truck.
"Don't worry," he said as he pulled back onto the highway. "We'll find
out what's going on, and someone," he growled, "will have to answer to
me..."
Jim sounded mean and threatening and like a guy I would not want to
cross. I almost felt sorry for that unknown someone. Almost, but not
quite.
I was really touched by his concern. But that's Jim - he's like everyone's
big brother. Jim keeps an eye out for everyone, and makes sure everyone's
okay. I guess it's all part of the Sentinel gig - a genetic predisposition
to make sure the tribe's safe. He'd do the same thing for any of his
friends.
By the time we arrived at the hospital, I was pretty calm. I mean, sure,
I was still a little spooked by all this Cold War spy shit that seemed
to be going down, but Jim was right there next to me, bumping arms as
we walked down the hall to the cafeteria. We each grabbed a cup of what
passed for coffee. I slid into a booth while Jim snagged a donut. Even
though the other side of the booth was empty, he nudged me over into
the corner and slid in next to me. I don't think Jim even realized what
he was doing. He just sat there, happily eating his donut and drinking
his coffee, his eyes constantly sweeping the room, his Blessed Protector
radar up and running.
I have to admit it, having him sitting next to me made me feel safe.
It isn't his size, because Jim's not that big. I mean, he's buff but
not enormous, like Simon, who towers over everyone, the same as Orvelle.
It was his presence, watching and guarding, that made me relax. That
and the fact that I knew Jim would risk his life to save mine, the same
as he's done before.
And I'd return the favor.
Of course I know that Jim's not invincible, but that didn't matter a
damn. They'd have to go through him to get to me, and he wouldn't let
anyone through without doing some serious damage. And Jim, when he puts
his mind to it, can do a lot of serious damage.
Jim finished his donut and coffee, and licked his fingers before wiping
them on a napkin.
"Ready?" he asked.
"You know, I could stay down here and study if you want to talk with
Neil in private."
He gave me his 'get real, Sandburg' look. "I don't think so, Chief."
He stuck even closer to me on our way upstairs, his hand hovering over
my back and arm. I kept expecting him to touch me, but he didn't. As
we neared Neil's room, Jim kept crowding me, bumping into me a couple
of times, and once he even made me trip over his foot. I was going to
call him on it, but then I got a good look at his face - if he'd been
any paler, the nurses would have had him stretched out on a gurney, covered
with a sheet, waiting for the ME to do an autopsy.
I grabbed his arm and pulled him around to face me.
"You look like hell, Jim. Are you okay?"
He gave me a puzzled look, like I was speaking Greek or something, and
shrugged.
"I'm fine."
"You don't look fine." I gave his arm a little shake.
"Listen, Sandburg, we both know I'll never win any beauty contests-"
His voice suddenly cut off and he pressed his lips together, like he
does when he's struggling with how much to reveal about himself. He reached
out and ran his fingertips down my arm, from my shoulder to my elbow,
and then did it again. "Blair, I have to do this for Neil and Cynthia's
sakes, as well as my own. But it's..." he paused and winced, "it's not
easy. For a lot of reasons." His fingers crept around my arm, gently
stroking.
"What can I do to help?"
He shot me a look of gratitude that practically pinned me to the wall,
and his hand slid up my arm and around the back of my neck.
"Just stick with me, Chief. That's all I need."
"Okay. Sure. I can do that. Whatever you need, Jim." I was babbling.
I knew it. What I didn't understand was why I was babbling.
And then Jim pulled away, turned and walked down the hall. So I followed
him.
He paused before he got to Neil's room and took a deep breath. Then he
squared his shoulders and walked in resolutely, like a man facing a firing
squad. I was close on his heels - so close, in fact, that I ran into
him just inside the door. It was like running into a wall. A hand reached
back and steadied me for a moment.
"Watch it, Sandburg," he whispered. "Neil's asleep..."
"Jim?" Neil's voice cracked. He cleared his throat. "Jim?"
"I'm right here, Neil." Jim walked over to the bed. "I thought you
were napping."
"I was," said Neil. He took Jim's hand. "Couldn't sleep last night...
Too much noise, and they kept waking me up to take blood or give me pills."
He raised the head of his bed and caught sight of me. "Hi, Blair. Thanks
for coming by."
"No problem," I muttered. Neil had gone back to looking at Jim and wasn't
listening to me anyway. And Jim was fussing around him, making sure
he had a drink of water, bending his straw just so, straightening out
the blankets. From the way things looked, if I waited long enough, I'd
see Jim fluffing his pillows. I turned to the door - there had to be
a quiet corner down the hall where I could sit and read.
"Hey, Sandburg? Could you take this down to the nurses' station and
get some ice?" Jim held out the pink plastic pitcher to me.
"Yeah. Sure." I dumped my backpack and took the pitcher to the nurses'
station and asked for ice. Since when did Jim start playing nursemaid?
I knew the answer - it's what he does every time I'm sick. Every time
I've been injured, Jim's there, checking on me, fetching and carrying
without making a big deal of it. Jim doesn't fuss. He just goes ahead
and does what needs to be done, including, and here my face got hot as
I remembered the times he'd helped me, urinals and bedpans and vomit
basins.
I took the ice back to the room, and helped Jim move the bed a little,
so that Neil wouldn't have to crane his neck to see us when we sat down.
There were two chairs against the wall now, side by side, and that made
me feel a little more welcome.
I sat down, while Jim helped Neil put on his robe and slippers and walk
to the bathroom. Neil took small, tentative steps, using Jim's arm for
more than just show. He was weak, and a lot sicker than he looked when
he was sitting in bed. Once Neil was in the bathroom, Jim stood guard
by the closed door and I caught his eye. There was a depth of hopelessness
there that I'd never seen before, a hollowness already carving its way
inside him. He could see what was coming, and was powerless to prevent
it.
The knowledge was eating him alive.
When he'd gotten Neil settled back in bed, Jim sat in the chair beside
me and asked Neil about some of his old research. They had obviously
talked about it when they were friends, and Jim really surprised me by
his detailed knowledge of Neil's work. I mean, how exciting can house
flies be to a sixteen-year-old science nerd and football player? But
Jim either had found them fascinating, or else he had wanted to please
Neil by acting interested.
As they talked, Jim fidgeted. He shifted in his chair, crossing and
uncrossing his legs and making little pyramids with his hands on the
armrests. Then he stretched his arms up over his head, and brought one
down over the back of my chair. He wasn't really touching me, just brushing
the back of my neck with his arm. But the weird thing was that he immediately
stopped fidgeting and stillness settled over him like a blanket.
They talked about Neil's work a little longer and then Neil asked Jim
about a case that we had just wrapped up. It wasn't much of a case -
a series of burglaries carried out by some teenagers - but it had received
a lot of publicity because the perps had videotaped themselves committing
the burglaries using a stolen video camera. I mean, talk about *stupid.*
"The tapes will make the trial a lot more interesting," Jim said, smirking.
"I can't wait to hear what their defense will be."
"Something creative, I've no doubt." Neil looked thoughtfully at Jim
before continuing. "The Anderson boy was in one of Cynthia's classes
a few years ago. She told me he was heading for trouble even then.
He was in foster care for years, with no stable role model, and displayed
the usual teenage combination of self-doubt and bravado. I can't help
thinking that we could have avoided this waste of a young life if someone
had taken him in hand and showed him love and discipline."
"Probably," Jim said, a shadow crossing his face. "But it didn't happen."
"Hey, don't you remember, Jim?" I cut in. "Father Crawford said that
he tried to get Bill Anderson off the streets for a couple of years,
and Bill just kept blowing him off. And he didn't even want to see Father
Crawford when he came to ask if he could help with his legal expenses.
I mean, normally I'd agree with you, but in this case, someone was
trying, and Bill just didn't want to listen."
"Or maybe he desperately wanted to be taken down..." Jim's voice was
very soft.
Before I could ask Jim what he meant, Neil shook his head and pursed
his lips. "No, Jim. It's not the same. You got into your share of
trouble," he said, his eyes darting over to me for a second, ordering
me to be quiet, "but it wasn't self-destructive, like this boy's actions.
You would have straightened yourself out even if Cynthia and I hadn't
been around."
"Don't be so sure..."
Jim was absolutely motionless for a moment, then he jumped up from his
chair and walked over to the window. He stood at parade rest, staring
out the glass, but I'm sure he didn't see a thing outside.
"You didn't see me after I got back from Peru," he continued, his voice
level and calm. "I was a mess." His hands tightened on each other,
the tendons in his arms standing out, his fists almost white from the
tension.
Neil's face was gray, and he closed his eyes as Jim spoke. But he didn't
try to answer Jim or argue with him. He just listened. I just sat there,
stunned at Jim's words. I could hardly breathe, much less interrupt.
"I almost didn't make it, Neil. A couple of good people caught me before
I hit bottom-"
His voice wavered and he cut off abruptly. Then he shivered, and his
whole body shook like he was freezing.
"Why?" The word was torn from him and flung at Neil, who flinched even
before Jim turned and stalked over to the bed. "Why did you and Cynthia
ignore me when I got back from Peru? I called and called and left message
after message..." Jim clamped his jaw shut and stared at the wall.
"And you never returned my calls," he whispered, closing his eyes.
I stared at Neil's pale face, not quite understanding. I had thought
that Jim was the one who broke off the relationship - that he had wanted
to cut himself off from the past after the trauma of Peru. But if he
had called Neil and Cynthia, and they hadn't answered...
Oh, shit.
I was on my feet and around the bed before I even knew what I was doing.
Jim swayed and his arm quivered beneath my fingers as I pulled him toward
the door.
"C'mon, man, let's get you out of here and into the fresh air..."
"No, Jim, wait! I can explain..."
"Later." I glared at Neil. "Give him a minute." I pushed Jim toward
the door.
"Chief." Jim turned and put his hand on my shoulder, and I knew he had
made up his mind. "Thanks, but I owe it to Neil to hear his explanation."
"Fine. Listen to him." I blinked, trying to get myself under control.
I don't even want to know what my blood pressure was. Jim's hand traveled
down my arm a couple of times, calming me. When I met his eyes, he quirked
a pathetic excuse for a smile. Okay. He wanted to stay. I could do
that.
Jim sat down, and I ended up perching on the arm of his chair, my hand
on his back. He leaned against me, and I could feel the tremors running
through him. But his color was better, and he took a deep breath, calming
himself.
"Why?"
Neil reached a shaking hand out and took a sip of water. He looked really
bad, his skin gray and sweaty, and I almost felt sorry for him. Almost,
but not quite.
"Cynthia and I never made any secret about how we felt about the military.
We both saw promising young men killed, or wounded, or changed - twisted
- so much by the brutality of the military life. It sickened us." He
kept his eyes fixed on his hands, and didn't look at Jim. "And when
you told us you were going to college on a military scholarship, and
would join the army when you finished, we were heartbroken."
"But I called and wrote then, and you answered. What changed?"
My chest tightened unbearably - Jim sounded so lost. All I could do
was rub his back a little, and let him press closer.
"I couldn't..." Neil rasped, his hands twisting the blankets. "We couldn't...
The last time we talked with you, before you left for Peru, you sounded
so different, so cold... We couldn't stand to see the boy we had loved
turn into such a man..."
Jim took a deep, shuddering gulp of air and closed his eyes. "So you
cut me loose."
"I'm sorry, Jim..."
"Me, too. C'mon, Chief. Let's go." He stood and nodded once to Neil,
then walked out the door.
I grabbed my backpack and paused beside Neil's bed. "He needed you
then, and you weren't there for him. Why didn't you just take a knife
and cut out his heart? It would have been kinder."
His face twisted in pain, and I felt a tingle of satisfaction. No one
treats Jim Ellison like that as long as I'm around.
I caught up with Jim at the elevators. He looked fairly calm, but I
kept a close eye on him the entire ride home. He refused to talk about
what Neil had said, which I pretty much expected. We discussed the opened
letters instead, and I agreed to let them both be analyzed at the lab.
I didn't think the lab could tell us anything more than what Jim had
discovered, but it was worth a shot.
So we stopped by the loft and I got the other letter, and we took them
to the station. I wanted to go to the university and get some work done,
but Jim wouldn't hear of it. And when we got the phone company's report
that they strongly suspected that my office phone had been tapped, although
they weren't sure of the method used, I was just as glad to stick close
to Jim for the evening.
I sighed and looked at the clock beside my bed. 4:17 am. I guess Jim
had decided to give up pretending to sleep, because I could smell coffee.
He'd been up all night, wandering quietly around the loft. A couple
of times I heard the balcony doors open and close, and I knew he was
standing out in the cold, staring over the harbor. He'd come back in
after ten or fifteen minutes, which I really appreciated. I didn't mind
staying up with Jim, even though neither of us acknowledged it, but I
didn't want to have to play nursemaid, and if he went outside and zoned,
I'd have to drag his butt back in. And that would blow our pretense
of privacy.
He was sitting at the table, cradling a mug of coffee, when I wandered
out of my room. The counter light caught the side of his face, picking
out the fluffed up bed hair and tired droop of his eyelid. He nodded
at me.
"You're up early."
"I was kinda restless. Couldn't settle, y'know." I poured myself some
coffee and sat across from Jim. "You look rocky." I took a sip, enjoying
the bitter heat that trickled down my throat.
"Yeah. Well." He shrugged and stared at his mug.
"Thinking about yesterday?" I wasn't going to push too hard, but it
would do Jim good to talk.
"Yeah."
"I was really surprised by what Neil said."
"Me, too, Chief." His mouth and jaw worked, but he didn't say anything
else.
"It must've been tough when they wouldn't talk to you." Jim shot me
a sharp look. He knew I was fishing, but hey, if he told me to shut
up about it, I would. Eventually.
"Yeah." He turned the mug in his hands, around and around, and I had
just opened my mouth to ask him how he felt when he sat back and sighed.
"I didn't know what to think. I thought they blamed me for losing my
men-" He took a deep breath and shook his head. "I wanted to talk about
what had happened, and hoped they'd tell me that I'd done everything
I could under the circumstances. I tried, Chief, I really tried to salvage
what I could from the mission, but..." He pressed his lips tightly together
and his shoulders drooped.
Pain shot through me like a bullet. "I know I'm not Neil or Cynthia,
Jim, but I believe you did everything possible for your men, and more."
"Thanks, Chief." He raised his head and gave me a half-smile, the pain
on his face fracturing like an ice floe breaking up.
"How about some breakfast?" I asked, suddenly filled with nervous energy.
I wasn't really hungry, but I needed to do something. It sounds stupid,
but Jim's silly little smile had jangled my nerve-ends, and I was practically
bouncing in my seat.
"Sure."
So I scrambled up some eggs while Jim made another batch of coffee and
set the table. I think we were both surprised by how fast our food disappeared
- if anyone had asked me, I'd have said I couldn't swallow a bite. But
we sat and ate and talked quietly about the upcoming week's schedule.
It was completely, refreshingly boring.
A couple of hours later, I had covered the table with books, papers and
my laptop. Jim had sat across from me for a while, cleaning his gun,
and it was all I could do to keep my mind on my work. It's not like
cleaning guns is... well, sexy, although I'm sure Freud would have something
to say about it, but watching Jim carefully take it apart, clean and
oil everything, and put it back together was like watching some intricately
choreographed ballet. Not a wasted movement, and every movement had
its reason.
He must have caught me staring. "I'm almost done, Chief," he said almost
apologetically, startling me.
"Yeah, okay." I got a little flustered, I guess. "No problem. I was
just thinking..."
"Oh?" He smiled and raised one eyebrow. "Since when do you ever stop
thinking?"
//Since I was staring at your hands,// my mind screamed and I felt a
wave of hysteria build in me. I must have been more tired than I thought,
'cause I usually don't get rattled by these weird little moments of attraction.
Not that it happens very often. Not at all.
I buried my head in my books and managed to concentrate for a while.
Until I noticed that Jim was beginning to bounce off the walls. He'd
wander to the kitchen, open the fridge, close the fridge without taking
anything out, sit on the sofa, turn on the TV, flick through the channels
once, turn off the TV, go out on the balcony, stare into the distance
for a minute, and then start all over again. I watched him do this three
times.
"Jim?"
"Yeah?" He propped himself against the table and crossed his arms over
his chest.
"Why don't you go down to the gym for a while and get rid of some of
this nervous energy?"
He opened his mouth, closed it, then uncrossed his arms and began to
rifle through my notes.
"I'm fine, Sandburg." He pushed himself away from the table and started
toward the kitchen.
"Jim! C'mon, man. Do us both a favor and go show those weights who's
boss or pound some machine into submission."
He stared at me, the hurt plain on his face. "I didn't want to leave
you alone," he finally said, turning and pouring himself another cup
of coffee.
Aw, shit.
I closed my book and mentally kicked myself for being ten kinds of fool.
I hadn't forgotten about the wiretap and my mail being opened, but it
didn't occur to me that Jim would make it his business to stick with
me all day. Which was stupid, because that was exactly the kind of thing
Jim would do. Guess I really was tired.
"Listen, Jim, I really appreciate you staying with me." I glanced at
the phone, I couldn't help it. "But you need to get out. I'm gonna
stay here and work. I'll be fine for a couple of hours."
Eventually he agreed, but only after I keyed his cell phone number into
the phone's rapid-dial memory and promised to use it if anything happened.
And I promised to keep the door locked. I saw him off and settled down
at the table.
I worked for over an hour when a quiet knock at the door interrupted
my train of thought. I peered out the peep-hole and then jerked the
door open.
"What do you want?"
Cynthia stared back at me, startled.
"I'd like to speak with Jim," she said after a moment.
"He's not here."
"Oh." She looked down the hall and surreptitiously wiped the corner
of her eye. Her eyes were red and swollen, and she swayed slightly.
Damn.
I opened the door wider. "Come in. He'll be home soon."
I got her settled on the sofa. She looked as if she'd shatter like glass
at the wrong touch, a brittle fragility. I offered to make her some
tea, and she nodded. Her hands shook as she took the mug, her fingers
clasping it like it was a lifeline.
I'd made myself a mug of tea, too, figuring I'd probably need it. I
took a sip and turned to her.
"Why are you here?"
She stared at me for a minute or two, her eyes flickering from my face
to the loft, taking in the room. I guess she came to a decision, because
she turned back to me with a nod.
"I wanted to try and explain to Jim a little more about why we..." Her
voice wavered, and she raised the mug to her lips, although she didn't
drink.
"Why you ignored him after he returned from Peru?" I didn't mean for
the words to come out as harsh as they did... Or maybe I did.
She nodded once, her mouth compressed into a thin line.
I stared at the tea in my mug, picking out the tiny spots of oil as they
floated on the surface, winking in and out of sight as the liquid moved
and caught the light. Steam curled up, the slightly bitter scent tickling
my nose. I wondered, for the millionth time, what it would be like to
suddenly have Jim's senses, to experience things so intensely that you
lose yourself in the experience...
"I was in college," I began softly, "when I heard this wild story on
the news about some soldier who'd been stranded in the jungle for a year
and a half. The army'd finally sent someone in to retrieve him, and he
was back in the good ol' US of A, recovering from his ordeal." I shifted
around, still looking at my tea.
"Some friends and I were talking about it. We were all anthro students,
and didn't have a lot of sympathy. Hell, we knew field researchers who'd
spent ten or twenty years in the jungle, and they were fine. I figured
he was some cookie-cutter military jock who couldn't cope without orders
and a PX somewhere nearby for cigarettes and booze." I paused, remembering
how young and naive I'd been at the time.
"A week or two later I walked by a newsstand and saw a picture on the
cover of News magazine. It wasn't of anybody special. Just some sweaty,
dirty guy with Don Johnson stubble and a bandanna. And then I looked
at his eyes...
"I bought the magazine and read about what had happened. Losing his
men. Burying them next to the wreckage of the chopper. Enlisting the
help of the local tribes. Defending the pass. But I really didn't need
to read about it. Everything was visible in his face and eyes - all
the pain and death and uncertainty." I looked up in time to catch her
staring at me. She turned away immediately.
"Did you see that picture, Cynthia?"
She nodded, but didn't look at me. "Blair, we made what we thought was
the best decision at the time."
"For you or for Jim?"
"For everyone," she said, her voice sharp. "It wasn't an easy decision,
or one we made lightly." She set down the mug and got up, moving to
the windows and staring out. "We saw the photo, and yes, it affected
us the same way it affected you. But believe me when I say that we thought
we were doing what was best for Jim." She turned back to face me, her
arms wrapped tightly across her chest. "We've loved Jim like our own
child, and the last thing we'd ever want to do is to hurt him..." A
tear suddenly spilled down her cheek.
I jumped up and coaxed her back to the sofa, then got a box of tissues
and put it on the coffee table. I was confused. I mean, Cynthia sounded
sincere, and the idea of hurting Jim obviously upset her, and yet what
they did was so cruel... I couldn't reconcile the two. She cried a
little and held my hand, while I just made soothing noises without saying
anything.
There was a rattle of keys, and the door burst open. One very pissed
Jim Ellison stood in the doorway.
"Cynthia?" The door slammed behind him. "What's the matter?" he said,
his voice a mixture of fear and tenderness. Jim stood behind the couch,
his hand hovering over her shoulders.
"It's okay, Jim..." I began, and he rounded on me.
"The door was *unlocked,* Chief," he growled. "I thought I told you to
keep it locked when I left!"
"Hey, chill." I jerked my head at Cynthia and glared at him. The man
has all the tact of a pit bull, especially when his BP radar is up.
He stared at me for a second, then came around the couch and sat next
to Cynthia, wrapping an arm around her shaking shoulders.
"Don't cry, Cyn," he crooned, pulling her against his chest and rocking
slowly. "I'm here..."
I let go of her hand and she clung to Jim for a minute, her fingers twisting
the front of his shirt into knots. He shot me a puzzled look, then handed
her a tissue when she pulled away. It took her a couple of minutes to
compose herself. I caught Jim's eye again, silently asking if he wanted
me to leave. He shook his head no, so I settled back and waited for
Cynthia to say whatever she had to say.
"I'm so sorry, Jim," she said, her voice catching. "We don't have any
other excuse except that we did what we thought was the best for everyone.
I don't expect you to understand, but I hope you can forgive..." She
dabbed at her eyes and sniffled.
Jim got very still, his eyes focused somewhere out in space. Then he
closed his eyes and pressed his lips together in a frown. "It was a
long time ago, Cyn," he said finally. "If you were doing what you thought
was best, I can't argue with you."
She nodded. "Thank you."
"How's Neil?"
Her throat worked as she struggled to swallow. "Not well. We got a
diagnosis last night. It's cancer."
I could see that the news hit him hard, although, in true Jim Ellison
fashion, he just frowned and nodded once. Always the understated one.
"How bad is it?"
"They don't know yet."
"What do the doctors recommend?"
They talked about the benefits of chemo versus radiation, surgery, courses
of drug therapy, all the magic bullets in the medical arsenal at their
disposal. Sometimes I think we're not all that far from the days of leeches
and trepanning, but I didn't really listen. I was too busy watching
Jim and feeling horrified. There, right in front of me, he was battening
down his hatches and fortifying his defenses; rebuilding walls and barriers
that I hadn't seen in months. It was visible in his eyes, in the way
he talked with Cynthia, in the set of his shoulders and line of his jaw.
Jim Ellison was preparing for the worst the way he always had - by bricking
up his heart and soul, by fleeing so deep inside himself that it would
take months to coax him back. I felt sick to my stomach.
Eventually they talked themselves to a stand-still. Cynthia looked exhausted,
and as if she hadn't eaten since yesterday. Given the news about Neil,
she probably hadn't. Jim offered her some lunch, and she agreed that
she should have something to eat before driving back to Seattle.
Jim started the sandwiches while Cynthia and I cleared off the table.
I carried a pile of books back into my bedroom, and when I came out,
she was reading some of my notes.
"Here. Let me take those," I said, and she actually jumped, like I'd
startled her. She handed me the notes, with the weirdest expression
on her face. I glanced at the notes - they were nothing special, just
another reference I'd found to a tribe with a Sentinel legend. I shoved
them into a folder and we quickly set the table.
Lunch was quiet. Cynthia managed to eat her sandwich, which didn't really
surprise me. Jim makes great sandwiches. Although he'd deny it to the
death, he's actually a pretty good cook. I mean, I wouldn't ask him
to make a ten course ethnic dinner, but he can handle most basic meals.
And he's a lot more savvy about nutrition than most people would give
him credit for. It makes sense, you know, 'cause he's really into fitness,
and why would he spend all that time sweating in the gym, only to pork
out on empty calories? Yeah, I'll grant you that he has an occasional
buttermilk donut or cheeseburger, but he's pretty careful otherwise.
Like I said, lunch was quiet. I wanted to talk to Jim, to see if I could
stop his retreat inside himself, but there wasn't much I could say in
front of Cynthia. So I ate and watched him go farther and farther away.
Cynthia left after promising to phone Jim when they knew what was going
to happen next, and Jim mentioned something about visiting on Tuesday
or Wednesday.
I was washing the plates when he wandered back into the kitchen, looking
like some lost animal pretending not to be lost.
"I'm sorry to hear about Neil," I said, sticking a toe in to test the
waters.
He shrugged, grabbed the dishtowel, and began to dry the plates. I tried
again.
"Did you sense anything about his illness when we visited-"
A plate hit the floor and shattered. I whirled around, flinging soap
and water over the counter. Jim was staring at the mess on the floor,
the towel hanging limply from his hand.
"Are you okay?" I grabbed his arm and peered into his face. His eyes
flickered over me, cold and unseeing.
"That was clumsy," he said calmly, shaking off my hand. A wet, soapy
patch stained his sleeve. "Watch it, Sandburg. You're dripping over
everything."
I dried my hands on my pants and wiped up the counter as Jim got the
broom and dustpan. He swept up the shards scattered all over the floor
and dumped them into the trash. His hands shook almost imperceptibly,
and he winced at the noise when the broken stoneware clattered into the
trash can. But his face was perfectly still, and not even the muscle
in his jaw jumped. He looked like one of the totems on Easter Island,
cold, hard, inhuman, standing with his arms crossed over his chest, leaning
against the cooking island. God, I hated it when he cut himself off
like this.
"Jim, what did you sense in the hospital?" I stood beside him and ventured
a little touch on his arm. Nothing much, just a little human contact.
"Nothing." He walked over to the windows, staring out.
I followed him, like I always do. Sometimes I think that when I die,
my last sight will be of Jim's back and butt. Not that I particularly
noticed, you understand, but aesthetically speaking, he has a very nice
back and butt. Anyway, I stood behind him, watching the tension ripple
through his back and shoulders. It was like whatever was going on inside
him had to surface occasionally, or he'd explode, or go nuts, or do
something that would make the evening news.
"I know that's not true, man, 'cause you said yourself that it was hard
for you..." Another ripple. I guessed I was on the right track. "I'm
your friend, Jim. You can tell me." I touched his arm.
"There's nothing to tell." I bit back my angry retort and took a deep
breath. Jim just needs some coaxing before he opens up.
"Was it a smell, or-"
"Don't push me, Sandburg!" he growled, and started toward the door.
He checked himself halfway there, instead flinging himself into the couch
and turning on the TV, ignoring me.
I don't know what it was that shoved me into oncoming traffic, but I
guess I kinda went ballistic.
"Don't push you? Jesus, Jim, if I didn't push you, you'd still be back
in caveman mode, repressing the hell out of everything and biting off
the heads of innocent bystanders! D'you think I enjoy pushing you?
That I get some kind of kick out of banging my head against the walls
you've built around yourself? Think again, man." I slammed into my
room and grabbed my backpack, stuffing a couple of books into it. I
didn't have to stay here. I had work I could do elsewhere.
"Where the hell do you think you're going?" Jim stared at me as I snagged
my jacket, sounding more bewildered than anything else.
"To the library. At least I can get information there..." I enjoyed
slamming the door behind me, and clattering down the stairs. It was
drizzling outside, which was fine with me. It matched my mood.
I half expected Jim to run out and stop me, but I pulled out of my parking
space without seeing hide nor hair of him. Fine. I mean, so my office
phone might be tapped, and my mail was being opened... I kept glancing
at the rear view mirror, but no one seemed to be following me. Fine.
I may not be a cop, but I'm not an idiot. When I got to the university,
I parked next to a bunch of other cars, and in the library I set up shop
on a table near a couple of other grad students I recognized. I'd done
everything I could to protect myself, except drag Jim along, and I settled
down for a few hours of work.
An hour later I was still staring off into space, my book open but unread,
the paper in front of me blank. I couldn't get my mind off Jim. Specifically,
what the hell I could do to help him through this. It wasn't like he
was giving me much maneuvering room here. But then again, I was pretty
used to running blind when it came to Jim's internal workings. Which
didn't mean I had to like the way he shut me out. Me. The closest friend
he has. On the other hand, it was classic Jim - a knee-jerk emotional
reaction from a man who had single-handedly fashioned repression into
an art form. But...
I sighed, suddenly feeling an intense bond of brotherhood with those
rats going nowhere fast on their exercise wheels. I wasn't getting a
damn thing done here, that was the one thing I was sure about. Time
to go home and try a little more head banging against the Ellison Barricade,
just because it felt so good and made me feel so useful. I gathered
up my stuff and started toward the door, only to stop short by a table.
A table where Jim was sitting like he belonged here, calmly reading a
book. He didn't even look up at me when I stopped. Well, why should
he? A babysitter didn't need to acknowledge his charge...
God damn him.
What did he think I was going to do? Something stupid, like those idiots
in slasher movies who go up into the attic alone? Didn't he trust me
enough to be sensible?
I didn't say anything. Not that I could have, given the size of the
burning lump that suddenly appeared in my throat and choked me. I turned
and walked quickly out of the building, automatically pushing down the
anger that crackled through me like a wildfire. My hands shook, and
I shoved them into my pockets. I got to the car, and had the presence
of mind to realize that I wasn't in a fit state to drive right then,
so I turned and practically ran the whole way to my office.
By the time I got there I was feeling better. And a little ashamed.
Jim was just being... Jim. After his admission that he didn't want to
leave me alone this morning, I should have expected him to follow me.
I'd over-reacted, which wasn't really like me. Okay, so what was I going
to do now? I dumped my backpack on my desk and flopped on the chair.
Walk back to my car, drive home, and hope that Jim hadn't noticed I'd
lost it for a moment? Stick around and wait for him to show up? I propped
my elbows on my desk and buried my face in my hands, suddenly tired of
second-guessing Jim, tired of the whole situation.
A soft knock on the door roused me. Jim leaned against the doorjamb,
his arms crossed over his chest, his head tilted to one side. "Can I
come in?"
I nodded and he stepped inside. "Chief..." he began, then his head whipped
up and he jerked like he'd been hit with a surge of electricity. His
whole body tensed as he turned in a tight circle, looking around the
room, eyes searching, hackles raised.
"What is it?" Fear trickled down my back like ice water.
"That smell..." he murmured, then swung his head around to pin me with
a stare. "Don't you smell it?"
I sniffed and shook my head. Other than the usual smells of musty old
books and dusty artifacts, I came up blank.
"Aftershave," he murmured, then paled. "British Sterling..."
I think all the blood in my body decided to drop right into my feet,
and I leaned over my desk, suddenly dizzy. Breathe, Sandburg. In.
Out. Again. Strong hands pushed me back into my chair and guided my
head between my knees. I batted at the arm holding my head down.
"Let go, Jim. I'm fine, dammit!" The hand disappeared and I sat up
slowly. Jim was propped against my desk, his face probably looking no
better than mine. I took another deep breath and glanced around my office.
"It doesn't look disturbed." I got up, ignoring my shaky knees, and
walked over to the filing cabinet. None of the artifacts in the room
were especially valuable, but the data in the cabinet... Well, that
was irreplaceable to me.
Jim appeared next to me, concentrating on the cabinet. He peered at
the drawer handles, then, hooking a pencil through the handle, opened
the top drawer. The files seemed all intact as I scanned the labels.
I shook my head.
"It looks okay."
Jim closed it and used the pencil to open the second drawer. Before
I could even check the labels he leaned forward and sniffed.
"This one," he said. Then, starting at the front of the drawer, he hovered
over the files, peering intently at them, inhaling deeply. A third of
the way along he stopped and pointed to a thick folder. My heart dropped
into my shoes even before he said "They stopped here."
Of course. My files contained, among other things, data on individuals
with heightened senses I'd traced. The folder Jim indicated was the
one for people I'd found with all five heightened senses. There was
just one person's data in that folder.
"It's your folder, Jim." He shot me an inscrutable glance and looked
back at the folder. I hurried on. "It doesn't have your name or address
or anything in it. I just refer to you as 'the subject' and that's all,
but..." My voice trailed off, a strange sort of burning started in my
chest. For all his smooth, tight muscles, Jim suddenly looked very vulnerable
- all it would take was a word or two to the wrong people, and Jim Ellison
could find himself the object of more media attention than Princess Diana,
even before she died. Every rag in the country would trumpet his abilities
and Jim, probably the most private man I know, would be completely laid
bare in order to thrill and titillate the public and sell tabloids.
Or he could disappear into some secret military installation and never
see the light of day again.
I wanted to puke at the thought.
Jim was carefully maneuvering the folder out of the drawer, his fingers
wrapped in his handkerchief. "I'm going to have a quick look at this,
and then we'll take it to the lab," he said.
I cleared a space on my desk. Jim opened the folder and delicately leafed
through it, his eyes narrowed, intently scanning each page. About halfway
through, he stopped and sat up a little. "Got tweezers and an envelope,
Chief?"
I rifled through my desk drawers until I found the tweezers, and grabbed
an envelope from the stack. Using the tweezers, Jim lifted whatever
he had seen up to the light. It was a hair. A short, curly blond hair.
He tucked it into the envelope and sealed it, then put it in his jacket
pocket. After he finished looking at the folder, I got a large envelope,
and he slid the folder into it.
Before we left, Jim examined the lock on the door. "They must've gotten
in with a key, Chief," he said, checking the hasp. "There aren't any
indications that it was forced."
"Damn," I muttered. "There's no way to trace how many people have keys
for these offices."
He insisted that we ride to the station together, and I didn't argue.
I could pick up my car later. Right now, I didn't particularly want
to be driving around alone. It was bad enough that someone was listening
to my phone calls, and reading my mail, but to have them in my office,
reading my files... I looked out the windshield and shivered, and Jim
reached over and gave my shoulder a quick rub.
"You okay, Chief?"
"Yeah. Just kinda... you know, creeped out, and worried about what the
hell is happening. I mean, it looks like they want information about
you, whoever 'they' are - and they aren't too particular about how they
get it."
"Could be," he said laconically.
"Could be? Is that all you have to say?" I couldn't believe how casual
he sounded; like it was no big deal.
"Until we get more information, yeah."
I stared at him. "I can't believe you, man! This could be really serious!"
He kept his attention on the road and didn't look at me. "You're theorizing
ahead of your data, Darwin." I could almost hear him close the portcullis
and raise the drawbridge, shutting me out.
I opened my mouth and then closed it. What was the use? Jim was a master
of 'not listening' when he didn't want to. I decided to save my breath
for something that might actually have a chance of succeeding, like asking
Ellen DeGeneres out for a hot date.
We still hadn't said a word to each other when we walked into the lab.
Linda Kim was there - I liked her. She was good at her job, and she
had a really twisted sense of humor.
"Hey, guys," she said, twirling around on her stool and greeting us with
a grin. "I finished the analysis of those letters. I couldn't get much,
but there were some smudges that might have come from leather gloves.
Nothing else, though. Here's the report." She got up and walked over
to the desk. I'd never noticed how she... well, swayed when she walked,
like a model on a runway.
"Thanks, Linda." Jim flashed her one of his 'killer Ellison' smiles,
and I could see her knees go weak. She handed him the report, her eyes
lingering on him a hell of a lot longer than necessary. Jim, the idiot,
was totally oblivious to the way she was looking at him.
I stuck the big envelope in front of her face. "We have a file we'd
like you to check out," I said, and she blinked, then gave me a weird
look.
Jim chimed in. "We'd like to know if there are traces on the papers
in this file similar to those on the letters, and if you can find anything
else. I found this hair," he handed her the small envelope, "but nothing
else." He leaned forward and I couldn't believe it, but she actually
licked her lips. "This is still unofficial, okay?"
"You got it, Jim."
//And you'd like to have it,// I thought. I couldn't help it. For some
reason, it made me really uncomfortable to see them flirting. I mean,
normally I was happy when Jim paid attention to a woman, much less flirted
with her. This whole surveillance thing must've freaked me more than
I realized.
"Thanks, Linda." He took her hand! He actually held her hand in his
and...
I turned and walked out the door. I didn't have to watch this.
I was about halfway down the hall when I heard the lab door bang open
and Jim call out, "Hey, Sandburg, wait up!"
I stopped, but I didn't turn around. Suddenly, a hand wrapped itself
around my arm and I was being towed down the hall in Jim's wake. "What
the..." Before I could get more out, he had opened the door to a small
interview room and pushed me inside.
I rounded on him as he snapped on the lights and shut the door behind
him. "You damn well better have a good reason for this, man. I don't
like to be pushed around!"
Jim stood with his back to the door and raised his hands. "Give me a
minute before you start with the complaints, Chief."
I took a deep breath, pushed down my anger, crossed my arms over my chest
and leaned against the table. "Go on."
Jim shoved himself away from the door and began to pace, his eyes traveling
over the institutional green walls. "I want you to know I am taking
this surveillance business seriously."
"From what you said in the truck, it didn't sound that way to me."
He pursed his lips and frowned, then ran his hand over his face. "Blair,
one of the problems when dealing with surveillance is that you're never
sure when you are being watched or listened to. I don't think we were
being followed, but it was still a possibility. And it was possible
that they were listening to us with a directional mike. I had to be
careful what I said. I don't want them to know how much we know - that
will give us an edge."
I nodded slowly, my anger draining away. "Okay. We can talk about it
here, where there are no windows, but anywhere else..." I gave him a
shaky grin. "It's gonna be tough not to mention it anywhere else, you
know."
"Yeah, I know," he said, his mouth quirking. He looked at me, and I
could see the worry in his eyes. "Just try not to talk about it in your
sleep, okay?" He opened the door and stepped out into the hallway.
"I don't talk in my sleep!" I barreled after him.
We were almost home when Jim's cell phone rang.
"Ellison." He paused, listening intently, then made a right turn, away
from the loft. "We're on our way, sir. We should be there in twenty
minutes."
"What's up?"
"A homicide at one of the art galleries down in the Sanctuary." The
Sanctuary was a small, maybe six square block area near the docks. The
home of thieves and prostitutes a hundred years ago and poor immigrants
for another seventy, it had recently become a fashionable neighborhood,
especially for gay artists and the galleries that showed their work.
Jim's jaw tightened, the muscle jumping. "You might want to stay in
the truck. Simon said it was pretty messy."
Oh great. If Simon said it was messy, then... Well, let's just say
the man was not prone to understatement. Lunch had been a long time
ago, and that was probably just as well. Less to leave in the gutter.
"Do they know who it is?"
"Not yet."
The rest of the trip passed in silence. I was trying not to anticipate
what we'd find, but my imagination's pretty vivid, and I was already
feeling queasy by the time Jim pulled up to the curb.
Jim frowned when I opened the door and stepped out of the truck. "You
think this is a wise idea, Chief?"
I shrugged. "Probably not."
Jim led the way past the uniforms, his hand hovering over my shoulder.
Not touching, you know, but just... there. My stomach settled a little,
and I glanced over at him. He nodded and a smile ghosted his lips.
I knew that if the gore got too much for me and I had to leave, he wouldn't
call me on it. He understood.
And then the door opened and we walked into a bloodbath. There was no
question that the guy had been murdered. I mean, even if he had wanted
to hang himself, he couldn't have disemboweled himself afterward. Not
to mention cutting himself into pieces. I managed not to embarrass myself
by staying in the hall, but Jim was having a hard time coping with the
smell. It was worse than a slaughter house.
It was after two a.m. when we finally stumbled into the loft, tired and
hungry, but not capable of eating much.
"How about fixing some scrambled eggs?" Jim suggested as he leafed through
the mail. It wasn't obvious, but he scanned each piece carefully before
setting it aside.
"Sure." I noticed the message light blinking on the answering machine
and hit the play button.
"Jim..." Cynthia's voice sounded tinny on the machine. "Neil's blood
pressure began to drop this afternoon after I got back, and the doctors
suspect he's hemorrhaging internally. They're prepping him for surgery
now. I..." Her voice faltered. "I'm not sure why I called, because
I know you can't do anything from Cascade, but I had to tell you..."
A muffled voice sounded in the background. "I have to go, the doctor
wants to speak with me... I'll call you in the morning when I have news."
I got to Jim in three steps.
"Okay, man-" I steered him toward the couch. His entire body quivered,
except for his lips. They were pressed together so tightly that they
looked like a slash of white in his pale face. His eyes... well, they
were survivor's eyes, glassy from shock and pain.
Before I could get him to sit down, he shook his head and pulled away.
"I'm fine, Sandburg," he said, his voice harsh.
So he was going to play it that way. I'd hoped for... It didn't matter.
"You're not fine, Jim," I countered, but I kept my tone level. No sense
in antagonizing him any more than necessary. "You were already exhausted,
emotionally and physically, and now you get more bad news. It's no sin
to admit that you're in pain."
He just stood there, arms crossed tightly over his chest, like he was
holding himself together by sheer force of will. I could see the tremors
pass through his body, the accumulating tension lodging in his jaw as
he ground out, "I can handle it."
"Yeah, you probably can, but at what price?" I slipped around in front
of him and laid my hand on his arm - his flesh was cold and damp, the
muscles underneath shivered like tightly stretched cables, ready to snap.
"I'm your friend, remember? Remember what friends do for each other?
I thought we'd already had this discussion, y'know."
Suddenly his hand swooped out and he grabbed my wrist, raising my hand
almost to his face. He squeezed his eyes shut and inhaled deeply, then
released me and stepped back.
"I'm going to bed." He turned on his heel and practically ran up the
stairs. I just stared at the place where he had been and then went to
my room. What the hell else could I do?
The phone woke me. I was trying to haul myself out of bed when it stopped.
Jim must've answered; I could hear him talking quietly. I glanced at
the clock - 8:15. Damn! We didn't have time to sleep in - we had an
investigation to conduct. I staggered out to the bathroom, trying to
shake off that muzzy, disconnected feeling you get when you've suddenly
woken up from a heavy sleep. Jim was sitting at the table, all wrapped
up in his robe, phone in one hand, the other one running through his
hair, making it stand up in funny little spikes. I got this weird flash
of Jim painting them green and purple - punk Jim - and snorted at the
thought.
He looked up and gave me a wave, so I detoured over to the table and
leaned against it, waiting for him to finish.
"I do want to see him," he said, giving me an unreadable look. "But
we're in the middle of an investigation, and it probably won't be until
later in the week... The St. Francis Center, right. Don't worry, I
can find the address. Oh, here's my cell phone number, in case... in
case you need to get in touch with me quickly." He rattled off the number,
then said goodbye and hung up.
"Neil?" I asked.
He nodded, rubbing his hands over his face. "They were able to stop
the hemorrhaging, but the cancer is everywhere inside him. All they
can do is make him comfortable. Cynthia's moving him to a hospice in
a couple of days."
"Good idea. It'll be more low-key there." I chewed on my lip as I looked
at him. I was sorry about Neil, but I didn't really know him - it was
Jim I was hurting for now. Big, buff Jim, who, like Atlas, took the
weight of the world on his broad shoulders and was almost crushed by
it.
I really hate feeling helpless, especially when there's not a damn thing
I can do to change the situation. I wanted to get some coffee on, and
make us a good breakfast to make up for going to bed hungry last night,
but something pinned me there by his side. It wasn't pity... Nah, definitely
not pity. Anyhow, I reached out and squeezed his shoulder gently, and
he lowered his hands from his face and gave me the weirdest look.
"Jim," I said, and then I had to clear my raspy throat. Hadn't had my
first cup of coffee yet, y'know. "I'm sorry about Neil."
"Thanks, Chief." He darted a glance at the phone, then his eyes bore
into me. With a quick flick of his head, he mouthed a word, and I was
suddenly glad I hadn't had anything to eat yet, 'cause it would've come
right back up. I guess I was so surprised that I froze for a minute.
Jim tapped me on the cheek and repeated it. "Tapped."
I nodded once, wishing I hadn't understood. "How about I make us some
breakfast before we head out?" My voice was steady, and Jim gave me
a brief, warm smile that made my breath catch.
"Sounds good. We have to meet with Simon this morning, and I want to
stop by the gallery on the way and have another look."
"Okay." I stretched, joints popping and muscles aching. "Gimme fifteen
minutes to wash, and I'll get started."
Jim levered himself up and slapped my stomach lightly. "Ten minutes,
Chief, and I'll put on the coffee."
"Deal, man."
I made it in eight, receiving a cup of coffee, a grin, and a shoulder
smack before Jim disappeared into the bathroom.
We pulled up to the gallery forty minutes later. Although Jim had done
a sweep of the gallery last night, the smell of blood and raw viscera
had overpowered everything, affecting even his sight and hearing. He
needed to do a sweep again, this time with no pieces of body lying around
and some fresh air in the rooms. I picked up a newspaper on the way,
and the story of the murder was buried back on page five, next to the
embezzlement of church funds and the mall flasher stories. Fortunately,
the details of the murder weren't made public.
Twenty minutes after that we were on our way back to the station with
an evidence bag containing a blood-covered hair. Jim had found it in
a gory corner, resting on top of a pool of dried blood. Since the guy
killed had dark brown hair and this one looked like it had originally
been blond, he bagged it.
We hadn't talked about our phone being tapped, but as soon as we got
to the station and checked the bag in as evidence, I practically dragged
Jim down to the interview room across from the lab, slamming the door
behind me.
"Those bastards!" I paced the room, trying to find the words to express
my anger. Usually that wasn't a problem, but this time I wasn't very
successful. After a few "shits" and "damns," I stopped and turned to
Jim. He was leaning against the cinderblock wall, his arms crossed over
his chest, his face solemn.
"You done?" It wasn't an accusation.
I slammed my fists onto the table a couple of times, then shoved my hands
into my pockets and shrugged. "Yeah."
"Right." He pushed away from the wall. "I'm fairly sure it wasn't in
place last night - there wasn't any hint of it on Cynthia's message.
So they decided, for whatever reason, to put the tap into place overnight.
They also don't know that we know it, and we've got to assume that
their surveillance is comprehensive."
"D'you think they've bugged the loft?" It was hard to breathe - something
really heavy was squeezing my chest.
"No," he shook his head. "I did a quick sweep before we left, and I
didn't pick up anything that indicated a bug. If they're out there,
they're using directional mikes. In a lot of ways they're easier than
bugs." He frowned. "Don't kid yourself, Sandburg. They know our routines
and habits, down to just how often we use the can."
"Jim, I live with a *sentinel.* I gave up on privacy a long time ago."
His eyes went wide, his cheeks grew red, and for a second I could see
the hurt in his face. Then he frowned and nodded. "Point taken, Chief."
Before I could move or say anything, he was out the door, heading to
the elevators. I ran after him and managed to slip into the elevator
right before the doors closed.
"Sorry, man. I didn't mean it that way."
He shrugged and stared at the blank doors. "It doesn't matter."
"Well, yeah, it does. I know you don't spy on me."
He kept staring at the elevator doors, but his face got redder and redder,
and when the doors opened on six, he jumped out of the car and practically
knocked over Rhonda. I followed him slowly, turning over an idea that
had just occurred to me. A very weird idea. A very weird, kinda thrilling
(in a shitting-in-your-pants sorta way) idea.
The big problem was going to be introducing the topic. It would have
to be carefully handled. Kid gloves treatment. Jim was already at his
desk, his face buried in a report. So I walked over and sat down in the
chair beside his desk, turned to him and said "So how long have you been
monitoring me, and is it just me or it is anyone you're around a lot,
and is it conscious or unconscious?"
"Sandburg!"
Heads turned in the bullpen and in the hall. Jim did a searchlight glare
around the room, and eyes fell as they met his. He gave me one of his
'if looks could kill, Sandburg, you'd be toast' scowls, but I ignored
him. The topic was too intriguing to drop just because Jim Ellison didn't
want to talk about it, and besides, it would make a great chapter in
my dissertation. "Unconscious Partner Monitoring Behavior in Sentinels,"
or something like that.
"This is really great, man," I whispered. "Does it happen all the time?
Which senses do you use? Or do they rotate, you know, sound now, smell
another time, that sort of thing?"
He just stared at me, his mouth open, his cheeks pink. Then his mouth
snapped shut and he picked up the report.
"Let's leave the academics alone for the moment, Chief. I think we've
got an ID on the victim. Jenkins reports that the wallet he found in
the dumpster down the back alley seems to check out, and the photo on
the driver's license resembles the body." He read a little more and
hesitated, his eyes flickering up to me.
"So who do we think it was?"
Jim took a deep breath. "J. Earl Wallace. He was a professor in Rainier's
physics department." I shivered - I couldn't help it. Thinking about
what the poor guy must have endured before he died. Jim looked at me
again, as if he was expecting something. Oh, of course.
"I didn't know him, Jim. I may have seen him before on campus, but we
weren't acquaintances."
Jim relaxed his jaw a fraction, then nodded. "We'll go check out his
house and office - see if we can trace a connection between him and anyone
connected with the gallery."
"Is the gallery owner... what was his name? Keith Roberts? Is he back
in town yet?"
"His assistant said he was due back around noon today. We'll try to
catch him this afternoon."
"Man, what a rotten thing to come back to." I grimaced, remembering
the way the blood and gore had splattered over the paintings and almost
coated some of the sculptures in the gallery. "A lot of the art is probably
ruined, and even if you could clean it up, who would want it after that?"
Jim shrugged. "There are always people willing to make a buck on someone
else's tragedy, Chief." That's Jim - supremely practical. But he had
a point.
We met briefly with Simon and Jim updated him on the status of the case,
then we headed out to talk with Professor Wallace's family, friends and
colleagues. As we drove to the home address in Wallace's wallet, I thought
about Jim's tacit admission that he monitored me. It didn't bother me
- like I told Jim, I'd given up the concept of privacy when I'd moved
in. It was like living in a barracks or a successful commune; you knew
everyone's business in nauseating detail, but you pretended ignorance
for sanity's sake. That was okay with me. I trusted Jim; anything he
learned about me would be strictly confidential. Just like what I had
learned about him. Well, except for the information that I needed for
my dissertation.
Anyhow, I decided to do a little test. I stared out the window, then
started to breathe rapidly, like I was scared. One. Two. Three...
"Chief? You okay?"
Wow.
I mean, that was fast! Okay, well, maybe it was because we were in
a small, enclosed space, with no one else around, no other distractions.
I'd have to try it again, at the station, or in a shopping mall, with
lots of people and noise and-
"Sandburg?"
"I'm fine, Jim." I grinned at him and he shot me his 'amused but damned
if I'm gonna smile' look. I spent the rest of the drive designing a
simple test protocol.
No one was at home at Wallace's neat little house. And when I say neat,
I mean neat. Whoever maintained that putting green lawn and sparkling
home could have given Jim lessons in order and cleanliness. We tried
the neighbors, and struck it lucky on the third try. Mrs. Mona Spencer
was a widow in her sixties, who had plenty of time on her hands and enjoyed
keeping track of the comings and goings of her neighbors. She carefully
examined Jim's badge through the locked storm door, and then Jim himself,
giving him a once-over that would do a cop proud. She smiled. He obviously
passed muster. Then she turned to me and frowned.
"Are you a detective as well?"
Before I could even open my mouth, Jim smiled at her. "Oh no, Mr. Sandburg
is a special consultant to the police department, and we are very fortunate
that he agreed to accompany me today..."
She shot me another look, and then Jim leaned toward her and his smile
widened. Oh boy, he was doing his 'killer Ellison' shtick again, and
she was lapping it up like a cat with a bowl of cream. "He only handles
the most difficult and interesting investigations."
Somehow I managed to keep a straight face during all the crap that Jim
was dishing out like a pro. I don't know whether it was the prospect
of helping with a difficult and interesting investigation, or Jim's
attentions, but she quickly ushered us into her living room.
"Well, Detective Ellison and Mr. Sandburg," she said, settling herself
in a brocade wing chair positioned next to the hard little couch where
Jim and I sat, "how can I help you?"
"We're trying to get in touch with Professor Wallace-" Jim began.
A shadow crossed her face. "Oh dear. I hope the Professor hasn't gotten
into trouble, or anything like that..." Her lips thinned and she frowned.
"In trouble? What kind of trouble?"
"Well, I don't like to speak ill of anyone, much less a well-respected
man who lives two houses away, but..." She lowered her voice and leaned
forward, enjoying herself enormously, "...but when a man's wife of over
twenty years leaves him and then he takes up with a young *man,* who
arrives in the evening and leaves in the morning, and who parades around
the garden in shorts that are so short you can practically see his-"
Her mouth snapped shut and she turned beet red.
"I understand," Jim soothed. "When did his wife move out?"
"About six months ago, I believe," she said, squinting as she concentrated.
"Yes, it was the end of May or beginning of June when Doreen moved out
because the Petersen's baby was born on June 10th, and she was gone by
then."
"Do you know if they got divorced?" I asked.
"Oh no. Doreen and Earl are good Catholics, and that is not an option.
In my opinion, although divorce is not a practice I usually condone,
there are times like this when two people are better off divorced.
I always said that if the Pope was stuck in a horrible marriage the
way some women are, he'd be the first to allow divorces for all sorts
of reasons."
"Do you have Mrs. Wallace's address?"
She nodded. "Yes, of course. Doreen and I were friendly when she lived
here, and although she was loyal to her husband and didn't complain
to me, I knew there was something wrong between the two of them for
three or four years." She shook her head sadly. "I know the doctors
say that this... attraction to other men is genetic and that the poor
things can't help themselves, but Doreen was a beautiful woman who
always made the best of herself, and why Earl wouldn't find her desirable
is beyond me..." She got up and retrieved a small floral address book
from an ornately carved desk. "Now, here it is. I'll write it down
for you. I'm afraid I don't know where she works... She mentioned something
about a bank, but I'm not sure which one."
"When did you last see Dr. Wallace?" Jim cut her off neatly in mid-thought.
"Oh, my, let me see..." She paused for a minute, then nodded. "Saturday
morning it was. I saw him leave around ten or so."
We said goodbye pretty quickly after that and drove over to the university.
Jim wanted to interview some of Wallace's colleagues, and maybe find
a photo of him. On the way, he tried to phone Wallace's wife, Doreen,
but she wasn't home.
We didn't get much help from the Physics Department. It sounded like
Wallace was universally respected, a brilliant physicist, and had absolutely
no friends at work. No one had ever been invited to his house, or met
his wife, or knew anything about him personally, except that he was always
organized and prompt and kicked up a fuss whenever his routine was disturbed.
Even the Department Head agreed that he was an enigma, but since Wallace
was good with the students and responsible for several important discoveries
in his field, he was left alone. According to a couple of his colleagues,
he had left Friday afternoon as usual and hadn't been seen since. We
checked out his office, and it was as neat and tidy as his house. I
found it depressing. Jim looked on the organized files and books and
papers with a nod of approval. Of course.
"Where to next?" I asked as we walked back to the truck.
Jim checked his watch. "The gallery owner, Roberts, should be back by
now. We'll go talk with him, and then try to get in touch with Wallace's
wife again. She'll have to ID the body."
"Oh man..." I felt kinda queasy at the thought. "It must be bad enough
to leave your husband because he's gay and not to be able to get a divorce,
but to have to look at that face..."
"Yeah, it stinks, Chief." His voice was kind, and he gently nudged me
with his arm.
We got to the truck, and I suddenly remembered my car, still sitting
in the library parking lot. "Hey, why don't I drive my car back to the
loft now? You can follow me, and it'll save us a trip later."
Jim agreed, with the proviso that I'd make sure he was behind me all
the time, and not to try to run any yellow lights. I shot him a hurt
look and he grinned.
"I've seen you drive, Mario. To you, yellow means 'speed up.'"
I didn't even bother to argue with ol' Seor Law 'n' Order. I kept to
the speed limit and obeyed every single damn traffic law the entire drive
back. It took us twice as long as usual.
Jim pulled into the space next to me, and I leaned in his window. "I
just want to grab a book I forgot this morning. It's in my room. I'll
be right back."
Ignoring his snort, I ran up the stairs - the elevator is slower than
molasses in January - and quickly unlocked the door. I think I was only
about three steps inside when I noticed that the doors to my room were
closed. I thought I had left them open this morning. I was pretty sure
I had, but maybe I was thinking of another day. I opened the doors, and
smelled it. Strong, sweet and unfamiliar, the scent permeated the entire
room.
Shit. Oh shitshitshit...
I backed out quietly, my heart pounding, my throat suddenly parched.
It didn't look like anything had been disturbed, but then, a professional
wouldn't make that kind of mistake. I glanced around the living room
and kitchen, but I didn't want to go up to Jim's room - at least, not
without Jim standing beside me. I opened the door and ducked into the
hall, slumping back against the wall for a second, my eyes closed, as
I composed myself.
The hand on my shoulder made me jump and lash out, but my fist was caught
and held in a firm but gentle grip.
"Easy, Sandburg. I don't need a black eye."
"Oh man, Jim..." I was really glad to see him, and my other hand clutched
his jacket. It was the shock, y'know.
"What happened?"
"There's this strange smell in my room," I began in a whisper, trying
not to babble. "I've never smelled it before, and my doors were closed,
and I guess..." I blushed and hesitated. It sounded so stupid when
I said it out loud. "I guess I thought someone had been searching my
room..."
Jim nodded, like he was taking me seriously, and released my fist. It
was hard to let go of his jacket, but I did. I really wanted to hold
him tightly... Well, that's not important. Forget it. He held his
finger to his lips and then jerked his head toward the door. "Let's
go check it out."
With a quick pat on my shoulder, he drew his gun, opened the door and
walked in. "I'm just going to change my pants. You know I hate when
I spill coffee on myself," he said. His eyes raked over the rooms, and
I could practically see him listening. He slipped into my room, tested
the fire door, and when he started toward the stairs, his face was pale.
"No hurry, man," I replied, going for a casual sound. I don't think
I succeeded, but he just nodded and silently disappeared upstairs. I
knew empirically that he was only out of my sight for about ten seconds,
but damn, that was the longest ten seconds I could remember. I must've
been holding my breath, because as soon as I saw Jim, I took a big gulp
of air.
He had a pair of pants slung over his shoulder, the gun still in his
hand. That's my Jim - no detail is too small for him to remember. If
we were under surveillance, he'd have to appear in different trousers.
He ducked into the bathroom and then checked the emergency exits.
I guess he was satisfied that everything was secure for the moment, because
he handed me his gun and quickly changed his pants. With another pat
on my shoulder, he reholstered his gun and motioned me into my bedroom.
The smell was already dissipating, but Jim wrinkled his nose.
"British Sterling?" I mouthed, and he nodded. His arm swept out in a
gesture that encompassed the room, and he looked at me questioningly.
I quickly glanced around, trying to remember what it had looked like
this morning before we left. Books, papers, notes, journals...
Damn.
I know I'm not the neatest person in the world - Jim would call that
an understatement, by the way - but I do know where everything is on
my desk. And my current journal was not where it was supposed to be.
I keep them organized by date, not surprisingly, and I remembered I had
last written in it on Saturday night - well, Sunday morning, really -
when Jim had stayed up all night. Now it was in the wrong place.
Some bastard was reading my journal.
I was so angry that I almost said something to Jim, but he quickly put
his finger on my mouth, silencing me. I stared at him, my chest suddenly
tight. With a strange little grimace, he swayed toward me, then jerked
his hand away and turned toward the door. I touched my mouth before
the warmth of his finger disappeared, licked my lips, and ignored the
twisting in my gut.
We grabbed sandwiches at the deli, finishing them quickly. Mine could've
been made of cardboard - I didn't even taste it. We hardly spoke as
Jim drove downtown to the gallery, but my eyes kept swinging around to
his still, self-contained figure, like a compass needle to the north.
Anger and worry warred with confusion, but I couldn't say anything
about the break-in, or phone taps or my mail being opened. Not in the
truck, at least. Not until we got back to the station and down in the
basement to that claustrophobic room...
Jim's hand crept across the seat and his fingers slid down my arm in
long, easy strokes. He didn't look at me, but I scooted closer to him
and leaned into his touch. My anger slowly evaporated, leaving the worry
and an unsettled gnawing inside. Jim's face was as calm and composed
as ever, but his hand trembled against me, like he was scared. Jim.
Scared. Jim was never scared, at least not for himself. And that
meant that he was scared for *me.* That simple fact sent tiny slivers
of ice through my chest.
One deep breath and a stern admonishment to myself later, I was calmer.
Getting freaked by this whole business wasn't going to help me or Jim
or anyone. I needed to stay calm and focused so that we could beat these
rat bastards at their own game. That decided, I smiled at Jim and patted
his hand, resting on my shoulder. It provided a small island of warmth
on my cold body, and I was really grateful that Jim was there beside
me, doing his Blessed Protector thing. I can take care of myself most
times, you know. I don't like to fight, but I will if I have to. I've
picked up a few self-defense tricks over the years, but this covert ops
stuff was way out of my league. After all this shit goes down, I think
I'll ask Jack Kelso for some more tips on dealing with spies and moles
and all. Whoever was doing this didn't seem to be in Lee Brackett's
league, but having more information might save us some grief in the future.
And the truth is, I didn't want Jim to have to shoulder the responsibility
alone. I'm his *partner,* dammit, and I should be able to pull my own
weight in this.
"Hey, Chief, wake up." Jim prodded me in the shoulder. "We're here."
"Sorry, man," I said, scrambling out of the truck. "I was just trying
to work a few things out."
"Don't strain anything, Professor." He gestured to the side of the building.
"Roberts' apartment door is this way."
The freshly-painted green door opened almost immediately, and a huge
bear of a man stood in the doorway. Jim introduced himself, pulling
out his badge. The guy just shook his head, threw up his hands and rumbled
"This way," before turning and leading the way up the narrow staircase.
I followed Jim, feeling extraneous, kinda like the tail-end of a parade.
He led us to a spare, bright room and motioned us toward the sofa. It
looked like some sort of crazy foam sculpture, but it was surprisingly
comfortable. He sat, or perched, really, on a collection of rods dotted
with strategically placed cushions, masquerading as a chair. It was beautiful,
in a weird, too-much-spicy-food-dream sort of way.
"Greg told me what happened," he began, obviously shaken, "or at least
as much as you told him. What can I do to help?"
Jim gave him the standard platitudes about being sorry this had happened,
etc. I was proud of him - he sounded like he really meant them. Then
he pulled out the photocopy enlargement of Wallace's driver's license
photo.
"Do you know this man?"
Roberts took the paper and stared at it, frowning. "Was this the man
who was killed?"
"That's what we're trying to discover," said Jim. "Have you seen him
before?"
"Yeah." Roberts nodded slowly. "Yeah, I've seen him around. He's been
to a couple of openings with Brett Paul. They made a cute couple."
"Brett Paul?"
"The artist. He did that series of small rose quartz sculptures on display
downstairs."
I shared a look with Jim - we both remembered those little sculptures.
I didn't have any idea that they'd been carved from rose quartz, though,
because of the blood and gore that had covered them.
"Do you know of any disagreements they may have had recently?"
Roberts thought for a moment, then shook his head. "No. They were at
my opening last Tuesday, and I don't think anyone could pry them apart.
Brett's..." He laughed, not pleasantly. "Brett's very demanding. He
likes both attention and money, and is willing to use his considerable
'charms' to get what he wants. From what I could see, and I wasn't paying
them a lot of attention, you understand, Wallace is completely under
his thumb." He paused. "So to speak."
"Where does Brett Paul live?"
"Wherever he damn well pleases, I imagine. He has an apartment and studio
on the waterfront, about eight blocks from here, but my guess would be
that he stays with Wallace as much as possible, to save on expenses."
Jim leaned back and stretched out his legs, looking steadily at Roberts.
I knew that look - Jim was shifting into hunting mode. "You don't like
him, do you?"
Roberts froze for a second, then shrugged. "No, I don't. He played
me for a fool two years ago, and... Well, I still resent it. But he's
a damn good artist, and I'm glad to have his work in my gallery. It's
exquisite, approachable, and it sells well."
He gave us Paul's address and phone number, adding "I wouldn't be surprised
if his phone is cut off. Brett's not very good about paying bills on
time, although he never forgets what *he's* owed." We left soon afterward,
after Jim reassured Roberts that he'd be able to get into the gallery
and clean up in a couple of days.
Sure enough, when Jim tried Paul's number back at the truck, he got the
'out of service' message.
"Looks like Roberts was right," he said, pulling away from the curb and
heading away from the station.
"Are we going to his place?"
"Might as well while we're in the area, Chief."
We drove down to the waterfront and found Paul's apartment building.
It had been an old warehouse, but was converted into apartments in the
mid 80's. Parking was a bitch at that time of day, and Jim finally found
a space three blocks away. As we walked back to the building, he stayed
close beside me, his arm bumping into me, his fingers brushing mine.
Paul lived on the second floor. Jim knocked on the door, then cocked
his head to one side, listening.
"No one's home," he said, turning away. Then his head jerked up and
he inhaled deeply.
"What is it?" He swayed, eyes glazed, and I pressed my hands against
his chest to steady him.
"Blood..."
His hands covered mine for a second and he squeezed them gently before
pushing them away. Covering the doorknob with a handkerchief, he tried
the door - it was unlocked and swung open slowly.
"Your gun, Jim," I whispered as he started through the door.
He frowned and shook his head. "There's no one alive in here, Chief."
Then he disappeared inside, and I followed cautiously.
The apartment was basically one large open space, with a little cubicle
in the corner that was probably the bathroom. It had been casually divided
into living, dining and kitchen areas, but the largest was obviously
used as a studio. Stones of various sizes and colors were scattered
over shelves and a large table, some raw, some roughly carved, some finished.
There were a couple of machines next to the table - probably a polisher
and grinder. A table saw of some sort stood in the corner. Apart from
the clutter in the studio, the place was even more barren than Jim's
when I first moved in -- there was no place for anyone to hide, except
for the bathroom.
And that's where Jim was headed.
The door was closed, but even I could smell the sharp, metallic tang
of blood, and the other disgusting odors that accompanied death. Jim
never hesitated. He wrapped his shirt-tail over his hand and opened
the door. The reek hit me like a blow - I can't imagine what it was
like for Jim. I peered around the door-frame and then stepped back quickly.
Another murder. It wasn't as bad as Wallace, but I don't think anything
could be as bad as Wallace. This guy had had his throat cut. Almost
severed, really, which I guess was why there was so much blood around.
It must have gushed for a few seconds while his heart was still pumping...
"Give me your phone, Jim, and I'll call this in," I said, trying not
to breathe or look into the bathroom as I held out my hand.
He handed me the phone with a grunt, and I spent the next couple of hours
hanging around, trying not to get in the way. When Simon arrived, we
discussed the case with him, and he decided that Jim and I should stick
with the Wallace side, while Brown and Rafe would handle this. We'd
exchange data and coordinate with each other. Someone pretty high up
had already heard about Wallace, and had lit a fire under Simon's ass.
They wanted his murder solved and the murderer on trial asap. Paul,
if this guy was Paul, was definitely playing second fiddle here, regardless
of how things were when he was alive.
Simon fingered his unlit cigar thoughtfully. "Sounds like our only source
of solid information is Mrs. Wallace. Get some dinner, and then drive
over and see if she's in. She'll have to ID the body, but that can wait
until tomorrow."
"We're on it, sir."
We grabbed a quick burger, but instead of eating in the relative peace
and quiet of the truck, Jim motioned me into a booth in the back corner
of the crowded restaurant and squeezed in beside me.
"What's up, Jim?"
He ducked his head and shielded his mouth with his hand. "Need to talk,
Chief. Without anyone listening."
I mirrored him. If anyone was paying attention to us, we must've looked
pretty stupid with our heads down and our hands cupped over our mouths.
But the noise of the crowd would make it difficult, if not impossible,
to overhear us and the place was full of high school kids, too wrapped
up in themselves to notice two older guys sitting quietly in the corner.
"How the hell did they get into my room? Everything was locked up, and
I don't leave a key outside anymore."
"They came in through the front door," Jim murmured. "They had a key.
And they left through the fire door." He leaned against me, a warm wall
of flesh standing between me and the world.
"We've gotta tell Simon what's happening, Jim. Maybe get some surveillance
of our own set up."
"No," he said quickly. "Not yet... Unless-" He swung around and looked
at me, like he was searching for something. "We could do that, Chief,
but it might tip them off, and then we'd never find out who's behind
this."
I grimaced. He was right, at least about the counter-surveillance.
"Hey, I want to know who's doing this more than anyone, man, but if something
happened to you... us..." I swallowed convulsively, trying to push down
the panic that suddenly rose inside me. "At least Simon would have a
clue about what was going on. Maybe there's something we could do that
we haven't thought of, or maybe we won't feel so isolated if we told
him - I don't know, man, but it just seems the right thing to do!"
I clasped my hands together, trying to stop them from shaking. Where
the hell had all that come from? I guess everything that was bottled
up inside me decided to go walk-about - an emotional purge. But it wasn't
cathartic - I didn't feel better afterward. If anything, I felt worse.
Jim leaned closer, his hand sliding over mine. "You're right, Blair,"
he whispered. "We'll tell Simon in the morning."
"But what about tonight? I mean, we can't sleep at home - they could
get in and-"
He squeezed my fingers gently before raising his hand to his forehead,
rubbing it hard. "We have to act as if we don't know we're being watched,
Chief."
"Yeah. Okay. You're right, man." I hated the defeated tone in my voice,
but dammit, this was driving me nuts.
"Don't worry, Sandburg. I'll rig it so that we'll have plenty of warning
if they try to get in tonight. They won't take us by surprise."
I couldn't hide my spark of excitement. "Oh yeah? Are you gonna do
some Covert Ops stuff?"
His mouth quirked into a half-smile. "Something like that. Now, if
you're done, let's get over to Mrs. Wallace's and see if she's home."
It took us forty-five minutes to make our way across town to the apartment
complex Doreen Wallace called home. They weren't bad apartments - the
neighborhood was relatively safe and they were pretty inexpensive - but
the walls were like cardboard and the rooms were small. A lot of grad
students lived in the complex, and I'd been to a couple of parties there.
It must have been a real let-down for Mrs. Wallace to move there after
living in that beautiful house. But maybe she didn't have much choice.
Or maybe it was her choice.
We finally found her apartment tucked way back in a corner building,
and Jim knocked on the door. The chain rattled, and the door opened
a crack.
Jim introduced us, showing his badge, and the door swung wide. I don't
think I let my surprise show, but Doreen Wallace was a babe! Her husband
had been in his early sixties, and so I'd assumed that she'd be about
his age. She wasn't young - probably in her mid-forties - but she had
one of those faces that gets more beautiful with age, and her short blonde
hair didn't look l
by Sihaya Black