_____________________________
I
hurried past the nurses’ station while shrugging into my winter coat. I heard Janet's "Rick!" from
somewhere behind me as my hand hit the double doors. If the security guard that was now posted there hadn't been quite
so agile that swinging door woulda' busted his nose.
Now
exactly where the hell I thought I was going, since my only means of
transportation was Janet, I'm not sure.
I kept right on walkin' though, stomping by the same waiting area,
offices, and labs we'd passed minutes before.
Janet
was forced to run in order to catch up with me. She was thrusting her arms into her own heavy coat when she
finally came abreast of me.
She
reached out and grabbed my elbow, swiveling me to face her.
"Just
where the hell do you think you're going, Richard Simon?"
"I'm
goin' home."
"Home? To San Diego?"
"No! Home to your house. I'll get my stuff and go to a
motel."
"Whoa! Wait a minute! First of all, you don't need to go to a motel. I've got plenty of room. And second of all...second of all, just what
the hell was that all about back there?"
I
continued walking toward the elevators, giving Janet no choice but to follow.
"I'm
tired and it's been a long day. I'm
ready to go home and call it a night."
"Without
saying goodbye to your brother first?"
She voiced her disbelief.
"Without taking a few minutes to speak to him? To let him know you're here and that you
care?"
"A.J.
knows I care."
"He
does? And just how would he know
that? He asked for you, and you turned
and walked away from him. You might as
well have whipped him the bird and told him to kiss your ass!"
I
stopped and rubbed a hand over my aching forehead. "Look, Janet, I’ve got a lotta things on my mind. I already told you I'm pissed at A.J. That doesn't mean I'm not grateful he's
gonna be okay, because I am. I sat down
in that waiting room for five hours giving myself an ulcer while worryin' about
him. But right now I need a little
distance from this whole situation, and a little distance from him, too."
Whether
she fully understood how I was feeling I don't know. But at least she stopped givin' me grief over it.
"All
right," she nodded, "but just
when will you be ready to close this distance between the two of you?"
"I
dunno."
"Well,
you'd better have an answer for me when I come back here tomorrow afternoon to
visit your brother, because I can guarantee you he'll ask me where you
are. I have no intention of lying to
him, or making excuses for you."
"Yeah,"
I growled, "well, we'll worry
about tomorrow when tomorrow comes.
That seems to be the way A.J.'s been living his life this week. In total disregard of everyone else but
himself, so why the hell should I be any different?"
I
stomped off for the elevators once more.
Janet followed me with a sigh of exasperation, but kept her mouth
shut.
We
didn't exchange one word all the way back to Janet's house. The BMW's doors slammed simultaneously when
we climbed outta the car in her garage.
She
unbugged her alarm system and we stepped into the back hallway. She reset the alarm and locked the
door. I picked my duffel bag up off the
floor where I'd left it, hiking it onto my shoulder. I told her again I'd go to
a motel if she preferred, but she just shot me a look that told me to get
real. I let the argument drop
there. Despite the fact that neither
one of us really wanted to share the same living space that night, with Hewitt
still on the loose it was probably best if she wasn't alone.
Janet
pointed to a dark room in the hallway as we passed.
"You
can use this bathroom. There's a linen
closet in there full of clean towels and washcloths."
I
followed her all the way up the stairs to the room A.J. had been staying
in. His suitcase sat neatly beside the
long triple dresser, and I caught the faint whiff of a cologne he favors.
"You
can sleep here for now. When A.J.'s
released from the hospital you can move into my office until he's well enough to
make the trip home. I have a couch in
there that converts to a bed.
"There's
leftovers in the fridge. You're welcome
to warm up in the microwave whatever looks appealing. Otherwise, there's cereal in the cabinet next to the stove and bread
in the breadbox by the sink. I think
A.J. bought a sliced turkey breast at the grocery store the other day if you
want to make yourself a sandwich. Feel
free to search the cabinets or refrigerator for whatever you can find. The only thing I ask is that you clean up
the kitchen when you're finished. I'm
not your maid, and I have no intention of being."
Her
spiel was quick, impersonal, well rehearsed, and meant to let me know she was
angry with me. Before I could say
"Thanks," or "Can I heat something up for you, too?" or
"Where do you keep the potato chips?" she was gone.
Janet’s
bedroom door was shut with such a violent slam the pictures hanging on the wall
in the hallway rattled. I gave a
helpless little shrug of my shoulders before turning to dig through my duffel
bag. I pulled out a pair of clean boxer
shorts, an undershirt, my toothbrush and paste, and my electric razor. I gathered everything together and headed
down to the bathroom she'd told me I could make use of.
I
stood under the hot water a long time.
I thought of calling the hospital when I was finished to tell A.J. good
night, or to ask one of the nurses to tell him for me, but just as quickly
decided I was still too ticked off to deal with any of it. He'd almost gotten himself killed, and for
what? An ex-wife who had caused him
nothing but pain. Not that I woulda'
wanted to see Janet get hurt either. But
A.J. knew a lotta good Seattle detectives.
He coulda' recommended any one of them to her. He didn't have to come here himself.
And
most of all, he didn't have to lie to me about it.
It
was twenty minutes later before I emerged from the bathroom. If I'd been in the house by myself I woulda'
just come out in my boxers and T-shirt, but decided it behooved me to pull on
my jeans, too. Not that I'm all that
modest or a prude, but I had a feelin' Janet wouldn't appreciate me walkin'
around in front of her in my skivvies.
The
extra effort didn't prove to make much difference. Janet was nowhere to be seen.
I could detect a familiar smell when I entered the kitchen and placed a
light hand on the four-slot toaster. It
was warm, indicating to me she'd been in here but had either eaten her meal
quickly, or had taken it up to her room.
And
here I was gonna apologize to her and offer to cook her something, I
chuckled to myself with both amusement and sincerity.
I
didn't have much of an appetite, and was too tired to face cleaning up a big
mess, so settled on a bowl of Grapenuts and a Florida orange for my
supper. Janet had kindly left the
dishes we'd used that morning on the kitchen table. I knew she'd done it on purpose, and thought of how she told me I
was to clean up when I was finished. I
reluctantly admitted to myself I deserved her wrath so took care of all the
dishes and dumped the leftover coffee down the sink.
It
didn't take me long to figure out how to get her dishwasher going. I emptied it first of the clean dishes
sitting inside, searchin’ the necessary cabinets until I had them all back
where they belonged. I went about reloading it, found the soap, poured it in
the dispenser, shut and latched the door, then pressed the 'start' button.
Once
I discovered where she kept the coffee and filters I even set the coffee maker
to start brewing at seven the next morning.
I wiped off the kitchen table and put her placemats and centerpiece
where they belonged. Satisfied that the
room would pass Janet's inspection come daybreak, I shut the light off, grabbed
the newspaper from the magazine rack in the living room, retrieved the folded
dirty clothes I'd sat at the base of the stairway after my shower, and headed
up to bed.
Janet’s
door was still shut when I passed by, but a light shone from underneath. I thought about knocking and calling good
night, but decided better of it. Maybe
we needed a little distance from one another as well.
_____________________________
I
was dead to the world when I was woken from the depths of sleep by someone
callin' my name. I'd read the paper in
the bed in Janet's guest room, then shut the light out shortly after nine
o'clock. It had been a long day and I
was beyond exhaustion.
It
took me a few seconds to realize where I was.
The hall light spilled in through the bedroom door that was now
open. Janet stood there with her robe
half on.
"Rick! Rick, wake up! We've got to get back to the hospital!"
My
first thought was that Dallas Hewitt had somehow gotten past the security guard
posted at the Intensive Care entrance.
I
glanced at the bedside clock radio while struggling with the mattress to
rise. It was one forty-two a.m.
I
wasn't too concerned about the fact I was clothed in nothing other than my
boxers and T-shirt when I kicked the covers off and jumped to the carpeted
floor. "What's wrong? What's happened?"
"Leslie
just called! It's A.J.! He's been having seizures of some sort on
and off since eleven. She thinks we'd
better get down there as quickly as we can."
I
could hear the tears in her voice. I
tried to combat them by projecting a calm I didn't feel.
"All
right, get dressed then. I'll meet you
at the car."
She
brought a trembling hand up to her mouth as her tears began to flow. "Oh, Rick...oh what if something
happens to A.J.? What if...what if he
doesn't make it? It'll be all my
fault. I'll never forgive myself. I should have never called him."
That
was the moment I decided there'd been far too much blame placing going on of
late. And I was the guiltiest party of
all. It was time to put all that aside
and focus on what was important.
I
walked over to Janet and wrapped her in my arms, totally oblivious to the fact
that I was in my underwear and she was in a thigh-length purple satin gown with
a robe that wasn't quite on. Just
holding her like that for those brief seconds reminded me of what it had been
like when we'd been friends. It had
been a lotta years now, and a lotta water had run under the bridge, but she
wasn't a bad person, and she never had been.
"Don't
cry, Janet," I whispered into her hair.
"Don't cry. It's not your
fault. No one's gonna blame you for
anything. If anyone's gonna take on any
blame around here it's me." I
gently pushed her toward her room before she could say anything else. "Go on now. Get dressed."
I
pulled my socks on and jumped into my jeans.
I rifled through my bag and came up with a brown corduroy shirt. I hastily worked the buttons into the holes,
leaving the last three undone. That
fact was hidden when I shoved the shirttails into my pants. My winter coat was layin' across the only
chair in the room. I grabbed it and my
wallet on the way out, leaving my hat behind in the rush.
I
was tugging my boots on in the downstairs hallway when Janet arrived with tears
still streaming down her face. She'd
thrown on a pair of jeans and an old bulky green sweater, had untied tennis
shoes on her feet, and was still struggling into her coat. Without saying a word she handed me the keys
to her car. I caught her by the elbow
and we rushed out as one.
Because
of the lateness of the hour, and my heavy foot, a trip that should have taken
us at least thirty minutes took us fifteen.
I held Janet’s hand as we ran through the dim parking lot for the front
entrance.
We
were still running when we got off the elevators on the sixth floor. We never stopped as we flew by the security
guard and burst through the doors into the Intensive Care Unit.
The
nurses at the station looked up, startled, when we barreled in like a couple of
cops about to make a drug bust. In just
scant seconds they recognized us, however, and one rounded the counter to take
charge. She told us Doctor Zabler would
be right with us. She wouldn't allow us
to continue to A.J.'s room.
The
other nurse headed off in that direction.
Within seconds she returned with Leslie in tow. The doctor ushered us right on out the doors
again, not answering any of our questions until we came to the small room I'd
seen earlier labeled Family Lounge.
The
private waiting area was about the size of your average bedroom, the walls
painted pale pink. A white phone was
mounted on one of them with instructions hanging beneath that told you how to
dial into the Intensive Care nurses’ station.
Light pink carpet blanketed the floor.
A couch and two chairs made it appear as though it was a calm oasis in
someone's home. Two lamps with white
shades were situated on end tables.
They were turned to their dimmest setting, causing a person to
automatically speak in hushed tones as though a baby was sleeping somewhere in
the near vicinity.
The
doctor indicated for me and Janet to sit on the couch. She perched on the arm of the chair to my
left. With one sentence she explained
why she'd brought us to this room.
"It's
better if we speak in here so we don't disturb the other patients."
"What's
goin' on?" I asked. "Janet said something about
seizures."
"Yes,
though at this point I'm without an explanation as to why. So is the neurologist who's with A.J.
now."
"I
know seizures can be brought on by head injuries," I informed the
woman, "but you said the bump he's
got isn't serious."
"And
we still don't believe it is. We did a
CT scan an hour ago and it's showing nothing that would indicate the cause of
what A.J.'s experiencing."
"So
what's happening?" Janet
asked. "Why is A.J. having
seizures?"
"We're
still attempting to come to a clear conclusion. It's possible this is a side effect of the drug Hewitt injected
A.J. with. It's also a possibility it's
a side effect of the entire trauma he suffered, including being out in the cold
for so long. Or, it's possible A.J.’s
got himself so agitated that he just can't relax."
"Agitated?" I asked.
I recalled A.J. lying quietly in bed, cold and sedated the last time I'd
seen him. Several words came to mind
that would have described his appearance then, but agitated sure the hell
wasn't one of 'em.
"He's
been upset ever since the two of you left.
No matter how much we sedate A.J., he's not out for long. And even when he is, all he does is mumble
your name in his sleep."
The
doctor was looking right at me when she said that, so there was little doubt as
to whose name A.J. was repeating.
I
stood up. "Let me see him."
"Rick,
I'm not sure now is a good time. He's
been through a lot. If we don't get the
seizures under control...well, I'm not certain how much more he can physically
withstand."
"You
said he's upset. You said he's callin'
for me. So let me see him. I think I can calm him down."
I
saw the doctor look to Janet who nodded her head yes. I felt Janet reach for my hand and give it a squeeze right before
I followed Leslie out of the lounge.
Other
than in A.J.'s room activity on the floor was at a bare minimum. A man I took to be the neurologist was in
with A.J., but stepped out when Leslie entered with me. He gave her a raised eyebrow in question as
he passed.
"I'll
explain in a minute," she told me.
"Please wait by the nurses’ station for me."
A.J.'s
bed had been lowered so he was now lying flat.
His wrists were loosely secured to the railing in thickly padded
restraints, which I knew was for his own safety, but that didn't make it any
easier for me to see. His face was the
color of diluted putty, his features drawn with the physical strain brought on
by the repeated violent contractions of his muscles. Dark circles of exhaustion ringed his closed eyes like smoky
bruises. Common sense told me he
couldn't take much more.
Doctor
Zabler spoke from somewhere behind me.
"I'll be back in a few minutes, Rick. If you need me before then I'll be at the nurses’
station."
I
nodded my head and heard her walk out.
I crossed to the left side of A.J.'s bed and leaned over the railing. I
ran the fingers of my right hand through his hair while softly calling his
name.
"A.J.?"
It
took him a moment to open his eyes, and even longer to focus on me. I repeated my actions, combing my fingers
through his hair again and calling his name.
He
licked at his cracked lips and whispered so low I could hardly hear him.
"Rick?"
I
squeezed his forearm, then undid the restraint so I could take his hand.
"Yeah,
A.J., it's Rick. I'm here."
Although
there was little strength to it, I felt him squeeze back.
And
that was it. There were no apologies,
no accusations, and no explanations on either of our parts. There were just two brothers who were always
there for one another, and who always would be.
I
stayed by A.J.’s side all night, reassuring him with a touch and quiet words
whenever he seemed confused as to where he was, or whether or not I was still
with him. He didn't have any further
seizures. The doctors were hard pressed
to explain that phenomenon, but I wasn't.
All I had to do was look down at his hand encased in mine, and that was
all the answer I required.
S&S S&S S&S
S&S S&S
I
was released from Seattle's Shoreland Hospital on Tuesday afternoon. Other than feeling like I'd been run over by
a semi-truck and dragged behind it for ten miles, I was fine.
I
spent the remainder of Tuesday and most of Wednesday sleeping and reading in
Janet's guest room. I'm not sure what
Rick did except he seemed to spend a lot of time in the kitchen cooking and
cleaning. How Janet had managed to make
him such a slave to the stove and a sponge was beyond me, but I was certainly
anxious to discover her secret.
Leslie
allowed Earl Wilke in to see me on Sunday evening. Telling him everything I could recall of my ordeal wasn't
easy. It had been terrifying to be
completely helpless like that minus my sense of sight and hearing. At the time I had no clue as to where I was
and what Hewitt had planned for me. If
I did somehow manage to survive, I was left wondering if the blindness,
deafness, and paralysis would be permanent.
To say it's something I don't like to dwell on is an understatement.
In
the end, what I could tell Earl and what I couldn't didn't make much
difference. I was moved off Intensive
Care on Monday morning. When I woke up
from a nap in my new room late that afternoon Rick was sitting beside my
bed. I thought that was odd. It was right in the time period when
afternoon visiting hours had long been over and evening ones had yet to begin.
I
reached for the button by the side of the bed that would raise me to a sitting
position.
"Rick?"
He
allowed the silence to linger before speaking in a quiet voice. "A.J....A.J.,
they found Hewitt a couple hours ago. I
wanted you to hear this from me before you
saw it on the news."
"Hear
what?"
"He's
dead, A.J. He hung himself. He hung himself in the...in the boxcar where
Janet and I found you."
I
turned my head on the pillow and looked away from my brother. He didn't press me to speak. He seemed to sense the wide range of emotions
hammering me for all angles. When I
felt his hand on mine I squeezed for all I was worth. He squeezed back, and in that one small gesture told me he
understood.
Dallas
Hewitt had been the cause of a lot of pain.
He'd ended many lives before their time, and caused the families of his
victims unrelenting suffering. Had
caused his own family endless pain and suffering as well. And had very nearly succeeded in killing
me. Possibly he would have killed
Janet, too, had he gotten the chance.
But
while I had long ago quit trying to figure out what goes haywire in the minds
of people like Doctor Hewitt, that doesn't mean I took his death lightly, and
that I don't feel for the children and brother he left behind. Most people would look at Dallas Hewitt and
say he got what he deserved. I look at
him and wonder why he didn't receive the help he needed before his actions
spiraled so out of control.
While
I highly doubt Rick would agree with my sympathetic feelings for the man, he
stayed with me that night so we could watch the news together. I didn't ask him to, he just stayed. I suspect he knew I had to put the case to
rest and didn't want me doing that alone.
When the broadcast was over I shut the television off, and with Rick's
help, got out of bed. I shouldered into
my robe, belting it with clumsy fingers that were numb and swollen from the
aftereffects of frostbite. My feet
worked their way into the slippers Janet had bought for me the previous day.
My
brother and I walked the hallway in silence that evening. When we got back to my room Rick asked me if
I wanted to talk. I shook my head no
and he let the subject drop there.
When
Janet arrived from work Rick was helping me clear the food off my dinner
tray. She scolded him for eating what I
was supposed to be eating, then scolded me for not eating what I was
supposed to be eating. I think she
sensed my mood and probably knew the reason behind it. She insisted I put my robe and slippers on
so the three of us could walk down to the hospital cafeteria for dinner. Even though Rick had just polished off one
supper, he was game for another.
By
the time we'd eaten and they walked me back to my room I was in far better
spirits. We'd laughed and joked and
teased throughout our meal, the light-hearted levity reminding me of what good
friends the three of us made when all the other trivial bullshit of life was
out of the way.
My
brother and I flew out of Seattle at eleven o'clock on Thursday morning. Both Rick and Janet tried to convince me I
needed another day or two of rest before traveling, but I was ready to
leave. Seattle was no longer my home,
in many ways it never really had been.
San Diego was my home, and I was anxious to get back there. I missed Lauren, I missed her boys, I even
found myself missing lazy old Toby.
After what I'd been through it was going to feel good to return to all
that was familiar, welcoming, and safe.
Rick
had the household up early the day of our flight. He bustled around making breakfast for the three of us, then took
out the garbage, changed bed sheets, and gathered up the towels and washcloths
he and I had used. I heard him ask
Janet where her laundry detergent was, then heard water running in the washing
machine.
I
looked at my former wife with amazement.
"What did you do to my brother that's got him scurrying around your
house like an employee of Cleaning Maid Easy?"
She
chuckled while revealing her secret.
"I simply told him if he was going to stay here with me then he was
going to pick up after himself."
"That's
it? I mean, you didn't threaten to do
him bodily harm? Or Heaven forbid, burn his favorite cowboy hat in your
fireplace?"
"No. Nothing like that."
She
was amused by my befuddlement.
"But
I've been trying for years to get him to pick up after himself."
She
gave me a solicitous pat on the back as she walked away. "Maybe you just don't phrase it right,
A.J."
Janet and Rick had picked the Concord up from
the parking garage on Sunday morning. Even
though it had to be returned to the airport, thereby giving Rick and myself
transportation there, Janet insisted on going into work late that day so she
could see us off.
She
followed us to Sea-Tac International in her BMW. A half an hour after arriving our luggage was checked in and the
rental car had been returned. I paid
the remainder of the balance owing on the car with the business credit
card. Before I could get the receipt
tucked away in my wallet Janet grabbed it from my hands.
"Hey!
Give that back to me."
"No. I need to keep it with the other receipts so
I know you don't leave anything off when I get your bill."
"Janet,
I'm not sending you a bill."
She
planted her hands on her hips in a gesture I well remembered from our married
years. "Oh, yes you are."
"No,
I'm not."
"Yes,
you are."
"No..." I stopped there, realizing we sounded like a
couple of kids arguing over a toy.
I
steered her away from the rental car counter.
Rick followed us, but stayed out of our disagreement.
"Look,
Janet, I'm not going to bill you for anything."
"A.J.,
I told you when I called you that I wasn't going to let you come up here if you
didn't treat me like a regular client.
Which means I pay you just like a regular client would. No favors.
No special treatment.
Nothing. Just send me the bill
and be done with it."
I
looked to Rick for help. He shrugged
his shoulders.
"Sounds
like the lady means business to me. And
I learned a long time ago not to mess with her when she gets in that
mood."
Having
gotten no reinforcement from my sibling, I turned back to my ex-wife. "If I'd done anything to help you then
granted, maybe you would owe me for my services. But the point is, I didn't do anything. The guy was never after you to begin with. It was me he wanted all along."
"Maybe,"
Janet agreed. "But maybe not. His intention could very well have been to
hurt me as a motive of revenge against you.
Whatever the reason, we'll never know now. And besides, every P.I. takes on cases where the results aren't
what he expected, but that doesn't mean he foregoes billing his client for his
time, effort, and expenses."
"That's
true, but--"
I
couldn't have been more startled than when she leaned forward and kissed me on
the mouth right in mid-sentence.
"A.J.,
just shut up and send me the damn bill."
I
watched wide-eyed, as she moved from me to Rick. She got on her tiptoes to kiss him.
"And
don't forget to add in whatever it cost you to have Carlos's cousin fly you up
here."
When
Rick put his arms around her and kissed her back I realized the two of them had
somehow made peace after a long-running, bitter, and hard fought war.
Regardless
of how old my brother gets, he'll always be a shameless flirt and a ladies’
man. He kissed Janet a second time
before she pulled away from him laughing.
He
cocked an eyebrow at me. "You
know, A.J., the lady does have an interesting way of askin' for her bill. It'd sure be nice if all our female clients
would take up her methods."
Before
I could make a reply an announcement went over the P.A. system saying our
flight was ready to board. Janet walked
with us to the gate. She and Rick
exchanged a final hug. I knew he was
referring to their frantic search for me when he told her, "You make one helluva partner,
lady. You ever decide to give up that
fancy job you got, you give me a call."
She
laughed at him again, told him he was and always would be too much of a Peter
Pan for her, then sent him on his way.
Rick
walked down the concourse that would take him into the plane. I knew he went on ahead without me so Janet
and I could have a moment alone together.
Her
lips brushed my cheek, while at the same time she gave me a strong hug. "I was so worried, A.J. So scared something had happened to you and
that you were...that you were..."
I
wrapped my arms around her when she couldn't bring herself to finish that
thought.
"I
know, Janet. I know."
She
wiped her eyes as we broke apart. She took
my hand and gave it a squeeze.
"Thank
you for everything, A.J.
Everything. Take care of
yourself."
"I
will. You do the same."
"I
will. And, A.J.?"
"Yes?"
"If
you don't mind...if you don't mind I'd like to call you every so often. It's nice...it’s nice keeping in touch with
old friends."
I
smiled at her shy request while bending forward to place a kiss on her
cheek. "Yes, it is. Old friends are special. Call me anytime you'd like."
The
final announcement for boarding the flight south to San Diego came. Right before I turned away from my former
wife I said, "Oh...and, Janet?"
"Yes?"
"You
really should look into that Lars character more closely. If you want my personal opinion, he's not
the guy for you."
She
smacked my arm and laughed. "Oh,
A.J."
There
was a strong, serious undertone to my voice.
"Promise?"
She
rolled her eyes in exasperation but vowed,
"Promise."
The
last sight I caught of Janet was of her standing in front of the large windows
watching our flight take off. I knew
she couldn't see me, but I gave her a little wave anyway. But then again, maybe she could see me
because she waved back.
On
second thought, she probably just knew.
_____________________________
Our
return home was uneventful, which was just fine with me. I'd had enough events of late to last me a
lifetime.
With
Mom being out of town for the next month it wasn't going to be necessary to
explain to her where I'd been or what had happened, which was just as well as
she'd only be upset. When I asked Rick
not to mention it to Mom either, he simply nodded his head in agreement.
Toby
was excited to see me that Thursday evening, or at least as excited as Toby can
get. He pushed his fat body off the living
room floor and kind of wiggled his butt in an odd little dance of
greeting. Carlos dropped both Rick's
truck and Rex off after work, allowing Toby time with his favorite playmate.
Although
I wasn't going to admit it to Rick, he and Janet had been right. I should have waited a couple more days
before making the trip home. It was
five fifteen before we turned in my driveway.
Along with luggage delays at the airport, paying for the Camaro's stay
in the parking lot, and rush hour traffic, came a walloping headache and
bone-aching exhaustion.
Rick
pulled the Camaro into my garage. We
both stood and stretched a long moment after climbing out of the sports car.
The day had been filled with too much sitting and too little legroom. With renewed muscles we grabbed our luggage
from the backseat. By the time we were
settled in the house, Carlos had stopped by, and Rick had gone out to get us
something to eat, it was six-thirty. I
was practically asleep on the couch when he got back. It was all I could do to make my way to the table. And even then I was so tired that the food
he'd brought home had very little appeal.
I
was in bed by seven-thirty. I hadn't
expected Rick to spend the night, but to be honest with you I'd been too
exhausted to ask him what his plans were.
It came as no big surprise to find him sleeping on the sofa in my den
the next morning.
He
went into the office later in the day to pick up the
mail, listen to the answering machine, and
return phone messages before stopping at the grocery store for me. I'd have had to have been heavily sedated
not to realize Rick hadn't said more than a dozen words to me since we got on
the plane to come home. If I didn't
know him as well as I do maybe I wouldn't have perceived his coolness to be
anger. Maybe I would have perceived him
to be tired, or just not in the mood to talk.
But I didn't perceive either of those things because he's been my
brother long enough for me to know when he's ticked at me. I could easily guess that his solicitous behavior
toward me both in the hospital, and at Janet's home, came from his fear and
worry over my health. Now that I was
back on my feet I was no doubt going to, at some point in time, be on the
receiving end of his deep-seeded wrath.
I felt kind of like a kid who knew he'd done wrong and knew he deserved
the whipping he was eventually going to get.
It was waiting for that whipping that was taxing on the nerves.
Rick
disappeared early on Saturday morning but left Rex with me, leading me to
believe he hadn't returned to his boat.
I got the impression he simply didn't feel like being around me.
Lauren
and her boys were coming for dinner on Saturday night. I'd asked Rick to join us, but as it grew
closer to the time of Lauren’s arrival and he still wasn't back I assumed he'd
decided to skip it.
Rick’s
truck pulled in just ahead of Lauren's minivan. When he walked into the kitchen he had a boy hanging from each
hand.
Shane
and Tanner broke free from Rick to run to me.
I crouched down to receive their hugs and felt Tanner's lips smack wetly
against my right cheek.
"I
really missed you, A.J.!" The five-year-old declared. "You were gone forever!"
"Yeah,
A.J.," Shane echoed, "you
were gone a whole week. Where
were you?"
From
where he stood above us Rick muttered,
"Funny. I was askin' myself
that same question on many a night."
My
eyes flicked to the brother who brushed past us to lift the lid on the
simmering pot of marinara sauce.
"I
was on a case," I told the boys.
"It took me longer than I thought it would."
Lauren
kissed me on the lips as I stood.
"You look tired, sweetie.
And pale. Are you okay?"
"Yeah,
A.J.," Rick said, "you look
pale. Are you okay?"
Why
Rick suddenly decided to be such a shit was beyond me. Perhaps this was his twisted way of
extracting revenge. I got the
impression he had every intention of making the night as uncomfortable as
possible. He knew perfectly well I
hadn't told Lauren where I'd gone or what had happened. He knew perfectly well I had no plans to
tell her now, or in the future. Not
that Janet was a threat to Lauren. In
the year and a half we'd been seeing each other we'd only briefly discussed my
marriage. It was natural for Lauren to
wonder why it had come to an end so I'd told her. And that was it. We'd
never talked about Janet again. I
couldn't see what would be gained or lost now by telling Lauren what events had
occurred in the last week of my life.
Just like I didn’t want to upset Mom, I didn't want to upset Lauren
either.
"I'm
fine," I assured. "Just came
home with a...bit of the flu bug I guess."
"Ah,"
Rick nodded. "The flu. That can really knock a guy down, that's for
sure. Can hinder his eyesight, hearing,
muscles, the whole works. You watch
yourself there, A.J. I'd hate like heck
for anything that drastic to happen to you."
If
Lauren wondered what Rick was rambling about, or why there was such a biting
edge to his voice, she didn't comment on it.
But it's quite possible she didn't even notice as she was busy helping
Tanner get his jacket off and reminding Shane to remove his shoes before he
walked on my carpeting.
The
five of us sat around my dining room table eating spaghetti and meatballs and
warm garlic bread. Conversation was
kept lively by the boys, who were anxious to tell me of the events in their
lives over the past week.
Rick
was sopping up the remainder of sauce on his plate with a piece of bread. "Sounds like the boys had a busy
week. Why doncha tell 'em about your
week, A.J.?"
From
his seated position Tanner jumped up and down in his chair. "Yeah, A.J., tell us about your
week! Tell us about the case you were
on!"
Lauren
reached over and put a firm hand on his thigh, indicating with just that
movement he was to calm down. "Shhh," she admonished softly. "You don't have to shout.
I know you're excited to see A.J., but he's not deaf. He's sitting right next to you and can hear
you perfectly fine."
"I
don't know about that, Lauren."
Rick stood to carry his plate into the kitchen. "Seems to me A.J.'s been havin' some
trouble with his hearing lately. Could
be a sign of old age, I suppose. But
than again, could just be a sign of foolishness."
Lauren
heard Rick this time and gave me a look of confusion. I shrugged my shoulders and said in a stage whisper, "He didn't get his nap today."
She
chuckled and let the subject drop there.
We
got through dessert without Rick making any more helpful remarks. He and Lauren loaded the dishwasher while
the boys and I cleared the table.
Unlike was the norm for the two of them when they shared in kitchen
chores, Rick wasn't teasing Lauren or endlessly chattering about whatever came
to his mind. I'm sure she found that
unusual, and I know Tanner did.
As
he carried the last plate in and handed it to Rick he paused to look up at
him. His blue eyes were round and
serious.
"What'sa
matter, Rick? Why are you so crabby
tonight?"
"Tanner
Reed!" Lauren scolded.
Rick
chuckled and swung the boy up until he was seated on the counter. He thoroughly tousled Tanner's fiery
hair. "I'm not crabby tonight,
pardner. Just tired." He turned to give me a pointed look. "Takin' care of A.J. when he has a ‘bit
of the flu bug' is more than one man can handle."
Tanner
hopped off the counter and came running over to wrap his arms around my
waist. "I'll help you, Rick. I'll take care of A.J., too!"
I
laughed while patting Tanner on the back.
"Well thank you, Tanner.
That's nice of you. I'm sure
your disposition outshines Rick's on any day."
Rick
brushed by both of us, mumbling under his breath.
"Yeah,
well maybe if he'd been through with you what I have his disposition wouldn't
be so hot either."
I
watched, mystified, as my brother disappeared up the stairs.
I
covered Rick's sudden departure by taking over the kitchen chores he'd been
doing while engaging Lauren and her kids in playful conversation. By the time we were done Rick had been out
to his truck and returned with a Three Stooges video, a favorite form of
entertainment for him and the boys.
Rick
seemed to loosen up a bit while he and the kids sat on the couch imitating the
antics of Moe, Larry, and Curly. For
their own safety, Lauren had to finally put an end to their games.
She
and I were sitting at my kitchen table enjoying a glass of wine and private
conversation. When things started to
get too rowdy she called into the den,
"Hey, you guys! Cool
it! Someone's going to get poked in the
eye if you don't stop what you're doing."
"Yeah,"
Rick agreed. as though he wasn't the instigator of all the horseplay to begin
with, "listen to your Mom. Someone could get poked in the eye. And not bein' able to see is no fun, let me
tell you. Just ask A.J. about
that. He knows."
That
was when the temptation to bean my brother over the head with the rolling pin
was at its greatest.
Fortunately,
Lauren and the boys left shortly after that.
While Rick helped the kids find their shoes, slip into their jackets,
and say their final goodbyes to Toby and Rex, Lauren rose from her chair and
came to wrap her arms around my neck.
She leaned close and spoke softly in my ear.
"Rob
will be taking the boys to his house after their soccer game tomorrow
afternoon. Will you be feeling well
enough for an early dinner at my place and then," she gave a throaty
chuckle, "dessert
afterwards?"
I
looked up at her and waggled my eyebrows.
In deference of the boys' presence I kept my reply quiet and low
pitched. "You bet. You know how much I love your
desserts."
"Yes,
I do. And if you get to feeling sick
again I can just as easily play nurse."
I
laughed. "That would be a fun
game, too."
I
lifted my face enough so our lips made brief contact.
I
watched Lauren as she gathered up her boys while at the same time teasing Rick.
There
was so much about this woman I loved.
She had a playfulness and sense of fun Janet was lacking. The word vivacious had been invented just
for her. She was a wonderful mother, a
wonderful lover, and above all, a wonderful friend. She never expected more of me than I could give her. She was forever tolerant of the time I
couldn't give her because of my chosen profession. The profession Janet hated.
And she was a friend to the brother who had often gotten on Janet's
nerves. Lauren once told me Rick was
easy to like because he was nothing more than a big kid. "After all," she'd said with a
twinkle in her eye and a laughing lilt to her voice, "I've already got two
little boys. What's one
more?" Admittedly, Janet had never
looked upon Rick and his impulsive ways with that kind of good humor and
acceptance.
I
walked Lauren and the boys out to their vehicle. I slid open the rear panel door so the kids could scramble
in. I shut it firmly, gave them a final
wave through the glass, then opened the driver's door for their mother.
"Be
careful driving," I cautioned as Lauren climbed in the van.
"I
will be."
In
a few short seconds everyone was buckled up and Lauren was backing onto the
street. I stood in the darkness
watching until they turned at the intersection.
I
reentered the house to find Rick in my den stuffing clothes in his duffel bag.
I leaned against the kitchen countertop by the sink and observed.
He
didn't look up from his task. "Lauren
and the kids are gone?"
"Yes."
"Me
and Rex will be goin’ too." He
swung the bag onto his shoulder.
"Thanks for dinner."
I
didn't say a word when he whistled for Rex, nor as he and the dog rounded the
snack bar into my kitchen. It wasn't
until he was about to brush past me on his way out the door that I snared him
by the upper arm.
He
shrugged my hand loose. "Let go
a' me."
"Hold
up a second then."
When
his eyes met mine it was if they were issuing a challenge. “Why?"
"Why? Because I think you have something you want
to say to me."
I
thought for sure he was going to deny that with brusque, "Don't have
nothin' to say to you, A.J.," right before he continued out the door.
But that's not
what happened. Instead, he stared at me
for a long moment, then allowed his bag to slide to the floor by his feet. Just like kids who have realized they've
been given a few more minutes to play together, Rex and Toby disappeared into
another part of the house.
"Okay,
yeah. I do have something to say to
you." He turned his face so I
could see him in profile only. His jaw set in a harsh line indicating to me the
depths of his anger. "On second
thought, I don't have something to say to you. I have something to ask you."
"Ask
me?"
"Yeah,"
he swiveled to face me once again.
"ask you."
I
tried to interject a portion of humor with a light-hearted wave of my
hand. "Ask away then."
The
humor was lost on my brother. His words
were tight and terse. "Why did you lie to me, A.J.?"
I
didn't have to inquire of Rick what he meant.
I knew perfectly well to what he was referring.
"Because
if I'd told you where I was going and why, you would have been mad."
He
loudly voiced his disgust at my reply.
"Oh
for God's sake, A.J.! That's the
stupidest buncha' crap I've ever heard!
You stopped worryin' about whether or not I was mad at you back when you
were four years old! And even then, I
always suspected the big sad eyes and droopy mouth was nothing more than an
act."
Hmmm.
He's more perceptive than I give him credit for sometimes.
"It's
not that I was afraid of your anger," I explained, "it's simply that
there would have been little point to it for either one of us."
"Whatta
ya' mean?"
"I
mean I had already made up my mind, Rick.
I was going to Seattle to help Janet, and didn't need your approval to
do that."
"No,
you didn't," he agreed. "But it woulda' been nice if you had told me
what you were up to so I didn't spend three days worryin' and wonderin' about
you."
"You're
right, it would have been. And I'm
sorry I didn't feel that I could tell you."
"So
what's that mean? That given similar
circumstances you'd do the same dumb-ass thing all over again."
"If
Janet needed my help, yes I would."
"A.J.,
she's your ex-wife! Ex-wife. A term that generally means former. A term that means it's over. The curtain's been pulled. The train's left the station. The geese have flown south."
I
couldn't help but smile. "The
geese have flown south?"
"Whatever. You get my drift."
I
grew serious. "Yes, Rick, I
do. But just because Janet and I are no
longer married doesn't mean I can't offer her my help when and if she needs
it."
"Jeez,
A.J.! What is it with you and that
woman?" He shouted with arms
akimbo. "She's like a black widow
who keeps drawin' you back into her web!"
"Don't
you think your analogy's a bit harsh?"
"No,
I don't!" He began to pace the
floor. "All right, all right,
maybe. I mean...well, Janet's not a bad
person. For a long time I thought she
was...I blamed her for a lotta your unhappiness--"
"I
know you did," I quietly stated.
"But
I guess I was wrong to do that. I guess
it's like you've been tellin' me all along.
Once you get past all the why's and wherefore's, it just comes down to
the two of you making better friends than you made husband and wife."
"That's
true."
He
stopped pacing and turned to face me.
His index finger rose like a harsh pointer.
"But
that doesn't excuse what you did. We're
partners in a business, A.J. Never
before has either one of us ever taken a case the other one doesn't know about
and agree to. Never before has either
one of us snuck off amidst a buncha’ half-assed lies and half-answered
questions. You could have told me,
A.J. Regardless of whether I woulda'
agreed with what you were doin', you shoulda' told me."
He
was right, I should have. I should have
told him exactly where I was going that morning I called him, and I should have
told him why. Granted, I would have
then been forced to listen to him rant and rave and tell me I was ten ways a
fool for even considering offering help to Janet, but at least Rick would have
known where I was. If our positions had
been reversed I would have expected the same courtesy from him.
His
monologue continued without so much as the briefest pause to allow me to
interject an apology.
"Do
you have any idea how many somersaults my gut did when I got Janet's phone call
at three o'clock last Saturday morning?
Do you have any idea how I felt when I got up to Seattle and discovered
we had virtually no clues to go on when it came to findin' you? Do you have any idea what thoughts were
racin' through my head when we stumbled across you in that boxcar unable to see
or hear us? Do you have any idea how damn
lucky you are to be standin' here in front of me right now alive and well
and whole?"
Before
I could say anything he crossed the small space between us. His arms came up and pulled me to him in a
fierce, hard hug. He spoke so softly I
almost didn't hear the final words that encompassed so much.
"Do
you have any idea?"
And
in that short phrase was everything Rick couldn't voice.
Do
you have any idea how worried I was about you?
Do
you have any idea how terrified I was for you?
Do
you have any idea how close I came to losing you?
And
most importantly;
Do
you have any idea how much I love you?
_____________________________
Two
weeks have passed since that Saturday night in my kitchen. Rick and I seem to be back on even footing
these days. My trip to Seattle and the
many reasons for it haven't been spoken of since, save for one brief moment.
I
returned to work the Monday morning after our spaghetti dinner. Rick was already seated behind his desk when
I got there. He gave me a curse nod
when I walked in the door. We were
both quiet as we went through the morning catching up on paperwork and
reviewing the case he'd accepted while I was gone. It was like we were pieces of a jigsaw puzzle that didn't know
quite how to fit together again after having been scattered all over the floor.
At
noon I shrugged into my sport coat while Rick grabbed his hat from the corner
of his desk. As we walked out the door
for lunch I stopped his progress by placing a hand on his arm and forcing him
to turn and face me. "I just want
you to know," I confessed,
"that every now and then...I do think about her."
He
studied me a long time. The twinkle
that finally lit his eyes overruled the serious expression on his face. He shot me a, "What the hell am I gonna
do with you?" look right before he brought an arm up and loosely slung it
over my shoulder. His voice was full of
soft compassion.
"I
know ya' think about her, kid. I know
ya' think about her."
It
was as we were walking out the door he added,
"And I guess if I'd spent a lotta cold winter nights snuggled up
next to her in that little satin nightgown she favors, I'd spend plenty a' time
thinkin' about her, too."
I
pulled away from him in shock. I knew
he and Janet had parted friends, but I didn't think they'd become that
close.
"What? What are you talking about? You saw Janet in her nightgown? Rick!
Rick, get back here! Rick!"
All
I got in return for my trouble was his laughter. Which was okay with me. We
hadn't laughed together in over a week.
It felt good, it felt right, and it only served to remind me that, I was
indeed, back where I belonged.
~
~ ~ ~ ~ ~