“I’m good,” I said. “You know that. I just worry about a scene like tonight.”
Nicole smiled and held out her hand. I took it.
“Michael, you’re always good. Always fine. At least that’s the part we all get to see. Sometimes, though, I wonder.”
I didn’t say anything, didn’t move very much.
“The SWAT team’s a good thing for me,” she continued. “Lets me do something.”
“The empowerment thing?”
“Yeah, the empowerment thing.”
My friend looked empowered, almost too much so.
“You sure?” I said.
“Yes. Besides, it gets too rough, I got you around.”
“Whether you like it or not.”
“Absolutely. But let me ask you a question?”
“Shoot.”
Nicole lifted her glass and talked around the side.
“How exactly you going to save this poor black girl if you’re sitting in a prison cell?”
“I guess it’s time for my story.”
“It is.”
And so I told her. About Gibbons and Elaine Remington, the print and Diane Lindsay.
“You sleeping with her?”
“No.”
Nicole rolled her eyes.
“Matter of time. I know Diane. She does some work at the Rape Volunteer Association.”
“And?”
“You’re in over your head.”
“Never stopped me before.”
“Really? When was the last time you slept with a woman?”
I shrugged. Nicole cut right to it.
“I’m going to guess there’s been no one since Annie. And that’s been…”
She counted on her fingertips and looked toward the ceiling.
“…over a year.”
There had actually been plenty of women since Annie, but it was all playacting, dipping a toe in the water. I had a feeling Diane Lindsay would take me to the deep end and that, as my friend hammered home, might be a problem.
“Simple fact of life, Michael. What’s done is done. You gotta move on. Hard as it is, everyone else already has.”
“Let’s try one thing at a time,” I said. “Right now, she’s a journalist and I’m a potential story. As in ‘murder suspect’ sort of story.”
Nicole sat back, dragged a straw idly through her drink, and looked into its caramel-colored depths. I took another sip of beer and studied the nearest EXIT sign. Sometimes friendship can be hard. Especially with me on the other side. After a while Nicole shrugged and let it go.
“Have you talked to Bennett?”
“Yeah. He says to just lay low. Whole thing will blow over.”
“Bennett is usually right,” Nicole said.
“True. By the way, he asked for you.”
“Bennett’s a sweet guy.”
“Yeah. And still a little obsessed.”
“I told you we talked. Straightened that all out. Long time ago.”
“The boy is only human, Nicole. Just another face in the fawning crowd.”
“Whatever. Now get yourself another beer and give me the dirt on Diane Lindsay.”
I didn’t have any dirt, or anything else to offer, on our local news celeb. So I made up a few things, which seemed to make Nicole happy and, of course, is the American way.
CHAPTER 12
I left Kelly’s at a little after ten p.m. and parked on Addison, just around the corner from my flat. I needed a smoke, shrugged into the night, and walked north along Southport Avenue. A half block from the Music Box Theatre, I brushed shoulders with the past. Annie was walking out of the old-time movie house and she was with someone, a tall, probably good-looking someone. He leaned over to speak at a crosswalk. She laughed into his chest, slipping a hand around his waist in a way I preferred not to remember.
The light changed and the couple approached, arms now linked, strides matching perfectly. A friend once told me that was a sure sign a couple was having sex. I leaned back, into the shadows of a convenient Chicago alley. They floated past. I caught a glimpse of her hair, maybe a cheekbone washed over in the pale reflection of neon. Then they were gone.
I moved into the slipstream and followed for another block or five. Her scent was there. Or maybe it was just me. Anyway, I followed, feeling more than I wanted. Nicole was dead-on. It shouldn’t be that way. But it was.
After a while, I had my fix and dropped off the pace. Nearby, an Irish bar named Cullen’s beckoned. I wandered in and ordered a pint. Then five more.
Four hours later, they announced last call. A half hour after that, a more than nice waitress offered me a lift home. I took it. We made time for a bit in her car, but she had to get up early. I said okay, went inside, and fixed a cup of tea. I thought about taking a look at the report on Gibbons’ homicide but knew I was drunk. Instead, I watched late-night Chicago flow past my window. After a while, I finished my tea and lay down, promising myself to fall asleep before the memories arrived.
CHAPTER 13
The next morning was Chicago cool, a slippery slope in late fall that could quickly deteriorate to cold, freezing cold, arctic cold, and why-the-fuck-would-anyone-live-here cold.
I made myself a cup of coffee and listened as the weather banged against my windows. Then I did what most runners do. Ignored the elements, got my running stuff on, and headed to the lakefront. A mile later, I felt loose and warm. The wind was steady and in my face. I kept my head down and plowed through. At four miles, I turned away from the lake, felt the breezes shift at my back, and let them chase me home. When I was done, I sat on my stoop as the sweat dried and the endorphins flowed. I’d be a little sore later on, but it was worth it. And would be worth it again. Tomorrow.
After the run, I showered, dressed, and found my car on the street. I headed west, through a light dusting of local traffic and into a dowager of a Chicago neighborhood near Humboldt Park. I parked in front of a Ukrainian church with a Madonna icon that used to cry but now just looks at you. Still, the people come. Still, the people leave money.
I got out of my car and stretched my eyes down the street. To my left a row of graystones marched into the distance. To my right a car parked at an angle to the curb. Two figures sat in the front seat. One drummed his fingers along the dashboard. A bass line growled from a pair of speakers in the back. I stepped close to a two-flat to read its number and stepped back. A stone gargoyle, face rubbed and smooth with age, smiled from its rooftop perch.
Halfway down the block I found the address I was looking for. In the last months of his life, John Gibbons had taken a room here. At least that’s what he’d told me. Like the rest of the street, it wasn’t much. For a man in the