“So you're hooked on risk, heroism, you're a courage junkie.”
Now she wanted to smack him twice. In the face.
She restrained herself. “Okay, fine, if that's the way you want to see it, then I'm a courage junkie.”
He did not apologize. He just stared at her.
She said, “But that's better than inhaling a pound of cocaine up my nose every day, don't you think?”
He did not respond.
Getting desperate but trying not to show it, Holly said, “When it was all over yesterday, after I handed Norby to that rescue worker, you know what I felt? More than anything else? Not elation at saving him — that too, but not mainly that. And not pride or the thrill of defeating death myself. Mostly I felt
Her voice was not rising, but it was increasingly intense. She paced faster, more agitatedly. She was getting passionate instead of angry, which was even more certain to reveal the degree of her desperation. But she couldn't stop herself:
“Just stew in anger. Unless you're Jim Ironheart.
He stared at her.
Congratulations, Thorne, she told herself scornfully. You were a monument to composure and restraint, a towering example of self-control.
He just stared at her.
She had met his cool demeanor with heat, had answered his highly effective silences with an ever greater cascade of words. One chance, that was all she'd had, and she'd blown it.
Miserable, suddenly drained of energy instead of overflowing with it, she sat down again. She propped her elbows on the table and put her face in her hands, not sure if she was going to cry or scream. She didn't do either. She just sighed wearily.
“Want a beer?” he asked.
“God, yes.”
Like a brush of flame, the westering sun slanted through the tilted plantation shutters on the breakfast-nook window, slathering bands of copper-gold fire on the ceiling. Holly slumped in her chair, and Jim leaned forward in his. She stared at him while he stared at his half-finished bottle of Corona.
“Like I told you on the plane, I'm not a psychic,” he insisted. “I can't foresee things just because I want to. I don't have visions. It's a higher power working throughme.”
“You want to define that a little?”
He shrugged. “God.”
“God's talking to you?”
“Not talking. I don't hear voices, His or anybody else's. Now and then I'm compelled to be in a certain place at a certain time …”
As best he could, he tried to explain how he had ended up at the McAlbury School in Portland and at the sites of the other miraculous rescues he had performed. He also told her about Father Geary finding him on the floor of the church, by the sanctuary railing, with the stigmata of, Christ marking his brow, hands, and side.
It was off-the-wall stuff, a weird brand of mysticism that might have been concocted by an heretical Catholic and peyote-inspired Indian medicine man in association with a no-nonsense, Clint Eastwood-style cop. Holly was fascinated. But she said, “I can't honestly tell you I see God's big hand in this.”
“I do,” he said quietly, making it clear that his conviction was solid and in no need of her approval.
Nevertheless she said, “Sometimes you've had to be pretty damned violent, like with those guys who kidnapped Susie and her mother in the desert.”
“They got what they deserved,” he said flatly. “There's too much darkness in some people, corruption that could never be cleaned out in five lifetimes of rehabilitation. Evil is real, it walks the earth. Sometimes the devil works by persuasion. Sometimes he just sets loose these sociopaths who don't have a gene for empathy or one for compassion.”
“I'm not saying you didn't
He drank some beer. “You ever read the Bible?”
“Sure.”
“Says in there that God wiped out the evil people in Sodom and Gomorrah with volcanoes, earthquakes, rains of fire. Flooded the whole world once, didn't He? Made the Red Sea wash over the pharaoh's soldiers, drowned them all. I don't think He's going to be skittish about a little old shotgun.”
“I guess I was thinking about the God of the New Testament. Maybe you heard about Him — understanding, compassionate, merciful.”
He fixed her with those eyes again, which could be so appealing that they made her knees weak or so cold they made her shiver. A moment ago they had been warm; now they were icy. If she'd had any doubt, she knew from his frigid response that he had not yet decided to welcome her into his life. “I've met up with some people who're such walking scum, it'd be an insult to animals to call them animals. If I thought God always dealt mercifully with their kind, I wouldn't want anything to do with God.”
Holly stood at the kitchen sink, cleaning mushrooms and slicing tomatoes, while Jim separated egg whites from yolks to make a pair of comparatively low-calorie omelettes.
“All the time, people are dying conveniently, right in your own backyard. But often you go clear across the country to save them.”
“Once to France,” he said, confirming her suspicion that he had ventured out of the country on his missions. “Once to Germany, twice to Japan, once to England.”
“Why doesn't this higher power give you only local work?”
“I don't know.”
“Have you ever wondered what's so special about the people you save? I mean — why them and not others?”
“Yeah. I've wondered about it. I see stories on the news every week about innocent people being murdered or dying in accidents right here in southern California, and I wonder why He didn't choose to save them instead of some boy in Boston. I just figure the boy in Boston — the devil was conspiring to take him before his time, and God used me to prevent that.”
“So many of them are young.”
“I've noticed that.”
“But you don't know why?”
“Not a clue.”
The kitchen was redolent of cooking eggs, onions, mushrooms, and green peppers. Jim made one big omelette in a single pan, planning to cut it in half when it was done.
While Holly monitored the progress of the whole-wheat bread in the toaster, she said, “Why would God want you to save Susie and her mother out there in the desert — but not the girl's father?”