bodyguards — and made his was upstairs to the Atrium. There were a dozen food places here with names like Peking Gourmet (very low mein and chicken MSG), Pasta Pasta (sold by weight), RBY (Really Bodacious Yoghurt), and So What's Not To Like Bagel. There were tables around the fountain where people could eat. It was a nice place to eat lunch, especially during the Washington summers when no one wanted to venture out onto melting sidewalks.
Nick was standing in front of the counter at Cafe Ole waiting for his two double cappuccinos when he became aware of someone staring at him. He turned but didn't see anyone, except for a bum. Having been born in 1952, he still thought of them as 'bums,' rather than 'the homeless,' though he was careful never to call them that. In fact, he had tried to set up a program whereby the cigarette companies would distribute free cigarettes to homeless shelters, but the gaspers got wind of it and got HHS to stop it, so it was no free smokes for those who needed them most.
Nick recognized most of the bums who would pandhandle in the Atrium until Security chased them away, but not this one. Quite a specimen he was, a hulking, big figure, and talk about the Grunge Look — he was wearing the remnants of about a dozen overcoats. The hair hung down in greasy clumps over his face, which looked like it had last seen soap and water during the seventies. He approached.
'Gaaaquadder?' His eyes were clearer than most of these guys', which looked like bad egg yolks.
Nick gave him a dollar and asked him if he wanted a cigarette.
'Gaaaablessyoubruhh.' Nick gave him the rest of the pack.
'Gaaaamash?' Nick gave him a disposable lighter. His cappuccinos were ready. He headed off for the escalator that led up to the lobby where the office elevators were. The homeless guy followed along. Nick wasn't looking for a relationship here, but being a lapsed Catholic, he would never be entirely sure, despite his certainty that it was all a crock, that one of these wretches wasn't the mufti Christ checking to see who was being charitable toward the least of his creatures, and who wasn't and was therefore going to have such a hot time in the eternal hereafter as to make a Washington summer seem Antarctic by comparison.
'What's your name?' Nick asked. 'Reggggurg.'
'Nick. You from around here?'
'Balmurrr.'
'Nice town.' They were on the escalator now. 'Well,' Nick said, 'hang in there.'
He felt something poke him in the middle of his back, like an umbrella tip. Then he heard a voice — it came from the bum but it was a whole new one — say, 'Don't turn around. Don't move, don't speak. That's the muzzle of a nine millimeter, and if you don't do everything I tell you to, when I tell you to, you'll be on a slab at the morgue with a tag on your toe by the time that coffee cools.'
As introductions went, it was attention-getting. They reached the top of the escalator. There were so many people all over the place Nick wanted to shout,
'See that limo over there?' said the bum. 'Walk toward it very slowly. Do not run.'
Nick did not run. The limo's windows were opaque-black. They had about fifty feet to go. Here he was, all these people — he was being kidnapped in broad daylight, in front of hundreds of people. And— why?
He paused about five feet from the car. The gun dug into his spine. 'Keep moving.'
He should be remembering details.
The rear door opened.
All those Beirut hostage news stories flashed before him.
Nick became aware of pain in his hands. He was holding his two cappuccinos in their Styrofoam cups. His heart was beating fast. No need for caffeine.
He turned round and threw the cappuccinos at the pistol-packing bum. They hit him on the chest and bounced off. The lids held. The cups fell to the ground and burst open, scalding his ankles with foamy cappuccino. How many times in his life had the plastic tops come off when they weren't supposed to, burning his hands, his lap, ruining the upholstery, making brown stains in the crotch of tan summer suit pants, usually before an important meeting. But no, now, the one time in his life it would have actually helped for the tops to come off,
The bum shoved him backward into the limousine. Nick's head took a whack on the door jamb on his way in. Hands pulled him in, and while the lights of the Milky Way pulsated through his optic nerve, a black silk hood went over his head and his hands were efficiently cinched behind him with what felt like garbage bag ties. The car took off, slowly, into the traffic.
'Hello, Neek. It's so good to meet you finally.'
It was a strange accent, mittel-European, creepy and oleaginous.
'What's the deal, here?' Nick said.
'Can you breathe okay under de hood? It would be terrible if you couldn't
'Where are we going?' Nick asked.
'What an incredibly unrealistic question, Neek. You're expecting maybe an address?' That accent. That's it — Peter Lorre, the actor who played whatsisname, the greasy little hustler in
'Is this for ransom money?'
'It's for de
After about half an hour, the car stopped, doors opened, hands pulled him out, doors opened and shut, muffled voices spoke, they went up a flight of steps, down a hall, another door opened and shut, he was pushed down onto a chair, his ankles were tied to its legs. None of this was reassuring. The hood stayed on. That was reassuring, assuming they didn't want him to see their faces. The tie binding his wrist was undone, and now came a part he really didn't like at all, not one bit: they started to remove his clothes.
'Excuse me. What's happening?'
'Don't worry, Neek, dere aren't any women here. You don't have to be embarrassed.' That voice. It was creepy and unnerving. That was it for Peter Lorre movies, never mind that
In fact, a cigarette would be good right about now, yes.
'On the udder hand, if you wait a leetle while, you'll have all de nicotine you can handle.' Laughter. And not a nourishing kind of laughter either, more what you'd expect from someone with severe psychological problems. Maybe he
'Can we talk about this? Usually, they let you know why they're kidnapping you. Otherwise, like, what's the point?'
'You know why, Neek. We want you to stop killing people. So many people. More dan half a million people a year. And dat's just in the United States.'
'There's no data to support that,' Nick said, who perhaps could be forgiven, this once, for using the singular rather than plural verb form.
'Neek! Dat's not going to woork. You're not on de
'Well, it's nowhere near half a million. Even hardcore gaspers only claim as high as 435,000.'
'Gaspers. I
Nick was down to his boxer shorts now. He heard the sound of cardboard boxes being opened. With a black hood over your head, you become very curious about noises. More ripping, like plastic wrapping.
A hand pressed against his chest over his heart. He leapt up in his chair, straining at his ankles and wrists. The hand came away and he felt something left behind on his chest, something sticky and clinging, like a bandage.
Another hand, or the same hand, clamped down on his skin next to the first spot and left another whatever it was. Again, again, again, till his entire chest was covered, then the arms, the back, the legs from below the boxers