RECOVERY AND BETRAYAL

While Ryan was still in recovery at Dr. Jazz's house, Kaz had rented a small room in a hooker hotel in Trenton called the Blue Rainbow. He had learned long ag o t hat hooker hotels made great hideouts because the des k c lerks and the staffs had no inclination to talk to the cop s o r anybody else, for that matter. Money was the only language anybody spoke. He had prepared the dingy, threadbare room, bringing the medication that Dr. Jazz ha d p rescribed, along with clean sheets and blankets he'd b ought that afternoon in a department store. He als o b ought an ice chest and four six-packs of Gatorade to restore Ryan's fluids and electrolytes. He bought two six — packs of Coke for himself. He put all the provisions in th e r oom.

He picked up Ryan from Dr. Jazz at twelve-thirty A. M. Ryan was still out of it, mumbling incoherencies as Kenetta and Dr. Jazz helped get him into the Nova rental that Kaz had picked up that afternoon.

'Ain't gonna be much fun for a while,' Dr. Jazz said. 'He lost half of his adductor longus and I hadda rebuild his iliotibial tract. . I sewed what's left of the adductor to his vastus lateralis. He gonna be gimpin'.'

'I'm gonna have to put this on my account,' Kaz said, 'but I'll get it to you.'

'I don't work for cash,' the old man said, the handball bouncing up and down in his stringy neck. 'You watch for infection and give him dem antibiotics till they all gone.'

He watched with old eyes as Kaz kissed Kenetta goodbye, then got behind the wheel and drove Ryan away into the moonless night.

They arrived at the Blue Rainbow Hotel and Kaz pulled around to the alley in the back and parked. He had already unlocked the fire door. He got Ryan out of the seat and supported him so that he wouldn't have to walk on his damaged leg. Kaz struggled to get Ryan up to the second floor and down the hall. He passed a heroin-ravaged hooker with striped orange hair, who smiled at Ryan through broken teeth.

'Lookin' fo' some good times, baby? I buff yo' pink helmet, make yo' Johnny feel so thce. . '

'Why don't we wait till he stops bleeding, sugar?' Kaz said pleasantly, wondering if she was blind or just brain-dead. Kaz got Ryan into the room and onto the bed. He locked the door and put a blanket over him.

'Z0000 nooth. Luvvvv wingggg,' Ryan said.

'You're very welcome,' Kaz responded and he went to the cooler and popped open a cold soda, sat down, and looked at Ryan, who had already drifted back to sleep.

The Alos had put Ryan Bolt up on waivers and Kaz had claimed him. He still didn't know why or how he fit the puzzle.

While Ryan was lying in the hooker hotel unconscious, Lucinda had dressed and waited for New York Tony to come back. At eleven o'clock, it was certain something was very wrong. Her brother had been stomping around downstairs and had started using the phone. She had tried to call Ryan at the Cape May Inn on her private line, but there was no answer. She had gone downstairs and move d q uietly into the living room so that she could overhear her brother in the kitchen.

'Where the fuck is he?' Mickey was saying into the phone. 'Look, not on the phone, okay? I think we gotta figure it didn't happen. I'll talk to you in an hour.' He hung up and spun around and caught his sister standing in the living room ten feet behind him, listening.

'Whatta you doing?' His eyes had that same shiny, glazed-over look she remembered from the park, twenty years ago.

'I just came down to get something to eat.'

Mickey moved quickly, covering the short distance between them in less than a second. She tried to turn and run, but he grabbed her arm, spun her, and held her in a vise grip by both wrists.

'Where's Ryan? I tried to call him at the Cape May Inn,' she said.

'Ryan doesn't exist anymore.'

'Mickey, don't,' she said weakly. 'You're hurting me.'

Finally, Mickey shoved her back. She stumbled and fell on the beach house carpet.

He moved to her and stood looking down. There was something absolutely soulless in the stare. 'I told you not to see him. You chose to ignore me. . You went to Iowa anyway. If I can't trust you, Lucinda, I can't leave you in my life. Pack your stuff and get out.' Then he turned and walked out of the room.

She packed and, half an hour later, left the beach house in the old Mercedes station wagon that was there for the servants.

She knew as long as Mickey was there, she would never return.

Chapter 28

BONDING

Bud Rennickissued the invitation on Brenton Spencer's six o'clock news. It was a TV remote from the union headquarters on East Fifty-seventh Street. Bud was standing on the steps of the Teamsters headquarters dressed in a black suit. 'We welcome any help in this negotiation that we can get. If Governor Richards thinks he has a solution, we'd be more than happy to hear it.'

Ryan had been asleep for hours and the newscast woke him up. He was now watching the TV propped up in bed, his leg on fire, while Kaz sat in a straight-backed chair, drinking Coke out of a long-necked bottle.

'This has A. L's fingerprints all over it,' Ryan finally said under his breath.

'Who's A. J.?' Kaz asked nonchalantly, hoping he would open up.

'Better question is, who are you?'

'We'll get around to that. First I wanna know what you're doing with Mickey Alo.'

'Why?' Ryan answered, feeling dizzy.

'If you keep answering questions with questions, we're not gonna get far.'

'Why should we get anywhere?'

'Am I remembering this correctly? Weren'tyou about to get dumdummed off the fucking planet when I showed up?'

Ryan felt tooweak to answer. He wished somebody would get a chain saw and cut his leg off.

'So, who's A. J.?' Kaz asked again, as if no time had passed.

'Teagarden. He's Haze Richards's campaign chairman.'

'You feel strong enough to answer my other questions?'

Ryan studied the man who had saved his life and decided he owed him something.

'You're Ryan Bolt, right?'

'Right.'

'What's your connection to the Alos?'

'I was Mickey's roommate in prep school,' Ryan said as Kaz's expression went flat.

'Don't shit me, Bolt. I'm looking for comedy, I'll go watch pigeons fuck.'

'He and I went to Choate School in Connecticut twenty years ago. We were roommates. I didn't pick the room assignments.' The two traded empty stares.

'So why are you hanging with him now?'

'When you get through with this interrogation, are you gonna let me know who you are?' Ryan's leg was getting worse. He looked down at the bandage, still seeping blood. 'Depends on whether I like what I hear.'

'When my son died a year ago, Mickey came out for the funeral. I hadn't seen much of him since college, but he helped me get through it. And then. . I hit a roug h p atch, careerwise, this year, and he said he'd help me out.'

'What career? Whatta you do?' Kaz asked, but he already had a pretty good idea. He'd been shopping in Ryan's wallet and found his Writers Guild card and his T. V. and Motion Picture Academy memberships. Unfortunately, there were no picture IDs. 'I'm a writer-producer in television.'

'So, Mickey calls you up, asks you to come out here. Why?'

To make a documentary film on the candidate.' 'Must a' been a pretty shifty film.'

Ryan looked at him blankly.

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