bottle, craving numbness, but he’d had no more than two gulps when he vomited in the corner. He saw himself from the outside – one shoe off, belt undone, curled on the coarse carpet. And then Annabel appeared, kneeling over him, hand on his shoulder, saying,
He was cold in his bones where the rays couldn’t reach. He thought he should shower, but he found he already was, the scalding water raising streaks on his chest and arms, though he couldn’t quit shivering. Closing his eyes, he retreated into bleached-out memories of his mother. That yellow-tiled kitchen. Looking up as she’d bathed him, her black-brown hair draped along one tan arm. Patchouli and sage, the flesh-warm scent of cinnamon. That spot of blood – her blood? – on his father’s cuff.
A dead patch of time.
And then the room was dark and he was trembling beneath an icy spout, the hot water having long run out.
Next he was wet on the floor, wrapped in a bedsheet, hugging the shopping bag containing the gun and his remaining cash. The room was a mess – splotch of puke, tipped-over chair, sheets pulled onto the floor to form a nest.
The door opened, and a fall of light from the corridor landed on his face, making him blink. Then the door closed, heavy footsteps padded across to him, and a man’s shadow darkened his sight.
They were here, at last, to kill him.
‘Get up,’ Shep said.
A hand lowered into the fuzzy edge of Mike’s vision. Mike considered it with stunned incomprehension.
His voice, hoarse from disuse: ‘How’d you find me?’
‘You called me. You told me what you had to do. Now get up.’
Mike took his hand. Shep hoisted him to his feet.
Shep crossed and set a worn brown paper bag on the crappy kitchenette counter. He removed a sleek black cell, a Batphone replacement, and tossed it at Mike. Next came the Colt.45 and a police scanner, which Shep plugged into the outlet by the microwave: ‘-
‘What… what day is it?’
‘Monday. Eight-seventeen P.M. You’re back in California – Redlands.’
Had he really left Kat just yesterday?
‘Her glasses,’ Mike murmured. Pushing a fist to his forehead, he rocked a little. ‘I forgot. She needs a new pair to read-’
Shep opened a can of SpaghettiOs with a pocketknife, stuck in a plastic spork, and handed it to Mike. ‘Eat. We got business to handle in the morning, and I can’t have you all pale and shaky.’
‘Annabel could be dead by now,’ Mike said.
‘Eat.’
‘Tell me which hospital. I need to call-’
‘You can’t-’
‘-just to know.’
‘Then you’re willing to kill her. And us. And Kat.’ Shep grabbed the phone from the nightstand and, trailing the cord, held it out to Mike. A dare.
Mike stared at the phone hatefully. But didn’t reach for it.
Shep set the phone down and extended, again, the SpaghettiOs.
Mike took the can and did his best.
He looked around, seeing the mess through Shep’s eyes. The whole room was gravid with sullenness, as if it had been dipped in gray. The SpaghettiOs had turned to sour mush in his mouth. He gagged them down, wiped his lips angrily. ‘Why are you here?’
Shep said, ‘What?’
‘You could’ve told me off when I first called. After how we left things back when. But I knew you wouldn’t. I knew if I needed you, you’d be there in a heartbeat.’ The sentiment was coming out, bizarrely, as anger, a slow boil of a resentment Mike hadn’t known he was harboring. ‘Maybe you
Shep chewed his food. Scooped another sporkful. Paused. ‘May
‘You don’t owe me,’ Mike said. ‘Not for serving three months’ time for you.’
‘You think that’s why I’m doing this?’ Shep was utterly, infuriatingly calm. Thoughtful, even. ‘Because I owe you?’
‘Why else?’ Mike banged SpaghettiOs down on the TV, a blood spray erupting from the can to dot his forearm. There was relief in yielding to his temper, to using the old muscles in the old ways. He needed to strain and hurt and growl into the face of something. ‘Why
Shep took another hearty bite. Scraped the bottom of the can. ‘Never gave it much thought,’ he said, his mouth full.
‘Of course not.’ Mike felt his top lip curling. ‘That would be
‘That one o’ your SAT words?’
‘You’re too pure to
‘No past,’ Shep said.
‘But I
‘That’s what you never learned,’ Shep said.
‘What?’
‘Acceptance.’ Shep shrugged. ‘It is what it is.’
‘What is?’
‘Everything.’
‘The hell does that mean?’
‘Take your father. You been holding a grudge against him for how many years now? Black-and-white world. Him playing the role of black. What’s that leave you?’ Shep cranked open another steel can and dug into it, his appetite unhampered. ‘Your father’s betrayal – that’s been your North Star. And now? Leaving a kid behind?’ He held out his hands, a rare superfluous gesture, the spork sticking out of the can, a little white flag. ‘Black isn’t black today. White isn’t white. And maybe it never was. Maybe it’s all a goddamned mess and we do the best we can.’
‘That’s what you’ve done? The best you can?’
‘There was one time I didn’t. I was beaten down and couldn’t get up. And you made sure. You made sure I got up. And I vowed after that moment,
All the heat went out of Mike. He took a wobbly step back and sank to the mattress. He tilted his cheeks to his palms and sat there, pouring his face through his hands. ‘I remember when we went to Ventura Harbor to ride the carousel,’ Mike said. ‘She was three, and she wanted the chicken. But these other kids kept getting it. I mean, it
‘What are you telling me?’ Shep asked.
‘I picture her in that home and what will happen to her if I fail,’ Mike said, ‘and I think I might die.’
He couldn’t look up, but he heard Shep set down the can, right the chair, and pull it over. An exhale as he sat.
‘I never been responsible to or for anyone in my life,’ Shep said. ‘To take that on, it’s a courageous thing. But you can’t do it now. Not with what we’re going into.’
He leaned forward so his head butted against Mike’s. Same position, same posture, the two of them staring down at the threadbare carpet. Shep shoved a little, solicitously, crown to crown.