Harry studied Broker’s predicament and said, “You’re really miscast in this role, you know.”

Broker rubbed his head and said, “What did you hit me with?”

“The gun case. Didn’t hit you that hard,” Harry said.

“How miscast?” Broker said, sounding casual, but his eyes stayed fixed on that hammer.

“This dead priest isn’t your kind of thing. You’re not an investigator. You’re more the shock troop type. You go on missions after targets. That’s what John did; he sent you on a mission. .” Harry smiled. “After me.” Harry tapped his forehead. “Old John is a pretty smart motherfucker, I’ll give him that.”

“He sent me to take you to the hospital.”

“Yeah, right.” Harry opened a palm and floated it out to broadly indicate the scene on the deck. “So why ain’t we at the hospital?”

Broker blinked several times, but nothing worked right. Harry blurred in and out; there was a white-water rush in his eardrums.

“I’ll tell you why,” Harry said, “because you and me-we got a dialogue, that’s why.”

Broker’s frustration broke through and showed when he impulsively yanked at the handcuff and only succeeded in hurting his manacled left wrist.

“You remember I asked you earlier, why didn’t you go on to become a lawyer? I mean, you’re way too smart to be a fucking cop. You never answered me,” Harry said.

Broker felt the sun beat down like a spotlight. “You know why,” he said. But his voice was hoarse, and his teeth were clamped tight.

Harry put his hand to his ear, cocked his head. “What-sa matter? Lose your voice? Louder.”

With considerable effort Broker forced himself not to say the words that were on his lips. He had been about to ask Harry what he was going to do with him. No way he’d give the drunken bastard the satisfaction.

“Well?” Harry said.

Broker’s concentration failed, and he actually laughed because he was remembering the first line in his favorite book when he was a child: “Odysseus was never at a loss.” He’d tried to live his personal Odyssey that way. Now here he was chained and helpless, and the subject was all about loss.

He rallied and met Harry’s hot blue eyes and gave the honest answer. “I couldn’t go to law school after what happened to Diane, you know that. I had to try to. . stop people like that.”

Harry’s face turned killing ugly as he lurched up from the chair. “Stop people?” he said incredulously. “We don’t STOP people. We catch the twisted fucks after they. .” He lashed the air with clawed fingers. “I tried to stop somebody, and you stopped me.”

Harry reached over and wrapped his hand around the handle of the big hammer. He raised it slowly, and Broker could see the tendons in Harry’s arm strain with the weight. Slowly, Harry pumped the hammer in the air.

Broker had lost the fight inside where his heart broke loose in a panic gallop. He resolved to construct a box around the fear, keep it contained, keep it off his face. His mind assembled the image of his daughter’s face, and the idea was so painful that he thrust it away.

Give him nothing.

Nothing.

So Broker looked beyond Harry and pinned his eyes on the heavy foliage of two giant cottonwoods that grew along the lakeshore. He tried to locate himself in the variety of leaf and shadow, the shapes; mysteries, eternities of green. .

“Why do you think you’re chained up there like a damn dog, huh?” Harry yelled as the hammer moved in small piston circles, gathering momentum.

Broker couldn’t keep the tree thing going. He turned back to face the hammer. “Fuck you. If you’re going to do something, do it,” he said.

Harry leaned closer. “Feel helpless, maybe? Like she did. One minute she’s safe in her kitchen, the next that sick fuck husband of hers comes through the door; the same sick fuck you and me booked into jail the night before, right? Except now he’s out, and he’s got a hammer. A hammer. You ever really think what that was like?”

Broker felt a tic of nerves pry at his face, and he wanted to tell Harry it was sadness, grief, whatever-but not fear, goddammit.

Not.

But he couldn’t control the deep soak of fear sweat that gushed from his pores. Or the rush of rapid breathing. Out of sheer animal reflex he lashed against the manacle. The indifferent steel chain rattled but held fast. Then, finally, the survivor reptile part of his brain reminded him that Harry was standing too far away to actually hit him with the hammer. Harry was carefully staying beyond Broker’s stronger reach.

“I just want you to answer me one thing,” Harry said.

Then Broker watched Harry’s clenched-teeth rage go slack. He staggered slightly and blinked several times. His nose started to bleed again. He wiped at his nose and said, “If it happened all over, would you stop me again?”

Harry straightened up and dropped the hammer to the deck. “You don’t have to answer me right now. Think about it. I thought about it a lot.” He dropped his chin to his chest, and then he rallied and his head came up and his eyes burned. He raised an accusing finger and jabbed it at Broker. “I could kill you easy.”

Breathing heavily, Harry grimaced and snapped his fingers. “Just like that. And I very well might.”

But Harry made no further move toward the hammer on the deck. They glared at each other for several beats. Then Harry exhaled, took another pull on the bottle, and said, “Okay, listen up. John took my badge and my gun, so, just for kicks, I took your badge and your gun. Plus your keys, so I’m going to leave in your truck. You get your cell phone so we can talk. I got the number off the display.” Harry placed the cell down on the patio table well out of reach.

“Talk?” Broker almost choked on the word.

“Yeah-you and John Eisenhower’ll never catch the Saint in a million fuckin’ years.”

“Harry-I don’t know a lot about this stuff, but you could go into alcohol shock and die. You should get some help.”

“No thanks, I still ain’t got over the last time you helped me.”

Broker, who had struggled so mightily not to show fear, completely submitted to anger. Red-faced, smashing the handcuff against the unyielding redwood strut, he shouted, “Harry, you wacko, think what you’re doing!”

Harry gave a fitful misfiring laugh and said, “Save your strength and, ah, don’t go away.” He left the porch, and Broker strained to hear him moving inside the house. He heard him go down the basement stairs, then after a few minutes trudge back up and go out the front door. The door on Broker’s truck opened, then slammed shut. The front door to the house opened and closed. More sounds inside, up and down the hall.

Then Harry came back out on the deck and said, “Okay, what it is-I’m leaving the hammer so you can knock the rail apart and get out. And I saw the clipboard in the truck, with Mouse’s handwriting on it. Don’t tell Mouse what’s going on between us here, ’cause then I won’t help you.”

Broker decided to give another push. “You’re just loaded, running your mouth. You don’t know shit.”

Harry raised his hand and tapped his forehead. “Ah, psychology. Sorry.” He held up the handcuff key. “Look- I’ll leave this in the mailbox. I’ll call you tomorrow. Meanwhile, you find out if the dead priest deserved it.”

“Deserved it?”

“Yeah, like Dolman. He deserved it.” Harry walked to the patio door, turned, and hefted the hammer. “See, if the Saint’s doing God’s work, as it were, I don’t see any reason to interfere.”

Harry extended the hammer. “This is between you and me, right?”

“You and me,” Broker said.

Harry tossed the hammer. Broker snatched it cleanly with his right hand.

Then Harry said, “Course if the priest is clean and the Saint ain’t doing God’s work, then we’ll. . see. I ain’t really decided yet.” He reached in his front pocket, eased something out and held it in his fist, and said, “On the other hand. .” Harry raised his closed hand palm down and opened his fingers.

The bullet clinked on the deck between Broker’s shoes. It was about the length and diameter of his ring finger. Harry turned and disappeared through the patio door.

Broker listened to Harry leave the house, get in the truck, start it, and drive away. His knuckles tightened

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