with your loving mother like that?' '
'Go easy on him, Steve. He's got a lot going on.'
'Yeah, well, so do I.'
Steve banged the horn at a Hummer that was trying to nose into traffic from the Grove Isle bridge. 'Asshole! Guy thinks he owns the road 'cause he's got the biggest bumper.'
Great, Victoria thought. Just what they needed. A road rage incident.
Steve slid down the window on the passenger side, leaned across, and shouted: 'Hey, you! Big car, little dick!'
Victoria swatted his hand away and hit the button, closing the window. 'What's wrong with you! Don't you know how many drivers in Miami are armed?'
He turned on the radio. 'No, but I'm sure you do.'
'Your conduct lately simply defies description.'
'Oh, c'mon, Vic. Give it a try.'
'For starters, you've been both irresponsible and reckless.'
A sports talk station came on, the caller and host debating whether Shaquille O'Neal was a better player than Wilt Chamberlain. The consensus seemed to be that Wilt scored more points and more women.
'Could you change that, please?' Victoria asked.
Steve punched a button, and another sports station came on, the host asking callers to choose the sexiest cheerleader from the Dolphin Dolls.
'How can you listen to this garbage?' she asked.
'I like it. Is that being reckless or irresponsible?'
'Juvenile.'
'I guess good old Bigby doesn't listen to sports radio.'
'Where did that come from? What's Bruce have to do with anything?'
'I don't know. He sort of popped into my head.'
Ahead of them, traffic started moving and they inched past Mercy Hospital on the way downtown. Strange, Victoria thought. Just last night, her mother brought up Bruce. Victoria had been complaining about Steve and his penchant for trouble. Weirdly, The Queen had spoken up for Steve. What had she said exactly? Victoria couldn't remember.
Steve gave the Mustang some gas and said, 'Good old boring Bruce Bigby.'
That was almost exactly what The Queen had said.
'Have you been speaking to my mother?'
'Why would I? She hates me.'
Victoria reached over and changed the station. On came Steve's damn Margaritaville music, Jimmy Buffet singing 'Growing Older but Not Up.' Another of the beach bard's paeans to the good life.
Victoria hit another button, and a deep voice rumbled from the speakers:
'I'll change that,' she said, reaching toward the radio.
'No. Let's see who he's blasting today.'
'What's he peddling now?' Steve asked.
'Oh, shit!' Steve slammed on the brakes and was nearly rear-ended.
'What a load of crap,' Steve said.
The words hit Steve like a one-two combination- jab-hook, jab-hook-and seemed to reverberate inside his brain.
'The son she loves?' Steve nearly spat the words. 'She nearly killed Bobby!'
Steve stomped on the gas and pulled through a U-turn, tires screeching.
'What are you doing?' Victoria said.
'We're going to the station. I'm not gonna let him get away with this.'
'You can't play on his turf. Remember last time you went on the air?'
'Got no choice. Kreeger's setting the table for a custody fight. I've got to expose him as a fraud.'
'He's taunting you. He
'Fine. He wants a fight, he's gonna get it. Janice, too.'
Typical Steve, she thought. Rushing blindly into danger, never considering the consequences.
She sank back in her seat as the Mustang squealed around the turn at Seventeenth Avenue on the way to Dixie Highway. Steve was right about one thing, she thought.
Bruce carried an umbrella, even when the forecast was sunny and clear. Steve windsurfed in thunderstorms, mast pointed toward the sky, daring Zeus to toss lightning bolts his way.
On the radio, Janice was going on about how much she missed her son when she was incarcerated and how, alone in her cell, she pledged to clean up her act so she could come home and raise the boy.
'The Eva Braun of mothers is criticizing my parenting,' Steve muttered.
'Right. No way I'd abandon the boy and nearly let him freeze to death.'
'Steve. Don't do anything stupid, okay?'
'I'm not going to do anything stupid,' Steve said.
'But I'll tell you this, Vic. I'll kill her before I let her have Bobby.'
Twenty-Seven
When Steve and Victoria entered the control room, Dr. Bill Kreeger was just finishing his umpteenth commercial for one of his products, a seven-set CD collection entitled: 'Stop Kissing Butt and Start Kicking It.' Through the window, Steve could see Kreeger and Janice, earphoned and miked, engaged in the mutual stroking of egos.
'Welcome back Janice Solomon, a truly courageous woman who took control of her life,' Kreeger said. 'Janice, tell my listeners how you did it.'