to go!' he hissed. 'Rikki still had another speech to give, and the kid had some more lines. You screwed up the whole thing!'
Sydney just glared at him. 'Get the hell out of my way,' she growled.
And he did.
She often thought about that guy, though she never saw him again. She wondered if Rikki had hired him to help raise money. That was the only misgiving Sydney had had about donating $25,000 of her book advance to the Cosgroves. Were the funds being well managed?
Though she never got to spend any time with Aidan alone, Sydney could see they were taking good care of him in the hospital. So she recorded a thirty-second radio spot for their charity, the Aidan Foundation. She also-- rather stupidly--signed some document allowing them to use her image for the charity. Sydney cringed at what Rikki Cosgrove's reps came up with: a heavily retouched composite, showing her and Aidan. She hovered at his bedside, but they'd altered a photo taken at the Harborview visit-turned-press-conference. Smiling bravely, Aidan was shirtless and scarred. Beside him, Sydney was no longer in a wheelchair. They'd airbrushed out her halo contraption. They also put her face on someone else's body--a model in a figure skater's leotard with miniskirt. It appeared as if she'd briefly stopped skating to pose for a minute with this poor, mangled, crippled child. It was a ridiculous image, and so airbrushed, she almost looked like a cartoon. Sydney had to tell herself if the stupid ad- photo made money to pay for the Cosgroves' medical expenses, why should she care?
While still in the hospital, Sydney worked on her autobiography with a ghostwriter named Andrea Shorey. About fifty, with glasses and wild, curly gray hair, Andrea was very thorough in her research. She discovered that for a while Aidan Cosgrove was a child model, and a successful one, too. 'You know the picture of that cute toddler in all the ads and on the sales tags of those kids' clothes,
'My God,' Sydney murmured, 'that poor kid.'
She felt so horrible for Aidan Cosgrove--and couldn't help being angry at his mother. She hated thinking this way, but if that stupid woman--
'Well, do you think we should use it in the book?' Andrea pressed.
'We're going to have to check with Rikki, first,' Sydney answered with a sigh. 'Painting that kind of picture of her could really sink the Aidan Foundation, which I know is legit. I don't want to be responsible for that.'
Rikki allowed them to divulge her struggles with alcohol and drugs, and even provided some candid quotes about those
While the TV movie
Sydney settled with Rikki's lawyer, even though Rikki was merely mentioned in the film. As far as Sydney was concerned, it wasn't worth the hassle. The network asked her to make some promotional appearances with Aidan, but the boy was still in and out of the hospital for surgery on his back and skin grafts to repair the scars. Sydney didn't want to put the poor kid on display. Besides, any association with Aidan meant dealing with Rikki, and Sydney was pretty tired of her. She was always
Sydney wrote to Aidan, but the responses always came from Rikki, usually hitting her up for a favor or more money. Sydney never got a chance to sit down and talk privately to the boy whose life she'd saved.
After marrying Joe and moving to Chicago, she was glad to have Rikki Cosgrove out of her life--even though it meant losing touch with Aidan. But in truth, she'd never really been able to get together with him anyway. Rikki had always been there, running interference.
'...and as you know, my lungs haven't been the same since the fire.' Sydney listened to Rikki's weak, nasally drone. 'Aidan's coming up from San Francisco to visit me tomorrow. He's been up the last several weekends. I truly think this will be our last visit. I just can't see me hanging on for another week. I'm so--tired...'
'I'm very sorry to hear that, Rikki,' Sydney said. Ordinarily, she would have asked the person, 'Is there anything I can do?' But this was Rikki Cosgrove, perpetually ill, perpetually manipulative.
Sydney was now sitting on the front stoop with the phone to her ear. A few neighbors had come through the gate and passed by. She'd worked up a smile and nodded at them. But there was still no sign of Eli.
'Sydney, I really need you to do something for me...'
'Could you come by my apartment tomorrow? I'd really like you to sit down and talk to Aidan while he's here. I'm so worried about him. He--he says he's doing all right down in San Francisco, but I honestly don't know...'
'How's he feeling? How's his back?' Sydney asked. He'd had two corrective surgeries fourteen years before.
'Oh, his back's much better. He met this woman in San Francisco. She's older. She's become his
'Of course, I'll talk to him, Rikki,' she heard herself say. This was one favor she wouldn't mind doing for Rikki Cosgrove. It would be her first real opportunity to sit down and talk with Aidan. 'I don't know how helpful I'll be, but I'd be happy to answer any questions Aidan might have.'
'Oh, that's wonderful...' Sydney heard some wheezing. 'Are you--are you free around one o'clock?'
'Um, I'm not sure yet.' She ducked back inside the house and hurried into the kitchen. She glanced around for her address book. 'Let me get your phone number, Rikki--and your address while I'm at it.' Taking the cordless into her office, she saw her purse by the computer monitor. She fished her address book out of it, then sat at her desk and wrote down Rikki's contact information. As long as she had the book open to the C's, she asked for Aidan's address and phone number, too. Sydney figured it would be nice to connect with him some time--without his mother being involved.
There was a frail sigh on the other end of the line. 'Oh, it's a new address, and I'm honestly too weak to get out of bed and look it up right now. You can get it from Aidan tomorrow, when you come by. I'll expect you around one.'
'Um, like I said, Rikki, I'll call you back and confirm with you.'
Sydney glanced at the clock in her office: 3:20. Still no Eli.
'Rikki, I need to scoot,' she said into the phone. 'It--it was nice to reconnect with you. I hope you feel better. I'll let you know about tomorrow. Okay?'
'All right, and I do hope to see you tomorrow, Sydney. It's very, very important.'
'I'll let you know,' she said. 'Good-bye, Rikki.'
Sydney clicked off the phone; then she closed her address book and stuck it back in her purse. She would give Eli ten more minutes, then she'd go to the beach again and have the lifeguard make another announcement.
There was no point in calling Kyle back just yet. She glanced at the e-mail she'd been writing to Angela's