immediately. Bo felt the first drops of rain from a summer storm. The rain was cold and sharp, but it didn’t seem to be any help in clearing his head.

He was having trouble standing up now. He tried to remember where he’d parked his car. He pushed away from the building, and the world seemed to come at him in a slant.

“Whoa, buddy. You okay?”

The voice was familiar to Bo. Lester, who’d bought him a beer.

“Sick…” Bo managed to say.

“Come on, we’ll help you to your car.” It was another familiar voice, but more distant than the first.

Bo felt support slip under each of his arms. He tried to help them, tried to walk, but he couldn’t seem to make his legs move. He felt himself slipping, going under. But before he was gone completely, he had one lucid thought.

How did they know which car was his?

He felt the vehicle moving and he smelled exhaust. And then he was driving again. Driving the old bus. He sat behind the wheel, as he always did in his dreaming. The bus was on the river, caught in the sweep of a strong current, and he was trying desperately to turn toward the safety of the riverbank. The wheel spun uselessly in his hand. He felt himself and the others who rode with him, all those who relied on him, sweeping toward a blind curve of the river, beyond which something terrible awaited them.

A big bump threw him upward and he hit his head. He half-woke and opened his eyes. There was dark all around him, and the smell of exhaust and water on hot metal, and the rattle of the undercarriage as it negotiated old pavement, and the hiss of tires on wet asphalt. He wondered dreamily, Where am I?

• • •

He woke again to the feel of hands and the sound of voices.

“That’s right, Thorsen. Time to go night-night.”

They lifted his legs and turned him so that he was sitting up, more or less. Bo saw a line of lights like a string of bright pearls against the black throat of the night and the rain.

“Come on, buddy. Just a few steps and you’re there.”

They helped him up. He stood unsteadily. He looked back. At first he saw a huge, gaping mouth. Then he understood that it was a car trunk. They’d lifted him out of a car trunk. That seemed odd. But they were helpful.

“You can do it, Thorsen. That’s right. A step at a time.”

Rain fell against his face, cooling and refreshing. The fresh air felt good after the stuffy car trunk. The air carried on it a familiar scent. The dank, muddy smell of the Mississippi River.

“There we go.”

They leaned him against a metal railing. Bo looked down. In the flash of lightning, he saw the river far below him, black and shiny for a moment, then lost in the dark again, and the rain.

He knew where he was. His old stomping grounds. The High Bridge over the river. In the shadow of that bridge, he’d lived with his family of runaways in the old bus.

“Damn it, Curtis, hold on to him.”

“It’s the goddamn rain. He’s slippery as an eel.”

Bo felt them grasp him low around his hips. He knew he was about to travel again on the black river he’d driven so often in his nightmares.

But this was no nightmare.

Bo gathered himself around that small, hard realization and acted without thinking. His body moved in the way he’d trained it for nearly two decades. He yanked his arm loose and delivered a hard kick to the knee joint of the man to his right, who went down howling. The other man Bo struck with a forearm blow to the middle of his face, and a fountain of blood squirted into the rain. Bo lurched away from the railing toward the car that sat idling on the bridge.

“Christ, don’t shoot him,” one of the men hollered.

Bo tumbled into the car parked at the curb, and he slumped over the wheel. As he jammed the stick into gear, the front door on the passenger’s side popped open. He hit the gas, and the car shot forward. Behind him, someone screamed a curse.

Bo sped across the bridge into St. Paul. He was sleepy, barely able to keep his eyes open or his foot on the pedal. The car swerved across lanes. He mounted the bluff to Summit Avenue and headed west along the rain- swept street between rows of big, fine houses.

Where? he tried to think.

Not to Tangletown. They would look for him there.

Then he thought of Diana Ishimaru. She lived on East River Road, less than a mile from Tangletown. All he had to do was stay awake for a few more minutes and he would be there.

He drifted, heedless of stoplights. Dimly, he understood that it must be very late because there was almost no traffic. On East River Road, he tried to remember which house was hers. In the dark and the rain, it was hard to tell. He pulled to the side of the street, and the front right wheel jumped the curb. He jerked the door handle and tumbled out onto the pavement. He stumbled up the walk to the front door, leaned against the clean white wood, and pounded.

The porch light came on. The locked clicked, the door opened, and Bo fell forward. A man caught him and stood him up.

“Diana?” Bo said.

“Ishimaru? Diana Ishimaru? She lives next door.” The man swung his hand in that direction. He wore a white robe and an angry look.

Bo took a couple of steps back into the rain and almost toppled over.

The man said, “Drunken asshole,” and slammed the door.

Bo crossed the wide lawn, tramped through a flower bed, reached the porch of the next house, and hit his fist against the door.

Diana Ishimaru answered immediately. Despite the hour and being dressed in a red chenille bathrobe, she looked wide awake.

“Bo? Jesus, come in out of that rain.” She reached out and took his arm.

Bo stumbled into the hallway. “Tried to kill me…” he mumbled.

“What?”

“Coffee,” he said. He leaned against the wall. He felt so tired.

“Out of those clothes, first. You’re dripping all over my rug.”

She led him to the bathroom. By the time she came back with dry clothes, he’d curled up on the tile floor and was drifting off.

“Bo.” She shook him. “Here, let me help.”

She worked him out of his shirt and then his pants. That left him in boxers. “I’ve done all the helping I’m going to. Get out of those wet Skivvies and into these things.” She dropped a set of gray sweats into his lap. “I’m going to make some coffee.”

Slowly, Bo finished what Ishimaru had started. She knocked on the door, came in, helped him stand up, then walked him into her living room, where she settled him on the couch.

“I’ll get the coffee and be right back.”

Bo laid himself down. The couch cushions felt so good, so soft, so welcoming.

Diana Ishimaru was an enigma in many ways. Although Bo knew where she lived, had driven past her house many times, he’d never been invited inside. So far as he knew, none of the agents in the field office had. In this way, and others, she’d kept her personal distance. As he took in the interior of her home, Bo was treated to a side of Ishimaru he’d never seen. A pair of gold-flaked screens decorated with cranes separated the living room and dining room. In the middle of the table near the front window sat a zen rock garden, six stones in raked white sand. On top of her bookcase were two clay pots containing tiny bonsai trees. On the wall behind the sofa hung a mirror in a blond wooden frame into which had been carved the delicate image of birds perched on branches. Bo was surprised by all this, for in her office, Ishimaru kept little evidence of her ancestry. He was just closing his eyes, ready to dream of the Orient, when Ishimaru shook him vigorously.

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