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Noton pushed up the plastic glasses on his nose with his thumb and said, "Mostly scrambled. Sometimes over easy, though. Sometimes it's an altered personality, or just an amplified one. It's tough to know with a John Doe. We don't have any reference points."

"The police don't know anything?"

Noton shook his head.

"But he'll be functional?" the same person asked. "Walking. Talking."

"Eventually," Noton said. "I've seen people with massive frontal lobe damage walk out of the hospital in less than a week. Others? It can take years before they're functional enough to live on their own."

Teuch flexed his fingers and toes under the sheet and smiled inwardly, knowing from the clarity of his thoughts that he'd be one of the ones walking out in less than a week.

Noton reached for a tray and lifted a shiny half-dome up for all to see. "Anyway, who wouldn't want a titanium skull?"

A couple of them chuckled politely.

"Doctor," another one asked, "I thought you had to wait at least three days after a thoracic surgery to patch a skull."

"The bullet went right through the chest," Noton said, looking up and scratching his cheek. "They opened him up and got right out. Dr. Kilkoyne did the surgery if you want to talk with her about it. Said she never saw anything like it. Bullet hit at just the right angle, ran along the rib, and out under the arm. Human armor."

"Lucky guy, right?"

"Very," Noton said. "Whoever he is."

"Will the police be back?" someone asked.

Noton shrugged. "When he comes to, they will."

Teuch let his lids settle closed. He thought about opossums and how they survived. These doctors would grow careless. And then, when the time was right, John Doe would be gone.

He had work to do.

CHAPTER 21

AFTER HE LINED UP CASEY'S MOTORCYCLE ESCORT, JOSe PAID A visit to Ken Trent, his former captain. Jose was hoping for a connection to Gage that might put him in a favorable light with the big chief.

"Guy's a grade A flaming asshole," Ken said, leaning back in his chair.

"Tell me what you really think," Jose said.

"The two of you'll get along swell."

"Seriously, someone must know him," Jose said. "Even assholes have friends."

"Tell you who might be able to help," Ken said. "Dave Wayson, you know him?"

"The narco guy who got into the Secret Service?" Jose asked.

"He got the detail out on the senator's ranch when the first lady came for that square dance fund-raiser they did for some Bible group. Mention my name to Wayson. My wife's brother was the one who helped him get into the Secret Service. He'll help you."

Ken jotted down Dave's number and handed it across his desk to Jose.

"Did he get to know Gage?" Jose asked, sticking the number into his pocket.

"Podunk cops like Gage fall in love with the Secret Service guys. Makes them feel like they're on the inside."

"What kind of bullshit is that?"

"I don't know," Ken said, "I'm making it up as I go, but it's the only thing I can come up with."

Jose laughed and stood to go.

"That poker game is still running every Tuesday," Ken said, walking him to the door. "You should get there."

"I know," Jose said, shaking his old friend's hand. "I keep saying I will and one day I'll surprise you."

"How's things on the home front?"

"Cold and deep as the Titanic."

"Not her, your little girl," Ken said.

Jose turned and smiled. "Honestly? I'd be married to that two-timing bitch ten more years if it got me another little girl like Kenna. She's the silver lining. Platinum, really."

"Good," Ken said.

Jose wanted to get home to change his clothes before seeing Gage. On the way he dialed Wayson, who answered his phone on the first ring, out of breath, as if he had been expecting someone important. He sounded disappointed at the sound of Jose's voice until Jose mentioned Ken's name. Then Wayson perked right up.

"Cold fish, that guy," Wayson said in reference to Gage. "I actually went down there after the whole first-lady visit to help him out with some protocols for the senator."

"Gage is protecting the senator?" Jose asked. "From who?"

"You know how some of these politicians get," Wayson said. "The people around them kiss their ass so hard half of them think their next stop is the White House. Makes 'em feel important to have a couple guys running around with earpieces when they sit down at a restaurant."

"Would you mind giving him a call?" Jose asked. "Ken said I could count on you. What I'd really like is if you could tell him there's some noise about the whole hunting accident, this woman defense lawyer bugging people about it. Tell him that her investigator, me, is a good shit, ex-Dallas PD, one of the guys, and the best way to get everyone home by dinner is to be nice and help me out a little. Tell him I think the whole thing is crap. Can you do that?"

"I'll tell him you're Santa Claus if you want," Wayson said. "Once I got down there-on my day off, I might add-the guy acted like I was lucky to be helping him. A weird cat. Big as a redwood, too, with that creepy old Frankenstein head. I was nice, though. Figured I was there, anyway."

Jose had a one-bedroom in a downtown building that had seen better days. He parked the truck in his lot across the street, then ran up to change. When he opened the door, he bumped into the couch, forgetting that he'd left the living room a mess from his daughter's visit two days before. They'd shuffled the furniture and draped blankets over everything, pinning them down with unopened soup cans to construct an extensive fort. Several different tunnels led to the main room of the fort, where the two of them had eaten hamburgers and French fries and where they'd watched Air Bud from a nest of pillows, ultimately falling asleep.

At Kenna's request, Jose had left the whole mess intact and moved his personal base of operations to the bedroom, where clothes and paperwork made up a soup of dishevelment. The gang clothes came off and went into the pile in the corner by the window. He sniffed the air, thinking the smell came from the clothes, but realizing the culprit lurked somewhere out in the little galley kitchen. He found his regular jeans on the bed and tucked in his T-shirt, wondering at the extra flesh that had been accumulating around his middle.

Desperate fingers plumbed the fat for the washboard within. In his mind, he did a simple calculation of the doughnuts and beer he could cut out to bring it back. He swung the bedroom door to a close, stood sideways, and sucked it in. After a determined nod, he replaced the cutoff flannel with the last garment hanging in his tiny closet, a loose-fitting white dress shirt that in his respectable years had always been teamed up with a blazer and tie. For shoes, he simply laced up the Timberland boots he'd worn open-tongued in the barrio.

Sitting on the bed, he dialed information for the Wilmer Police Department. While he didn't speak to Gage, the chief's secretary told him if he could get there before five-thirty, the chief would be able to see him. On the way out, Jose emptied the garbage to remove the bad smell. While Kenna never minded the clutter, he didn't want her to spend her visits in squalor.

Because of traffic, the drive to Wilmer took nearly forty-five minutes. Gage was in the office, and after twenty minutes he appeared in the lobby with a frown as big as his head. He extended a hand and Jose shook it, matching his grip and then weakening the way a dog will roll to its back in order not to fight, until Gage's lips evened out.

"Wayson says you're okay," Gage said, studying Jose carefully as if he still wasn't sure, "otherwise you'd be shit out of luck."

"I understand you met my lovely client," Jose said, shaking his head in the knowing way of good old boys.

Gage continued to study him. Jose held the chief's gaze, aware that the success of his trip hung in the balance. Finally, the enormous cop snorted and turned without speaking. Jose followed the chief back into his office as though he'd been politely invited.