“I’ll have to.”
“You Americans. Always what must be done. Never what is pleasant to be done.”
He thought on that parting remark long after the hip-high grasses and knee-high flowers had swallowed her pink-suited figure.
Here, he was truly helpless, his body anchored by the means of its recovery. Yet his mind soared like the distant clouds. He rubbed his left inner elbow. He still smelled the acrid rubbing alcohol scent, felt the ting of the hypodermic needle tip tasting his vein, as a serpent smells, with the bitter end of its toxic tongue.
Death rode on that thin, hollow steel reed; he knew it. His death.
This woman had interrupted that, and by duplicitous means had wafted him away from the clinic, from his would-be killer and also from the only man he trusted.
That made her the only woman he trusted.
That made trust a necessity rather than an option.
He knew this Max person he was didn’t like necessity as a partner.
He inhaled the heady scent of mountain wildflowers. Their only escape route had been on foot. For now, he was helpless and, rid of the leg casts, might be more helpless still. Yet his mind was working, weighing. His mind wouldn’t let him sink into complacency.
Complacency. “The refuge of the inferior mind.”
That motto rang true, like history. He’d been warned against complacency. Over and over again.
Twilight was falling on the valley below before she returned.
“Did you think I wasn’t coming back?” she asked.
“I didn’t think. That’s the advantage of being an invalid.”
“I deliberately stopped us by this haymow. It’ll be as cozy as an inn. But, first—”
She knelt in the long grass, the action releasing the scent of crushed wildflowers as he lay back on his elbows.
“They had a saw.”
He viewed the sturdy, ragged edge of a small, hand-size hacksaw and winced.
“I’ve only time to do one cast before the light fades. You were due to have them removed two days from now anyway. Think you can bear an early exodus?”
Her language was quaint, laughable. Exodus. “Saw away. If you hit skin, you’ll know.”
Still, he steeled himself, feeling the hard-edged plaster rocking back and forth as she sawed. She knew where the seam lay, and attacked the cast on his right leg top and bottom, then pulled, then sawed . . . finally the cast opened like an almond shell. Two halves, clean. The setting sun made the revealed white skin of a man’s leg glow in its angled rays. The dying light revealed a horrifying degree of muscle waste in a mere six weeks.
“Ye gods,” he murmured, “it’s so pink and puckered and ghastly.”
There was a silence.
“My leg,” he said firmly.
Come Into My Parlor
The siren screams of police and emergency vehicles racing to the Sapphire Slipper continued into early afternoon.
A number of Vegas cabs and private SUVs that were driving up hastily turned around. Inside the Sapphire Slipper, the resident courtesans had a new client to lavish exclusive attention on.
“That was the bravest thing I ever saw,” Babette said, stroking Midnight Louie’s fevered brow.
At least his tongue was very warm anyway.
“He’s so cute!” purred Kiki, Lili, and Niki, tickling his tummy.
“Look at these nails!” Angela and Heather intoned together. “Shredded. And his pads are bleeding.”
They looked with accusing fury at Lieutenant C. R. Molina, Detective Alch, and Coroner Grizzly Bahr.
“I will tend him immediately, my dears.” Coroner Bahr hovered over Louie’s lush nurses. “Some styptics and gauze bandages should set the little guy right. And then I’ll see to you ladies.”
“What about the D.B.?” Molina asked.
“In a minute. This, uh, Good Samaritan needs tending.”
Temple shook her head at Louie’s moment in the spotlight. She was sitting on a blue sofa with Matt down on one knee, attending her kicked ankle.
“It’s swelling already, and bruised,” he decided. “You’ll need to elevate that.”
“Oh, for God’s sake,” Molina said. “You’ve already proposed, from what I hear. You may pick up the bride-to-be and put her down on the long sofa in the bar area. There’s an interrogation going on there that you may be useful for. Coroner, I really think you have more pressing matters upstairs. I sent the crime scene crew up first. Leave the alley cat for the vet.”
Soon all have dispersed but the Sapphire Slipper nursing unit. Louie deserted his cooing chorus of ladies, squirming until they were forced to let him down to limp after the exodus to the bar.
Matt had been focused on Temple from the moment the limo stopped. He’d taken her out of the front seat, spotted her scraped ankle at once, and picked her up, so this was her second stint of bridal carting.
No one noticed them much, though, Temple saw. The barroom was jammed.
Fontana brothers were lined up on and between the barstools. Their girlfriends were scattered at the round tables. Molina had joined two serious, suited men at a table with four semiautomatic pistols on it.
“I take it,” she was saying, “that these are the firearms that shot out the tires.”
One man nodded. “You’ll want to confirm that, for the record.”
The other man looked up and Matt turned to confront him, shocked. “Frank.” He turned back to Temple. “You knew.”
She nodded as the man walked over. He was tall and lean with scissor-sharp features and a receding hairline.
“Matt. I do find you in the most interesting places these days.”
Temple smothered a smile. Frank Bucek was also an ex-priest. He’d been Matt’s teacher in the seminary, but was now an FBI agent. The other agent was getting the girlfriends’ names and addresses, so they made a confidential trio conferring on the sidelines.
“Okay,” Matt said softly, still obviously shocked. “So you were the one Temple called from my cell phone address list. How’d you get here so fast?”
“I was in L.A. And your . . . fiancée, is it, from the good lieutenant’s comments in the foyer? . . . had a bout of curiosity that set a huge fuss in motion.” Bucek grinned. “Congratulations, kids. Am I invited to the wedding?”
“When we decide on a place and a time,” Matt said. “But—”
“I’ll buy you both a celebratory drink in town later, and give you some big explanations in private. Right now, we have a last piece of the puzzle I need to pry out of these women before we leave the crime scene to the able lieutenant.”
Temple was about to scream if she heard Bucek put one more praising adjective in front of Molina’s title, but then she was a bit wrought up from seeing the limo driver’s eyes nearly scratched out by a posse of infuriated domestic cats, led on by the awesome cries and growls of her own cuddly bed partner.
“My midnight radio show—” Matt began, his brow furrowing.
Bucek leaned close. “Carmen is not in a good mood, for many reasons I can guess and some I can’t, but I did get her to promise you’d flee the mass interrogation in time to make your live radio commitment.” He glanced at Temple with some amusement. “You she has plans for. But it’s a small price to pay for Matt getting sprung from a brothel ASAP.”
Temple just shrugged. “How can I help you, Agent Bucek?”
“Tell me which one of these lovely ladies was mad enough at a Fontana boyfriend to help set up a mob hit.”
Temple caught her breath. Putting Madonnah’s murder in those terms took the whole last eighteen-hours’ chaos from the comedy of errors it felt like to the tragedy it was.
Sitting on a leather sofa with her legs up and her foot on Matt’s thigh like a shoeless Cinderella, now that he’d sat down again, made her look about as effective as a poetic Victorian invalid on a fainting couch. Elizabeth Barrett Browning, say. Temple had to twist her neck to eye the eight women she’d come to recognize and know.