Roma.
Jack tucked in his shirt and—reluctantly—left his apartment. But in the hall, after locking the door, he pulled a hair from his scalp, wet it with saliva, and stretched it across the space between the door and the jamb. After the saliva dried, it would be invisible. A crude little telltale, but very effective.
He headed back to the hotel, glancing over his shoulder all the way.
6
Jack sat on one of the benches in the common area on the second floor as various SESOUPers wandered in and out of the huckster room and the MK-ULTRA panel. He watched them smile and greet each other, laugh at an in-joke, throw a friendly arm over another's shoulder, and he thought about what Abe had said. They truly were like a family, not genetically related, maybe, but they did share a heritage of sorts. He'd bet the majority of them spent a lot of time alone, their contact for most of the year limited to newsletters and the Internet, and maybe an occasional phone call. This conference was a family gathering of sorts…a gathering of loners, mostly.
Loners…Jack knew the Loner family…he was a charter member.
But one member of this particular branch was dead. Maybe two, if Melanie already shared the same fate as Olive.
"Working hard?"
Jack looked up and saw Lew Ehler standing over him.
Lew looked worse than he had this morning. Wasn't he sleeping at all!
"Sit down, Lew" Jack said, patting the spot next to him on the bench. "Want to ask you a couple of questions."
Lew wearily slumped his gangly frame onto the bench. "Have you learned anything since this morning?"
"Nothing useful."
"Sitting here daydreaming isn't going to improve that situation."
Jack gave him a raised-eyebrow look.
"Sorry," Lew said, looking away. "I'm a wreck, just a wreck. With each passing hour I become more and more convinced I'll never see her again." He bit his lip. "I'm going out of my mind."
"You were feeling better when I left you this morning."
"For a while, yes. The men in black…I figured that's why she's missing, and why she doesn't contact me—she's hiding from them." He slumped further. "But then I started asking myself, How can I be sure? And if she is hiding, where is she hiding? I can't bear to think of her huddled somewhere alone and afraid."
Jack sensed Lew was going to puddle up again. "It may not be that bad. She may be holed up in a motel—"
"How? Using what for money? I checked our bank account and she hasn't made any ATM withdrawals. I called our credit card companies and there've been no charges on her cards. It's like she dropped off the face of the earth."
"Maybe she's with a friend," Jack offered.
"Olive, maybe?" he said, brightening just a little. "She's still missing, you know."
"I'd assumed as much," Jack said carefully.
"She still hasn't contacted anyone—just like Mel. Do you think Olive could be with Mel, maybe helping her?"
Jack debated telling him about Olive. Did Lew have a right to know? Maybe. Would it make his life any easier at the moment? After seeing the flicker of hope the mention of Olive had lit in his eyes, Jack was certain the truth would sink him.
Some other time, Jack decided.
"I don't know what to tell you about Olive," Jack said.
Not an answer, he admitted, but at least it's true.
"I keep thinking about that rope ladder in Mel's folks' basement," Lew said. "It's so bizarre…I can't seem to get it out of my head. Don't ask me why, but I just know it has something to do with Mel's disappearance."
"All right," Jack said, grasping at anything to steer the subject away from Olive. "Maybe we'll go take another look at it."
"Now?" Lew said eagerly.
"Well, no. Not right now. I want to have a talk with Professor Roma first."
"How can he help?"
"You said he was in contact with Melanie a lot before she disappeared. Do you know if they ever met?"
"No. I'm sure they didn't. Why?"
He told Lew about his trip to Monroe yesterday, and what the librarian had said about seeing Melanie last week with a man who had a monkey on his shoulder.
Lew looked stunned. "Professor Roma?"
"Do you know anyone else with a pet monkey?"
Lew shook his head. "I don't understand."
"Neither do I. That's why I'm looking for him."
Jack looked away. He didn't mention that his interest in Roma was of a more personal nature. Sure, Roma might know something about Melanie, but that wasn't the only reason now. Jack wanted to find out how much he knew about Jack, and how he knew it.
"Don't forget Frayne Canfield while you're at it," Lew said. "He and Mel were close. They shared a bond that excluded me."
Jack looked at him now. Was that a hint of jealousy in Lew's voice?
"But I guess it's to be expected," Lew went on. "They grew up near each other in a small town, both disabled…" He shook his head. "For a while there I suspected they might be having an affair, but…I realized I was wrong. Mel wouldn't do that to me."
"By the way, what's wrong with his legs?"
"I don't know. I've never seen them…but Mel has."
"How do you know?"
"Because I asked her just what you asked me. 'What's wrong with Frayne's legs?' She told me, 'You don't want to know.'"
7
Jack spent the rest of the morning and some of the early afternoon looking for Roma, but man and monkey seemed to have vanished. No one at the hotel knew his whereabouts. He tried to listen to some of the El Nino panel but found it so lame he fled after a couple of minutes. It irked him that he could have been using the time to coach Vicky on her baseball basics.
Finally he went outside in search of a phone. A sunny spring Saturday greeted him. And what did New Yorkers do when the sky was bright and the air balmy? Without lawns to mow or gardens to weed, they were free to hit the streets. And today they were hitting with a vengeance—strolling, jogging, shopping, snacking, parents pushing baby carriages, couples in shorts and sun dresses walking arm in arm or hand in hand, kids chasing each other along the sidewalks.
An abundance of navels on display, many of them pierced.
And all these pretty girls with really ugly guys…almost as if they were dating outside their species. Then Jack wondered if people thought the same when they saw Gia with him. Probably.
The people-watching served only to make Jack long all the more to be with Gia and Vicky. But he knew that even if he'd already found Roma and finished questioning him, he'd probably be keeping to himself today.
He couldn't shake the feeling that Gia and Vicky might be safer if he stayed away.
He found a pay phone at the corner of Ninth and Fiftieth. A huge painting of the Toxic Avenger grinned at him from the side of the building half a block down the street where Troma Rims had its offices. He called Gia, cupping his hand over the buttons as he tapped in her number.
Dammit, he thought. Why don't I just become a card-carrying member of SESOUP? I'm becoming just like them.
Except I'm really being watched.
Which was no doubt how Kenway and Zaleski saw themselves too.
What next? Start getting myself X-rayed for mind-control implants?
Jack could not remember ever feeling this spooked.
"Hey, it's me," he said when Gia answered.
"You're late," she said. "Vicky's been waiting for you."
He hated the thought of disappointing Vicky. "I'm afraid I'm going to have to cancel out of baseball practice, Gia."
He heard her sigh. "You shouldn't have promised if you weren't sure you could make it."
"I was sure I could get away for a couple of hours, but…"
"Tomorrow, then?"