“Us?” John Nighthawk said. “We were never here.” He and the big guy strolled away.
Jerry looked at Ray expectantly.
“Go ahead, take off,” Ray told him. “I’ll save a ton of the paperwork for you.”
“Thanks a lot,” Jerry said sourly, turning to go.
“And Jerry—” Ray added.
“Yeah?”
“It was fun.”
Jerry paused. “It was. In an odd sort of hallucinogenic kind of way. Come on,” he added to Sascha and Mushroom Daddy.
“I wonder if I can find another van,” Daddy said wistfully. “Hey! We could drive back together!”
Digger Downs came by, his tape recorder in his hand. “Hey, guys,” he said.
Ray looked at him unenthusiastically. He still hadn’t forgiven Downs for once dripping blood on his fighting suit, sixteen years ago. “What do you want?” Ray asked.
“The story,” Digger said. “What happened between John Fortune and his father during those last moments?”
“Can’t you leave the kid alone?” Ray asked.
“No,” John Fortune said quietly. “I’ll tell him. I’ll tell him about the most powerful ace in the world, and the final gift he gave me.”
The Angel nodded. “Your father would want the story to come from you.”
Downs had his tape-recorder out and was listening with a wide grin—Visions of a Pulitzer probably dancing in his head, Ray thought—as Billy Ray and the Angel strolled away.
“Well,” Ray said, gesturing at the devastated lobby and the squads of cops and federal agents wandering around it in a daze, “alone at last. Got any plans for this evening?”
The Angel shook her head. “Do you?”
“I was thinking of a good meal, a hot shower, a romp in the sack, and then about twenty hours of sleep. How’s that sound?”
“Billy—” She stopped, started again. “I’ve got a lot of thinking to do.”
“We can always find some time for that. I guess.”
“Do you really believe that you and I can make it?”
Ray shrugged. “I don’t know. I believe we’d be crazy not to try, though. Besides, I could drink a case of you. Whatever that means.”
“You remember our song!”
“Remember it? Hell, I’ve never even heard it.”
The Angel smiled and put her head on his shoulder as they stepped through the debris littering the lobby floor.
“By the way,” Ray said. “You look bitching in red.”
Cardinal Romulus Contarini sat alone in Nighthawk’s suite. He jumped when Nighthawk opened the door and came in on silent feet.
“Well?” he asked.
Nighthawk sighed. “Well, you were wrong, as usual.”
“Wrong?” Contarini said angrily. “I was not wrong! I am righteous in my faith and in my wrath! We will begin again,” he said, a cunning look in his eyes. “The diabolists cannot match the might of Mother Church—”
“But you were right about one thing,” Nighthawk said thoughtfully as he approached the Cardinal. “There is a false prophet in this story.” He removed the glove from his left hand. “It was you,” he said, reaching for the cowering churchman.
He had barely said Hello, when suddenly it was time to say goodbye. But life, and death, are like that, Fortunato thought. He remembered the last great Zen lesson.
Enlightenment comes to you only when you stop looking for it.
He stood some where, on some thing, the universe open before him.