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Two Olympic appearances down the toilet.

What the hell. His life wasn’t over. He had a great girlfriend and a pair of well-tied shoes.

Gaby was waiting for him on the sidewalk outside the Chinese restaurant. He spotted her from the corner across the street and took an extra minute just to watch her, as he always did when he had the chance.

She was an Aztec princess by way of Elle magazine. With her high cheekbones and blacker-than-night hair, she took after her Mexican mother more than her Irish-American father. She wore jeans and a simple red silk blouse with confidence enough to suggest that she surpassed the dress code of the island’s trendiest club. At this distance, he couldn’t see her eyes, but he knew the way they looked at everything, focusing on this and dismissing that with intensity and razory speed.

Then she spotted him. He expected her broad, welcoming smile, but all she did was wave. He crossed the street and joined her.

She looked at his battered face and winced, then stretched up on tiptoe to give him a quick kiss. “How’d it go?”

“Well, you’d know if you’d been there.”

“Yes, I know. I’m sorry. Let’s go in, I’m starved.”

He held the door open for her. “So, what were you up to today?”

“Tell you later.”

He ordered shrimp fried rice; she just asked for a cup of wonton soup. When the waitress left, he said, “I thought you were starving.”

“I am. Well, sort of starving.” She looked uncomfortable and shut up.

He let the silence hang between them for a moment. “Well, I’ve got some news,” he said, just as she said, “I need to talk about something.”

They both smiled at the awkwardness.

Harris didn’t feel like smiling. Maybe she wanted to move in together. He didn’t think he was ready for that. Maybe she even wanted to set a date. Oh, God; maybe, in spite of their precautions, she was pregnant. “You go first,” he said.

“No, you.”

“No, you.”

“Okay.” She took a deep breath. “Harris, I think maybe we . . . ought to kind of go our separate ways.”

He put his head down on the table.

“Harris?”

“What?”

“Did you understand me?”

“I don’t think so.” He straightened up. Maybe she was speaking the same language as the referee earlier tonight. Taken apart, the words were English; put together, they made no sense.

“Harris, it’s not working.”

“What’s not working?”

We’re not working. Out. Working out.”

“The hell we’re not. How are we not working out? We hardly ever fight.”

“I know we don’t. You’re one of the nicest men I’ve ever met.”

“Am I lousing up your career? Did your parents forget to tell me that they hate me?”

“Nothing like that.”

“Is there another guy?”

“No.”

“Another girl?”

She almost smiled. “Harris.”

“Look, if it’s my career choice, let me tell you, I just went through a big change.”

“No.”

“Gaby, I love you.” There they were, the magic words. He’d never had any problem saying them. He meant them.

He waited, but this time she didn’t say them back. She just gave him a look full of hurtful sympathy.

“Oh, Jesus.” He slumped back in his chair. “When did this happen?”

“Harris.” She closed her eyes for a moment. When she opened them again, he knew she’d found the words. “I think the world of you. I don’t want to lose you as a friend. But . . . well, this is my fault. I keep expecting you to be something you’re not.”

“Which is what? Just where exactly do I fall short?” He searched her face for a clue.

She moved like a butterfly impaled on a pin, struggling with words that didn’t seem to want to come out. “I don’t think I can describe it.”

“Try.” His voice fell to a whisper. “I can change.”

It was the wrong thing to say. He’d never known he could sound so pathetic. Suddenly he knew why she was doing this. He’d become a neighborhood dog and she was the woman he’d followed home.

He wouldn’t want a dog, either.

Her next words were the rocks thrown to drive him off. “I think I need my keys back.” She set down his own apartment key beside his silverware, then wiped at the tear that threatened to roll down her cheek.

He looked at the key. She didn’t even want to come out to his doghouse anymore. He almost laughed.

He pulled out his keychain and wrestled her building and apartment keys off the metal coil. He set them down in front of her.

She put them in her fanny pack and zipped it up. Her voice was low, pained. “Good-bye, Harris.” And she left.

Harris watched the door swing closed behind her. “Zeb should’ve put you in the ring tonight,” he said. “You would’ve pounded Sonny flat.”

The waitress set Gaby’s soup down in front of him.

What the hell. His life wasn’t over. He had a great bowl of wonton soup and a pair of well-tied shoes.

Chapter Two

Phipps looked up as Gaby come out of the restaurant.

An interesting change. Before, she’d been alert. Now she walked with her head down, hands stuffed into her jeans pockets. A more likely target for a mugger. Phipps might actually have to protect her. The irony amused him.

The guy in the jeans jacket, the one who’d met her at the door, didn’t come out with her. Phipps liked that. One less complication, assuming that she didn’t hook up with him again later.

He glanced at his watch. Three hours until midnight. All he had to do was keep near her for a couple more hours and everything would be all right. He gathered up his newspaper and blended in with the sidewalk traffic as he followed her.

There was still some of the Stolichnaya in his cabinet. Harris uncapped it and carried it to his sagging couch. Gaby would be annoyed with him for treating the expen­sive vodka like common booze. He looked forward to that.

On the end table was the file full of newspaper clippings his mother had sent him over the years. He groaned when he saw it. That’s a call he didn’t want to make. Hi, Mom, Dad. You know all that money you spent to ­support me while I beat people up in New York? Uncle Charlie was right: you wasted it.

He picked up the folder and shuffled through the clippings.

Some of it was college paper stuff about the theater productions he’d been involved with: a picture of him onstage in Death of a Salesman, another of him backstage doing his own makeup for Ethan Frome. But the majority of stories were about tae kwon do.

So many tournaments, competitions, demonstrations. His home-town newspaper had glowingly reported his Olympic career. It even made his first-round loss in Seoul sound like a moral victory. It wasn’t; he’d just gone out there and gotten clobbered.

Harris looked at the pictures of the happy, cocky, ­eager kid he used to be. Dark hair, features that looked brooding even when he was happy. “A soap opera hero face,” Gaby had said a long time ago. “You ought to go over to NBC and try out for a part. Put that theater major to some good use for once.”

He tipped the bottle up and took a pull on it, felt the liquor burn down his throat. Maybe he’d do that now. They’d hire him to be the next bare-chested hunk. Gaby would be channel-surfing and would spot him licking the tonsils of some soap opera sweetheart. She’d drop her teeth.