Roger kept that up for several seconds as he readied to pull away. Then he moved until he was neck-and-neck with the guy about ten feet on his left. Ahead the road was wide open. They ran in formation like that for awhile. A couple times the guy looked over to Roger. Roger hooked eyes on him, and in that flash something passed between them. Roger didn't know what it was, nor did he care. All his concentration was on that bright yellow finish line a hundred meters ahead.
Cheers from the huge gallery rose up as a small knot of local track stars crossed the finish line first.
At about sixty meters, Roger pushed his throttle to the limit. Straining with everything he had, he moved past 44 without a glance and pumped down the road to the fat yellow finish, crossing a dozen paces ahead.
The crowd went wild not because they knew Roger, but for his breakaway. From over a hundred meters they had watched the two run in perfect stride until Roger made his stupendous sprint to the finish.
Laura ran out to Roger as he panted and stumbled around to catch his breath. She embraced him and gave him some water.
He knew it was irrational, what he had just done-yielding to testosterone. But, Jesus, it felt good to take that guy.
Standing on a bench in the Park across from the finish, Agent Eric Brown shot off two dozen frames from the Nikon with the black zoom and motor drive as Roger flew across the yellow line and into the cheering crowd.
He takes a cup of water from someone. He bends over to catch his breath. He raises a pained face to the sky. He takes a hug from his wife, who looks older than he in the zoom. He dumps a cup of water over his head. He towels off. He downs more water. He high-fives his son. He gives a wave to Bill Pike when he crosses the line.
And Brown caught it all.
"Olafsson's right," Pike said when he finally made his way to Brown. "The wrong guy." He was still panting and mopping his brow with a towel.
"Yeah, but for thirty-eight, the bastard can run."
"Tell me about it." Pike's face was drained and his lungs still burned. "I don't know what his secret is, but he must have rocket fuel for blood, is all."
"Roger, I'm sorry to call you at the shop, but it's extremely important."
Jenny tried to disguise the desperation in her voice, but he heard it.
And, yet, he still turned on her harshly. "If it's about the orchids, m'am, I can't help you. They're not available."
That was their code word. Whenever they discussed Elixir on the phone, her sister and Roger had referred to it as the "orchids."
It was so unfair, Jenny thought. So unfair. And Laura was to blame. She had poisoned his mind. Her own sister! "But you must," Jenny pleaded. You have to. If you don't-"
"I'm sorry, m'am, I can't help you," he said, and hung up.
For a startled moment Jenny stood there with the dead phone to her ear. He had cut her off because he was afraid their lines were tapped, which was why he never even addressed her by name.
But that was ridiculous after all these years. Roger and Laura had new lives, and Jenny had moved out of Kalamazoo years ago. Even Ted didn't know where she and her daughter were living.
Jenny put down the phone, thinking how selfish and inconsiderate of him. Her own brother-in-law. And after all she had done for them.
The music still wafted down from Abigail's room. Thank goodness she hadn't heard the conversation.
Jenny felt the panic grip her again. The last injection of serum could not hold her much longer. Any day now she could begin to change. Laura had said it was awful what happened to the monkeys.
What will happen to me? Jenny's brain screamed. They said you turned old and died in a matter of hours. It was too horrible to contemplate.
I can't leave her like this.
"Mother!" Abigail called from upstairs.
"Yes, darling?"
"How do you say kangaroo in French?"
"I don't know," she yelled, "but I'll look it up."
As she made her way for the dictionary, Jenny looked at her face in the mirror. "God, help me," she whispered.
"It's the second time this week she's called. She sounded a little crazy," Roger said from the bathroom.
As usual, Wendy was in bed propped up with a book. It was what she did every night before going to sleep.
Jenny had turned fifty a few months ago, and Wendy knew it had hit her hard. She had called them several times about Elixir, to the point of begging. Having been a registered nurse, she assured them that she could administer needle injections to herself, that she would be no problem to them at all, that they could even Federal Express a few vials to her. But they had flatly refused.
Roger snapped off the bathroom light and headed for the bed. He had touched up his beard and grayed his sideburns.
"She wasn't just irrational," he continued. "The way she talked. Her tempo was all off. She took long pauses before responding. I wasn't even sure she got what I was saying. At one point she called me Mr. Bigshot and threatened not to be my friend anymore. It was like talking to a child."
Laura didn't want to get into more Jenny-bashing. "She's been through a lot," she said.
"But I don't think she'll let it go. She sounded almost threatening."
He got into bed beside her.
Tonight Laura was reading a mystery novel. For years she had avoided the genre because they reminded her of her own lost career. Ironically, her fugitive status had made If I Should Die a best-seller years ago. She had thought about getting back into writing under a pseudonym, but there were too many risks in going public. They still lived in fear of seeing recognition flicker in a stranger's eyes. Also, some hawk-eyed reader might picked up on quirks of style and connect her to Wendy Bacon. So, sadly, she had abandoned her passion and became just another reader.
Roger reached over and pulled the book out of her hand and gave her a kiss. He had that goatish look in his eye. He rubbed his hand down her thighs.
"Not tonight." She could see the disappointment in his face. Brett was already asleep in his room, so that was no excuse. She just didn't feel like it. She gave his hand a conciliatory squeeze. "I'm sorry."
"Not as much as I am."
There was a time he would have protested-when they were both younger. When they were biological equals. But he had become resigned to rejection. These days they made love just a couple times a month. He took her face in his hands. "I love you, you know."
"I know," she said. She still liked hearing that, but she no longer took refuge in the words. "And I love you. Tomorrow night, I promise."
Roger nodded. "Sure," he said and kissed her lightly on the mouth.
She dimmed the light and lay quietly against him for several minutes. The silence was charged with bad feelings. Several times when they were out she'd catch him looking at younger women. And how could she blame him? Even though she kept up aerobics, ate right, colored her hair, used vitamin supplements and all the hot anti-wrinkle creams on the market, a quarter century of biology separated them. Technically, she could be his mother.
"We don't have many more years left for this," she said.
"Left for what?"
She wished he wouldn't play dumb. "For charades."
"Do we have to get into that now?"
It scared him when she brought it up because the inevitable was happening-to her, not him. Between fake identities and the makeup, he had almost fallen for the artifice. Once a few years ago she had let the roots of her hair grow out, and he was shocked at all the gray. He had nearly forgotten she was growing old.
"Well, when exactly do you want to talk about it?" she asked.