The safety barriers were dismantled quickly and as the helpers took out the gates, they saw Ruda assisted to a chair by Grimaldi. They brought her water and she drank thirstily, leaning against her husband. She covered her face with her hands. "Oh God. Oh God..."
She rocked backward and forward on the chair. Grimaldi angrily waved Vernon away as he approached. "No. Leave us alone. Leave us alone, she's okay."
He didn't want anyone to see her in this condition. He knew how gossip spread and he didn't want it said that Ruda Kellerman was sick. They had six more weeks, and a chance to go back to the States. Grimaldi lifted her to her feet. "We'll go and change for the final parade, okay, Ruda? All right guys, everything's under control. All the cats back in their cages?"
The tractor was pulling all the cages into their covered tent to be put back into their regular, heavier cages. Mamon growled and hissed, swiping and butting the bars. Grimaldi helped Ruda from the arena, then gestured for Mike.
"Be careful with the bastard, he looks mean," he whispered. "Don't move him if you're worried, we'll deal with him when he's calmed down."
Mike nodded and murmured that he'd get the feeds ready, then looked back as Mamon roared his fury. Mamon's cage rocked dangerously as it moved out of sight. Grimaldi didn't have to repeat his order: No one would go near him.
The cold air made Ruda gasp. Grimaldi put a protective arm around her shoulders. Her chest was heaving. "You were right, Luis. I should have listened to you. Seeing Rebecca again made my mind go, but I'll be okay... maybe I need to lie down for a while."
As Grimaldi walked her to the trailer he stepped on Vernon's yellow rain cape, left by the side of the steps. He chucked it aside and helped Ruda inside. She sat down on the bunk, her head between her knees. Grimaldi poured a brandy and held it out for her. Ruda took the glass, cupping it in both hands. "You did okay out there, you old bastard."
He grinned and got himself a drink. "Well you know me, I always did like a challenge."
He caught his reflection in the mirror and chuckled. "I felt good. It's been too long. Maybe if we did the first half we could work something up together. But I won't work with Mamon, he's your baby. Look back at tonight's show — you don't need him. Maybe we could try and get another panther. Wanton's a great crowd-pleaser, they loved him. Did you hear that applause?"
Ruda pulled off her leather gloves. Grimaldi was staring at himself in the mirror.
"I'll start working out, get this fat off me." Grimaldi slapped his belly.
Ruda sipped her brandy, turned her face away. "Where's Rebecca?"
He sat opposite her, the way they used to in the old days, his long legs propped up beside her.
"Vernon's taking care of her, you just relax."
Grimaldi cocked his head. "You want to tell me what happened? I mean, you blanked out, Ruda. In the middle of a big act! It made the old ticker jump."
He smiled, but Ruda was worried about Rebecca. "You sure she's with Vernon?"
"Yes, just relax. Eh! Did you see how fast I shot through that trapdoor? They were going into the first part of the act again, Ruda. Ruda?"
"You sure she's with Vernon? I feel her. God, it's hot, I'm so hot."
Rebecca was cold. Her head ached and she didn't know how long she had been there. Had she fainted? This had happened before so many times — hours blanked out, even days. She was about to crawl out from beneath the trailer when she heard Ruda's voice and the darker, heavier tones of Grimaldi directly above her.
Ruda pushed open the trailer window. "She has no memory of what happened. Strange, she remembers nothing. But she is to blame for what happened tonight, I know it."
"Oh, come on. I don't think you realized the emotional impact on you at seeing her. I warned you."
"You don't understand."
"Why don't you help me understand, Ruda? I want to."
She laughed, some of her old anger returned. "Oh aren't you suddenly Mister Wonderful! You think I don't know why? Got your balls back tonight, did you? I may have fouled up, but you'll never replace me. It's my act, Luis, it's mine."
"How the hell do you think you'd have got out of there tonight without me? Maybe I did get my balls back, but it's good I still had them! I admit I've been scared, Ruda, but tonight I faced it, didn't even think about it. The fear went, I had no fear, Ruda!"
"What the fuck do you want me to say? You did great, you did good. Now leave me alone. I need to think about something. Just leave me alone."
"One of these days, Ruda, I might do just that."
He patted his pockets for a cigar. He struck a match, puffed the cigar alight, then turned back to her, prepared for a fight. He was surprised by the soft tone of her voice.
"I kept on seeing colors. I couldn't give the right commands."
Luis drew the ashtray closer and was about to interrupt when she continued.
"We were so young, they could only do the tests with color cards..."
"You told me!"
"No, you don't understand. We could transmit coded colors. Don't you realize how our minds are linked? That's what was wrong tonight, it was me, Rebecca..."
She suddenly stood up. "Oh my God, where is she?"
"Look, just forget her for a second, okay? Sit down." He poured another brandy, but Ruda couldn't sit still. She knew Rebecca needed her.
Grimaldi handed her the brandy and stood over her. She stared into the glass. "What was any of it for, Luis? We were just another one of his insane experiments. He tried with other twins, too. He was able to identify which of the twins could receive — it was always the stronger of the two, the weaker one was the transmitter."
She gave him her glass. "I don't want it." She breathed in heavily. Her body trembled as she rubbed the scars at her temples. "They clamped these wires to my head, which would burn. I didn't understand what they wanted. When I finally did, it was easy. I always knew what she was thinking. If she bruised a knee I felt it. I always knew, Luis, as if she were inside my head, you know?"
He said nothing, simply watched her.
"After — years after, I sometimes felt she was close. It was strange. You ever had the feeling? Like you know you are about to meet someone, see someone, and you do. Well, I would often have the feeling she was close by. It would just be a feeling, and I would concentrate on her, as I had at the camp, I'd picture her face. But then the feeling would go away and we'd travel on. But so many times I was sure she was there. I remember once I was in New York, I was so sure she was close, and then here — remember me saying I had this feeling? Well, she's staying at the Grand Hotel."
He saw her hand tighten into a fist. "I knew, always knew she was alive."
"Why didn't you tell me about her? If you knew she was alive, we could have searched for her together, put ads in the papers, there's even organizations that—"
She interrupted him. "I searched, I never gave up hope, that's why I started all my astrology letters, remember them? I was always thinking about her. You know, hoping maybe one letter would be from her. Everywhere I went I'd put ads in the papers, things that only she would understand, and I thought about her, concentrated on her."
He sipped his brandy and waited.
"I would think about what she owed me, what I had done for her. Then I would become angry, because I knew she had to feel me too, had to know I was alive, and I would curse her, hate her for not coming to me. I wanted her to come to me, I wanted to put my hands around her throat and choke her to death."
"What?"
"She left me... she left me, Luis, she left me." Her voice was hardly audible. He poured himself another brandy, uncertain if what he was hearing made any sense. Ruda was silent, staring from the window. When she continued her voice was stronger.