If he’d known someone out here he could trust, he might have arranged to be picked up, and he’d follow that way. But he knew no one. Abe had arranged a weapon for him, but couldn’t do more than that on such short notice.
So no big surprise when Goren led his daughter into the parking area. Jack followed until he saw them get into a rattletrap Ford of uncertain vintage and mismatched front fenders. A second man sat behind the wheel. Goren put his daughter in the rear, then got in the front passenger seat. Jack memorized the license plate out of habit—couldn’t imagine another car like that in the entire airport.
He hurried back and found a line for the taxis. Took ten teeth-grinding minutes to reach one. Too late to follow.
Damn. Tailing would have saved him a ton of legwork.
He turned away and crossed over to where the rental car vans were picking up and disgorging customers. He hopped on the first to come along.
4
“Oh, shit!”
Hank had come down to the subcellar to check on Darryl. He hadn’t turned on the lights, just followed the cold blue glow. The dots and lines he’d seen yesterday were gone. Or maybe not gone, simply invisible without the assistance of absinthe. If getting tanked on that stuff was what it took to see them, he’d skip a second look. He’d felt terrible this morning.
He stopped dead in his tracks when he saw that Darryl’s legs were no longer sticking out. His feet, shoes and all, were now entirely within the thing.
He turned at a sound behind him and saw Drexler strolling in from the stairway.
“I came to check on our friend,” he said, smiling as he approached, “but I see you’ve beaten me to it.”
Hank pointed at the Orsa. He hated that his hand shook, but he couldn’t help it. This was . . . he didn’t know what it was, but it couldn’t be good.
“Look at that! It’s sucked him further inside.”
Drexler stopped and stared. He looked surprised for an instant, then composed.
“Well, that makes sense, doesn’t it. If the Orsa is going to cure his whole body, it must have access to his whole body. Don’t be concerned. Just a normal part of the process.”
“I thought you said this had never been done before.”
“Yes, I did say that, but there are writings on the subject. Have no fear: Our friend is being cured.”
As Hank turned away and resumed staring at the Orsa and the man trapped within, he wondered how much of that was bullshit.
“Our friend? Don’t pretend you ever liked him. You made it pretty clear he got on your nerves.”
Drexler stopped at Hank’s side. “That is true, I suppose. But now I harbor only good feelings about him.”
“Yeah? And what do you think Darryl’s feeling?”
“I have no idea. Since he appears unconscious, I would assume he feels nothing.”
Hank continued to stare at Darryl’s still form. He hoped that was the case. He felt somehow responsible for the guy being in there. If he came out cured of AIDS, then good. He could be annoying at times, and had got himself infected in a really stupid way, but he didn’t deserve AIDS.
He recalled a strange remark Drexler had made yesterday while they’d been staring at the dots and lines. He glanced at him.
“Yesterday you mentioned a word I’d never heard before—fin-something—in connection with Darryl. What were you talking about?”
Drexler looked suddenly uncomfortable. “Nothing. Forget I mentioned it.”
That wouldn’t be hard, since he barely remembered it, but Drexler’s discomfort piqued his interest. He had a feeling the man never would have mentioned it if not for a snootful of absinthe.
“No can do. You said it about one of my Kickers, so I need to know what it means.”
“It’s nothing. Just an ancient word for the healing process our friend is going through.”
“Bullshit. You said it was some sort of contingency plan.”
Drexler looked even more uncomfortable. “I said nothing of the sort. I must have said the Order has contingency plans to aid the One, and you misinterpreted.”
He was lying. Hank resisted the urge to take a poke at him, knock him down, dirty up his white suit, maybe work him over with his own fancy cane. Instead he replayed that scene from yesterday . . . they were standing closer to the Orsa, checking out the dots and lines . . . talking about Opus Omega . . . and Drexler had mentioned . . .
“Fhinntmanchca,” Hank said as it came back to him. “That was what you said.”
Drexler looked pale now. “Excuse me. I’ve used up today’s allotment of idle chatter.”
He turned and strode away.
Fhinntmanchca, Hank thought. He needed to find out what that meant, but hadn’t a clue as to where to look. He’d try to Google it, but he didn’t even know how to spell it.
He stared at the Orsa. What did it mean? It had something to do with Darryl. But what?
He had an uncomfortable feeling he’d be finding out soon enough.
5
It called itself the Andaz West Hollywood now, but in the old days it had been the infamous Riot Hyatt.
Jack had programmed the hotel’s address into his rental car’s GPS, but when he pulled into the rear parking lot an hour later, he realized he hadn’t needed it—except for the final hundred yards on Sunset Boulevard, he’d stayed on the same street, La Cienega, all the way from the airport.
The room was nothing much—a view of the traffic on Sunset, the House of Blues across the street, and the towers of downtown rising through the smog in the basin. But the hotel was special. He’d chosen the Riot Hyatt for its place in rock history, figuring as long as he had to make this trip, he might as well make it interesting.
Little Richard used to live here. Timmy O’Brien, one of Julio’s regulars, had told him he’d been out here on a business trip during his heyday in advertising and had seen him getting into a limo in the parking lot. Timmy had had the presence of mind to call out, “Hey, how’s it going, Mister Penniman?” which so pleased Little Richard he rewarded him with a pearly grin, a handshake, a pre-signed photo, and a couple of Seventh Day Adventist brochures. Timmy kept the photo, dumped the brochures.
The Hyatt gained the “riot” from all the rowdy rock bands that used to stay here when they passed through on tour. The Who and the Stones—those impetuous boys—threw TVs out windows. A member of Led Zep supposedly drove a motorcycle along one of the hallways.
Staying here had seemed like a cool idea last night when he’d been looking for a hotel, but now that he was here . . .
Meh.
So what? Big deal. Who cared?
He’d noticed that reaction more and more lately. Vicky and Gia aside, nothing outside the Conflict seemed to excite or interest him much. Maybe because he no longer felt that his life was his own, that he was being manipulated by forces beyond his control.
Wasn’t that the way a paranoid schiz would think?
But he wasn’t crazy, he wasn’t imagining all this. He’d seen and experienced things with no conventional rationale, understandable only as manifestations of the Conflict.
He wasn’t a free, independent individual, he was a backup plan. He’d been in the crosshairs since his conception—yesterday’s revelation of the Lady’s presence in his hometown as Mrs. Clevenger clinched that.
So who cared about the antics of a bunch of drugged-up, self-indulgent cases of arrested development, whose major accomplishment was turning up the volume to eleven?
Jack stared out the window at the art deco façade of the Argyle Hotel across the street. Cool looking place. Should have booked there.
He shook his head. This wasn’t like him. He used to enjoy life, used to put on his own personal film festivals built around a theme or an actor or director. When was the last time he’d done that?