We sat beside each other in overstuffed chairs with ridiculously high armrests. There was a small octagonal coffee table in front of us. “Maybe I’ll order a bottle of courage,” I said.
“They don’t serve bottles here silly,” she said. “This is a highclass joint.”
I looked around. “They’ve got a signature hotel, a signature bar, probably got a signature drink,” I said.
“Here we go again,” she giggled. “Actually, they do have a signature drink!”
“As long as it doesn’t contain the words venti or doppo,” I said.
“If I tell you the name, promise you’ll order it?”
“Is it really pretentious?” I asked.
Her laughter started bubbling up, spilling out into the room.
“More puffed up than the coffees at Starbucks?” I said.
She feigned a snooty look. “Those are bush league by comparison,” she huffed. “Mere pretenders.”
I smiled. “Okay,” I said, “hit me with it.”
Our waitress came, and we ordered a watercress sandwich for Kathleen. “And to drink?” she asked.
“I’ll have a pomegranate martini,” Kathleen said.
The waitress smiled and looked at me. “And for you, sir?”
I looked at Kathleen.
“Say it,” she giggled.
I sighed. “I’ll have a crystal cosmopolitan,” I said, and she howled with laughter.
The drinks came, and I didn’t want to ruin the moment, but I had to know what happened to make her change her mind about seeing me.
“Augustus,” she said.
“Augustus?”
“You sent him to guard Addie.”
“I did.”
“Even though you and I were through at the time.”
“So?”
“So you really cared about Addie and wanted to keep her safe. That warmed my heart, Donovan. It says everything about your character.”
I remembered how I’d ruined the moment with Lauren the week before and was determined not to react or say anything that could turn the tables on what promised to be an epic evening. I thought I’d stick to a safe topic.
“You had a chance to spend some time with Quinn?” I asked.
“I did,” she said. “Augustus is wonderful with the children-so loving and gentle.”
I couldn’t recall ever hearing the words Augustus and loving and gentle in the same sentence before.
“Did you talk to him about me?” I asked.
“Of course!” she said, her eyes sparkling.
“And?”
“And I told him I thought you were seriously flawed.”
I nodded. “And what did he say?”
Kathleen grew serious for a minute and paused to give weight to her words. “He said you were chivalrous. That you’re always on a quest.”
“Anything else?”
“Yes. That you’re a good friend to have.”
“Did he mention I liked puppies and butterflies, too?”
“No… thank God!”
An hour later, we entered my suite, and she mugged me with kisses before I got the door shut. Our hands were all over each other, racing to see who could touch the most skin in the shortest period of time. I pinned her against the wall in a full body embrace, and our mouths worked hard to keep pace with our passion.
Then Kathleen broke away and dragged me to the bedroom. She spun me around and pushed me onto the bed. I sat up and reached for her, but she slapped my hands away.
I said, “Damn, those pomegranates are amazing!”
“You mean these?” she said. She ripped off her bra, and my brain circuits spun like tumblers in a slot machine.
“Now, Donovan!” she said.
“Now?”
She stepped out of her clothes. Licked her lips.
“At your cervix,” I said.
We made love like teenagers, wrecking the sheets, rolling all over the place. At one point, she started moaning like a porn star, and I said, “Hey, calm down. We both know I’m not that good!”
CHAPTER 38
The wind in Cincinnati whipped and swirled under a gunmetal sky. Bits of paper came to life on currents of air. A bus stopped at the corner of Fifth and Vine, and a young lady stepped off, wearing a short gray sweater dress with pleats. The sudden gusts played havoc with her dress, causing it to flutter and dance about her legs in a way that revealed more than she’d intended. A cellophane wrapper rose from the gutter and became part of a tiny swirling cyclone that covered some twenty yards along Vine Street before coming to rest on the sidewalk in front of the Beck Building.
The Beck was an austere building located a stone’s throw from the Cincinnatian Hotel, where I’d spent the previous night. It was also the building that housed he law firm of Hastings, Unger, and Lovell.
According to the concierge, my corner suite on the second floor of the legendary hotel was tastefully flamboyant. Still, the kitchen and parlor offered a great view of downtown Cincinnati, as well as the Beck Building’s front entrance, so I did my best to ignore the decor while waiting for Augustus Quinn to call me.
Quinn had arrived in town an hour earlier, carrying only a duffel bag. Now he and the duffel were locked in the trunk of Sal Bonadello’s black sedan.
I could only hope he was still alive.
Actually, I was almost certain he was alive, because that was part of the plan.
Every city has a rhythm, and I absorbed what I could of the sights and sounds of downtown Cincinnati from my window, trying to get a feel for it. Half a block away, a homeless person sat on a frozen park bench in what passed for Cincinnati’s town square: a block-sized patch of green with a gazebo and enough open space to accommodate a small gathering for outdoor events. It was practically freezing outside, but he had a couple of pigeons hanging about, hoping for a bread toss. I wondered if he’d had a better life at some point, and hoped so.
I didn’t expect Quinn’s call for at least ten or fifteen minutes and didn’t plan to worry unless a half-hour had passed without hearing from him. As I stood at the window, I was thinking that I had no reason to believe Sal would double cross me, and yet I had just bet Quinn’s life on that assumption.
I was also thinking what a fine target I’d make standing in front of the floor-to-ceiling windows.
I shut the blinds, moved to the interior of the room, and-to take my mind off the wallpaper pattern-went through my mental checklist one more time.
We were in battle mode, and I had things wrapped pretty tight. Callie was still in West Virginia keeping an eye on Janet and Kimberly. Quinn had spent the night at the burn center and had been relieved early this morning by two of our guys from Bedford. Kathleen was at her office, and Lou Kelly had put a guy on her just in case. Victor and Hugo were assembling the assault team and working out the final details for hijacking a government surveillance drone.
Sal Bonadello was on the seventh floor of the Beck Building with his bodyguard and two attorneys, hatching a plot to kill me. The attorneys were Chris Unger, whose private suite was located there, and Chris’s younger brother, Garrett, who had formerly represented Addie’s parents, Greg and Melanie Dawes.
Normally attorneys wouldn’t be involved in discussing-much less planning-a criminal activity. But because I am known by the underworld as a counter-terrorist, Joe DeMeo wanted to be extra careful with the hit, wanted everyone to be on the same page. The attorneys were deep into organized crime but they couldn’t afford to be seen meeting with Sal Bonadello and his bodyguard Big Bad-as in Big Bad Wolf-which is why I thought we had a good chance of pulling off the plan I had hatched the night before.
Sal had gotten the call from Joe DeMeo to oversee the hit on me, but Sal claimed my status with the government required a sit-down. DeMeo refused, wanting to lay low until he knew I was dead, but he sent his emissary from New York City, Garrett Unger. Since Sal lived in Cincinnati, and Garret’s older brother, Chris, had his own law practice here, they decided to meet in Chris’s private suite on the seventh floor.