Lily looked away: "That's what they used on Walt. An M-15. A full clip: they emptied a full clip into him. They found pieces of him all over the block."
"Jesus…" Lucas groped for something else to say, but all he could find was, "How about you? Are you okay?"
"Oh, sure," she said, and fell silent.
"The last time I saw you, you were on a guilt trip about your old man and the kids…"
"That's not over. The guilt trip. Sometimes I feel so bad I get nauseous," she said.
"Do you see the kids?"
"Not so much," she said sadly, looking away from him. "I tried, but it was wrecking all of us. David was always… peering at me. And the boys blame me for leaving."
"Do you want to go back?"
"I don't love him," she said, shaking her head. "I don't even like him very much. I look at him now, and it all seems like bullshit, the stuff that comes out of his mouth. And that's weird, because it used to seem so smart. We'd go to parties and he'd spin up these post-Jungian theories of racism and class struggle, and these phonies would stand around with their heads going up and down like they were bobbing for apples. Then I'd go to work and see a report on some twelve-year-old who shot his mom because he wanted to sell the TV to buy crack, and she wouldn't let him. Then I'd go back home and… shit. I couldn't stand listening to him anymore. How can you live with somebody you can't stand listening to?"
"It's hard," he said. "Being a cop makes it worse. I think that's why I spent so much time with Jennifer. She was a professional bullshit artist, but basically, she knew what was what. She spent the time on the streets."
"Yeah…"
"So where're you at?" he asked again.
She looked at him unsteadily, not quite nervous, but apprehensive somehow. "I didn't want to get into that right away-I wanted to get you committed first. Will you come?"
"Somebody new?" he asked, his voice light.
"Will you come?"
"Maybe… so you've got someone."
"Sort of."
"Sort of? What's that?" He hopped off the chair and took a turn around the room. He wasn't angry, he thought, but he looked angry. He reached down and turned on the TV and a tinny, distant voice instantly cried, "Kirrrbeee Puck-it." He snapped it off again. "What does 'sort of' mean? One foot on the floor at all times? Nothing below the waist?"
Lily laughed and said, "You cheer me up, Davenport. You're so fucking crass…"
"So…?" He went to the window and looked out; the thunderheads were gray, with soaring pink tops, and were bearing down on the line of the river.
She shrugged, looked out the window past him. "So, I was seeing a guy. I still am. We hadn't started looking for an apartment together, but the possibility was out there."
"What happened?"
"He had a heart attack."
Lucas looked at her for a minute, then said, "Why does that make perfect sense?"
She forced a smile. "It's really not very funny, I'm afraid. He's in terrible shape."
"He's a cop?"
"Yeah." The smile faded. "He's like you, in some ways. Not physically-he's tall and thin and white-haired. But he is-was-in intelligence and he loves the streets. He writes articles for the Times op-ed page about the street life. He has the best network of spies in the city. And he has a taste for, mmm…" She groped for the right phrase.
"Dark-eyed married women?" Lucas suggested, moving closer.
"Well, that," she said, the tentative smile returning. "But the thing is, he likes to fight… did like to fight. Like you. Now he can't walk two dozen steps without stopping for a breath."
"Jesus." Lucas ran a hand through his hair. He'd had nightmares of being crippled. "What's the prognosis?"
"Not so good." Tears glistened at the corners of her dark eyes. At the same moment, she smiled and said, "Shit. I wish I didn't do this." She wiped the tears away with the heel and knuckles of her hand. "This was his third attack. The first one was five years ago. That was bad. The second one was a couple months after the first, and wasn't so bad. Then he was coming back. He'd almost forgotten about them, he was working… Then this third one, this was the worst of all. He's got extensive damage to the heart muscle. And he won't stop working. The doctors tell him to spend a year doing graded exercise, to stay away from work, from the stress. He won't do it. And he's still smoking, I think. He's sneaking them. I can smell them on his clothes… in his hair."
"So he's going to die," Lucas said.
"Probably."
"That's not so bad," Lucas said, leaning back, looking at her, his voice flat. "You just say fuck it. You do what you want, and if you go, you go."
"That's what you'd do, isn't it?"
"I hope so," he said.
"Men are such goddamn assholes," Lily said.
After another long silence, Lucas asked, "So what are you doing for sex?"
She started to laugh, but it caught in her throat, and she stood up and picked up her purse. "I better get going. Tell me you'll come to New York."
"Answer the question," Lucas said. Without thinking about it, he moved closer. She noticed it, felt the pressure.
"We're… very careful," she said. "He can't get too carried away."
Lucas' chest felt curiously thick, a combination of anger and expectation. The electricity between them crackled, and his voice was suddenly husky. "You never really liked being careful."
"Ah, Jesus, Lucas," she said.
He stepped up to her until he was only inches away. "Push me away," he whispered.
"Lucas…"
"Push me away," he said, "I'll go."
She stepped back, dropped her purse. Outside, the first heavy drops of rain careened off the sidewalk, and a woman with a dog on a leash dashed past the house.
She rocked back on her heels, looked down at her purse, then grabbed his shirt sleeve to balance herself, lifted one foot, then the other, pulled off her shoes, and stepped into the hallway that led to the bedroom. Lucas, standing in the living room, watched her go, until halfway down the hallway she turned her head, her dark eyes looking at him, and began to unbutton her blouse.
Their lovemaking, she said later, sometimes resembled a fight, had an edge of violence, a tone of aggression. They might begin with an effort at tenderness, but that would slip and they would be bucking, wrenching, twisting…
That night, as the last of the storm cells rumbled off into Wisconsin, with the room smelling of sweat and sex, she sat on the edge of the bed. She seemed weary, but there was a smile at the corner of her lips.
"I'm such a goddamned slut," she said.
"Oh, God…" He laughed.
"Well, it's true," she said, "I can't believe it. I was such a nice girl for so long. But I just need. It's not intimacy. You're about as intimate as a fuckin' bear. I need the sex. I need to get jammed. I really can't believe it."
"Did you know you were going to sleep with me?" Lucas asked. "When you got here?"
She sat unmoving for a moment, then said, "I thought it might happen. So I went to the hotel first, and checked in. In case anyone called."
He ran a fingernail down the bumps of her spine, and she shivered. She was going back to the hotel in case "anyone" called…
"This guy you're sleeping with? 'Anyone'?" Lucas said.
"Yes?"
"What are you going to tell him?"
"Nothing. He doesn't need to know." She turned toward him. "And don't you tell him anything, either, Davenport."
"Why?" Lucas said. "Why would I ever see him?"
"His name's Dick Kennett." In the half-light of the bedroom he could see a tiny, rueful smile lift the corner of her mouth again. "He's running the Bekker case," she said.
CHAPTER
5
Early morning.
Lucas strolled along Thirty-fifth Street, sucking on half of an orange, taking in the city: looking at faces and display windows, at sleeping bums wrapped in blankets like thrown-away cigars, at the men hustling racks of newly made clothing through the streets.
The citric acid was sharp on his tongue, an antidote for the staleness of a poor night's sleep. Halfway down the block, he stopped in front of a parking garage, stripped out the last of the pulp with his teeth, and dropped the rind into a battered trash barrel.