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“You can talk now,” the man said, deftly adjusting his glasses again on the bridge of his nose.

Carver tried to say he was convinced. It was agree or die; he was sure of it. Only an inarticulate croaking came out. He was terrified his answer might be misinterpreted.

But apparently his attacker understood. Or at least was satisfied with the effort. He very deliberately and gently prodded Carver with the toe of his shoe. Then he brushed his hands together as if whisking dust from his palms, adjusted his tie knot, and nodded good-bye. His appearance and attitude was that of a salesman who’d just completed a successful office call.

Sunlight angled across the carpet, then disappeared, as the door opened and closed. Children’s shouts from pool and beach, which had entered the room with the outside glare, were abruptly cut off.

It was suddenly very quiet. Dim. Cool.

Carver lay with his cheek pressed against the coarse carpet, still in the fetal position but for his protruding stiff leg. He surrendered and let himself plunge with increasing speed through blackness to a place where there was no pain.

When he awoke he was lying on his back on the bed and he was sweating. His shoes had been removed. The back of his throat felt as if it had been sandpapered, and his stomach ached as if he’d eaten a hundred green apples. When he tried to lift his hand from the mattress to wipe his forehead, he discovered with a sledgehammer smash of pain that his entire upper body was stiff and sore, as if he’d been in a serious auto accident.

Someone groaned. Must have been him.

The mattress shifted and bedsprings sang. A cool, soft hand rested against his forehead. Familiar hand.

Beth said, “Who did this to you, Fred?”

“He didn’t leave his card,” Carver said hoarsely. At least he could still speak.

“One man?”

He nodded.

“Lord!”

Sitting on the edge of the mattress, she stared down at him with her own pain and concern. She was wearing faded Levi’s, a yellow sleeveless blouse, and a headband with a daisy design on it. She looked like an African princess dressed down for the occasion. “I’m gonna call a doctor.”

“Don’t do that. I don’t want anybody from the medical center.” God, it hurt to talk!

“Then I’m gonna drive you into Orlando. Get you goddamn looked at, and I don’t want any argument.”

“Not yet.”

She stood up from the bed. “Not yet my ass!”

“Let me stay here awhile. I’m feeling better, believe it or not.”

“Not,” she said. But she made no move to pry him from the bed. She cursed under her breath. “Feeling well enough to tell me what happened?”

“Slowly,” he said.

She sat back down on the bed, her hip warm against his side. “Slow as you want. Then we’re going to see a doctor.”

And he told her.

“The cane as phallic symbol,” she said, when he was finished.

“If that’s the case, it coulda been worse.”

“Maybe it will be next time. You better take this scumbag seriously.”

He was surprised by the fear in her voice, the rage in her dark eyes. He said, “I take him seriously, all right.”

She stood up and took a few hurried steps this way and that. Tall, elegant woman. “Shit, Fred! You need to back off this one.”

He said nothing. His own rage was building. He did feel as if somehow he’d been intimately violated, symbolic oral sex. For a moment an insight: Did rape victims feel this way? His hate for the man in the horn-rimmed glasses took root deep in him, hard and fast, the craving for revenge.

“Fred?”

“I’m thinking.”

“Bet you’re not. Bet you’re feeling.”

“Feeling lousy,” he said.

He moved to struggle to a sitting position, reaching for his cane with a stab of pain. Then he remembered the casual destruction of the cane after it had been used to beat him. It had been a skillful beating, bruising but not breaking, and he was reasonably sure there was no long-term injury. He was also sure the man who’d assaulted him was a professional thug. In the unlikely event of an arrest, by the time the victim of such a beating made it into a courtroom, the bruises would have long since faded. Prosecutors were left to try to prove that photographs, if there were any, weren’t images of faked injuries.

Beth worked an arm beneath one of his and lifted gently, but it still caused a jolt of pain and he ground his teeth.

“You oughta see,” she said. “You got welts all over you. You oughta fucking see!”

“I don’t have to see to know they’re there. I don’t have my cane.”

“I know, lover. I’ll help you out to the car.”

He leaned on her strong, lithe body, taking it slow, making it to the door with its useless locks. Have to make repairs.

Outside, he squinted against the glare, and the heat hit him like a falling wall. A few people by the pool stopped what they were doing and stared as Beth helped ease him into the passenger side of her LeBaron convertible. A small, shapely woman in a red bathing suit slung a towel across her shoulders and gazed openly with her head cocked to the side. He leaned back in the seat and closed his eyes to the brilliance and heat of the sun.

Great! Beth had the car’s top down. That was why she wore the flowered sweatband, to keep her hair from flying in her face.

Quickly, she started the engine, raised the canvas top, and switched on the air conditioner.

Then she drove fast and artfully, leaning forward to peer through the windshield intensely and gripping the steering wheel with both hands in the ten-and-two-o’clock position. On turns, she shuffled the steering wheel through her hands instead of crossing her arms. Knew her stuff. Maybe she’d driven getaway while living with her drug-czar husband. Wheel moll, if there was such a thing.

Unfair of him to think that, Carver decided. He wasn’t one to muck around in the past, anyway. It made no difference to him what she’d done in that phase of her life; being judgmental was a game he didn’t play. Who was he, Albert Schweitzer?

The car’s interior had barely cooled down when she swerved into a circular driveway, then parked by the tinted glass doors of a hospital emergency entrance.

12

A nurse placed cold compresses on Carver’s arms and shoulders to contain the swelling, while a young doctor whose name was Doris Loa swabbed his throat with disinfectant.

“This is about all we can do for you, Mr. Carver,” Dr. Loa told him, still with the cotton swab pressed against his tonsils. Apparently she didn’t expect an answer. She was a dark-complexioned, dark-eyed woman of about thirty with Asiatic features and an air of calm competence.

Finally she removed the swab, leaving him with a stinging sensation at the back of his throat and a persistent taste of iodine. She stepped back, dropped the used swab into a plastic-lined receptacle, and said, “How’d this happen?”

“Accident,” Carver said, before Beth could speak.

“That right?” She looked at Beth, who shrugged and nodded simultaneously. “Fell down some stairs, I bet,” Dr. Loa said.

“Fifteen steps,” Carver said. “Loose throw rug. Dangerous. When’s this bitter taste gonna go away?”

“Soon. What about the throat?”

“I was eating a Popsicle when I fell.”

“Those damned wooden sticks,” Dr. Loa said. She smiled hopelessly; she went from plain to attractive when she smiled. “I’m too busy to pry. I’m going to write you a prescription for pain pills and an antibiotic to reduce the possibility of infection. Call me if there are any complications. And I mean any.” A meaningful glance at Beth, conspiracy between the sexes. “Make sure that he does call.”

“You can see he’s easy to influence,” Beth said.

“I picked up on that. But I don’t want to treat him in the future for something more serious, if whoever beat him up with a throw rug, stairs, and Popsicle decides to get meaner.”

“Now I feel like a real patient,” Carver said, “being talked about as if I’m not here.”