Standing at the bedside, Ali could see Sister Anselm’s face was sunburned to the point of peeling. “How are you?” Ali asked.
“Better than I would have been without you,” Sister Anselm said. “How can I ever thank you?”
“I believe you’ve been paying that one forward all your life,” Ali said with a smile.
She pulled up another chair, and for the next half hour, Ali gave Sister Anselm and Bishop Gillespie the highlights of what she knew. When she saw Sister Anselm was fading, Ali excused herself. Rather than pushing the Down elevator button she pushed Up and went to the eighth floor. A new patient or two had been admitted. The burn-unit waiting room was crowded with a whole new collection of worried family members, but in the far corner, Ali spotted a single familiar face-Mark Levy. He looked bone weary, but his face brightened when he saw her.
“Hey,” he said. “I didn’t think I’d see you again.”
“I came back to thank you for the help you gave me earlier.”
“You’re welcome,” Mark said with a shrug, “but it wasn’t that much.”
“It was,” Ali said. “How’s James?”
“Better,” Mark said. “They’re starting the skin grafts. That’s good news. His parents even let me go in to see him once today. He was sleeping, but still. Visitors are limited to family members only. I think his mother said I was his brother.”
“Good,” Ali said. “You act like a brother.”
Mark was silent for a moment before adding, “I guess you heard that the woman in eight fourteen didn’t make it.”
Ali nodded. “I heard,” she said.
“Neither did the woman in eight twelve. Her name was Alva. She was smoking in a chair and fell asleep, and now she’s dead, too. I don’t think I could work in a place like this,” Mark added. “It would be too hard.”
“You’re right,” Ali agreed. “It is that.”
Her phone rang while she was riding down in the elevator.
“I don’t believe it,” B. Simpson said. “You finally answered the phone. Where are you?”
“Leaving the hospital,” she said. “I’m on my way back to the hotel.”
“Great,” B. said. “I’m here, too.”
“Where?”
“At the hotel.”
“My hotel?” Ali asked.
He laughed. “Yes, your hotel. I had meetings in Phoenix today. I thought I’d stop by and see if I can take you to dinner. Morton’s is right out front. We don’t have a reservation, but I’m betting they can fit us in.”
“Did I tell you I was staying at the Ritz?” she asked.
B. laughed. “When I couldn’t reach you, I weaseled the information out of your parents. What about dinner?”
That was typical. Now that Ali’s romance with Dave Holman was pretty much off the table, Edie was promoting another possible candidate, but however B. had found his way to the Ritz, his invitation to go to dinner was a welcome one. Ali was hungry. It had been a long time since breakfast.
“Good,” she said. “I’ll be there in a few minutes.”
B. was waiting in the lobby when she arrived. “Congrats,” he said, standing up to give her a hug. “I hear you and Detective Salazar saved the day.”
“How do you know that?” Ali asked. “The news hasn’t exactly been disseminated to the media.”
“I heard it from a friend of yours,” B. said. “I expect he’ll be a friend of mine as well-or at least a client. Bishop Gillespie plans to hire High Noon Enterprises to keep track of diocese-owned computers. If any of the people who work for him are messing around with online porn, Gillespie wants to know about it. That man is something,” B. added admiringly. “If he weren’t a bishop, I think he’d make a wonderful hacker.”
That made Ali laugh.
“Are you ready to go to dinner?”
“I’ll go upstairs and drop off my briefcase,” she said. Up in her suite, she combed her hair and freshened her makeup. When she rejoined him downstairs, they walked across the driveway to the restaurant.
Even though Morton’s was crowded at that hour, the maître d’ showed them to a corner booth. Once seated, they ordered drinks and exchanged stories about all that had happened in the previous several days.
“It sounds like you’ve really made a name for yourself,” he said finally. “I know this thing with the sheriff’s department was supposed to be temporary, but will you stay on?”
“I don’t know,” Ali said seriously. “There’s a lot more going on in Gordon Maxwell’s department than meets the eye. If I end up being the one who delivers the bad news to him, he may not want me hanging around any longer. You know what happens to bearers of bad news.”
“Do you want to talk about it?”
“No,” Ali said. “Not yet. I haven’t decided what to do.”
“I see,” B. said.
Ali was gratified that he let it go at that. He understood she wasn’t ready to discuss it, and she liked the fact that he didn’t quiz her about it anymore, that he was at ease with her not telling him what she wasn’t prepared to tell.
They had a great time at dinner. The food was wonderful; so was the service. They laughed. They talked. Only when their waiter dropped off the bill did B.’s smile disappear.
“This has really been fun,” he said. “Thank you for coming. I finally figured out that the only way I’d ever be able to take you to dinner was if we were both out of town. You’re worried about the age thing, aren’t you?”
He had her cold on that one. He was attractive. He was interesting. He had money and a marital history of his own. The problem was that for Ali the age difference had always been the one major drawback to their having anything other than a professional relationship.
Tonight, at dinner, sitting there chatting and eating and enjoying themselves, Ali had noticed that no one noticed them or paid them the least bit of attention. They were simply two people out on the town, having fun. If some of their fellow diners or the waitstaff were busy calculating the difference in their ages, it didn’t show.
The last time B. had asked her out, Ali had said no. This time she had said yes. Why? Was it because she was hungry? Partly, but to be honest, she had to admit that after meeting Hal Cooper and seeing his devotion to his beloved wife, the fifteen-year age difference between Ali Reynolds and B. Simpson no longer seemed to be such an insurmountable barrier.
“Yes,” she said finally, in answer to his question. “I have been worried about that in the past, but maybe I’m not so worried about it anymore. Would you like to walk me home?”
“Sure,” he said with a grin. “Door-to-door service.”
Once in the hotel elevator, he pressed the button for the third floor without having to ask. “How did you do that?” Ali asked. “How do you know I’m on the third floor? What did you do, bribe the desk clerk? Hack into the hotel’s registration system?”
“Nothing as underhanded as that,” B. said. “I asked your mother.”
“That figures,” Ali said with a laugh. At the door to her suite, Ali pulled out her room key and plugged it into the slot. B. opened the door and held it for her.
“Don’t you want to come in?” she asked. “For a nightcap, maybe?”
They both knew she wasn’t talking about a drink.
“You don’t have to do that,” B. said. “I have my own room.”
“So?” Ali asked. “Nobody says you have to use it.”
With that, she led him inside.
When Ali awakened in bed the next morning, lying next to B. Simpson, she was surprised to realize that she felt happier than she had in a very long time. She slipped out of bed and was showered, dressed, and packed before she ever woke him up.