to happen.
He opened his eyes. St. Vincent was still there, but now his gaze had fallen upon Orteño. âThe reunion,â he said in a thick voice. âWhen?â
âAs soon as you agree to my proposal.â
âHow will I contact you?â
St. Vincent produced a mobile phone. âThis is only for us. It has no GPS, so it cannot be tracked. It also possesses the latest DARPA encryption, whether we speak or text each other. Itâs absolutely secure. My private number is built in.â
St. Vincent held out his left handâthe hand of the devil, it was thought, in medieval times, and still today in areas of rural Mexico, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas. Flix had no choice; he took it.
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6
Whitman felt Charlieâs heart beating wildly in her breast. Her breath was hot on the side of his neck. His arms came around her and he kissed her wet cheek.
âDonât,â she said, almost choking on her emotions. âItâs too soon, too soon.â
He just held her then, feeling the involuntary trembling slowly subside, feeling, too, the gathering of her formidable inner strength as she fought to pull herself together.
Her arms fell away from him. âStep away, Whit,â she whispered. âStep away from me.â There was no edge to her voice now.
He retreated over the threshold, out into the hall, and, for a split instant, was uncomfortably reminded of Bill AT&Tâs short journey from Charlieâs apartment into the hallway of, he believed, oblivion. Had Bill been simply a time-stamp, a coping mechanism, the latest in a line of males Charlie had been seeing over the last three years? Heâd never know, and heâd never ask. The answer might easily be too painful for both of them.
Now that there was a respectful distance between them, now that she had recovered from her small equilibrium break, she said, âIf you were considering saying youâre sorry, donât. There is no excuse for what you did. It was unconscionable.â
âWhat do you want me to say?â
Something behind her eyes flared, something dark, dangerous, feral. âYou should never have come back.â
He spread his hands wide in a gesture of peace, or at least compromise. âBut here I am. Thereâs been a death in the family, and now I need you, Charlie.â
âI donât give a crap what you need. I onlyââ
Her voice faded out as her eyes rolled up in their sockets. She began to collapse, and Whitman was there to keep her from cracking the back of her skull on the bathroomâs tile floor.
Her hands were as white and bloodless as a corpseâs. No, he thought, no, no, no. Laying her down gently, he put two fingers against her carotid artery. No pulse; none at all.
Time was of the essence, he knew. Quickly now, he stepped over her, opened the cabinet beneath the sink, hauled out the old-fashioned physicianâs bag. From inside, he took out a disposable syringe, two small vials filled with clear fluid, and a larger bottle of alcohol. He swabbed the rubber tops of the vials. Ripping open the syringe packaging, he plunged the needle into the vial of prednisone, filled the syringe halfway. He did the same with the vial of Imuran, until the syringe was full. Flicking his finger against its side, he got rid of any remaining air, then he plunged the needle into Charlieâs arm, injecting her with the serum cocktail. Throwing the empty syringe aside, he gathered her in his arms, rocking her gently, murmuring to her.
âCome on, Charlie, come on, snap out of it, Charlie, Charlie, Charlie,â until it became a kind of chant or invocation, if not a prayer. He remembered taking her to the hospital for the coronary arteriogram and magnetic resonance angiography that, days later, confirmed that she had Takayasuâs disease, an autoimmune inflammation of the arteries that caused terrible headaches, chest pain, high blood pressure, no pulse, and,
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