“It’s OK,” I said, trying to process the entry of yet another mob family into my nightmare.
I craned my neck to look out the rear window and was rewarded with a sharp pain.
“Where’s Hudson?” I asked. And how did he get here?
“I told him I’d take care of you for a while. He tagged along to watch them question Louie.”
“He’s not FBI.”
“No, but…” She paused. “He has a lifetime of free passes, apparently. I heard it this way: Several years ago, a local Afghan interpreter opened fire on an army unit. Your friend Hudson and another security contractor ended up saving six soldiers. One of those soldiers happens to be the son of someone very high up in the Bureau.”
Ah, the legend of Hudson Byrd. Nothing could contain it. Not deserts, not oceans, not lonesome prairie.
My collection of injuries began to sing in chorus. My spine ached like I’d fallen off a wild bull; my concrete-grazed cheek and knees stung like the burn of multiple angry hornets; my throat felt like a night spent screaming at a TV in a sports bar. Nothing I hadn’t experienced before.
I would live.
More important, Maddie would live. I would make sure of it.
When Agent Waring dropped me off in front of the hotel with two of the Chicago Bureau’s “best” rookie agents to guard my hotel room door for the night, I had to ask.
“Is genealogy actually a hobby?”
“When you have five hours,” she said, “I’ll tell you how I have about three-fourths of an ounce of Tom Cruise’s blood running in my veins.” She grinned. “Enough to brag about at parties but not enough to drop Jesus for Scientology.”
She tossed off a two-fingered salute. “I’ll be in touch.”
As nice as she had been, I knew what that meant.
Pink Lady didn’t think I was her problem anymore.
My temporary guard detail consisted of two nervous-looking guys in their early twenties assigned to stand outside my room. I knew that nervous and young wasn’t necessarily a bad thing. It meant they’d stay alert, worried about not screwing up, and I guessed they wouldn’t mind checking my eyes for dilation every now and then.
I slipped the keycard in the door, promised the boys hamburgers from room service in an hour or so, and stepped inside.
How could I ever think this room felt cold?
The lamp’s blue light stood like a welcome home beacon. Tiny chocolate truffles rested on top of the oversized down pillows, perfect fluffs of cotton candy that I couldn’t wait to mess up with my aching head. The pale gray comforter-what a soothing color!-was turned down with a military precision that my own bed could only fantasize about.
I walked only a few feet inside before dropping my bag and stripping every disgusting bit of clothing off my body, things that he had touched. I even wanted to burn the lacy black underwear that I’d paid fifteen bucks for at Nordstrom. I can’t say that Hudson’s ripped chest hadn’t crossed my mind when I’d swiped my MasterCard in the lingerie department.
Where the hell was he anyway?
Instead of lighting a match to my underwear, I limped into the bathroom, knelt by the marble bathtub, and twisted the faucets all the way until the sound of the blasting water drowned out my sobs. I wrapped myself in a fetal position on the cold black tile floor, naked, head down, tears running down my legs, until I got it out of my system. By then, the tub was filled to drowning level, not that I planned to. I tipped in a generous amount of bubble bath, turned the spa jets to “gentle,” and dipped a toe in. Perfect. Then I hustled out butt-naked to the mini-bar, retrieving a supremely overpriced bottle of screwtop Chardonnay to celebrate the fact that I wasn’t being tortured or raped tonight.
If anybody ever asked me, the psychologist, what to do in a meltdown when therapy wasn’t available, I’d tell them that I considered hot water to be the emotional equivalent and a lot cheaper.
I slid under, closed my eyes, and counted to sixty, a habit since Sadie and I competed for best underwater time one summer at the lake. Then I barely exposed my face, my ears still filling up with water, and let the minutes tick by with excruciating slowness. I’d always done some of my most rational thinking in the bathtub.
I sunk a little deeper in the water. Every cell in my body fought the idea that Anthony Marchetti was my biological father.
There could not be a human being more different from the salt-of-the earth rancher who raised me. No matter what facts were placed in front of me, I still could not believe that Daddy would lie to me, especially a whopper like this one. He got on to Sadie and me for the smallest infractions of the truth. “White lies are lies just the same,” he’d say, even though most Texans found white lies pretty damn useful.
The tub had already cooled off. I used my big toe to turn on the hot water faucet. Mama used to say I liked to poach myself. Satisfied with the temperature, I closed my eyes again and returned to a half-formed plan that I’d thought up at the library. It had nothing to do with today’s research or my family heritage. It involved a trip to Oklahoma to investigate a murder. More than anything else, those newspaper articles in Mama’s box pulled at me like a magnet. They meant something. They dated back to the days when Mama was meticulous, when she made sense.
Two rough hands grabbed under my arms, yanking me out of my reverie and into the cold air. In that fraction of a second before my eyes flew open, I knew that Louie was back to finish the job.
“What are you doing?” Hudson’s angry voice destroyed every bit of effort I’d made to decompress. He picked up the bottle of half-drunk Chardonnay and dumped it into the tub. The other hand gripped my elbow a little too tightly.
“I’m trying to relax after a bad day,” I said with controlled fury, moving my hands fast to cover my breasts. But Hudson seemed not so much turned on as fascinated by the artwork of bruises that covered my body.
“Ouch,” he said, wincing, loosening his grip.
“The boys outside are getting hungry. I called your name at the bathroom door five times and you didn’t answer. I got worried.”
I knotted a towel around me and changed the subject, struggling to regain some dignity. “How did you get here?”
“The usual way,” he drawled, “in one of those big things that fly.”
“Why are you here?”
“I made a promise to you over tequila. I always keep promises when tequila’s involved.”
He saw the anger in my face and held up his hand. “I talked to Sadie. She told me what you were up to. She already had the impression I was protecting you. How did that happen, I wonder?”
“Um.”
“Yeah… um.” Hudson sat on the edge of the tub, feeling right at home while I stood clutching a towel around my naked body.
I stalked around him to the hotel robe hanging on the door. “I can’t reach Maddie or Sadie. They aren’t answering their cell phones. I tried calling from the car.”
“No worries. They’re on their way to your cousin’s house in Marfa for a little safekeeping. It’s a long drive. Sadie said she’d call you tomorrow.”
Would Marfa be far enough?
“By the way,” Hudson said. “Louie refused to talk until his lawyer gets back in town tomorrow. His father and Anthony Marchetti were big-time rivals in the drug trade in the seventies. Maybe still are. The FBI was a little tight with me on details.”
I reached for the robe and he turned his head. Nice, I thought grudgingly.
“Louie threatened me.” My voice trembled a little. “He hinted that this has everything to do with the murders that Marchetti went to prison for… OK, I’m decent.”
“You were always way more than decent.”
I was suddenly too exhausted to carry on the banter, and he sensed my mood, following me silently into the bedroom, where my clothes were still strewn across the floor, not saying a word as I picked them up and stuffed them in the trashcan under the desk.