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"Who's that?" Manfred asked.

Lang sighed again. "Someone I knew a long, long time ago."

"Before you knew Mommy?"

Lang started to simply lie and stopped. He was not about to begin his relationship with his son with untruths. "No, I knew Mommy before I knew her. But there was a time…"

How do you explain the complexity of man/woman relationships to a three-year-old?

You don't.

"Let's just say I knew her before I loved Mommy."

That seemed to satisfy him.

He put an arm around Lang's shoulders and squeezed. "I love you, Daddy."

"And I you," Lang said, gritting his teeth against the pain of standing up. "There isn't anything else here worth saving."

A knock at the door.

Lang gave Manfred a gentle shove. "Go open it, will you? It should be men with the oven. Daddy isn't moving so swiftly these days."

Painfully, Lang made his way from the bedroom. From its door he could see two burly men with a wheeled pallet. Whatever was under the shipping blanket was a lot larger than a wall oven.

Lang stopped just inside his front door, watching the blankets come off. Underneath was a huge stove. Six gas burners, grill, two ovens. The thing was larger than his entire kitchen.

"Where you want it?" one of the men asked.

"The enlisted men's mess at Fort Benning, maybe?" Lang responded. "That isn't what I ordered."

The other man looked at a slip of paper before showing it to Lang. "This is what the order form shows."

Lang groaned inwardly.

Home Depot had been founded right here in Atlanta and had grown into the largest home supply company in the world. Its two founders had retired, one bestowing on the city the world's biggest aquarium. The other had purchased the suppurating sore of sports, the Atlanta football team. Only fantasy and hubris could have made him think he could lift the team to a level of mediocrity for which it had vainly struggled for forty years.

Rumor had it that since the founders' departure, the company's service had sunk to the same performance level as the football team.

"I don't care what the paper shows," Lang said. "You can see this stove won't fit into that kitchen."

The man shrugged. "You can take that up with the appliance department. All we do is deliver."

"Well, you can't leave it here."

"Yeah, we can. Fact, we can't take it back without orders from them, the appliance department."

Lang eased the door shut, leaving just a crack. "You're not bringing that thing in here."

With the disinterest Lang thought exclusive to the US Postal Service, the men simply collected the blankets, took the pallet and left the huge stove in the hallway.

Lang almost swore until he remembered the small boy at his side. Instead, he took out his BlackBerry and punched in a number.

"Sara? I need you to call Home Depot, see if you can get someone on the phone with at least a room-temperature IQ…?

Outside, a taxi was waiting to take him to meet Gurt and the SUV he had rented until he regained his agility. He hated the lumbering gas guzzler but a more nimble vehicle provided little room to maneuver with in a cast or to store crutches. Lang was unable to drive his manual shift Porsche still garaged here at Park Place. His frustration at having to rely on others tended to make him ill-tempered except where Manfred was concerned. He was impatient for the time he would be mobile enough to play with his son, to take him to a Braves game or any of the things young fathers did.

In the meantime, he kept alert. Whoever had tried to kill him wasn't likely to give up. The only reason he could imagine why they had waited this long was that they either hoped he would become less than cautious or hadn't been able to find him.

He had left the hospital to convalesce in a Trappist monastery in nearby Conyers, a small town east of Atlanta. The quarters had been Spartan, the food hardy if less than sensational. Given the vows of silence of the brothers, the conversation had been less than spectacular, too. He had lived for Gurt and Manfred's daily visits. Still, he appreciated whatever ecumenical strings Francis had pulled to get him into one of the last places on earth any who knew him might look.

Any organization efficient enough to track him down from London to Atlanta, though, would have eyes and ears. Now that he was on the street, they would know it.

The thought was less than comforting.

Once out of the monastery, he, Gurt and Manfred were living on the land Lang called simply "the Farm" The relatively small acreage would have made "plantation" seem not only potentially politically incorrect but pretentious as well. About an hour's drive from the city's southern limit, Lang had bought it some years ago in the name of a dummy corporation. The purchase included a frame cabin of about fifteen hundred square feet, no phone or cable TV. Even better, cell phone reception was spotty when it existed at all. A perfect retreat. It did have good redneck neighbors who took each others' property and privacy rights seriously. They adorned their pickups' rear windows with racks holding at least one shotgun or rifle.

Burglars or home invaders were wise to confine themselves to venues other than Lamar County.

Even better was the ten-acre pond. Manfred had, possibly, never seen a live fish. He squealed with excitement each time he, with minor assistance from Lang, dragged a shiny, flopping bass or bream onto the clay banks. The child had somewhat less enthusiasm for cleaning his catch, something his father insisted upon. Gurt was probably even more thankful than her son when throwing the fish back became the custom. All three had eaten about as much marine life as they wanted for the time being.

Instead of his normal twenty-three-and-a-half-hour daily nap, Grumps showed signs of life, even giving token chase to rabbits he had to know would outdistance him in seconds. He followed Manfred everywhere, a pastime Lang tried to not let annoy him. After all, it had been Lang who had provided the mutt's keep all these years.

But then, what living creature could not adore Lang's son?

All in all, it had been a restful, pastoral period to mend, reacquaint himself with Gurt and get to know his son while bones healed and internal organs returned to their natural locations.

It ended that night.

Not for the first time, Lang was pleasantly surprised by Gurt's adaptability. She had produced a dinner indigenous to the locale: roasted hen with baked sweet potato and collards. As a native Southerner, Lang had been equally delighted and astonished. The green leaves were usually harvested only after the first frost and the unpleasant odor of cooking them normally permeated an entire house. Before he was through marveling at their appearance on the table, she put a small black iron skillet of cornbread in front of him.

Made with buttermilk. It might not have been as good as Lang's mother used to make, but it sure was better than mix out of a box.

He started to ask where she had suddenly acquired such peculiarly Southern cooking skills, thought better of it, and reached for another slice of cornbread.

From his high chair, Manfred inspected the greens suspiciously. "Is it grass?"

Lang was sprinkling the customary green pepper sauce over his own. "It's good. Try it."

With a skeptical eye on his father, the child speared a single leaf and slid it into his mouth, followed by another.

"What is that?" He was pointing to the pepper sauce.

"Hot. You wouldn't like it."

The little boy extended his hand. "Gimme."

Gurt put down her fork. "We say what in English when we ask for something?"

Manfred thought for a moment. "Please!"