"It"s me," Susan said.
The door opened fully and Brad came out with a towel wrapped inexpertly around his waist. His hair was wet and he was clean shaven. His skin was pale and sort of inelastic looking, and the hair on his chest was gray, but he hadn"t gotten fat. He saw me and jumped about six inches. Not a bad vertical leap for a white Harvard guy.
"Jesus Christ," he said. "It"s you."
"Yes it is," I said.
"You startled me," he said. "Lucky I had this towel on."
"Get dressed," I said.
"You bet," he said. "Suze, can you rustle me up a little grub? I"m totally famished."
He went into Susan"s bedroom and closed the door. Susan was still in the kitchen.
"I didn"t know you rustled up grub," I said.
"I don"t."
"I"ll make some coffee," I said.
"Fine."
Susan sat on a stool at her kitchen counter and watched me a.s.semble the coffee and water in Mr. Coffee. When it was ready, I poured us each a cup.
"Didn"t you leave some Irish whisky here last year?" she said.
"Yes."
"I"ll have some in my coffee," she said.
I found the whisky in the cabinet above the refrigerator and poured some into her cup.
"Thank you," she said.
I put some milk and sugar in my coffee and leaned my hips on the counter next to the refrigerator. Brad came into the kitchen, barefoot, wearing a tee shirt and a pair of jeans. The tee shirt hung loose outside the jeans.
"I smell java," he said.
"In the pot on the counter," I said.
He poured some.
"Milk and sugar?"
"Nope, I like it black as the devil"s soul, and lots of it," he said. "These are your duds, I a.s.sume."
"Yes."
"Pants are a tad short," he said.
"Tee shirt"s kind of loose around the chest and arms too," I said.
Susan smiled and sipped her coffee.
"Any chow?" he said.
"There"s some eggs in the refrigerator," Susan said.
"Suze, come on, I don"t really cook very well."
"Me either."
"No? I figured you"d learned by now."
"Never did," Susan said. "Never wanted to."
"d.a.m.n," Brad said. "I"m really hungry."
Neither of us said anything. Brad opened a few cabinet doors randomly and found some rye bread, and a half jar of peanut b.u.t.ter.
"For shame," I said to Susan.
"Only keep it for guests," she said to me.
"You don"t have any white bread, do you?"
"No."
"Jelly?"
"Refrigerator."
He found some boysenberry jam in the refrigerator and looked at it the way Macbeth had looked at the spot.
"What kind is this?"
"Boysenberry," Susan said.
"Well, it"ll have to do," Brad said. "Got something to make a sandwich?"
"Knife is in the left drawer in front of you," Susan said.
She took another sip of her coffee. Her face was contemplative. She looked as if she had just awakened from a deep refreshing sleep and was waiting to see what the day would bring. Brad made an amateurish looking peanut b.u.t.ter and jelly sandwich and ate it rapidly, hunched over the counter with swallows of coffee in between bites. As soon as he had finished, he made another one. This one was no better looking but it lasted longer. Susan and I were quiet while he ate.
"Sorry to be stowing it away like this," Brad said, "but I am really famished."
He finished his second sandwich and went to the sink to rinse his hands and face. I could see that he had a small gun in his right hip pocket. I took mine off my hip and put it on the counter top and rested my right hand on it, shielded discretely by the refrigerator. Brad dried his hands and face on a paper towel and refilled his cup and came to the counter where we sat and leaned his forearms on it.
"Wow," he said. "Nothing like getting inside a shower and outside of some strong Joe to make you feel brand new."
"So where have you been?" Susan said.
"Round and about," Brad said. "I ran out of money three-four days ago."
"And you came to me," Susan said. "Do you think I"ll give you money?"
"I had nowhere else to go, Suzie-Q."
"Why didn"t you go home?" Susan said.
Her voice was calm and pleasant and implacable. Occasionally she raised her coffee cup with both hands and took a sip.
"We"re maybe not married anymore, sure, but h.e.l.l, we"re still family."
"No, Brad, we"re not family. That"s what divorce means."
"We meant something to one another, Suzuki. We meant quite a lot."
"Brad, think about this for a moment. There was a reason why I divorced you."
"Well, sure, I made some mistakes."
"We both did, but finally after all that is taken into account, and to oversimplify a little perhaps, for effect, there"s more to it than that. I divorced you because I didn"t like you."
Brad straightened as if he"d been stuck with a pin. He frowned and opened his mouth and closed it and opened it again and said, "I can"t believe you said that."
"One of the biggest problems you have, Brad," Susan said, "is you can only believe what you want to or need to. I didn"t like you. I don"t like you. The first time you came to see me I thought you were asking for help and I felt enough guilt to try to get you help."
"Him?" Brad said.
"Now I realize you were asking me for money," Susan said. "But I was not sufficiently, ah, evolved, and I misunderstood. I tried to save you."
"By sending me him? Thanks a lot."
"It was my mistake and it is my responsibility that he"s involved with you. But I"m not going to compound that mistake by lying to you or to myself."
"What are you saying?"
"I"m saying that when you have finished your coffee and we"re through talking, you"ll have to leave."
"And go where?"
"Probably to h.e.l.l."
"And you don"t care?"
"You"ll get there anyway," Susan said. "Whatever I do."
"That"s cold, Sue, that"s really cold."
"Yes," she said.
"I"m just trying to stay alive, Susie."
"I wish you success," Susan said.
"And what happens if I won"t leave? Your bully boy throws me out?"
I smiled courteously.
"You"ll have to leave," Susan said.
"Well, let me tell you right, d.a.m.ned, now, Suzie Qu-sie, I"ve dealt with tougher guys than him."
"There"s no need to put it to the test," Susan said. "I"ll simply call the police."
"Susan, for G.o.d"s sake, I can"t let the cops find me. If I have to leave here, I"ve got no place to go. If they find me, they"ll kill me."
"The cops?"
"Of course not."
"Who?"
She said it so gently, and it slipped into the flow of the argument so easily that Brad answered it before he knew he"d been asked.
"Wechsler and Gavin," he said in the exasperated tone one uses to explain the obvious to an idiot. Susan was looking at him over the rim of her cup. She sipped a little of the whisky-laced coffee and then slowly lowered the cup, and sat back a little.
"Why?"
"Why for crissake..."
In mid-sentence Brad realized that he had said too much. He stopped and shut his mouth and his face had a set look to it.
"Why are Gavin and Wechsler after you?"
Brad shook his head. Susan was silent, waiting. Brad tried to match her silence but he couldn"t.
"They think I got something they want," he said.
"What?"
Brad clamped his mouth shut and shook his head.
Susan waited. Brad shook his head. Susan looked at me.
"Would you like to contribute?" she said.