Wages
of Sin part 5
Danae
Disclaimers/ Warnings: see
part 1
Senator Adams sat back in
his desk and clasped one hand over his eyes for a moment. Pete shifted in his chair. “So, you see, Senator, we just got swept
along in all this. Blair Sandburg
lost his career and his reputation trying to help expose this—this…” Pete
gestured to the open files on the Senator’s desk.
“Travesty? Mockery of democratic principles? Attack on humanity itself?” The Senator’s voice was gaining in
volume. “My god! I knew that there was something going on
over there but this! This is just a
nightmare! It’s something out of
Nazi Germany! Or Stephen King,
maybe.” Adams closed his eyes for a moment. When he opened them again, he whispered,
“MacNamara better be glad he’s dead.
Bastard.”
“Senator, there’s nothing we
can do at this point to give Jim or Blair back that time they spent as prisoners
but we can at the very least make sure that Blair gets his good name back. We can let people know that he’s not a
fraud. Please, sir.” Pete glanced at Jim who sat like a stone
statue in the chair next to him.
Jim did not turn to meet his eyes.
“Of
course, of course! I don’t think we
need to let all of this out, you understand? Can you imagine that backlash? But, we can and we will make it known
that the boy was in the service of his country and that he did what he had to do
to rid the country of a threat.
I’ll get my aide on that right away. I must ask you though. You say he’s damaged,
mentally?”
“Yes, sir. We are hoping that it’s only temporary
though. He’s getting the best of
care.”
“Perhaps we can get some
sort of compensation for him. I’ll
check on that as well.”
Jim
started to say something, but Pete grabbed his arm and answered first. “That would be greatly appreciated,
sir. Sir, you do realize that in
order for this to do any good, it has to be pretty public. You know, a press conference or some
sort would be quite helpful. I got
in touch with Dr. Carter Meeks at Rainier. He was the only staff member that had
any information on what we were doing.
Even he didn’t get the whole story but he knew enough to know that Blair
was working on something important.
He told me that he could call a press conference there at Rainier. If you or your aide could be there and
say a few words, it would go a long way in helping Blair get his life back. I plan to be there and Chad Ryan will be
there, but sir, if it came from your office, no one would question
it.”
Adams was nodding and Pete
gave a silent sigh of relief. “I
think that can be arranged. I can’t
go, but I can send Ken. I have to
take this to the committee. You and
Ryan have done our jobs for us with the investigation but there are some things
that we will need to discuss and actions we need to take. For example, I think that MacNamara’s
estate should pay for Mr. Sandburg’s care, don’t you?”
Pete could not help the grin
that spread over his face. “Yes,
sir. I think that’s an excellent
idea.”
Adams nodded. “And I suppose that this really isn’t
completely over until Rose is in custody.
I never liked that man. I
met him a few times. He always made
my skin crawl. At any rate, you
arrange that press conference and I’ll discuss with Ken just what we can
disclose and get him out there to Washington. He’ll be there tomorrow afternoon at the
latest. Is that
sufficient?”
“Yes, sir. More than sufficient. Thank you.”
“Peter, in the past, you
have irritated me; you’ve done things that are quite questionable legally, but
son, this time, you did good.”
Adams stood and offered his hand across his desk to Pete. Pete rose from the chair and accepted
it.
“Thank you, sir.” If the Senator thought the smile on
Pete’s face was caused by his praise that was just fine and dandy.
“Mr. Ellison,” the man
continued, “this country owes you a debt of gratitude as well.” He offered his hand to Jim. Jim rose as well and shook the man’s
hand.
“Thank you,
Senator.”
“Well, Senator, thanks for
your time and your help with this.
Jim is anxious to get back home.”
“I
can certainly understand that. Good
luck to you, Mr. Ellison. On behalf
of the nation, my sincerest apologies.”
Jim
nodded and moved quickly out of the office.
“He’s a little upset
still. I’m sure you can
understand. Blair is his best
friend.”
The
Senator shook his head and waved off the explanation. “You don’t need to explain. In his shoes, I’d be a little
pre-occupied too. Get the man home
and leave the rest to me.”
“Senator, your wish is my
command. I feel better already,
knowing you’re on the case.”
“Peter, save the bullshit
for the people who don’t know you, son.
I’m not buying it.”
Pete grinned. “Yes, sir. Been a pleasure to see you again,
sir.”
“Right. Take care of yourself,
Pete.”
“You too, sir.” Pete backed out of the office. Outside the door, Jim waited for him.
Pete winked at him and headed for the elevator. Neither of them said a word as they
waited. The elevator arrived and
they boarded it, still silent.
When they reached the first floor, Pete led the way out of the building
and to his car. Only then, inside
the confines of the car did Pete allow himself a small celebration. He pounded the steering wheel and
whooped. Jim was glaring at
him. “What’s your problem, man? It
worked! You get your life back,
Jim, with the gratitude of the nation.” Pete did a pretty good imitation of the
Senator, if he did say so himself.
“We
just lied through our teeth to a United States Senator. Forgive me if I have a little trouble
understanding your need to rejoice.”
“Actually, I lied through my
teeth. You just sat there like a
lump. Good thing I didn’t need
you. Oh, and just for the record,
that’s not the first time I’ve lied to help a friend and it probably won’t be
the last. The government lies all
the damn time. So this time they
get screwed, big deal. But, you
know, since we are on the subject, I’d just like to take this opportunity to
point out that I had to lie because you wouldn’t let me tell the truth. I gave you that choice, remember? But, oh no, can’t have anybody think
that Jim Ellison isn’t 100% normal.
Heaven forbid! Although, who
the hell knows what normal is? God
knows, I don’t. One look at
my employees would tell you that.
You know what I think?”
“No, but I suppose you’re
going to tell me.”
“Damn right I am. I think that you’re scared half out of
your mind of losing Blair Sandburg.
That’s what I think. You
need him to be dependent on you.
You liked the fact that he had nowhere to go and had to take you up on
your generous offer of a badge and gun.
But guess what, Jim! That
wasn’t his only option! You were
not the only one he could turn to.
I offered him a job and if you hadn’t made that ‘hail Mary’ save right
there at the end, he’d be in my employ right now. How do you like them apples, as my
grandma used to say? So, big fat
fucking deal, I lied. You lie
whenever it suits you, I’ve noticed.
So you sit there and hide your insecurities behind that pathetic excuse
of ‘you lied, Pete’ and I’ll do whatever I have to to give Blair his life and
his options back. And quite
frankly, if I have to lie to every damn agency and every damn politician in this
fucking town, so be it!”
“You scare me,
Pete.”
Pete could not help but
laugh. “Hey, you know what,
Jim? Sometimes, I scare me
too. I get over it. So should you.”
“Just get me to the damned
airport, please. I want to go
home.”
“Yeah, you’re welcome.” Pete shook his head and started the
car.
Jim
sat silent in the passenger seat as Pete pulled out into traffic. His jaw was clenched so tight that it
hurt, but he could not seem to release the tension there. Pete had hit so many raw nerves that Jim
felt as though he would fly apart at the seams if he even moved the slightest
bit. He was afraid of being labeled
abnormal. He was afraid of losing
Blair. He did want Blair to be
dependent on him but at the same time, he resented being dependent on
Blair. But he was not dependent on
Blair anymore. The sentinel senses
were gone. So why the abject terror
at the thought that Blair might move on?
Pain sliced through his chest and somehow he knew that it had nothing to
do with anything physical. The
prospect of life without Blair was too painful to contemplate.
He
had made a fatal error, the very one that his father had always warned him
about. He cared. What was more, he let someone care about
him. It was then that he realized
that he was dependent on Blair and not because of his senses. Blair Sandburg had become so much
more than researcher and guide. He
had become the closest thing Jim had to family. Sure, his father was alive; he had a
brother, but blood relations do not always a family make. Caring made a family and Blair was the
first person that had ever cared enough about him to stick
around.
Shame swept over him and his
face felt hot. Blair stayed, in
spite of everything Jim had done to drive him away. He stayed, despite the fact that he did
not want to be a cop. Pete was
right. Jim did think that he had
offered Blair his only chance for a future. Jim also arrogantly believed that Blair
stayed only because he had to. It
was easier to think that because then Jim could say that Blair did not really
care that much. He just knew he had
no other choice. Now, Jim knew
better and it made everything he had done seem that much worse.
“I’m sorry,” he heard
himself say. “And thank
you.”
“You’re welcome, Jim,” Pete
answered.
“I
don’t want Blair working for you.”
“That’s not going to be up
to you, now is it?”
“No.”
“Well, I’m glad that you do
at least realize that. I will say
though, that I don’t think you’re going to have to worry about that. I think he’ll want to finish his
doctorate. After that, I don’t know
but I don’t think I’ll be his first choice.”
“Thank you for giving him
the choice.”
“Whoa, that had to hurt to
say.”
“More than you
know.”
Pete laughed. “You are such a jerk, Jim. You better be glad that, despite your
many faults, your friends like you.”
“Gee,
thanks.”
“You’re quite welcome. So you know, we leave in the morning for
Cascade. I have to tie up a few
things here before we go and Chad can’t get away tonight.”
Jim
did not want to wait another night but he sighed and resigned himself to
it. He nodded and turned to stare
out the window again and watch D.C. go by.
The
cougar was back again. He watched
it approach the temple. Silently,
it ascended the steps. It came to a
stop before him and changed. The
shaman smiled at him. He smiled
back.
“It’s time to come home,
Blair.” The voice startled
him. He had seen the shaman’s lips
move but the sound seemed to come from everywhere all at
once.
He
wondered what the man meant. He was
home. Here was where he
belonged. It was where he wanted to
be.
The
shaman shook his head. “This is not
your home. You can’t stay here
forever. It was a safe haven for
you but now you’ve made it a prison.”
He
did not like the man’s words. He
covered his ears with his hands but the shaman simply removed them. “You have to listen. See the wolf. You keep him close but you won’t let him
in. You’re rejecting who you are
when you reject him. That’s holding
you here. Come with me.” The shaman held out his hand. He wanted to take it but he was
afraid. The wolf nudged him. “Let the wolf in and then come with
me.”
No,
letting the wolf in meant pain. He
could not be what the wolf wanted him to be. He could not be what the shaman wanted
him to be. That path led back to
the one who betrayed him, left him here alone to be hunted and trapped. He shook his head.
“Please. I’ll protect you. I swear it. You have people who care about you, out
there. We will all protect
you.”
He
looked back at the temple. He did
not want to be alone there anymore.
He took the shaman’s hand.
“That’s it. Come with me.” The shaman led the way down the temple
steps. He paused at the final
step. He looked down to the wolf at
his side. The shaman nodded. He closed his eyes and waited. That was
when he heard it; the roar of a great cat.
His eyes snapped open and he backed up the steps, pulling his hand away
from the shaman. The wolf whimpered
and followed him. The roar sounded
again and he saw a flash of black in the jungle. The black jaguar was back. He glared at the shaman. The man had tried to trick
him.
“No, no, Blair. It’s okay.”
He
turned away and raced back up the steps, resuming his
lookout.
“Damn it!” Kit shouted as he
was thrown out of the dream state by Blair Sandburg’s rejection.
“What is it?” Jesse rushed
into the room.
“Ellison’s back in town.”
Kit looked at the figure of Blair Sandburg on the bed in front of him, seemingly
unaware of his real surroundings.
“How do you
know?”
“Saw him. So did Blair, unfortunately, before I
could get him to come with me.”
Kit’s cell phone rang then
and he answered it.
“Chase.”
“Kit, just touched down at
the airport. How are things? Any change?”
“No.”
“I
can’t believe you two took him out of the hospital. Well, wait, yes, I can. This is you and Jess I’m dealing with,
right? I haven’t told Jim, you
know. He’s not going to be
happy.”
“Where is his
majesty?”
“Calling Banks from the pay
phone. I’ll let Banks deal with the
initial explosion. I’ll have to
hear enough after he gets off the phone.
We have to go straight to the university.”
“University?”
“Yeah, worked some
magic. You guys pay attention to
the television for the next hour or so.
If I wrote books, I’d have the Pulitzer sown up right about now. Anyway, we’ll be where you are right
after this press conference. You
might want to prepare for Hurricane Ellison.”
“Couldn’t you just keep him
in D.C. for just a little longer?”
“Kit, don’t ask me silly
questions.”
“I
almost had him, Pete. Then he saw
Ellison.”
“What the hell are you
talking about?”
“Nothing. We’ll see you when you get here.” Kit hung up. “Pete says we need to be watching the TV
for a while. Go turn it on and I’ll
be right there.”
“Gotcha.” Jess left him alone with
Blair.
“You think I tried to trick
you. I didn’t.” He sighed. “You’re so pissed off. That’s the problem, isn’t it? Never been quite this pissed off before
and you scared yourself. You’re
afraid of the pain, afraid of the anger.
Afraid of facing what you are because you think it means you have to
accept the hurt. It doesn’t mean
that at all. You were born a
shaman, Blair. You chose to be a
guide. You can walk away. Especially now. There is no sentinel. I know you can hear me. You hear what you want to hear. You know what you want to know. It’s okay to be mad. It’s okay to kick his ass if you
want. It’s okay to be scared and
it’s certainly okay to choose to walk away.” He got up and walked out of the room,
turning out the light as he went.
“Good afternoon. Thank you all for coming. I’m Dr. Carter Meeks and we are here
today to right a wrong. With me,
are Mr. Kenneth Russell, aide to Senator Adams, Peter Devereaux, private
investigator, Special Agent Chad Ryan of the FBI and Detective Jim Ellison of
the Cascade Police Department. I’ll
step aside now and let Mr. Russell explain to you the reason you are all
here. Mr.
Russell?”
“Thank you, Dr. Meeks. Ladies and Gentlemen, as Dr. Meeks has
told you, I’m an aide to Senator Adams.
Most of you know that the Senator is the Head of the Intelligence
Oversight Committee. The Senator
has been concerned about internal problems in the CIA. He has been in the process of
investigating these problems for a while now. To aid him in this investigation, he
enlisted the help of the FBI and Mr. Devereaux. Mr. Devereaux then enlisted the help of
Detective Ellison and his civilian partner, Blair Sandburg, a consultant to the
police department and doctoral student here at Rainier. Mr. Sandburg, Detective Ellison, and Mr.
Devereaux then set up a sting operation in conjunction with the FBI to capture
what they believed to be a mole.
Mr. Sandburg was a main part of that sting operation as he was to write a
false dissertation to bait the mole into making a move so that he could be
captured. That dissertation, as
most of you have guessed, claimed that Detective Ellison was a genetically
enhanced human called a sentinel.
Given the fact that Detective Ellison has, on occasion, shown an enhanced
sense of hearing, and that Mr. Sandburg has studied other individuals with one
or two enhanced senses, it was not difficult for him to put together enough
evidence to make the dissertation credible.” Russell paused to take a
breath.
“There was just one
problem,” he continued. “The
dissertation was inadvertently released to the press and in order to save the
operation, he was forced to recant it publicly while, through certain channels,
maintaining its validity. The
operation is now over. The threat
has been eliminated. Further
details of the operation cannot be discussed at this time. However, we can now exonerate Mr.
Sandburg of his supposed fraud. We
can only hope that Mr. Sandburg’s advisors here at Rainier will reinstate him
into the doctoral program where he can finish his real dissertation. I will take questions now, just be aware
that there are some things that I cannot and will not
discuss.”
The
resulting cacophony was deafening even without sentinel senses. Finally, Russell pointed to a reporter
and the others settled down to listen to the question. “Mr. Russell, where is Blair Sandburg
now? Why isn’t he
here?”
“Unfortunately, Mr. Sandburg
was injured during the course of the investigation. He is unable to be here at this time.
Yes?” He pointed to another
reporter before the noise could start up again. Jim was grateful for that. He was getting a
headache.
“Mr. Ellison, why did you
participate in the investigation?
Why were you chosen?”
Jim
looked to Russell then spoke.
“There were rumors that there were groups, foreign and domestic, who were
interested in genetic engineering using people with enhanced senses as their
starting point. The discovery that someone in a government agency was apparently
obtaining data in such an area, where there was no legitimate basis for the
interest, concerned Sandburg, because he had studied many people with one or a
few enhanced senses and felt an obligation to provide them with whatever
protection he could. Mr. Devereaux
is a personal friend of ours and knew of Blair’s work. It fit with what the investigation
needed and asked for our help to pull it off.” Jim said what Russell had told him to
say and stepped back. There were
more questions but he was not called on to answer any more of them. Instead, he focused his attention
inward. He still had to
figure out how to make all this up to Blair. Since he had ceased to pay attention, he
almost missed it when someone asked a question of someone not behind the
podium.
“Chancellor Edwards, what
does this mean for Blair Sandburg?
Now that the university knows that he was in the service of the country
and that the paper you fired him for was not his dissertation, will he be
reinstated or not? And will he get his job back?”
Jim
turned to look at the woman who stood off to one side glowering at them
all.
“Well, we will have to
actually speak to Mr. Sandburg and meet privately with the gentlemen here but,
um, of course we will seriously consider this new
information.”
Jim
wanted to tear into the woman but Pete grabbed his arm and shook his head at
him. Pete grinned at him as a
reporter did what Jim wanted to do.
“Ms. Edwards, are you saying
that the university may NOT choose to reinstate Mr. Sandburg even after he
risked his career and apparently his life for his country? Surely that won’t be the
case.”
“Well, there are other
considerations besides the dissertation.
Mr. Sandburg lied to this university. He hid his involvement with this
from…”
“Let me get this
straight. You think that he should
have told you about a secret government investigation because--?” Pete cocked
his head at her in inquiry.
“No, that’s not
it.”
“Chancellor, weren’t you
involved in some small way in the release of the dissertation? As I recall, you called a press
conference to announce Mr. Sandburg’s work, despite the fact that he had tried
to suppress it and told you and everyone else that he did not want it
released.” Jim saw the glitter in
Pete’s eyes. The man was so very
good at manipulation. The woman did
not dare deny Blair his chance now.
“There was a
misunderstanding. I’m sure that
once everyone sits down and works through this mess, he’ll be allowed to
continue his studies.” She gave the
assembled audience a strained, fake smile and made a show of sitting down in an
empty chair and straightening her dress.
“It’s always better to let
someone else do the dirty work, Jim.” Pete winked at him.
Russell was thanking
everyone for coming. The press
conference was over. Jim was
inordinately relieved. It was
getting harder and harder to keep the ever-changing stories straight. Pete told it one way. Adams and Russell
told it another. Everybody wanted
credit; nobody wanted blame. Was
that not just the way of the world?
At least it was in Jim’s world lately. Now that this was over though, Jim had
to prepare himself to face his own responsibility in the hell that had become
his life. He had to once again face
Blair and this time, he had to try to repair the damage. There was no more putting it off. He was not feeling relieved
anymore. It suddenly occurred to
him that what had gone before was the easy part. Now, the hard part began. Now, he had to regain the trust and
friendship of Blair Sandburg.
Something told him that it was not going to be easy. He wondered if it would even be
possible.
The
jaguar was coming closer. He
watched it from the temple door.
Part of him wanted to kill the animal before it could hurt him
again. The jaguar had hurt him
before. He could not let it near
again. Another part of him felt
drawn to the animal, however. He
could vaguely remember a time when he and the jag hunted together. The conflicting feelings warred within
him. The wolf was becoming
restless. It stood and circled him
before stopping in front of him and placing its nose against his chest. He pushed it gently away and covered the
spot the animal had touched with his hands. It whimpered but relented. Its sad eyes stared at him. He understood. It would not leave him but his rejection
had hurt. Guilt cut him. He knew how the wolf felt. He shifted his gaze to the jungle again,
his eyes automatically searching out the intermittent flashes of black amongst
the green. A voice came to his
ears, a voice from his memory.
I have a guide,
Sandburg. He angrily wiped the tears
away. He had to be vigilant. He did not have time for tears. The jaguar was out there and it was not
his friend. It wanted to hurt
him. He would hurt it instead. He would kill it if he had to. He desperately hoped he would not have
to do that. Still, he let his anger
burn away the sadness that had almost consumed him. The cat roared and he answered it with a
growl, a warning to stay away. He
would not be hurt again.
Simon considered using the
siren as he sped through the streets of Cascade. He needed to be there when Jim got to
his house. He knew that his
detective was very angry over the stunt that Chase and Riviera had pulled to get
Blair out of the hospital. Despite
the fact that Simon had explained why they did it and that he would have done
the same thing, Jim was still furious.
Simon had been tempted to tell him to shut up and get over it, but he did
not. He knew why Jim was
angry. Even if Jim did not know
himself, Simon knew. The man was
upset that it had been Chase and Riviera to Blair’s rescue this time instead of
him. He was upset, too, that he had
put Blair in the position of needing to be rescued from the hospital in the
first place. Yet, Simon knew that
he would take his anger with himself out on the two men that, in essence, took
his place. It would not be a
pleasant situation. Devereaux would
take up for his men well enough, Simon realized, but at the same time, it would
be his house that took the brunt of the fallout. Yes, he needed to be
there. He buzzed by a blue haired
old lady in a ’72 Buick moving all of 30 MPH and pushed his foot to the floor
once again.
As
he turned onto his street, he saw a rental car pulling into his drive. He zipped in behind it and got out. Jim and Peter Devereaux got out of the
rental at the same time. They were
already arguing.
“They did what they had
to! Hell, Jim, they did what you
would have had you been here!
You’re just pissed that you weren’t here.” Devereaux was voicing Simon’s own
opinions.
“Jim, he’s right.” Simon approached the
man.
“Simon,” he
greeted.
“Nice to have you back,
Jim.” Simon extended his hand for a
handshake then, when Jim accepted his hand, pulled the man into a brief
hug. He slapped Jim on the back and
released him.
“Thank you, Simon. Are they in
there?”
“Yes.”
“Blair?”
“Of
course.” Simon watched as Jim’s jaw clenched and he turned to stare at the
house.
“How is
he?”
“The same. No change.”
Jim
nodded.
“Captain Banks, thanks for
looking out for my guys.” Devereaux circled the car and offered his
hand.
Simon took it and
grinned. “You should be thanking me
for not throwing their asses in jail.
I may agree with the spirit of it but it was still
fraud.”
Devereaux cleared his
throat. “Well, that too. Of course, you know I could have found
Naomi Sandburg and had her swear that she really had adopted Jess while putting
together all the necessary documentation to have it look all legal. That paperwork would just magically
appear in court records and no more fraud.” The man was grinning at him. It irked Simon.
“He’s not lying, Simon. If anybody could, it would be him.” Jim glared at
Devereaux.
Simon frowned. “I don’t think I want to hear anything
else. Just be thankful and when
this is over, stay out of my city.”
“That’s gratitude for you,”
Devereaux laughed.
“Oh, don’t get me wrong,
both Jim and Blair are back safe. Everything, or almost everything is back
to status quo,” he said, glancing at Jim, “I’m a grateful man. That’s why I want you gone. Eventually, you would do something
stupid and I don’t want to have to be the one to arrest you. Now, Jim, are you calm enough to go
inside and deal with this like adults or do we stand here on the lawn all
night?”
“I
want to see Blair. I won’t say
anything to them. I’m calm.” The jaw was still clenched, the eyes
still hard.
“Right. Sure you are, Jim,” Devereaux remarked
sarcastically.
“Devereaux, you are not
helping,” Simon snapped.
“Sorry, sir.”
“To
use your own words, right, sure you are.”
Simon turned back to Jim.
“Let’s go then.” He put one
hand on Jim’s shoulder and gently steered him toward the house. “Are you sure you’re okay?” Simon asked
as they walked.
“I’m fine. I said I wouldn’t bother them and I
won’t.”
“That’s not what I
meant. Physically, all that? We had other things to worry about last
time I saw you so I honestly forgot to ask.”
Jim
almost smiled but given his current mood, it more resembled a grimace. “I was a valuable commodity, Simon. They didn’t hurt
me.”
Simon did not know quite
what to say to that.
“Too bad that protection
didn’t extend to Blair.” Jim
stopped at the door and turned to look into his face. “I swear, Simon, I never meant for him
to be hurt. I didn’t know what to
do so I did nothing. What’s that
famous saying? About evil
triumphing because good men do nothing?
I had forgotten that.”
“That was Lincoln, I
believe.”
“Nope!” Devereaux spoke
up. “It was Oliver Wendell Holmes,
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.”
“How the hell would you
know, Devereaux?” Simon asked.
“Because Alex plastered the
damn thing on my office wall once when I pissed him off. No need to go into details, right? I’d rather not.” The man looked sheepish
all of a sudden and Simon decided that one day he would like to go into the
details. “Anyway, it goes, ‘the
only thing needed for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing.’”
“Yeah. That’s it.” Jim sighed. “Well, I’m stalling. Let’s do
this.” He reached for the doorknob
and swept into the house like a man with a purpose.
Ten
minutes later, he was standing at the patio doors, one hand on the glass. It was where he had been since Riviera
had told them that Blair was on the patio with Chase and Jade. It was like he was transfixed, stuck
there, unable to move forward or back.
Simon had gone out to greet Jade but returned to his friend’s side. “Jim, aren’t you coming
outside?”
Jim
shook his head. Simon allowed his
gaze to follow Jim’s back to the patio table. Jade was attempting to get Blair to draw
on paper with a blue crayon.
Mostly, she was doing the drawing, her hand wrapped around Sandburg’s and
moving it around the paper.
Amazingly enough, Kit Chase sat across from them, drawing himself. Simon had sneaked a peek at the drawing
while he was out there. Chase was
drawing a wolf. It was a pretty
good rendering, too. He had some
talent.
“I
can’t do it, Simon. I can’t. I’ll only screw it up worse than it is
already.”
“Jim, you’re doing nothing
again.” Simon hoped throwing the
man’s words back into his face would help.
Jim
shook his head again. “No, in this
case, I think I am the evil.”
“Jim, don’t do this. That kid needs
you.”
“Is
Chase a sentinel or not? Have you
noticed anything?”
“No. Why don’t you ask the man,
Jim?”
Jim
chuckled but it had a bitter edge.
“He’d just as soon shoot me as look at me. Besides, I don’t suppose it
matters. I’ll get Pete to take me
home. I’ll be back in to work
tomorrow. Unless you have any
objections, that is? Hell, do I
even have a job anymore?”
“Of
course, you have a damn job, Jim!” Simon took a deep breath and lowered his
voice. “You can come back to work
whenever you’re ready. But Jim, I
don’t like this. You have to at
least try to reach him!” Simon pointed to Blair. “Don’t walk away from
him.”
“I
don’t have the right to stay.” He
turned and headed toward the front door.
“Bullshit! You don’t have the guts to stay!” That
stopped him in his tracks but Simon did not stop there. “Okay, you say you caused this? Then I say it’s your responsibility to
fix it. Time to face the music,
Ellison.”
“I
don’t know how! I don’t even know
where to begin! How do you fix
this? How do you take back a
betrayal? Especially one this
big? How do I even start to make it
all up to him? Tell me, Simon,
because I need to know! I fucked
this up so badly. I accused him of
betrayal, Simon. More than
once. All the while, I was the one
doing the betraying. I’ll bet Jade
would say that I was projecting.
Heard that one before, Simon?
Where you accuse others of what you are guilty of to ease your
conscience? Yeah, that’s what I
did. I accused, I belittled, I
insulted, I hurt him. For
what? Why? Pete’s right. You’re right. You’re all right! This is my own damn fault. My pride could not accept the fact that
I needed somebody, anybody, so I pushed him away, I shut him out. I didn’t want to be thought of as a
freak so I hid and let him take the fall for my weakness. I even had the audacity to say to myself
and you and anybody else who knew the real story that I didn’t ask him to do it
so it wasn’t my fault. No, I didn’t
ask but I certainly didn’t give him another choice, now did I? It was my way or no way at all. Then, to add insult to injury, or injury
to insult, how ever you want to look at it, I let them do that!” He flung his
hand in the direction of the patio.
“While I did nothing. Did
you know that I got whatever I wanted to eat in that compound? I wonder what he got? I got outside and I exercised and even
enjoyed some of it. I bet he never
got out of that room, except for his escape attempt. Nobody touched me; I was the golden boy,
not so much as one bruise. I
watched as they tortured him, drugged him.
I stood right there and never flinched. Couldn’t let them know I cared. I had this crazy notion that if they
thought I didn’t care, they’d leave him alone. I mean, wasn’t that his purpose
there? To keep me in line? I was wrong. I didn’t know. God help me, I didn’t know. And now, you think that I can help
him? You think he’d even want my
help? If I were Blair, I would
never want to see me again. I might
even hire Pete to kill me.” He
burst out laughing then and Simon began to seriously worry about the man’s
sanity. He caught Devereaux’s eyes
and saw the same concern there.
“Jim, it’ll be okay. Just give it some time. Blair cares about you.” It sounded pathetic, even to Simon’s
ears as he said it.
“Sure it will. Pete, take me home.” Ellison walked out of the house then
without a backward glance.
“Don’t worry, I’ll stay with
him tonight,” Devereaux told Simon before leaving as well.
Simon stood in the middle of
his living room floor for long moments before he felt as though he could move
without his legs giving out on him.
He was so very tired. He
made it to his recliner and sat down heavily.
A
cup of coffee appeared under his nose and he took it gratefully. “Thanks.” He looked up into the face of Jesse
Riviera.
“Welcome.” An uncomfortable silence fell between
them. Jesse broke it. “Pete will take care of
him.”
Simon nodded. “You were scarce while he was
here.”
“Didn’t want to get into an
argument with him. I’m not sorry
about what I did.”
“I
know. I’m not sorry you did it,
Jesse.”
“Cool. I’m going to go outside with Kit and
Blair. I think Jade’s coming
inside. We’ll give you guys some
privacy.” Riviera grinned at him
and winked.
“Gee, thanks.” Riviera’s antics only served to remind
him that he and Jade would not have much true privacy for a
while.
“Dude, we can take Blair to,
like, the zoo or something.”
“No, no, that’s all
right. Just go
outside.”
Jade entered the house then
and Jesse slipped by her and out onto the patio, still grinning at
him.
“What was that
about?”
“Just Riviera being
annoying. How’d it go with
Blair?”
“It
didn’t. That is until Kit finished
that wolf picture he was drawing and put it in front of him. The reaction was immediate. Blair grabbed for it, but Kit reached
out and touched his hand and they were gone.”
“What do you
mean?”
“Well, Blair is almost
always gone, right? But for a few
seconds there, Kit was gone too. I
may as well not have been there. I
don’t know how to explain it any other way. It was over in seconds. There is something very strange about
Kit Chase, Simon.”
“No
kidding.”
“What happened to Jim? I expected him to come
outside.”
“So
did I, baby. So did I. He’s having a hard time facing what’s
happened to Blair.”
“Well, avoidance is very
unproductive.”
“Jade, honey, Jim Ellison
has made an art of avoidance. We
can only hope that he’ll come around.”
“I
have an idea, my big strong police captain. Let me take you out for an early
dinner.”
“I
need to get back to the station. I
left in the middle of my shift because I expected a bloody conflict here. At least I was spared that,
huh?”
“Hey, I say you’re the
captain, take an hour or two. You
have a doctor’s appointment.”
“You are a genius.” He put his arms around
her.
“Yes, I know.” She leaned into him and stood on her
tiptoes to kiss the end of his nose.