by David Wiltse
That was even the difference between himself and John Becker. They all had the opportunity to kill, the other two did and Tee did not… But if it happened again, he wondered. If it had been safer, if it had been legal-if it had been someone else in his grasp… He remembered the trembling of his muscles, the urge to let her go and watch her tumbling, cart-wheeling into space, to see the final flicker of terror in her eyes before she plummeted away from him… Had it really been just to see it? His rage was not that compelling, her threat to him surely not great enough to warrant death. Had it really been just the power to do it that had made him shake with temptation? He did not know if he believed that of himself, but then he had to believe what he had just done. In the past half hour he had done two things he would not have thought likely: first the astonishing, bravura sex, casting aside all sense of propriety and caution, and then the near homicide. It was one hell of an age to start discovering what he was capable of, Tee thought. He was not at all sure that he wanted to know any more.
When he reached the bottom of the hill at last he walked past his car and kept going until he reached the bank of the reservoir. Scarcely bothering to look to see if he was observed, he took off his clothes for the second time that day and walked into the water until it was up to his neck, feeling as if some other power were driving him, as if he were no longer responsible for his actions, not even to himself.
He could hear cars driving past on the other side of the screen of trees, even hear when some of them automatically slowed at the sight of a police car, but his eyes and his mind were out over the water, away from civilization, skimming the surface of the water; sailing up to the heavens as birds caught his eye; flitting to the forest on the far shore, where he could barely discern the movements of muskrats puttering around the edge of the lake and then pushing off at last into the water, their furry heads breaking the surface and leaving a long, serpentine wake behind them as they swam slowly in his direction. His mind drifted, trying to calm itself, trying to focus on the innocence of nature's diurnal life, wincing and recoiling when it looked back on the past hour's work, yearning to soar as concentrated but thoughtless as the hawk, which still wheeled over the reservoir.
When he had regained enough composure to feel thormughly silly standing neck-deep in a lake, he rose at last from the reservoir, scraped the water from himself with the side of his hand as if cleaning a windshield, dressed, and drove slowly to work.
22
For a man accustomed to suspicion by profession, jealousy had hit Becker with a surprising force. He would have thought himself to be inured to such doubts about his own wife, but that was only because he had loved her with such confidence. Their marriage, he had come to believe, was something special, a relationship immune to common failings because of their long exposure to the single life. Before their marriage they had both tasted what pleasures there were outside of monogamy, and both had found them ultimately lacking. Novelty for its own sake was no longer new for either of them and they had come to each other with a sense not only of mutual love but of relief that they were freed from the strictures and demands of the single life. They exchanged breadth of experience for depth of understanding and it was a trade they made knowingly and gladly. They had talked about it as they talked about everything in their lives, and they had luxuriated in the shared serenity of their love. Which was not to say that they took each other for granted. Both of them proceeded as if living together were part of an extended courtship, and both still made the extra effort to do and say the things that most pleased the other. They were mature enough to appreciate what they had in each other. They were actively in love. Or so Becker had thought. Now he was forced to recon sider everything.
Karen had lied about her relationship with Kom and she was a woman who would never lie without very good reason. There were probably alternate explanations to the obvious one, but Becker could think of none of them.
He was in the paradoxical position of the jilted lover-the only one who could ease his pain was the one who had caused it. And he dared not ask Karen directly because he feared that she would lie to him again-and he was desperate enough to believe her. He would turn from wronged husband to fool, from innocent victim to the classic deserving cuckold. Not only his love had been assaulted but his pride as well.
With self-disgust and a deep sense of shame, he turned to a private detective. When he confronted her, he wanted to know the facts. He was prepared to forgive her, to work even harder to make her happy-but he had to know the truth, and he no longer trusted her to give it to him.
His quandary, however, was to protect his wife. If she were the object of an investigation, it could slip out in the myriad ways that rumors did. A woman in her position in the Bureau had to be Caesar's wife, beyond even the suggestion of impropriety. It could not be known that Karen was being watched; it could not be known that her husband had ordered the surveillance. Becker ordered the tail to be put on Stanley Kom.
Karen was deep in the analysis of a number of unsolved bombings that had taken place over a fifteen-year span. Three people had been killed in the bombings, many wounded, and hundreds of millions of dollars had been lost in the explosions. Karen, goaded by Deputy Director Hatcher, was attempting to establish the case that the bombings were linked, which would make the bomber a serial killer by the Bureau's definition. There was little doubt in Karen's mind that Hatcher wanted her Serial Killings department to become involved so that he could justify putting Becker on the case. Becker despised Hatcher and had refused to ever work directly for the man again. Karen knew that he hated Hatcher for good reason; she also knew that Hatcher wanted to use Becker for good reason. As a high-level administrator she had a duty to her superior. As a woman she had a duty to the man she loved. Performing the calculus that stabilized these two duties was a difficulty with which she had struggled almost since meeting Becker. Being made head of the department had only increased the problem.
She took Kom's call as a welcome distraction. "I know I shouldn't bother you at work, but I really needed to hear a friendly voice," he said. She could hear the smile in his tone, but the sadness, too.
"What's wrong?"
"Oh, Tovah, of course. You don't know how lucky you are, married to a man who you get along with so well."
"We have our rocky times," Karen said, then hastily added, "But I know that I'm lucky."
"No relationship is perfect, I didn't mean that," Kom said. "I know there must be times when you wish John were different in some way… I mean, everyone wishes that at some time, don't they? Or am I just crazy?"
"No, everyone wishes that sometimes."
"But Tovah… Christ, I get so lonely."
"Oh, Stanley. I'm sorry."
"I can't talk to her. Her paranoia is bad enough, but then I can't trust her either. If I say something private to her 1 don't know who else is going to hear it. One of her lovers? Can you imagine how that feels, thinking maybe she's lying in bed with another man, laughing and telling him some secret I told her?"
"I'm so sorry, Stanley."
"Who in hell am I supposed to talk to, Karen? I have feelings that I need to express, you know what it's like, you have to share your life or it's almost like you're not living it at all. Who can I share with?
I've tried John, but he just doesn't seem to want my friendship, not on the level I need."
"John takes time…" she started.
"Who can I talk to, Karen? Who can I talk to?"
"You can talk to me, Stanley," Karen said. She did not see how she could say otherwise. She heard the catch in his breath and knew that he was moved.
"Bless you," he said. "You're a wonderful woman. A wonderful, wonderful woman. I'll tell you, Karen, the few times we've been able to talk the last few weeks are the moments I'm hanging on to. If I didn't have those, if I didn't have that outlet at least- You're saving my life here. "
"I'm glad I can help, I wish there were something.
"Just let me talk to you. You
are so compassionate. I mean it, I really mean it. You have such a good heart, it comes out, it just radiates, it affects everyone around you. I can feel the warmth just being in the same room, it's like, you're like a stove, Karen, you're so warm."
Karen laughed. "Stanley, you're just lonely."
"God yes, I am, that's true, but-what are you saying, that I wouldn't feel your warmth otherwise? You don't know, how would you know what your presence feels like? You're the source of it, not the recipient.
I'm telling you that you're a godsend, you're a lifesaver… Listen, I'm going nuts again, have you been listening to me?"
"Yes…
"Do I sound nuts or not? What is there about talking to you? I just crack open like a ripe melon and start spilling my insides when I'm with you. Like nothing is too intimate, nothing is too personal, I feel that I can say anything at all to you and you won't judge me and you'll understand."
Karen noticed her secretary pausing in her doorway, an eyebrow arched in his habitual request for permission to enter. Karen turned just slightly away from the door an. d the secretary immediately interpreted the request for privacy and withdrew.
Kom detected the lapse in her attention as if he were standing in the room. "Listen, did I get you at a bad time, can you talk?"
"Well…"
"I understand, I'm practically at the hospital now myself, I have to operate in a few minutes. The reason I called, I've got a few more thoughts about the party for John. Can we get together and discuss them?"
"Of course."
He set a time and place for their meeting, then he said, "I hope you appreciate yourself, Karen. I hope you know what a good person you are and how good it is for me to have you in my life right now." His tone had dropped to the barely audible and Karen found herself reacting in kind, speaking in a near whisper.
"You're very special too, Stanley. I hope you come to realize it, I really do, because it's important."
"Bless you," he whispered, his voice scarcely more than a breath.
When she looked up the secretary was in the doorway once more, watching her. His face showed nothing but the proper formal deference but she thought she could detect the trace of a knowing look, as if it had been on his face a second before she glanced at him and now hung somewhere in the air, slowly dissolving. Karen felt herself blush to the roots of her scalp.
She told herself that she had nothing to be ashamed about, that she had been having a conversation with a friend, but in her heart she knew that was not entirely true. There was something about speaking to Stanley Kom that was unlike speaking to other men-the stakes always seemed higher, yet far less explicitly defined, as if by the very act of conversing she had agreed to play a game whose rules and wagers she was completely ignorant of. Yet the game did not seem dangerous, there was a very nonthreatening quality to Kom's friendship. Where with other men a friendship held the constant threat of emergent sex, however elaborately denied, with Stanley the sex seemed to be sublimated into trust and intimacy in a form that was almost neutered. Almost neutered. Karen did not delude herself that there was no element of sex whatever between them. He made her feel very good about herself, he flattered in a way that appeared totally, gratefully sincere, and therefore acceptable-but it never made her forget that he was a man. If she was being wooed-and at times she felt she was and at times she knew she wasn't-it was in a way she'd never experienced before.
What there was about Stanley, she thought, that made him different, the thing that replaced sex and yet added a flavor of excitement that would otherwise be missing, was the sheer intensity of his needs. Whatever it was he wanted from her, he seemed to want it completely. Nakedly.
Unapologetically. And he made her think she could give it to him. That was very attractive to a woman, she realized. It was nurture, after all. And perhaps that was why she liked him so much, she thought.
Perhaps that was why she saw herself responding to him on a level and in a way that she had not felt in a long time. She could help him-he needed her. A very seductive combination. Karen was bright enough to recognize what was happening to her, what Stanley was unconsciously making happen to her-but she was not cynical enough to stop it. It Hell, she told herself, within the realm of harmless flirtation, and in the meantime she was doing Stanley some good and she was doing Becker some good. If she received a bit of a lift from that herself, where was the harm in that?
AT ONE A.M. Tee's clock radio switched on, the volume turned as low as he could get it and still have it audible. He woke to the noise of static, switched it off, and eased himself out of bed, moving on tiptoe in order not to waken his wife. She rolled over with a loud grunt as he opened the bedroom door and slipped into the living room.
Making his way by the moonlight coming through the bay window, Tee walked to the hallway. His daughter's door was slightly ajar and he peeked in. Ginny lay asleep in a pool of pale lunar light, looking to Tee's adoring paternal eyes as innocent and angelic as a newborn fawn.
At fifteen her face was — in transition, the features and shapes of the adult emerging but still embedded in the child. He realized that he had not peeked in upon her for months, forced to respect her privacy in grudging deference to her age. It had been his great joy in the past to watch her sleep, and he and Marge would creep to her door together and stand for long minutes admiring her and, by extension, themselves. Marge had given up the practice first, acknowledging Ginny's growing maturity before Tee was willing to. It had struck him as strange, cold, somehow unmatemal, this precipitous rush to see her grown, and he had at first suspected that it was female jealousy over his daughter's slowly manifesting beauty. One night Ginny had opened her eyes and looked back at him as he stood in the doorway. In the past they had smiled at each other and he would tell her to go back to sleep and she would, comforted by his presence. This time she had smiled, and she had spoken gently, but her words stung as if she had shouted.
"I don't watch you sleep," she had said. Stunned and suddenly uncomfortable, Tee had eased her door shut without a word. He had not been back to look at her until this night.
God, I love her, he thought, and felt his throat tighten and his eyes tear. We should have had more children, he thought, then felt disloyal because he didn't want any other children, he just wanted his Ginny, and he wanted her to stay his child, to be forever small and young and her daddy's darling. A surge of anger swept over him at the injustice of life, that it stole everyone's youth, his, hers, theirs.
Ginny shifted her position in bed and Tee quickly pulled away from the door. He slumped against the wall of the hallway in the instinctive lurch of the Peeping Tom, feeling both the anger and the tears and thinking what a mess he was. Some essential cement in his character seemed to have given way, allowing the elements to float freely, recombining in instantaneous, volatile, wholly unpredictable ways. That morning he had tucked his lover atop a cliff with as much regard for proprieties or his surroundings as an oversexed baboon, then minutes later had come within an inch of killing her, wanting to kill her. Naked as a jay, he had stood neck-deep in a reservoir, acting for all the world like a Hindu swami, and now he was close to sobbing at the sight of his daughter sleeping in the moonlight. This was not a midlife crisis, he thought, it was a fucking cataclysm.
Recovering himself, he went to the kitchen to the phone that was farthest from the bedroom. After closing the kitchen door, he spoke aloud for the first time since rising, testing his voice to be sure the fogginess of sleep was gone. He altered his tone and pitch, trying to disguise himself. When he was ready, he punched in a number and listened to the phone ring. His own house was so quiet that the ring on the other end seemed to shriek in his ear.
On the- third ring a man answered, sounding sleepy and annoyed.
"Yeah, what?"
Tee hesitated, wanting to just hang up but knowing that would send out alarms.
"Hello, hello?" the voice demanded.
"Is Mr. Conrad there?" Tee said in his altered voice.
"Who?"
"Conrad."
"Wrong number," the voice said, more angrily than before. The phone went dead. Tee opened the kitchen door and jerked back with a gasp when he saw Marge standing there.
"Shit a brick!" he exclaimed. "You scared the hell out of me. "
Marge stood with her arms crossed over her chest, the pale skin of her cleavage shining like a ghost. "Sorry."
"You didn't have to get up," he said. "I tried not to wake you."
"I know."
"I was creeping around like a goddamned mouse," he said. She moved slightly, making her cleavage even more prominent. Tee found he couldn't stop looking at it. In the pale light Marge looked younger, thinner, altogether more desirable.
"I know it," she said.
Christ, I'm horny, he thought, finding it amazing after the morning's performance. He reached out a tentative finger, slipping it in the cleft between her breasts. "Who is she, Tee?"
Tee stopped, puzzled. "Who?"
"The woman you're calling at one in the morning from the kitchen phone."
"That wasn't a woman."
"Uh-huh."
"I was calling McNeil."
"Then who's Mr. Conrad?"
"How long were you out there listening?"
"Who is she? Is she anyone I know? Does she know me? Because I can't stand to be walking around and thinking she's watching me and pitying me."
"Marge, I was calling McNeil. I swear to Christ. I swear on Ginny's life." Marge glared at him for a long time. Tears ran down her cheeks but she made no sound of weeping.
"I think you're a complete shit," she said at last, as she turned and walked back to the bedroom.
Tee stood in the kitchen several moments longer. I agree with her, he thought, over and over. I agree with her.
23
Luv parked his car in the Stop and Shop lot and walked from the supermarket to a Mobile station a few hundred yards away. He had called Denise and told her that his car had broken down and asked her to pick him up at the service station. It was a large, busy station with a ministore inside and two telephones in the lot. Luv's presence there for a few minutes should occasion no notice, but he was still uneasy about the exposure. It wasn't likely that anyone would recognize him there; he was in Ridgefield, a good distance from his home, but accidents did happen. He was even less sanguine about being seen riding with Denise in her car-he had come to rely on the tinted glass of the Caprice, it had been like moving about invisibly-but using his other car was out of the question. He would ride with Denise to and from their motel, have her return him to the station, then walk back to the supermarket to reclaim his car so that Denise did not see it. The entire episode would be a compromise, but Luv was confident that he would be safe. He had eluded Becker, he could certainly avoid detection by some random passerby. It would be necessary to acquire another Luvmobile in the future, but for right now, he would improvise. Denise arrived full of solicitude. "You've been having such terrible luck," she said. "What do they say is wrong with the car?"