The doctor squinted, concerned. “Shock. Nerves. You’re partially correct. The problem does involve the nerves. But not in the way you imagine. Mr. Grant, to repeat, you have an amazing constitution. Your skull has been fractured. You’ve suffered a concussion. That accounts for your dizziness and blurred vision. Frankly, given the bruise I saw on the CAT scan of your brain, I’m amazed that you were able to stay on your feet, let alone think on your feet. You must have remarkable endurance, not to mention determination.”
“It’s called adrenaline, Doctor.” Buchanan’s voice dropped. “You’re telling me I have neurologic damage?”
“That’s my opinion.”
“Then what happens now? An operation?”
“Not without a second opinion,” the doctor said. “I’d have to consult with a specialist.”
Restraining an inward tremor, appalled by the notion of willingly being rendered unconscious, Buchanan said, “I’m asking for your opinion, Doctor.”
“Have you been sleeping for an unusual amount of time?”
“Sleeping?” Buchanan almost laughed but resisted the impulse because he knew that the laugh would sound hysterical. “I’ve been too busy to sleep.”
“Have you vomited?”
“No.”
“Have you experienced any unusual physical aberrations, apart from the dizziness, blurred vision, and tremors in your right hand?”
“No.”
“Your answers are encouraging. I’d like to consult with a specialist in neurology. It may be that surgery isn’t required.”
“And if it isn’t?” Buchanan asked rigidly. “What’s my risk?”
“I try not to deal with an hypothesis. First, we’ll watch you carefully, wait until tomorrow morning, do another CAT scan, and see if the bruise on your brain has reduced in size.”
“Best case,” Buchanan said. “Suppose the bruise shrinks. Suppose I don’t need an operation.”
“The best case is the worst case,” the doctor said. “Damaged brain cells do not regenerate. I’d make very certain that I was never struck on my skull again.”
3
The one-story house was in a suburb of Fort Lauderdale called Plantation, its plain design disguised by abundant shrubs and flowers. Someone obviously took loving care of the property. Buchanan wondered if Doyle made a hobby of landscaping. Their conversation during the drive from the hospital to Doyle’s home indicated that the recession had affected Doyle’s business and he was hardly in a position to afford a gardener. But after Doyle parked in a carport and led Buchanan through the side screen door into the house, it quickly became obvious who was taking care of the grounds.
Doyle had a wife. Buchanan hadn’t been sure, inasmuch as Doyle didn’t wear a wedding ring, and Buchanan seldom asked personal questions. But now he faced an energetic, pixyish woman a little younger than Doyle, maybe thirty. She had happy eyes, cheerleader freckles, and an engaging, spontaneous smile. Buchanan couldn’t tell what color her hair was because she had it wrapped in a black-and-red-checkered handkerchief. She wore a white cotton apron, and her hands were covered with flour from a ball of dough that she was kneading on a butcher-board counter.
“Oh, my,” she said with a pleasant southern accent (Louisiana, Buchanan thought), “I didn’t think you’d be here this soon.” Appealingly flustered, she touched her face and left a flour print on her freckles. “The house is a mess. I haven’t had time to—”
“The house looks fine, Cindy. Really,” Doyle said. “Traffic wasn’t as bad as I figured. That’s why we’re early. Sorry.”
Cindy chuckled. “Might as well look on the bright side. Now I don’t have to wear myself out rushing to clean the house.”
Her smile was infectious. Buchanan returned it.
Doyle gestured toward him. “Cindy, this is my friend I told you about. Vic Grant. I used to know him in the service. He’s been working for me the past three months.”
“Pleased to meet you.” Cindy held out her hand. Then she remembered the flour on it, blushed, and started to retract the hand.
“No, that’s okay,” Buchanan said. “I like the feel of flour.” He shook hands with her.
“Classy guy,” she told her husband.
“Hey, all my friends are classy.”
“Tell me another one.” She studied Buchanan, pointing at the thick bandage around his skull. “I’ve got another black-and-red handkerchief that’ll sure look better than that.”
Buchanan grinned. “I’m not supposed to take this off for a while. It doesn’t do much good. It’s not like a cast or anything. But it reminds me to be careful of my head.”
“Fractured skull, Jack told me.”
Buchanan nodded, his head still aching.
He expected her to ask him how he’d injured it. That would be a natural, logical next statement, and he was preparing to repeat his lie about falling off a boat, but she surprised him, suddenly switching topics, gesturing toward the dough on the counter. “I’m making you a pie. I hope you like key lime.”
He hid his puzzlement and told her, “I seldom taste homemade pie. I’m sure anything you cook would be wonderful.”
“Jack, I like this guy better and better.”
“I’ll show you to the guest room,” Doyle said.
“Anything you need, just ask,” Cindy added.
“Hey, I bet everything is fine,” Buchanan said. “I really appreciate your taking me in like this. I don’t have a family or anything, and the doctor thought it would be better if . . .”
“Shush,” Cindy said. “For the next few days, we’re your family.”
As Doyle led Buchanan from the kitchen toward a sunlit hallway, Buchanan glanced back toward Cindy, still puzzled about why she hadn’t asked him the obvious question about what had happened to his skull.
By now, she had turned from him and resumed kneading the ball of dough on the butcher-board counter. Buchanan noticed that she had flour handprints on the trim hips of her jeans. Then he noticed something else. A snub-nosed .38 revolver was mounted to a bracket beneath the wall phone next to the screen door, and Buchanan knew that Jack Doyle would never have chosen that type of weapon for himself. Doyle would have considered it a toy, preferring a semiautomatic 9-mm or a .45. No, the snub-nosed revolver was for Cindy, and Buchanan was willing to bet that she knew how to use it.
Was the gun there as a precaution against burglars? Buchanan wondered. Had Doyle’s experience with the SEALs made him extra security-conscious in civilian life? As Buchanan followed Doyle down the hallway, he remembered Doyle’s comment about sometimes doing favors for people he used to work for, and immediately he decided that the revolver wasn’t the only weapon he’d find around the house and that Doyle intended the weapons to be a protection for Cindy against the possible consequences of some of those favors.
“Well, here it is.” Doyle led Buchanan into a pleasant, homey bedroom with lace curtains, an antique rocking chair, and an Oriental carpet on a hardwood floor. “The bathroom’s through there. You don’t have to share it. We’ve got our own. No tub, though. Just a shower.”
“No problem,” Buchanan said. “I prefer a shower.”
Doyle set Buchanan’s bag on a polished bench at the foot of the bed. “That’s about it for now, I guess. Unpack. Have a nap. There’s plenty of books on that shelf. Or watch TV.” He pointed toward a small set on a bureau in the corner. “Make like the place is yours. I’ll come back and let you know when lunch is ready.”
“Thanks.”
Doyle didn’t leave, though. He looked preoccupied.
“What’s the matter?” Buchanan asked.
“I don’t know your real background, and it isn’t right for me to know it, but I figure, considering the people who asked me to give you cover, we must be brothers of a sort. I appreciate your thanks. It isn’t necessary, though.”
“I understand.”
Doyle hesitated. “I’ve been following the rules. I haven’t asked you any questions. All I need
to know I assume I’ve been told. But there is one thing. What happened and why you’re here . . . If you’re able to . . . Is there any danger to Cindy?”
Buchanan suddenly liked this man very much. “No. To the best of my knowledge, there isn’t any danger to Cindy.”
The muscles in Doyle’s cheeks relaxed. “Good. She doesn’t know anything about the favors I do. When I was in the SEALs, she never knew where I was being sent or how long I’d be gone. Never asked a single question. Took everything on faith. Never even asked why I wanted her to learn how to shoot or why I’ve got guns mounted around the house.”
“Like the revolver beneath the phone on the wall in the kitchen?” Buchanan asked.
“Yeah, I saw you noticed it. And like this one.” Doyle raised the cover from the side of the bed and showed Buchanan a 9-mm Colt in a holster attached to the bed frame. “Just in case. You ought to know about it. I don’t care what happens to me, but Cindy . . . Well, she’s a damned fine woman. I don’t deserve her. And she doesn’t deserve any trouble I bring home.”
“She’s safe, Jack.”
“Good,” Doyle repeated.
4
The muffled ringing of a phone wakened him. Buchanan became alert immediately, and that encouraged him. His survival instincts were still functioning. He glanced from the bed toward the end table, didn’t see a phone, then gazed toward the closed door of the guest room, beyond which he again heard the phone, its ring muted by distance, presumably down the hall in the kitchen. He heard a murky voice, female, Cindy’s. Then he heard Jack. The conversation was brief. The house became silent again.
Buchanan glanced at his watch, surprised that it showed half-past noon, that what had felt like a fifteen-minute nap had lasted almost two hours. The doctor had warned him about sleeping more than usual. Past noon? He frowned. Lunch should be ready by now, and he wondered why Cindy or Jack hadn’t roused him. He stretched his arms, testing the stiffness in his shoulder where his wound had been restitched, then put on his shoes and stood from the bed.
He heard a soft rap on the door.
“Vic?” Cindy whispered.
“It’s all right. I’m up.” Buchanan opened the door.
“Lunch is ready.” She smiled engagingly.
Buchanan noticed that she’d removed her flour-dusted apron but still wore the red-and-black-checkered handkerchief on her head. Her hair must need fixing and she didn’t have time, he thought as he followed her along the sunny hallway into the kitchen.
“The pie’s for supper. We don’t eat big meals at lunch,” she explained. “Jack’s a fanatic about his cholesterol. I hope you like simple food.”
A steaming bowl of vegetable soup had been set at each place, along with a tuna sandwich flanked by a plate of sliced celery, carrots, cauliflower, and tomatoes.
“The bread’s whole wheat,” she added, “but I can give you white if you . . .”
“No, whole wheat’s fine,” Buchanan said, and noticed that Doyle, who was already sitting at the table, seemed preoccupied by the tip of his fork.
“Did you have a good nap?” Cindy asked.
“Fine,” Buchanan said, and took a chair only after she did, waiting until she dipped her spoon into the soup before he started to eat. “Delicious.”
“Try the raw cauliflower.” Cindy pointed. “It’s supposed to help purify your system.”
“Well, mine could definitely stand some purifying,” Buchanan joked, and wondered why Doyle hadn’t spoken or eaten yet. Obviously, something was bothering him. Buchanan decided to prompt him. “I bet I’d still be asleep if I hadn’t heard the phone.”
“Oh, I was afraid that might have happened,” Cindy said.
“Yeah.” Doyle finally spoke. “You know how I’ve got the office phone rigged so if someone calls there and we’re out, the call is relayed to here?”
Buchanan nodded, as if that information was obvious to him, trying to maintain the fiction in front of Cindy that he’d worked for her husband these past three months.
“Well, that was someone calling the office to talk to you,” Doyle said. “A man. I told him you wouldn’t be available for a while. He said he’d call back.”
Buchanan tried hard not to show his concern. “It was probably someone I did a job for. Maybe he’s got questions about a piece of equipment I installed. Did he leave his name?”
Doyle somberly shook his head.
“Then it mustn’t have been very important.” Buchanan tried to sound casual.
“That’s what I thought,” Doyle said. “By the way, after lunch I ought to go down to the office. I need to check on a couple of things. If you’re feeling all right, you want to keep me company?”
“Jack, he’s supposed to be resting, not working,” Cindy said.
Buchanan chewed and swallowed. “Not to worry. Sure. My nap did a world of good. I’ll drive along with you.”
“Great.” Doyle finally started to eat, then paused, frowning toward Cindy. “You’ll be all right while we’re gone?”
“Why wouldn’t I be?” Cindy’s smile was forced.
“The soup’s excellent,” Doyle said.
“So glad you like it.” Cindy’s smile became even more forced.
5
“Something’s wrong,” Buchanan said.
Doyle didn’t respond, just stared straight ahead and pretended to concentrate on traffic.
Buchanan decided to push it. “Your wife’s so good-natured, I get the sense she’s working at it. Working hard. She doesn’t ask questions, but she picks up overtones—about that phone call, for example. If her smile got any harder, her face would have cracked. She doesn’t believe for a minute that you and I are friends. Oh, she tries to pretend, but the truth is, I make her nervous, and at lunch she finally wasn’t able to hide it anymore. If she gets any more nervous, I might have to leave.”
Doyle kept staring ahead, driving over bridges that spanned canals along which pleasure boats were moored next to palm trees and expensive homes. The sunlight was fierce. Doyle seemed to squint less from the sun and more from the topic, however, as he put on dark glasses.
Buchanan let him alone then, eased the pressure, allowing Doyle to respond at his own pace. Even so, Doyle took so long to reply that Buchanan began to think that he never would unless Buchanan prompted him again.
That wasn’t necessary.
“You’re not the problem,” Doyle said, his voice tight. “How I wish life could be that simple. Cindy’s glad to have you at the house. Really. She wants you to stay as long as necessary. When it comes to the favors I do, her nerves are incredible. I remember once . . . I was stationed at Coronado, California. . . . Cindy and I lived off base. I said good-bye to her in the morning, drove to work, and suddenly my team was put on alert. No communications to anyone off base. So naturally I couldn’t tell her I was being airlifted out. I could imagine what she’d be feeling when I didn’t come home that night. The confusion. The worry. No emotional preparation for what might be the last time we saw each other.” Doyle’s voice hardened. He glanced toward Buchanan. “I was away for six months.” Buchanan noted that Doyle didn’t say where he’d been sent, and Buchanan would never have asked. He let Doyle continue.
“I found out later that a reporter had managed to discover that I was a SEAL and Cindy was my wife,” Doyle said. “The reporter showed up at our apartment and wanted her to tell him where I’d been sent. Well, at that point, Cindy still didn’t know I was gone, let alone to where, which of course—the where part—she never would have known anyhow. But someone not as strong as Cindy couldn’t have helped being surprised to find a reporter blurting questions at her and telling her I’d been sent on a mission. The natural response would have been for her to show her surprise, admit I was a SEAL, and ask him how much danger I was in. Not Cindy, though. She stonewalled him and claimed she didn’t know what he was talking about. Other reporters showed up, and she stonewalled them as well. Her answer was always the same: ‘I don’t know what y
ou’re talking about.’ Amazing. She never phoned the base, wanting to know what was happening to me. She just acted as if everything was normal, and Monday through Friday she went to her job as a receptionist for an insurance company, and when I finally got back, she gave me a long, deep kiss and said she’d missed me. Not ‘Where were you?’ just that she’d missed me. I left on plenty of missions, and I never for a second doubted that she was faithful to me, either.”
Buchanan nodded, but he couldn’t help wondering, If Cindy wasn’t nervous because of his presence, what was the source of the tension he sensed?
“Cindy has cancer,” Doyle said.
Buchanan stared.
“Leukemia.” Doyle’s voice became more strained. “That’s why she wears that kerchief on her head. To hide her scalp. The chemotherapy has made her bald.”
Buchanan’s chest felt numb. He understood now why Cindy’s cheeks seemed to glow, why her skin seemed translucent. The chemicals she was taking—combined with the attrition caused by the disease—gave her skin a noncorporeal, ethereal quality.
“She just got out of the hospital yesterday after one of her three-day treatments,” Doyle said. “All that fuss about the food at lunch today. Hell, it was all she could do to eat it. And the pie she was making . . . The chemotherapy does something to her sense of taste. She can’t bear sweets. While you were napping, she threw up.”
“Christ,” Buchanan said.
“She’s determined to make you feel at home,” Doyle said.
“You’ve got trouble enough without . . . Why didn’t you turn this assignment down? Surely my controllers could have found someone else to give me cover.”
“Apparently, they couldn’t,” Doyle said. “Otherwise, they wouldn’t have asked me.”
“Did you tell them about . . .?”
“Yes,” Doyle said bitterly. “That didn’t stop them from asking me. No matter how much she suspects, Cindy can’t ever be told that this is an assignment. All the same, she knows it is. I’m positive of that, just as I’m positive that she’s determined to do this properly. It gives her something to think about besides . . .”
Assumed Identity Page 17