by Faye, Carmen
"What can they do?" Cole asked.
"They'll most likely begin with giving her naloxone, which is very effective in countering heroin and other opiates, but first, they may take the time to ensure that's all she has in her system. We were told that this was done to her, not something she accidentally did herself. Do you know if she uses any other drugs? Does she party at all?"
"She drinks and I know of at least once time she did crystal, but very rarely. Drinks beer, mostly. Some shots, but never more than five."
"How long has she been like this?"
"Ah, a little longer than I day? I would guess? But I don't know the doses or how many," Cole admitted.
"That's fine. Please wait in the visitor room and I’ll be back out to tell you any changes or news. All right? I've been dedicated to her treatment, so I'll be able to pass you news as it happens."
"Good and thank you," Cole said.
The nurse then leaned closer and whispered to him, "You might want to put the gun in your car. Cops come in and out of here quite often."
He gave her a grin, "Thanks. I'll do that."
Max was already in the waiting room. Cole gave him the run down about the naloxone treatment and then walked out to the limo to shuck his gun and told his fellow brothers the news, as well. "You guys don't have to stay. I'll call you with any news. She could be home tomorrow," Cole told them.
"Angie is going to want to be assured, again, that this isn't her fault, so I should head home," Rat agreed. "But you have to come over soon and back me up on that, because she isn't believing me much."
"I'll hang for a while," Jim told him, "Then go back to the club and make sure your bike is settled inside for the night. I'll come by with your keys later on."
Brian looked at him, "I got nothing better to do, bro, so I'm with you."
"You licensed to carry inside hospitals?" Cole asked with a grin.
"Yes, but I'll leave them out here anyway," Brian replied seriously. "I don't want to make people nervous who are already in pain."
Cole nodded and they walked together into the lobby and sat down.
CHAPTER FORTY NINE
It was near three in the morning when Nicole opened her eyes and focused on a familiar silhouette in the doorway, watching over her. "Captain?" she asked softly.
"Oh, shit," Lou whispered quietly, "Sorry, baby. I didn't mean to wake you."
"Did you come for me?"
"Well, your man did, that young fellow, Cole, and he let me tag along," Lou told her, stepping a little closer with his hat in his hand.
She thought about that, "I think I remember that. I think I remember him carrying me."
"That's good; that's real good. Recall is a good sign," Lou said, keeping his voice low, stepping a little closer.
"My brain isn't right, though, Captain. I can feel it isn't right. Is this how it is going to be now? Like this?" she asked, tears in her eyes.
"No, no, baby, this is only a few hours after treatment. They're going to get you back to yourself. You're going to be all right and clear as summer," Lou assured her.
Nicole nodded her head and tried to believe him.
Lou came farther in and sat on the edge of her bed. "So, so you and Cole. You serious about him? Cause he's very serious about you. Gabriel -- may he rot in hell -- could tell you just how serious he is."
She studied Lou's eyes and saw that this really was Captain talking to her, then she nodded. "I think I was serious our first date. It was…"
Lou waited for a moment, and then urged her with, "Go on. I would like to hear it."
"I'm just trying to figure out how to describe it, Captain. We connected in this really strong way. I don't mean like just having feelings for each other, but… rather… having each other's feelings. I could feel what he was feeling so strongly they were like my own, but felt more distant than mine. And we knew things about each other that neither of us could possibly know. And we felt, saw, and envisioned what we were going to be to each other in ten years. It was so real, so amazingly real, and wonderful. But it kind of scares me."
Lou looked down at the hat in his hand and rolled it slowly with the brim, as if deep in thought and then with a nodding of his head he said, "That's … well that's how it was with me and Ciri. It's very strange, after all these years, to hear someone else describe what we went through. All these years, and…huh. Strange."
"Seriously?" she asked, her eyes wide.
Lou nodded, giving her a glance and then looking at his hat, turning the brim, "It scared us to death; it really did, because you know, we were both raised in old Catholic families and things like this…these connections… they just weren't natural. Like when we were on our fifth day together, she was very upset with me for lying to her about getting hurt.
"She says, 'I know you are lying, Louis Donadio, because you are doing that thing with your cheek and you always do that thing with your cheek. For years, I see you do this thing and every time, it is a lie coming out of your lips.' And I have to tell you -- one, she was right. I was doing that thing with my cheek and I was lying. But two, that was only our fifth day together, not years together, and she was talking to me like it was our seventh anniversary or something. Like she knew all kinds of things about me.
"Then, I suddenly knew things about her. I knew how she ate her food and that she didn't like marinara sauce ‘cause it was too sweet. She liked to sit in the front of the movie house, not the back. I knew she was so afraid of spiders she would rather burn down the house to get rid of one than to come close enough to squash it with a napkin. But what really threw me is I knew how she liked it in bed and, baby, we were still virgins at that time."
Nicole had risen and sat up as he was talking, "Exactly; that is it exactly."
"Now," Lou smiled wanly, "Now you're going to ask me what it is, or where it comes from. But I have been asking that myself since that fifth day with Ciri and I have never gotten an answer. Not one. I've spent a great deal of money looking for that answer, too, but not even a glimmer."
"Does it still happen?" Nicole asked.
Lou smiled and played with his hat some more, "Yes and no. I'm sure it is the same thing. It has that strong sense of double reality to it, like you are living twice at once. Like there are four people there and not just two.
"But now…it is like strong reminders of who we were back then. I'll kiss her and suddenly it is twenty years ago, twenty-five years ago, even thirty years ago, and she's still so young and firm, and we are just married and no kids, and so passionate about each other that we can hardly stand not to be touching. And I remember things like what chocolates she enjoyed and how she used to make these little napkin things for Easter, and that she really likes purple daisies and all these little things about her that made her happy and gave her joy.
"Some of these things I didn't notice back then, but when they pop into my memory, I can look back and I see that, yeah, she did do that, or she did like that. So, I've been getting her these little things and she's been doing it, too. And it's like we are …" he shrugged. "I don't know. I don't have the words. What's deeper than falling in love again?"
Nicole leaned her head against his shoulder, "I don't know, but it sounds good."
"It is good. It really is. And it's good to share that with someone, especially you, ‘cause you are like the star for new beginnings. You guide ships out of the fog and it has been a serious pleasure to know you."
"No more model building with us and no more row row, either. Are you sad?"
"Yes, because I'm a naturally selfish man; just ask Ciri; she'll tell you all about it. But only because of my selfishness am I sad. When I get my head out of my own ass, I'm very, very happy for you. And, when he finally gets around to it, I wouldn't mind getting an invitation to the wedding," Lou told her.
"I'll hand deliver it," she smiled.
CHAPTER FIFTY
It was late the next afternoon and she finally was able to convince Cole to go home and get some slee
p. Alone, Nicole looked up at the ceiling and realized that what Lou told her last night might be coming true. She was beginning to think clearer. Not clear, or sharp, but not the hindered fuzz and slow recall of last night. "At least, at this point, I could live with this. If this is as good as it gets, I can accept this." A polite knock on the doorframe drew her attention and there was a beautiful redhead woman, who Nicole had never met before. "Yes?"
"Hi, Nicole; we've never met. I'm Max's assistant, Cathy. May…may I talk to you for a few moments?" she asked, trying to sound polite, but Nicole also felt that it was important to this woman, Cathy.
"Yes, sure. How can I help you?"
"Well, first of all this might not be the time, how are you feeling? I mean, after what you went through--"
"Please, Cathy. I'm fine. You feel nervous and it feels like a nervousness about something you want, something important to you. So, talk to me and if I can, I'll help, all right?"
Cathy nodded and her body language smoothed into something Nicole almost envied. Cathy was now an executive level power-woman and not the bundle of nerves she was at the doorway. "Wow, I wish I could do that," Nicole said with a smile.
"What?"
"That, what you just did. You're so… powerful now. Like you could just say 'do this' and most people would be doing it before they realized they didn't know who you were."
Cathy studied her and then laughed, "Really? Max makes me feel like that sometimes. He's just so…"
"Commanding. Like you just believe he knows what he's doing so you want to follow, because you're so sure it will be safe."
Cathy nodded eagerly, "Exactly. The nice thing is, he normally does know what he is doing."
"So, what can I help you with?" she asked.
Cathy studied her and said, "You know, in just the last few minutes, I'm … maybe you just are natural and can't ‘cause you don't know. But… sorry… anyway, I've been with Max since before his wife died. I was with them when she passed and then with him in New York and all points in between. The core of us, his personal staff, who travel with him – Bill, James, Sally, and myself – we could see…we could see he wasn't Max anymore. He died with her. He loved her so much that he just died with her." Cathy looked at her hands, "I tried everything. We all did. I even tried sleeping with him. I don't think Sally ever did, but, well, I love Max and seeing him like that was really hard. But even sleeping with him didn't help."
She looked at Nicole, "And then he spent two days with you. Well, three I guess, but he came back walking like a real man again. I was so happy that I could have screamed and hugged him in public. I swear. It was so hard not to break out the wine glasses and dance on the plane as we flew to Portland. Anyway, you've been really good for him, but now you're retiring, obviously. I don't want him to slip back. So, I was wondering if, if what you did could be taught? And if it could, would you teach me?"
Nicole thought about that, "Most of what I did, I taught myself. I don't think any of it was natural to me. I may have some natural empathy or something like that, but what I did was very specific and based on sound studies about sex and psychology, and my bubble theory. I haven't run across anything yet that matches my bubble theory. I built it from several schools of thought by taking one piece from one and another piece from another, so it's not wholly mine. But to answer your question, yes. I think it can be taught. I don't know if I'm skilled enough to teach it, but it can be learned. I know that because I learned it. And yes, definitely, especially for Max, I would try my best to teach you."
"My schedule is fairly tight --" Cathy began.
"Mine isn't. And there is Skype and email," Nicole offered. "It might be good for me to really sit down and go through it, to write it out, to focus that kind of energy into it."
"I want to pay you for this. We pay our own way and there's nothing more valuable than knowledge, especially knowledge from experience that works." Cathy told her. "So, let's work that out, too. All right?"
"Max means a great deal to me; it feels odd, but all right, because I know he would demand to pay me, as well. I'm guessing we're going to be hush-hush about this until you are confident in your skills."
"I think that would be wise, don't you?" Cathy asked.
"I never, ever, let them see the woman behind the curtain. It wouldn't, and I really believe this, wouldn't help them to know what is going on, and having them know would only make it harder to pop the bubble."
"You've used that term several times now, bubble. Can you explain that much to me today?" Cathy asked.
"Sure," Nicole said and sat up and began teaching Cathy about wealthy, powerful men. A subject that Cathy, until this moment, really believed she had a clear understanding of.
Two hours later, Cathy was taking notes and slightly flabbergasted, "I have to say that this isn't what I expected to be learning today. I mean, you were a call girl, so I expected to be taught -- "
"Pussy tricks?" Nicole smiled.
"Um, yes," she blushed. "Pussy tricks."
"We'll get to those, but I'm sure you understand that they're useless without this happening first. This is what broke down the wall and let Max grieve. As soon as his bubble popped, as soon as he was in the present, he broke down. He stayed with me because I told him to after that. He was shattered. I couldn't just let him walk out like he was the next morning. By the second day, I could have let him go and felt all right about it, but I still had another day off and it felt good to be with someone who was being so human with me."
"You didn't have sex with him at all?" Cathy asked, a little amazed.
"The third day, before he left, we had sex. Then I showered him, got him into clean clothes, and he called his driver," Nicole told her.
Cathy looked down at all of her notes, "Wow, you could make a fortune selling this."
"I have a fortune. Cole, Max, you, Lou, Jim, Brian, even Rat, came into a firefight and saved me from a lunatic. How much is that on the spreadsheet?"
Cathy grinned at her, "Cole seems very serious about you."
"So I've heard. I'm very serious about him."
"Kind of a frightening man, though. I mean, he's got the same kind of vibe going on that Max does, but so much more…savage," Cathy estimated.
"Once you hit the wild side, you never go back," Nicole told her with a laugh, "and yeah, savage is a good word. Wow."
Cathy laughed and put her hand to her lips, "Oh you are bad."
"Do you have your laptop to with you?" Nicole asked.
"Yeah, sure; what do you need?"
"Look up Ben Wa balls and get some for our next lesson. Also look up pompoir, which is a pussy technique you can learn from using the Ben Wa balls." Cathy, Nicole noted, was nearly a computer herself the way she took in and processed information.
"Is this… real?" Cathy asked a few minutes later.
Nicole looked down at herself in her hospital gown and shrugged, "Here, put two fingers inside me."
"What?"
"We're not lezing out; just do it," Nicole told her.
Cathy hesitated for a moment and then did what she was told to. Once her fingers were in, Nicole began pompoir and Cathy's eyes turned into amazed saucers. "How… I mean… holy shit!" Cathy stuttered.
"That's exactly what they say," Nicole laughed.
Cathy sat back in her chair again, staring at her, "Oh, I have got to learn how to do that. Have to."
CHAPTER FIFTY ONE
The next morning, Cole showed up with fresh clothing and a helmet so she could ride home with him.
As she walked into the house, after what felt like years of being gone, she told him, "Your shades of brown have never looked so good."
"I'm glad you like them," he smiled.
"Like them? Hell, baby, I'm loving them."
After a late breakfast, they curled up on the couch together and talked, about everything.
"Next time, talk to me Nicole," he told her.
"You would have tried to stop me," she protested.
<
br /> "And that would have been a bad thing?" he asked.
"Well, other than the part where I was almost brain-melted and made into marble-eyed house pussy by a deranged psychopath, the plan worked," she tried.
"Other than that," Cole nodded.
"Cole, he was Captain that night and yesterday. Dark Lou is far more ruthless than maybe even you can comprehend. If the Horsemen didn't back down in a day, maybe two days, after discovering that he was who you were really up against, he would have brought in serious numbers, on his own, to force you to. It would have been bloody as hell and for what? I mean really? I couldn't have lived with it, Cole. I kept imagining you and Brian dead on the highway somewhere, and I simply could not live with it knowing I could have stopped it. And yes, with Milwaukee and Detroit riding in, you might have taken them. You might have won, but at what cost, Cole?"