Part 26 (1/2)
As Will drove her home, Alicia watched his hands where they gripped the wheel. Strong hands, and strong arms. She wondered what those arms would feel like around her. She rarely minded being alone, in fact, most of the time she was too busy to realize that she was was alone. alone.
But there came times, at night, mostly, when she felt an urge to cling to someone, to feel protective arms around her, when she simply wanted to be held held.
She was feeling relaxed and safe as Will pulled to a stop in front of her apartment. And she was torn: Ask him in or not?... ask him in or not?
And then a beeper sounded.
Will checked his belt. ”Not mine.”
Alicia fished hers out of her shoulder bag, and felt the mood shatter as she recognized the number on the display.
Hector's floor. Only one reason they'd be calling her at this hour.
”Will, can you take me over to St. Vincent's? Fast? I mean, really fast.”
He replied with squealing tires.
SAt.u.r.dAY.
After only three hours sleep, Alicia was back in the hospital, this time in the Pediatric ICU. Little Hector Lopez had crashed last night-grand mal seizures and respiratory arrest. She and the house staff had pulled him through-just barely.
Will had hung around for hours downstairs in the waiting area. He didn't know Hector, had never laid eyes on him, yet he'd seemed genuinely concerned. Finally Alicia convinced him to go home.
He'd hugged her and wished her luck, and she'd watched him go, thinking this was someone special.
But now she was watching Hector, unconscious, a slim ribbed endotracheai tube snaking from his mouth to a larger tube, his bony chest rising and falling in time to the hissing rhythm of the ventilator at his bedside.
She heard a knock on the gla.s.s part.i.tion to her left and turned to see Harry Wolff gesturing to her from the other side. She'd called him in on consult regarding the seizure. He'd done a spinal tap. Hector's central nervous pressure had been up, and the fluid had looked hazy. Not good, not good...
Alicia stepped to the door and pulled her mask down to her chin. ”Harry. What have you got?”
His expression was grim. ”Candida in the CSF.”
Alicia sighed. d.a.m.n d.a.m.n. That explained the seizure. Although not a complete surprise, she'd been hoping the pediatric neurologist would find something easier to treat.
”Any more seizure activity?” he said.
”No. But there will be if I don't get this yeast under control. Trouble is, his immune system's in free fall.”
”I'll keep looking in. Good luck.”
”Thanks, Harry.”
She turned and looked back at Hector. She was losing him. d.a.m.n it, this was her home field, this was the only place in her life these days where she called the shots. But she seemed to be losing here as well.
There had to be a way to turn this around. Had to be...
Ramirez showed up a few minutes early, but Jack was ready and waiting at the town house, decked out in his green blazer, white s.h.i.+rt, striped tie, Dockers, loafers, and s.h.i.+t-eating grin.
He'd been here for an hour or so already, familiarizing himself with the place. The house itself didn't need any window dressing; it was in perfect shape. All the closets and dressers were filled with clothes. Whoever had inherited this from the late Dr. Gates hadn't removed a thing.
The only touch he added to the place was a photo he'd picked up in a secondhand shop-two men sitting side by side on a log. He left it in the master bedroom. Then he outfitted the sitting room off the front hall with a card table, and on that arranged manila folders, deposit receipt forms, Xeroxed from the original Hudak Realty form.
Ramirez wore a full-length black leather overcoat. A single, heavy gold chain gleamed through the open collar of his golf s.h.i.+rt. He had broad shoulders and a thick middle. He flashed Jack a bright, wide grin, showing off his caps, but his dark eyes were on the move, taking in every detail of the front hall-the etched gla.s.s in the front door, the crystal chandelier, the bra.s.s carpet rails on the steps leading up to the second floor.
Jack handed Ramirez a card-an exact copy of Dolores's except that the name had been changed to David Johns-and gave him the tour, regurgitating much of the patter he'd heard from Dolores on Thursday. He watched Ramirez run his hands over the fine wood of the antiques as they went from room to room.
As they returned to his makes.h.i.+ft office in the sitting room off the front hall, Jack mentioned that a condition of the sale was that the closing had to be in thirty days.
”Thirty days,” Ramirez said. ”Why does this owner wish such a quick closing?”
Jack paused, as if debating how much to say, then shrugged.
”All right, I'll tell you. He's looking for a quick sale because he needs the money.”
”He is in financial trouble?” Ramirez said.
”No-no.” Jack lowered his voice, as if sharing a secret that should go no further. ”He's in the hospital now. The poor man needs the money for medical expenses.”
”Really?” Ramirez's tone was properly sympathetic; the sudden gleam in his eye was anything but. ”That is too bad.”
Jack could almost see the wheels turning in Ramirez's head: in the hospital... medical expenses. in the hospital... medical expenses... the photo of two men in the bedroom the photo of two men in the bedroom...
He was making a diagnosis.
”And you say the sale price includes all of the furniture?”
”Yes. All fine, fine European antiques. At the asking price, I a.s.sure you, it is quite quite a bargain.” a bargain.”
Ramirez shrugged. ”I do not know. It is very old. Have you had much interest in the property?”
”Strangely enough, no. I don't understand it,” Jack said slowly, then pretended to catch himself. ”Not that there's been no no interest. There's been good interest.” interest. There's been good interest.”
Ramirez smiled. ”As I said, it is an old house. But I feel sorry for this poor sick man. I will take it off his hands. But not for the asking price, I am afraid.”
Jack sniffed. ”It's already underpriced.”
”I must disagree,” Ramirez said.
And then he made a low-ball offer, a good twenty percent under the asking price.
You b.a.s.t.a.r.d, Jack thought. Jorge had said he'd steal from a dying man, and Ramirez had just proved him right.
Jack had begun thinking of his imaginary client as a real person, so he didn't have to fake being indignant.
”Out of the question. My client would never consider such a price.”
”You will call him and ask him?”