Sudden Prey
got to work; I’m on camera four hours a day. This is the biggest story of my life.”
“Look, goddamnit, we know they were coming after you guys . . .”
“That’s all taken care of. They can’t find out where the kids are, because nobody knows but you and me and Richard. And I’m safe in here,” she said. “I’m sorry, but we’ve figured the risks. I’m staying here.”
He gave up. “All right. But I want to talk to Small. I want to make goddamn sure that you’ve got a tight communications link between here and City Hall, and the second something happens . . .”
WEATHER WAS WORSE.
When Lucas walked into the suite, Weather was talking with Sarah. When Lucas began the pitch, she picked Sarah up and held her on her lap.
“Listen, Weather . . .” Sarah blocked Weather off, like some kind of psychic barricade. He couldn’t operate with Sarah looking at him with his own blue eyes; couldn’t sell. He couldn’t touch Weather, and he needed to touch her to convince her, he thought.
“Lucas,” she said, exasperated, when he finished. “Nobody can find me at the hospital. Nobody. People who work there can’t find me, unless they have my schedule—and half the time they can’t find me then. I’ve got jobs lined up all week. I just can’t skip them because there are some lunatics running around out there.”
“The problem is, you’re a lure,” Lucas said. “You could bring a hell of a lot of trouble down on the heads of everybody around you. And now we know they’ve got a cop feeding them information . . .”
“Look,” she said. “Let’s do this. Let’s tell everybody— everybody, including the police—that I’m in the hotel. We can sneak me in at night, and I’ll go around and complain about being stuck there, so everybody knows I’m around. Then we’ll sneak me out in the morning, and nobody’ll know but the two of us.”
“Somebody’ll know,” Lucas said.
“Two or three people. You can use guys you’re sure of.”
Lucas said, “How about if you were interviewed on TV tonight—ten minutes from now, a half hour—in the hotel? About what it’s like to be shut up here, and wait? So it’ll be on TV?”
She nodded. “If that will keep me on the job,” she said.
“I’ll call Jen and see if she can set it up,” Lucas said. He made a quick circle of the room, coming back to the pair of them, picked up Sarah and bounced her. “Want to see your mom?”
“She’s breaking a major story,” Sarah said solemnly.
“I think she could take a minute away to see her kid,” Lucas said. “Let’s go talk to her.”
19
LA CHAISE WAS MANIC: They’d shot the cop, he said, his face alight, as though he expected Sandy to have a celebration prepared.
“What d’ya think about that, huh? What d’ya think?”
Sandy, coldly furious, turned her face away until the chain came off, and then stalked up the stairs, into the back bedroom, the one they said was hers, and slammed the door in LaChaise’s face. She said not a word. She’d felt like a dog with the chain around her waist, and a mistreated dog at that.
She lay on the stripped-off bed for half an hour, thinking about Elmore, thinking about horses, smelling the odd lingering body odors of strangers.
Horses. She got up, went out to the living room. LaChaise and Martin were drinking, watching television. “I’ve got to call a guy, to make sure he’s feeding the stock,” she said.
LaChaise shrugged. “Use the cell phone. It’s in my coat pocket. Don’t talk more’n a minute or so, in case there’s some way they can trace it. And call from out here, where we can hear you.”
She nodded, went to his coat, dug around. She found the stack of photos, the photos of the cop, deep in one pocket. Ten of them, two men at a table, one black, one white. Which one was the cop?
She listened for a minute, then took two of the photos, the two that showed each of the faces best, and slipped them into her jeans pocket. She put the rest back, found the telephone, and went out to the hallway where the men could hear her.
Jack White. She knew the number, dialed in. Jack’s wife answered:
“Sandy, where are you, we can’t believe . . .”
“It’s not what anybody thinks,” she said. “I can’t talk—but you’ve got to tell Jack to take care of the stock.”
“He’s already doing that, as soon as he heard about Elmore.”
“Tell him he’ll get paid; I swear, as soon as I can get out of this,”
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