Chapter
53: And So You, Bread and Light and Shadow Are [65]
Joe
forced open his eyes at the shriek of the phone. 5am
on a Saturday? This better be good. “Hello?”
“You
got a TV, Maxwell?” Greg asked.
“What
the hell kind of question is that before dawn?” Joe retorted.
“Yeah, I got a TV. Why?”
“Turn
it on,” Greg said.
“Which
channel?” Joe asked, stumbling into the living room.
“Doesn’t
matter,” Greg said. “They’ll all be carrying it. I gotta get
back to work---let’s meet for lunch later at the diner, okay?
Noon?”
“Yeah,
noon. See ya then.” Joe hung up the phone and switched on the TV in
time to hear one of the talking heads begin her report. “The FBI
announced today that former District Attorney John Moreno was found
dead of an apparent heart attack in his jail cell…”
Joe
closed his eyes. Heart
attack, my ass. All
of the questions he’d most wanted to ask the man---most of them
beginning and ending with Why?
How could you?---would
have to remain forever unasked. Almost without thinking, he dialed
Lucille’s phone number to offer his condolences, then caught
himself before dialing the last digit. Lucille was now John’s
widow; he couldn’t burden her with his sorrows now, even assuming
she wanted to talk to him.
He
wondered, not for the first time, where Cathy was, and if she’d
seen the news. Despite the news, she was still in danger, and so was
Rita. With Moreno dead and unable to testify against Avery, there
might well be more attempts to remove the two of them from the case.
Joe ran a hand through his hair and put a pot of coffee on to brew,
thinking. There had to be a way to contact Cathy. There had
to be.
***
Catherine
had not stepped one foot outside the tunnels in the two weeks since
her flight below, and she worried incessantly---about Rita, about
Joe, about the case---and about Vincent as well. He’d spent more
than a few sleepless nights pacing the antechamber; security patrols
had been stepped up and sentries had reported some unknown figures
around the main Central Park entrance, but nothing---so far---had
come of it.
“You
should go to bed,” Vincent insisted late one night.
She
shook her head. “My place is with you.”
“You
need your rest,” he said gently. “I will…be awake for some
time.”
“Then
let me be here for you,” she told him. “Please.”
To
her great, if surprised, relief, he didn’t continue to argue.
Instead, he brought a quilt out from their bedroom---it was cooler in
the antechamber, even with the braziers lit---and wrapped it around
her shoulders. “Will you tell me what’s bothering you?” she
asked as he returned to his eternal pacing.
The
breeze he created stirred the cool air as he passed; Catherine drew
her quilt closer and waited for his answer. Though Vincent remained
unsure about assuming the eventual leadership of the tunnels, the
burdens of the role had already left their mark upon him, she
noticed. He seemed, if not thinner, a good bit more worn than he had
even a month before. “I’ve played chess with Father,” he
finally said.
It
seemed apropos of nothing, but Catherine knew Vincent better than
that. “And?”
Vincent’s
fretful, worried pacing stopped. “In chess, there are
strategies…ways of playing which are distinctive to every player.
Father’s game has always been precise, well-reasoned. Contrary to
tunnel legend, it’s not always been easy to defeat him. Now…”
He came to sit next to her. “His moves are disorganized and not
thought through. We played last night; I found it impossible to
predict what he would do next.”
Catherine
tried for a forced lightness. “Maybe he’s tired of always being
beaten and he’s trying to surprise you.”
“No,”
Vincent said, though his half-smile told her he appreciated the
attempt at humor. “It’s…subtle, Catherine, but…”
“You
feel there’s something wrong,” Catherine finished.
“Yes.
But it’s nothing I can point to and say, ‘Here is a sign of a
problem.’ ” He sighed in a great shuddering gust of tension. “I
visited Pascal yesterday afternoon; in passing, he mentioned Father
had transposed some pipe codes---though, as he says, we all do that
from time to time.”
“We
do,” Catherine said lightly, rubbing the tight muscles of his broad
shoulders. “Vincent, if there was something serious going on,
surely your empathic senses would tell you.”
“I
have been…misled before, where Father is concerned,” Vincent said
quietly and she knew he was referring to Paracelsus’s horrific
ruse.
Catherine
had many theories as to why Vincent hadn’t immediately realized it
was Paracelsus, but now wasn’t the time to explore any of them. “So
what do we know, really? He had a fit of bad temper last week, he’s
not playing chess the way he has for years, and Pascal says he’s
occasionally mixed up his pipe codes. It could mean something. Or
nothing. He surely must have a lot on his mind right now, and he is
growing older.”
Vincent
nodded. “Yes.” He gazed at her sideways from beneath his veil of
hair. “Catherine, when your father became…ill, were there any
warning signs?”
It
was a question Catherine had asked herself many times after her
father’s death, wondering if she’d been so preoccupied with the
changes in her own life that she’d missed the obvious. “I thought
about it a lot after he passed away,” she said, “but I don’t
believe there were. One of my father’s associates said he wasn’t
as focused but…his priorities had changed in the last months of his
life. He didn’t feel the need to put in eighty hour weeks any
longer. He took time off, traveled…if there were any warning signs
of his stroke, neither Kay—his girlfriend---nor I saw them.”
His
hand curled around hers; his pulse beat slowly against her wrist.
“Then I will…watch.”
“And
try not to worry,” she urged. “Please.”
“Very
well,” he answered.
She
tugged him down next to her into the welcoming nest of blankets.
“Now, sleep.”
***
Catherine
looked over her coffee to see Peter enter the commons. “Peter,”
she said. “Bit early to be here, isn’t it?”
“Late
for me,” he said, hugging her. “I just delivered a baby. But
that’s not why I’m here. I got a call from your boss this
morning.”
She
had to marvel at Joe’s resourcefulness. Peter had been called upon
as an expert witness on some of their most difficult cases; Joe must
have remembered Peter’s connection with her. “Really? What did he
say?”
“He
needs to see you, Cathy. Said he’d be at the Metropolitan Museum of
Art at 4pm in the Egyptian section.” Peter smiled. “Rest assured,
I said all the proper things--- I didn’t know where you had gone
but I was certain you were fine. I’m sure he’s wondering how I
know that much, but it won’t be the first time I’ve had to field
those kind of questions.”
Catherine
smiled. “I’m sure not. I wonder what Joe wants to see me about,
though.”
Her
husband entered the commons and sat down next to her. “Likely
this,” Vincent said, and handed her the front page of a newspaper
which must have arrived earlier in the day.
“John
Moreno is dead?” Catherine asked, shocked. “I never thought…a
heart attack…”
Peter
glanced at the two of them. “An awfully convenient heart attack,
one might say.”
“I
didn’t think you knew much about this case, Peter,” Catherine
said.
“I
watch the news,” Peter replied dryly. “And when Jacob told me why
you’ve been below the past couple of weeks, it doesn’t take a
genius to figure out there’s a connection.” He took a sip of his
coffee. “What should I tell Mr. Maxwell?”
Catherine
studied her husband. He met her eyes squarely. “You must do what
you think is right,” Vincent told her.
“Nice
answer, love, but…this affects us both. What do you
want me to do?”
The
honest answer---stay
Below where I can keep you safe---was
one they both knew he would never speak. Vincent folded his hands
upon the worn wood of the table. “I think… you must meet with Joe
and find out what he has to say. The Met is such a public place, and
there are multiple tunnel entrances leading to it. There will be
relatively little danger.”
Peter
nodded. “Then I’ll call him once I get back to my office.” He
covered a yawn with his hand. “In the meantime, though, I need to
get some sleep. Stay safe, Cathy, okay?”
She
hugged the older man. “Will do, Peter.”
After
he left, Vincent turned to face her. “Catherine, you must go Above
but…you won’t go alone.”
“It’ll
be daylight still, you can’t---”
“I
won’t,” Vincent assured her, though she understood full well the
daylight wouldn’t stop him if she was really in danger. “But
there are others who can, and will, if I ask them.”
***
Vincent
found Angus and Cullen about where he’d expected them, taking a
quick break from resoldering an old pipe in Sector E. “Come to join
us?” Cullen asked.
“No,”
Vincent said, “I’ve got Sector F maintenance with Warren, Kanin
and Rhys tonight.”
Angus
shook his head. “Make sure Rhys remembers to hold the flame away
from his face, will you? I swear, that kid could kill himself with a
dull pair of scissors.”
“I
will,” Vincent agreed, suppressing a smile. Rhys was the least
adept at any of the mechanical maintenance, but he was always prompt
for his shift, always ready and willing to work when asked. Since the
same could not always be said of the other tunnel-dwellers, Vincent
didn’t mind working with him.
“What’s
up?” Cullen asked. “You look worried, man.”
“Catherine
has to go Above to meet her boss this afternoon. I cannot…go with
her, of course.”
“No,”
Cullen said softly, “I’d imagine you can’t. Do you want me to
go with her?”
The
very idea of asking anyone else to guard her, protect her, made the
words acrid in his throat, yet there was no other option. “Yes,”
Vincent finally said. “If you would, please. I would…greatly
appreciate it.”
“I
can go too,” Angus said unexpectedly. “I mean, if you want me
to.”
“That’s
a great idea,” Cullen said, grinning. “Angus here is built like a
brick shithouse---”
Angus
rolled his eyes, though it was clear he took no offense. “Where is
she meeting him?”
“The
Met,” Vincent said, “in the Egyptian section.”
“I
haven’t been there in years,” Angus mused. “Not since…” He
breathed out. “It was my wife’s favorite museum.”
Cullen
looked down at his empty canteen. “Angus, I’m going to go refill
this. You want some water?”
Angus
unhooked his own canteen and handed it to Cullen. “Thanks.”
Vincent
peered up at the other man. “Angus, I would have asked you
myself---”
“But
you never thought I’d want to,” Angus finished. “Yeah, I don’t
blame you there. I haven’t been the…friendliest guy here.”
Since
there was nothing he could say but agree with the statement, Vincent
said instead, “Catherine’s meeting is at 4pm today. Will you be
done by then?”
Angus
nodded. “We should be done by two. That’ll give us enough time to
get decent and go with your wife.”
Vincent
smiled. “Thank you.”
As
he turned to leave, Angus’s voice stopped him. “Vincent?”
“Yes?”
Angus
flashed a rare dry smile. “Thank you for not agreeing with me.”
***
Catherine
entered the Met a little before 3:30 in the afternoon, through a
roundabout maze of passages and tunnels and stairways she doubted
she'd be able to find again if her life depended on it. Yet Cullen
and Angus seemed totally sure-footed, never hesitating in their
choice of tunnel or pathway. “Where will these passages end?” she
asked as they crossed a high, narrow bridge.
Cullen
thought for a moment. “Years ago, the usual entrance was through a
basement storeroom.”
She
raised her eyebrows. “After hours, I presume?”
“When
else was Vincent going to see the museum?” Cullen said with a
rogue’s grin. “Now they’ve installed video cameras so it’s
been years since any of us went this way, but I don’t think they’d
have gotten rid of the storeroom.”
“Will
there be people in the area?” Catherine asked.
Angus
shook his head. “Usually, no, not at this time of day. There's
always a risk, though, so if you want to enter through the normal
fashion, we can cut across here---” and he gestured to a winding
corridor off to their right--- “which will take us to an alley off
5th
Avenue. Your call.”
Catherine
frowned. “No, I don't want any of us to be visible targets. I'll
take my chances with the storeroom.”
Angus
looked down at her quizzically. “Sound thinking for a lawyer.”
“Vincent
wouldn’t marry a dummy,” Cullen replied. “She’s right---in
that alley we’d be sitting ducks if anyone saw us.”
They
stopped at the base of a rocky staircase. “All right, then,”
Angus said and extended his hand to help Catherine up the large step
at the very bottom. “Go up to the top of the steps and turn left.
It should lead to the door of the storeroom.”
***
The
Egyptian section was located on the first floor, and crowded as it
usually was with schoolchildren and other visitors. Catherine saw
Angus and Cullen spread out, unobtrusive but still watchful and then
she saw Joe, sitting on a bench beside a large plaque of Ma’at---how
appropriate,
she thought. She sat down on one of the benches opposite him. “Joe.”
He
turned a little, keeping his attention on his map. “Hey, Radcliffe.
I…wasn’t sure you would come.”
His
words were quiet and to any outside observer, Catherine was sure they
would appear to be strangers consulting their respective maps,
perhaps asking for directions. She picked up her own map and thought
irreverently that perhaps she should order a martini, shaken not
stirred. “What’s going on, Joe?”
“You
heard Moreno died?”
“Yeah,”
Catherine replied. “It was in this morning’s paper.”
“The
preliminary autopsy couldn’t find anything wrong with his heart,”
Joe stated. “That wasn’t in the papers.”
“We’re
still in plenty of danger, aren’t we,” Catherine said.
Joe
nodded. “I heard from my contact with the feds that Moreno was
planning to testify against the Rotolos in exchange for a lighter
sentence.”
“He
might have been useful to our case too,” she observed, though she
had been on the fence about subpoenaing him to testify; if Elliot
Burch was problematic as a witness, a disgraced former district
attorney was even more so. Now the option was closed to them. “Damn.”
“Yeah,”
Joe agreed. “Cathy, the Feds have had to dismiss part of their
indictment against the Rotolos because of Moreno’s death. If you
and Rita are out of the picture…”
He
didn’t have to finish. “There’s a hearing at the end of this
month; I have to be there.”
“They
got to Moreno in federal custody. What makes you think…?”
Catherine
knew what he was asking---how
safe do you think you
are?
“Joe, Moreno’s dead and I don’t know who all else is bought and
paid for. But they didn’t get to me. Or to Rita. I’ll be there
for his hearing.”
“Okay,”
Joe replied, though it was obvious he didn’t like the idea. “But
don’t go back to your apartment until we can have Greg Hughs do a
security sweep.”
She
leaned back to brush his shoulder, the best she could do for a hug in
the circumstances. “Oh, Joe. Greg’s involved?”
“Who
else was I gonna trust, Radcliffe? Yeah, he is. He’s managed to
keep his investigation off the record for now.”
Catherine
nodded. Hadn’t she asked the same thing of Greg, when she’d been
dealing with her stalker? All she could do was hope they both
weren’t wrong in trusting him. “I understand. Is there anything
else I should know?”
“The
body of the garage clerk was found on the New Jersey side of the East
River. Coroner says he’d been dead about three weeks. Avery’s
racking up quite a case in New Jersey too.”
“They
can have him,” Catherine said, “once Rita and I are done with
him.”
Joe
chuckled. “That’s what I thought. If I need to contact you…?”
“Call
Peter. He can find me.”
She
stood; Joe gazed at her silently for a moment. “Do I even want to
know where you’re staying or why a semi-retired family practice
doctor knows exactly how to find you?”
Catherine
shook her head. “It’s better if you don’t, believe me.”
Joe
seemed to notice Cullen and Angus, who had come to stand behind
Catherine. “Who are these guys?”
Before
she could answer, Angus spoke. “Family friends. Her husband
couldn’t be here today.”
Joe
smiled. “Good for you, Radcliffe.”
***
Catherine
wasn’t surprised when Vincent didn’t meet her at the Central Park
entrance; she’d suggested he keep busy while she was gone. From the
messages on the pipes, he’d signed up for a maintenance crew
working on the Sector F pipes, so she said goodbye to Angus and
Cullen and began to walk towards their chamber, not wanting to
disturb his work.
She’d
made it about halfway when she heard four loud bangs on the
pipes---Pascal’s signal for an all-clear. Say
again? Pascal
asked.
The
frenetic message was far faster than Vincent’s usual style of pipe
code, but from the controlled urgency rushing through their bond, she
knew it was him. Massive
pipe rupture-Sector F-all maintenance crews needed-flooding---
The
white heat of pain, the sensation of icy water, and then his end of
their bond went dark and silent. Vincent!
her mind screamed, but there was no answer.
________
[65]
Pablo Neruda, “And Because Love Battles”
6 comments:
Ah! Things are tightening up on BOTH ends of Catherine's life! Moreno's murder complicates her Avery trial and increase the likelihood that she is in danger Up Top. And now Below there has been an accident involving Vincent. The poor woman just can't catch a break!
But, obstacles to overcome are required for a good love story. Bring 'em on! Catherine and Vincent are equal to the task! And we LOVE the suspense!
More, please!
Regards, Lindariel
Hi Lindariel!
Well, no...it's not all smooth sailing for Catherine (or Vincent) but...it's life :) I can't tell you what'll happen next, but I promise it'll all come right in the end. ;)
Thanks so much for reading and commenting---it's always appreciated :)
Oh my, I am left sitting on the edge of my seat,and chewing my nails, Hope V is okay... marvelous chapter Krista :-) Am enjoying the story so much.Can't wait to read what happens next!
Hugs,
Linn
Hi Linn! :)
Awww...thank you. I'm so glad to see you here! :) I'm happy you're enjoying the story, and although I'm sorry for your nails, I'm glad to keep my readers riveted ;)
Thank you again---so much---for sticking with the story this long. It'll be two years in September (!!) since I started it and I'm always pleased beyond words that people enjoy it enough to keep reading :)
Hugs,
Krista :)
AAAAAAHHHH!
You might as well be right about me finishing it tonight, but it's just that... I swear this story is having the Kaleidoscope effect for me: once you pick it up, you can't put it down!
Hey Vicky!!!
I'd like to apologize for the cliffhanger, but...if it's got you that hooked...well.. :)
Seriously, I'm beyond thrilled that you're so absorbed by this story. Thank you, so very very much.
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