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So what's going on that isn't in the package?
She checked the digital clock on the side table--the hour was pus.h.i.+ng ten--and decided to give Grant a call.
Three chirps, and then, "Yo. Hampton here."
My G.o.d, she thought, he even does it at home. That synthetic bravado was left over from his trader days: _You're the luckiest person alive, just to have reached me. How can I further make your day?_ his tone implied.
"Grant, it's me. I think it's time for that vital chat."
It took him a split second to recover, and then, "Hey, I was beginning to wonder what happened to you. If you were going to stand me up or what. Not call, like you said you would."
"Long day. I was up at Mom's this morning. You knew she was going to tell me, right? About your little surprise visit and proposal?"
"I had a hunch the topic might arise." His voice seemed to shrug nonchalantly. "I thought you should hear it from her instead of from me. So what do you think?"
"What do I think? I think I'm wondering what you're up to."
"I'm not 'up to' anything, Ally, except exactly what I told her.
Trouble is, I don't know whether she got it. I wanted to see how she was doing. You know, I'm thinking maybe Dr. Vee can do something for her. But I had to see her first. She seemed pretty distant, but that woman there--what was her name? Marie, Maria, whatever?--said she has lucid moments. So who knows? He might possibly help her. I think I can arrange to get her into his clinic. Bartlett gives me a few perks. It's the least I can do for her, so..." His voice trailed off expectantly.
"Grant, I need to talk to you about this man. I read the stuff you gave me and I still don't know the first thing about him." She paused, about to speak words she never thought she would. "If you want to come over, I'll stand you a drink."
"You serious?"
"For my sins."
"I'll grab a cab. See you in fifteen."
It's begun, she thought. I'm about to let Grant screw up my life one more time.
No. This round, don't give him the chance. Stay ahead of him.
_Sunday, April 5
10:39 P.M.
_
"I didn't know if I should have brought a bodyguard" he was saying as he strode in the door, a Master of the Universe with a leather jacket slung over his shoulder. He looked stylish, but then he always did. He casually tossed the jacket onto the gray couch, then gazed around.
Thankfully, he didn't try the New York cheek kiss. "I guess this is not supposed to seem like old times, but somehow it does. Seeing you again.
Hey, we're still blood kin, right?"
"Don't push it, Grant." She'd killed the Chopin and put on a Bach sonata. Clear, precise thinking was required not sentimentality.
Knickers had rushed to give Grant a h.e.l.lo nuzzle, happier to see him than Ally was. "Whatever this is, it is definitely not old times."
He sauntered into her kitchen, looking around--trying to act cool, but clearly ill at ease. "You've done a nice job on this place, sis." He was looking over the rustic counter she'd installed. "You get a deal on the s.p.a.ce? A bank repo or something?"
"The people who had it wanted to sell fast and I made them an offer."
Not that it was any of his d.a.m.ned business. Why didn't she treat the question with the scorn it deserved?
She had an old fifth of Dewar's in the cabinet. She poured him some, over ice, then gave herself a shot of tequila _anejo_, neat, to sip.
She loved the pure agave flavor. The more she thought about the situation, the more she was sure she needed it.
He picked up his scotch, then walked into the living room and helped himself to the couch. "Ally, I know why you're ticked. And I don't blame you. I feel crummy about Dad, I really do. I guess I share some of the blame."
He was trying to sound contrite but the reading did not quite rise to the minimal threshold of credibility.
"You 'share'... with whom, you self-centered p.r.i.c.k? n.o.body else was involved. He mortgaged Citis.p.a.ce to the hilt and settled those fraud suits to keep you from losing your license. Or worse. You destroyed his business and his life all by yourself."
He looked as contrite as she'd ever seen him.
"Look, I thought the business plan I had would work out. I really did.
I was managing discretionary accounts, but the bond market hit a downdraft when I was long. A few of my clients didn't have the b.a.l.l.s to ride it out. What do you want me to say? That I feel like a complete cretin over what happened? That a day doesn't go by that I don't hate myself for it?" His eyes went dead and he seemed to shrivel, his body becoming visibly smaller. "Well, I do. More than you'll ever know."
"You didn't seem all that contrite at the time."
"I was operating in a high state of denial back then. But now I want to take a shot at growing up. I want to start trying to make up for all that, if you'll just cut me a little slack and give me a chance."
"Grant, you're working for Bartlett Enterprises, doing whatever it is you do. Fine. That's your job. But now you want me to become a guinea pig when this Dutch doctor needs one in a crunch. Or maybe Mom too, for all I know. Maybe he needs her as well. Two guinea pigs. So don't try to make this about me and her. Let's keep it honest. It's really about you, just like always."
"Ally, a lot of things have gone on since Dad... pa.s.sed away. I've changed, in more ways than you could ever imagine." He was all sincerity now, his demeanor rapidly evolving to fit the current vibes of the scene. "I'm not like I used to be. I really mean that. I've learned ... learned that I can't always just be thinking about myself."
"So ... what changed you?" The truth was, he did seem different. In some way she couldn't quite understand. But he was always talking about turning over a new leaf, especially whenever he'd just gotten himself in trouble. That part hadn't changed at all.
"Ally, Dr. Van der Vliet... I don't know how much I should tell you, but he's a miracle worker." He paused and looked down at his scotch.
One thing about him was definitely different, she thought. There was a lot less bravado and swagger. "The thing is, what he's doing is so powerful. I'm not sure which worries me most--that it's not true, that it's just some placebo effect, or that it is true. When I think about the implications ..." His voice trailed off again.
"Go on." She could tell he was dead serious.
"It's not something I'm sure I should talk about." He reached over and touched her hand. "But it's working, I swear. He's doing things that shouldn't even be possible."
Uh-huh, she thought, pulling her hand away.
"Grant, please tell me exactly what you think he could do for Mom." She wasn't sure she should be having this conversation. "You want her to go out to the Dorian Inst.i.tute, right? Where he does his 'research.' And I take it that's where you want me to go too."
"It's in northern Jersey, about an hour's drive from the city, maybe not even if traffic's light. But I'd only want Mom to go if you say it's okay. I'm not trying to do anything behind your back."
She breathed a long sigh, trying to clear her brain. Every other word he uttered was probably part of some hustle. But what was it?
"Why don't we start at the beginning, Grant? I read his CV, and believe me I've got a lot of questions. For starters, how did he convince Winston Bartlett to bankroll him?" She took another sip of her tequila, then set it down. "You're his flunky now, so you should be able to answer that question."
"You read the materials I left?"
"Just finished them."
"Then you know he lost his federal funding at Stanford a few years back, when he was at a critical stage of his research using stem cells.