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Into The Inferno Part 18

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I had some more questions for Drago, but I could hear the tremor in his voice. Charlie was coming close to losing his mind right there on the phone. I decided to change the subject and asked about the companies involved.

After much shuffling of papers and confusion on his end of the line, Drago told me he couldn't locate the list of companies with products in the fire room at Southeast Travelers. Instead he told me all the company names he could remember off the top of his head and everything he knew about them. I wanted to compare the list from Holly's truck with Drago's list. It seemed to me that if we found products on both lists, we should concentrate on them.

"How about a company called Jane's California Propulsion? Did they have anything at Southeast?"

"Jane's? Maybe. I dunno. It's a pretty long list. I can't remember all the companies. Listen, I'll get back to you when I find my complete list. And you get in touch anytime, day or night," Drago said. "I mean that. You want something, it's yours. I'll fly out there and sit with you, man. I mean that. I'm there for you. Anything."

"Thanks, Charlie."



When I hung up, Stephanie looked at me and said, "Did they?"

"Did they what?"

"Recover?"

"No."

We were still waiting for the meal when Mary Kay LeMonde approached our table with a look on her face that was half curiosity and half challenge. Through part of the winter and early spring, Mary and I had kept company, our time together overlapping Holly's entrance and exit in my life, as well as the second Suzanne's, the Suzanne whose existence had spurred my breakup with Holly. You can see how complicated things were.

I liked women, liked to be friends with them, liked to be lovers with them, and I especially liked to be friends with them after after I had been lovers with them. I can't tell you why it meant so much to me, because I didn't know many other single men who were friendly with any of their exes, much less I had been lovers with them. I can't tell you why it meant so much to me, because I didn't know many other single men who were friendly with any of their exes, much less all all of their exes. To me, it had always been pivotal that my lovers liked me after the heat of pa.s.sion waned, which was ironic because Lorie barely spoke to me and certainly had not been back to visit since the night she left three years ago. of their exes. To me, it had always been pivotal that my lovers liked me after the heat of pa.s.sion waned, which was ironic because Lorie barely spoke to me and certainly had not been back to visit since the night she left three years ago.

Joel McCain claimed it was almost as if I were forming a club of ladies I'd f.u.c.ked.

f.u.c.ked. That was the word Joel had used. Could any term be more degrading, more gauche, more unpolished, or, in this case, more apt? Until the past few days, I'd never used the word. Not even back in the army. Oddly, Joel, with religion oozing out his ears, had used it all the time. That was the word Joel had used. Could any term be more degrading, more gauche, more unpolished, or, in this case, more apt? Until the past few days, I'd never used the word. Not even back in the army. Oddly, Joel, with religion oozing out his ears, had used it all the time.

"h.e.l.lo, Jimmy."

"Mary Kay. How nice to see you."

As with the others, after we stopped sleeping together Mary Kay and I remained on speaking terms-the last phone call about two weeks ago.

Grasping the table for support, I stood up, realizing as I looked into her dark-brown eyes that even though we still spoke on the telephone from time to time, I had been doing my level best to avoid her. Two weeks ago at the QFC I'd raced out of the store after spotting her. Childish, yes. Vintage Swope? You bet.

Mary Kay was unquestionably the best-looking woman on the staff at Mount Si High School and had often gone on about how handsome I was and what a nice couple we made and so forth. We had been a matched pair, neither of us ever appearing in public with unflossed teeth, a hair out of place, or lint on our clothes, two mirror addicts temporarily in love with the thought of coupledom. For years I'd been as shallow as a puddle of melted ice cream, and now all I could think about was how shallow Mary Kay had been, still was, and how glad I was to be shed of her.

Mary Kay was too busy with her machine-gun chatter to notice the way I gripped the table for support. Talk, talk, talk. Mary Kay had even nattered while we made love, a proclivity that had kept me from completing the business at hand on at least one occasion. She'd gabbed our breakup to death in much the same way Holly had, a.n.a.lyzing the smallest details until I wanted to bay at the moon.

I introduced the women, telling Mary Kay that Stephanie was a doctor, that we were working on a fire department project together. Don't ask me why I cared what she thought. Mary Kay and I would never see each other again. Before she left, Mary Kay ascertained that Stephanie was from out of state and would be leaving soon, all of this done in one polite exchange after another.

I couldn't help thinking how much of my life had been frittered away on women I knew were only pa.s.sing through. It seemed such a colossal waste of time. But then, I'd always been misguided about what it took to be a man. It was no accident I ran away from home and moved directly into an army barracks, no accident, either, that within two years of my exit from the service I'd become a firefighter. One macho trade after another. And of course, Lorie had been gorgeous. Demented, but gorgeous.

My years of standing around on street corners handing out Bible tracts alongside timid females and gawky men had polluted my entire adult life. I was still trying to be a man's man. Anything but the sissy on a street corner.

After our waiter left, Stephanie said, "That must have been a tangled web."

"What?"

"You and Mary Kay."

"Not really."

"So why did you feel you had to make sure she knew you and I weren't romantically involved."

"I didn't say that."

"You did everything but pull out a grease pen and print strictly business strictly business across my forehead. You ashamed to be seen with me?" across my forehead. You ashamed to be seen with me?"

"Absolutely not."

"You practically apologized to her for being with me."

"She's a little touchy, is all."

"Because of the way you broke up?"

"I suppose."

"It is is over, isn't it?" over, isn't it?"

"It is, but she was having a hard time believing it."

"You didn't make it plain?"

"It's more complicated than that."

"How could it be any simpler? You don't want to see her anymore. You move on. She moves on."

"It's hard to explain."

"Selfishness always is. Were you seeing her before Holly or after?"

I picked up a piece of bread and broke it. "Before."

"You took a long time to answer. It was during, wasn't it?"

"I'm tired."

"You dumped dumped her her."

"We decided to make some s.p.a.ce."

"You decided to make some s.p.a.ce." decided to make some s.p.a.ce."

"She wasn't fighting it. She-"

"You're not the kind to tell somebody it's over, are you? No. You're too pa.s.sive-aggressive for that. You like women hanging around. Clinging. Making you feel wanted. Important."

"You drove up here today to attack me?"

"I'm not attacking you."

"Funny. It feels like you are."

I'd harbored some slim hope that Stephanie Riggs would remain my ally throughout this ordeal, that she would be there to the end, but it was a pathetic hope. Too bad there was no one else to hold my hand when I turned into a vegetable, not unless I wanted to resurrect my relations.h.i.+p with one of the Suzannes or Mary Kay or one of the others.

"She's still carrying the torch and you love it."

"Basically, we're just friends."

"If there's one thing you're not not, it's friends. So what woman hurt you so badly you can't trust any any woman? That you want to torture them all like this?" woman? That you want to torture them all like this?"

"What's trust got to do with it? Is that what Holly wrote in her diary? That I'd been betrayed?"

"I'm guessing it was your mother."

The meal had been in front of us for some time. I sprinkled grated cheese on my tortellini and picked up my fork. "I'll be dead by the end of the week. What does it matter?"

"Dead?"

"As good as."

"You won't be dead."

"You think I'm a sonofab.i.t.c.h, don't you?"

"I think you're just like anyone else, a complex human being who doesn't quite understand all of his motivations. There's nothing wrong with that. Most of us don't understand what makes us tick. Look. I really am sorry I opened my big mouth."

"No. You're right. I've known a lot of women, and I'm not sure I treated any of them the way I'd want my daughters treated. I've never been good with relations.h.i.+ps. Every woman I've dated in the last couple of years . . . I start off thinking this is the one, and by the time I have her convinced of it, I've lost interest." I broke off a hunk of bread and dipped it in olive oil.

"Did you cheat on your wife?"

"Why are you asking that?"

"You cheated on Holly and this other person, Mary Kay."

"I didn't say I cheated on Mary Kay."

"But you did, didn't you?"

"We were friends. It wasn't-"

"Did you cheat on your wife? Indulge me. I'm trying to get to know you. We don't have that long, and I want to know you."

"You know plenty."

"I don't, though. Not enough."

I didn't know what kind of game she was playing, but as uncomfortable as it made me, it also pleased me in a manner that was hard to describe. I'd never been with a woman as brutally honest as her. Nor one who could put a knife in my heart as quickly.

"Did you?"

"What?"

"Cheat on your wife?"

"Never even crossed my mind. Well, toward the end it crossed my mind. But it never happened. And it never would have. Marriage vows are sacred."

"Your baby-sitter was staring daggers at me."

I broke off another hunk of bread. "Was she?"

"She's got the hots for you."

"I suppose you think I engineered that, too?"

"I don't know how it happened, but it's easy enough to see what it does for your ego."

Oh, brother.

31. JANE'S CALIFORNIA PROPULSION, INC.

Digging into my lunch while she perused the list of company names I'd scribbled on the paper place mat, I thought about the script that had already been played out in Chattanooga. Had the problem there been addressed properly, firefighters in North Bend wouldn't be dropping like empty sh.e.l.l casings under a drunken hunter.

Stephanie said, "Canyon View Systems. Is that what this says?"

"Yeah. Now that you mention it, Canyon View was on the manifest I got for Holly's truck, too. But they were only s.h.i.+pping books, as I recall. And according to Charlie Drago, they were the only ones who helped out in Tennessee. Everyone else stonewalled or fought them tooth and nail. Canyon View sent two specialists down to answer questions and a.s.sist with the investigation."

"My Aunt DiMaggio? You saw her the other night at the hospital. Her husband founded Canyon View Systems. She runs it."

"That would make sense. Your aunt said Holly s.h.i.+pped stuff for them from time to time."

"It also makes sense that they sent people down to help when n.o.body else would. Aunt Marge has always had a fairly well developed social conscience. She did a lot to help Holly get on her feet when she first arrived here in Was.h.i.+ngton."

"Was she running the company three years ago?"

"Phil was still alive then, so he was."

It was at about that point that I got a brainstorm and asked to borrow Stephanie's cell phone. Mine had blown up with the engine back at Caputo's trailer. On the first call I reached Mr. Stuart from Jane's California Propulsion, the same man who'd told me they didn't s.h.i.+p in February. I told him who I was and he said, "Lieutenant Swope? I guess you spoke to my colleague Ben Gray? It turns out we were were s.h.i.+pping last February. I'm sorry about that. We very rarely send anything out during that time of year, and I could have sworn we didn't last February. My mistake. Now what can I do for you?" s.h.i.+pping last February. I'm sorry about that. We very rarely send anything out during that time of year, and I could have sworn we didn't last February. My mistake. Now what can I do for you?"

"I wanted to know what you were s.h.i.+pping and if there might be any adverse health effects attached to it."

"We have a lot of materials we send by truck. Unfortunately, they're all cla.s.sified. I'm not really at liberty to talk about them. You say somebody's been sick?"

"Quite a few somebodies."

"I'm sorry to hear that. Do the symptoms include dizziness?"

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Into The Inferno Part 18 summary

You're reading Into The Inferno. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): Earl Emerson. Already has 535 views.

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