Deadly Pursuit
of her hand across her face. “Give me a cigarette.”
    “I don’t smoke.”
    “One of my cigarettes.”
    “Get it yourself.”
    “God damn you, Jack.”
    He bent and kissed her roughly on the mouth. “Love you, too,” he breathed in her ear.
    She pushed him away, then scowled with a sudden thought. “What day is it?”
    “Thursday.”
    “Oh, hell. What did you wake me up for, you stupid shit? You know I’ve got Thursdays off.”
    “But you don’t want to waste the whole morning, do you?”
    “Like fuck I don’t.” She flung herself on her pillow and shut her eyes. “You asshole.”
    “Spoken like an angel.”
    “Get out of here.” Already her voice was a murmur. “Leave me alone.”
    “Your wish is my command, O beautiful one.”
    “Bite it,” she murmured, drifting away.
    He left the room, chuckling.
    Jack’s relationship with Sheila Tate, whom he’d met in a singles bar last March and had dated intermittently ever since, was perhaps not a model of romantic bliss. It was more like an exercise in undisguised mutual contempt. He despised her because she was, at heart, a whore, using sex to gain gifts and favors and money. She despised him because he knew what she was and continued seeing her. She interpreted this behavior as weakness. In that conclusion, however, she was mistaken.
    He persisted in the affair, such as it was, solely for convenience. Masturbation had never done much to relieve his hormonal urges. He needed flesh and hair to sink his fingers into, needed the smell of a woman’s sweat.
    And for him, Sheila was the ideal woman. She made no demands on him, expressed no curiosity about those weekends when he was out of town, performed whatever sex acts he requested, and expected nothing in return except presents of jewelry, electronic toys, and cash.
    Above all, she was safe, because she was not his type.
    Once, last May, Sheila had frightened him by remarking idly that she might try dyeing her hair blond. Jack had argued strenuously against it, the pitch of his voice rising as he insisted she would be crazy to become a blond, absolutely crazy.
    He must have been persuasive. Or perhaps she had simply lost interest in the notion. Either way, she hadn’t done it; but for weeks afterward he had been terrified that she would walk into his apartment one evening, the transformation accomplished.
    He was by no means certain he could control himself in those circumstances. And if he killed her ...
    Disaster. The police would be all over him like flies.
    Still, it hadn’t happened, and he no longer feared that it would.
    She wouldn’t look good as a blond, anyway.
    Whistling, Jack left the apartment. He pressed the call button, then stood waiting for the elevator, appraising himself in the polished metal doors.
    The slate blue Brooks Brothers suit had been a good choice, he decided. He always dressed conservatively, his attire selected purely for the benefit of his associates at work. He’d found that presenting a businesslike demeanor promoted professionalism and efficiency, admirable qualities even in his field.
    The elevator dropped him to the underground garage, where his red Nissan Z waited in its assigned space. The license plate read DEFY F8.
    Defy Fate. Jack liked the sentiment. To his way of thinking, Fate was just one more mark to be conned.
    He slipped behind the wheel and eased out of his space, thumbing the remote control to lift the automatic gate. Wilshire Boulevard swept him to the freeway on-ramp. He gunned the engine and hurtled onto the northbound 405.
    Traffic was surprisingly light. Slicing deftly from lane to lane, he fed a disc into the CD player and cranked up the volume. Springsteen poured out of the four coaxial speakers, howling “Thunder Road” in his raspy, street-worn voice.
    Jack rapped his knuckles on the steering wheel and sang along.
    Bruce was an old story to him. Jack had listened to his LPs as a high-school student in Montclair, New Jersey, twenty years

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