what I could,” I said.
“It helps to know that,” Susan said, “when you lose.”
We were quiet for a time, listening to the horses move pleasantly in their stalls.
“What do you think happened to those security guards?” Susan said.
“Nothing good,” I said.
“You think Rugar killed them?”
“Yep.”
“Because that’s what you would have done.”
“If I were Rugar,” I said.
“What’s interesting is, why you’re not.”
“Not Rugar?” I said.
“In many ways you’re like him,” Susan said. “But in crucial ways you’re not. It’s like Hawk. I’ve never quite figured it out.”
“Hawk’s different than Rugar,” I said.
“I know,” Susan said. “All three of you have rules.”
“We do.”
“But?” Susan said.
“That’s all Rugar’s got,” I said.
“Hawk has more?”
“Yes,” I said.
“And you?”
“I have you,” I said.
“I like to think that,” Susan said. “But I’m pretty sure you were different than they are before you met me.”
“Maybe I was,” I said. “But far less happy.”
We were quiet again. The horses were quiet. It was hard to be sure, but I thought it possible that the storm was quieting.
“My hair is plastered to my skull,” Susan said. “And I’m sure that all my face has washed away.”
“Lucky it’s dark,” I said.
12
At the opposite end of the barn was a window high up near the peak of the roof. I knew that because it had a little gray light showing though it. Susan was soddenly asleep on the floor beside me. I got up stiffly and walked to the barn door. The horses stirred and muttered. It might have been me walking around, or maybe horses just get hungry early. Outside, except for the uprooted trees and the scattered limbs and the saturated earth, it was as if the world had begun again. The air was clean and still, pungent with the salt smell of the ocean. Nothing moved. To the east the sky was bright with the impending sun. I moved along the edge of the barn with my gun in my hand. The cliff edge was ahead of me. To my left I could see the MP9 that had disappeared in the fight last night. Most of it was washed over with mud, and only the barrel showed. I left it. It would need to be cleaned to be dependable. On the other side of the barn, and at a little distance, I heard the sound of the helicopter starting up. I edged around the corner of the barn and looked toward where I thought it was. It was a lot closer than it had seemed in last night’s pitch-black chaos. The blades were turning. And as I watched, the chopper lifted off the ground, hovered for a moment, and then banked away north toward the mainland.
I watched it fly out of sight and then went back inside the barn. The horses were all looking at me.
“I’ll make sure somebody feeds you,” I said.
Susan had sat up, leaning her back against the wall.
“Who are you talking to?” she said.
“The horses,” I said. “They’re looking for breakfast.”
“And what did you tell them?”
“I said I’d get them fed.”
Susan looked at me for a moment, fully awake now.
“My God,” she said. “I hope you look worse than I do.”
“I always look worse than you do,” I said.
“You’re a mud ball,” she said.
I looked down at myself. All of myself that I could see was caked with mud and grass. I looked at her. Her hair had dried plastered to her skull. The only makeup she had left was her eye makeup, which made dark streaks and splotches on her face. I grinned at her.
“Don’t you ever change,” I said.
“What were you doing outside?”
“Watching the helicopter take off,” I said.
“They’re gone?”
“I would say so.”
“All of them?”
“I can’t imagine a reason to leave anyone here,” I said.
Except the guy at the bottom of the cliff.
I wondered if he was still there or, more likely, had washed out to sea.
“So presumably, they’ve got the girl,” Susan said.
“Presumably,” I said.
“What are we going to