Chapter 18

If there was more to Robert Jackal than met the eye, he did an awfully good job of hiding it, although truthfully I never tried to dig very deep. My favorite thing about him—besides that face—was that you never felt like you were missing anything. There was never any wondering what he was thinking.

When Lou brought up Ellen—the story abridged so that what had happened was between her and the ghost of Klein, but we’d all have to be careful about what we said to anyone dancing around the office—Jackal didn’t even flinch. He slurped his drink.

“So if the police come to the office—” Jackal started to say, but Lou cut him off.

When the police come, you tell them you never even met her,” she said. “Because you never did. Right?”

“I told you he didn’t,” I said. Lou kept her eyes fixed on Jackal. Waited for him to answer.

“Not once.”

“And”—here Lou hesitated, stared at me, tried to tell me something, but I wasn’t reading it—“we’re pausing our cases, everything we’ve been working on. We need to keep a low profile, until all of this blows over. We can’t afford any attention.”

Jackal frowned, and his eyes narrowed. He cocked his head and stared at Lou. “That comes from the Lady? She knows about this?”

“It’s from me,” Lou said, locking eyes with him. Something was happening between them, a power struggle that I couldn’t read or understand. “We don’t want the Lady knowing about any of this.”

Jackal nodded, his lips twisted ugly into a sneer. He turned to me, eyebrows raised. If he was looking for backing from me, he wouldn’t get it. The man looked the other way when his girlfriends took the long snooze. He finally said, grudgingly, “Fine by me.”

That was the last the three of us talked shop that night. Instead, Lou and Jackal launched into a conversation about a movie they’d both seen, a talky shoot-’em-up Jackal couldn’t convince me to sit through. Lou was loose with him, flirtatious and not meaning it, and Jackal, the man who never stepped offstage, wasn’t always searching for his cue. He fumbled with words. He had a goofy laugh, a snorty hyuk-hyuk, when he wasn’t trying to seduce someone. Watching them, I could see the dynamic that must have existed before me. They shared the happy-go-lucky manner of nonmurderers.

You’re drunk, Jo, I told myself, and then realized that it was mostly true but could be truer. I looked around for the bartender. Somehow, the bar had filled up and I hadn’t noticed. No bartender. When it wasn’t Lou calling, he couldn’t be bothered. I stood up to go look for him.

“Jo?”

Behind me, Lou’s voice had taken on a worried pitch. But she didn’t stand up and I didn’t turn around. If she and Jackal were enjoying themselves so much without me, I could find someone to enjoy myself with, too.

I walked to the bar, happy I wasn’t swaying, happy that to anyone who didn’t know me I looked sober enough. I wandered around, swerving through conversations, looking for the bartender to grab his attention.

I thought of something Ellen had said once, when we’d gone to grab a drink after one of her first meetings with Klein. She’d wanted to order something new, said she didn’t feel like herself. I’d worried that she was unraveling already, couldn’t handle the heat of the game, and I’d asked her about it—why didn’t she feel like herself? She smiled at me strangely, lips pressed together, not looking at all like the half-sure girl I’d always known her to be. “That’s how I wanted it to feel,” she said. “I’m so sick of always being myself.” She’d ordered a dirty martini with blue-cheese-stuffed olives, and she’d only taken one sip of it before she sat back, dismayed. “That’s disgusting,” she’d said.

I leaned over the bar top, plucking at the bottles racked neatly behind the counter. I jostled the couple next to me, tipping a woman in heels into her date.

“Hey, what the hell?” I couldn’t tell who said it. I didn’t care. Then there were two big hands around my waist, gently pulling me back. The smell of Jackal’s cologne in my face, even from behind. The man bathed in it.

“I wanted one more,” I said. “Blue cheese.”

“Time to go.” Jackal spun me around, marching me back to Lou, who was standing with her arms crossed over her chest.

Lou walked behind Jackal and me, quiet until he poured me into the passenger seat of his car, and then she said, “Keep an eye on her. This was too sloppy by half.”

She pushed the door closed in my face as Jackal moved to the driver’s side. I wanted to press a finger against the glass, tell her something I knew she needed to know, but she was staring down at me like she’d never seen me before, like she never wanted to see me again. I don’t think she looked at me like that even when I brought her to Ellen. And then we were driving away and I couldn’t see Lou at all anymore.

The swaying motion of the car lulled me into a calmness that was like sobriety except for the disjointedness of my thoughts. Jackal tried to talk to me once or twice. He’d even, voice gruff and unsure, asked if I wanted to talk about Ellen.

“Don’t you say her name to me,” I snapped at him, and then I cranked the seat back and closed my eyes and pretended to sleep the whole drive back to his place.

The car rocked as Jackal’s door slammed shut and I jerked awake, the ruse having turned real somewhere on the freeway. I could see him silhouetted, walking up to the gate of his apartment complex. He meant to leave me in the car to sleep it off. I stumbled out, the alarm cooing behind me, and followed him to his apartment.

Jackal hadn’t even bothered to turn a light on before he wandered into his bedroom, leaving the door ajar. I could hear him prop his window open, start up the box fan, then lean out to click off the car alarm. He came back into the living room, went to the fridge, and stared inside for a moment. He closed it without grabbing anything. Went to the bathroom, started to brush his teeth in the dark. Like I wasn’t even there.

“Are you going to make me sleep on the couch?”

Jackal leaned into the sink and spat. “I don’t care where you sleep.” Coming out of the bathroom, he stared at my face, and when he asked, “Are you crying?” it was a surprise to me that he was right.

“No,” I said, and unbuttoned my pants, reaching for him. “No, no, no.”