Authors: Unknown
finger, counting off his reasons. “The cartel came by boat,
which means they left Miami before we did. He didn’t see
us and then call them. They knew to be here because he told
them to be here.” He flipped up another finger. “He knew my
past here. You think it was coincidence I hit Gaudet’s radar as
soon as I landed? He effectively boxed us in, forced us to act.”
“I don’t know, Ty,” Nick finally said. “I don’t trust the
bastard either, but . . . I’m just not comfortable thinking he’s
that many steps ahead.”
Ty shrugged. “Neither am I.”
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“If that is what happened, why would he try to kill you?”
Owen asked. “Do you really think he just mixed those bullets
up?”Ty stared at the voodoo dol , long enough the silence
became uncomfortable. “He’s a scorpion and I’m a turtle,” Ty
finally answered.
“Are you hal ucinating again?” Zane asked.
Nick cleared his throat. “It’s a fable. The scorpion asks the
turtle to take him across the river. The turtle says no because
he’s afraid the scorpion will sting him. Scorpion tells Turtle
he won’t sting him because they’ll both drown. But halfway
across the river, the scorpion strikes. As they’re sinking, Turtle
asks him why, and Scorpion replies, ‘It’s just my nature.’”
Zane’s worried eyes moved to Ty, who was studying the
voodoo doll again. “That’s not good enough.”
“Maybe he knows Ty’s the only one who can catch him,”
Kelly rasped.
Ty stood carefully without another word, then took a step
toward Kelly. Kelly lifted a hand and Ty took it, squeezing it
gently. “I’ll be back, okay?”
“I’m not going anywhere.”
Ty petted him on the head, then turned to shuffle out of
the room.
The rest of them began to stand, giving Kelly their own
goodbyes before they all filed out.
Nick stood at the doorway, watching the others walk
away.Digger put his arm over Owen’s shoulders. “Care for a few
cocktails?”
“It’s barely noon, man.”
“So? This is Nawlins!”
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They laughed as they headed for the elevator. Ty and Zane
followed, walking side by side but not saying anything. Nick
shook his head as he watched them go.
“They gonna be okay?” Kelly asked from the bed.
Nick pondered them. “Oh, you know Ty,” he finally said,
injecting some cheer into his voice. “He can squirm out of
anything.”
Ty was silent as Zane hailed a cab for them. Digger and
Owen had cavorted off into the French Quarter as if nothing
had happened that morning, but Zane was finding it a bit
more difficult to brush off.
He and Ty climbed into the cab, directing it to the
Bourbon Orleans, where they still had a room under Nick’s
name. What remained of their belongings had been taken
there earlier.
Zane glanced sideways at Ty. His neck was stained with
remnants of Digger’s fake blood and his real blood, and his
face was ashen, but Zane had seen him look worse. “I can’t
believe we both came out of this without anything other than
scratches,” Zane tried.
Ty bobbed his head distractedly.
“Do you still have the gris-gris bag?”
That caused Ty to raise his head. He licked his lips. “Yeah.
Gotta figure out how to cleanse it.”
“How?”
“There used to be a priestess on Rampart. Probably still
there.”
Zane studied him, wishing the distance between them
hadn’t grown so full of thorns. He worked hard to swallow
past the tightness in his throat.
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The taxi came to a stop and Zane paid the driver as Ty
trudged to the hotel entrance. Zane jogged to catch up with
him. “Hey,” he called, frustration growing as he followed Ty
through the lobby. “Are we going to talk about . . . anything?”
Ty punched the button on the elevator. He nodded, not
meeting Zane’s eyes. The doors opened and Ty stepped in,
turning to face Zane. “Do you love me, Zane?”
The simple question, asked with so little emotion in Ty’s
eyes, hit Zane like a hammer in the chest, stealing his breath,
making his knees go weak. He stumbled into the elevator
before the doors could close on them.
“Yes. Yes I do.”
Ty nodded. “And I love you.”
Zane released the breath he’d been holding. He was
relieved to hear that confirmation after all that had happened,
after all they’d said and done to each other. “So . . . what do
we do?”
“Well.” Ty swallowed, looking a little sick. “I can’t . . . I
can’t sit on your pedestal.”
“Ty.”
“No. I’m not saying it’s a bad thing, Zane. I’m not. We’ve
both known from the start the only reason you got clean was
because I begged you to. You hang on by your fingernails
because I expect you to. It’s not fair to you. It’s not fair to me.
I can’t be the reason you’re sober, Zane.”
Zane’s breath came out harsh and shaky.
“Because I’m not perfect, and the next time I let you
down, it can’t be me you’re leaning on. You have to be strong
enough to stay off the bottle. For you. Not me.”
Zane couldn’t meet Ty’s eyes anymore and he averted his
gaze to the floor. “I’m not proud of what I’ve done, Ty.”
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“Neither am I,” Ty whispered. He reached out and put
two fingers under Zane’s chin, lifting his head to meet his
eyes. “I’m sorry I let you down.”
Zane moved closer, his eyes rapt on Ty’s. Ty’s hand
moved from his chin to cup his cheek, and Zane leaned to
kiss him carefully. The kiss demanded nothing. It was merely
a sentiment of love and devotion from one man to another.
Zane’s heart pounded with the acceptance. When he
stepped back, they were still looking into each other’s eyes.
The elevator stopped and jolted them both. Zane took a deep,
bracing breath. “Where does that leave us?”
Ty shook his head. “I love you. You love me. We know
what we have can be strong. Stronger.”
Zane lowered his head before he could see the pain that
was about to pass over Ty’s face. The elevator door opened
and closed behind him. “But . . . the pieces have to be strong
for the whole to be. Right?”
“Yes,” Ty whispered. “And I’m not right now. I . . . I don’t
even know what I am anymore. I haven’t for a long time.”
“You’re a good man,” Zane said, vehement as he jerked his
head up. “You’re a brave man. And you’re a man who loves
with his whole heart and soul. That’s who you are.”
Ty pressed his lips together tightly. His eyes were
glistening, and as Zane watched, a tear broke free and trailed
down his face. Ty ducked his head and wiped it away with the
heel of his hand. “That’s who you think I am.”
Zane swallowed hard.
“I’m an assassin,” Ty said, his voice unsteady. “I’m a killer.
I’m the tip of a spear.”
The hair on Zane’s arms rose. His stomach tumbled.
Another tear followed the trail of the first down Ty’s dirty
face, but Ty didn’t seem to notice.
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“And you,” Ty continued, his voice breaking. “You’re a
phoenix, Zane. Rising from the ashes. And all I do is make
you burn.”
Zane’s throat was too tight to swallow past, and his next
breath came out a choked sob. He had never imagined that
was how Ty saw him, and hearing it now made him want to
take back every harsh word they’d ever shared, every thrust
and parry of their relationship. He reached for Ty’s face,
fingers trembling.
Ty hugged him, clinging to him, his breaths harsh in Zane’s
ear. “I’m going to stay here,” Ty said shakily. Zane gasped, but
Ty didn’t let him pull away. He held to him tighter. “Until the
suspension’s over. I’m going to stay here with Kelly. I’ll give
you that time and space you said you need.”
“Ty,” Zane whispered.
Ty wrenched away and dug in his pocket for something,
then shoved it into Zane’s hand and hugged him again like he
was afraid Zane might try to get away. When Zane looked at
the object over Ty’s shoulder, his chest fluttered at the sight
of the silver anchor token Ty had made him. I believe in you,
it read.
Zane wanted to argue, to beg Ty not to make him leave
him here. But Ty was right. He had realized it himself,
remembering the way he’d watched Becky, thinking her joy
was shared. The way he observed Ty’s vibrant lust for life and
fooled himself into thinking he was living just by basking in
that glow.
But he had no friends. He had no joys. He had nothing
that wasn’t about Ty or the job.
He had to learn to live. If he was a phoenix, he had to
learn to fly on his own, or he’d keep smoldering in his own
ashes.
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He nodded against Ty’s cheek. “Okay,” he whispered.
“Okay.”
323
ane sat at his desk, finishing up paperwork from a
Z
racketeering case they had been building for the last four
weeks. He’d been working without a partner, taking on more
responsibilities as a team leader. Two weeks ago, the Assistant
Special Agent in Charge had been promoted and transferred
to a different post, and Zane had unofficially moved into the
position, taking even more responsibility until it was filled.
It was a promotion in every sense of the word, and Dan
McCoy had let Zane know the ASAIC was his if he decided
to take it. It would mean no more field work.
No more partner.
Zane hadn’t been able to say yes, but he hadn’t refused
it either. Candidates were being vetted and interviewed, and
Zane had time to decide.
Until then, he concentrated on slowly but surely righting
his ship. He’d begun his AA meetings again, keeping the
anchor token with him at all times. He’d stopped going to the
gym quite as often, trying to fill his free time with other, more
varied things. He set up an easel and a massive drop cloth on
the top floor of the row house and began painting again. He
started talking out loud when the room was empty, like Ty
sometimes did, and he found it made his thoughts clearer to
send them into the air rather than keep them trapped in his
mind to weigh him down. He reread the books he’d clung to
all these years, reminding himself why he loved them the first
time around. Then he went out and hunted down new ones.
324
With Ty’s permission, he went through every nook
and cranny in the row house. He looked through all of Ty’s
books, finding half a dozen with cutouts and things hidden in
them: passports, lockbox keys, money from several different
countries, a flash drive, the emblem from the grill of the
Bronco, and one of Elias Sanchez’s dog tags. He put it all back.
He finally looked under the kitchen sink, hunting through
everything to find what it was Ty had hidden under there. He’d
caught Ty once, when he’d lost his sight, rummaging through
here. What he finally found made him grin from ear to ear: a
box of Cuban cigars inside a fireproof, portable safe. He took
one out and put the rest back where he’d found them.
The most shocking thing he found, though, was
something he’d always known was there. In an armoire in the
spare bedroom, Ty kept dozens of little boxes. Decorative
boxes, old cigar boxes, leather jewelry cases. Zane had never
asked about them, never looked in them. He’d always been
just a little afraid to see what Ty kept in those boxes.
Ty managed to surprise him yet again. Inside he found
trinkets Ty had collected over the years. Things he’d picked
up and taken home for no apparent reason. Things from cases
he’d worked. Things from people he’d known. In one box,
Zane found a bottle cap from a Shiner beer, the kind he’d had
in Texas. A poker chip. A purple crayon. A piece of the fake
skin they’d used to cover his tattoo on the cruise ship. A dried
flower.
Zane discovered that Ty was basically a squirrel.
After the initial shock of being alone, he started branching
out further, trying to find out more about himself instead of
Ty. He went to a few Orioles games alone, immersing himself
in the intricacies and inches that had so fascinated him as a
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child. He started putting his knife skills and love of puzzles to
good use and taught himself to cook.
He stood outside of a bar in Fell’s Point with dozens of
others and watched the news as it was announced that Osama
bin Laden had been killed. For the first time in over a week,
Ty called him. They watched the same newscast, sharing it
together, neither saying more than ten words.
He escorted Clancy to her sister’s wedding, pretending
to be her very charming and wealthy boyfriend for her overly
nosy mother in exchange for the honor of a few tangos.
Clancy wasn’t a half bad dancer.
He helped Alston move out of his girlfriend’s condo,
all the while dodging Alston’s possessions being chucked at