Chapter 24.1
"You do know you're a goddamn lunatic!" Mike said as he helped Henry down the ramp to the boat. "You trying to get yourself all dead, or what?"
"Yeah, right. But no, really, I just wanted to see how far down into the sewers my fellow human beings have sunk."
"Really? So you had to fucking...hit me?"
"Why'd you let 'em have at Anton like that, Mike? That wasn't part of the plan, you know?"
Mike tried to laugh it off, and almost pulled it off, too. "Hey, the best-laid plans, if you know what I mean. Anyway, I guess we got what we were after. Anton's got papers now. He's legal. That's what matters, right?"
"Did a doc check him out?" Henry asked, still pissed off.
"I don't think so, at least not after that airedale knocked him around. They did check us both for radiation exposure when we first got to Paris."
"And?"
"Pretty bad, but nothing lethal. You're probably shedding some in your pee, so we may need to flush the holding tanks at some point."
Henry shook his head as he watched Anton climb aboard -- slowly, almost painfully -- and another wave of anger came over him.
"Where was Clyde hanging out?" Mike asked.
"No idea. He just showed up at dinner one evening while I was with Tracy."
"Tracy?"
"The California Girl."
"You said she's a shrink?"
"Yup. Too bad for you, eh Mike?"
"Kinda dark out now, but she looks kind of cute."
"Wait'll you see her tomorrow then tell me what you think," Henry sighed. "And I'm pretty sure she could knock the snot out of me if she wanted, so tread carefully."
"No shit? Now that's interesting...a shrink with a mean streak."
"Not mean, Mike, just tough as nails. She left California more than a year ago. Went down through the canal then up to Florida, then up to Carolina before she crossed to the Azores. She ain't the passive wallflower type, if you get my drift."
"Shut up, you're making me horny."
"Go for it, Amigo; I can't wait to see the results. Navy still paying for your medical insurance?"
Mike laughed as he climbed aboard, then he helped Henry up onto deck before heading to the cockpit. Henry saw Tracy poking her head up Karma's companionway and motioned her to come over, and a minute later she joined the three of them in Time Bandit's cockpit.
"Anton? This is Tracy. I met her last night and she's heading to Paris too, so she'll be traveling with us all the way to the city."
"Pleased to meet you," the Russian said, extending a hand.
She smiled warmly and took his hand: "You're the fighter pilot Henry told me about?"
"Da, but that last week. This week I learn painting. Flowers maybe sound pretty good."
"Well, Paris is the right place for that," she said, laughing with him. "Henry, can you turn on some lights?"
Henry flipped a couple of switches and the cockpit was bathed in bright halogen light; Tracy leaned forward and looked at Anton's face. "Mind if I look at those bruises?" she asked gently.
"No, please, I not hurt."
"Mind if I check anyway?"
Anton shrugged and Tracy got to work. "What were you hit with?" she asked as she palpated the bone around his right eye.
"I think it was a Beretta," Mike sighed, looking at his sneakers right about then.
"Jesus H Christ," Henry muttered. "Well, don't that figure."
"Hey, got papers so all good, right?"
Henry shook his head conspiratorially and looked away. "Anton, why don't you hang with me tomorrow and Mike can help you through the locks, if that's okay with you, Tracy."
"Sure, I'd love the help."
Clyde growled, a long, low, guttural sound that raised the hackles on the back of Taggart's neck, and he followed the pups eyes until his own came to rest on a shadow about a hundred yards ahead, though still up on the upper quay.
"What is it?" Mike asked.
"One of yours, I reckon. Keeping tabs on us, I assume." Henry looked at Anton, then at Tracy. "Why don't we carry on down below?" he said quietly -- but Mike pointed at his ears -- then at the boat. His meaning was clear enough, too: the boat had been bugged again. "Tracy? Mike can show you where all the medical supplies are located. I'm going to take my nighttime meds now, then I'll put on some coffee. Anyone feel like an Irish coffee before turning in?"
Everyone did, it seemed.
"Oh yeah, before I forget," Tracy said, taking command of the moment. "The tide will be optimal at 0625, so up at 0545 latest."
Mike and Anton looked from Tracy to Henry and then back to Tracy, not quite sure what to think about all this. "That sounds about right," Henry replied. "We can still get about eight hours even with coffee."
"I put on water, Genry. Go take medicine."
"Good to have you back on board, Anton," Henry said, smiling. "Sorry about all the bullshit."
Anton shrugged then stepped into the galley and got to work; Tracy followed Henry to the aft cabin and sat on the bed while he got out his medications. "Henry, this boat is beyond fantastic. I hate to even think what she cost."
"Yeah, me too. That was a carbon fiber mast, by the way, and there's kevlar in the hull. My biggest concern is what all that fucking radiation did to the laminates, because hull insurance doesn't cover acts of war."
"Crap...I didn't think about that -- or I'd have never left the Azores."
"We were about 15 miles off the breakwater at Rotterdam when the bomb hit, so call it 25 miles from ground zero. I think it was a low yield tactical nuke so no alpha radiation at that range and the prevailing winds were westerly so fallout was minimal, but we probably took a pretty big hit of neutron radiation."
"I suppose you have iodine tabs?"
"I think so, yeah, but I'm not sure what dose we need, or..."
"And the net is still down."
"Right. No such things as books anymore, so you understand the dimensions of that problem."
"You ever think the internet is one giant rabbit hole?"
"Oh, not often. Maybe two or three times a day."
She laughed at that. "It has been a blessing -- and a curse."
"Odd choice of words, Tracy, all things considered."
She turned a little red at that. "You should have been a shrink, Hank."
Henry blinked hard and shook his head as images of Claire in the hospital filled his mind, and he heard her saying exactly the same thing -- and as Tracy's voice was almost identical to the one in memory he found himself choking back tears...
"What is it, Henry?"
"Just...you sound just like Claire, and it's all coming back to me now."
She stood and came to him, put her arms around him and held on tight, then she gently spun him around until he was facing her. "What about me? I'm not Claire, Henry..."
She leaned in and kissed him, an eyes closed, deep lingering kind of thing, and he felt a little weak in the knees when she ran her fingers along the nape of his neck -- if only because everything still felt like Claire. Exactly like Claire. And all the time this was going down, he knew he couldn't tell her anything like that, and yet the pain was becoming almost unbearable.
When she pulled away she looked into his eyes, only to shake her head and take a step back. "I shouldn't have done that, Henry," she whispered. "I'm so sorry."
He took her hands in his and pulled her back into his arms. "Don't be sorry, darlin', 'cause I wouldn't have missed that for the world."
She laughed a little, but the story was in her eyes: "Too weird for you?" she asked.
"Hey kid, even when I'm wrong I'm right."
"...and stops my mind from wandering, I think you're going to say next?" she added.
"You know it, kid."
"What are you thinking right now, Hank?"
He stood on the precipice and looked into the abyss, then took a step into the void: "Time. I wish I had more to give you."
"We have what we have, Hank, and that only makes each moment more precious."