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"You do smell better," Gia murmured as Jack spooned against her in the bed.
"Rough night."
"Do I want to know?"
"No way."
"Then don't tell me."
He snuggled closer, pressing the fronts of his thighs against the backs of hers.
"Let's just sleep, Jack. I'm really tired."
She was tired? All he wanted was to be close enough to feel clean again. Or at least cleaner. With what he knew floated in his DNA, he'd never feel completely clean.
She hadn't a clue as to what had happened downtown a little while ago. That would change in the morning.
"I'm more tired than you. I could sleep for a week."
"Oh, yeah? I could sleep for a month."
"Really? I could sleep for a year"—he tried to think of the loudest thrash-metal band he knew—"at a Polio concert."
She laughed. "Okay. You win. You're more tired." She pushed her butt back against him. "See you in the morning."
"Love ya."
"Love ya too."
"Like a zombie, you look," Abe said as Jack approached the rear counter.
Which meant he looked lots better than he felt.
Jack leaned the katana, wrapped now in one of Gia's paint-stained drop cloths, against the base of the counter and slumped onto a stool.
"Coffeeeeeee… coffeeeeeeee."
God, he needed sleep. Usually he could go days on a few hours, but he couldn't seem to shake the effects of the Kuroikaze. And every time he'd dozed off, images from the abattoir the Kakureta Kao temple had become would flash through his head, waking him.
As Abe turned to fill a cup from his bottomless coffee pot, Jack glanced at the screaming headlines on the front pages of the morning papers. The Daily News:
And the Post:
Abe handed Jack a steaming cup. He took it and sipped. He'd already had four cups but they hadn't helped.
"You've read?" Abe said, pointing to the Post.
Jack shook his head.
He held it up. "You want?"
Another shake.
He snorted. "You want I should read it to you?"
"No, thanks."
Abe's eyebrows rose, ridging his forehead and part of the infinity pool of his bare scalp.
"I don't get it. You love stories like this. All the details, you want. You…" His voice trailed off as he looked down at the headline, then back at Jack. "They say almost fifty bodies were found by press time and probably more to come. That dwarfs even the number found in the Red Hook warehouse." His expression slackened. "Oy! You again?"
Jack shrugged. "Mostly as a nonparticipant."
Unlike Red Hook.
"Mostly?"
Jack shrugged. "Would've been completely non if someone had given me a choice at the end."
Abe looked worried. "What set you off? Please tell me Gia and Vicky are—"
Jack raised a hand to stop him. He didn't want to go there—didn't want even to consider the slightest possibility of anything happening to Gia and Vicky again.
"They're fine. I told you: nonparticipant. I was simply the party planner. Not my fault if the crowd got rowdy."
Abe turned his hands palm up and waggled his pudgy, stubby fingers. "Give-give."
Jack didn't feel like talking about it, so he pointed to the giant soft pretzel on the counter. From the amount of crumbs—Abe's parakeet Parabellum was swiftly diminishing their number—he figured Abe had started out with more than one.
"Pretzels for breakfast?"
"Breakfast was hours ago. This is lunch."
"Oh. Right."
He tore off a loop and bit into it. The salt tasted good. He was hungrier than he'd thought.
"Last night?"
"Okay, okay."
Jack gave him a moderately detailed account of what went down up to the point where he regained the katana.
"All this for a rotten old sword?" Abe said.
"And a pregnant teenager. Everybody wants her baby. Damned if I know why."