Chapter Forty
We helped Doris catch the puppies, which were doing laps around the pool.
Jamie laughed as he held a squirming puppy.
It struggled not to get down, but to lick his face.
He’d been afraid of dogs, of most animals, for years, and now he acted like an armful of puppy was the best thing in the world.
It made my heart ache to see him so happy about anything, but especially one of the many things he’d seemed terrified of for over ten years.
I would not cry in front of him while he was laughing, but I wanted to; luckily the puppy in my hands gave a serious squirm and I had to concentrate not to drop it.
The thought that I might drop the tiny dog instead of saving it was enough to dry up any thoughts of tears.
“You really need to get them life jackets, Doris,” I said as I handed the puppy to her.
“I got them, they have little handles on them and everything. They’re supposed to be napping, not out by the pool, and thank you for getting Charlie out of the pool when he fell in last week.”
“I’m happy to help, and thank you for letting Connery play with them.”
“Pugs love kids, and he helped tire these little maniacs out,” she said, laughing as Donald tried to lick her face.
Jamie offered her the other puppy, and she tucked one under each arm. “Thank you both for catching the little hooligans.”
“Our pleasure,” Jamie said, and seemed to mean it.
One puppy started barking. “Charlie, stop that.” He didn’t stop and now it was a duo of puppy barks. “Don’t you start, Donald.”
“I’m going to take Jam . . . Levi upstairs for some food. We’ll see you later.”
“Have him make you some of that veggie pasta with the white sauce, it’s delicious,” she said as she turned with the wriggling puppies.
“I don’t have the ingredients for that right now, Doris, maybe next time he visits.”
“Invite me next time you make it,” she called back as she used her foot to close the door, and the sound of excited barking grew a little dimmer.
“That was great,” Jamie said.
I almost said, But you’re scared of dogs , but I didn’t, because his face was shining with joy, almost like the way Connery’s did after he’d played with the dogs.
It was like Jamie was reborn, childlike and happy, like the last thirteen years had been washed away.
I said another quick prayer of gratitude and led him toward the only stairs leading up.
My apartment was at the top of the stairs; just turn slightly to the right.
It was the smallest apartment in the building, tucked away on the top floor, but there was a picture window that went from almost ceiling to floor so the living room got a lot of light, and a second smaller window on the other side of the door made the two-seater kitchen table cheerful.
The sunlight hit the pool below and bounced even more light up to us, so that it was almost never dark or gloomy.
As a cop, I wasn’t happy with the big window right by the front door, but as a person who’d just been kicked out of his home, I’d needed the light.
The other apartments I could afford had been like dark holes.
Neither my depression or my son would have done well there.
Connery liked sitting at the table eating breakfast and watching the water shadows bounce along the roof overhang just outside the kitchen window.
There were days when his happiness was everything to me.
“You always could do that,” Jamie said.
I turned from the table and realized that I’d totally lost track of things for a second. Jamie seemed okay, better than okay, but bringing a potentially unstable person into my apartment and then zoning out was not a good idea.
“Do what?” I asked, and tried not to frown or act upset. Jamie could be sensitive to moods.
“Smile and have it look happy and sad at the same time.”
“So, I’ve always been a gloomy overthinker, even at seven?” I asked with a smile.
He grinned. “Maybe not gloomy, but you’ve always been serious and an overthinker.”
“Hey, I kept us out of trouble more than once, because I thought things through.” I took off my suit jacket and put it on the back of the kitchen chair.
“I didn’t think you followed sports, Havoc.”
“What do you mean?” I asked.
He motioned at the shirt.
I looked down and realized I was wearing a Broncos shirt I’d borrowed from Charleston after my last clean shirt had been cut off me.
“I forgot I borrowed a shirt from my lieutenant.”
“Why’d you need the shirt?”
“It’s long story and I’d rather hear your story while I fix us dinner.”
“What are we having?”
“Paninis.”
“What kind of hot sandwiches?” he asked.
“Roast beef, three kinds of cheese, and a choice of dill or sweet bread-and-butter pickles. I’ve got mayonnaise, dijonnaise, and stone-ground mustard.”
“What’s dijonnaise?” he asked.
“A mix of mayonnaise and mustard in one bottle.”
He made a face. “No, I don’t want that.”
“Hey, my kid loves the stuff.”
“What toddler doesn’t like mayonnaise and ketchup?”
“He’s three, so don’t call him a toddler to his face. He’s a big boy now.”
Jamie smiled. “I still can’t believe you have a child, that any of us have a child.”
I knew he meant Surrie, him, and me. “Yeah, Suriel was surprised, too.”
“You’ve seen Surrie? Where? When?”
I mentally cursed myself for just blurting it out. “Tell me how you got better, and I’ll tell you how I ran into Surrie.”
His face crumpled and I watched an echo of the crazy Jamie in his eyes. “Suriel came to give us her expertise on a demon-related case today, that’s all.” It wasn’t all, but I wanted to chase away that shadow in his eyes. I’d fill in the blanks after I got him talking about something else.
“So she stayed an Infernalist,” he said, face serious and sad, and his eyes still not good.
“Yes.”
“How was she?”
“She’s third in line of all the Infernalists.”
“I knew she’d do well at whatever she chose.” It was almost an echo of what I’d thought, but he didn’t look happy about it. He looked sad, worse.
I thought about telling him that I’d see Harshiel and Turmiel, too, but he’d never been friends with them, and his eyes still didn’t look right.
I wanted him well more than I wanted to talk about anyone at the College.
I got the cheese out of the fridge, slicing some samples off the three kinds of cheese I had.
I handed him a taste of muenster. He took it without thinking about it and ate it the same way.
The moment he tasted it his eyes cleared.
I’d noticed over the years that sometimes food could bring him back out of whatever trap his mind had become.
It never brought him back completely; Gordon Ramsay couldn’t have fixed a meal that would have cured him, but food helped, especially if he hadn’t been eating enough.
“That’s good, muenster, right.”
“Yeah,” I said and handed him a piece of the Old Croc cheddar, though it wouldn’t melt well enough for a panini.
“Okay, that’s amazing, what is it?”
“Old Croc cheddar, it doesn’t melt well, but I can cut some with crackers for us to snack on while I cook the sandwiches.”
“Yes, please,” he said, and he looked happy again. His eyes were clearing of that shadow. He was better, so much better, but the broken bits were still inside him. I guess we never really get rid of the broken pieces; we heal, but the scar tissue stays to remind us of what happened.
I put the cheese and crackers on a small plate. They were supposed to be salad plates, but I’d never seen anyone serve salads on them; desserts yes, salads no. Reggie had explained to me that the tiniest plates in our wedding china were supposed to be the dessert plates.
“You look sad, what’s wrong?” he asked.
“Did you know this is supposed to be a salad plate?” I said.
He looked down at the cheese and crackers, which were half gone. I almost told him that he was going to ruin his dinner as if he were Connery. Instead I reached for a cracker and a chunk of cheese, before he finished them all. If we shared, then neither of us would ruin our dinners.
“I thought it was for desserts.”
“Me, too, but according to my wife they’re salad plates and the really tiny plates are the dessert plates.”
“You thought about Regina, that’s why you looked sad,” Jamie said.
His dark eyes studied my face as if they could see inside my head to every thought, which had been true once, before he lost the gift along with his mind.
He’d tested so high on the Methodius scale that teachers had compared him to Bachiel, who stayed in his high tower and listened to thoughts of the human world.
It was a rare gift to be able to see angels and read human thoughts.
“Did you hear me thinking?” I asked.
“No, I am thankfully alone inside my head. It is so quiet, so peaceful inside me right now. Blessedly so.” He closed his eyes and let out a deep sigh of contentment.
“I’m glad,” I said, and meant it, but I had so many more questions that I wanted answered; I was just afraid that too many questions would undo the peace inside him.
“Is that supposed to be smoking?” he asked, pointing back at the stove.
“Crap!” I grabbed the pan off the heat and flipped the sandwich over. The bread wasn’t black, but it wasn’t the light golden brown I’d been aiming at either.
“I guess this one is mine,” I said.
“Why?” he asked.
“Because I’m the cook and I burned it.”
“I’m not sure I follow your reasoning, but okay.” He took another piece of cheddar, broke it in half and put it on a cracker.