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Authors: Kaje Harper

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BOOK: Full Circle
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"Yeah." He dug in his hip pocket. "You want me to dial home?"

"Yep." That would keep Toller's number off my own phone, harder to dial again if...if... Heath handed me his phone and it was ringing.

Three tones and then a man's voice on the other end. Older, deeper, a little more resonant and blurry with sleep but Toller. "Heath? Is there a problem?"

I swallowed hard, glanced at the clock. Ten-thirty. That would be eleven-thirty in New York. "It's almost midnight," I said, and my voice was steadier than I expected. "Do you know where your kids are?"

For a moment there was only the sound of breathing over the line, then Toller said hoarsely, "Jamie?"

"Yep."

"This is Heath's phone number."

"So it is."

"He didn't." I could hear the alertness coming back in Toller's voice. "Oh, fuck, he did. Jamie, I'm sorry, I'm really sorry. I never figured he would actually track you down and show up on your doorstep."

"I don't mind," I said, surprised to find it was true. "Thing is, he wants to hear stories of the old days. And I'm not sure what you want me to do with him."

"I...shit, I don't know. God, Jamie, it's been so long. I hoped I'd get to talk to you again, but I would never have sent Heath... Damn it, put the kid on."

I held out the phone. "Your father." An odd warmth ran through me, saying that. Toller had a kid. It was...unexpected.

Heath wasn't saying much more than
yes
and
no
and
I'm sorry
into the phone. He looked contrite. I figured Toller was reaming him a new one. Then he said,
I found him in a bar,
and I thought I might do the reaming myself. After a minute he held it back to me. "He wants to talk to you again."

"Damned stubborn kid." I could hear pride and worry mingled in Toller's voice. "Jamie, can you keep him overnight? You can stick him on a train back home in the morning. I'll buy the ticket for him online and he can pick it up at the station."

"What about his questions?"

Toller blew out a breath. "Did he say why he was asking?"

"You don't want him to grow up to be a social worker. You would rather he sold his soul to the devil. He's having a hard time understanding your point of view."

"Something like that. Damn it, Jamie, I know it sounds unreasonable, but I can't stand the thought of him putting all his youth and hope and energy into a system as fucked up and life-destroying as that."

"But you won't tell him why you have such a high opinion of his chosen field."

"I should. I can't."

Still not healed, after all these years. I gentled my voice. It still came easy. "Toller, baby, do you really want me to do it?"

That
baby
echoed between us for a moment. Wrong, wrong thing to have said, but it had come to my lips with the tone. And Toller's voice when he answered matched it, younger and unsure. "Would you? Not everything, Jamie. But enough for him to understand."

"He said you're married. And your husband didn't get why you were so worked up about it either."

"Not married yet. Although now it's legal here, we'll do the deed soon. But with one guy, yeah, fourteen years now. Tristan. And I've told him some of it. Enough, I thought."

"Might want to make sure of that."

There was a long pause. Then Toller said softly, "Still making me do the right thing, huh, Jamie. I'll talk to Tris again. You talk to Heath. Tell him what he needs to hear. I trust you. I always have."

Motherfucker.
I held the phone out to Heath silently.

"Dad? Can I stay for a bit? Okay. Yeah I promise. I will. Tell Papa I'm sorry. Yeah, me too. Good night."

Heath pocketed his phone and eyed me uncertainly.

"So. It's you and me kid, at least for a couple of days."

"Dad said he'd buy me a ticket for Monday. So we have tomorrow to talk."

I had the sudden impulse to call Toller back and ask him to make it longer, let me have this beautiful, young, unwounded boy around for a while. But by the time we were done talking, I might be ready to send him home. I nodded. "Come on. I'll put sheets on the couch for you. Did you eat anything?"

"Had a sandwich on the train." But he looked at me hopefully. Seventeen. I'd been a bottomless pit at seventeen, and Toller... "Come on. I'll dig out some leftovers before you crash for the night."

A couple of hours later Heath was fast asleep on the couch, breathing deeply just on the edge of snoring. I sat in a chair by my bedroom window. Outside the street was quieter than daytime, but distant sirens and trucks and honking horns came and went. The music of my city. I listened to it with one ear cocked to that steady rhythm from the living room. Foolish really. Heath was strong and confident and whole. There was no need to listen for the uneven catch of breath, the whimpering movements that would signal a nightmare. Just old, deeply-buried habit, so easily resurrected.

In the morning I would have to decide what to tell Heath and what to keep back. How to make him understand Toller, without putting things in his head that would poison his image of his father. Tonight, though, tonight I would just remember it all. The good, the bad, and the fucking ugly. Toller Grange, and the days that he spent in my life...

* * * *

I remember the first time I saw Toller. He was walking past the liquor store as I came out, a precious bottle safely tucked under my arm. He was a thin kid with dark unkempt hair and fair skin that showed bruises all down one arm and over his left cheekbone. His clothes were a pair of ratty jeans, old sneakers, and a stained T-shirt. No jacket despite the chill in the October air. Nothing special. None of the beauty that Heath carried with him all unaware. But Toller's eyes burned across my skin as he looked at me.

Three steps further and I saw him lurch. He leaned against the building, hugging his arms around himself. Might have just been cold, but I diagnosed cracked or broken ribs from the posture and the careful way he moved. He coughed once, and training took over. I hurried toward him.

"Are you all right? Breathing okay? No blood?"

I reached out to him but he jerked away, despite the hiss of pain that the fast motion caused him. "Don't touch me."

"It's alright. I'm a doctor."

He straightened and laughed scornfully. "Yeah, right. And I'm Elvis Presley."

"I'm just trying to help."

"I don't need help from some stinking, dirty, lying drunk! I don't need help from anyone." He straightened carefully and continued on down the street. His gait was noticeably stiff and slow.

I stared at his retreating back. His words echoed in my head.
Stinking, dirty, lying, drunk.
"I'm not a liar," I whispered. I looked down at myself. I was wearing my favorite parka. It wasn't really that cold, but in those days I never could feel warm. It was smeared with the remains of a drippy taco I'd had for lunch. Or maybe had for lunch the day before. And there were other, older stains on it.

My pants had once been a good pair of khakis, but now they too bore the marks of hard use. One knee was ripped out, where I had fallen, navigating the steps down to the subway while under the weather. I raised an arm and sniffed myself, oblivious to the people walking around me on the sidewalk. Maybe I was a little whiff. I couldn't think when I'd showered last. Or changed clothes, or slept for that matter. And I didn't care. I'd finally managed to get to the point of intoxication where nothing mattered at all. So why was I letting some punk upset me?

"So what?" I muttered. "So what if I'm dirty and smelly? Doesn't matter. Nowhere to go, nothing to do. And I'm not half as drunk as I wanna be." I pulled the new bottle out of the bag, cracked the top, and took a healthy swig. In fact, I leaned against the wall right there, where he'd rested for a moment. I put my shoulders where his had been and raised the bottle to my lips, feeling the burning darkness of the liquor slide down my throat. And as I slid over the hill from almost drunk to totally smashed, for some reason, I couldn't shake the image of a pair of disapproving grey eyes. But more whiskey would fix that.

The next time I saw the kid with the grey eyes, we were both in line at the local soup kitchen. He was two ahead of me. He'd scrounged up a jean jacket from somewhere, but even on his lean frame it was a little small. His hands and wrists poked out of the sleeves like a kid in a growth spurt. The bruises had healed, but his pale skin was greyer and less healthy. A faint patina of dirt around his neck suggested he'd washed his face but not showered lately. And his hands shook a little as he picked up his tray.

He sat at a table as far from the rest of us as he could. I'm not sure what devil on my shoulder prompted me to go and plunk my tray right down beside his. He glanced at me for just an instant then turned back to his spaghetti, visibly tuning me out.

"Cold day," I said, dumping three packages of sugar into the sludge they called coffee. When he didn't respond, I added, "The food here is edible, but watch out for this stuff they call coffee. I think they scrape it off the floor in back of the counter."

He grunted involuntarily, but kept his eyes fixed forward. He ate with a tight control that suggested he was an inch away from just stuffing everything in his mouth. He looked thin and cold, but not high, not like he was using. His eyes were bright and alert, flicking toward any movement that came close. As he was finishing up, mopping the last specks of sauce with the crust of his bread, I slid my own untouched bread over onto his plate.

"They always serve me too much," I lied. "Hate seeing food go to waste, especially in here."

He startled, far more than the gesture was worth, and stared at me. For a moment I think it hung in the balance, his hunger against his pride. Then he pushed back from the table roughly.

"I'm sure you'll find someone who wants it," he snapped. His voice was light and just a little rough. He pulled the collar of his denim jacket up around his neck and strode out the door without a backwards look.

I sighed and reclaimed my bread before someone stole it. I chewed slowly, in no hurry to leave, and thought about the kid. Not in a sexual way. For one thing, I had hit my thirties and the kid had to be straddling eighteen, one way or the other. And between the booze and the lack of sleep and losing Henri, I had about as much sex drive as an amoeba back then. I was just speculating.

Before Henri got sick, before I blew up my career and dove into the bottle, I'd worked the emergency room. You get to know the look of fear. The way the ones who had been hurt moved, like they wanted to keep everything tightly wrapped inside. Their eyes had this look, watching the world from behind a pane of glass. Like they were looking for the next pain to come flying at them, without any hope that seeing it coming would let them get away. Battered wives, abused kids, victims of assault of one form or another, they had a common face. And however controlled this kid was, he wore that look.

I reached into the pocket of my parka for the flat, smooth shape of the bottle. Nothing I could do for the kid. Nothing I wanted to do for myself. The road to sweet oblivion was there, waiting.

They say third time's the charm, but there was nothing charming about it. I almost tripped over him, there in the dark. Barely fifty feet from the back of that same liquor store as the first time, like a reprise of a moment that had come back to mind far too often.

He grunted. "Watch your fucking feet." But there was a breathy quality to his voice that stopped me and turned me around.

He sat slumped against the wall, legs outstretched, which was why I'd about tripped over his feet. It was a cold night, and getting colder, but he was just sitting still, head bowed down, ass on the frigid concrete. I hesitated and then squatted down. A graceless move that became even more so when I landed on my ass, balance destroyed by the booze and months without more exercise than the walk to the liquor store. I struggled up, kneeling, and peered at him. "You didn't laugh. Something must be wrong."

"You aren't that fucking funny." He ended the statement with a cough. Once it started, the hacking went on and on. Finally he choked and spit a gob of something. He made the effort to turn away to do it, so I didn't have to pop him one. I reached out, really slowly, toward his wrist.

He stared at my hand, but didn't pull back as I laid one finger over his skin below that skimpy jacket. His pulse bounded under my fingertip, and the heat of his skin burned in the cold air.

"You have a fever," I said, trying not to slur the words. "And your heart rate is about one-fifty. You need a doctor."

"And you just happen to be one, right?" He raised his head to glare at me and pulled his arm away. "Go fuck yourself."

"You need a real doctor. One who isn't halfway to unconscious. I'll go call an ambulance."

As I struggled to get my feet under me, he reached out and grabbed my wrist. "No. I'm fine. Just leave me the hell alone."

"Can't do that. I may not be practicing anymore, but I signed that fucking hypocritical oath back when. You stay out here overnight and you may be dead by morning. That means I have to get involved."

He shook his head hard and put a hand on the pavement as if the motion had made him dizzy. "Hell with that. Have a drink. Have ten. You'll forget all about this. Just go booze up somewhere else."

"Can't." I scooted around and put my back to the brick wall beside him. Damn, that ground was cold. I pulled out my bottle and pretended to take a sip, then passed it to him. "Drink?" Alcohol was the last thing he needed, but the only thing I had to offer that he might take.

After a moment he took the bottle from me and tilted his head back. Two long swallows and I thought about pulling the bottle away, because he really didn't need the vasodilation from the alcohol if he was going to sit out in the cold. But the next bout of coughing stopped him before I could. When it was over, he made as if to hand the bottle back and then stopped short. "Maybe you shouldn't put your mouth on this. I might be contagious."

I blinked, both at the thought and at the way he phrased it. More to this boy than I realized. "Alcohol sterilizes."

"Not well enough." He set the bottle down on his other side and tipped his head back against the bricks. "I'm sorry."

"So you owe me one."

"Maybe." He closed his eyes.

"Let me call 911."

"Get fucked. I don't owe you that much."

"Why not?" I was starting to get frustrated with him. "Why won't you let the city come scrape you up off the pavement and put you in a nice warm bed for a few days until you feel better?"

"No money. No insurance."

"It's free if it's an emergency, you moron."

"Hate hospitals."

"Enough to die rather than go to one?" I said acidly.

He opened one red-rimmed eye and rolled his head a little to look at me. "Yeah," he said, and closed his eyes again.

"Idiot." But I didn't get up. Beside me his breathing was fast and shallow, with an odd little grunt of effort on each inhale. The ER physician in me diagnosed pneumonia, and worried about TB. I put a finger on his wrist again, and he sat limply and let me. One-fifty-six.

"Fuck," I said. "Can't leave you alone here. Can't call 911. Don't want to sit on the fucking pavement and freeze to death. Guess you have to come home with me."

"No way."

"Yes way. Two choices, kid. You come home with me, or I will fucking call 911 on you and hold you here until the paramedics arrive."

"Think you can, old man?" he sneered.

"Before, no. You'd have hauled ass before I could even find a phone. But now? I think it's going to be an even chance whether we can get you two blocks to my place without you passing out."

He made as if to stand and stopped, coughing, his hands pressed to his head like it was going to fly to pieces. When he was finally done, he looked at me and his eyes were old and tired. "Damn it."

"911 would be smarter. I'm really not a doctor anymore, and my place is a dump."

Oddly, he looked as if that confession made him happier. "Your place."

"Okay." I reached across him to take the bottle back, capped it carefully, and put it in my pocket. Then I got on one knee and slid a shoulder under his arm. "Easy now. Get up slowly."

Anyone watching that night would have thought we were both drunk. The kid walked as best he could on legs that were rubber at the knees. I kept an arm around him and tried to steer us both in the right direction. Twice he had to stop and cough, bouts so violent that I stood behind him and just wrapped my arms around his chest to hold him together. After the second one he was crying, although I don't think he knew it.

"Fifty more feet," I told him. "Then one flight of stairs, and if that doesn't kill us, we'll be home, kid."

"Toller," he said. "My name's Toller, not kid."

"Whatever you say, kid. Fifty more feet." That last flight of stairs almost did us in. I was half carrying him, and staggering under the weight, thin as he was, when we reached my door. I propped him up against the wall, unlocked the door, and hauled him inside.

One benefit to a tiny efficiency apartment: the bed was only ten feet from the front door. I manhandled him over there and let him half-fall onto the rumpled sheets. As he lay there, breathing harshly, I bent to untie his sneakers and slide them off. The socks under them were more holes than cloth, and I pulled them off too. His bare feet were bony and white, chilled at the toes and hot with fever by his ankles. I lifted his legs up onto the bed.

He grunted, "Thanks," and tried to curl up in a ball.

"Not yet. Pants and jacket off."

"I'm fine like this."

"My house. My rules." I stripped the clothes off him matter-of-factly, leaving him in dirty boxer-briefs and a worn T-shirt. I think he would have fought me, but he was losing coherence, eyes moving randomly. He made a protest or two, the words mumbled. I pulled the sheet out from under him and dropped it lightly over his body. Then I located the second pillow and raised his head a little more on it. He thanked me absently and went into another coughing spell. I stuffed a wad of tissues in his hand and left him to it.

At the sink, I scrubbed up my hands mechanically. The dirty dishes piled high under the faucet made it difficult and I stared at them. How long had those been there? I couldn't remember the last time I ate anything that wasn't take-out.

I still had a bag of doctor stuff in the cabinet under the bathroom sink. I pulled out a thermometer, stethoscope, and a penlight. Not much in the way of meds in the house, but in the mirror cabinet there was some aspirin and half a bottle of the Amoxicillin I'd started taking when I cut my foot. That had been a bad time, and the foot had healed before I remembered to take even half of the antibiotics. I peered blearily at the bottle and made out the expiry date, only eight months gone. Good enough.

BOOK: Full Circle
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