2
Tom quelled a ripple of anxiety as he started
down to the baggage claim area. The flight had been perfect, the
attendants beautiful, the food… edible. If this were Miami
International he’d feel fine; he could make his way through there
blindfolded. But he’d never been to La Guardia.
He supposed it was part of aging: You come to
depend on things being comfortable and familiar, and get rattled by
the new and different. But a big part was Jack’s damned
secretiveness. He’d said he’d meet him in the baggage area, but
what if he forgot? Or what if he got tied up in traffic or delayed
by something? Tom wasn’t averse to taking a cab, but to where? He
didn’t know Jack’s address. Oh, he had a mailing address, but Jack
didn’t live there.
Relax, he told himself. You’re borrowing
trouble. You have a cell phone and you know his number.
A gaggle of bearded men in black hats or
yarmulkes and women in wigs and long-sleeved dresses descended
ahead of him. These fifty or so Orthodox Jews—he’d heard someone
mention that they were Hasidic—had occupied the rear half of the
plane. Tom wondered what they’d all been doing in Miami. Not one of
them looked tan.
He reached the bottom of the stairs and
followed the crowd along a short corridor that opened into the
baggage claim. He found a lake of expectant faces spread out in a
thick semicircle. Dozens of black-suited, white-shirted limo
drivers milled about, some holding up handwritten signs with the
names of their fares, others simply killing time until a given
plane arrived. Behind them stood relatives and friends waiting for
loved ones. Jack would—should—be somewhere in the throng.
But where?
He scanned the faces, looking for his son’s
familiar features. There—a brown-haired man waving at him. Jack.
Good thing he was waving or Tom would have missed him. He could
have been anybody in his hooded blue sweatshirt, plaid flannel
shirt, jeans, and sneakers. Virtually invisible.
Tom felt a flood of love tinged with relief.
He didn’t understand his younger son—didn’t much understand the
older one either, for that matter—but his time with Jack back in
September had been an eye-opener. The affable, laid-back man he’d
come to think of as rudderless, perhaps even something of a loser,
had metamorphosed into a grim warrior, intensely focused, who’d
wrought a terrible vengeance on a murderous crew.
Tom had participated in the killing and
afterward had expected fits of guilt and remorse. They never came.
Strangely, the killing didn’t bother him: The dead in this case
deserved it. And taking the long view, hell, he’d killed more and
probably better men during his tour in Korea.
But though he’d learned to respect Jack that
night, he still didn’t understand him. Which was why he’d decided
to come here. He wanted time with his son in his own
environment.
Jack’s excuse about his apartment being too
small… it didn’t ring true. He’d been disappointed and even tempted
to call him on it, but decided to go along. Just more of his
number-two son’s obsessive secretiveness. He guessed he’d have to
accept that as part of the package.
Tom locked on to Jack’s deceptively mild
brown eyes as they worked toward each other through the crowd. Jack
waited as the line of Hasidim passed, and then he was reaching for
Tom’s hand. What started as a shake turned into a brief
embrace.
“Hey, Dad, you made it.”
For a reason he could not explain, Tom filled
up. His throat constricted and it took him a few seconds to find
his voice.
“Hi, Jack. Damn, it’s good to see you
again.”
They broke apart and Jack grabbed Tom’s
carry-on.
“I can handle that,” Tom said.
“What a coincidence. So can I.” He nodded
toward the small horde of Hasidim. “What’d you do, come in on El
Al?”
“I remember reading about some gathering in
Miami.”
On the way to the baggage carousel Jack
pinched a fold of fabric on Tom’s green-and-white jacket.
“Look at you—puffy starter coat. Very cool.
Eagles colors, no less.”
Tom nodded. He’d been a lifelong Eagles
fan.
“Bought it last week. Figured I’d need
something to protect me from the cold.”
As they joined the passengers and waited for
their luggage, he studied his son. Hard to believe that this
regular-looking Joe had led them into a firefight in the Everglades
and saved him from being sucked into a tornado.
He owed Jack his life.
“Well, Dad, anything special you want to do
while you’re here?”
“Spend time with you.”
Jack blinked. The remark—the bold-faced truth
as far as Tom was concerned—seemed to take him by surprise.
“That’s a given. I’m just putting the
finishing touches on a job, and after that, I’ve cleared the
deck.”
“What sort of job?”
A shrug. “Just fixing something for
somebody.”
… .fixing something for
somebody… not big with the details, his son.
“But other than hanging out,” Jack went on,
“is there any play you want to see, restaurant you want to
try?”
“I’d like to go to the top of the Empire
State Building.”
Jack grinned. “Really?”
“I’ve never been. Lived less than two hours
outside this city most of my life and never once made it there. So,
before I die—”
Jack rolled his eyes. “Oh man!”
“No, seriously. I’ve decided to make a list
of certain things I’ve always wanted to do, and the Empire State
Building is one of them. Have you ever been
to the top, Mr. New Yorker?”
“Lots of times. I always bring flowers and
leave them there.”
“What? I’d never take you for a fan of
An Affair to Remember.’“
He laughed. “No, I bring them for
Kong.”
“Kong?”
“King Kong. That’s where he was
killed.”
Tom stared. “You were always a weird kid,
Jack. Now you’re a weird adult.”
He shook his head. “Uh-uh. Still a
kid.”
But not acting like one now, Tom thought as
he noticed the way Jack’s eyes darted back and forth, constantly on
the move. Watching for what? Terrorists?
No… his gaze seemed to linger more on the
security personnel than on the Arabic-looking members of the crowd.
Why? What about them concerned him?
He realized Jack looked edgy. He suspected
that whatever it was Jack did for a living, it probably wasn’t on
the right side of the law. Tom hoped that was only a sometime
thing.
After what Tom had seen of Jack’s
capabilities back in Florida, he’d make one formidable foe, no
matter which side of the law he was on.
But from what Tom had seen during Jack’s
visit he knew that his son was involved in something else,
something beyond legal systems. Perhaps even beyond normal
reality.
A girl who could control swamp creatures… a
hole in the earth that went God knew where… a man who could walk on
water, who Jack had called by name. They seemed to be
enemies.
And that was all Tom knew. He hadn’t been
able to squeeze much explanation from Jack beyond cryptic
statements about having had a “peek behind the curtain.”
His stated purpose now was to spend the
holidays with his sons and grandchildren, and that was true to an
extent. But Tom was determined to use the time to learn more about
the man his son had become. Which wouldn’t be easy. He knew Jack
saw him as a bedrock traditionalist, and to some extent he was. He
made no excuses about hewing to traditional values. He sensed Jack
had no quarrel with those, but held to a looser, more flexible view
as to how to uphold them.
Still, no way to deny that Jack was on guard
here. Not that he had to worry about the two blue-uniformed
security people in sight—a skinny guy and a big-butted woman
standing together near the exit. They seemed more interested in
each other than in what was going on around them.
Still, Tom looked for a way to ease Jack’s
discomfort.
“Where’s the car?”
Jack jerked a thumb over his shoulder. “In
the big garage across the way.”
“Much of a trip?”
“Not bad. We go upstairs, take the skywalk
across. That’ll put us on level four. I’m parked on level two, so
we take an elevator down and go from there.”
That seemed like too much time. If being here
bothered Jack, this could be a way to get him out more
quickly.
“Why don’t you go get the car? By the time
you come back, I’ll be waiting at the curb with my luggage.”
“How many bags?”
“One big one. And don’t give me that
can-the-old-guy-handle-it? look. I handled it in Miami and I can
handle it here. It’s got wheels.”
Jack hesitated, then said, “Not a bad idea.
The sooner we get on and off the BQE, the better. Rush hour starts
early around here. Meet you outside.”
His relief at getting out of the terminal was
obvious.