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    Desperate Measures

    Page 42
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      mansion to confront Gable.

      The person he'd gone to see was a security expert. The sweater was a

      bullet-resistant vest whose state-of-the-art design made it look like

      ordinary clothing.

      I'm the sum of all the people I ever interviewed, Pittman thought

      morosely as he stared again out the shattered window toward Denning's

      corpse.

      He turned away. The effort of breathing made him wince. The security

      expert had explained that the woven fibers of the bullet-resistmt vest

      could stop most projectiles but that it offered no protection against

      the force of their impact. Bruises and injured ribs were sometimes

      unavoidable.

      I believe it, Pittman thought, holding himself. I feel like I've been

      kicked by a horse.

      The sirens, joined by others, sped nearer and louder.

      Pittman staggered across the living room, passing Gable's corpse, then

      Sloane's, then Webley's. The stench of cordite and death was cloying.

      He had to get outside. He had to breathe fresh air. He stumbled along

      the stone-floored hallway, his legs weak from the effects of fear. As

      he reached for the main door, he heard tires squealing on the paved

      drivewayoutside. He'opened the door and lurched onto the terrace,

      breathing sweet, cool air. Policemen scrambled trom cruisers. Weapons

      drawn, they didn't bother slamming their car doors. They were too busy

      racing toward Pittman. He lifted his arms, not wanting them to think he

      was a threat. But then he saw Jill among them, racing even harder to

      reach him, shouting his name, and he knew that for now at least he

      didn't have to be afraid. He held her, clinging to her, oblivious to

      the pressure against his injured chest. She was sobbing, and he held

      her tighter, never wanting to let her go.

      "I love you. I was so afraid that I'd lose you," she said.

      "Not today." Pittman kissed her. "Thank God, not today.

      EPILOGUE

      Love is an act of faith, Pittman thought. People get sick and die, or

      they die in accidents, or they eat food that hasn't been properly cooked

      and they get salmonella and they die, or they fall from a ladder and

      break their necks, or they get tired of you and they don't want to see

      you anymore and they don't answer your phone calls, or they divorce you.

      There were so many ways to be to by love. Indeed, eventually all love,

      even the truest and most faithful, doomed the lover to agonizing

      loss-because of death. Love required so much optimism, so much trust in

      the future. A practical person might say that the possible'immediate

      benefits did not compensate for the ultimate painful result. A cautious

      person might deny his or her feelings, closet the temptation to love,

      smother it, and go through life in a safe, emotionless vacuum. But not

      me, Pittman thought. If love requires faith, I'm a believer. These

      thoughts occurred to him as he held Jill's hand and walked between rows

      of tombstones toward his beloved son's grave. It was Thursday again, a

      week after the events that had taken place at Eustace Gable's mansion

      and two weeks after Pittman had tried to save Jonathan Millgate's life

      at the Scarsdale estate. Following the arrival of the police and the

      discovery of the corpses in Gable's blood-spattered living room, Pittman

      and Jill had been held in custody. But as

      Pittman had hoped, the damning conversation that had been broadcast to

      the police was his salvation. After he and Jill had been questioned at

      length, after Mn. Page corroborated those portions of their story about

      which she had personal experience, after the police in Boston and New

      York verified other details (with help from the Vermont State Police,

      who went to Grollier Academy), Pittman and Jill were eventually

      released.

      Now in New York, they stopped before Jeremy's grave, and the warm

      sunshine-filled spring afternoon made Pittman's heart ache worse from

      love for his absent son. It was terrible that Jeremy would never again

      see and experience weather so beautiful.

      Pittman put his arm around Jill, drawing comfort from her, while he

      studied the amazingly green grass that covered

      Jeremy's grave. As his tear ducts stung his eyes, he was reminded of

      something that Walt Whitman had written, that grass was the hair of

      graves. Jeremy's hair. The only hair he has now. Except that isn't

      true, Pittman thought. A hundred years ago maybe, when coffins were

      made of wood and weren't surrounded by a concrete sleeve and lid. In

      the old days, the coffin and the body would decompose, become one with

      the earth, and generate new life. Now the way bodies are hygienically

      sealed within the earth, death is truly lifeless, Pittman thought. If

      his ex-wife had agreed with Pittman's wishes, their son's body would

      have been cremated, his ashes lovingly scattered in a meadow where

      wildflowers could bloom from him. But Pittman's ex-wife had insisted so

      strongly and Pittman had been so emotionally disabled, Jer emy's body

      had been disposed of in a traditional manner, and the sterility of it

      made Pittman want to cry.

      The thought of death, which for the past year had preoccupied him, now

      weighed heavier on his mind. Since his escape from the Scarsdale

      estate, he had seen his best friend killed, and Father Dandridge, and

      that didn't include several men whom he himself had killed, and it

      certainly didn't include the slaughter at Gable's mansion. The more

      Pittman brooded about it, the more he wondered if the other grand

      counselors-Anthony Lloyd dead from a stroke, Victor Standish dead from

      suicide-should also be included. And of course, Jonathan Millgate. I

      set out to do an obituary on a man who wasn't dead, Pittman thought. In

      the process, I inadvertently ended up causing the death of that man and

      of all his associates.

      The grand counselors were evil. Of that, Pittman had no doubt. But

      they would have died soon anyway, he told himself, and maybe that would

      have been better than exposing their obscene secret and causing so many

      other deaths along the way. Would any of this have happened, Pittman

      wondered, if he hadn't believed that the public truly had a right to

      know about the abuses of power? If he'd been less determined, he would

      never have gone after Jonathan MiHgate seven years previously. Burt

      would never have chosen him to go after Millgate again two weeks ago. Do

      I bear some responsibility for what happened?

      Pittman couldn't believe that. No, I was right to go after them, he

      told himself with force. 'Mose bastards did think they were above

      everyone. They didn't care who suffered and died as long as their

      careers prospered. They deserved to be punished-not killed, too easy

      for them, but exposed, condemned, ridiculed. In the old days, they

      would have been put in a cage in the town square and people would have

      spat upon them. And maybe other diplomats would have been discouraged

      from abusing power.

      This "what if' type of thinking, this "if only" second guessing had been

      typical of Pittman's mind-set after Jeremy's death. He had kept

      imagining an alternate rea
    lity in which if only this or that had

      happened, everything would have turned out for the best. But the "if

      only" hadn't happened. "If only" wasn't the case. Reality was the

      case. And reality was painful.

      As a consequence, he had not been prepared for the love that he had

      found in Jill. He held her close to him. He treasured her. Yes, love

      was doomed to end in pain, he thought, but in the meantime it was an

      anodyne against other kinds of pain, the tragic imperfections of life.

      He still could not adjust to the realization of how close he had come to

      killing himself two weeks earlier. He had been in such black despair

      because of grief, the pain had been intolerable. Now grief still

      weighed upon him, unrelieved by the tears that streamed down his cheeks

      as he blinked through them at Jeremy's sunbathed grave, but he had been

      shocked into dealing with the present rather than dwelling on the past,

      and with Jill beside him to share the weight of his grief, he knew that

      he could now persist, just as he would gladly share the weight of

      whatever despair would eventually seize her.

      And to be sure, a few good things had happened. The day after the

      massacre at Gable's mansion, the newspaper for which Pittman had worked

      and which had been scheduled to go out of business had found a financial

      white knight willing to keep it in business. The dying paper had been

      reborn, and the publicity that Pittman's story had received had prompted

      the paper's new owner to rehire Pittman as a lead reporterin exchange

      for an exclusive series about what had happened to him and what he had

      discovered about the grand counselors, although his prestigious new

      position didn't matter to him as much as the chance to continue telling

      the truth about the abuses of power.

      If only Jeremy was alive to cheer me on, Pittman thought

      If only.

      But II if only" was to look backward, and at the moment, watching

      Jeremy's grave, tightening his arm around Jill, he knew that he had an

      obligation to himself and Jill to look to the future. An act of faith,

      Pittman thoughtHe turned to Jill, who wiped his eyes and kissed him.

      "I'm sorry you're hurting," she told him.

      "Hey, I,m alive. you're here with me." His voice broke.

      "Tears don't always mean a person's sad."

     

     

     



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