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chapter eighteen.
SUSAN AND I were running by the head of the Charles River on the Cambridge side, near the Cambridge Boat Club. It wasn't really the head, it was just where the river, having encroached north into Cambridge, turned back west toward its birth in Dedham. But Cambridge is Cambridge and they thought it was the head.
"Don't get giddy here," I said, "but have you heard from Brad Sterling?"
"No."
"I went to see him and he wasn't there and his office was closed. Do you know his home address?"
"No."
"You have any thoughts on his absence?"
"Perhaps he's gone away for a few days."
"Perhaps," I said.
The ice was out of the river and the boat crews were on the cold water pulling hard while their coaches followed in small motor boats, yelling instructions through bull horns. Susan and I ran with the river on our left, the spa.r.s.e Sat.u.r.day-morning traffic moving on Fresh Pond Parkway to our right. Across the parkway some kids were out early throwing a baseball on the prep school field. It was still cold enough so that a ball off the handle would make your hands ring up to your shoulder.
Susan ran beside me, on my left, so that my sword arm would be free. She wore a lavender headband and gray-lensed Oakley sungla.s.ses and a gray sweat jacket that said Ventana Canyon on the left breast, and came low enough to cover most of her f.a.n.n.y, which, she contended, was ladylike when wearing s.h.i.+ny black tights. Her running shoes were white with lavender highlights, which explained the headband. She was in shape and she ran easily. Me too.
"You work out before you met me?" I said.
"No, I don't think I did," Susan said.
"You play any sports as a kid?"
Susan laughed.
"Cute little Jewish girls, when I was a kid, did not play sports."
"What did you do," I said.
"We looked beautiful and our daddies took us to libraries and theater matinees and movies and museums and shopping and lunch."
"No mommies?"
"Mommy thought spending money was a bad thing. She always disapproved of the things my father bought me.
"Did you have money?"
"We had enough. The drug store did well, I think. I always thought we were... upper cla.s.s, I guess."
"I bet you were," I said.
We chugged up over the Eliot Bridge and onto the Boston side of the river. Actually, I chugged. Susan glided.
"It's funny to think of you," I said, "little Suzy Hirsch sitting at dinner every night with these two people that I don't know."
"Thing is," she said, "I didn't know them either."
"Not even your father?"
"Especially my father. He was simply a playmate. He was never really a father. He never reprimanded or instructed, or even explained. If I was doing something he didn't like, he'd speak to my mother about it. She'd do the parenting."
"Which she probably liked," I said.
"Yes, I suppose she did. It gave her status, so to speak, in the family. And it gave her a chance to berate me in a socially acceptable way."
"Probably a lot of parental discipline is disguised anger," I said, just to be saying something. I had no idea what I would accomplish by getting her to tell me about her childhood, but I liked hearing it. And it couldn't hurt.
"Yes, she was quite careful about that. She would denigrate me, whenever she could. If I said something at dinner she would smother a snicker. But every time she did anything direct, she would give it the maternal spin. She had to protect me from my failures of character: 'Oh Susan, you know how you are."'
"And your father never intervened."
"No. Parenting me was my mother's job. Besides, we had to protect her."
"You and your father."
"Yes."
"From what?"
"From breaking down. She was very nervous. That was the phrase, nervous. I suppose now we would say she was phobic."
"Oh, Ma," I said. "You know how you are."
Susan smiled.
"Perhaps if you decide to give up professional thuggery," she said, "you could hang out your s.h.i.+ngle."
"Then could I say things like, she was projecting her own inadequacies onto you?"
"Yes, only I think you need to deepen your voice a little more and say it more slowly."
There was sweat on Susan's face and sweat had soaked through the back of her gray jacket. But her voice was still even and conversational.
"You and your father ever talk about that?"
"Protecting my mother? No. It was an unspoken agreement. We'd pretend she wasn't phobic. We'd agree that she was 'nervous' and that we didn't want to 'upset her.' But the agreement was silent. We never spoke of it. We never, in my memory, spoke of anything."
"Nothing?"
"Nothing of substance. He'd ask me how I liked school, or tell me what a pretty dress I had on. That sort of thing. But an actual conversation-I can't remember one."
"So the only parent you had was your mother and she was jealous of you. Did she love you too?"
"I think so. I know that I was ashamed of her. She was older than other kids' mothers, and she was really square. And I know I hated her for being so"-Susan smiled sadly-"nervous. But however b.i.t.c.hy she was, I knew she loved me. And she was always there. I trusted her, as much as I despised her. She was the one who took care of me."
"And she had her problems," I said.
"Yes," Susan said, "she had many and they were probably deep seated and my father was probably one of them."
"He fool around?" I said.
"I have no idea," Susan said. "I spent a lot of time with him, but I can't express to you how much I didn't know my father."
From the Harvard Boat House to the Larz Anderson Bridge is uphill. You never notice it driving along Soldier's Field Road. It's not very dramatic, but if it marks the last stretch of a four-mile run, it becomes more apparent.
"Well, dysfunctional or not," I said, "they produced a h.e.l.l of a daughter."
"A bit dysfunctional herself."
"You think?"
"Not easy to live with," Susan said.
"Impossible to live with," I said. "But what we do works out pretty good."
"Just pretty good?"
"Masculine understatement," I said.
"Oh that," she said.
We went up the little hill and turned left across the Anderson Bridge, where I had almost died last year.
"I am being a b.i.t.c.h," Susan said, "about Brad Sterling."
"Yes."
"I'm sorry."
"I know."
"I don't know if I can promise not to be again."
"I know."
"Nothing breaks you, does it," Susan said. "Nothing makes you swerve."
"For crissake, Suze, I love you," I said. "I plan to continue."
"If I weren't so ladylike," she said, "I might cry."
"Isn't it sort of unladylike, anyway, to sweat like you do?" I said.
"Hey," Susan said. "Unlady-like this!"
"Of course," I said. "How could I have been so wrong."
chapter nineteen.
HAWK CAME INTO my office wearing a blue blazer and white trousers.
"Been yachting?" I said.
"Ah is in disguise," Hawk said. '"The Marblehead look. Blend right in."
"Boy, you certainly fooled me," I said. "How'd it work?"
Hawk shrugged.
"Been outside the Ronan place maybe an hour when two hard cases come along."
"Cops?"
"Naw. Tough guys. A tall fat one, and a short one with muscles, no neck that I could see."
"Well, well," I said.
"Sound familiar?"
I nodded. "What did they say?"
"They want to know what I'm doing there. And I say, 'Who wants to know?' And they say, 'We do,' and it go sort of like that for a while. And they say if I know what's good for me that I'll haul my black a.s.s out of there."
"That wasn't very sensitive," I said.
"I told them that."
"And?"
"Apparently they hadn't intended it to be sensitive. So, I figured since they looked a lot like two guys braced you a while ago that maybe I might have run into a whatchamacallit..."
"A clue," I said.