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    Desperate Measures

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      ,'Come on." He tugged at Jill's sleeve and moved quickly along the

      hallway, through the door, and outside into the shadowy bottom of an air

      shaft. Garbage cans lined its walls.

      "It's a dead end!"

      "I tried to tell you." Jill turned to run back into her apartment

      building. "There's nowhere to-,'

      "What about that?" Pittman pointed toward a door directly across from

      him. He rushed over to it, twisted its knob, and groaned When he found

      that it was locked. Doing his best to control his shaky hands, he

      pulled out his tool knife and used the lock picks, exhaling with relief

      when he shoved the door open. It led into a hallway in the apartment

      building behind Jill's.

      The moment he and Jill were inside, he shut the door and turned the knob

      on the dead bolt. By the time the police got it open, he and Jill would

      be out of the area. As they hurried onto Eighty-sixth Street, Pittman

      imagined the police cars arriving at Jill's apartment building on

      Eighty-fifth Street.

      Two blocks to the east was an entrance to Central Park.

      Jill's casual clothes-sneakers, jeans, and a sweater-made it easy for

      her to run. She clutched her purse close to her side.

      At the hospital, Pittman had sensed from her comfortable, graceful

      movements that she was an athlete, and now her long legs stretched in an

      easy runner's rhythm, proving that he'd been right.

      They slowed briefly to avoid attracting attention, then in creased speed

      again after they entered Central Park, racing east beyond the children's

      playground, then south past grown ups playing baseball on the Great

      Lawn. Finally, below the Delacorte Theater, Belvedere Lake, and

      Belvedere Castle, they chose one of the many small trails that led

      through the trees in the section of the park known as The Ramble.

      It was almost two in the afternoon. The sun continued to be strong for

      April, and sweat beaded Pittman's forehead as well as made his shirt

      cling to his chest while he and Jill Founded a deserted section of

      boulders and gradually came to a stop.

      In the distance, there were other sirens. leaning against a tree whose

      branches were green with budding leaves, Pittman tried to catch his

      breath. "I ... I don't think we were followed. "

      "No. This is all wrong."

      "What?"

      Jill's expression was stark. "I'm having second thoughts about this. I

      shouldn't be here. At my apartment, I was scared. "

      "And you're not scared now?" Pittman asked in dismay.

      "Those men breaking in... When you shot one of them ... I've never

      seen anybody... The way you were talking ...You confused me. I think I

      should have waited for the police to come." Jill drew her fingers

      through her long blond hair. "You should have waited. The police can

      help you."

      "They'd put me in jail. I'd never get out alive."

      "Have you any idea how paranoid you sound?"

      "And apparently you think it's normal for gunmen to break into your

      apartment. I'm not being paranoid. I'm being practical. Since

      Thursday night, everywhere I've gone, people have been trying to kill

      me. I'm not about to let the police put me in a cell, where I'll be an

      easy target."

      "But the police will think I'm involved in this."

      "You are involved. Those men would have killed you. You can't depend

      on the police to keep you safe from them. Jill shook her head in

      bewilderment.

      "Listen to me," Pittman said. "I'm trying to save your life. "

      "My life wouldn't have needed to be saved if you hadn't come to my

      apartment."

      The remark made Pittman flinch, as if he'd been slapped. Although he

      heard children laughing on another trail, the trail he was on was

      suddenly very silent.

      "You're right," he said. "I made a mistake."

      "I shouldn't have said that. i'm sorry."

      Pittman nodded. "I am, too." He walked away. hanging over his left

      arm was his overcoat, heavy with his .45 and One of the gunmen's pistols

      with ammunition magazines from the others in his pockets.

      "Hey, where are you going?" Pittman didn't answer.

      "Wait.

      But Pittman didn't.

      "Wait." Jill caught up to him. "I said I was sorry."

      "Everything you said was true. The odds are that those men would have

      left you alone if I hadn't shown up. For certain, Father Dandridge

      would still be alive if I hadn't gone to see him. Millgate might still

      be alive, and my friend Burt would be alive, and

      I NO- Pay attention to me." Jill grabbed his shoulders and turned him.

      "None of this is your fault. I apologize for blaming you for what

      happened at my apartment. You meant no harm. You only came there

      because You needed help."

      Pittman suddenly heard voices, rapid footsteps, what sounded like

      runners on the trail ahead. He stepped to the side, among bushes, his

      hand on the pistol in his overcoat pocket. Jill crowded next to him.

      Three joggers-two young men and a slender woman, all wearing brightly

      colored spandex outfits-hurried past, Mumbling to one another.

      Then the trail was quiet again.

      "You'd be safer if you didn't stay with me," Pittman said. "Maybe

      you're right. Phone the police. Tell them I forced You to go with me.

      Tell them you're afraid to show yourself because you think the men who

      broke into your apartment have friends who'll come after you. YOU might

      even tell them I'm innocent, not that they'l believe you."

      "No.

      ,you won't tell them I'm innocent?"

      "I won't tell them anything. The more I think about it' the more I have

      to agree with you. The police would question me and let me go. But I'd

      still be in danger. Or Maybe I could convince them to Put me in

      protective custody. But for how long? Eventually I'd be on my own, in

      danger again."

      "Then what are you going to do?"

      "Stay with you."

      "Me?"

      "Tell me how I can help." The bank Jill used, Citibank, had a branch

      south of Central Park, at Fifty-first and Fifth Avenue. As usual on a

      Sunday afternoon, the avenue wasn't busy. Making sure that passersby

      didn't overhear him, Pittman explained how the police had arranged for

      his bank's automated teller machine to seize his card. "But they

      haven't had time to do anything about your card. What's the maximum the

      bank allows you to take out?"

      "I'm not sure. It could be as much as a thousand dollars."

      "That much?" Pittman shook his head. "Not that it does us any good. I

      doubt you've got it in your account."

      Jill assumed an odd expression. "I might have."

      "Well, I know it's a lot, but this is an emergency. Please, get as much

      as you can.

      They entered the bank's vestibule. Jill shoved her card into the

      machine and responded to the computer screen's inquiries, pressing

      buttons. A minute and a half later, she was stuffing a wad of twenties

      and tens into her purse.

      "Don't forget your card," Pittman said. "And here's your transaction

      printout.

      He glanced down, wondering what information might be on it that someone

      coul
    d use if the printout had been left behind. The printout indicated

      the remaining funds ill the account, and Pittman abruptly understood the

      odd expression on Jill's face when he asked her about the size of her

      account.

      "Eighty-seven thousand dollars and forty-three cents?"

      Jill looked uncomfortable.

      "You've got a fortune in this account."

      "That printout is confidential." Her blue eyes flashed. "I couldn't

      help looking," Pittman said.

      "Surely it occurred to you that I couldn't be living in a large Upper

      West Side apartment on a nurse's salary."

      Pittman didn't answer.

      "You mean you had no idea I had money?"

      "No. How did-?"

      "My grandparents. A trust fund. Some bonds just came due. I'm

      deciding how to reinvest. That's why there's so much money in the

      account."

      Pittman studied her with wonder.

      "Is this going to be a problem?"

      "Hell no. If you've got that much money, how about treating a starving

      man to a decent meal?"

      The restaurant-on East Seventy-ninth Street-was small and unassuming: a

      linoleum floor, plain booths, red plastic tablecloths. But the veal

      scallopini, which Pittman recommended, was excellent, and the modestly

      priced house Burgundy was delicious.

      A few tables had been set out on the sidewalk, and Pittman sat in the

      sunlight with Jill, enjoying the last of his salad.

      "that's your second helping," Jill said. "I didn't think you'd ever get

      full."

      "I told You I was hungry. This is the first decent meal I've had in

      quite a while. Mostly I've been eating on the run. You didn't like the

      food?"

      "It's wonderful. But the restaurant doesn't exactly announce itself.

      How on earth did you ever find this place?"

      Pittman bit into the final piece of garlic bread. "I used to live

      around here." The memory made him solemn. I was married."

      "When "Past tense?" Jill set down her wineglass. "Grief and connubial

      bliss don't seem to go together."

      "Now I guess I'm the one who's snooping."

      "There isn't much to tell. MY wife was stronger than I was. That

      doesn't mean she loved Jeremy less, but after he died, I fell apart.

      Ellen didn't. I think she was afraid I was going to be like that for

      the rest of my life. She'd lost her son, and now she was losing ... I

      scared her. One thing led to another. She divorced me. She's married

      again Jill almost touched his hand. "I'm sorry."

      Pittman cried. "She was smart to get out. I was going to be like that

      for the rest of my life. Last Wednesday night, I had a gun in my hand,

      ready to ... And then the phone rang, and the next thing - - ."

      Jill's eyes widened with concern. "You mean the newspapers weren't

      exaggerating? You have been feeling suicidal impulses?"

      "That's a polite way to Put it."

      Jill's brow furrowed with greater concern.

      ," hope you're not going to try to be an amateur psychoanalyst," Pittman

      said. "I've heard all the arguments- 'Killing yourself won't bring

      Jeremy back.' No shit, But it'll certainly end the pain. And here's

      another old favorite: If I kill myself, I'll be wasting the life that

      Jeremy would have given anything to have. The trouble is, killing

      myself wouldn't be a waste. My life isn't worth anything. I know I've

      idealized Jeremy. I know that after his death I've made him smarter and

      more talented and funnier than he actually was. But Jeremy was smart

      and talented and funny. I haven't idealized him by much. A straight-A

      student. A sense of humor that never failed to amaze me. He had a

      droll way of seeing things. He .Could make me laugh anytime he wanted.

      And he was only fifteen. The world would have been his . Instead, he

      got cancer, and no matter how hard the doctors and he fought it, he

      died. Some gang member with a handgun is holding up a liquor store

      right now. That scum is alive, and my son is dead. I can't stand

      living in a world where everything is out of balance that much. I can't

      stand living in a world where everything I see is something Jeremy will

      never see. I can't stand remembering the pain on Jeremy's face as the

      cancer tortured him more and more each day. I can't stand ... "

      Pittman's voice trailed off. He realized that he'd been speaking faster

      and louder, that some of the customers in the restaurant were looking at

      him with concern, that Jill had leaned back as if overwhelmed by his

      emotion, Spreading his hands, he mutely apologized.

      "No I" Jill said. "I won't try to be an amateur psychoanalyst."

      "Sometimes everything builds up inside me. I say more than I mean to."

      "I understand."

      "You're very kind . But you didn't need me to dump on you."

      "It's not a question of being kind, and you obviously needed to get it

      out of you. "It's not, though."

      "What?"

      "Out of me. I think - Pittman glanced down at the table. "I think we'd

      better change the subject.

      Jill folded her napkin, neatly arranging the edges. "All right, then.

      Tell me about what happened Thursday night, how you got into this."

      "Yes," Pittman said, his anger changing to confusion. "And the rest of

      it."

      It took an hour. This time Pittman spoke discreetly, keeping his. voice

      low, pausing when anyone walked by. The converSation continued after

      Jill paid the waiter and Pittman strolled with her along Seventy-ninth

      Street.

      "A nightmare."

      "But I swear to God it's all true," Pittman said.

      "There's got to be a way to make sense of it."

      "Hey, I've been trying my damnedest."

      "Maybe you're too close. Maybe you need someone else to see it from a

      different angle. Let's think this through," Jill said. "We know

      Millgate's associates took him from the hospital because a reporter got

      his hands on a secret Justice Department report that implicated Millgate

      in a covert attempt to buy nuclear weapons from the former Soviet Union.

      Millgate's people were afraid of reporters showing up at the hospital

      and managing to question him."

      "They were also afraid of Father Dandridge," Pittman said. "More so.

      Millgate's people were afraid of something Millgate had told Father

      Dandridge in confession. Or of something Millgate might have told

      Father Dandridge if the priest had been able to see him Thursday night."

      "Then you followed Millgate to the estate in Scarsdale. You got into

      his room to help him, but the nurse came in unexpectedly and saw you

      doing it."

      "She also heard Millgate tell me something. Duncan. Something about

      snow. Then Grollier." Pittman shook his head. "But Father Dandridge

      told me that Grollier wasn't anyone's last name. It was the prep school

      Millgate went to."

      "Why would that be important enough to kill anybody?" They reached

      Fifth Avenue, and Pittman faltered. "What's the matter?" Jill asked.

      Pittman stared to the right toward a crowd going up and down the steps

      of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Vendors, buses, and taxis

      contributed to the congestion in front. Several policemen on horseback

      maintained order
    .

      "I guess," Pittman said, "I feel exposed." He glanced down at the

      weapon-laden overcoat draped over his left arm and guided her back along

      Seventy-ninth Street. "I want to find out about Grollier prep school."

      "How are you going to do that? The only place I can think Of with that

      information is the library. Or someone at a college. But it's Sunday.

      All those places are closed."

      "No, there might be another way.

      The freshly sandblasted apartment building at the end of East

      Eighty-second Street overlooked Roosevelt Drive and the East River.

      Pittman could hear the din of traffic from the thruway below as he and

      Jill entered the shadows of the cul-de-sac known as Gracie Terrace. The

      time was almost five in the afternoon. The temperature was rapidly

      cooling.

      Jill peered up at the attractive, tall brick building. "You know

      someone who lives here?"

      "Someone I interviewed once," Pittman said. "When this started and I

      was trying to figure out how to get help, I realized that over the years

      I'd interviewed people with all sorts of specialties that might be of

     


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