time to stop, Bev."
"It's easy for you, isn't it?" She s.n.a.t.c.hed a blanket from the crib to
press it to her b.r.e.a.s.t.s. "You can sit and drink and write your music as
if nothing happened. It is so b.l.o.o.d.y easy for you."
"No." Weary, he pressed his fingers to his eyes. "But I can't just stop
living. He's gone, and I can't change it."
"No, you can't change it." The helpless grief welled up to rub the wound
raw. "You had to have the party that night. All those people in our
home. Your family was never enough for you, and now he's gone. You had
to have more, more people, more music. Always more. And one of those
people you let into our home killed my baby."
He couldn't speak. If she had taken a knife and slashed him from heart
to gut there might have been less pain. Certainly less shock. They
stood, with the empty crib between them.
"He didn't let the monsters in." Emma stood in the doorway, her books
dangling from their strap, her eyes dark against her white skin. "Dad
didn't let the monsters in." Before Brian could speak, she was rushing
down the hall, her sobs trailing behind her.
"Good job," Brian managed to say while his jaw clenched and unclenched.
"Since you want to be alone, I'll take Emma and go."
She wanted to call after him, but couldn't. Tired, much too tired, she
sank into the rocker again.
IT TooK HIM AN HOUR to calm Emma. When her tears had put her to sleep,
he began his calls. His decision made, he ended with Pete.
"We're leaving for New York tomorrow," he said shortly. "Emma and I.
We'll hook up with Johnno, take a few days. I need to find her a good
school and arrange security. Once she's settled, and safe, we'll go to
California and begin rehearsals. Fix up the tour, Pete, and make it a
long one." He took a hard pull of whiskey. "We're ready to rock."
SHE DOESN'T WAnt to go back." Brian watched Emma wander around the
rehearsal hall with her new camera. He'd given it to her during their
tearful goodbye at Saint Catherine's Academy for Girls in upstate New
York.
"She'd barely been there a month before this spring-break thing,"
Johnno reminded him. But he felt a twinge for the little girl as she
snapped a picture of Stevie's Martin on its stand in the corner. "Give
her a bit of time to adjust."
"It seems all we do is adjust." It had been eight weeks since he'd
walked out on Bev, and he still ached for her. The women he'd taken
since were like a drug, the drugs like women. Both only eased the pain
for moments at a time.
"You could call her," Johnno suggested, reading his partner's thoughts
with the ease of a long relationship.
"No." He'd considered it, more than once. But the papers had been full
of their separation, and his appet.i.te since. He doubted if he and Bev
would have anything to say to each other that wouldn't make things
worse. "My concern now's for Emma. And the tour."
"Both'Il be smashing." Johnno glanced over, giving a pointed look toward
Angie. "With a few exceptions."
Brian merely shrugged and began to noodle on the piano. "If she