
“I was an FBI agent, not a psychic.”
But he made a show of holding the photo up and looking at it anyway. The woman and the boy seemed happy. It was a celebration. Seven candles. McCaleb remembered that his parents were still together when he turned seven. But not much longer. His eyes were drawn to the boy more than the woman. He wondered how the boy would get along now without his mother.
“I’m sorry, Miss Rivers. I really am. But there is nothing I can do for you. Do you want this back or not?”
“I have a double of it. You know, two for the price of one. I thought you’d want to keep that one.”
For the first time he felt the undertow in the emotional current. There was something else at play but he didn’t know what. He looked closely at Graciela Rivers and had the sense that if he took another step, asked the obvious question, he would be pulled under.
He couldn’t help himself.
“Why would I want to keep it if I’m not going to be able to help you?”
She smiled in a sad sort of way.
“Because she’s the woman who saved your life. I thought from time to time you might want to remind yourself of what she looked like, who she was.”
He stared at her for a long moment but he wasn’t really looking at Graciela Rivers. He was looking inward, running what she had just said through memory and knowledge and coming up short of its meaning.
“What are you talking about?”
It was all he could manage to ask. He had the sense that control of the conversation and everything else was tilting away from him and sliding across the deck to her. The undertow had him now. It was carrying him out.
She raised her hand but reached past the photo he was still holding out to her. She placed her palm on his chest and ran it down the front of his shirt, her fingers tracing the thick rope of the scar beneath. He let her do it. He stood there frozen and let her do it.
“Your heart,” she said. “It was my sister’s. She was the one who saved your life.”
