Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo
her—but the little blue car was hemmed in behind the semi and the truck with the
trailer. She eased up on the accelerator because a minivan was riding alongside a
cement truck, blocking the inside lane.
“Come on, move it,” Star snapped. She was practically riding the minivan’s rear
bumper. “What the hell is he doing?”
“Sitting there with his thumb up his ass, trying to work things out,” Dáire replied.
“Flash him your lights.”
Star reached down to do so but the cement truck slowed down going up a slight
incline and the minivan passed it, swung into the truck’s lane almost immediately. The
blast of the truck’s horn made Star jump but Dáire just laughed.
“Where’s a smoky when you need one?” Star complained.
58
HardWind
Taking the FL-87S exit, Star pulled into the truck stop a few hundred yards down
the road and waited in the car for Dáire to get them both something to drink. While she
waited, she rummaged in her oversized handbag for the pills to help his headache.
“Jazzy little car there, mama,” someone said, and Star looked up. A man had come
out of the truck stop and was ogling her as he leaned his hip against the front of a
pickup truck that had seen better days.
“Ah, thanks,” she said, and continued looking through her purse.
“Bet it could get up to a hundred in a flash, huh?” the man asked. He pushed away
from the truck.
“Bet your head could too if you take one more step toward my woman,” Dáire said.
His menacing words had been spoken in a soft voice but the man to whom they were
directed instantly stopped in mid stride.
Though Dáire looked yuppified—as he and Jackson would have termed it—with
his white silk shirt, black trousers and black loafers—there was something very deadly
in the way he stood, the way his sunglass-clad vision was directed toward the man in
the frayed baseball hat, dirty T-shirt and rumpled jeans.
The trucker sniffed, ran his arm under his nose, tugged on the brim of his baseball
cap then spun around on his heel and went back into the truck stop.
“Get in the car,” Star said. She had a feeling the man had gone back inside for
reinforcements.
Dáire was hoping he had. Although his head was pounding, he would have
welcomed taking a few rednecks down a peg or two.
“Please?” Star begged, keeping an eye on the door to the truck stop.
Taking his time folding his tall body into the sports car, Dáire didn’t bother
directing his attention to the truck-stop door. If anyone were foolhardy enough to come
out to have a little dance with him, he would be glad to oblige. In the mood he found
himself, smashing his fist into a beer-puffed face might help to ease the tension.
Star didn’t give him a chance to find out. As soon as he shut the car door, she shot
out of the gravel-paved parking lot—gravel spraying under her wheels—and was back
on the highway, taking the on-ramp to the interstate before he could pop the tabs on the
cans of soda.
“Jealousy doesn’t become you, Dairy Crow,” she threw at him.
Dáire chuckled like a little boy caught with his hand in the cookie jar and took a
long swig of his soda.
“Here,” Star said, extending the bottle of analgesic toward him.
The drive to Sacred Heart where Jillian had been admitted to the Children’s
Hospital took a while. Sunday drivers seemed to be out in force and not a one of them
seemed to mind driving well under the posted speed limits and braking for no
apparently good reason, slowing down Star’s progress. Following behind an elderly
couple whose turn signal continued to flash long after they’d pulled in front of Star, was
59
Charlotte Boyett-Compo
like residing in the first circle of hell. Dáire’s fingers were drumming on the side mirror
as though he could hurry them up with the repetitious movement.
“I hope I don’t live to be that old,” he said as they crawled along behind the aged
couple.
“Don’t worry,” Star said. “I’ll put you in a home long before you’re a menace to
fellow drivers.”
“That’s good to know,” he agreed.
They turned down Brent Lane as Ma and Pa Driver continued on their merry way,
turn signal still flashing. The parking garage of the hospital seemed overly crowded for
a weekend but, luckily, Star was able to find a good space. She turned off the engine
and twisted in her seat, unwrapping the scarf she had tied around her long hair to keep
it from blowing in her face. As she folded the gauzy material, she could not help but
notice Dáire’s left foot was bouncing on his leg nervously.
“Are you okay?” she asked.
Dáire nodded but didn’t speak.
“She doesn’t bite.”
The man who had dodged flying bullets with aplomb, who had suffered untold
agonies for months on end and who had killed more men than he could number, was
trembling when Star reached out to place her hand on his arm.
“It’s all right, Dáire.”
He turned bleak, wounded eyes to her. “What do I say to her, Star?” he asked.
“How am I supposed to—?”
“Just relax,” she told him. “That’s all you need to do.”
Nodding his assent even though he wanted to leap out of the car and run as fast
and as far as he could, he reached for the door handle, annoyed with himself that his
hand was shaking.
Star opened her door and got out. She understood his nervousness, but there really
wasn’t anything she could say or do to reassure him. This was his child he was meeting
for the first time, and nothing could prepare him. It was not going to be an easy thing
for him to see their special-needs daughter. Already she feared he blamed himself for
Jillian’s condition. He had practically said as much when he’d told Star about his aunt
with Down’s syndrome.
He joined her at back of the car, reaching out to take her hand as they started
walking. “Will she be able to understand what I say to her?” he asked.
“She’ll respond to your words, though how much she understands is anyone’s
guess. She’s only ten months old, sweetie,” Star said. “She’s been feeling pretty rotten
since they admitted her so she may not be in a good frame of mind. She was fussing like
crazy when I was here yesterday morning.”
The ride up in the elevator was done in silence. Their fingers were threaded tightly
together and when they got off the elevator, Star heard Dáire sigh deeply.
60
HardWind
“I have never liked hospitals,” he said in way of explanation.
“Nobody does,” she replied.
His footsteps became slower with each step he took until he came to an abrupt stop,
shaking his head. “I can’t,” he said. He met her eyes and there were tears in his. “I can’t
do this, Star.”
Star put her free hand up to his cheek and cupped it. “I understand. You want to
wait here while I go see her?”
He nodded, unable to speak. Withdrawing his hand from hers, he shoved them into
his pockets and stood there with shoulders hunched, drawn in upon himself.
“Just wait right here.”
He watched her walking down the hall and called himself a coward a thousand
times before he saw her coming back. He had paced the corridor numerous times—
feeling the sympathetic eyes of the nurses—but could not find the courage to go after
Star. He was more than willing to give their child whatever she needed in order for her
to thrive, but he was not brave enough to meet her.
Star hadn’t been gone all that long, but it felt like hours to him as she came up to
him and slipped her arm through his. “Dr. Powell will have his nurse set up a time for
you to come in and be tested in the morning. He said it might be possible to do the
donation a day or two later. Is that all right with you?”
“Yeah,” Dáire said, feeling as though a load of brick were being piled on his chest.
“He told me the procedure won’t take long and you’ll be in the hospital only a day
unless there are complications. He’ll go over all that with you tomorrow.”
“Okay.”
Star eased him into movement, ushering him back to the elevator. “Let’s go get
some lunch,” she said.
He stopped, his head down. “Star, I’m sorry. I…”
“It’s all right,” she said. “I understand.”
Lifting his eyes to her sweet face, he asked if she really did.
“Yes, baby. I do,” she replied. “The important thing is that you’re here and you’re
going to help our daughter.”
All the way back to the parking garage, Dáire hated himself more with every step.
Star was being so patient with him, so understanding, but he no more understood his
reluctance to meet Jillian than he could have taken wing and sailed across the lowering
sky.
“Looks like another storm is headed in,” Star said as she pulled out onto Ninth
Avenue.
“Do you hate me?” he asked in a soft voice.
“Of course not,” she said.
“I hate me,” he confessed.
61
Charlotte Boyett-Compo
Pulling into a used-car parking lot, Star put the car in park and turned to face him.
“Dáire, there is no reason to feel that way. She wouldn’t have known who you were
anyway.”
“But she’s my daughter,” he said, his chin trembling. “Why couldn’t I go in there
and see her, Star?”
Before Star could answer, a few raindrops fell and she decided to put the top up. As
soon as the canopy was in place, the skies opened and a torrent of rain began to fall.
“Man, that was close,” she said with a laugh.
Dáire was sitting there with his hand across his eyes and his leg was bouncing
again. It was a habit he had whenever he was upset.
“The motel I usually stay at is over on Airport Boulevard,” she said. “How ’bout we
go check in then get lunch? Maybe the rain will have slacked off by then.”
“Whatever you want,” he answered listlessly.
“Is your head still hurting?”
“Like a big dog,” he replied.
Star reached out and put her hand on his thigh, feeling the muscles bunch beneath
her palm. “It’s tension, baby. Try to relax and it’ll go away.”
“I’m a prick,” he stated.
“I won’t argue with you there,” she said, and removed her hand. Glancing behind
her, she pulled out into traffic, the windshield wipers slapping vigorously as the rain
slammed against the glass.
Star drove down to the motel she had used many times before and Daire got out to
register them. He came back with a keycard and an annoyed look on his face.
“There’s a damned reunion of some kind in town and the only room they had left
was a double with two full-sized beds. I wasn’t going to take it but she said we’d be
lucky to find anything else.”
Star looked out over the parking lot of the motel. It was packed with cars. “She may
be right.”
“Let’s just go eat,” he said. “Maybe by the time we get back someone will have left
so we can get a decent parking place.”
There was a waiting line inside the restaurant and nowhere to sit while they waited.
Rather than leaving and running the gantlet beneath the punishing rain, they decided to
stay. Dáire leaned against the wall and drew Star back against him, gently cradling her
in his arms. An elderly couple smiled at them. A middle-aged couple frowned and a
teenage couple rolled their eyes at the public display of affection, as though they were
the only ones allowed such behavior.
Dáire stared at the teenagers for a moment then lowered his mouth to Star’s ear.
“How do you think I’d look with my eyebrow pierced?” he whispered.
Star had also been staring at the teens. Dressed in the faddish Goth style, the young
man had both eyebrows as well as his lower lip pierced and the girl had studs in both
62
HardWind
sides of her nose, a bar in the bridge of her nose and at least nine rings in her left ear.
“Like a fool,” she whispered back to Dáire.
“I think it looks cool,” he said.
“You would.”
He continued to stare at the teenage boy. Remembering getting his left ear pierced
right after leaving the Rangers, he recalled all too well the severe tongue-lashing he’d
received from Gentry. A smile crept across his face. Although he hadn’t worn a hoop in
his ear in over eight years and knew the hole had closed up, he decided to get it redone
and look into the eyebrow thing for good measure.
“Dude, what’s your problem?” the Goth girl asked, her kohl-lined eyes boring into
Dáire. “Like, didn’t your mother ever tell you it was rude to stare?”
Dáire grinned and just as any woman who was the recipient of that sensual smile,
the girl melted. “I like your tat,” he told her.
The girl blushed. “Yeah, like, thanks.” She reached up to touch the spider web
tattooed on her right shoulder. “You got one?”
Dáire nodded. He took his arms from around Star and stepped around her, walked
over to the couple and undid the top three buttons of his shirt, pulled the fabric back to
show them his tattoo.
“Cool!” the young man said. “You’re a Ranger!”
“Was,” Dáire said.
“Uber-bad, dude,” the girl said in an awed voice.
“Dude, that’s awesome!” the young man said. “Did you go to Iraq?”
“In 1990,” he answered. “During the first Gulf War.”
“Outstanding,” the young man pronounced, and looked annoyed that the hostess
called him and his date for their table. He reached out to shake Dáire’s hand. “Like