"Don't you believe in karma?"

  "Karma? Hardly."

  "Sure you do. We agree that what goes around comes around, don't we?"

  He backed away and squinted at her.

  "Don't look at me that way, Rafe. I'm just saying that if you don't do right by your parents, the same thing is bound to happen to you someday."

  When everyone else had left, Rayford noticed his mother pointedly ignoring him. He approached her and said, "Mom, I want to get back to that conversation." "No, you don't."

  He looked at Irene, who nodded at him and pointed to the other room.

  "Yes, I do. Now come sit down. You were telling me what was so important to you and Dad."

  He could see in her eyes that his lie had convinced her. He wanted to have this conversation the way he wanted to spend an afternoon at the mall when the Bears were on television.

  She took his hands in hers and led him to the couch in the living room. "Here's what I want you to pray about, Rayford. Though it's clear Daddy's mind is going and it's likely Alzheimer's, the doctor says he is otherwise healthy as a horse. I don't know why they always say it that way, like horses are healthier than

  Tim LaHaye Jer'ry B. Jenkins

  other animals. They aren't, are they? I never heard that they were."

  "I don't know, Mom. Back to your story."

  "Sorry. Anyway, Daddy and I always said we wanted to celebrate fifty years together." "Fifty years?" She nodded.

  "He probably can't even remember wanting that,"

  said, regretting it as soon as it was out of his mouth.

  "Don't be cruel."

  "No, I'm just saying.., if there's a benefit to this malady, it's that he will not likely be disappointed by missing those things he can't even remember hoping for."

  "Well, I'm hoping for it, okay?"

  That was so like her. And it made Rayford feel bad. I. "The doctor says it's possible he will live another

  years," she said. "We'll have to institutionalize him eventually, which should make it easier for me to last twenty more years."

  "Why is that so important, Mom? I'm not disparaging it. I really want to know."

  She dabbed at her eyes. "Besides raising a fine son and for all the best for you, being married fifty years

  our life's goal. Fd still like to make it, whether he's .... aware of it or not."

  Rayford could only imagine their fiftieth anniversary photograph.

  "So will you pray with me about that?" she said. "Maybe when you go to bed at night."

  344 345

  47

  He nodded, not wanting to put this lie into words.

  "You still pray when you go to bed, don't you, Ray- ford?"

  "Sometimes."

  "I believe in prayer," she said.

  I don't.

  Rayford's impatience for the good life grew into frustration as he and Irene slogged through their days in a tiny apartment. He was excited about the impending child, of course, but though he loved all the flight time he was logging, life seemed to drag. Irene became more tired and irritable while the baby grew within her. Rayford's mother became needier when his father was sent to a facility that required as much of Rayford's monthly income as he could afford to bridge the gap between the cost and his parents' insurance.

  It wasn't that Rayford begrudged helping. But his own dreams were on hold. How would he ever afford a house, cars, all the things that made life worth living?

  As thrilling as the birth of their daughter, Chloe, was, Rayford had to admit that even that glow didn't last. He was flooded with love for her, but he had envisioned more fatherly things than just helping Irene with chores, changing the baby, and fetching her in the night so Irene could nurse her. Rayford hated himself for feeling that way. He still loved his daughter and his wife, of course, but the fact was that his life was not yet what he dreamed it would be.

  346

  3 Then there was Irene's eagerness to start going to church again.

  "I thought you had learned your lesson about all that," Rayford said.

  "All I've learned is that I don't know so much," she -said. "I miss the best things about it, and I told you years ago I didn't want to raise a child without religion in her life."

  And so they began attending a big church where Rayford could easily get lost in the crowd and slip out as soon as it was over.

  Irene seemed pleased enough. She appeared to enjoy being a wife and mother, spending time with Rayford and helping him in his career. But that wasn't enough for him. Rayford applied to all the major airlines and devoted himself to qualifying on bigger and bigger jets.

  The bottom line was that life was not as fun as he thought it would be. Money, he was convinced, would change that. Prestige, which went with captaining an airliner, would too.

  The happiest day of Rayford Steele's life--though he didn't admit to Irene that it superseded even their wedding day, their honeymoon night, or the birth of their daughter--came when he got the offer from Pan- Continental Airlines to become a flight engineer in the cockpit for flying 747-200s. He had trained on the monsters in the air force and impressed the Pan-Con brass.

  Standing before the mirror in his new dress blues with Irene and Chloe, then four, admiring him and cooing

  349

  over him, Rayford could not stop grinning. At six-four and two hundred and twenty pounds, his gold braid and buttons gleaming, all he could think of was a house in the suburbs and a great new car. Within a month he was dreamily, satisfyingly, as deep in debt as he could afford.

  Irene cautioned that they had bought more house than they needed, but Rayford could see in her eyes that she loved the place. She had been a fastidious housekeeper in their dingy apartment, but now she was a woman on a mission. Creative and precise, she made their new home neat and gorgeous--a haven.

  Complicating Rayford's life, however, was the fact that his father was now altogether incapacitated. He was in the full-care unit, nearly twice as expensive as the normal residence had been. Rayford's mother had deteriorated as well. She seemed older and more fragile than ever. That her husband did not recognize or even acknowledge her seemed to crush her spirit.

  Worse, though Rayford tried to convince himself otherwise, he detected symptoms in his mother he had noticed in his dad before he was diagnosed. "Tell me it's just normal aging, Irene," he said.

  "I wish I could."

  For the next few years, the Steeles lived on the edge of solvency. When his mother was also institutionalized, Rayford drowned in the many details of selling off the family home, trying to salvage something from the sale of the tool and die, and attempting to stay afloat financially. Despite what he called "too much month at the end of

  348

  Tim LaHaye & Jerry B. Jenkins the money" every paycheck, his income allowed him more credit than he could afford. He would not deny himself a BMW convertible and a sedan for his wife.

  "I don't need this," Irene said. "Can we afford it?"

  "Of course," he said. "Don't deny me the privilege of buying you something nice."

  Though it racked him with guilt, Rayford began wishing his parents would die. He told himself it would be better for them. His father had long since been virtually gone, unaware of his surroundings, enjoying hardly anything resembling quality of life. And his mother was hard on his heels. They would be better off, and so would Rayford and his family.

  Nick Carpathia somehow avoided the typical travails of preadolescence. He never went through a gangly or awkward stage. His glowing skin never broke out. By the time he was sixteen he was so far ahead of his peers that he could have tested out of high school. But he wanted to be valedictorian first. Once that was accomplished, he enrolled at the University of Romania at Bucharest, determined to graduate in two years.

  "I want to stay at the InterContinental," he told Aunt Viv.

  "That would be exorbitant," she said.

  "And I want Star Diamond boarded as close by as possible."

&nb
sp; 351

  "I'll see what I can do."

  Of course she would. She had apparently been put on earth to do Nick's bidding. He found her amusing. He loved going to her classes and beating her to the punch. The netherworld seemed to communicate with him first, and it was not beyond him to clarify messages for her or even shout them out before they reached her.

  Irene Steele had talked of having another child, but Rayford wouldn't hear of it. He didn't want to tell her how delicate their financial situation had become, but she had to have an idea. When Chloe was seven years old, Irene carefully broke the news to Rayford: another baby was on the way.

  He tried to act excited, but he couldn't muster the requisite enthusiasm. That threw Irene into a funk that lasted until she was able to announce that it was a boy and that she hoped Rayford would agree to name him after himself. Rayford's ego was stroked, and he even looked into moving to a better neighborhood--until Irene put the kibosh on that. "You think I can't read our bank statements?" she said. "I admire what you're doing for your parents, but as long as that continues, this is going to be our lot."

  Rayford enjoyed striding through the corridors of the country's major airports. He was already graying, but he liked the new look, and Irene said it only made him more distinguished.

  350

  Tim LaHaye & Jerry B. Jenkins

  * When he was nineteen Nick Carpathia demanded a meeting with Reiche Planchette. "It is time for me to know my natural history," he said.

  "Meaning?"

  "You know what I mean, Reiche." He could tell Planchette didn't like to be referred to by his first name, especially by a teenager. "I want to know who my father is."

  "Impossible. Thoroughly confidential." "By tomorrow," Nick said. I'll see what I can do."

  The next day Planchette arrived at Nick's suite with a thick folder. "I need not remind you how highly classified this information is."

  "Then why remind me, Reiche? Just let me see it." "I can't leave it with you. It is not to leave my--" "You have copies." "Of course, but--"

  "I will return these to you tomorrow."

  "Very well."

  The next day Nick showed up at Planchette's tiny office in a dingy building in downtown Bucharest. "This place is an embarrassment to the association," Nick said.

  "All our money goes to your lodging and whims, Nick."

  Young Carpathia stared at him. "Do I detect resentment, Reiche?"

  "Maybe. Are you familiar with the phrase high maintenance?"

  Nick rubbed his eyes and let his head roll back. "Oh, Reiche. Are you familiar with the term unemployment?"

  Planchette stood. "I've been a loyal employee of the association long enough to not have to be subjected--" "Oh, sit down. I have questions about this file." "I can't imagine, Nick. Everything is there." "So I am a freak. I have two fathers." "Correct. Well, not the freak part, but yes." "And they have been given all this money?" "By Mr. Stonagal, yes."

  "And you complain about my expenses?"

  "Wellm"

  "Stonagal has a sea of money, Reiche. I would say that, so far, I am a bargain. I want two things: a stake in an international import/export business. Say ten million

  euros tO start."

  "Ten million!"

  "And I want these two opportunists off the payroll." "Impossible."

  "Not if they are eliminated."

  "They are your fathers. We can't just--"

  "Am I having trouble making myself understood, Reiche?"

  "I'll pass the word along, Nick."

  Carpathia tossed the folder onto Planchette's desk, and it pushed other papers onto the floor as it slid to him. "That reminds me. I guess I want a third thing: to be referred to by my given name." "Nicolae? You seem--" "Good guess, Reiche."

  Tim LaHaye (a" Jerry B. Jenkins

  "You seem so young--"

  "To be making more money than you? Was that what

  you were going to say?"

  "No. I just--"

  "Because that will be true soon; will it not?" "Well, I--I mean, the powers that be will have to decide whether your being a businessman is in the best interest

  Nicolae stood. "Please, Reiche, spare me the time, would you?"

  * Planchette sighed and hefted the folder, scowling. "You are going to resent working for me; are you not,

  Reiche?"

  Planchette cocked his head. "Am I?"

  "Going to resent it or going to work for me? Because there is no question of the latter. The only question is the former."

  "I am a loyal soldier, Nick... olae. Nicolae. I will do what I am called upon to do."

  "I know you will. Tell me something. When does one get the privilege of talking to the big guy, the leader, the boss?"

  "Stonagal?"

  Nicolae laughed. "You think he is in charge? Maybe that is why you will be working for me before long. You know who I am talking about."

  "The chief spirit? That is a privilege. A rare privilege."

  "How about you, Reiche? Have you had the privilege?"

  "Two different times, now many years ago.

  352 353

  355

  Ms. Ivinisova too. Just once for her. But I can tell you

  this: it isn't like you talk to him; he talks to you." "But you can then respond, right?" "Of course."

  "I cannot wait."

  354

  TWENTY-FIVE

  WHEN HE FINALLY became a captain, Rayford believed he had arrived. He got his finances under some modicum of control, and he looked forward to the birth of Rayford Jr., whom Irene was already referring to as Raymie.

  "That makes no sense if he's a Rayford Jr.," Rayford said, but the name stuck.

  He loved flying, being in charge, supervising a crew, chatting up the passengers; and he took satisfaction in his perfect safety record. But when Rayford allowed himself the luxury of assessing his life, he had to admit he was living for himself, not for anyone else. Oh, he did things for Irene and Chloe and soon Raymie. But everything revolved around him.

  Rayford was proud he had never allowed his love for alcohol to impede his work. One December afternoon, just after he arrived for a flight, O'Hare had been shut

  357

  down due to heavy snow. The forecast looked bleak, and he assumed he would be sent home soon. So he and a few colleagues enjoyed a couple of martinis each, then hung around in the pilots' lounge, waiting to be released.

  But suddenly the snow stopped, the plows gained purchase on the runways, and the announcement came that takeoffs would begin again in half an hour. Rayford asked his teammates if they were up to flying after drinking. To a person, each said he had had only a couple and felt fine about proceeding.

  Rayford felt the same but also believed he shouldn't risk it. He called his supervisor, Earl Halliday. I'll take whatever dock in pay you have to mete out, Earl," he said, "but I had a couple of martinis when I was sure we'd be grounded, and now I'm afraid I had better ground myself."

  "Where'm I gonna get a replacement at this hour, Steele?" Halliday said. "You sure two martinis are going to have an effect on a big guy like you?"

  "I'm sorry, Earl. But I'm not going to drive a fully loaded heavy tonight."

  Halliday slammed down the phone, but on Rayford's way home---confident to drive himself but not to be responsible for hundreds of passengersmhe took a call from Earl. "Got somebody, in case you're interested."

  "That's a relief. Sorry about that, Chief. I won't let it happen again. What's it going to cost me?" "Nothing." "Say again?"

  "You did the right thing, Steele, and I'm proud of you.

  356

  Tim LaHaye Jerry B. Jenkins

  You gave me a headache, but the alternative could have been a nightmare. Good man."

  Irene seemed to love to tell that story. Rayford had to ask her to quit referring to him as her "straight-arrow captain," though secretly he was thrilled that she was proud of him. That's why his brush with infidelity would have flattened her. He could ne
ver tell Irene, and he lived with the guilt of it--even though, thankfully, it stopped short of actual adultery--for years.

  It happened just two weeks after he had grounded himself. He and Irene were about to head to Earl Halliday's staff Christmas party when at the last minute Irene announced she couldn't make it. She was two weeks from delivery and not feeling well, but she insisted he go and enjoy himself and greet everyone for her.

  He wasn't scheduled to fly that night, of course, and knowing he could get a cab home, Rayford did not tern- his thirst. He was not the type to dance on tables, but he sensed himself getting louder and friendlier as the night wore on. Trish, a beautiful young intern in Earl's office--the one who always smiled when he dropped by--flirted with him all evening. Her boyfriend was out of town, and when she said one too many times that she would love to get Rayford alone, he said,

  "You'd better quit advertising if you're not selling." "Oh, I'm selling," she said, "if you're buying." While some were holding forth at the top of their lungs around the piano and others were dancing, Trish grabbed Rayford's hand and pulled him into a secluded closet.

  Five minutes later, after some heavy necking, Rayford

  pulled away. "I'm not going to do this," he said.

  "Oh, come on, Captain. I won't tell."

  "Neither would I, but I would know. And I'd like to be able to face myself tomorrow. Irene is--"

  "I know," she said. "Go home to your pregnant wife. There are more where you came from."

  Two days later, racked by a guilt he Would never fully shed, Rayford dreaded a visit to Earl's office. The boss just had routine business with him, but Rayford didn't want to face Trish. No such luck. She greeted him on his way in and asked if he had a minute later.

  On his way out she beckoned him to a corner where they could be seen but not heard. "I want to apologize for the other night," she said.

  "Don't give it another thought," he said. "We were both drunk."

  "Not as drunk as I got later, thinking about my boyfriend. He's about to pop the question, and I feel terrible."