“So,” he finally said. “You need my help again.”
“I wouldn’t be here if I didn’t,” Nick said, words coated
in ice.
Paddy laughed. He pointed at Nick while glancing at
Kelly. “So fucking stubborn. He ever told you this story?”
Kelly shook his head, then remembered Nick’s warning
about being respectful. “No, sir.”
Paddy grunted. “First time I saw these two chuckleheads,
they were sixteen, walking down the street from baseball
practice. That one had a black eye.” He pointed at Nick
again. “Looked so much like my son, Patrick Jr. Lost him
to a goddamn drunk driver the year before. Saw Nicky and
thought he was a ghost. I stopped my car, called to him, asked
him how he got that shiner. And this fucking kid, he looks
me straight in the eye. You know how many people look me
straight in the eye, even back then?”
Kelly shrugged uncomfortably.
“No fucking one.” He looked back at Nick almost sadly.
“Didn’t take a fucking genius to figure out his old man was
knocking him around, so I asked him, big kid like you, why
don’t you knock back? He meets my eyes again and he says,
‘’Cause I got people more important than me at home to
take care of, Paddy.’ He fucking knew who I was. Wasn’t
afraid of me.”
163
Kelly glanced at Nick, his heart aching. “With a father
like his, why should he be afraid of anyone?” he asked softly.
“You damn right,” Paddy snarled. “Damn right. I told him
I’d help him out. I’d protect his sisters if he’d protect me. He was good on his word, and I was good on mine. Even gave him
a ride to the airport and paid for his fucking ticket to go to