noticed that Dix's hands lay perfectly still, one on top of the other on the desk in front of him.
"Booze," Dix said.
"Booze?"
"I was a drinker of opportunity," Dix said. "As soon as I could get booze, I did."
"I was all right until my wife left."
"No, you weren't. Even if you were sober. You were a drunk waiting to happen."
Jesse was silent for a time. Dix waited. He seemed ready to wait for the rest of eternity. There was nothing hurried in him.
"Lot of wives leave a lot of husbands," Jesse said.
Dix nodded.
"Not all the husbands have a drinking problem."
Dix nodded again.
"You married?" Jesse said.
"My wife left me because I was a drunk," Dix said. "By the time I got sober she was with somebody else."
"Tough."
"I earned it," Dix said. "Like they say, if you can't do the time, don't do the crime."
"Booze kill the job, too?"
"Yes."
"How'd you get sober?"
"I stopped drinking," Dix said.
"That's the secret?"
"You're a drunk because you drink," Dix said. "Don't drink, you're not a drunk."
"You don't believe in addiction?"
"Sure I do. I was addicted. Still am. But that's an explanation. You want to stop drinking, pal, you have to do more than explain it."
Jesse smiled a little.
"You're a cold bastard, aren't you," he said.
"Stopping is cold bastard work," Dix said. "Ever been to a shrink?"
"Not till now."
"Lotta people go to the shrink. They discover their childhood. They understand why they do what they do. And they say, 'Oh boy, now I understand why I'm such a full-bore blue-blooded asshole.' And they think they're cured."
"But they aren't," Jesse said.
"They're halfway," Dix said. "The trick is to stop being a full-bore blue-blooded asshole."
"I sense a parable," Jesse said.
Dix smiled. "You need will as well as understanding."
"There's the rub," Jesse said.
"Yep. There's the rub," Dix said.
"Can you help?"
"What am I, another pretty face? Of course I can help you. But I can't stop you. You got to find a reason for that."
"Like a higher power?" Jesse said.
"Like not getting your ass shot because you're drunk while serving and protecting," Dix said.
"So what do we do?"
"We talk," Dix said. "We think about where you are and how you got there. Sometimes I offer advice."
"Like what?"
"Like drink a lot of orange juice. Your body starts to crave sugar when you give up booze."
"Why juice?"
"Because it's better for you than candy bars and tonic," Dix said.
"For that I'm paying a hundred and fifty an hour?"
"A hundred and sixty-five an hour," Dix said. "I'm here all the time. You can call me anytime. You can stop by at 3:00 A.M. if you want. We can talk. We can sort out the things you tell yourself. And we can agree once again that the way to stop is to stop."
"And I'm doing this why?"
"You tell me," Dix said.
"I need to stop drinking."
Dix nodded.
"Jenn tell you about me?"
Dix nodded.
"This job, in Paradise, is the last stop. I get off the bus here and where do I go?"
"Freud says the things that matter most to people are love and work," Dix said.
"I don't want to be oh for two."
"I don't know where it will lead," Dix said. "But I've talked with Jenn, and the connection between you is very powerful."
"You're saying maybe I could be two for two?"
"I'm saying you do what you can. Jenn is up to Jenn. But the work is up to you."
"I can do the work," Jesse said.
"If you're sober."
"And Jenn?"
"Jenn will do what she will do," Dix said. "All you can do is be sober."
"And staying sober helps the work and the work helps the staying sober."
"Can't hurt," Dix said.
Again they sat quietly in the unadorned room. Dix remained motionless.
"That's what you're doing," Jesse said.
Dix didn't answer.
"You stay sober by helping people stay sober," Jesse said.
"See, you learned something already."
Jesse thought about it. He laughed.
"I need a drink," he said.
"Me too," Dix said.
"But you won't."
"Nope."
They were silent for a long time. Jesse could hear his breath going in and out.