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2000 Sandra Brown Standoff.html

Sandra Brown
Standoff
also by sandra brown
The Alibi
Unspeakable
Fat Tuesday
Exclusive
The Witness
Charade
Where There’s Smoke
French Silk
Breath of Scandal
Mirror Image Best Kept Secrets
Slow Heat in Heaven
Published by
warner books
SANDRA
BROWN
STANDOFF
WARNER BOOKS
A Time Warner Company
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, incidents, and dialogue, except for incidental
references to public figures, products, or services, are imaginary and are not intended to refer
to any living persons or to disparage any company’s products or services.
Copyright © 2000 by Sandra Brown Management, Ltd. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or
mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in
writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.
Warner Books, Inc., 1271 Avenue of theAmericas ,
New York,NY10020
Visit our Web site at www.twbookmark.com IA Time Warner Company
Printed in theUnited States of America
First Warner Books Printing: May 2000
10 98 7 65 43 21
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Brown, Sandra.
Standoff/ Sandra Brown.
p. cm.
]SBN 0-446-52701-7 1. Hostage negotiations–New Mexico–Fiction. 2. Runaway teenagers–New Mexico– Fiction. 3. Women journalists–New Mexico–Fiction. I. Title.
PS3552.R718 S73 2000
813′.54–dc21
99-052374
STANDOFF
CHAPTER 1
JUST HEARD THE NEWS BULLETIN ON MY CAR RADIO.
Tiel McCoy didn’t begin this telephone conversation
with any s! uperfluous chitchat. That was her opening statement
the instant Gully said hello. No preamble was necessary.
Truth be known, he had probably been expecting
her call.
But he played dumb anyway. “That you, Tiel? Enjoying
your vacation so far?”
Her vacation had officially begun that morning when
she leftDallas and headed west on Interstate 20. She had
driven as far asAbilene , where she stopped to visit her
uncle, who’d lived in a nursing home there for the past five years. She remembered Uncle Pete as a tall, robust
man with an irreverent sense of humor, who could barbecue
a mean brisket and knock a softball out of the park.
Today they had shared a lunch of soggy fish sticks and
canned English peas and watched an episode of Guiding
Light. She’d asked if there was anything she could do for
him while she was there, like write a letter or buy a maga
zine. He had smiled at her sadly and thanked her for coming,
then gave himself over to an attendant who’d tucked
him in for his nap like a child.
Outside the nursing home, Tiel had gratefully inhaled
the scorching, gritty West Texas air in the hope of eradicating
the smell of age and resignation which had permeated
the facility. She had been relieved the family
obligation was behind her, but felt guilty for the relief. By
an act of will she shook off her despair and reminded herself
that she was on vacation.
It wasn’t even officially summer yet, but it was unseasonably
warm for May. There’d been no shade in which to park at the nursing home; consequently her car’s interior
had been so hot she could have baked cookies on the
dashboard. She flipped on the AC full-blast and found a
radio station that played something other than Garth,
George, and Willie.
“I’m going to have a wonderful time. The time away will
be good for me. I’ll feel a lo! t better ! for having done it.” She repeated this internal dialogue like a catechism, trying
to convince herself of the truth of it. She had approached
the vacation as though it were equivalent to
taking a bad-tasting laxative.
Heat waves made the highway appear to ripple, and the
undulating movement was hypnotic. The driving became
mindless. Her mind drifted. The radio provided background
noise of which Tiel was barely aware.
But hearing the news bulletin was like getting goosed
by the driver’s seat. With a lurch, everything accelerated
–the car, Tiel’s heart rate, her mind.
Immediately she fished her cell phone from her large
leather satchel and placed the call to Gully’s direct line.
Again declining any unnecessary conversation, she said to
him now, “Give me the skinny.”
“What’s the radio putting out?”
“That earlier today a high school student in Fort Worth
kidnaped Russell Dendy’s daughter.”
“That’s about the gist of it,” Gully confirmed.
“The gist, but I want details.”
“You’re on vacation, Tiel.”
“I’m coming back. Next exit, I’ll make a U-turn.” She
consulted her dashboard clock. “I’ll be at the station by–”
“Hold on, hold on. Where’re you at, exactly?”
“About fifty miles west of Abilene.”
“Hmm.” “What, Gully?” Her palms had become damp. She experienced
the familiar tickle in her belly that only happened
when she was following a hot lead to a super story.
That unique adrenaline rush couldn’t be mistaken.
“You’re on your way to Angel Fire, right?”
“Right.”
“Northeastern part of New Mexico . . . Yeah, there it is.”
He must have been reading a highway map as he spoke.
“Naw,! never mi! nd. You don’t want this assignment, Tiel. It
would take you out of your way.”
He was baiting her, and she knew he was baiting her,
but in this instance she didn’t mind being baited. She
wanted a piece of this story. The kidnaping of Russell
Dendy’s daughter was big news, and it promised to become
even bigger news before it was over. “I don’t mind
taking a detour. Tell me where to go.”
“Well,” he hedged, “only if you’re sure.”
“I’m sure.”
“Okay then. Not too far in front of you is a turnoff onto
state highway Two-oh-eight. Take it south to San Angelo.
On the south side of San Angelo you’re gonna intersect
with–”
“Gully, about how far out of my way is this detour going
to take me?”
“I thought you didn’t care.” “I don’t. I’d just like to know. Rough estimate.”
“Well, let’s see. Give or take . . . about three hundred
miles.”
“From Angel Fire?” she asked faintly.
“From where you are now. Doesn’t count the rest of the
way to Angel Fire.”
“Three hundred round trip?”
“One way.”
She expelled a long sigh, but was careful not to let him
hear it. “You said highway Two-oh-eight south to San Angelo,
then what?”
She steered with her knee, held the phone with her left
hand, and took notes with her right. The car was on cruise
control, but her brain was in overdrive. Journalistic juices
were pumping faster than the pistons in her engine.
Thoughts of long pleasant evenings spent in a porch rocker
were swapped for those of sound bites and interviews.
But she was getting ahead of herself. She lacked pertinent
facts. When she asked for them, Gully, damn him,
turned mulish on her. “Not now, Tiel. I&#! 8217;m as! busy as a one-armed
paperhanger, and you’ve got miles to cover. By the
time you get where you’re going, I’ll have a lot more info.”
Frustrated and supremely irked with him for being so
stingy with the details, she asked, “What’s the name of the
town again?”
“Hera.” The highways were arrow-straight, flanked on both
sides by endless prairie with only an occasional herd of
cattle grazing in irrigated pastures. Oil wells were silhouetted
against a cloudless horizon. Frequently a tumble
weed rolled across the roadway in front of her. Once she
got beyond San Angelo, she rarely saw another vehicle.
Funny, she thought, the way things turn out.
Ordinarily she would have elected to fly to New Mexico.
But days ago she had decided to drive to Angel Fire, not
only so she could visit Uncle Pete along the way, but also
to get herself into a holiday frame of mind. The long drive
would give her time to decompress, work the kinks out,
begin the period of rest and relaxation before she ever
reached the mountain resort, so that when she did arrive,
she would already be in vacation mode.
At home in Dallas, she moved with the speed of light, always
in a rush, always working under a deadline. This
morning, once she had reached the western fringe of Fort
Worth and put the metropolitan sprawl behind her, when
the vacation became a reality, she had begun to anticipate
the idyllic days awaiting her. She had daydreamed of clear,
gurgling streams, hikes along trails lined with aspens, cool, crisp air, and lazy mornings spent with a cup of coffee
and a fiction bestseller.
There would be no schedule to keep, nothing but
hours in which to be lazy, which was a virtue unto itself.
Tiel McCoy was way past due to engage in some unabashed
ennui. She’d already postponed this vacation
three times.
“Use ‘! ;em or lo! se ‘em,” Gully had told her of the vacation
days she had accumulated.
He had lectured her on how her performance, as well
as her disposition, would greatly improve if she gave herself
a breather. This from the man who hadn’t taken more
than a few vacation days in the past forty-something
years–counting the week required to have his gallbladder
removed.
When she reminded him of this, he had scowled at her.
“Precisely. You want to wind up an ugly, shriveled, pathetic
relic like me?” Then he’d really hit the nail on the head.
“Taking a vacation isn’t going to jeopardize your chances.
That job’ll still be up for grabs when you get back.”
She easily inferred the meaning behind that sly remark.
Miffed at him for homing in on the real reason behind
her reluctance to leave work for any period of time, she
had grudgingly consented to going away for a week. The
reservations had been made, the trip scheduled. But
every schedule should have a little bit of flexibility built in. And if flexibility was ever called for, it was when Russell
Dendy’s daughter was allegedly kidnaped.
Tiel held the pay phone’s sticky receiver pinched between
the pads of her thumb and index finger, loathe to
touch any more of the surface than necessary. “Okay,
Gully, I’m here. Well, near, at least. Actually, I’m lost.”
He cackled. “Too excited to concentrate on where
you’re going?”
“Well, it’s not like I’ve missed a thriving metropolis. You
said yourself, the place isn’t even on most maps.”
Her sense of humor had worn off about the time she’d
lost all feeling in her butt. Hours ago, her posterior had
gone numb from sitting. Since talking to him, she had
stopped only once, and then only out of extreme necessity.
She was hungry, thi! rsty, tir! ed, cranky, achy, and none
too fresh because she’d been facing into the setting sun
for a long portion of the trip. The car’s AC had gone
humid from overuse. A shower would be bliss.
Gully didn’t improve her mood any by asking, “How’d
you manage to get lost?”
“I lost my sense of direction after the sun went down.
The landscape looks the same from every angle out here.
Even more so after dark. I’m calling from a convenience
store in a town with a population of eight hundred twenty-three, according to the city-limit sign, and I think the
chamber of commerce fudged that number in their favor.
This is the only lighted building for miles around. The
town is called Rojo something.”
“Flats. Rojo Flats.”
Naturally Gully knew the full name of this obscure hamlet.
He probably knew the mayor’s name. Gully knew
everything. He was a walking encyclopedia. He collected
information the way frat rats collected coeds’ phone numbers.
The TV station where Tiel worked had a news director,
but the man with the title conducted business from inside
a carpeted office and was more a bean counter and administrator
than a hands-on boss.
The man in the trenches, the one who dealt directly
with the reporters, writers, photographers, and editors,
the one who coordinated schedules and listened to sob
stories and chewed ass when ass-chewing was called for,
the one who actually ran the news operation, was the assignments
editor, Gully.
He’d been at the station when it signed on in the early
fifties, and had mandated that they would have to carry
him out of the place feet first He would die before he retired.
He worked a sixteen-hour day and begrudged the
time he wasn’t working. He had a colorful vocabulary and
countless similes, an extensive repertoire of yarns about
bygone days in! broadcas! t news, and seemingly no life beyond the newsroom. His first name was Yarborough, but
only a few living persons knew that. Everyone else knew
him strictly as Gully.
“Are you going to give me this mysterious assignment or
not?”
He wouldn’t be rushed. “What happened to your vacation
plans?”
“Nothing. I’m still on vacation.”
“Uh-huh.”
“I am! I’m not canceling my week off. I’m just postponing
the start of it, that’s all.”
“What’s the new boyfriend gonna say?”
“I’ve told you a thousand times, there is no new
boyfriend.” He laughed his phlegmy, chain-smoker’s
laugh that said he knew she was lying, and that she knew
he knew.
“Got your notepad?” he asked suddenly.
“Uh, yeah.”
Whatever germs had been teeming on the telephone
were probably living with her now. Reconciled to that, she
propped the receiver on her shoulder and held it there
with her cheek while she removed a notepad and pen
from her satchel and placed them on the narrow metal
ledge beneath the wall-mounted telephone.
“Shoot.” “The boy’s name is Ronald Davison,” Gully began.
“I heard that much on the radio.”
“Goes by Ronnie. Senior year, same as the Dendy girl.
Won’t graduate with any honors, but he’s a solid B student.
Never in trouble until today. After homeroom this
morning, he boogied out of the student parking lot in his
Toyota pickup with Sabra Dendy riding shotgun.”
“Russ Dendy’s child.”
“His one and only.”
“Is the FBI on it?”
“FBI. Texas Rangers. You name it. If it wears a badge,
it’s working this one. Waco all over again. Everybody’s
claiming jurisdiction and wants in on the action.”! ;
Ti! el took a moment to absorb the broad scope of this
story. The short hallway in which the pay phone was located
led to the public rest rooms. One had a cowgirl in a
fringed skirt stenciled in blue paint on the door. The
other, predictably, had a similar silhouette of a cowpoke in
chaps and ten-gallon hat, twirling a lasso above his head.
Glancing down the hall, Tiel spotted the real thing
coming into the store. Tall, slender, Stetson pulled down
low on his forehead. He nodded toward the store’s
cashier, whose frizzy, over permed hair had been dyed an
unflattering shade of ocher.
Nearer to Tiel was an elderly couple browsing for souvenirs, apparently in no hurry to return to their Winnebago.
At least Tiel assumed the Winnebago at the gas
pumps outside belonged to them. Through bifocal eyeglasses
the lady was reading the ingredients of ajar on the
shelf. Tiel heard her exclaim, “Jalapeno pepper jelly? Good lord.”
The couple then joined Tiel in the hallway, moving toward
their respective rest rooms. “Don’t dally, Gladys,” the
man said. His white legs were virtually hairless and looked
ridiculously thin in his baggy khaki shorts and thick-soled
athletic shoes.
“You mind your business, and I’ll mind mine,” she retorted
smartly. As she moved past Tiel she gave her a men-think they’re so smart but we know-better
wink. Another
time, Tiel would have thought the senior couple cute and
endearing. But she was thoughtfully reading what she’d
taken down almost verbatim from Gully.
“You said ‘riding shotgun.’ Strange choice of words,
Gully.”
“Can you keep a secret?” He lowered his voice significantly.
“Because my ass will be grass if this gets out before
our next newscast. We’ve scooped every other station and
newspaper in the state.”
Tiel! ’s ! scalp began to tingle, as it did when she knew she
was hearing something that no other reporter had heard,
when she had uncovered the element that would set her story apart from all the others, when her exclusive had the
potential of winning her a journalism prize or praise from
her peers. Or of guaranteeing her the coveted spot on Nine Live.
“Who would I tell, Gully? I’m sharing space with a fresh-off the-range
cowboy buying a six-pack of Bud, a sassy
granny lady and her husband from out of state–I’m
guessing by their accents. And two non-English-speaking
Mexicans.” The pair had since come into the store. She’d
overheard them speaking Spanish while heating packaged
burritos in a microwave oven.
Gully said, “Linda–”
“Linda? She got the story?”
“You’re on vacation, remember?”
“A vacation you urged me to take!” Tiel exclaimed.
Linda Harper was another reporter, a darned good reporter,
and Tiel’s unspoken rival. It stung that Gully had
assigned Linda to cover such a plum of a story, which
rightfully should have belonged to her. At least that’s the
way she saw it.
“You want to hear this or not?” he asked cantankerously.
“Go ahead.”
The elderly man emerged from the men’s room. He
moved to the end of the hall, where he paused to wait for
his wife. To kill time, he took a camcorder from a nylon
airline bag and began tinkering with it.
Gully said, “Linda interviewed Sabra Dendy’s best friend this afternoon. Hold on to your hat. The Dendy
girl is pregnant with Ronnie Davison’s kid. Eight months
gone. They’ve been hiding it.”
“You’re kidding! And the Dendys didn’t know?”
“According to the friend, nobody did. That is, not until
last night. The kids broke the news! to their! parents, and
Russ Dendy went apeshit.”
Tiel’s mind was already racing ahead, filling in the
blanks. “So this isn’t a kidnaping. It’s a contemporary
Romeo and Juliet.”
“I didn’t say that.”
“But. . . ?”
“But that’d be my first guess. A view shared by Sabra
Dendy’s best friend and confidante. She claims Ronnie
Davison is crazy about Sabra and wouldn’t harm a hair on
her head. Said Russell Dendy has been fighting this romance
for more than a year. Nobody’s good enough for
his daughter, they’re too young to know their own minds,
college is a must, and so forth. You get the picture.”
“I do.”
And what was wrong with the picture was that Tiel
McCoy wasn’t in it and Linda Harper was. Damn! Of all
times to go on vacation.
“I’m coming back tonight, Gully.”
“No.” “I think you sent me on this wild goose chase so it would
be impossible for me to return.”
“Not true.”
“How far am I from El Paso?”
“El Paso? Who said anything about El Paso?”
“Or San Antonio. Whichever is closer. I could drive
there tonight and hop a Southwest flight in the morning.
Do you have their schedule handy? What time does the
first flight depart for Dallas?”
“Listen to me, Tiel. We’ve got it covered. Bob’s working
the manhunt-law enforcement angle. Linda’s on the kids’
friends, teachers, and families. Steve’s practically moved
into the Dendys’ mansion, so he’ll be there if a ransom
call comes in, which I don’t expect. And, bottom line,
those kids’ll probably turn up before you could get back
to Dallas anyway.”
“So what am I doing out here in the middle of freaking
nowhere?”
T! he old ma! n shot her a curious glance over his shoulder.
“Listen,” Gully hissed. “The friend? Sabra mentioned to
her a few weeks back that she and Ronnie might just hightail
it to Mexico.”
Mollified because she was closer to the Mexican border
than she was to Dallas, Tiel asked, “Where in Mexico?”
“She didn’t know. Or wouldn’t say. Linda had to twist
her arm to get that much from her. She didn’t want to betray Sabra’s confidence. But the one thing she did say is
that Ronnie’s dad–his real dad; his mom’s remarried–is
sympathetic to their predicament. Awhile back he offered
his help if they ever needed it. Now, you’re gonna feel
really bad about yelling at me when I tell you where he
hangs his hat.”
“Hera.”
“Satisfied?”
She should have apologized, but she didn’t. Gully understood.
“Who else knows about this?”
“Nobody. But they will. It works to our advantage that
Hera is a one-horse town, not on any beaten path.”
“Tell me about it,” she muttered.
“When word gets out, it’ll take everybody a while to get
there, even by helicopter. You’ve got a definite head start.”
“Gully, I love you!” she said excitedly. “Direct me out of
here.”
The elderly lady emerged from the ladies’ room and rejoined
her husband. She admonished him for fiddling
with the camcorder and ordered him to put it back in the
tote bag before he broke it.
“Like you’re an expert with video cameras,” the old
man retorted.
“I took the time to read the instruction book. You
didn’t.” Tiel poked her finger in her ear so she could hear Gully
better. “What’s the dad’s name? Davison, I presume.”
“I’ve got an addre! ss and ph! one number.”
Tiel wrote down the information as fast as he reeled it
off. “Do I have an appointment with him?”
“Working on it. He might not agree to go on camera.”
“I’ll get him to agree,” she said confidently.
“I’m dispatching a chopper with a photographer.”
“Kip if he’s available.”
“Yall can meet in Hera. You’ll do the interview tomorrow
as soon as it’s arranged with Davison. Then you can
continue on your merry way.”
“Unless there’s more story there.”
“Uh-uh. That’s the condition, Tiel.” She envisioned
him stubbornly shaking his head. “You do this bit, then
you’re off to Angel Fire. Period. End of discussion.”
“Whatever you say.” She could easily agree now, then
argue about it later if events warranted.
“Okay, let’s see. Outta Rojo Flats …” The map must
have been right there on his desk, because within seconds
he was giving her further directions. “Shouldn’t take you
long to get there. You’re not sleepy, are you?”
She was never more wide awake than when pursuing a
story. Her problem was shutting her mind off and going
to sleep. “I’ll buy something caffeinated to take along.” “Check in with me as soon as you get there. I’ve got you
a room reserved at the only motel. You can’t miss it. I’m
told it’s at the blinking traffic light–the one and only.
They’ll wait up for you to give you a room key.” Changing
subjects, he asked, “Is the new boyfriend going to be
pissed?”
“For the last time, Gully, there is no new boyfriend.”
She hung up and placed another call–to her new
boyfriend.
Joseph Marcus was as much a workaholic as she was. He
was s! cheduled ! to fly out early the next day, so she predicted
he would be working late at his desk, putting things
in order prior to his being away for several days. She was
right. He answered his office phone on the second ring.
“Do you get paid overtime?” she teased.
“Tiel? Hi. I’m glad you called.”
“It’s after hours. I was afraid you wouldn’t answer.”
“Reflex. Where are you?”
“The end of nowhere.”
“Everything okay? You haven’t had car trouble or anything?”
“No, everything’s great. I called for a couple of reasons.
First, because I miss you.”
This was the tack to take. Establish that the trip was still
on. Establish that it was being delayed, not derailed. Assure
him that everything was cool, then inform him of the slight wrinkle in their plans for a romantic getaway.
“You saw me just last night.”
“But only briefly, and it’s been a long day. Secondly, I
called to remind you to throw a swimsuit into your suitcase.
The hot tub at the condo complex is public.”
After a pause, he said, “Actually, Tiel, it’s good that you
called. I needed to talk to you.”
Something in the tone of his voice prevented her from
prattling on. She stopped talking and waited for him to fill
the silence that yawned between them.
“I could have called you on your cell phone today, but
this isn’t the sort of thing . . . The fact is …. And I’m sorry
as hell about this. You can’t begin to know how sorry I
am.”
Tiel stared at the countless perforations in the metal
surrounding the telephone. She stared so long without
blinking that the tiny holes ran together. Absently she
wondered what purpose they served.
“I’m afraid I can’t get away tomorrow.”
She’d been holding! her brea! th. Now she released it, relieved.
His change of plans alleviated her guilt over having
to change them herself.
However, before she could speak, he continued. “I
know how much you’d looked forward to this trip. And so
had I,” he rushed to add.
“Let me make this easier on you, Joseph.” Meekly she confessed. “The truth is, I was calling to say that I need another
couple days before I can get to Angel Fire. So I’m
fine with a short postponement. Would your schedule
allow us to meet on, say, Tuesday instead of tomorrow?”
“You don’t understand what I’m saying, Tiel. I can’t
meet you at all.”
The perforations ran together again. “Oh. I see. That is
disappointing. Well–”
“It’s been very tense around here. My wife found my airline
ticket and–”
“Excuse me?”
“I said my wife found–”
“You’re married?”
“Well. . . yeah. I thought you knew.”
“No.” Her facial muscles felt stiff and inflexible. “You
have failed to mention a Mrs. Marcus.”
“Because my marriage has nothing to do with you, with
us. It hasn’t been a real marriage for a long time. Once
I’ve explained my situation at home to you, you’ll understand.”
“You’re married.” This time it was a statement, not a
question.
“Tiel, listen–”
“No, no, I’m not going to listen, Joseph. What I’m
going to do is hang up on you, you son of a bitch.”
The telephone receiver she had been so reluctant even to touch ten minutes earlier she now clung to long after
replacing it on the hook. She leaned against the pay
phone, her forehead pressing hard against the perforated
metal while her hands maintained their grip on the greasy
re! ceiver. Married. He had seemed too good to be true, and he
was. Good-looking, charming, friendly, witty, athletic, successful,
and financially secure Joseph Marcus was married.
If not for an airline ticket she would have had an affair
with a married man.
She swallowed a surge of nausea and took another moment
to compose herself. Later she would lick her
wounded ego, berate herself for being such a Pollyanna,
and curse him to hell and back. But right now she had
work to do.
Joseph’s revelation had left her reeling with disbelief.
She was furious beyond measure. She was terribly hurt,
but more than anything she was embarrassed by her gullibility.
All the more reason she was not about to let the bastard
affect her work performance.
Work was her panacea, her life support. When she was
happy, she worked. Sad, she worked. Sick, she worked.
Work was the cure for all her ills. Work was the remedy for
everything . . . even heartbreak so profound you thought
you’d die.
She knew that firsthand. She gathered up her pride, along with her notes on the
Dendy story and Gully’s directions to Hera, Texas, and ordered
herself to mobilize.
Compared to the dimness of the hallway, the fluorescent
lighting in the store seemed inordinately bright. The cowboy
had left. The elderly couple were browsing through
the array of magazines. The two Spanish-speaking men
were eating their burritos and talking quietly together.
Tiel sensed their smoldering gazes as she went past
them on her way to the refrigerated cabinets. One said
something to the other that caused him to snicker. It was
easy to guess the nature of the comment. Thankfully, her
Spanish was rusty.
She slid open the door to the refrigerator and selected
a six-pack of high-voltage cola for the road. From a rack of
snack food she chose a package of sunflower seeds. During
college she ! had disco! vered that cracking open the
salty seeds in order to get to the kernel inside was a good
manual exercise to keep one awake while studying. Hopefully
it would translate to night driving as well.
She debated whether or not to buy a bag of chocolate-covered
caramels. Just because a man she had been dating
for weeks had turned out to be a married shit-heel didn’t
mean she should use that as an excuse to binge. On the
other hand, if ever she deserved a treat-The security camera in the corner of the ceiling virtually
exploded, sending pieces of glass and metal flying.
Instinctively Tiel recoiled from the deafening noise.
But the camera hadn’t exploded on its own. A young man
had entered the store and fired a pistol at it. The gunman
then aimed his weapon at the cashier, who screeched a
high note before the sound seemed to freeze inside her
throat.
“This is a holdup,” he said melodramatically, and somewhat
needlessly, since it was apparent what it was.
To the young woman who had accompanied him into
the store, he said, “Sabra, watch the others. If anyone
moves, warn me.”
“Okay, Ronnie.”
Well, I might die, Tiel thought. But at least I’ll get my story.
And she wouldn’t be going to Hera to get it. It had
come to her.
chapter 2
You!” ronnie davison pointed the pistol at Tiel.
“Come over here. Lie down on the floor.” Incapable of
moving, she only gaped at him. “Now!”
Dropping her package of sunflower seeds and the six-pack
of sodas, she scrambled over to the indicated spot and
lay facedown as instructed. Now that her initial shock had
worn off, she bit her tongue to keep from asking him why
he was compounding a kidnaping with an armed robbery. But she doubted that at this moment the young man
would be receptive to questions. Besides, until she knew
what h! e had pla! nned for her and the other eyewitnesses,
perhaps she shouldn’t reveal that she was a reporter and
knew his and his accomplice’s identities.
“Get over here and lie down,” he ordered the elderly
couple. “You two.” He pointed the gun at the Mexican
men. “Now! Move it!”
The old people complied without argument. The Mexican
men remained where they were. “I’ll shoot you if you
don’t get over here!” Ronnie shouted.
Keeping her head down and addressing her words to
the floor, Tiel said, “They don’t speak English.”
“Shut up!”
Ronnie Davison broke the language barrier and made
himself understood by motioning with the pistol. Moving
slowly, reluctantly, the men joined Tiel and the elderly
couple on the floor.
“Put your hands behind your head.”
Tiel and the others did as he asked.
Over the years, Tiel had covered dozens of news stories
wherein innocent bystanders, who had become eyewitnesses
to a crime, were all too often found at the scene,
lying facedown, dead, one gunshot to the back of the
head, executed for no other reason except that they had been in the wrong place at the wrong time. Was this to be
how her life ended?
Strangely, she wasn’t so much afraid as angry. She
hadn’t done everything she wanted to do! Snowboarding
looked like a real kick, but she hadn’t had time to try it.
Correction: She hadn’t taken time to try it. She’d never
toured the Napa Valley. She wanted to see Paris again, not
as a high school student under strict supervision, but on
her own, free to meander the boulevards at will.
There were goals she had yet to reach. Think of the stories
she would miss covering if her life ended now. Nine
Live would go to Linda Harper by default, and that was so
unfair.
And not all her dreams! were car! eer-oriented. She and
other single friends joked about their biological clocks,
but in private she anguished over its incessant tick. If she
died tonight, having a child would be just one of many
dreams left unfulfilled.
Then there was the other thing. The big thing. The
powerful guilt that fueled her ambition. She hadn’t done
enough yet to make up for that. She hadn’t yet atoned for
harsh words spoken angrily and flippantly, which, tragically,
had been prophetic. She must live to make restitution
for that.
She held her breath, waiting for death.
But Davison’s attention was on something else. “You, in the corner,” the young man shouted. “Now! Or I’ll kill the
old folks. It’s up to you.”
Tiel raised her head only high enough to glance into
the fish-eye mirror mounted in the corner at the ceiling.
Her assumption had been wrong. The cowboy hadn’t left.
In the mirror, she watched him calmly replace a paperback
novel in its slot on the revolving rack. As he sauntered
down the aisle, he removed his hat and set it on top
of a shelf. Tiel experienced a flurry of recognition, but
she attributed it to having seen him before when he came
into the store.
The eyes he kept trained on Ronnie Davison had a tracery
of fine lines at the corners. Unsmiling lips. The face
said Don’t mess with me, and Ronnie Davison read it well.
Nervously he shifted the pistol from one hand to the other
until the cowboy was stretched out alongside one of the
Mexican men, his hands clasped on the back of his head.
While all this was going on, the cashier had been emptying
the cash drawer into a plastic grocery bag. Apparently
this out-of-the-way store wasn’t equipped with an
after-dark safe into which cash automatically went. From
what Tiel could discern, there was an appreciable amount
of money in the ! sack Sabr! a Dendy took from the cashier.
“I’ve got the money, Ronnie,” said the daughter of one
of Fort Worth’s richest men. “Okay then.” He hesitated as though unsure about what
to do next. “You,” he said, addressing the terrified cashier.
“Lie down with the rest of them.”
She might have weighed ninety pounds sopping wet
and was a stranger to sunscreen. The skin hanging loosely
from her bony arms looked like leather, Tiel noticed as
the tiny woman lay down beside her. Little hiccups of terror
erupted from her spasmodically.
Everyone had his own unique way of reacting to fear.
The elderly couple had disobeyed Ronnie’s orders to
keep both hands behind their heads. The man’s right
hand was tightly clasping his wife’s left.
This is it, Tiel thought. He’ll kill us now.
She closed her eyes and tried to pray, but it had been a
while and she was out of practice. The poetic language of
the King James Bible eluded her. She wanted this appeal
to be eloquent and stirring, persuasive and impressive,
compelling enough to distract God from all the other
prayers coming His way at this particular moment.
But God probably wouldn’t approve of her purely selfish
reasons for wanting to live anyhow, so all she could
think to say was, “Heavenly Father, please don’t let me
die.”
When the scream rent the silence, Tiel thought for certain
it had originated from the cashier. She glanced
quickly at the woman beside her, to see what unspeakable torture had been inflicted. But the woman was still blubbering,
not screaming.
It was Sabra Dendy who had screamed, and that first
startling sound was followed by, “Oh, my God! Ronnie.1″
The boy rushed over to her. “Sabra? What’s the matter?
What’s happening?”
“I think it’s . . . Oh, L! ord.̶! 1;
Tiel couldn’t help herself. She raised her head to see
what was going on. The girl was whimpering and staring
aghast at the puddle of fluid between her feet.
“Her water broke.”
Ronnie whipped his head around and glared at Tiel.
“What?”
“Her water broke.” She repeated the statement with
more composure than she felt. Actually her heart was hammering.
This might be the spark that set him off and caused
him to bring things to a swift conclusion, such as shooting
them all and then dealing with his girlfriend’s crisis.
“That’s right, young man.” Unafraid, the elderly woman
sat up and addressed him with the temerity she had
demonstrated when lecturing her husband about fiddling
with the home video camera. “Her baby’s coming.”
“Ronnie? Ronnie?” Sabra crammed the skirt of her sundress
up between her thighs, as though to impede the
course of nature. On bended knees, she lowered herself to the floor until she was sitting back on her heels. “What
are we going to do?”
Clearly the girl was frightened. Neither she nor Ronnie
seemed adept at armed robbery. Or at childbirth, for that
matter. Taking courage from the older lady, Tiel also sat
up. “I suggest–”
“You shut up,” Ronnie shouted. “Everybody just shut
I )»
up!
He kept his pistol aimed at them as he knelt down beside
Sabra. “Are they right? This means the baby’s coming?”
“I think so.” She nodded, shaking loose tears and sending
them rolling down her cheeks. “I’m sorry.”
“It’s okay. How much time . . . How long before it’s
born?”
“I don’t know. It varies, I think.”
“Does it hurt?”
A fresh batch of tears formed in her eyes. “It’s been hurtin! g for a couple of hours.”
“A couple of hours!” he cried in alarm.
“But only a little. Not bad.”
“How long since it started? Why didn’t you tell me?”
“If she’s been in labor–”
“I told you to shut up!” he yelled at Tiel.
“If she’s been in labor for a while,” she said persistently,
keeping her eyes steadfastly on his, “you’d better get medical attention. Immediately.”
“No,” Sabra said hastily. “Don’t listen to her, Ronnie.”
She grabbed his sleeve. “I’m okay. I’m–”
A pain seized her. Her face contorted. She gasped for
breath.
“Oh, God. Oh, Jesus.” Ronnie studied Sabra’s face, raking
his teeth across his lower lip. His gun hand wavered.
One of the Mexican men–the shorter of the two– surged to his feet and lunged toward the couple.
“No!”Tiel shouted.
The cowboy made a grab for the Mexican’s leg, but
missed.
Ronnie fired the pistol.
The bullet shattered the glass door of the refrigerated
compartment, making a horrific sound and puncturing a
plastic gallon jug. Everything nearby was showered with
glass and milk.
The Mexican man drew up short. Before he came to a
complete rest, inertia caused his body to rock slightly forward,
then back, as though his boots had become stuck to
the floor.
“Stay back or I’ll shoot you!” Ronnie’s face was congested
with blood. A common language wasn’t required
to get his message across. The man’s taller friend spoke to
him softly and urgently in Spanish. He backed away until
he reached his starting point, then sat down again. Tiel glared at him. “You could have gotten your fool
head blown off. Save your machismo for another time,
okay? I don’t want ! to get ki! lled because of it.”
Although the words were unknown to him, he caught
her drift. Pridefully, his dark eyes smoldered resentment
over being dressed down by a woman, but she didn’t care.
Tiel turned back to the young couple. Sabra was now
lying on her side, her knees drawn up to her chest. For the
moment she was quiet.
By contrast, Ronnie looked on the verge of losing all
self-control. Tiel didn’t believe that, in the span of a single
afternoon, he could have been transformed from a student
who’d never been in trouble into a cold-blooded
killer. She didn’t think the boy had it in him to kill anyone,
even in self-defense. If he had wanted to hit the man
who had charged him, he could have easily. Instead he appeared
as upset as anyone that he’d had to fire the pistol.
Tiel guessed that he had intentionally missed the man and
fired the gun only to underscore his threat.
Or she could be entirely, terribly wrong.
According to Gully’s information, Ronnie Davison
came from a broken home. His real father lived far away,
so visits couldn’t have been too frequent. Ronnie lived
with his mother and stepfather. What if little Ronnie had
had a problem with those arrangements? What if his personality
had been twisted by the forced separation from his father, and for years he’d been harboring hatred and
mistrust? What if he had been concealing murderous impulses
as successfully as he and Sabra had concealed her
pregnancy? What if he’d been driven over the edge by
Russell Dendy’s reaction to their news? He was desperate,
and desperation was a dangerous motivator.
For speaking out, she would probably be the first one
he shot. But she couldn’t just lie there and die without at
least trying to avoid it. “If you care anything for this
girl …”
“I’ve told you befor! e to shut! up.”
“I’m only trying to prevent a disaster, Ronnie.” Since he
and Sabra had addressed each other, he wouldn’t wonder
how she knew his name. “If you don’t get help for Sabra,
you’re going to regret it for the rest of your life.” He was
listening, so she took advantage of his apparent indecision.
“I assume the child is yours.”
“What the hell do you think? Of course it’s mine.”
“Then I’m sure you’re concerned for its well-being as
much as you are for Sabra’s. She needs medical assistance.”
“Don’t listen to her, Ronnie,” Sabra said weakly, “The
pain’s better now. Maybe it’s a false alarm, after all. I’ll be
okay if I can just rest for a while.”
“I could take you to a hospital. There’s got to be one
fairly close.” “No!” Sabra sat up and gripped his shoulders. “He’d
find out. He’d come after us. No. We’re driving straight
through to Mexico tonight. Now that we’ve got some
money, we can make it.”
“I could call my dad. …”
She shook her head. “Daddy could’ve got to him by
now. Bribed him or something. We’re on our own, Ronnie,
and that’s how I want it. Help me up. Let’s get out of
here.” But as she struggled to get up, another pain seized
her and she gripped her distended abdomen. “Oh my
God, oh my God.”
“This is nuts.” Before Tiel had time to process the command
of her brain, she was on her feet.
“Hey!” Ronnie shouted. “Get back down.”
Tiel ignored him, moved past him, and crouched down
beside the suffering girl. “Sabra?” She took her hand.
“Squeeze my hand until the pain passes. That might help.”
Sabra graspe! d her han! d so hard Tiel feared the bones
would be ground to meal. But she endured it, and to
gather they rode out the contraction. When the girl’s features
began to relax, Tiel whispered, “Better now?”
“Hmm.” Then with a trace of panic, “Where’s Ronnie?”
“He’s right here.”
“I won’t leave you, Sabra.”
Tiel said, “I think you should urge him to call nine-one-one for you.”
“No.”
“But you’re at risk and so is your baby.”
“He would find us. He’d catch us.”
“Who?” Tiel asked, although she knew. Russell Dendy.
He had the reputation of being a ruthless businessman.
From what she knew of him, Tiel couldn’t imagine him
being any less unyielding in his personal relationships.
Ronnie said brusquely, “Get back with the others, lady.
This is none of your business.”
“You made it my business when you waved a pistol at me
and threatened my life.”
“Get back over there.”
“No.”
“Look, lady…”
He faltered when a car pulled off the highway and into
the parking lot. Its headlights swept the front of the store.
“Damn! Hey, lady!” He walked over to the cashier and
nudged her with the toe of his shoe. “Get up. Turn off the
lights and lock the door.”
The woman shook her head, refusing to acknowledge
either him or the precarious situation.
“Do what he says,” the elderly woman said to her. “We’ll
be all right if we just do what he says.”
“Hurry up!” The car rolled to a stop at one of the gas pumps. “Turn off the lights and lock the door.”
The woman came to her feet unsteadily. “I’m not supposed
to close until eleven. That’s still ten minutes.”
If circ! umstances! hadn’t been so tense, Tiel would have
laughed at her blind adherence to the rules.
Ronnie said, “Do it now. Before he gets out of his car.”
She went behind the counter, her mules slapping
against her heels. At the flip of a switch, the lights outside
were extinguished.
“Now lock the door.”
She click-clacked over to another control panel behind
the counter and threw a switch. With an audible snap, the
door locked electronically. “How do you unlock it?” Ronnie
asked her.
He was smart, Tiel thought. He didn’t want to get
trapped inside.
“Just flip this here switch,” the cashier replied.
The cowboy and the two Mexican men were still lying
facedown on the floor, their hands on their heads. They
couldn’t be seen by the man approaching the door. Tiel
and Sabra were also out of sight in the aisle between two
rows of shelves.
“Everybody stay put.” Ronnie duck walked to the elderly
lady and grabbed her arm, lifting her to her feet.
“No!” her husband cried. “Leave her alone.”
“Shut up!” Ronnie ordered. “If anybody moves, I’m going to shoot her.”
“He’s not going to shoot me, Vern,” she said to her husband.
“I’ll be all right, as long as everyone stays calm.”
The woman followed Ronnie’s instructions and
crouched down with him behind a cylindrical cold-drink
cooler. From above the rim, he had a clear view to the door.
The customer tested the door, discovered it locked, and
called out. “Donna! You in there? How come you shut off
the lights?”
Donna, cringing behind the counter, remained mute.
The customer peered through the glass. “There you
are,” he said, spotting her. “What gives?”
“Answer him,” Ronnie instructed her in a whisper. R! 20;I’m … s-sick,” she said, loud enough to carry through
the door.
“Hell, you ain’t got nothing I ain’t already had. Open
up. All I need is ten dollars’ worth o’ gas and a six-pack o’
Miller Lite.”
“I cain’t,” she called out tearfully.
“Come on, Donna. Won’t take two shakes, and I’ll be on
my way. It ain’t quite ‘leven yet. Open the door.”
“I cain’t.” She unraveled at the same time her voice rose
to a full-fledged scream. “He’s gotta gun and he’s gonna
kill us all.” She dropped down behind the counter.
“Shit!” Tiel didn’t know from which man the expletive had
come, but it echoed exactly what she was thinking. She
was also thinking that if Ronnie Davison didn’t shoot
Donna the cashier, she just might.
The man at the door backed away, then stumbled as he
turned and ran for his car. Tires screeched as the vehicle
shot backward, then spun around and pulled onto the
highway.
The old man was chanting, “Don’t hurt my wife. I beg
you, please don’t hurt Gladys. Don’t hurt my Gladys.”
“Hush, Vern. I’m all right.”
Ronnie was angrily yelling at Donna for being so stupid.
“Why’d you do that? Why? That guy will call the police.
We’ll be trapped here. Oh, hell, why’d you do that?”
His voice was tearing with frustration and fear. Tiel
thought that he was probably as scared as the rest of them.
Maybe more so. Because no matter how this situation was
ultimately resolved, he would be faced not only with legal
consequences, but with the wrath of Russell Dendy. God
help him.
The young man ordered the cashier to come from behind
the counter to where he could see her.
Tiel didn’t know whether or not she o! beyed him! . All
her attention was centered on the girl, who was in the grip
of another contraction. “Squeeze my hand, Sabra.
Breathe.” Isn’t that what women in labor were supposed to do? Breathe? That’s what they did in the movies. They
huffed and they puffed and . . . and they screamed the
house down. “Breathe, Sabra.”
“Hey! Hey!” Ronnie shouted suddenly. “Where do you
think you’re going? Get back over there and lie down.
Hey, I mean it!”
Now wasn’t the time to be provoking the rattled young
man, and Tiel intended to tell whoever was doing so to cut
it out. She glanced up, but the reproach died unspoken
when the cowboy knelt down on the other side of Sabra.
“Get away from her!” Ronnie jammed the barrel of the
pistol against the cowboy’s temple, but it was ignored and
so were the young man’s shouted threats.
Hands that looked accustomed to handling tack and
fence posts were placed on the girl’s abdomen. They
kneaded it gently.
“I can help her.” His voice was scratchy, like he hadn’t
spoken in a long time, like West Texas dust had collected
on his vocal cords. He looked up at Ronnie. “They call me
Doc.”
“You’re a doctor?” Tiel asked.
His calm gaze moved to her, and he repeated, “I can
help her.”
CHAPTER 3 You’re not touching her,” Ronnie said fiercely. “Take
your lousy hands off her.”
The man called Doc continued to press the girl’s abdomen.
“She’s in either the first or second stage of labor.
Without knowing how much she’s dilated, it’s hard to
gauge how close she is to delivering. But her pains are
coming frequently, so I’m guessing–”
“Guessing?”
Ignoring Ronnie, Doc patted Sabra’s shoulder reassur! ingly. “Is this your first baby?”
“Yes, sir.”
“You can call me Doc.”
“Okay.”
“How long since you first started noticing the pains?”
“At first I just felt funny, you know? Well, I guess you
don’t.”
He smiled. “I have no personal experience of it, no. Describe
to me how it felt.”
“Like right before a period. Sort of.”
“Pressure down there? And twinges like a bad case of
cramps?”
“Yes. Real bad. And a backache. I thought I was just
tired from riding in the pickup so long, but it got worse. I
didn’t want to say anything.” Her eyes moved to Ronnie,
who was hovering over Doc’s broad shoulders. He was hanging on every word, but he kept the pistol trained on
the people who were lined up like matchsticks on the
floor.
“When did these symptoms start?” Doc asked.
“About three o’clock this afternoon.”
“Jesus, Sabra,” Ronnie groaned. “Eight hours? Why
didn’t you tell me?”
Her eyes began to tear again. “Because it would have ruined
our plans. I wanted to be with you no matter what.”
“Shh.” Tiel patted her hand. “Crying will only make you
feel worse. Think about the baby coming. It can’t be much
longer now.” She looked across at Doc. “Can it?”
“Hard to say with first babies.”
“Your best guess.”
“Two, three hours.” He stood up and faced off with
Ronnie. “She’s going to deliver tonight. How easy or difficult
the labor and birth will be rests with you. She needs a
hospital, a well-equipped delivery room, and medical personnel.
The baby will also need attention immediately
after it’s born. That’s the situation. What are you going to
do about it?! 221;
! Sabra cried out with another pain. Doc dropped down
beside her and monitored the contraction by placing his
hands on her abdomen. The steep frown between his eyebrows
alerted Tiel to trouble. “What?” she asked. “Not good.”
“What?”
He shook his head, indicating that he didn’t want to
discuss it in front of the girl. But Sabra Dendy was no
dummy. She picked up on his concern. “Something’s
wrong, isn’t it?”
To his credit, Doc didn’t talk down to her. “Not wrong,
Sabra. Just more complicated.”
“What?”
“Do you know what breech means?”
Tiel’s breath caught. She heard Gladys make a tsking
sound of regret.
“That’s when the baby …” Sabra paused to swallow
hard. “When the baby is upside down.”
He nodded solemnly. “I think your baby is in the wrong
position. Its head isn’t down.”
She began to whimper. “What can you do?”
“Sometimes it isn’t necessary to do anything. The baby
will turn on its own.”
“What’s the worst that can happen?”
Doc looked up at Ronnie, who’d asked the question. “A
cesarean section is done, sparing the mother and child a
grueling delivery. A vaginal delivery is dangerous, and can
be life-threatening. Knowing that, will you let someone
call nine-one-one and get Sabra some help?”
“No!” the girl cried. “I won’t go to a hospital. I won’t!” Doc took her hand. “Your baby could die, Sabra.”
“You can help me.”
“I’m not equipped.”
“You can anyway. I know you can.”
“Sabra, please listen to him,” Tiel urged. “He knows
what he’s talking about. A breech birth would be extremely
painful. It could al! so endang! er your baby’s life or
cause serious defects. Please urge Ronnie to take Doc’s advice.
Let us call nine-one-one.”
“No,” she said, shaking her head stubbornly. “You don’t
understand. My daddy swore that neither I nor Ronnie
would ever see our baby after it’s born. He’s going to give
it away.”
“I doubt if–”
But Sabra didn’t allow Tiel to finish. “He said the baby
would mean no more to him than an unwanted puppy he
would take to the dog pound. When he says something,
he means it. He’ll take our baby, and we’ll never see it.
He’ll keep us apart, too. He said he would, and he will.”
She began to sob.
“Oh, my,” Gladys murmured. “Poor things.”
Tiel glanced over her shoulder at the others. Vern and
Gladys were sitting up now, huddled together, his arms
protectively around her. Both were looking on sorrowfully.
The two Mexican men were talking softly together, their hostile eyes darting about. Tiel hoped they weren’t
plotting another attempt to overthrow Ronnie. Donna the
cashier was still lying on the floor facedown, but she muttered,
“Poor things, my ass. Almost killed me.”
Ronnie, having reached a decision, looked at Doc and
said, “Sabra wants you to help her.”
He looked as though he were about to argue. Then,
maybe because time was a factor, he changed his mind.
“All right. For the time being, I’ll do what I can, starting
with an internal examination.”
“You mean her …”
“Yes. That’s what I mean. I need to know how far the
labor has progressed. Find something for me to sterilize
my hands with.”
“I’ve got some of that waterless hand wash,” Tiel told
him. “It’s antibacterial.”
“Good. Th! anks.R! 21;
She made to get up, but Ronnie halted her. “Get it and
come right back. Remember, I’m watching.”
She returned to the spot where she had dropped her
satchel, her soft drinks, and her sunflower seeds. She retrieved
the plastic container of hand wash from her
satchel. Then, getting Vern’s attention, she mimicked holding a video camera up to her eye. At first he looked
perplexed, but then Gladys nudged him in the ribs and
whispered in his ear. Nodding vigorously, he hitched his chin in the direction of the magazine rack. Tiel remembered
they’d been browsing there when the robbery commenced.
She returned with the bottle of hand wash and handed
it to Doc. “Shouldn’t she have something beneath her?”
“We’ve got some bed pads in the RV.”
“Gladys!” Vern exclaimed, obviously mortified by his
wife’s admission.
“They would be perfect,” Tiel said, remembering the
disposable protective pads she’d seen on Uncle Pete’s bed
in the nursing home. They prevented the staff from having
to change the bed linens each time a resident had an
accident. “I’ll go get them.”
“Like hell,” Ronnie said, dashing that idea. “Not you.
But the old man can go. She,” he added, pointing the pistol
at Gladys, “stays here.”
Gladys patted Vern’s bony knee. “I’ll be fine, honey.”
“You’re sure? If anything happened to you …”
“Nothing is going to happen to me. That boy’s got
more than me to worry about.”
Vern levered his rickety body up off the floor, dusted off
the seat of his shorts, and moved to the door. “Well, I can’t
walk through glass.”
Ronnie nudged Donna again, who instantly began imploring
him to spare her life. He instructed her to shut up and u! nlock the door, which she did.
At the door Ronnie and the elderly man exchanged a meaningful look. “Don’t worry, I’ll be back,” the old man
assured him. “I wouldn’t do anything to jeopardize my
wife’s life.” And, although Ronnie Davison was fifty
pounds heavier and half a foot taller, he issued him a
warning. “If you harm her, I’ll kill you.”
Ronnie pushed open the door and Vern slipped
through. His attempt at a jog was unintentionally comical.
Tiel watched his progress across the parking lot until he
reached the gas pumps and climbed into the Winnebago.
Doc was talking Sabra through another pain. When it
passed, the girl relaxed and closed her eyes. Tiel looked at
Doc, who was watching the girl. “What else would be helpful
to you?”
“Gloves.”
“I’ll see what I can find.”
“Some vinegar.”
“Standard distilled vinegar?”
“Hmm.” After a brief pause, he remarked, “You’re awfully
cool under pressure.”
“Thanks.” They continued to watch the girl, who, for
the moment, seemed to be asleep. Tiel asked softly, “Is
this going to end badly?”
His lips compressed into a grim line. “Not if I can help
it.”
“How bad–” “Hey, what are you two whispering about?”
Tiel looked up at Ronnie. “Doc needs some gloves. I
was about to ask Donna if the store stocks them.”
“Okay, go ahead.”
She left Sabra’s side and moved to the counter. Donna
was standing behind it, waiting to unlock the door when
Vern returned. She regarded Tiel suspiciously. “What do
you want?”
“Donna, please remain calm. Hysteria will only worsen
the situation. For the time being, we’re all safe.”
“Safe? Ha!! This is ! my third time.”
“To be robbed?”
“My luck’s bound to run out. First time, there were
three of them. Came in pretty as you please, emptied the
register, and locked me in the freezer. If the dairy delivery
man hadn’t come by, I’d've been a goner. Second time,
this guy in a mask clubbed me good ‘longside the head
with the butt of his pistol. Had a concussion and couldn’t
work for six weeks on account of headaches. So dizzy I
puked ’round the clock.” Her narrow chest rose and fell
on a deep sigh of resignation. “It’s only a matter o’ time.
The odds’ll catch up with me, and one of ‘em’ll kill me.
Do you think he’d let us smoke?”
“If you’re so afraid, why don’t you quit and get another
job?”
She looked at Tiel as though she had lost her mind. “I love my work.”
If that was logical, maybe Tiel was losing her mind. “Do
you carry any latex gloves in the store? The kind a doctor
wears.”
She shook her frizzy, permed head. “Rubbermaid.
That’s it. I think we got two pairs over yonder with the
household cleansers.”
“Thanks. Stay cool, Donna.”
As Tiel moved past Gladys, she leaned down and whispered,
“Is there a tape in your video camera?”
The old lady nodded. “Two hours’ worth. Rewound,
too. Unless Vern screwed it up when he was fiddling with
it.”
“If I can get it to you–”
“Hey!” Ronnie shouted. “What are you whispering
about now?”
“She’s afraid for her husband. I was reassuring her.”
“There he is now,” Gladys said, pointing at the door.
Donna threw the bolt and Vern came tottering in,
everything except his spindly legs hidden behind a stack
of bedding. Ronni! e ordered! him to drop the load of pillows
and quilts, but the old man argued. “It’s all clean. If I
drop it, it’ll get dirty. The lady should have a comfortable
place to lie, and I thought these towels might come in
handy, too.” “Actually that’s very good thinking, Ronnie,” Tiel said.
‘You can examine the stuff once he brings it over.”
From his Winnebago, in addition to the pads he’d gone
for, Vern had brought two pillows, two quilts, two clean
bedsheets, and several bath towels. Ronnie found nothing
concealed inside the linens and gave the go-ahead for Tiel
to make a pallet, which she did while Sabra leaned heavily
against Doc.
Tiel used only one of the sheets, saving the spare for
later, should the need for it arise. When she was finished,
Doc laid the girl down on the bedding. She settled on it
gratefully. Tiel placed one of the disposal pads beneath
her hips.
“They’re not for what you think,” Vern declared.
Simultaneously Tiel and Doc glanced up at the old
man, surprised to see him bending down to confide in
them. “We’re not incontinent.”
Tiel could barely contain her smile. “We didn’t ask.”
“We’re on our honeymoon,” Vern explained in a confidential
whisper. “Every night we go at it. Daytime too, if
the urge strikes us. You know how randy honeymooners
are. Those pads aren’t the most comfortable things for
the partner on bottom, but neither of us likes to lie in the
wet spot, and it beats changing the sheets after each time.”
The old man winked, turned away, and obeyed Ron nie’s instruction to rejoin the others. He sat down beside
his wife–his bride–who hugged him and gave him a
smacking kiss on the cheek, commending him for his
bravery.
Tiel, realizing her jaw was hanging slack, closed ! it with a soft click of her teeth. Her gaze slid to Doc, who was intent
on timing Sabra’s labor pain, but his thin lips were
twitching with a smile.
From beneath his eyebrows, he glanced up at Tiel,
caught her looking at him, and made a snuffling sound
that passed for a laugh. “Gloves?”
“What?”
“Did you ask about the gloves?”
“Oh, uh, two pair of Rubbermaid.”
He shook his head. ‘Just as well be leather work gloves.
What about some vinegar?”
“Coming up.”
“And gauze.”
She asked Ronnie’s permission to shop the aisles,
where she found several plastic bottles of vinegar, a box of
sterile gauze pads, and a package of disposable baby
wipes. She gathered them up. On her way back to Sabra,
another display caught her eye. On a burst of inspiration,
she added two boxes of hair coloring to her collection.
When she got back to the girl, Sabra was listening intently to what Doc was telling her.
“It won’t be comfortable, but I’ll try not to hurt you,
okay?”
The girl nodded and glanced apprehensively at Tiel.
“Have you ever had a pelvic exam, Sabra?” she asked
softly.
“Once. When I went for birth-control pills.” Tiel cocked
her head quizzically, and Sabra lowered her eyes in em
barrassment. “I stopped taking them because they made
me fat.”
“I see. Well, you’ve been examined before, so you know
what to expect. This probably won’t be any worse than
that first exam. Right, Doc?”
“I’ll make it as easy as I can.”
Tiel gave the girl’s hand a quick squeeze. “I’ll be right
over there if you–”
“No, stay here with me. Please.” She motioned Tiel
down for a private consultation.
“He’s nice,” she said! , speakin! g in a low voice directly
into Tiel’s ear. “He acts like a doctor, and talks like a doctor,
but he doesn’t look like one, know what I mean?”
“Yes, I know what you mean.”
“So I feel sorta weird, having him . . . you know? Could
you, like, help me take off my underpants?”
Tiel straightened and looked at Doc. “Could you give us a moment, please?”
“Sure.”
“What’s happening?” Ronnie wanted to know when
Doc stood up.
“The lady needs some privacy. From me. And you.”
“But I’m her boyfriend.”
“Which is exactly why you’re the last person she wants
observing.”
“He’s right, Ronnie,” Sabra said. “Please.”
The boy moved away with Doc. Tiel lifted Sabra’s skirt
and helped as she awkwardly raised her hips and worked
her underwear down her thighs.
“There we go,” Tiel said gently, taking away the damp
garment, which Sabra had balled up to the size of a Ping-Pong
ball.
“I’m sorry it’s all icky.”
“Sabra, starting right now, you’re to stop apologizing.
I’ve never been in labor, but I’m sure I wouldn’t approach
it with near the dignity that you have. Are you more comfortable
now?” Obviously not. She could tell by Sabra’s grimace
that she was in the throes of another pain. “Doc?”
He was there in an instant, pressing his hands on the
mound of her stomach. “Sure wish he’d turn on his own.”
“I’m hoping for a girl,” Sabra told him on gasping
breaths. Doc smiled. “Really?”
“Ronnie would like a girl too.”
“Daughters are great, all right.”
Tiel stole a glance at him. Did he have daughters? she
wondered. She’d taken him for a bache! lor, a lo! ner. Maybe
because he looked like the Marlboro man. You never saw
the Marlboro man with a wife and family in tow.
Perhaps . . . ? Tiel couldn’t shake the feeling that she’d
seen Doc somewhere before. His resemblance to the
rugged models in the cigarette ads must be why he looked
vaguely familiar.
When the pain passed, Doc placed his hands on the
girl’s raised knees. “Try and relax as much as possible.
And let me know if I’m hurting you, okay?”
“Oh, wait.” Tiel reached for a box of hair coloring and
opened it. Reading Doc’s inquisitive expression, she explained.
“It comes with disposable gloves. They won’t be
great; they probably won’t even fit,” she added, glancing
down at his manly hands, “but they might be better than
nothing.”
“Good thinking.”
He peeled the plastic gloves off the sheet of waxed
paper to which they were stuck and worked his hands into
them. It was an O. J. Simpson fit and they looked clumsy,
but he thanked Tiel, then once again assured Sabra that
he would try his best not to make it too unpleasant. “This might help.” For modesty’s sake, Tiel spread the
second sheet over the girl’s knees.
Doc gave her an approving glance. ‘Just relax, Sabra.
It’ll be over before you know it.”
She took a deep breath and pinched her eyes shut.
“First I’m going to wash the area with one of these
wipes. Then bathe it with some vinegar. It might be a little
cold.”
As he poured the vinegar over her, blotting at it with
several of the gauze pads, he asked her how she was doing.
“Okay,” she replied timorously.
Tiel found herself holding her own breath. “Breathe
deeply, Sabra. It’ll help you relax. Let’s do it together. Big
inhale. Now out.” Upon pen! etration,! Sabra flinched. Tiel
said, “Again. Another deep breath in. Out. That’s it. Not
much longer now. You’re doing great.”
But she wasn’t. Doc’s expression told her as much. He
withdrew his hand from between the girl’s thighs and, hiding
his concern, bragged on how well she’d done. He
peeled off the gloves and reached for the bottle of hand
wash, rubbing it vigorously onto his hands and forearms.
“Is everything all right?”
Ronnie was back. It was he who had asked the question,
but Doc addressed his answer to Sabra. “You haven’t dilated
much.” “What does that mean?”
“It means that your labor is dysfunctional.”
“Dysfunctional?”
“That’s a harsh word, but that’s the medical term for it.
As hard and frequent as your pains are coming, your
cervix should be dilated more than it is. The baby is trying
to push its way out, but not all the parts of your body are
ready for the birth.”
“What can you do?”
“I can’t do anything, Ronnie, but you can. You can stop
this foolishness and get Sabra to a facility where she’ll receive
proper obstetric care.”
“I already told you, no.”
“No,” Sabra repeated.
Before there could be any further argument, the telephone
rang.
CHAPTER 4
THE UNEXPECTED, SHRILL SOUND STARTLED EVERYONE.
Donna was nearest to the ringing telephone. “What
should I do?” she asked.
“Nothing.”
“Ronnie, maybe you should let her answer it,” Tiel suggested.
“How come? It’s probably got nothing to do with me.”
“That could be. But what if it does concern you?
Wouldn’t you rather know what you’re up against?” He mulled it over for several seconds, then gave Donna
the go-ahe! ad to ans! wer.
“Hello?” She listened for a moment, then said, “Hi,
Sheriff. No, he weren’t drunk. Just like he told you, this
kid here has got us held at gunpoint.”
Suddenly the front of the building was bathed in brilliant
light. Everyone inside had been so focused on
Sabra’s condition that none had heard the approach of
the three squad cars, which had now flashed on their
headlights. Tiel deduced that the sheriff was probably calling
from one of the units, which were parked just beyond
the gas pumps.
Ronnie ducked out of sight behind a Frito-Lay display,
yelling, “Tell them to turn off those damn lights or I’m
going to shoot somebody.”
Donna relayed the message. She paused to listen, then
said, “About eighteen, I’d guess. Calls hisself Ronnie.”
“Shut up!” Ronnie brandished the pistol at her. She
screeched and dropped the telephone receiver.
The car lights went out, two pair almost simultaneously,
the third pair seconds later.
Sabra moaned.
Doc said, “Ronnie, listen to me.”
“No. Be quiet and let me think.”
The young man was flustered, but Doc persisted in a low, earnest voice. “Stay here and see this thing through if
you like. But the manly thing to do would be to let Sabra
leave. The authorities will take her to the hospital, where
she needs to be.”
“I won’t go,” the girl said. “Not without Ronnie.”
Tiel appealed to her. “Think of your baby, Sabra.”
“I am thinking of our baby,” she sobbed. “If my daddy
gets his hands on the baby, I’ll never see it again. I won’t
give it up. I won’t give Ronnie up, either.”
Seeing that his patient was close to hysteria, Doc relented.
“Okay, okay. If you won’t agree to leave, how about
this? What if a! doctor w! ere to come here?”
“You’re a doctor,” Ronnie argued.
“Not the kind Sabra needs. I don’t have any instruments.
I’ve got nothing to give her to relieve her pain.
This is going to be a difficult delivery, Ronnie. There
could be all sorts of serious complications, which I’m unqualified
to deal with. Are you willing to risk Sabra’s life as
well as the child’s? Because by allowing the situation to
continue as it is, that’s what you’re doing. You could lose
one or both of them. Then, no matter how it pans out, it
will all have been for nothing.”
Tiel was impressed. She couldn’t have phrased an appeal
any better.
The young man gnawed on Doc’s words for a minute,
then motioned Tiel toward the counter and the dangling telephone receiver. For several moments after Donna had
dropped it, a man’s voice could be heard, demanding to
know what was going on. Now, it was silent.
“You’re good at shooting off your mouth,” Ronnie said
to Tiel. “You do the talking.”
She came to her feet and made her way past Sabra and
Doc, past the Frito-Lay display and across the open space
to the counter. She wasted no time calling nine-one-one.
As soon as the operator answered, she said, “I need the
sheriff to call me. Don’t ask questions. He is aware of this
emergency situation. Tell him to call the convenience
store back.” She hung up before the operator could proceed
with the routine drill, which would be a waste of valuable
time.
They waited in tense silence. No one said a word.
Gladys and Vern were huddled close together. When Tiel
glanced in their direction, Vern subtly drew her attention
to the tote bag in his lap. Somehow he had managed to retrieve
it without Ronnie’s being aware. A crafty Casanova.
That in itself would ma! ke a good! story, Tiel thought. Except
that she had a better one, in which she wasn’t just a
reporter, but a participant. Gully would be ecstatic. If this
story didn’t secure the Nine Live spot for her-
Although she’d been expecting the telephone to ring,
she jumped when it did. She answered it immediately. “Who’s this?”
She avoided a direct answer by saying, “Sheriff?”
“Marty Montez.”
“Sheriff Montez, I’ve been appointed spokesperson.
I’m one of the hostages.”
“Are you in immediate danger?”
“No,” she replied, believing it.
“Are you being coerced?”
“No.”
“Give me a rundown.”
She began with a brief and concise account of the robbery,
starting with Ronnie’s shooting out the security camera.
“It was interrupted when his accomplice went into
labor.”
“Labor? You mean labor like having a baby?”
“Exactly like that, yes.”
After an extended pause during which she could hear
the heavy breathing of an overweight man, he said, “Answer
me if you safely can, miss. Are these robbers by any
chance a coupla high school kids?”
“Yes.”
“What’s he asking?” Ronnie demanded to know.
Tiel covered the receiver with her palm. “He asked if
Sabra was in pain and I answered.”
‘Jee-sus,” the sheriff exclaimed in a near whistle. In a
low voice he passed along to his deputies–or so Tiel assumed –that the hostage-takers were the kids “outta Fort
Worth.” Then to her, he asked, “Is anybody hurt?”
“No. We’re all unharmed.”
“Who-all’s in there with you? How many hostages?”
“Four men and two women besides myself.”
“You’re a smooth talker! . You wou! ldn’t by any chance be
a Ms. McCoy?”
She tried to hide her surprise from Ronnie, who was lis 48 I SANDRA BROWN
tening to her intently and closely monitoring her facial
expressions. “That’s correct. No one has been wounded.”
“You are Ms. McCoy, but you don’t want ‘em to know
you’re a TV reporter? I see. Your boss, guy name o’ Gully,
he’s called my office twice, demanding we put out an APB
for you. Said you started from Rojo Flats and was supposed
to call him–”
“What’s he saying?” Ronnie asked.
She interrupted the sheriff. “It would be in everyone’s
best interest if you could provide us with a doctor. An OH
if possible.” “Tell him to bring along anything he might need for a
difficult delivery.”
Tiel relayed Doc’s message.
“Be sure he knows that the baby is in a breech position,”
Doc added.
After Tiel conveyed that, the sheriff asked who she was
getting her information from. “He goes by Doc.”
“You’re shittin’ me,” the sheriff said.
“No.”
“Doc’s one of the hostages,” she heard him pass along.
“Doc says the Dendy girl needs a specialist, huh?”
“That’s right, Sheriff. And as soon as possible. We’re
concerned for her and the baby.”
“If they surrender, we’ll get her to a hospital pronto.
They have my guarantee.”
“I’m afraid that’s not a contingency.” “Davison won’t let her go?”
“No,” Tiel said. “She refuses to leave.”
“Shee-ut, what a mess,” he expelled on a heavy sigh.
“Okay, I’ll see what I can do.”
“Sheriff, I can’t impress on you enough how badly this
young woman is suffering. And! …&! #8221;
“Go ahead, Ms. McCoy. What?”
STANDOFF | 49
“The situation is under control,” she said slowly. “For
the time being everyone is calm. Please don’t take any
drastic measures.”
“I hear what you’re saying, Ms. McCoy. No grandstanding.
No fireworks, SWAT teams, and such?”
“Precisely.” She was relieved that he understood. “So
far, no one has been injured.” “And we’d all like to keep it that way.”
“I’m very glad to hear you say that. Please, please, get a
doctor here as quickly as you can.”
“I’m on it. Here’s the number of the phone I’ve got
with me.”
She committed the number to memory. Montez wished
her luck and hung up. She replaced the telephone on the
countertop, glad to note that it was an older model and
didn’t have a speaker-phone feature. Ronnie might wish
to listen in on future conversations.
“He’s working on getting a doctor here.”
“I like the sound of that,” Doc said.
“How soon before he gets here?”
Turning to Ronnie, she replied, “As soon as possible.
I’m going to be honest with you. He guessed your and
Sabra’s identity.”
“Oh, hell,” the boy groaned. “What else can go wrong?” “They’ve been located!”
Russell Dendy nearly knocked down the FBI agent who
happened to be standing in his path when the shout came
from the adjacent room. He didn’t apologize for causing
the agent to spill scalding coffee over his hand. He barreled
into the library of his home, which, since that morning,
had been converted into a command post.
“Where? Where are they? Has he hurt my daughter? Is
Sabra all right?”
50
SANDRA BROWN
Special Agent William Galloway was in c! harge. He! was a
tall, thin, balding man who, if not for the pistol riding in
the small of his back, looked more like a mortgage banker
than a federal agent. His demeanor wasn’t consistent with
the stereotype either. He was calm and soft-spoken–most
of the time. Russell Dendy had put Galloway’s pleasant disposition
to the test.
As Dendy stalked into the room blurting questions, Galloway signaled for him to pipe down and continued his
telephone conversation.
Dendy impatiently punched a button on the telephone
and a woman’s voice filtered through the speaker. “It’s
called Rojo Flats. Practically in the middle of nowhere,
west-southwest of San Angelo. They’re armed. They tried
to rob a convenience store, but it was thwarted. Now
they’re holding hostages inside the store.”
“Damn him. Damn him!” Dendy ground his fist into his
opposite palm. “He turned my daughter into a common
criminal! And she couldn’t understand why I objected to
him.”
Galloway once again signaled him to keep his voice
down. “You said they’re armed. Are there any casualties?”
“No, sir. But the girl is in labor.”
“Inside the store?”
“Affirmative.”
Dendy cursed lavishly. “He’s holding her against her
will!”
The disembodied woman said, “According to one of
the hostages who spoke to the sheriff, the young woman
refuses to leave.”
“He’s brainwashed her,” Dendy declared.
The FBI agent from the Odessa office continued as
though she hadn’t heard him. “One of the hostages ap
STANDOFF | 51 parently has some medical knowledge. He’s seeing to her,
but a doctor has been requested.”
Dendy thumped the top of the desk with his fist. “I want
Sabra the hell out of there, do you hear ! me?”! ;
“We hear you, Mr. Dendy,” Galloway said with diminishing
patience.
“I don’t care if you have to blast her out of there with
dynamite.”
“Well, I care. According to the spokesperson, no one
has been injured.”
“My daughter’s in labor!”
“And we’ll get her to a hospital as soon as possible. But
I’m not going to do anything that will endanger the lives
of those hostages, your daughter, or Mr. Davison.”
“Look, Galloway, if you’re going to take a limp-dick approach
to this situation–”
“The approach I take is my call, not yours. Is that understood?”
Russell Dendy had the reputation of being a real son of
a bitch. Unfortunately, meeting him hadn’t dispelled any
myths or changed Galloway’s preconceptions of the millionaire.
Dendy exercised despotic supervision over several corporations.
He wasn’t accustomed to relinquishing control
to someone else, or even to giving anyone else a vote in
the way things were managed. His businesses weren’t democracies, and neither was his family. Mrs. Dendy had
done nothing all day except weep into her hankie and
second her husband’s answers to the agents’ probing
questions about their family life and their relationship
with their daughter. She hadn’t offered a single opinion
that differed from his, or voiced any personal observations.
From the start Galloway had doubted Dendy’s allega
52 | SANDRA BROWN
tion of a kidnaping. Instead he leaned heavily toward the
more viable version: Sabra Dendy had run away from
home with her boyfriend in order to escape her domineering
father.
Galloway’s dressing-down had left Russ Dendy practically
spitting with fury. “I’m on my way out there.”
“I don’t advise that.”
&! #8220;As ! if I give a rat’s ass what you advise.”
“There’s no room in our chopper for extra passengers,”
the agent called to Dendy’s retreating back.
“Then I’ll take my Lear.” He stormed from the room and began shouting orders
to his band of flunkies who were ever present, as silent
and unobtrusive as pieces of furniture until Dendy’s strident
commands jump-started them. They filed out behind
him. Mrs, Dendy was ignored and not invited to go
along.
Galloway disengaged the speaker phone and picked up
the receiver, so he could hear the other agent more
clearly. “Guess you heard all that.”
“You’ve got your hands full, Galloway.”
“And then some. How’re the locals out there?”
“From what I understand, Montez is a competent sheriff,
but he’s in way over his head and is smart enough to
know it. He’s getting backup from the Rangers and highway
patrol.”
“Will they resent our presence, you think?”
“Don’t they always?” she came back dryly. “Well, it came to us as a kidnaping. I’m leaving it at that
until I know better.”
“Actually, Montez will probably be glad to land the
problem in our lap. His chief concern is that there be no
heroics. He wants to avoid bloodshed.”
“Then he and I are on the same page. I think what
STANDOFF
53
we’ve got here is a couple of scared kids who’ve got themselves
trapped in a situation and can’t find a way out.
What, if anything, do you know about the hostages?”
She gave him the breakdown by gender. “One’s been
identified by Sheriff Montez as a local rancher. The
cashier is a fixture at the convenience store. Everybody in
Rojo Flats knows her. And that Ms. McCoy who talked to
Sheriff Montez?”
“! What about her?” “She’s a reporter for a TV station in Dallas.”
“Tiel McCoy?”
“So you know her?”
He knew her and mentally formed an image: slender,
short blond hair, light eyes. Blue, possibly green. She was
on TV nearly every night. Galloway had also seen her outside
the studio among reporters at the scenes of crimes
he’d investigated. She was aggressive, but objective. Her
reports were never unfairly inflammatory or exploitative.
She was a looker and utterly feminine, but her delivery
merited credibility.
He wasn’t thrilled to hear that a broadcast journalist of
her caliber was at the epicenter of this crisis. It was a compounding
factor he could easily have done without.
“Great. A reporter is already on the scene.” He ran his
hand around the back of his neck, where tension had
begun to gather. It was going to be a long night. He predicted
the previously unheard-of Rojo Flats would soon be
swarmed by media, contributing to the mayhem. The other agent asked, “Gut instinct, Galloway. Did that
boy kidnap the Dendy girl?”
Beneath his breath, Galloway muttered, “I only wonder
why it took her so long to run away.”
CHAPTER 5
While they waited for the promised doctor to arrive,
Doc gleaned a pair of scissors and a pair of shoelaces from
the store’s stock. He placed them to boil in a carafe usually
used for water with which to mix instant hot drinks.
He also took from the shelves sanitary napkins, adhesive
tape, and a box of plastic trash bags.
He asked Donna if they stocked aspirators. When she
stared at him blankly, he explained. “A rubber bulb syringe.
To suck the mucus from the baby’s nose and
throat.”
She scratched her scaly elbow. “Don’t have much call
for those.”
Ronnie was nervous when Doc picke! d up the ! carafe of
boiling water. He ordered him to let Gladys pour out the
water, which the elderly lady was all too happy to do.
Following that activity, the wait grew to be interminable.
Everyone inside the store was aware of the increasing number of arriving vehicles. The distance between the
gasoline pumps and the store’s entrance was like a DMZ;
it was kept clear. But the area between the pumps and the
highway became congested with official and emergency
vehicles. When that space was filled, they began parking
on the shoulder of the highway, lining both sides of the
state road. They hadn’t arrived running hot, but the absence
of flashing lights and sirens made their presence
even more ominous.
Tiel wondered if the back of the building was seeing as
much activity as the front. Obviously that possibility occurred
to Ronnie, too, because he asked Donna about a
rear door.
She said, “In the hall going to the bathrooms? See that
door? Through that is the stockroom. Also the freezer
where those crazy kids locked me in.”
“I asked about the back door.”
“It’s steel and bolted from the inside. It has a bar across
it, and the hinges are on the inside, too. It’s so heavy I can
barely open it for deliveries.”
If Donna were telling the truth, no one would be coming
through the rear door silently. Ronnie would be signaled
of an attempt well ahead of time.
“What about the rest rooms?” he wanted to know. “Any
windows in them?” She shook her head no.
“It’s true,” Gladys chirped. “I was in the ladies’. If you
ask me, better ventilation wouldn’t hurt.”
Those worries laid to rest, Ronnie divided his attention
among Sabra, his hostages, and the increasing movement
outside, which was more than enough to keep him occupied.
Tiel excused hers! elf from ! Sabra’s side and asked
Ronnie if she could get into her satchel. “My contacts are
dry. I need my wetting solution.”
He glanced quickly toward the bag where it sat on top
of the counter. She’d left it there after retrieving the hand
wash for Doc. He seemed to be debating the advisability of
granting her permission when she said, “It won’t take a
sec. I can’t be away from Sabra long. She likes having another
woman nearby.”
“Okay. But I’m watching you. Don’t think I’m not.”
The young man’s bravado was affected. He was scared
and frazzled, but he still had his finger on the trigger of
the pistol. Tiel didn’t want to be the one responsible for
sending him over the edge.
She moved to the counter where Ronnie could see her
digging into her satchel in search of the small vial of solution.
She uncapped it and tilted her head back to apply
the drops. “Damn,” she cursed softly, holding a finger
over her eye. She then removed her contact lens, dug
around in the bag for another bottle of solution and proceeded to clean the lens in a small pool of solution in her
palm.
Without turning to look at Gladys and Vern, she spoke
to them in a whisper. “Does your camera have a tape in
it?”
Vern–bless him–was inspecting a loose cuticle on his
left hand and looking about as conspiratorial as an altar
boy. “Yes, ma’am.”
“Fresh batteries too,” Gladys added as she folded her
crew sock down to form a cuff around her ankle. She inspected
it, then, deciding she liked it better the other way,
rolled it back up. “It’s all set to go. Get ready. We’ve got a
distraction planned.”
“Wait–”
Before Tiel could finish, Vern went into a fit of coughing.
Gladys leaped up, tossed their ! tote bag ! onto the
counter within Tiel’s reach, then started whacking her
husband hard between his shoulder blades. “Oh, Lord,
Vern, not one of your strangling spells. Of all times to get
choked on your own spit. For mercy’s sake!”
Tiel popped in her contact and blinked it into place.
Then, as everyone including Ronnie was watching the old
man gasp and gurgle in an effort to regain his breath
while Gladys smacked away as though beating a rug, she
reached into the tote bag for the camera. She was familiar enough with home recorders to know
where the power switch was located. She flipped it on and
punched the Record button. She then set it on a shelf,
wedging it between cartons of cigarettes and praying it
wouldn’t be noticed. She didn’t have high hopes for the
quality of the picture, but amateur videos had proved invaluable
in the past, including the Zapruder film of JFK’s
assassination and the disturbing video of the Rodney King
beating in Los Angeles.
Vern’s coughs subsided. Gladys asked Ronnie’s permission
to get a bottle of water for him.
Tiel replaced the contact-lens cleaner and wetting solution
in her bag and was about to withdraw her hand when
she spotted her audiocassette recorder. She sometimes
used the minuscule recorder during interviews as a supplement
to the video recording. Later, when writing her
script, she didn’t have to sit in an editing booth and watch
the video in order to hear the interview. She could replay
it on the tiny recorder.
She hadn’t intentionally brought it along. It was a tool
of her trade, not a vacation item. But there it was, buried
in the bottom of her bag, looking to her like a broadcast
news icon waiting to be excavated. She imagined it radiating
a shimmering, golden aura.
She palmed the recording device and slipped it into the
pocket of her s! lacks jus! t as Sabra gave a sharp cry. Franti cally, Ronnie looked around for Tiel. “I’m coming,” she
told him.
Giving the elderly thespians a thumbs-up as she stepped
around them, she rushed back to Sabra’s side.
Doc looked worried. “Her pains have slowed down
somewhat, but when she has one it’s acute. Where the hell
is that doctor? What’s taking so long?”
Tiel blotted Sabra’s sweating forehead with a pad of
gauze she had moistened with cool drinking water. “When
he–or she–does get here, how effective can he be? What
will he be able to do under these circumstances?”
“Let’s just hope he has some experience with breech
births. Or maybe he’ll be able to convince Ronnie and
Sabra that a C-section is mandatory.”
“And if neither is the case . . . ?”
“It will be bad,” he said grimly. “For all concerned.”
“Can you do without a bulb syringe?”
“Hopefully the doctor will bring one. He should.”
“What if she hasn’t dilated . . . ?”
“I’m counting on nature taking its course. Maybe the
baby will turn on its own. That happens.”
Tiel stroked the girl’s head. Sabra appeared to be dozing.
The final stages of labor hadn’t even begun, and already
she was exhausted. “It’s good she can take these
short naps.” “Her body knows that later it’ll need all the strength it
can muster.”
“I wish she didn’t have to suffer.”
“Suffering is a bitch, all right,” he said, almost to himself.
“The doctor can give her an injection to relieve the
pain. Something that won’t harm the fetus. But only up to
a point. The closer she gets to delivery, the greater the risk
of giving her drugs.”
“What about a s! pinal? Do! n’t they administer that in the
final stages of labor?”
“I doubt he’ll try to do a block under these conditions,
although he might feel confident enough.”
After a moment of thought, Tiel said, “I think going the
natural route is nuts. I guess that makes me a disgrace to
womankind.”
“You have children?” When his eyes connected with
hers, it felt like she had been poked lightly just below her
navel.
“Uh, no.” She quickly lowered her gaze from his. “I’m
just saying that if and when I ever do, I want drugs with a
capital D.”
“I understand completely.”
And Tiel got the impression that he did. When she
looked at him again, he had returned his attention to
Sabra. “Do you have children, Doc?”
“No.” “Earlier you made a comment about daughters that led
me to think–”
“No.” His fingers loosely encircled Sabra’s wrist, as
his thumb pressed her pulse point. “I wish I had a blood-pressure
cuff. And surely he’ll bring a fetoscope.”
“That…”
“Monitors the fetal heartbeat. Hospitals now use fancy
ultrasound devices. But I’d settle for a fetoscope.”
“Where did you get your medical training?”
“What really concerns me,” he said, ignoring her question,
“is whether or not he’ll perform an episiotomy.”
Tiel winced at the thought of the incision and the delicate
area subjected to it. “How could he?”
“It won’t be pleasant, but if he doesn’t, she could easily
tear and that’ll be even more unpleasant.”
“You’re doing my nerves no good, Doc.”
“I imagine all our nerves have had better days.” Again
he raised his head and looked across at her. “B! y the way! ,
I’m glad you’re here.”
The look was just as intense, the eyes as compelling, as
before, but this time she didn’t chicken out and look
away. “I’m not doing anything constructive.”
“Simply being with her is doing a lot. When she’s having
a pain, encourage her not to fight it. Tensing the muscles
and tissue surrounding the uterus only increases the discomfort. The uterus was made to contract. She should
let it go about its business.”
“Easy for you to say.”
“Easy for me to say,” he conceded with a wry smile.
“Breathe with her. Take deep breaths inhaled through the
nose, exhaled through the mouth.”
“Those deep breaths will help me, too.”
“You’re doing fine. She feels comfortable with you. You
neutralize her shyness.”
“She admitted to being shy with you.”
“Understandable. She’s very young.”
“She said you don’t look like a doctor.”
“No, I don’t suppose I do.”
“Are you?”
“Rancher.”
“You’re a real cowboy then?”
“I breed horses, run a herd of beef cattle. I drive a pickup truck. I guess that makes me a cowboy.”
“Then where’d you learn–”
The ringing of the telephone brought their private conversation
to a halt. Ronnie snatched up the receiver.
“Hello? I’m Ronnie Davison. Where’s the doctor?”
He paused to listen, and Tiel could tell by his expression
that he was hearing something that distressed him.
“FBI? How come?” Then he blurted, “But I didn’t kidnap
her, Mr. Galloway! We were eloping. Yes, sir, she’s my main
concern too. No. No. She refuses to go to a hospital.” He listened longer, then glanced at Sabra. “Okay. If the
phone&#! 8217;ll reach.” He dragged the telephone to Sabra,
stretching the cord as far as it would go. “The FBI agent
wants to talk to you.”
Doc said, “It won’t hurt her to stand up. In fact, it might
do her good.”
He and Tiel supported Sabra beneath the arms and together
assisted her to her feet. She baby-stepped far
enough to take the extended receiver from Ronnie.
“Hello? No, sir. What Ronnie told you is true. I’m not
leaving without him. Not even to go to the hospital. Because
of my daddy! He said he’ll take away my baby, and
he always does what he says.” She sniffed back tears. “Of
course I came with Ronnie voluntarily. I–” She caught
her breath and gripped a handful of Doc’s shirt.
He lifted her and carried her back to the makeshift
birthing bed, depositing her gently. Tiel knelt beside her
and, as Doc had instructed, coaxed Sabra to relax, not to
fight the contraction, and to breathe.
Ronnie was speaking anxiously into the telephone. “Listen
here, Mr. Galloway, Sabra can’t talk anymore. She’s
having a contraction. Where’s the doctor we were
promised?” He glanced through the plate glass. “Yeah, I
see him. You bet I’ll let him in.”
Ronnie slammed down the receiver and dropped the phone back onto the counter. He started for the door,
then, realizing how exposed he would be to sharpshooters,
ducked behind the Frito-Lay display again. “Cashier,
wait until he’s at the door before you unlock it. Then, as
soon as he comes through, relock it. Understand?”
“What d’ya think, I’m stupid?”
Donna waited until the doctor was pushing on the door
before she flipped the switch. He came inside, and everyone
in the store, including the young doctor, heard the
metallic click when the door relocked.!
Ner! vously he glanced over his shoulder at it before introducing
himself. “I’m, uh, Dr. Cain. Scott.”
“Move over here.”
Dr. Scott Cain was a handsome man of medium height
and build, in his early to mid-thirties. Wide-eyed, he
scanned the people huddled in a group in front of the
counter. Gladys waved at him.
His gaze swung back to Ronnie. “I was making my
rounds at County when I was paged. Never would’ve
guessed I’d be called in on an emergency like this.”
“With all due respect, Dr. Cain, we’re short on time.”
Tiel shared Doc’s impatience. The wet-behind the-ears
Dr. Cain was obviously awed to find himself a player in
such high drama. He hadn’t fully grasped the seriousness
of the situation.
Doc asked if he’d been apprised of Sabra’s condition. “I was told she was in labor and that there might be
complications.”
Doc motioned him toward the prone girl. “Is it okay?”
Cain asked Ronnie, glancing fearfully at the pistol.
“Open up your bag.”
“Huh? Oh, sure.” He unlatched the black valise and
held it open for Ronnie’s inspection.
“Okay, go ahead. Help her, please. She’s in a bad way.”
“It would seem so,” the doctor remarked as a contraction
seized Sabra and she moaned.
Reflexively she reached for Tiel’s hand. Tiel held on
tight and spoke to her encouragingly. “The doctor’s here,
Sabra. Things are going to get better now. I promise.”
Doc was providing the doctor with pertinent information.
“She’s seventeen. This is her first child. First preg nancy.” They took up positions near the girl, Doc on
Sabra’s right side, Dr. Cain at her feet, Tiel on her left.
“How long has she been in labor?”
“Preliminary contractions sta! rted mid ! afternoon Her
water broke about two hours ago. Pains escalated sharply
after that, then for the last half hour they’ve tapered off.”
“Hi, Sabra,” the doctor said to the girl.
“Hi.”
He placed his hands on her stomach and examined the
mound with light, massaging squeezes.
“Breech, right?” Doc asked, seeking confirmation of his diagnosis.
“Right.”
“Do you think you can turn the fetus?”
“That’s very tricky.”
“Do you have experience in breech births?”
“I’ve assisted.”
That wasn’t the hoped-for answer. Doc asked, “Did you
bring a blood-pressure cuff?”
“In my bag.”
The doctor continued to examine Sabra by gently probing
her abdomen. Doc extended the blood-pressure cuff
to him, but he declined to take it. He was speaking to
Sabra. ‘Just relax, and everything will be all right.”
She glanced at Ronnie and smiled hopefully. “How
long before the baby comes, Dr. Cain?”
“That’s hard to say. Babies have a mind of their own. I
would prefer taking you to the hospital while there’s still
time.”
“No.”
“It would be much safer for you and the baby.”
“I can’t leave on account of my father.”
“He’s very worried about you, Sabra. In fact, he’s outside.
He told me to tell you–”
Her whole body jerked as though having a muscle
spasm. “Daddy’s here?” Her voice was high, thin, panicked. “Ronnie?”
The news upset him as much as it had Sabra. “How’d he
get here?”
Tiel patted the girl’s shoulder. “It’s okay. Don’t think
about your father now. Think about your baby. That’s all
you should be concerned with. Everything el! se will w! ork
out.”
Sabra began to cry.
Doc leaned toward the doctor and whispered angrily,
“Why’n hell did you tell her that? Couldn’t that news have
waited?”
Dr. Cain looked confused. “I thought she would be
comforted to know that her father was here. They didn’t
have time to fill me in on all the details of the situation. I
didn’t know that information was going to upset her.”
Doc looked ready to throttle him, and Tiel shared the
impulse.
Doc was so angry his thin lips barely moved when he
spoke. But knowing that any outward display of anger
would only make the situation worse, he remained focused
on the business at hand. “She hadn’t dilated much
when I examined her.” Glancing at his wristwatch, he
added, “But it’s been over an hour since I did the internal.”
The doctor nodded. “How much? Was she dilated, I
mean.”
“About eight, ten centimeters.” “Hmm.”
“You son of a bitch.”
Doc’s low growl brought Tiel’s head up with a snap.
Had she heard him correctly? Apparently so, because Dr.
Cain was regarding him with consternation.
“Son of a bitch!” Doc repeated, this time in an angry exclamation.
What happened next was forever thereafter a blur in
Tiel’s memory. She could never accurately remember the
rapid sequence of events, but any recollection of them always
made her hungry for chili.
CHAPTER
6
THE FBI VAN PARKED ON THE APRON OF CONCRETE between
the highway and the fuel pumps was equipped with high-tech
paraphernalia used for deployment, surveillance,
and communication. It was a rolling command post out of
Midland-Odessa that had been mobilized and driven to
Rojo Flats. It had arrived within minutes of Galloway’s
chopper from Fort Worth.
There wasn̵! 7;t an ai! rstrip in the immediate area that
would accommodate an airplane larger than a crop
duster. Dendy’s private jet had flown to Odessa, where a
charter helicopter had been standing by to whisk him to
the small town. Upon his arrival, he had barged his way into the van, demanding to know exactly what the situation
was and how Galloway planned to remedy it.
Dendy had made a general nuisance of himself, and
Galloway had had all he could stomach of the millionaire
even before Dendy began grilling him over the maneuver
presently under way.
Every eye was on the television monitor, which was
transmitting a live picture from a camera outside. They
watched Cain enter the store, where he stood with his
back to the door for a time before disappearing from view.
“What if it doesn’t work?” Dendy asked. “What then?”
” ‘What then’ will depend on the outcome.”
“You mean you don’t have a contingency plan in place?
What kind of outfit are you running here, Galloway?”
They squared off. The other men in the van stood by
expectantly, waiting to see who detonated first, Dendy or
Galloway. Ironically, it was a statement from Sheriff Marty
Montez that defused the explosive tension.
He said, “I can save you both the suspense and tell you
right now that it’s not going to work.”
As a courtesy–and also a smart diplomatic move– Agent Galloway had invited the county sheriff to join the
top-level powwow.
“Doc’s no fool,” Montez continued. ‘You’re asking for
trouble, sending that rookie in there.” “Thank you, Sheriff Montez,” Galloway said stiffly.
Then, as though Montez’s statement had been
prophetic, they heard gunshots. Two came a millisecond
apart, one more several seconds later. The first two caused
them all to freeze in p! lace. The! third galvanized them.
Everyone inside the van went into motion and began
speaking at once.
“Christ!” Dendy bellowed.
The camera was showing them nothing. Galloway
grabbed a headset so he could hear the communiques between
the men in position in front of the store.
“Were those gunshots?” Dendy asked. “What’s happening,
Galloway? You said my daughter wouldn’t be in any
danger!”
Over his shoulder, Galloway shouted, “Sit down and be
quiet, Mr. Dendy, or I’m going to have you physically removed
from this van.”
“If you fuck this up, I’ll have you physically removed
from this planet!”
Galloway’s face turned white with wrath. “Careful, sir. You just threatened the life of a federal officer.” He ordered
one of his subordinate agents to remove Dendy.
He needed to know immediately who inside the store
had fired at whom and whether anyone had been injured
or killed. While he was trying to find out, he didn’t need
Dendy yelling threats at him. Dendy boomed, “Like hell I’m leaving!”
Galloway left the overwrought father to his subordinates
and turned back to the console, demanding information
of the agents outside.
Tiel had watched with disbelief as Dr. Scott Cain yanked
a pistol from an ankle holster and pointed it at Ronnie.
“FBI! Drop the weapon!”
Sabra had screamed.
Doc had continued to swear at Cain. “All this time we’ve
been waiting on a doctor!” he shouted. “Instead we get
you! What kind of stupid stunt is this?”
Tiel had surged to her feet, begging, “No, please no.
Don’t shoot.” She had feared she was about to see Ronnie
Davison blown away right before her eyes.
“You’re not a doctor?” the frantic young man had
shrieked. “They prom! ised us a! doctor. Sabra needs a doctor.”
“Drop your weapon, Davison! Now!”
“God dammit, all this time’s been wasted.” The veins in
Doc’s neck had bulged with anger. If the agent hadn’t
been holding a pistol, Tiel guessed that Doc would have
taken him by the throat. “That girl’s in trouble. Life
threatening trouble. Don’t any of you federal bastards get
it?” “Ronnie, do as he says,” Tiel had implored. “Surrender.
Please.”
“No, Ronnie, don’t!” Sabra had sobbed. “Daddy’s out
there.”
“Why don’t you both put down your pistols.” Although
Doc’s chest had been rising and falling with agitation, he
had regained some composure. “Nobody has to get hurt.
We can all be reasonable, can’t we?”
“No.” Ronnie, resolute, had clutched the pistol grip
tighter. “Mr. Dendy will have me arrested. I’ll never see
Sabra again.”
“He’s right,” the girl had said.
“Maybe not,” Doc had argued. “Maybe–”
“I’m giving you to the count of three to drop your
weapon!” Cain had shouted, his voice cracking. He, too, it
seemed, was cracking under pressure.
“Why’d you have to do this?” Ronnie had yelled at him.
“One.”
“Why’d you trick us? My girlfriend is suffering. She
needs a doctor. Why’d you do this?”
Tiel hadn’t liked the way Ronnie’s index finger was
tensing around the trigger.
“Two.”
“I said no! I won’t give her up to Mr. Dendy.”
Just as Cain had shouted “Three” and fired his pistol, Tiel grabbed a can of Wolf brand chili from the shelf nearest
her and clouted him over the head with it.
He had dropped like a sack o! f cement.! His shot went
wide of his target, which had been Ronnie’s chest, but it
came within a hair’s-breadth of Doc before striking the
counter.
Reflexively Ronnie had fired his gun. The only damage
that bullet did was to knock a chunk of plaster out of the
far wall.
Donna had screamed, hit the floor, and covered her
head with her hands, then continued screaming.
In the resulting confusion, the Mexican men had
surged forward, nearly trampling Vern and Gladys in their
haste.
Tiel, realizing that they intended take the agent’s pistol,
had kicked it beneath a freezer chest out of reach.
“Get back! Get back!” Ronnie had shouted at them. He
fired again for emphasis, but aimed well above their
heads. The bullet pinged into an air-conditioning vent,
but it stopped their rush toward him.
Now they all remained in a frozen tableau, waiting to
see what happened next, who would be the first to move,
to speak.
It turned out to be Doc. “Do as he says,” he ordered the
two Mexicans. He held up his left hand, palm out, signaling
them to move back. His right hand was clamped over his left shoulder. Blood leaked through his fingers.
“You’re shot!” Tiel exclaimed.
Ignoring her, he reasoned with the two Mexican men,
who were obviously reluctant to comply. “If you go charging
through that door, you’re liable to get a belly full of
bullets.”
The language as well as the logic escaped them. They
understood only Doc’s insistence that they remain where
they were. They rebuked him in rapid-fire Spanish. Tiel
picked up the word madre several times. She could only
imagine the rest. However, the two did as Doc asked and
skulked back to their original positions, muttering to each
other and throwing hostile glares all around. Ronnie kept
his pistol trained on them.
Donna was mak! ing more ! racket than Sabra, who was
clenching her teeth to keep from crying out as a labor
pain seized her. Doc ordered the cashier to stop making
the god-awful noise.
“I’m not gonna live to see morning,” she wailed.
“The way our luck’s going, you probably will,” Gladys
snapped. “Now shut up.”
As though her mouth had been corked, Donna’s crying
ceased instantly.
“Hang in there, sweetheart.” Tiel had resumed her
place at Sabra’s side and was holding her hand through the contraction.
“I knew …” Sabra paused to pant several times. “I knew
Daddy wouldn’t leave it alone. I knew he would track us
down.”
“Don’t think about him now.”
“How is she?” Doc asked, joining them.
Tiel looked at his shoulder. “Are you hurt?”
He shook his head. “The bullet only grazed me. It
stings, that’s all.” Through the tear in his sleeve, he
swabbed the wound with a gauze pad, then covered it with
another and asked Tiel to cut off a strip of adhesive tape.
While he held the square in place, she secured it with the
tape.
“Thanks.”
“You’re welcome.”
Up to this point no one had given any attention to the
unconscious man. Ronnie approached, transferring his
pistol from one hand to the other and drying his damp
palms alternately on the seat of his jeans. He hitched his
chin toward Cain. “What about him?”
Tiel considered that a very good question. “I’ll probably
get years in prison for doing that.”
Doc said to Ronnie, “I recommend that you let me drag
him outside, so his buddies in that bad-ass van out there
will know he’s alive. If they think he’s dead or wounded, it
could get ugly, Ronnie.” Ronnie apprehensively glanced toward! the outs! ide and
gnawed on his lower lip while considering the suggestion.
“No, no.” He looked over at Vern and Gladys, who seemed
to be having as good a time as two people on a theme-park
thrill ride. “Find some duct tape,” Ronnie told them. “I’m
sure the store sells it. Bind his hands and feet.”
“If you do that, you’ll only be digging yourself in
deeper, son,” Doc warned gently.
“I don’t think I could get in any deeper.”
Ronnie’s expression was sad, as though he was just now
fully comprehending the enormity of his predicament.
What might have seemed a romantic adventure when he
and Sabra ran away had turned into an incident involving
the FBI and gunplay. He had committed several felonies.
He was in serious trouble, and he was intelligent enough
to know it.
The elderly couple stepped over the unconscious
agent. Each took an ankle. It was an effort for them, but
they were able to drag him away from Sabra, giving Doc
and Tiel more room in which to function.
“They’re going to lock me up forever,” Ronnie continued.
“But I want Sabra to be safe. I want her old man’s
promise that he’ll let her keep our baby.”
“Then let’s end this here and now.”
“I can’t, Doc. Not before getting that guarantee from Mr. Dendy.”
Doc motioned down to Sabra, who was panting through
another pain with Tiel. “In the meantime–”
“We stay right here,” the boy insisted.
“But she needs a–”
“Doc?” Tiel said, interrupting.
“–hospital. And soon. If you’re truly worried about
Sabra’s welfare–”
“Doc?”
Irritated because she had twice interrupted his earnest
appeal, he turned to her abruptly and asked impatiently,
&#! 8220;What! ?”
“Sabra can’t go anywhere. I can see the baby.”
He knelt down between Sabra’s raised knees. “Thank
God,” he said on a relieved laugh. “The baby’s turned,
Sabra. I can see the head. You’re crowning. A few minutes
from now you’ll have a baby.”
The girl laughed, sounding too young to be in the jam
she was in. “Is it going to be all right?”
“I think so.” Doc looked at Tiel. “You’ll help?”
“Tell me what to do.”
“Get a few more of those pads and spread them around
her. Have one of the towels handy to wrap the baby in.”
He had rolled up his shirtsleeves above the elbows and
was vigorously washing his hands and arms with Tiel’s bottled
cleanser. He then bathed them with vinegar. He passed the bottles to Tiel. “Use both liberally. But quickly.”
“I don’t want Ronnie watching,” Sabra said.
“Sabra? Why not?”
“I mean it, Ronnie. Go away.”
Doc spoke to him over his shoulder. “It might be best,
Ronnie.” Reluctantly the boy backed away.
In Cain’s doctor’s kit, Doc found a pair of gloves and
pulled them on–expertly, Tiel noticed. He snapped them
smartly around his wrists. “At least he did something
right,” he muttered. “There’s a whole box of them. Get
yourself a pair.”
She had just managed to get the gloves on when Sabra
had another contraction. “Don’t bear down if you can
keep from it,” Doc instructed. “I don’t want you to tear.”
He placed his right hand on the perineum for additional
support to avoid tearing, while his left hand gently rested
on the baby’s head. “Come on, Sabra. Pant now. Thata
girl. You might move behind her,” he said to Tiel. “Angle!
her! up. Support her lower back.”
He coached Sabra through the pain, and when it was
over, she relaxed against Tiel’s support.
“Almost there, Sabra,” Doc told her in a gentle voice.
“You’re doing fine. Great, in fact.”
And Tiel could have said the same for him. One had to
admire the calm, competent manner in which he was dealing with the frightened girl.
“Are you okay?”
Tiel had been staring at him with overt admiration, but
she didn’t realize he was addressing her until he glanced
up. “Me? I’m fine.”
“You’re not going to faint or anything?”
“I don’t think so.” Then, because his composure was
contagious, she said, “No. I won’t faint.”
Sabra cried out, jerked into a semi-sitting position, and
grunted with the effort of expelling the baby. Tiel rubbed
her lower back, wishing there was more she could do to
relieve the girl’s suffering.
“Is she all right?” The anxious father was ignored.
“Try not to push,” Doc reminded the girl. “It’ll come
now without your applying additional pressure. Ride the
pain. Good, good. The head’s almost out.”
The contraction abated and Sabra’s body collapsed
with fatigue. She was crying. “It hurts.”
“I know.” Doc spoke in a soothing voice, but unseen by
Sabra, his face registered profound regret. She was bleeding
profusely from tearing tissue. “You’re doing fine,
Sabra,” he lied. “Soon you’ll have your baby.”
Very soon, as it turned out. After all the concern the
child’s slow progress had given them, in the final seconds
it was eager to make its way into the world.
During the next contraction, almost before Tiel could assimilate the miracle she was witnessing, she watched the baby&#! 8217;s head emerge facedown. Doc’s hand guided it only
a little before it instinctually turned sideways. When Tiel
saw the newborn’s face, its eyes wide open, she murmured,
“Oh my God,” and she meant it literally, like a
prayer, because it was an awe-inspiring, almost spiritual
phenomenon to behold.
But there the miracle stopped, because the baby’s
shoulders still could not clear the birth canal.
“What’s happening?” Ronnie asked when Sabra
screamed.
The telephone rang. Donna was nearest to it and she
answered. “Hello?”
“I know it hurts, Sabra,” Doc said. “The next two or
three contractions should do it. Okay?”
“I can’t,” she sobbed. “I can’t.”
“This guy name o’ Galloway wants to know who got
shot,” Donna informed them. No one paid any attention
to her.
“Doing great, Sabra,” Doc was saying. “Get ready. Pant.”
Glancing at Tiel, he said, “Be her coach.”
Tiel began to pant along with Sabra as she watched
Doc’s hands moving around the baby’s neck. Noticing her
alarm, he said softly, ‘Just checking to make sure the cord
wasn’t wrapped around it.” “Is it okay?” Sabra asked through clenched teeth.
“So far it’s a textbook birth.”
Tiel heard Donna telling Galloway, “Nope, he ain’t
dead, but he deserves to be and so does the damn fool
that sent him in here.” She then slammed down the receiver.
“Here we go, here we go. Your baby’s here, Sabra.”
Sweat was running into Doc’s eyebrows from his hairline,
but he seemed unaware of it. “That’s it. That’s the way.”
Her scream would haunt Tiel’s dreams for many nights
to come. More tissue was torn when the child̵! 7;s shoul! ders
pushed through. A small incision under local anesthetic
would have spared her that agony, but there was no help
for it.
The only blessing to come of it was the wriggling baby
that slipped into Doc’s waiting hands. “It’s a girl, Sabra.
And she’s a beauty. Ronnie, you have a baby daughter.”
Donna, Vern, and Gladys cheered and applauded. Tiel
sniffed back tears as she watched Doc tilt the infant’s head
down to help clear her breathing passages since they had
no aspirator. Thankfully, she began crying immediately. A
wide grin of relief split his austere face.
Tiel wasn’t allowed to marvel for long because Doc was
passing the infant to her. The newborn was so slippery she
feared dropping her. But she managed to cradle her and
get a towel around her. “Lay her on her mother’s tummy.”
Tiel did as Doc instructed. Sabra stared at her bawling newborn with wonderment
and asked in a fearful whisper, “Is she all right?”
“Her lungs certainly seem to be,” Tiel said, laughing.
She ran a quick inventory. “All fingers and toes accounted
for. Looks like her hair is going to be light like yours.”
“Ronnie, can you see her?” Sabra called to him.
“Yeah.” The boy was dividing his glance between her
and the Mexicans, who seemed totally disenchanted by the wonders of birth. “She’s beautiful. Well, I mean she
will be when she’s all cleaned up. How’re you?”
“Perfect,” Sabra replied.
But she wasn’t. Blood had quickly saturated the pads
beneath her. Doc tried to stanch it with sanitary napkins.
“Ask Gladys to bring me some more of those. I’m afraid
we’re going to need them.”
Tiel summoned over Gladys and gave her the assignment.
She was back in half a minute with another box of
pads.! “D! id you get that man tied up?” Tiel asked.
“Vern’s still working on him, but he won’t be going anywhere
anytime soon.”
While Doc continued to work on Sabra, Tiel tried to distract
her. “What are you going to name your daughter?”
Sabra was inspecting the infant with blatant adoration
and unqualified love. “We decided on Katherine. I like the
classic names.”
“So do I. And I think Katherine is going to suit her.” Suddenly Sabra’s face contorted with pain. “What’s
happening?”
“It’s the placenta,” Doc explained. “Where Katherine’s
been living the past nine months. Your uterus contracts to
expel it just like it did to get Katherine on her way. It’ll
hurt a little, but nothing like having the baby. Once it’s
out, we’ll clean you up and then let you rest. How does
that sound?”
To Tiel he said, “Get one of those garbage sacks ready,
please. I’ll need to save this. It’ll be examined later.”
She did as asked and again distracted Sabra by talking
about the baby. In a short time, Doc had the afterbirth
wrapped up and out of sight, but still tethered to the baby
by the cord. Tiel wanted to ask why he hadn’t cut it yet,
but he was busy.
A good five minutes later, he peeled off the bloody
gloves, picked up the blood-pressure cuff, and wrapped it
around Sabra’s biceps. “How’re you doing?”
“Good,” she said, but her eye sockets were sunken and
shadowed. Her smile was wan. “How’s Ronnie holding
up?”
“You should talk him into ending this, Sabra,” Tiel said
gently.
“I can’t. Now that I’ve got Katherine, I can’t risk my
Daddy placing her up for adoption.” “He can’t do that without your consent! .” “He can do anything.”
“What about your mother? Whose side is she on?”
“Daddy’s, of course.”
Doc read the gauge and released the cuff. “Try to get
some rest. I’m doing my best to keep your bleeding at a
minimum. I’ll be asking a favor of you later on, so I’d like
you to take a nap now if you can.”
“It hurts. Down there.”
“I know. I’m sorry.”
“It’s not your fault,” she said weakly. Her eyes began to
close. “You were super cool, Doc.”
Tiel and Doc watched as her breathing became regular
and her muscles relaxed. Tiel lifted Katherine off her
mother’s chest. Sabra mumbled a protest but was too exhausted
to put up much resistance. “I’m only going to
clean her up a little. When you wake up, you can have her
right back. Okay?”
Tiel took the girl’s silence for permission to take the infant
away. “What about the cord?” she asked Doc.
“I’ve been waiting until it was safe.”
The cord had stopped pulsing and was no longer ropy,
but thinner and flatter. He tied it tightly in two places with
shoestrings, leaving about an inch between them. Tiel
turned her head aside when he cut it.
The placenta now completely free of the baby, Doc tightly sealed the trash bag and once again relied on
Gladys’s help, asking her to put the bag in the refrigerator
before continuing to minister to the new mother.
Tiel opened the box of pre moistened towelettes. “Do
you think it’s safe to use these on the baby?”
“I suppose. That’s what they’re for,” Doc replied.
Although Katherine put up little peeps of protest, Tiel
sponged her with the wipes, which smelled pleasantly of
baby powder. Having had no experience with newborns,
she was nervous! about th! e task. She also continued to
monitor Sabra’s gentle breathing.
“I applaud her courage,” she remarked. “I also can’t
help but sympathize with them. From what I know of Russell
Dendy, I’d have run away from him too.”
“You know him?”
“Only through the media. I wonder if he was instrumental
in sending Cain in here?”
“Why’d you hit him over the head?”
“Referring to my attack on a federal agent?” she asked,
making a grim joke of it. “I was trying to prevent a disaster.”
“I commend your swift action and only wish I’d thought
of it.”
“I had the advantage of standing behind him.” She
wrapped Katherine in a fresh towel and held her against
her chest for warmth. “I suppose Agent Cain was only doing his duty. And it took a certain amount of bravery to
walk into a situation like this. But I didn’t want him to
shoot Ronnie. And, just as earnestly, I didn’t want Ronnie
to shoot him. I acted on impulse.”
“And weren’t you just a little pissed to discover that
Cain wasn’t a doctor?”
She looked at him and smiled conspiratorially. “Don’t
tell.”
“I promise.”
“How’d you know he wasn’t a medical man? What gave
him away?”
“Sabra’s vitals weren’t his first concern. For instance, he
didn’t take her blood pressure. He didn’t seem to grasp
the seriousness of her condition, so I began to suspect
him and tested his knowledge. When the cervix is dilated
eight to ten centimeters, all systems are go. He flunked
the test.”
“We both might get sentenced to years of hard labor in
federal prison.”
“Better that than letting him shoot Ronnie.”
“Amen to that.” She ! glanced d! own at the infant, who
was now sleeping. “How about the baby? Is she okay?”
“Let’s take a look.”
Tiel lay Katherine on her lap. Doc folded back the
towel and examined the tiny newborn, who wasn’t even as
long as his forearm. His hands looked large and masculine against her baby pinkness, but their touch was tender,
especially when he taped the tied-off cord to her tummy.
“She’s small,” he observed. “A couple weeks premature,
I’d guess. She seems okay, though. Breathing all right. But
she should be in a hospital neonatal unit. It’s important
that we keep her warm. Try and keep her head covered.”
“All right.”
He was leaning close to Tiel. Close enough for her to
distinguish each tiny line that radiated from the outer corners
of his eyes. The irises of his eyes were grayish green,
the lashes very black, several shades darker than his
medium brown hair. His chin and jaw were showing stubble,
which was attractive. Through the tear in his shirtsleeve,
she noticed that blood had soaked through the
makeshift bandage.
“Does your shoulder hurt?”
When he raised his head, they almost bumped noses.
Their eyes were engaged for several seconds before he
turned his head to check his shoulder wound. He looked
at it as though he’d forgotten it was there. “No. It’s fine.”
Hastily he added, “Better put one of those diapers on her,
then wrap her up again.”
Tiel ineptly diapered the baby while Doc checked on
the new mother.
“Is all that blood …” Tiel purposefully left the question incomplete, afraid that Ronnie would overhear. Since Tiel
had never witnessed a birth, she didn’t know if the
amount that Sabra had bled was normal or cause for
alarm. To her, it appeared an inordinate amount, and if
she was re! ading Doc! right, he was concerned.
“Much more than there should be.” He kept his voice
low for the same reason she had. Draping the sheet over
Sabra’s thighs, he began massaging her abdomen. “Sometimes
this helps curb the bleeding,” he said in reply to
Tiel’s unspoken question.
“If it doesn’t?”
“It can’t go on for long before we’ve got real problems.
I wish I could’ve done an episiotomy, saved her this.”
“Don’t blame yourself. Under the circumstances and
given the conditions, you did amazingly well, Dr. Stanwick.”
CHAPTER
7
It was out before she could recall it. She hadn’t intended
for Doc to know that she recognized him. Not yet,
anyway.
Although maybe her slip of the tongue had been subconsciously
intentional. Maybe she had addressed him by
name just to see how he would react. Her reporter’s yen
for provoking a response to an unexpected question or
statement had goaded her into tossing out his name to see what his spontaneous, unrehearsed, and therefore candid
reaction would be.
His spontaneous, unrehearsed, and candid reaction
was telling. In sequence he looked at first astonished, then
mystified, then irked. Finally, it was as though a shutter
had been slammed shut over his eyes.
Tiel held his stare, her steady gaze virtually daring him
to deny that he was Dr. Bradley Stanwick. Or had been in
his previous life.
The telephone rang again.
“Oh, hell,” Donna grumbled. “What do I tell ‘em this
time?”
“Let me answer.” Ronnie reached for the phone. “Mr.
Galloway? No, like the lady told you, he’s not dead.”
Sabra had been roused by the ringing telephone. She
asked to hold her baby. Tiel laid the infant in her arms.
The new mother cooed over how sweet Katherine looked now, ! how good she smelled.
Tiel stood up and stretched. She hadn’t realized until
now how taxing the final hour of labor and the birth had
been. Her fatigue couldn’t compare to Sabra’s, of course,
but she was exhausted nonetheless.
Physically exhausted, but mentally charged. She took
stock of the present situation. Gladys and Vern were sitting
together quietly, holding hands. They looked tired but content, as though the night’s events were being enacted
for their entertainment.
Donna was hugging her bony chest with her skinny
arms and picking at the loose, scaly sacks of skin that
passed for elbows. The taller, leaner Mexican man was focused
on Ronnie and the telephone. His friend was watching
the FBI agent, who showed signs of coming around.
Vern had propped Agent Cain’s back against the
counter with his legs and feet stretched out in front of
him. His ankles were bound together with silver duct tape.
His wrists were likewise secured behind his back. His head
was bowed low over his chest, but every now and then he
tried to lift it, and when he did, he moaned.
“We’ve got him tied up,” Ronnie was telling Galloway
over the telephone. “We fired our guns almost at the same
time, but the only one hit was Doc. No, he’s okay.” Ronnie
glanced at Doc, who nodded in agreement. “Who’s Ms.
McCoy?”
“Me,” Tiel said, stepping forward.
“How come?” Ronnie gave Tiel a quizzical once-over.
“Well, I guess it’s okay. How’d you know her name? Okay,
hold on.” As he extended the receiver to Tiel, he asked,
“Are you famous or something?”
“Not so you’d notice.” She took the receiver. “Hello?”
The voice was government-issue–crisp and concise.
“Ms. McCoy, FBI Special Agent Bill Galloway.” &! #8220;Hel! lo.”
“Are you in a position to speak freely?”
“Yes.”
“You’re under no duress?”
“No.”
“What’s the situation there?”
“Exactly as Ronnie described to you. Agent Cain caused
a near disaster, but we were able to quell it,”
Taken aback, the senior agent was slow to respond. “I
beg your pardon?”
“Sending him in here was a bad call. Miss Dendy
needed an obstetric specialist, not the cavalry.”
“We didn’t know–”
“Well now you do. This isn’t Mount Carmel or Ruby
Ridge. I’m not trying to tell you how to do your job–”
“Really?” he said dryly.
“But I urge you to cooperate with Mr. Davison from now
on.”
“It’s the Bureau’s policy not to negotiate with hostage-takers.”
“These aren’t terrorists,” she exclaimed. “They’re a
couple of kids who are confused and scared and feel that
they have exhausted all other options.”
Raised voices could be heard in the background. Galloway
covered the mouthpiece to speak to someone else.
Agent Cain raised his head and looked up at Tiel through bleary eyes. Did he recognize her as the one who had
knocked his lights out with a can of chili?
“Mr. Dendy is very concerned about his daughter’s welfare,”
Galloway said when he came back on the line. “The
cashier–Donna?–told me that Sabra has delivered.”
“A baby girl. Both are . . . stable.” Tiel glanced at Doc,
and he gave her a small nod. “Assure Mr. Dendy that his
daughter is in no immediate danger.”
“Sheriff Montez informs me there’s a local man in
there with you who has some medical training.”
“That’s right. He assisted Sabra through! the labo! r and
birth.”
Doc’s eyes narrowed a fraction–the gunslinger about
to draw.
“Sheriff Montez can’t recall his last name. Says he goes
by Doc.”
“Correct.”
“You don’t know his name?”
Tiel considered her options. She had been totally involved
with the labor and delivery, but she wasn’t entirely
unaware of what had been happening outside. She’d
heard the clap of helicopter rotors. Some would be police
and medical choppers, but she would bet they also indicated
the arrival of media from Dallas-Fort Worth, Austin,
Houston. Big stations. Network affiliates.
The active role she was playing in this unfolding story had automatically elevated its media-worthiness. She wasn’t
what she would term famous, but, in all humility, she
wasn’t a nonentity, either. She was seen nearly every night
on the evening news in her television market. Those newscasts
were also aired on cable stations in smaller markets
throughout Texas and into Oklahoma, which amounted
to several million viewers. She was a flavor-enhancing ingredient
to an already juicy story. Throw into that mix the
involvement of Dr. Bradley Stanwick, who three years ago
had disappeared from the public eye shrouded in scandal,
and you had a tasty potboiler that would cause a feeding
frenzy among the press corps.
But Tiel wanted it to be her potboiler.
If she gave away Doc’s identity now, she could kiss her
exclusive good-bye. Everyone else would report it first.
The story would be broadcast before she had filed her initial
report. By the time she could produce her own account
of events, the resurfacing of Dr. Stanwick would be
old news.
Gully would probably never forgive her for this decision,
but, for the time being, she was going to keep this
spicy tidbit as her secret ingredient.
So she a! voided gi! ving Galloway a direct answer. “Doc
did an incredible job under very trying circumstances.
Sabra responds to him favorably. She trusts him.” “I understand he was wounded during the exchange of
gunfire.”
“A scratch, nothing more. All of us are all right, Mr. Galloway,”
she said impatiently. “We’re tired, but otherwise
unharmed, and I can’t emphasize that enough.”
“You’re not being forced to say this?”
“Absolutely not. The last thing Ronnie wants is for
someone to get hurt.”
“That’s right,” the boy said, “I just want to be able to
walk out of here with Sabra and my baby, free to go our
own way.”
Tiel conveyed his wish to Galloway, who said, “Ms.
McCoy, you know I can’t let that happen.”
“Allowances could be made.”
“I don’t have the authority to–”
“Mr. Galloway, are you in a position to speak freely?”
After a momentary pause, he said, “Go ahead.”
“If you’ve had any interaction with Russell Dendy, then
you can well understand why these two young people felt
desperate enough to do what they’ve done.”
“I can’t comment on that directly, but I understand
your meaning.”
Apparently Dendy was within earshot. “By all accounts
the man is a tyrant,” Tiel continued. “I don’t know if you’re
aware of this, but he has pledged to forcibly separate these
two and put the baby up for adoption. Ronnie and Sabra want only the liberty to decide their own future and that of
their child. This is a family crisis, Mr. Galloway, and that’s
how it should be handled. Perhaps Mr. Dendy would consent
to a mediator who could help them work through
their differences and reach an agreement.”
“Ronnie ! Davison s! till has a lot to answer for, Ms. McCoy.
Armed robbery, for starters.”
“I’m sure Ronnie is willing to accept responsibility for
his actions.”
“Let me talk to him.” Ronnie took the receiver from
her. “Listen, Mr. Galloway, I’m not a criminal. Not until
today, that is. I’ve never even gotten a speeding ticket. But
I’m not going to let Mr. Dendy dictate my baby girl’s future.
From where I stood, I couldn’t see any other way to
get away from him.”
“Tell him what we decided, Ronnie,” Sabra called out.
He looked down at her where she lay with the newborn
cradled in her arms, and his face took on a pained expression.
“Talk to Sabra’s dad, Mr. Galloway. Persuade him
to leave us alone. Then I’ll release everybody.”
He listened for a moment, then said, “I know they need
to be in the hospital. The sooner the better. So you’ve got
one hour to get back to me.” Another pause. “Or what?”
he said, obviously repeating Galloway’s question. Ronnie
glanced again at Sabra. She clutched her baby daughter tighter to her chest, and nodded. “I’ll tell you in an hour.”
He hung up abruptly.
Addressing his hostages, he said, “Okay, you all heard. I
don’t want to hurt anybody. I want all of us to walk out of
here. So everybody just relax.” He glanced up at the wall
clock. “Sixty minutes, it could be over.”
“What if her old man don’t agree to let y’all alone?”
Donna asked. “What’re you gonna do to us?”
“Why don’t you sit down and be quiet?” Vern said
querulously.
“Why don’t you kiss my ass, old man?” she retorted.
“You’re not the boss of me. I wanna know, am I gonna live
or die? An hour from now, i! s he gonn! a start popping us?”
An uneasy silence descended over the group. All eyes
turned to Ronnie, but he stubbornly refused to acknowledge
the unspoken question in their eyes.
Agent Cain had either lapsed into unconsciousness
again or was hanging his head in shame over his failure to
bring the standoff to an end. In an event, his chin was resting
on his chest.
Donna’s elbows were subjected to more picking.
Vern and Gladys were showing signs of fatigue. Now
that the excitement of the birth was over, their liveliness
had waned. Gladys’s head was resting on Vern’s shoulder.
Tiel crouched down beside Doc, who was attending to
Sabra again. Her eyes were closed. Baby Katherine was sleeping in her mother’s arms. “How is she?”
“Too goddamn much bleeding, and her blood pressure’s
falling.”
“What can you do?”
“I tried massaging the uterus, but rather than slowing
the bleeding, it increased it.” His brow was furrowed with
consternation. “There is something else.”
“What?”
“Nursing.”
“Could she be lactating this soon?”
“No. Have you ever heard of oxytocin?”
“I assume it’s a female thing.”
“A hormone that helps eject breast milk. It also causes
the uterus to contract, which reduces the bleeding. Sucking
stimulates the release of the hormone.”
“Oh. Then why haven’t you–”
“Because I thought she might be on her way to a hospital
by now. Besides, she’s already had rather a lot to deal
with.”
They were quiet for a moment, both looking at Sabra
and disliking her paleness. “I’m afraid of infection too,”
he said. “Dammit, they both need to be hospitalized.
What’s that Galloway like? Typical hard-ass?”
̶! 0;All bus! iness, definitely. But he sounds reasonable.
Dendy, on the other hand, is a raving maniac. I could hear him in the background issuing threats and ultimatums.”
She glanced at Ronnie, who was dividing his attention between
the parking lot and the Mexican duo, who were be-coming
steadily and increasingly edgy. “He won’t execute
us, will he?”
Seemingly in no hurry to address her question, Doc finished
replacing the pads beneath Sabra, then leaned
against the freezer chest and raised one knee. Propping
his elbow on it, he wearily raked a hand through his hair.
By city standards, it could have stood a trim. But somehow,
on him, in this environment, the unkempt look was fitting.
“I don’t know what he’ll do, Ms. McCoy. The misery
that human beings are capable of inflicting on one another
has never failed to fascinate and repel me. I don’t
think the boy has got it in him to line us up and shoot us,
but there’s no guarantee that he won’t. In any event, talking
about it won’t affect the outcome.”
“That’s a rather fatalistic outlook.”
“You asked.” He shrugged indifferently. “We don’t have
to talk about it.”
“Then what do you want to talk about?”
“Nothing.”
“Bullshit,” she said, wanting to surprise him and succeeding.
“You want to know how I recognized you.”
He merely looked at her, saying nothing. He’d built up
quite an armor, but part of her job was piercing invisible armor.
“When I first saw you, I thought you looked familiar but
couldn’t place you. Then sometime during the birthing
process, just before the delivery, it occurred to me who
you were. I think the way you handled Sabra was the giveaway.”
“You’ve got a remarkable memory, Ms. McCoy.”
̶! 0;Tiel. A! nd my memory might be sharper than that of
the average Jane Q. Public. You see, I covered your story.”
She recited the call letters of the television station for
which she worked.
He muttered an expletive. “So you were among the
hordes of reporters who made my life a living hell?”
“I’m good at my job.”
He snuffled a deprecating laugh. “I’ll bet you are.” He
readjusted his long legs, but his eyes never left hers. “Do
you like what you do?”
“Very much.”
“You enjoy preying on people who are already down,
exposing their hardship to public scrutiny, making it impossible
for them to pick up the pieces of their already
shattered lives?”
“You blame the media for your difficulties?”
“In large part, yeah.”
“For instance?”
“For instance, the hospital buckled beneath the weight of bad publicity. Bad publicity generated and nurtured by
people like you.”
“You generated your own negative publicity, Dr. Stanwick.”
Angrily, he turned his head away, and Tiel realized she
had struck a chord.
Dr. Bradley Stanwick had been an oncologist of
renown, practicing in one of the most progressive cancer-treatment
centers in the world. Patients came from all
over the globe, usually in a last-hope attempt to save themselves
from dying. His clinic couldn’t save them all, of
course, but it had maintained an excellent track record of
staving off the ravages of the disease and prolonging life,
while also providing the patient a quality of life that made
living longer worthwhile.
That’s why it was such a cruel irony when Bradley Stan-wick’s
young, beautiful, vivacious wife was stricken with inoperable
pancreatic cancer.
Neither he nor his brilliant colleagues could retard its
rapid spread. Within ! weeks of ! her diagnosis, she was confined
to bed. She opted for aggressive chemotherapy and
radiation, but the side effects were almost as lethal as the
disease the treatments were intended to combat. Her immune
system weakened; she developed pneumonia. One
by one her systems began to falter, then fail.
Not wishing her senses to be dulled by pain-relieving
drugs, she declined them. However, during the last few days of her life, her suffering became so intense that she
finally consented to a painkilling drug that she could self-administer
through an IV.
All this Tiel learned through background research. Dr.
and Mrs. Bradley didn’t become news until after her
death. Until she died, they were just a sad statistic, the victims
of an insidious disease.
But following her funeral, disgruntled in-laws began to
make noises that perhaps their son-in-law had accelerated
his wife’s passing. Specifically, he had enabled her to kill
herself by setting the dosage on the self-administering
mechanism so high that she actually had succumbed to a
lethal amount of narcotics. They alleged that her sizeable
inheritance was his enticement to speed things along.
From the start, Tiel had thought the allegations were
nonsense. It was a foregone conclusion that Mrs. Bradley’s
life expectancy was a matter of days. A man due to inherit
a fortune could afford to wait until nature took its course.
Besides, Dr. Stanwick was affluent in his own right, although
he put a lot of his income back into the oncology
clinic to be used for research and indigent patient care.
Even if he had euthanized his wife, Tiel wasn’t ready to
cast the first stone. The controversy surrounding euthanasia
left her in a moral quandary to which she had no satisfactory
resolution. On that subject, she tended to agree with the last impassioned speaker.
But, strictly from a practical standpoin! t, she st! rongly
doubted that Bradley Stanwick would risk his reputation
even for his beloved wife’s sake.
Unfortunately for him, his in-laws persisted until the
DA’s office ordered an investigation–which proved to be
a waste of time and manpower. No evidence was found to
substantiate the relatives’ charge of criminal wrongdoing.
There was no indication that Dr. Stanwick had done anything
to hasten his wife’s death. The DA declined even to
present the case to the grand jury, claiming there was no
basis for it whatsoever.
Nevertheless, the story didn’t end there. During the
weeks that investigators were interrogating Dr. Stanwick,
his colleagues, his staff, friends, family, and former patients,
every aspect of his life was extensively examined
and debated. He lived beneath a shadow of suspicion that
was especially unsettling since the majority of his patients
were considered terminally, irreversibly ill.
The hospital where he practiced soon found itself in
the spotlight too. Rather than standing behind him, the
administrators voted unanimously to revoke his privileges
at the facility until he was cleared of all suspicion. No fool,
Bradley Stanwick knew he would never be cleared of all suspicion. Once a seed of doubt is planted in the public’s
mind, it usually finds fertile ground and flourishes. Perhaps the ultimate betrayal came from his partners at
the clinic he had established. After working together for
years, pooling their research and case studies, combining
their knowledge, skills, and theories, forging friendships
as well as professional alliances, they asked him to resign.
He sold his share of the practice to his former partners,
unloaded his stately home in Highland Park for a fraction
of its appraised value, and, with a “Screw you all” attitude,
left Dallas for parts unknown. That’s where the! story ended.. If Tiel hadn’t lost her way and wound up in Rojo
Flats, she probably would never have thought of him
again.
She asked him now, “Is Sabra the first patient you’ve
treated since you left Dallas?”
“She isn’t a patient, and I didn’t treat her. I was a cancer
doctor, not an OB-GYN. This is an emergency situation,
and I responded. Just as you did. Just as everybody has.”
“That’s false modesty, Doc. None of us could have done
for Sabra what you did.”
“Ronnie, okay if I get a drink?” he suddenly called out
to the boy.
“Sure. Okay. The others could probably use some water
too.”
Leaning forward, Doc took a six-pack of bottled water
from the shelf. After taking two of the plastic bottles for
Tiel and himself, he passed the rest up to the boy, who then asked Donna to distribute them.
He drank almost half his bottle in one swallow. Tiel
twisted off the cap and drank from her bottle, sighing
after taking a long draft. “Good idea. Trying to change
the subject?”
“Good guess.”
“You don’t practice medicine here in Rojo Flats?”
“I told you. I ranch.”
“But they know you around here as Doc.”
“Everybody in a small town knows everything about
everyone.”
“But you must’ve told somebody. Otherwise, how’d it
get around–”
“Look, Ms. McCoy–”
“Tiel.”
“I don’t know how it got around that I once practiced
medicine. Even if I did, what’s it to you?”
‘Just curious.”
“Uh-huh.” He was looking straight ahead, away from
her. “This isn’t an interview. You won’t get an interview
from me. So why not save yourself the breath? You might
need it later.”
&! #8220;Prio! r to the . . . the episode, you lived a very active life.
Don’t you miss being at the center of things?”
“No.” “You don’t get bored out here?”
“No.”
“Aren’t you lonesome?”
“For what?”
“Companionship.”
He turned his head and readjusted his position so that
his shoulders and torso were almost facing her. “Sometimes.”
His eyes moved downward, over her. “You volunteering
to help me out on that?”
“Oh, please.”
And when she said that, he began to laugh, letting her
know that he hadn’t been serious.
She hated herself for falling for the ruse. “I hoped you
were above that sexist crap.”
Serious again, he said, “And I hoped you were above
asking questions, particularly personal ones, at a time like
this. Just as I was beginning to like you.”
Strangely, the way he was looking at her now, with that
probing intensity, had a greater effect than the smarmy
sexual insinuation. That had been phony. This was real.
Her tummy lifted weightlessly.
But then an uproar on the far side of the store brought
her and Doc scrambling to their feet.
CHAPTER
8 Tiel had dubbed the shorter, stockier Mexican man
Juan. It was he who had caused the commotion. He was
bending over Agent Cain, lavishly cursing him–at least
she assumed he was cursing. His shouted Spanish had an
epithetical quality.
Cain was repeatedly screaming, “What the hell?” and futilely
straining to free himself from the duct tape.
To everyone’s dismay, Juan slapped a strip of duct tape
over the FBI agent’s mouth to shut him up. Meanwhile,
Juan’s taller companion let fly with a stream of Spanish
that sounded both reproachful and confused by Juan’s
sudden attack on the agent.
Ronnie bra! ndished h! is pistol, shouting, “What’s going
on? What’re you doing there? Vern, what happened?”
“Damned if I know. I had sorta dozed off. I woke up
when they started tussling and yelling at one another.”
“He just jumped on him,” Gladys contributed in her
prissy manner. “For no apparent reason. I don’t trust him.
Or his friend either, for that matter.”
“Quepasa?”Doc asked.
The others fell abruptly silent, surprised that he spoke
Spanish. Apparently Juan was more surprised than anyone.
He whipped his head around and glared at Doc. Undeterred
by the smoldering eyes, Doc posed the question
a second time. “Nada, “Juan muttered beneath his breath.
Then Doc just stood there and exchanged glowers with
the Mexican. “Well?” Tiel prompted.
“Well, what? That’s the extent of my Spanish vocabulary
except for hello, good-bye, please, thank you, and shit.
None apply to this particular situation.”
“Why’d you jump him?” Ronnie asked the Mexican
man. “What’s the matter with you?”
Donna said, “He’s a nutcase, that’s what. Knew it the
minute I laid eyes on him.”
Juan answered in Spanish, but Ronnie impatiently
shook his head. “I can’t understand you. Just take that
tape off his mouth. Do it!” he ordered when Juan failed to
obey immediately. Ronnie made himself understood by
pantomiming peeling the tape off Cain, who was listening
and watching the proceedings with round, wide, fearful
eyes.
The Mexican leaned down, pinched up a corner of the
tape, and ripped it off the agent’s lips. He yelped in pain,
then shouted, “You son of a bitch!”
Juan actually seemed pleased with himself. He glanced
at his partner and they both laughed, as though amused
by the feder! al agent&! #8217;s embarrassment and discomfort.
“You’re all going to jail. Every damn last one of you.”
Cain looked balefully at Tiel. “Especially you. You’re to
blame for the fix we’re in.” “Me?”
“You impeded a federal officer and prevented him
from performing his duty.”
“I prevented you from needlessly taking a human life
just so you could earn your spurs, or get your rocks off, or
whatever it was that motivated you to come in here and
further complicate an already complicated situation.
Under the same set of circumstances I would clobber you
again.”
His hostile gaze moved from one hostage to the other,
eventually landing on the Mexican who had attacked him.
“I don’t understand. What the hell is wrong with you people?”
He nodded toward Ronnie. “He’s the enemy, not
me.”
“We’re only trying to keep this standoff from ending in
disaster,” Doc said.
“The only way that’s going to happen is with a full surrender
and the release of the hostages. It’s a Bureau policy
not to negotiate.”
“We heard it already from Galloway,” Tiel told him.
“If Galloway thinks I’m dead–”
“We assured him you aren’t.”
The agent sneered at Ronnie. “What makes you think
he would believe you?”
“Because I confirmed it,” Tiel said. Doc, who’d returned his attention to Sabra, said, “I
need another package of diapers.”
They couldn’t be for the baby, Tiel reasoned. Katherine
hadn’t wet that much. It took only a glance for her to understand
that the replacements were for Sabra. Her bleeding
had not abated. If anything it had increased.
“Ronnie, may I get another carton of diapers?”
“What’s wrong? Somet! hing with! the baby?”
“The baby’s fine, but Sabra is bleeding.”
“Oh Jesus.”
“May I get the diapers?”
“Sure, sure,” he said absently.
“Some hero you are, Davison,” Cain remarked snidely.
“To save your own skin, you’re willing to let your girlfriend
and baby die. Yeah, it takes real courage to let a woman
bleed to death.”
“Wish that Mexican had used tape you cain’t pull off,”
Donna grumbled. “You got a real fat mouth on you, G-man.”
“For once, you’re right, Donna,” Gladys said. Speaking
to Cain, she added, “What a hateful thing to say.”
“All right, be quiet, all of you!” Ronnie said. Everyone
instantly fell silent, except for the two Mexican men, who
were conferring in whispers.
Tiel rushed back to Doc’s side with the box of disposable
diapers. She tore it open and unfolded a diaper for
him, which he positioned beneath Sabra’s hips. “What made you think of this?”
“She’s bleeding through the napkins too fast. These diapers
are lined with plastic.”
The exchange was spoken in an undertone. Neither
wanted to panic the girl or further fluster Ronnie, who
was watching the wall clock behind the counter. Its long,
sweeping second hand was circling dreadfully slowly.
Doc moved to Sabra’s side and took her hand. “You’re
still bleeding a little heavier than I’d like.”
Her eyes darted to Tiel, who laid a comforting hand on
her shoulder. “No need for immediate alarm. Doc’s just
thinking ahead. He doesn’t want things to get so bad they
can’t get better.”
“That’s right.” Leaning down nearer to her, he spoke
softly. “Would you please reconsider going to the hospital?”
“No!&#! 8221;
He appealed to her. “Before saying no, listen to me a
minute. Please.”
“Please, Sabra. Let Doc explain.”
The girl’s eyes moved back to Doc but they regarded
him warily. “I’m thinking not only of you and the baby,”
he said, “but of Ronnie too. The sooner he brings this to
an end, the better it’s going to be for him.”
“My daddy will kill him.”
“No he won’t. Not if you and Katherine are safe.” Her eyes filled with tears. “You don’t understand. He’s
only pretending to want us safe. Last night when we told
him about the baby, he threatened to kill it. He said if he
could, he would cut it out of me right then and strangle it
with his bare hands. That’s how much he hates Ronnie,
how much he hates our being together.”
Tiel gasped. She’d never heard a flattering word about
Russell Dendy, but this testimony of his cruelty was shocking.
How could anyone be so heartless? Doc’s lips compressed
into a thin line.
“That’s the kind of person my daddy is,” Sabra continued.
“He hates to be crossed. He’ll never forgive us for defying
him. He’ll have Ronnie sent to prison forever, and
he’ll make certain that I never see my baby again. I don’t
care what he does to me. If I can’t be with them, it doesn’t
matter what happens to me.”
She tilted her head down and rested her cheek against
her newborn. The peach fuzz on the baby’s small head
blotted Sabra’s tears from her cheeks. “You’ve both been
great to me. Truly. I hate to disappoint you. But you won’t
change my mind about this. Until they let Ronnie and me
walk out of here with Daddy’s promise to leave us alone,
I’m staying. Besides, Doc, I trust you more than I would
any doctor a! t a hospi! tal my daddy sent me to.”
Doc swiped his sweating forehead with the back of his
hand and sighed. He looked across at Tiel, who raised her shoulders in a defeatist’s shrug.
“Okay,” he said reluctantly. “I’ll do my best.”
“I don’t doubt that.” Sabra winced. “Is it really bad?”
“There’s nothing I can do about the bleeding from the
tear. But the vaginal bleeding . . . Remember earlier when
I told you to rest because I might have to ask you to do
something for me later?”
“Um-huh.”
“Well, I’d like for you to nurse Katherine.”
The girl shot Tiel a stunned glance. “The nursing will
cause your uterus to contract and reduce the bleeding,”
she explained.
Doc smiled down at Sabra. “Ready to give it a try?”
“I guess so,” she replied, although she seemed unsure
and embarrassed.
“I’ll help you.” Tiel reached for the scissors, which had
been wiped clean. “Why don’t I use these to clip the shoulder
seams of your dress? We can pin them back afterward,
but that’ll keep you from having to get undressed.”
“That’d be good.” She seemed relieved to give over
some of the decision-making to Tiel.
“I’ll let you ladies have some privacy. Uh, Ms., uh, Tiel?”
Doc motioned her to stand, and they held a brief, private
consultation. “Do you know anything about this?”
“Nothing. My mother stopped breast-feeding me when I was three months old. I don’t remember it.”
He smiled wanly. “I meant other than being on the receiving
end.”
“I knew what you meant. That was a joke. But the answer
is still no.”
“Well then, of the three of you, Katherine will be the
most knowledgeable. Position her correctl! y and she! ’ll act
on instinct. At least I hope she will. A few minutes on each
breast.”
“Right,” Tiel said with a brisk nod.
She knelt down beside Sabra and applied the scissors to
the shoulder seams of her sundress. “From now on, I suggest
you start wearing tops that button up the front. Or
something loose that you can lift up and drape over
Katherine. One time, on a long flight to Los Angeles, I sat
next to a mother with an infant. She breast-fed the baby
all the way, and no one except me knew it, and I did only
because she was in the seat beside me. She was completely
covered the whole time.”
The chatter was intentional, meant to distract Sabra
and relieve her bashfulness. When she was finished ripping
out the seams, Tiel peeled down one side of her
bodice. “Now lower your bra strap and pull down the cup.
Here, let me hold Katherine.” Sabra looked around self-consciously
“No one can see,” Tiel assured her.
“I know. But it feels weird.” “I’m sure it does.”
When Sabra was ready, Tiel handed Katherine back to
her. The newborn had been making soft, mewling noises,
but the moment she felt the fullness of Sabra’s breast
against her cheek, her mouth began rooting for the nipple.
She found it, tried to latch on, couldn’t. After several
attempts, the baby began to wail. She flailed tiny fists, and
her face turned red.
“Everything okay?” Doc called.
“Fine,” Tiel lied.
Sabra sobbed in frustration. “I’m not doing it right.
What am I doing wrong?”
“Nothing, sweetheart, nothing,” Tiel said soothingly.
“Katherine doesn’t know how to be a baby any more than
you know how to be a mom. You learn your roles together.
That’s what makes it so wonderful. But I’ve heard that a
baby can! sense th! e mother’s frustration. The more relaxed
you are, the easier it will be. Take a few deep
breaths, then try again.”
A second attempt was no more successful that the first.
“Know what? I think it’s your position,” Tiel observed. “It’s
awkward for you and for her. Maybe if you could sit up.”
“I can’t. My bottom hurts too bad.”
“What if Doc supported your back? It would relieve the
pressure down there and enable you to cradle Katherine more comfortably.”
“He’ll see me,” she protested in a tearful whisper.
“I’ll fix it so he won’t. Wait here. I’ll be right back.”
Earlier she had noticed a rack stocked with souvenir T-shirts.
Before Ronnie could even ask what she was doing,
she dashed to it and snatched one from the display. It was
dusty, she noticed, but there was no help for that. Just as
she was about to turn away, she yanked a second shirt
from the rack.
By the time she returned with the T-shirts, Katherine
was well into a wailing fit. Everyone else in the store was
maintaining a respectful silence. Tiel spread one of the
extra-large T-shirts over mother and baby. “There. He
won’t be able to see a thing. All right?”
“All right.”
“Doc?”
He was there in a blink. “Yeah?”
“Could you please get behind Sabra and support her
back, like I did during the birth?”
“Sure.”
He knelt down behind the girl and helped ease her into
a semi-sitting position. “Now, just lean back against my
chest. Come on, relax, Sabra. There. Comfortable?”
“Yes, I’m okay. Thanks.”
Tiel raised a corner of the T-shirt just enough to peer
beneath it. Katherine had stopped crying and was once again on her instinctive search. “Help her, Sabra,̶! 1; Tiel i! nstructed
softly. Sabra acted on instinct too. With only a little
maneuvering and finessing, a tight suction was formed
between breast and baby, and she began to suck vigorously.
Sabra laughed with delight. As did Tiel. She dropped
the corner of the shirt and smiled at Doc.
“I assume everything is okay.”
“They’re pros.” Tiel’s bragging brought a wide smile to
Sabra’s chalky lips. Tiel asked, “Had you decided ahead of
time to breast-feed?”
“Truthfully, I hadn’t really thought about it. I was so
preoccupied with worry that somebody was going to find
out about the pregnancy, I didn’t have much time to think
about anything else.”
“You can try it, then if it doesn’t work out, you can
switch to bottles. There’s no shame in bottle-feeding.”
“But I hear that nursing is better for the baby.”
“That’s what I hear too.”
“You don’t have kids?”
“No.”
“Are you married?”
It seemed that Sabra had forgotten Doc was there. Her
back was to him, so to her he was like a piece of furniture.
Tiel, however, was facing him and keenly aware that he
was listening to every word. “No. Single.” “Have you ever been?”
After a slight hesitation, she replied, “Years ago. For a
short time.”
“What happened?”
The grayish green eyes didn’t waver. “We, uh, went different
directions.”
“Oh. Too bad.”
“Yes, it was.”
“How old were you?”
“Young.”
“How old are you now?”
Tiel laughed nervously. “Older. Thirty-three last
month.”
“You’d better hurry up and find someone else. If you
want to have a family, I mean.”
“You sound like m! y mother.! ”
“Do you?”
“Do I what?”
“Want to have another husband and kids?”
“Someday. Maybe. I’ve been awfully busy establishing
my career.”
“You could be a single mom.”
“I’ve considered it, but I’m not sure I’d want that for my
child. The jury’s still out.”
“I can’t imagine not wanting a family,” the girl said with
a gentle smile for Katherine. “That’s all Ronnie and I talk about. We want to have a big house out in the country.
With lots of kids. I’m an only child. He has one little stepbrother,
and they’re twelve years apart in age. We want a
large family.”
“That’s an admirable ambition.”
Unobtrusively, Doc signaled Tiel with his chin that it
was time to switch sides. Tell assisted Sabra, and soon
Katherine was happily sucking away at the other breast.
Then the girl surprised them by angling her head back
and asking, “What about you, Doc?”
“What about me?”
“Are you married?”
“My wife died three years ago.”
Sabra’s face fell. “Oh, I’m so sorry.”
“Thank you.”
“How’d she die? If you don’t mind me asking.”
He told her about his wife’s illness, making no mention
of the conflict that followed her demise.
“Any kids?”
“Unfortunately no. We had just begun talking about
starting our family when she got sick. Like Ms. McCoy, she
had a career. She was a microbiologist.”
“Wow, she must’ve been smart.”
“Brilliant, in fact.” He smiled, although Sabra couldn’t
see it. “Much smarter than me.” “You must’ve loved each other a whole lot.”
His smile gradually faded. What Sabra couldn’! ;t guess,!
but Tiel knew, was that his marriage hadn’t been flawless
and trouble-free. During the investigation into the circumstances
surrounding Shari Stanwick’s death, it was disclosed
that she had engaged in an extramarital affair.
Bradley Stanwick knew of his wife’s unfaithfulness and
generously assumed his share of the blame. His work
schedule was demanding and often kept him out late and
away from home.
But the two had loved each other and were committed
to making the marriage work. They were in counseling and planning to stay together when her malignancy was
diagnosed. Her illness had actually brought them closer
together. At least that’s what he had claimed to his accusers.
Tiel could see that, even after all this time, reminders of
his wife’s adultery still pained him.
When he became aware that Tiel was watching him, the
wistfulness in his expression vanished. “That’s enough for
now,” he said, speaking more brusquely than he probably
intended.
“She’s stopped sucking anyway,” Sabra said. “I think
she’s gone to sleep.”
While Sabra was readjusting her clothing, Tiel took the
baby and changed her. Doc eased the girl back into her original position, then checked the diaper he’d placed beneath
her. “Better. Thank God.”
Tiel cuddled the baby close and planted a soft kiss on
the top of her head before returning her to her mother’s
arms.
The telephone rang. The hour was up.
Everybody snapped to attention. Anticipated for an
hour, the ringing telephone was jarring, because it represented
the course of their future. Now that it was imminent,
all seemed loathe to hear Galloway’s response to
Ronnie’s demand. Especially Ronnie, who appeared more
nervous even than before.
He looked over at Sabra and tried to smile, but his lips
! couldn! 217;t hold the expression for long. “Are you sure,
Sabra?”
“Yes, Ronnie.” She spoke quietly but with resolve and
dignity. “Absolutely sure.”
The boy wiped his hand on his pants leg before lifting
the receiver off the hook. “Mr. Galloway?” Then, after a
momentary pause, he exclaimed, “Dad!”
CHAPTER
9
WHO’S THIS?”
When the latest arrival was escorted into the FBI van, Galloway had ignored Russell Dendy’s rude question and
instead stood up to shake the man’s hand. “Mr. Davison?”
“You’ve got to be kidding me.” Dendy had sneered with
disgust. “Who invited him?”
Galloway had pretended Dendy wasn’t even there. “I’m
Special Agent Bill Galloway.”
“Cole Davison. Wish I could say it’s a pleasure to meet
you, Mr. Galloway.”
Judging by his appearance, one would guess Davison to
be a rancher. He wore faded Levi’s and cowboy boots. His
starched white shirt had pearl snaps in lieu of buttons.
Upon entering the van, he’d politely removed a straw cowboy
hat that had left a deep indentation in his hair and a
pink stripe across his forehead, which was several shades
paler than the lower two-thirds of his suntanned face. He
had a stocky build and walked with a bowlegged gait.
He didn’t ranch. He owned five fast-food franchises
and lived in Hera only to escape “metropolises” like Tulia
and Floydada.
Galloway had welcomed him with a “Thank you for
coming so quickly, Mr. Davison.”
“I’d've come whether you asked me to or not. Soon’s I
heard my boy was holed up here, I was anxious to get
here. I was on my way out the door when you called.”
Dendy, who’d been fuming in the background, had grabbed Davison by the shoulder and spun! him arou! nd.
He thrust his index finger into the other man’s face. “It’s
your fault my daughter is in the mess she’s in. If anything
happens to her, you’re dead and so is the miscreant you
spawned–”
“Mr. Dendy,” Galloway had interrupted sternly. “Once
again I’m on the verge of having you physically removed
from this van. One more word and you’re out of here.”
The millionaire, ignoring Galloway’s warning, had continued
his harangue. “Your kid,” he’d declared, “seduced
my daughter, got her pregnant, and then kidnaped her.
I’m going to make it my life’s mission that he never sees
the light of day or breathes a breath of freedom. I’m
going to make certain that he spends every single second
of his miserable life in prison.”
To Davison’s credit, he had kept his cool. “It appears to
me you’re partly to blame for all this, Mr. Dendy. If you
hadn’t come down so hard on those kids they wouldn’t've
felt the need to run away. You know’s well as I do that Ronnie
didn’t take your girl against her will. They love each
other and ran away from you and your threats, is what I
think.”
“I don’t give a fuck what you think.”
“Well, I do,” Galloway had said, shouting over Russell
Dendy. “I want to hear Mr. Davison’s take on the situation.”
“You can call me Cole.” “All right, Cole. What do you know about this? Anything
you can tell us about your son and his frame of mind
will be helpful.”
To which Dendy had said, “How about some sharpshooters?
A SWAT team? Now that would be helpful.”
“Using force would risk the lives of your daughter and
her baby.”
“Baby?” Davison had exclaimed. “It’s! come?! 221;
“From what we understand she delivered a baby girl
about two hours ago,” Galloway had informed him. “Both
are reportedly doing okay.”
“Reportedly,” Dandy had snorted. “For all I know my
daughter is dead.”
“She’s not dead. Not according to Ms. McCoy.”
“She could’ve been talking to save her own hide. That
lunatic could have been holding a gun to her head!”
“I don’t think so, Mr. Dendy,” Galloway had said, striving
to remain calm. “And neither does our psychologist,
who was listening to my conversation with Ms. McCoy. She
sounds in perfect control, not like someone under
duress.”
“Who’s this Ms. McCoy?” Davison had wanted to know.
Galloway explained, then he’d regarded Davison
closely. “When was the last time you spoke to Ronnie?”
“Last night. He and Sabra were about to go over to the Dendys’ house and tell her parents about the baby.”
“How long have you known about the pregnancy?”
“A few weeks.”
Dendy’s face had turned beet red. “And you didn’t see
fit to tell me?”
“No, sir, I didn’t. My son confided in me. I couldn’t betray
his trust, although I urged him to tell you.” He had
turned his back on Dendy and addressed the remainder
of his remarks to Galloway.
“I had to run up to Midkiff today on account of a deep
fryer going out. I didn’t get home until late this evening.
Found a note from Ronnie on my kitchen table. It said
they’d come by hoping to catch me. Said they had run
away together and were headed for Mexico. Said they’d
let me know how to reach them when they got where they
were going.”
“I’m surprised they would pay you a visit. Weren’t they
af! raid you&! #8217;d try and talk them into returning home?”
“Truth is, Mr. Galloway, I told Ronnie if they ever
needed my help, I was pleased to offer it.”
Dendy had attacked so quickly no one saw it coming,
least of all Davison. Dendy landed on Davison’s back with
all his weight behind him. Davison would have fallen forward,
had not Galloway caught him and broken his fall. As
it was, both men landed hard against the wall of the van
that was lined with computer terminals, TV monitors, video recorders, and surveillance equipment. Sheriff
Montez grabbed Dendy by the shirt collar and hauled him
backward, slamming him into the opposite wall.
Galloway had instructed one of his subordinates to drag
Dendy the hell out of there.
“No!” Dendy had had the wind knocked out of him and
was gasping for breath, but he managed to rasp, “I want to
hear what he has to say. Please.”
Somewhat mollified, Galloway had relented. “There will
be no more of that crap, Dendy. Do you understand me?”
Dendy was red-faced and furious, but he nodded.
“Yeah. I’ll get even with this son of a bitch later. But I want
to know what’s going on.”
Order restored, Galloway had asked Davison if he was
all right. Davison had picked his cowboy hat off the floor
and dusted it off on the leg of his jeans. “Never mind
about me. I’m worried about those kids. The baby, too.”
“Do you think Ronnie was coming to you for money?”
“Could be. Regardless of what Mr. Dendy here thinks, I
didn’t offer to help them run away. In fact, just the opposite.
My advice to them was that they should stand up to
him.” The two parents exchanged dirty looks. “Anyhow,”
Davison had continued, “I reckon they could’ve used
some cash. Ronnie works after school at a driving range to
! earn spen! ding money, but his salary wouldn’t finance a move to Mexico. Since I missed him today, I guess he decided
to do this.”
He’d gestured toward the store, his expression remorseful.
“My boy’s not a thief. His mother and stepfather
have done a good job with him. He’s a good boy. I reckon
he was feeling desperate to take care of Sabra and the
baby.”
“He’s taken care of her, all right. He’s ruined her life.”
Paying no attention to Dendy, Davison had asked Galloway,
“So what’s the plan? Have you got a plan?”
Galloway had brought Ronnie Davison’s father up to
speed. Checking his wristwatch, he’d added, “Fifty-seven
minutes ago, he gave us an hour to persuade Mr. Dendy to
leave them alone. They want his word that he won’t interfere
in their lives, that he won’t give away their baby.
That–”
“Give away the baby?” Davison had looked at Dendy
with patent dismay. “You threatened to give away their
baby?” His disdainful expression spoke volumes. Shaking
his head sadly, he’d turned back to Galloway. “What can I
do?”
“Understand, Mr. Davison, that Ronnie will face criminal
charges.”
“I reckon he knows that.”
“But the sooner he releases those hostages and surrenders,
the better off he’s going to be. So far no one’s been hurt. Not seriously anyway. I’d like to keep it that way, for
Ronnie’s sake, as well as the others.”
“He won’t be hurt?”
“You have my word on that.”
“Tell me what to do.”
That conversation had resulted in Cole Davison placing
a call to the store just as the deadline expired.
“Dad!” Ronnie exclaimed. “Where’re you calling
from?”
Tiel and Doc mov! ed forwar! d and listened carefully to
what Ronnie was saying into the telephone. Judging by his
reaction, he hadn’t expected the call to be from his father.
From what Gully had told her earlier, Tiel knew the two
were close. She imagined Ronnie was feeling a mix of
shame and embarrassment, as any child experiences
when caught red-handed doing something wrong by a
parent he respects. Perhaps Mr. Davison could impress
upon his son the trouble he was in and influence him to
end the standoff.
“No, Dad, Sabra’s doing okay. You know how I feel
about her. I wouldn’t've done anything to hurt her. Yeah,
I know she should be in a hospital, but–”
“Tell him I’m not leaving you,” Sabra called to him.
“It’s not just me, Dad. Sabra says she won’t go.” As he listened, his eyes cut to Sabra and the baby. “She seems to be
doing okay too. Ms. McCoy and Doc have been taking
care of them. Yeah, I know it’s serious.”
The young man’s features were taut with concentration.
Tiel looked around at her fellow hostages. All, including
the Mexican men, who didn’t even understand the language,
were still, silent, and alert.
Doc felt her gaze when it moved to him. He raised his
shoulders in a small shrug, then returned his attention to
Ronnie, who was gripping the receiver so tightly his
knuckles had turned white. His forehead was beaded with
sweat. His fingers nervously flexed and contracted around
the pistol grip.
“Mr. Galloway seems like a decent man to me too, Dad.
But it doesn’t really matter what he says or guarantees. It’s
not the authorities we’re running from. It’s Mr. Dendy.
We aren’t going to give up our baby and have strangers
adopt her. Yes he would!” the boy stressed in a voice that
cracked with emotion. “He would.”! ;
&#! 8220;They don’t know him,” Sabra said, her voice as ragged
as Ronnie’s.
“Dad, I love you,” Ronnie said into the receiver. “And
I’m sorry if I’ve made you ashamed of me. But I can’t give
up. Not until Mr. Dendy promises to let Sabra keep the
baby.”
Whatever Ronnie was hearing made him shake his head and smile at Sabra sadly. “Then there’s something you,
Mr. Dendy, the FBI, and everybody else ought to know,
Dad. We–Sabra and I–made a pact before we left Fort
Worth.”
Tiel’s chest constricted. “Oh, no.”
“We don’t want to live apart. I think you know what that
means, Dad. If Mr. Dendy won’t give up his control of our
lives, our future, we don’t want a future.”
“Ah, Jesus.” Doc dragged his hand down his face.
“Yes, Dad, I do,” the boy insisted. He was looking at
Sabra, who nodded her head solemnly. “We won’t live
without each other. You tell that to Mr. Dendy and Mr. Galloway.
If they don’t let us leave and go our own way, nobody
leaves here alive.”
He hung up quickly. No one moved or said anything for
several moments. Then, as though on cue, everyone
began talking at once. Donna started to wail. Agent Cain
kept up a litany of “You’ll never get away with this.” Vern
professed his love for Gladys, while she begged Ronnie to
think about his baby.
It was her statement that Ronnie addressed. “My dad
will take Katherine and raise her like his own. He won’t let
Mr. Dendy get his hands on her.”
“We decided all this ahead of time,” Sabra said. “Last
night.” “You can’t mean it,” Tiel said to her. “You can’t.”
“We do. It’s the only way they’ll understand how we feel
a! bout each! other.”
Tiel knelt down beside her. “Sabra, suicide isn’t a viable
way to make a point or win an argument. Think of your
baby. She would never know you. Or Ronnie.”
“She would never know us anyway. Not if my daddy had
his way.”
Tiel stood up and moved to stand beside Doc, who was
making similarly urgent appeals to Ronnie. “To take that
many lives, Sabra’s life, you’d only be validating Dendy’s
low opinion of you. You’ve got to play smarter than him,
Ronnie.”
“No,” the boy said stubbornly.
“Is that the legacy you want to leave your daughter?”
“We’ve thought about this for a long time,” Ronnie
said. “We gave Mr. Dendy an opportunity to accept us, and
he refused. This is the only way out for us. I meant what I
said. Sabra and I would rather die–”
“I don’t think they’re convinced.”
“Huh?” He looked at Tiel, who had interrupted him.
Doc also turned to her, equally surprised by her statement.
“I bet they think you’re bluffing.”
An idea had first occurred to her earlier, when Ronnie
was trying to convince Galloway that all the hostages were
safe, including Agent Cain. She’d temporarily shelved the notion while assisting Sabra with the breast-feeding. Now
it took another foothold in her mind and was expanding
even as she vocalized it.
“For them to feel the impact of your decision, they
need to understand how serious you are.”
“I’ve told them,” Ronnie said.
“But seeing is believing.”
“What are you suggesting?” This from Doc.
“There’s media out there. I’m sure a camera crew from
my station is among them. Let’s get a cameraman in here
to record you.” The boy was listening. She dro! ve home her point. “We see how earnest you are,” she said, indicating
the others. “But it’s impossible to convey your sincerity
over the telephone. If Galloway could see you when you
speak, see that Sabra is in total agreement, then I think
he, your father, and Mr. Dendy would give more credence
to what you’re saying.”
“You mean I’d be on TV?” Donna asked, sounding
pleased at the prospect.
Ronnie’s lower lip was getting brutalized by his upper
teeth. “Sabra, what do you think?”
“I don’t know,” she said with uncertainty.
“Another thing,” Tiel argued, “if Mr. Dendy could see
his granddaughter, he might back down altogether. You
claim to be more afraid of him than you are of the FBI.” “We are. He’s a lot more ruthless.”
“But he’s a human being. Video pictures of Katherine
would be powerfully persuasive. Up till now she’s been
just ‘the baby,’ a symbol of your rebellion against him. A
video would make her real to him, cause him to rethink
his position. And with your father and Agent Galloway
working on him, I believe he would weaken and capitulate.”
“Agent Galloway is not going to compromise on the Bureau’s
policy.” Cain might just as well have saved his
breath because no one heeded him or his comment.
“What do you say?” Tiel asked. “Isn’t it worth a try? You
don’t want to kill us, Ronnie. And you don’t want to kill
Sabra and yourself, either. Suicide is a permanent solution
to a temporary problem.”
“I’m not just blowing smoke!”
Tiel pounced on his emotional outburst. “Good! That’s
exactly what they need to see and hear. Use the videotape
to convince them that you do not intend to back down.”
He was ! strugglin! g with indecision. “Sabra, what do you
think?”
“Maybe we should, Ronnie.” She glanced down at the
child sleeping in her arms. “What Doc said about the
legacy we leave Katherine … If there’s another way out of
this, isn’t it worth a try at least?”
Tiel held her breath. She was near enough to Doc to
tell that he was as taut as a piano wire. “Okay,” Ronnie said tersely. “One guy can come in. And
you’d better tell them not to pull any tricks like they did
with him,” he said, gesturing toward Cain.
Tiel exhaled shakily. “Even if they tried, I wouldn’t let
them. If a crew from my station isn’t here yet, we’ll wait for
one. Unless I recognize the videographer, he doesn’t
come in, okay? I give you my word.” She turned to Cain.
“How can I contact Galloway?”
“I don’t–”
“Don’t give me any bullshit. What’s the number?”
CHAPTER
10
Tiel was washing her chest with one of the baby wipes
when she sensed movement behind her. She glanced
around quickly, and it would be difficult to say who was
the most discomfited, her or Doc. His eyes involuntarily
dropped to her lilac lace brassiere. Tiel felt a warm blush
rise out of it.
“Sorry,” he mumbled.
“I was a mess,” she explained, bringing her shoulder
back around to conceal her front. Her blouse had been
stiff with the dried sanguineous fluid it had absorbed
when she first held the newborn against her chest. Doc
had been conferring with Ronnie, so Tiel had taken advantage of a moment’s privacy to remove her blouse and
wash. He’d returned before she expected him. “I thought
I should clean up before appearing on camera.”
She disposed of the towelette and picked up the spare
T-shirt she ha! d taken f! rom the rack earlier. After pulling it
on, she turned and held her arms out to her sides. On the
front of the T-shirt was the Texas state flag with the word
home underneath. “Not exactly haute couture,” she remarked
ruefully.
“It is in these parts.” He checked on Sabra, then joined
Tiel where she had sat down with her back to the freezer
chest. She passed him a bottle of water. He drank after her
with no compunction.
“How is she? Any better?”
Doc nodded a hesitant affirmative, but his brow was furrowed
with concern. “She’s lost a lot of blood. It’s coagulated
somewhat, but she needs to be sutured.”
“There wasn’t a suture kit in the doctor’s bag?”
He shook his head. “I checked. So, even though the
bleeding has slackened, infection is a real concern.”
Sabra and the baby were sleeping. After Tiel’s telephone
conversation with Agent Galloway to arrange the
videotaping, Ronnie had resumed his post. He was most
wary of the Mexicans and Cain. He watched them vigilantly.
Vern and Gladys were dozing, their heads together.
Donna was thumbing through a tabloid magazine, much as she would do on any other night when business was
slow. For the time being, everything was quiet.
“What about the baby?” Tiel asked Doc.
“Holding her own.” He had listened to Katherine’s
chest through the stethoscope included in the doctor’s
kit. “Heartbeat’s strong. Lungs sound okay. But I’ll feel a
lot better when she’s getting neonatal care from experts.”
“Maybe it won’t be much longer. My friend Gully runs
our news operation. For several hours now he’s known
that I’m among the hostages. I’m almost certain our station
has a crew already here. Galloway’s checking on that,
and promi! sed to ge! t back to me as soon as possible. I have
every confidence in the effectiveness of video. It will soon
be over.”
“I hope so,” he said, giving the young mother and baby
another worried glance.
“You did a terrific job, Doc.” He looked at her suspiciously,
as though waiting for the other shoe to drop. “I
mean that sincerely. You’re very good. Maybe you should
have chosen obstetrics or pediatrics over oncology.”
“Maybe I should have,” he said grimly. “I didn’t have a
very good success rate combating cancer.”
“You had an excellent success rate. Far above the average.”
“Yeah, well …”
Yeah, well, I couldn’t cure the one that really counted. My own wife. Tiel mentally finished the thought for him. It would
be pointless to argue how commendable his efforts to
conquer the disease had been when, in his own mind, that
single casualty had cost him the war.
“What directed you toward oncology?”
At first it seemed he wasn’t going to answer. Finally he
said, “My kid brother died of lymphoma when he was
nine.”
“I’m sorry.”
“It was a long time ago.”
“How old were you?”
“Twelve, thirteen.”
“But his death had a lasting impact on you.”
“I remember how tough it was on my parents.”
So he’d lost two people he loved to an enemy he had
failed to defeat, Tiel thought. “You were powerless to save
your brother or your wife,” she observed aloud. “Is that
why you quit?”
“You were there,” he said curtly. “You know why I quit.”
“I know only what you were willing to impart to journalists,
which was precious little.”
“It still is precious little.”
“You were bitter.! 221;
! “I was pissed.” He raised his voice to the level of a stage
whisper, but it was loud enough to cause Katherine to
flinch in her mother’s arms. “At whom were you pissed?” She knew she was pressing
her luck. If she probed too hard, too fast, he might clam
up altogether. But she was willing to take the chance.
“Were you angry at your in-laws for making an unfounded
allegation? Or at your associates for withdrawing their
support?”
“I was angry at everybody. At everything. Goddamn cancer.
My own inadequacy.”
“So you just threw in the towel.”
“That’s right, thinking ‘What’s the fucking use?’ “
“I see, so you banished yourself to this no-man’s-land
where you could really be useful.”
Her sarcasm wasn’t lost on him. His features tightened
with mounting annoyance. “Look, I don’t need you or
anybody else analyzing my decision. Or questioning it. Or
judging it. If I decided to become a rancher, or a ballet
dancer, or a bum, it’s no one else’s business.”
“You’re right. It’s not.”
“And while we’re on the topic of business,” he added in
the same biting tone, “this videotape idea of yours …”
“What about it?”
“Is it strictly for Ronnie and Sabra’s benefit?”
“Of course.”
He looked at her with blatant mistrust, which stung. He
even chuckled skeptically. “I think anything we can do to sway Dendy will help
defuse this situation.” Even to her own ears she sounded
self-defensive, but she continued anyway. “I don’t get the
impression that Agent Galloway is enjoying this standoff.
Regardless of what Cain says, Galloway sounds like a de
cent man who’s doing his job but doesn’t relish the!
tho! ught of blazing guns and bloodshed. I think he’s willing
to try and negotiate a peaceful settlement. I merely offered
my services, which I believe will facilitate a peaceful
resolution.”
“But it’ll also make one hell of a story for you.”
His soft and intuitive voice, along with his piercing eyes,
made her guiltily aware of the audio recorder in her pants
pocket. “Okay, yes,” she admitted uneasily, “it’ll make a
great story. But I’m personally involved with these kids. I
helped bring their child into the world, so my idea isn’t
completely selfish.
“You’re biased, Doc. You dislike reporters in general,
and, given your experience with the media, your aversion
is understandable. But I’m not as cold-hearted and unfeeling
as you obviously think. I care a great deal what
happens to Ronnie and Sabra and Katherine. I care what
happens to all of us.”
After a significant pause, he said quietly, “I believe
that.” His eyes were just as piercing as before, but the substance
of this gaze was different. The heat of vexation that
had suffused her gradually intensified into heat of another
kind.
“You were terrific, you know,” he said. “With Sabra. You
could’ve fallen apart on me. Freaked out. Thrown up.
Fainted. Something. Instead you were a calming influence.
A real help. Thanks.”
“You’re welcome.” She laughed softly. “I was awfully
nervous.”
“So was I.”
“No! Honestly?”
He drew an invisible X over his heart.
“You’d never know it.”
“Well, I was. I haven’t had that much experience with
childbirth. I observed a few during med school. Assisted
with a couple when I was a resident, but always in a well-equipped,
sterile hospital with other do! ctors and! nurses
around. I’d forgot most of what I’d learned. This was a
scary experience for me.”
She stared into near space for a moment before her
eyes came back to his. “I was nervous up to the point
where I saw the baby crowning. Then the wonder of it all
overtook me. It was . . . tremendous.” The word fell short
of defining the memorable experience, but she wasn’t sure a single word could encompass it or capture its myriad
dimensions. “Truly, Doc. Tremendous.”
“I know what you mean.”
Then for what seemed an endless time, they held each
other’s stare.
Finally he said, “If I ever find myself in another emergency
childbirth situation …”
“You know who to call for backup. Partner.”
She stuck out her hand, and he took it. But he didn’t
shake it to confirm the partnership. He held it. Not so
tightly that it was uncomfortable, but snugly enough to
make it personal, almost intimate.
Except for the time she had taped the gauze to his
shoulder wound–and that had been so fleeting it really
didn’t count–this was the first time they had touched.
The skin-to-skin connection was electric. It created a tingle
that made Tiel want to pull her hand back quickly. Or
to continue holding on to his forever.
“Do me one favor?” he asked softly.
Mutely, she nodded.
“I don’t want to be on camera.”
Reluctantly she pulled her hand away. “But you’re integral
to the story.”
“You said the story was secondary to your purpose.”
“I also conceded that it’s a heck of a story.”
“I don’t want to be on camera,” he repeated. “Keep me out of it.”
“I’m sorry, Doc, I can’t. You’re already in it. You’re
neck-deep in this story.R! 21;
! “For us in here I am. I had no choice but to get involved.
But I don’t owe anybody out there a damn thing,
especially entertainment at the expense of my privacy.
Agreed?”
“I’ll see what I can do.” The secreted tape recorder felt
very heavy in the pocket of her slacks. “I can’t speak for
the cameraman.”
He gave her a retiring look that asked her not to insult
his intelligence. “Of course you can. You’re calling the
shots. Keep me out of it.” He emphasized each word, so
that there would be no misinterpretation of his meaning.
He got up to check on Sabra. As he moved away from
her, Tie! wondered if his compliments and hand holding
had been calculated to break down her defenses, a handsome
man’s way of buttering her up. Rather than taking a
belligerent stance, had he purposefully shown her his
softer side? The honey over vinegar approach, so to speak.
She also wondered what he would do when he learned
that the tape about to be recorded wouldn’t be the only
source of video available to her when she put her story
together. He had already been recorded on video and
didn’t know it. She would have to worry about that later, though. The
telephone was ringing.
Galloway quickly came to his feet when the van’s side
door opened. Sheriff Montez, whom Galloway had come
to respect as a wise, savvy, and intuitive lawman, entered
first. He motioned inside a bandy-legged, potbellied, balding
man who smelled like the pack of Camels that were
visible in the breast pocket of his shirt.
“My name’s Gully.”
“Special Agent Galloway.” As they shook hands, he
added, “Maybe we should talk outside. It’s becoming
crowded in here.”
Inside the van now were three FBI agents in addition to
Galloway, the FBI psychological profiler,! Russell ! Dendy,
Cole Davison, Sheriff Montez, and the newcomer, who
said, “Then kick somebody else out, because I’m staying
until Tiel is safe and sound.”
“You’re the news assignments editor, is that correct?”
“Going on half a century. And tonight I left my newsroom
in the hands of a wet-behind-the-ears rookie with
bleached hair and three silver hoops in his eyebrow, a
smart-ass fresh out of UT with a degree in television.” He
snorted with derision at the presumption that broadcast
journalism was something that could be learned at college. “I rarely leave my post, Mr. Galloway. And never in the
hands of incompetents. That I did so tonight should give
you some indication of how much I think of Tiel McCoy.
So, no, sir, Mr. Galloway, my ass is a permanent fixture of
this van until this business is over. You’re Dendy, right?”
Suddenly he turned to the Fort Worth millionaire.
Dendy didn’t deign to reply to so brusque a greeting.
‘Just so you know,” Gully told him, “if anything happens
to Tiel, I’m gonna rip out your goddamn guts. My opinion,
you’re the cause of all this.” Leaving Dendy to smolder
in his wrath, Gully turned back to Galloway. “Now,
what is it Tiel’s after? Whatever it is, she gets.”
“I’ve consented to her request of sending in a video
cameraman.”
“He’s outside, geared up and raring to go.”
“First, I need to lay down a few ground rules for this
recording.”
Gully’s eyes narrowed suspiciously. “Such as?”
“This tape must serve our purposes too.”
Cole Davison stepped forward. “What purposes?”
“I want a view of the store’s interior.”
“What for?”
“This is a standoff, Mr. Davison. Hostages are being
h! eld at gu! npoint. I need to know what’s going on in there
so I can respond accordingly.” “You promised me my son would not be hurt.”
“He won’t be. Nor will anyone else. Not if I can help it.”
“Might freak out the boy if he thinks you’re concentrating
on the lay of the land instead of his message,” Gully remarked.
“I want to know who is where inside that store.” Galloway
spoke with authority, quelling any further discussion
on the matter. He didn’t care who disliked it; that was
a non-negotiable condition.
“That it?” Gully asked impatiently.
“That’s it. I’ll call Ms. McCoy now.”
Gully motioned Galloway toward the telephone. “Get
after it. If you’re waiting on me, you’re backing up.”
Under other circumstances, Galloway would have
laughed at the man’s brazenness. But his voice was all
business when he got through to Ronnie. “This is Agent
Galloway. Let me speak to Ms. McCoy.”
“Are you going to let us do the video?”
“That’s what I need to talk to her about. Put her on,
please.” Within a second, the newswoman was on the line.
“Ms. McCoy, your cameraman …”
“Kip,” Gully supplied.
“Kip is standing by.”
“Thank you, Mr. Galloway.”
“We’re not filming a documentary. I’m limiting this taping
to five minutes. The clock starts as soon as the cameraman
clears the door of the store. He will be so instructed.”
“I think that will be agreeable. Ronnie and Sabra
should be able to get their message across in that amount
of time.”
“I’m going to tell Kip to pan–”
“No, no,” she interrupted quickly. “The baby’s doing
fine. I’ll see to it that Kip gets close-! ups of he! r.”
“You’re saying not to tape the interior of the store?”
“That’s right. She’s beautiful. Sleeping just now.”
“I’m … uh …” Galloway wasn’t sure what she was trying
to communicate to him. After the Cain debacle, he
couldn’t afford any more mistakes.
“What’s she saying?” Gully wanted to know.
“She doesn’t want us to video the store’s interior.”
Then: “Ms. McCoy, I’m going to put you on speaker.” He
depressed the button.
“Tiel, it’s Gully. How’re you doing, kid?”
“Gully! You’re here?”
“Can you believe it? Me, who never gets more than ten
miles from the TV station, out here in jackrabbit country.
Mode of transportation was a helicopter. Noisiest goddamn
contraption I’ve ever had the misfortune to fly in.
Wouldn’t let me smoke during the flight. This entire day
has sucked. How’re you?”
“I’m all right.” “Soon as you’re out of there, the margaritas are on me.”
“I’ll take you up on that.”
“Galloway’s confused. You don’t want Kip to pan the
store’s interior?”
“That’s right.”
“Freak everybody out?”
“Possibly.”
“Okay. How about a wide shot?”
“That’s very important, yes.”
“Got it. Wide shot, but nobody’s aware of it. Pretend
they’re close-ups. Is that what you’re saying?”
“I can always count on you, Gully. We’ll be watching for
Kip.” She hung up.
“You heard her,” Gully said, heading for the door of the
van to instruct the photographer waiting outside. “You’ll
get your interior shot, Mr. Galloway, but for whatev! er reason! ,
Tiel doesn’t want everyone to know they’re on camera.”
chapter
1 1
Tiel consulted her compact mirror, but she snapped it
shut without primping.
She reasoned that the more disheveled she looked, the
more impact the video would have. Swapping her stained
blouse for the T-shirt was the only concession she made. If
viewers saw her as they usually did–well coiffed, well dressed, and cosmetically enhanced–the video would
lose some of its punch.
She wanted it to pack a wallop. Not only with home
viewers, but with the TV station’s powers-that-be. This opportunity
had been handed to her, and she intended to
capitalize on it. While she already had a wonderful job
and was highly respected for her journalistic instincts and
know-how, her career would take a dramatic upward turn
if she got the coveted hostess spot on Nine Live.
The daily news-magazine show had been in the planning
stages for months. At first it was thought to be only a
rumor, the pipe dream of station management, something
on their wish list for the unspecified future.
But it now appeared that it was actually going to come
about. The half-hour program was scheduled to air between Jeopardy! and the fist edition of the evening news.
Set designers were submitting drawings for review. Brainstorming
sessions had been convened to discuss the
show’s concept, thrust, and focus. The promotions department
was working on a distinctive, readily identifiable
logo. A full-scale, saturating advertising campaign had
been budgeted. Nine Live was soon to become a reality.
Tiel wanted it to be her reality, her future.
This story would be a boon to her chances of landing
that job. This standoff would be a huge story tomorrow
and probably for several days to come. Follow-up reports on the people involved could be produced indefinitely
and the possibilities wer! e endless! : How Katherine was faring;
Ronnie’s trial and sentencing; the Davison-Dendy
Standoff–a retrospective one year later.
She could do interviews with Special Agent Galloway,
the Dendys, Ronnie’s father, and Sheriff Montez. And the
elusive Dr. Bradley Stanwick.
Of course it remained to be seen if Doc would agree to
an interview, but anything was possible, and Tiel was an
optimist.
For the next few days and weeks, she would be in the
glare of the broadcast media spotlight. No doubt she
would get a lot of ink, too, in newspapers and periodicals.
The TV station would benefit hugely from her national
exposure. Ratings would soar. She would be the darling of
the newsroom, and her popularity would extend to the
carpeted offices upstairs.
Eat your heart out, Linda Harper.
Ronnie interrupted her reverie. “Ms. McCoy? Is this
him?”
The videographer materialized out of the shadows be
yond the gasoline pumps. The camera weighted down his
right arm, but it was also like an extension of it. He was
rarely seen without it. “Yes, that’s Kip.” Mentally she rehearsed what she was going to say as an
open. This is Tiel McCoy, speaking to you from inside a convenience
store in Rojo Flats, Texas, where a drama involving two
Fort Worth teenagers has been unfolding for the last several
hours. As already reported, earlier today Ronnie Davison and
Sabra Dendy . . .
What was that? A twinge of conscience? She ignored it.
This was her job. This is what she did. Just as Dr. Stanwick
had applied his skill to the emergency birth, she was now
applying her particular skill to the situation. What was
wrong with that? It wasn’t exploitation.
It wasn’t!
If Sam Donaldson found himself on a hijacked airliner
and had an opportunity to feed a story to his network,
would he decline to do so just because the lives ! of other people were in jeopardy? Hell, no. Would he tell the head
honcho at his network that he didn’t want to do the story
at the risk of invading the privacy of his fellow hostages?
Don’t make me laugh.
People made news. The most compelling stories were
about people whose lives were in peril. The more immediate
the danger, the more gripping the story. She hadn’t
created this situation to further her career. She was
merely reporting on it. Sure, her career would benefit,
but still, she was only doing her job.
Earlier today Ronnie Davison and Sabra Dendy fled their high school in defiance of parental authority–and ultimately in defiance
of the law. These two young people are now engaged in a
standoff with the FBI and other law enforcement agencies. I am
one of their hostages.
Kip was at the door.
“How do I know he hasn’t got a gun?” Ronnie asked
nervously.
“He’s a genius with a video camera, but I doubt he
would know which end of a gun to point.” It was true. Kip
looked about as menacing as a marshmallow. Through a
viewfinder, he saw the lighting and angles that would produce
beautiful moving pictures. But he was woefully myopic
when it came to seeing himself in a mirror. Or so it
seemed. He was endearingly sloppy and ill-groomed.
Ronnie signaled Donna to activate the electronic lock.
Kip pushed his way inside. The door was relocked behind
him. He jumped nervously when he heard the metallic
click.
“Hi, Kip.”
“Tiel. You okay? Gully’s wound up tighter than an eight-day
clock.”
“As you can see, I’m fine. Let’s not waste time. This is
Ronnie Davison.”
Obviously Kip had expected a rough-looking thug, not
the clean-cut, all-American boy Ronnie personified. “Hey.”
“Hi.”
“Where’s the girl?&! #8221; Ki! p asked.
“Lying down over there.”
He looked in Sabra’s direction and hitched his chin in
greeting. “Hey.”
Katherine was asleep in her mother’s arms. Tiel noted
that Doc was still sitting on the floor with his back to the
freezer, where he could easily monitor Sabra but remain
concealed by a revolving rack of snack food.
“Better get started,” Kip said. “That Galloway was hyper
about this taking no more than five minutes.”
“I’ve got a few remarks to make first by way of intro,
then you can tape Ronnie’s statement. We’ll save Sabra
and the baby for last.”
Kip handed Tiel the wireless microphone, then swung
the camera up onto his shoulder and fitted the viewfinder
against his eye socket. The light mounted on top of the
camera came on. Tiel took up a preplanned position,
where the majority of the store’s interior could be seen behind
her. “Is this okay?”
“Fine by me. Sound level’s okay. I’m rolling.”
“This is Tiel McCoy.” She made the brief opening remarks
she had rehearsed. Her statement of the facts was
impassioned but not maudlin, having just the right blend
of empathy and professional detachment. She resisted the temptation to embellish, believing that Ronnie and
Sabra’s comments would be more stirring than anything
she could say.
When she finished, she signaled Ronnie forward. He
seemed reluctant to move into the bright light. “How do I
know they won’t take a shot at me?”
“While you’re on camera and posing no immediate
threat? The FBI has enough of a PR problem without the
public outcry that would create.”
Apparently he saw the logic in Tiel’s argument. Moving
into place, he cleared his throat. “Tell me when to go.”
“You’re ! on,”! ; said Kip. “Go.”
“I didn’t kidnap Sabra Bendy,” he blurted. “We ran
away. Simple as that. It was wrong of me to rob this store.
I admit that.” He went on to explain that they had been
driven away by Mr. Dendy’s threat to separate them permanently
from each other and their baby. “Sabra and I
want to get married and live together with Katherine as a
family. That’s all. Mr. Dendy, if you won’t let us live our
own lives, we’ll end them right here. Tonight.”
“Two minutes,” Kip whispered, reminding them of the
time limit.
“Very good, Ronnie.” Tiel took the microphone from
him and signaled Kip to follow her to where Sabra lay.
Quickly he positioned himself above her for the best possible camera angle.
“Be sure you’re getting the baby, too,” Sabra told him.
“Yes, ma’am. I’m rolling.”
Ronnie had taken a typically masculine approach–aggressive,
contentious, challenging. Sabra’s statement was
perhaps more eloquent, but equally and chillingly resolute.
Tears welled up in her eyes, but she didn’t falter
when she concluded with, “It’s impossible for you to understand
how we feel, Daddy, because you don’t know
what it’s like to love someone. You say you only want
what’s best for me, but that’s not true. You want what’s
best for you. You’re willing to sacrifice me, you’re willing
to give up your granddaughter, just to have your way.
That’s sad. I don’t hate you. I pity you.”
She ended just as Kip said, “Time’s up.” He turned off
the camera and lowered it from his shoulder. “I don’t
want to go over the time limit and be the cause of all hell
breaking loose.”
As he and Tiel picked their way back toward ! the door,!
he said, “A guy named Joe Marcus has called the newsroom
several times.”
“Who?”
“Joe Mar–”
“Oh, Joseph.”
“He was making such a pest of himself they finally
patched him through to me here.” “How’d he know about this?”
“Same as everybody else, I guess,” Kip replied. “Heard it
on the news. Wanted to know if you were all right. Said he
was worried sick about you.”
In the intervening hours since her telephone conversation
with him, she’d almost forgotten the wife-cheating,
lying rat with whom she had planned to spend a romantic
holiday. It seemed a very long time ago that Joseph Marcus
had held any appeal for her. She could barely remember
what he looked like.
“If he calls again, hang up on him.”
The unflappable photographer shrugged laconically.
“Whatever.”
“And Kip, be sure and tell Galloway and company that
Agent Cain and the rest of us are faring well.”
“Speak for yourself,” Cain said. “You tell Galloway that I
said–”
“Shut up!” Ronnie yelled at him. “Or I’ll let that Mexican
muzzle you again.”
“Go to hell.”
Kip looked reluctant to leave Tiel in such a hostile environment,
but a pair of headlights flashed twice. “That’s
my signal,” he explained. “Gotta go. Take care, Tiel.”
He slipped through the door and Ronnie motioned
Donna to lock it behind him. Cain started laughing. “You’re a fool, Davison. You
think that video means doodle-dee-squat? Galloway only
saw a way to stall a little longer, get more manpower in
here.”
Ronnie’s eyes sawed between the FBI agent and Tiel,
who shook her head. “I don’t think so, Ronnie. You’ve
talked to Ga! lloway. H! e sounds sincerely concerned for
everyone. I don’t believe he would trick you.”
“Then you’re no smarter than he is.” Cain snickered.
“Galloway’s got a psychologist out there, coaching him on
how to deal with this situation. They know how to smooth
talk. They know which buttons to push. Galloway’s got
over twenty years in the Bureau. This standoff is chicken
feed to him. He could handle it in his sleep.”
“Why don’t you shut up?” Ronnie said angrily.
“Why don’t you eat shit?”
Vern, who’d come awake for the TV camera, said, “Hey,
watch your language in front of my wife.”
“Never mind, Vern,” Gladys said. “He’s an asshole.”
“I gotta go to the John,” Donna whined.
“I want everybody to settle down and be quiet!” Ronnie
yelled.
He looked haggard. He had composed himself for the
camera, but now his nerves were beginning to fray again.
Fatigue, jangled nerves, and a loaded handgun made for a lethal combination.
Tiel could strangle Cain for goading him. In her opinion,
the FBI would be better off without Agent Cain. “Ronnie,
how about allowing us a bathroom break?” she
suggested. “It’s been hours for all of us. It may help everyone
relax until we hear back from Galloway. What do you
say?”
He thought it over. “You ladies. One at a time. Not the
men. If they have to go, they can do it out here.”
Donna excused herself first. Then Gladys. Tiel went
last. While in the rest room, she rewound the audiotape in
her pocket recorder and spot-checked it. Sabra’s voice
came through, muffled but distinct enough, saying about
her father, “That’s the kind of person he is. He hates to be
crossed.” She fast-forwarded, stopped it again, depressed
! the Play ! button, and heard Doc’s gritty baritone. “. . . at
everybody. At everything. Goddamn cancer. My own inadequacy.

Yes! She’d been afraid the tape had run out before that
confidential conversation. He would be a fantastic guest
to have on Nine Live. If she could persuade him to do it.
She would just have to, that’s all. She would begin the program
with file footage of his travails following his wife’s
death, then ask for an updated viewpoint on those unhappy
events that had reshaped his life. They could segue into a discussion about destroyed dreams. A psychologist,
possibly a clergyman, could join them to expand on that
theme: What happens to one’s spirit when one’s world
falls apart?
Excited by the prospect, she replaced the recorder in
her pocket, used the toilet, and washed her face and
hands. By the time she came out, Vern was headed toward
the men’s room to empty the bucket the men had used.
As Vern passed Cain, he asked Ronnie, “What about him?”
“No. Unless you’re volunteering to unzip him and do the honors.”
Vern snorted and continued on his way. “Looks like
you’re gonna have to wet yourself, G-man.”
The Mexican men, catching the gist of the exchange,
snorted with ridicule.
Tiel rejoined Doc, whose gaze was fixed on the two men
seated near the refrigerated cabinet with the shattered
glass door. Tiel followed the direction of his thoughtful
stare. “I wonder about that,” he murmured.
“What?”
“The two of them.”
‘Juan and Two?”
“Pardon?”
“I nicknamed the short one Juan. The taller one–”
“Two. I get it.”
He turned away and resumed his spot near Sabra. Tiel
looked at him quizzically as she sat down beside him. “What’s bothering you abo! ut them?&! #8221;
He raised one shoulder in a shrug. “Something’s out of
joint.”
“Like what?”
“I can’t put my finger on it. I noticed them when they
first came into the store. They were acting weird even
then.”
“In what way?”
“They were heating up food in the microwave, but I got
the impression they weren’t really here for a snack. It was
like they were killing time. Waiting on something. Or
someone.”
“Hmm.”
“I picked up this … I don’t know . . . bad vibe.” He
chuckled with self-deprecation. “I was leery of them, but
never in a million years would I have looked twice at Ronnie
Davison. Just goes to show how misleading first impressions
can be.”
“Oh, I’m not so sure about that. I noticed you when you
came into the store.”
Inquisitively, he arched an eyebrow.
The directness of his stare was both exciting and unsettling.
It caused a fluttering in her tummy. “You cast an imposing
silhouette, Doc, especially with your hat on.”
“Oh. Yeah. I’ve always been tall for my age.” It was meant as a joke, and it worked to the extent that
Tiel was able to resume breathing.
Then he said, “Thanks for honoring my request not to
be on camera.”
Conscience was more than a twinge this time. It was a
jabbing needle and much harder to ignore. She mumbled
an appropriate response, then, eager to change the subject,
gestured toward Sabra. “Any change?”
“Bleeding’s increased again. Not as bad as before. I
should get her to nurse the baby again. It’s been over an
hour, but I hate to disturb her while she’s sleeping.”
“They’re probably already watching that video. Maybe
she’ll be in a hospital soon.”
“She̵! 7;s a tro! oper. But she’s exhausted.”
“So is Ronnie. I see signs of disintegration. I wish I
hadn’t watched all those dramas about hostage situations
–fiction and non. The longer something like this
drags on, the more excitable everyone becomes. Nerves
snap. Tempers flare.”
“Then guns.”
“Don’t even say it.” She shuddered. “For an instant
there, I was afraid that Ronnie’s concern about sharpshooters
was valid. What if Galloway had buffaloed me?
Agreeing to do the video could have been a setup in
which Kip, Gully, and I were pawns.”
Adjusting himself into a more comfortable position, he asked, “Who’s this Gully?”
She described their working relationship. “He’s a real
character. I’ll bet he’s giving them fits out there,” she said
with a smile.
“And who’s Joe?”
The unexpected question pulled the plug on her smile.
“Nobody.”
“Somebody. Boyfriend?”
“A wannabe.”
“A wanna-be boyfriend?”
Piqued by his persistence, she was about to tell him to
mind his own business and to stop eavesdropping on her
private conversations. But in view of the audiocassette in
her possession, she rethought her reaction. A good way to
win his confidence would be to confide in him.
‘Joseph and I had several dates. Joseph was on his way
to earning the official designation of ‘boyfriend,’ but
Joseph failed to mention that he was another woman’s
husband. I made that rude discovery this very afternoon.”
“Hmm. Mad?”
“You betcha. Furious.”
“Regrets?”
“Over him? No. None at all. Over being such a gullible
goose, yes.” She hammered her fist into her palm as
though it were a judge’s gavel. “From ! now on, a! ll future dates are required to tender no less than three notarized
character references.”
“What about your ex?”
Score two for Doc. He had a real knack for instantly deflating
her smiles with an abrupt and sobering question.
“What about him?”
“Is he a consideration?”
“No.”
“Are you sure?”
“Of course I’m sure.”
“No lingering–”
“No.”
He frowned doubtfully. “You looked awfully funny
when I mentioned him.”
Inwardly she was pleading with him not to put her
through this. By the same token, telling the story would
serve him right for being so nosy.
‘John Malone. Great TV name, huh? With a face and a
voice to go with it. We met through work and fell hopelessly
in love. The first few months were bliss. Then shortly
after we were married, he was hired by one of the networks
to be a foreign correspondent.”
“Ah. I see.”
“No, you don’t,” she retorted. “Not at all. Professional
jealousy didn’t factor in. It was a fantastic opportunity for
John, and I was foursquare in favor of it. The thought of living abroad was enticing. I envisioned Paris or London
or Rome. But his choice came down to either South America
or Bosnia. This was before most Americans had even
heard of Bosnia. The struggle there was just beginning.”
Absently she picked at a loose thread on the hem of the
T-shirt. “Naturally, I urged him to take the safer choice– Rio. Where, incidentally, I could go with him. I didn’t relish
the thought of my groom leaving me Stateside and
going into a war zone, particularly one where boundaries
were imprecise and everyone was still choosing up sides.
“He opted for the more thrilling of the two. He wanted
to be where the action was, where he ! would be ! guaranteed
more airtime. We argued about it. Virulently. Finally I
said, ‘All right, John, fine. Go. Get yourself killed.’ “
Raising her head, she met Doc’s eyes directly. “And
that’s what he did.”
His expression remained impassive.
Tiel plunged on. “He had gone into an area where journalists
weren’t supposed to go–which didn’t surprise
me,” she added on a soft laugh. “He was an adventurer by
nature. Anyway, he caught a sniper bullet. They shipped
his body home. I buried him three months shy of our first
wedding anniversary.”
After a time, Doc said, “That’s tough. I’m sorry.”
“Yes, well …”
They were silent for a long while. It was Tiel who finally spoke. “What’s it been like for you?”
“In regards to what?”
“Relationships.”
“Specifically . . . ?”
“Come on, Doc. Don’t play dumb,” she chided softly. “I
was candid with you.”
“Which was your choice.”
“Fair’s fair. Share with me.”
“There’s nothing to share.”
“About you and women?” she asked incredulously. “I
don’t believe that.”
“What do you want? Names and dates? Starting when,
Ms. McCoy? Does high school count, or should I begin
with college?”
“How about since your wife died?”
“How about you mind your own fucking business?”
“Actually we’re talking about your fucking business.”
“No, we’re not. You are.”
“In light of your wife’s affair, I think you’d find it difficult
to trust another woman.”
His mouth compressed into a tight, angry line, indicating
that she’d struck a tender nerve. “You don’t! know any! thing
about–”
But Tiel never learned from him what she didn’t know
anything about because he was interrupted by Donna’s ear-splitting scream.
chapter
1 2
KIP’S VIDEOTAPE WAS PLAYING SIMULTANEOUSLY on two
monitors in the van, with everyone inside clustered
around to view them. One of the FBI agents was manning
the control panel, standing by to freeze the picture at Galloway’s
command.
“Where’s my daughter? I don’t see Sabra.”
Galloway detected liquor on Dendy’s breath. Periodically
he had been stepping outside “to get some fresh air.”
It seemed he was taking in more than oxygen.
“Patience, Mr. Dendy. We’re anxious to see all of it. I
need to know where people are positioned. Once I have
an overview, we’ll restart the tape and pause it on the segments
that warrant closer study.”
“Maybe Sabra tried to send me a private message. Like
a signal.”
“Maybe,” was the senior agent’s noncommittal reply.
His nose was no farther than ten inches from the color
monitor as he listened to Tiel McCoy’s opening remarks.
She was poised, he’d give her that. Unruffled. She looked
a little worse for wear in her Texas flag T-shirt, but she was
as composed and articulate as she would have been in a
television studio, safely behind a sleek news desk. “That son of a bitch,” Dendy snarled when Ronnie appeared
on the screen.
“If you can’t keep your mouth shut, Dendy, I’ll be
happy to shut it for you.” Cole Davison issued the threat in
a soft voice, but there was muscle behind it.
“Gentlemen,” Galloway said.
No one else spoke while Ronnie was delivering his
speech. But the silence became even heavier when the
camera moved to Sabra and her newborn. The images
were poign! ant, hear! t-rending. The dialogue was disturbing.
No new mother cradling her infant should be threatening
to take her own life.
For several seconds after the tape ended, no one spoke.
Finally Gully had the courage to say out loud what everyone
else was thinking. “Guess that settles the question as
to who’s responsible for all this.”
Galloway held up his hand, discouraging any further
unsolicited editorial comments on Russell Dendy’s culpability.
He turned to Cole Davison. “What about Ronnie?
How does he seem to you?”
“Exhausted. Scared.”
“High?”
“No, sir,” Davison replied briskly. “I told you, he’s a
good boy. He doesn’t do drugs. Maybe a beer now and
then. That’s the extent of it.” “My daughter certainly isn’t a druggie,” Dendy remarked.
Galloway remained centered on Davison. “Did you see
anything unusual that should alert us to an unstable state
of mind?”
“My eighteen-year-old son is talking about killing himself,
Mr. Galloway. I think that sums up his state of mind.”
While Galloway sympathized with the man–he had
teenagers of his own–he pressured him for more information.
“You know him, Mr. Davison. Do you think Ronnie
is bluffing? Does he sound sincere to you? Do you
believe he would go through with it?”
The man wrestled with his answer. Then he lowered his
head dejectedly. “No, I don’t think so. Truly, I don’t.
But–”
“But?” Galloway pounced on the qualifier. “But what?
Has Ronnie ever shown suicidal tendencies?”
“Never.”
“A violent streak? Uncontrollable temper?”
“No,” he replied shortly. However, he appeared uncomfortable
with his preemptive answer. Nervously his eyes
shifted from G! alloway t! o the others, then back to the
agent. “Well, only one time. It was an isolated incident.
And he was just a kid.”
Inwardly Galloway groaned. He was very sure he didn’t
want to hear about the one time Ronnie Davison had lost
it. “It may not be relevant–probably isn’t–but maybe you’d better tell me about it.”
After a long, uneasy silence, Davison began. “Ronnie
was staying with me during his summer vacation. It hadn’t
been long since his mother and I had divorced. Ronnie
was having trouble adjusting to the split. Anyway,” he said,
shifting his feet self-consciously, “he took a shine to this
dog that lived a few blocks over. He told me her owner was
mean to her, didn’t always feed her, never bathed her.
Stuff like that.
“I knew the owner. He was a mean ol’ bastard, drunk
most of the time, so I knew Ronnie was telling the truth.
But it was none of our business. I told Ronnie to stay away
from the dog. But, as I said, he’d formed a real attachment
to the mangy thing. I guess he needed a companion.
Or maybe he liked the animal because it was as miserable
as he was that summer. I don’t know. I’m no child psychologist.”
Dendy interrupted. “Is this sad story going anywhere?”
Galloway shot him a look and came close to telling him
to shut up before turning back to the other man. “What
happened, Cole?”
“One day Ronnie unchained the dog and brought her
to our house. I told him to return her to the neighbor’s
backyard immediately. He started crying and refused to.
Said he’d rather see her dead than living like that. I
scolded him and went to get my keys, meaning to drive the dog home in my pickup.
“But when I came back through the kitchen, Ronnie
was gone and so was the dog. Long story short, I search! ed
f! or them all night. Had neighbors and friends out looking
for him, too. Early the next morning a rancher spotted
him and the dog hiding behind his barn and called the
sheriff.
“As we converged on the barn, I called out to Ronnie,
telling him that it was time to take the dog back to her
owner and go home. He shouted back that he wasn’t
going to give the dog up, that he wouldn’t let her be mistreated
the way she’d been.”
He stopped speaking and stared at the brim of his hat
as he slowly threaded it through his fingers. “When we
came around to the back to the barn, he was crying his
heart out. He was patting the dog where it was lying right
there beside him. Dead. He’d hit it in the head with a rock
and killed it.”
The eyes he raised to Galloway were red with threatened
tears. “Mr. Galloway, I asked my boy how he could
have done such a horrible thing. He told me he’d done it
because he loved the dog so much.” His wide chest shuddered
when he deeply inhaled. “Sorry I got so longwinded.
But you asked if I thought he could possibly do
what he says he’ll do. That’s the best way I know to answer
you.” Galloway curbed the unprofessional impulse to press
the man’s shoulder. Instead he said tersely, “Thank you
for the insight.”
“So he’s a head case,” Dendy muttered. ‘Just like I said
all along.”
Although Dendy’s remark was unnecessarily cruel, Galloway
couldn’t entirely disagree with the connotation.
This incident from Ronnie’s childhood dangerously paralleled
the present circumstances. Cole Davison’s story
added another factor to the situation, and it wasn’t a positive
one. In fact, none of the factors had been positive
since this standoff began. Not one.
He turned to Gully. “! What abou! t Ms. McCoy? Did you
see any signs that suggest she’s under duress? Is she trying
to get across more than she’s saying? Any double meanings
to her words?”
“Not that I could tell. And I grilled Kip here real good.”
The FBI agent turned to the video cameraman. “Everything
was as they’ve told us? Nobody hurt?”
“No, sir. The FBI guy is tied up–taped, rather–but
he’s shooting off his mouth, so I guess he’s all right.” He
glanced at Dendy apprehensively, as though remembering
what happens to the bearers of bad news. “But the . . .
the girl?”
“Sabra? What about her?” “There were a lot of bloody disposable diapers around.
They were wadded up and pushed aside. But I remember
seeing them and thinking, Jeez.”
Dendy strangled on an anguished exclamation.
Galloway continued with Kip. “Did you notice anything
in your co-worker’s manner or delivery that was out of the
ordinary?”
“Tiel was same as always. Well, except for looking like
hell. She was cool as a cucumber, though.”
Finally the senior agent turned to Dendy, who had
skipped the trip outside and was openly drinking from a
silver pocket flask. “You mentioned the possibility of Sabra
sending you a secret message. Did you see or hear anything
to suggest one?”
“How could I tell by seeing the tape only that one
time?”
The fact that the tyrannical entrepreneur was uneasy
and indirect with his answer was in itself telling. Dendy finally
had been confronted with the ugly truth: His mishandling
of the original predicament had prompted
Sabra and Ronnie to take desperate measures, which had
gone terribly awry.
“Rewind it,” Galloway instructed the agent at the control
panel. “Let’s watch the tape again. An! ybody not! ice
anything, call out.” The tape began again.
“Tiel picked that spot so we could see the people behind her,” Gully remarked.
“That’s the refrigerator where the door was shattered,”
one of the other agents said, pointing to a spot on the
screen.
“Pause it there.”
Leaning forward, Galloway focused not on the newswoman
but on the group of people in the background.
“The woman leaning against the counter must be the
cashier.”
Sheriff Montez said, “That’s Donna, all right. No mistaking
that hairdo.”
“And that’s Agent Cain, right, Kip?” Galloway pointed
to a pair of legs, which he could see only from the knees
down.
“Right. He’s sitting with his back to the counter.”
“Silver duct tape sure shows up good against his black
pants, doesn’t it?”
Gully’s sly gibe went unacknowledged. Galloway was
studying the elderly couple sitting close together on the
floor near Cain. “How about the old folks? Are they all
right?”
“Wide-eyed and bushy-tailed from what I could tell.”
“What about the other two men?”
“Mexican fellows. I heard one of them say something to
the other in Spanish, but he was talking under his breath, and I wouldn’t've understood it anyhow.”
“Oh, Jesus.” Galloway sprang far forward in his chair so
quickly the casters sent it rolling from beneath him.
“What?”
The other agents, responding to their superior’s apparent
alarm, pushed the others aside and crowded around
him. “This one.” Galloway tapped the monitor screen.
“Take a good look and tell me if he looks familiar. Can you
bring him in any closer?”
Using the technology available, the agent manning the
controls isolated the Mexican man&! #8217;s f! ace. He was able to
enlarge the image, but doing so sacrificed quality and
focus. The agents squinted at the grainy picture, then one
of them snapped his head around and exclaimed, “Ah, shit!”
“What?” Dendy demanded.
Davison jumped in. “What’s the matter?”
Galloway shoved them aside and began issuing orders
to his subordinates. “Call the office. Get everyone mobilized.
Put out an APB–Montez, your men can help.”
“Sure. But help what?” The sheriff raised his arms at his
sides in a helpless shrug. “Yall have lost me.”
“Round up all your deputies. Notify neighboring counties
as well. Tell them to start looking for an abandoned
truck. Railroad car. Moving van.”
“Truck? Moving van? What the hell is going on?” Dendy
had to shout to make himself heard above the confusion that Galloway’s galvanizing orders had created in the
cramped van. “What about my daughter?”
“Sabra, all of them, are in more danger than we
thought.”
As though to underscore Galloway’s distressing words,
they heard the unmistakable crack of gunfire.
Donna’s blood-curdling scream brought Tiel to her
feet. “What now?”
Ronnie was brandishing his pistol and shouting, “Get
back! Get back! I’ll shoot you!”
Two, the taller of the Mexicans, had charged him. Ronnie
had halted him at gunpoint. “Where’s the other one?”
he shouted frantically. “Where’s your buddy?”
Sabra screamed. “No! No!”
Tiel whirled around in time to see Juan snatch Katherine
from Sabra’s arms. He clutched the newborn tightly– too tightly–against his chest. The infant began squalling,
but Sabra was shrieking as only a mother whose child is in
danger can shriek. She was struggling to sta! nd, clawi! ng at
Juan’s pants legs, as though to climb them.
“Sabra!” Ronnie cried. “What’s wrong?”
“He has the baby! Give me my baby! Don’t hurt her!”
Tiel lunged forward, but Juan thrust out his hand and
the heel of it caught her in the sternum, forcing her back.
She cried out in pain and fear for the newborn. Doc shouted a wordless protest, but Tiel reasoned that
he was afraid to charge Juan because of what he might do
to the infant in retaliation.
“Tell him to give her the baby!” Ronnie was clutching
the pistol in both hands, aiming it directly at Two’s chest
and yelling at the top of his lungs, as though volume could
conquer the language barrier. “Tell your friend to give her
the baby, or I’ll kill you!”
Perhaps to see just how earnest Ronnie’s threat was,
Juan made the mistake of glancing toward the front of the
store where the two were facing off.
Doc used that split second to make a lunge for him.
But the Mexican reacted instantly. He executed a practiced
uppercut that made a significant dent in Doc’s belly.
Doc bent in half at the waist, then collapsed to the floor in
front of the freezer.
“Tell him to give her the baby!” Ronnie repeated in a
shrill voice that splintered like thin ice.
Donna wailed, “We’re all gonna die.”
Tiel was begging Juan not to harm Katherine. “Don’t
hurt her. She’s no threat to you. Give the baby to her
mother. Please. Please, don’t do this.”
Sabra was practically helpless. Nevertheless, maternal
instinct propelled her to her feet. She was so weak she
could barely stand. Swaying slightly, hand outstretched, she implored the man to return her baby to her.
Juan and Two were shouting back and forth to one another,
trying to communicate above the other voices, including!
tho! se of Vern and Gladys, who was cursing a blue
streak. Donna was caterwauling. Agent Cain was shouting
accusations at Ronnie, saying that if he had surrendered
earlier this wouldn’t have happened, that if the standoff
resulted in tragedy it was no one’s fault but his own.
The gunshot rendered everyone speechless.
Tiel, who had been appealing to Juan, witnessed his gri
mace when the bullet struck. Reflexively, he pitched forward
and grabbed his thigh. He would have dropped
Katherine if Tiel hadn’t been there to catch her.
Holding the baby close, she spun around, wondering
how Ronnie had managed to get off such a clear and accurate
shot, one so well placed that it had disabled Juan
but hadn’t endangered the baby.
But Ronnie still had the bore of his pistol trained on
Two’s chest and seemed as surprised as anyone that a gun
had been fired.
Doc had been the marksman. He was lying on his back
on the floor, a small revolver in his hand. Tiel recognized
Agent Cain’s weapon, the one she had kicked beneath the
freezer and forgotten. Thank God Doc had remembered
it.
He took advantage of the momentary silence. “Gladys, get over here.”
The old lady came scurrying around the Frito-Lay display.
“Did you kill him?”
“No.”
“Too bad.”
“Take the baby so Tiel can tend to Sabra. I’ll take care
of him,” he said, referring to Juan. “Ronnie, relax. Everything’s
under control. No need to panic.”
“Is the baby okay?”
“She’s fine.” Gladys carried the crying infant over to
where Ronnie could see her for himself. “She’s mad as
hell, and I can’t say as I blame her.” Glaring back at Juan
where he now sat on the floor gripping his bleeding thigh,
she snarled with contempt.
Several jabs of ! Ronnie! 217;s pistol sent Two skulking back
to his original spot. His expression was meaner and more
agitated than before.
Doc placed Cain’s revolver high on a grocery shelf, well
out of Juan’s reach, and knelt down to cut open his
trouser leg with the scissors. “You’ll live,” he said laconically
after assessing the damage and stuffing gauze pads
into the wound. “Lucky for you the bullet missed the
femoral artery.”
Juan’s eyes blazed with resentment.
“Doc?” Tiel had got Sabra to lie back down, but fresh blood was making the floor around her slick. The girl was
ghastly pale.
“I know,” Doc said soberly, picking up on Tiel’s unspoken
alarm. “I’m sure she reopened the tear in the perineum.
Make her as comfortable as you can. I’ll be right
back.”
He had hurriedly bandaged Juan’s wound and fashioned
a tourniquet with another of the souvenir T-shirts.
Evidently in excruciating pain, Juan was sweating profusely,
and his straight, white teeth were clenched. But, to
his credit, he didn’t cry out when Doc unceremoniously
and none too gently hoisted him to his feet and supported
him as he hopped on one foot.
As they went past Cain, the agent addressed the gunshot
man. “You goddamn fool. You could’ve got us all
killed. What were you–”
Quicker than a striking rattlesnake, Juan, using the foot
of his injured leg, kicked Cain viciously in the head. The
sudden move cost him dearly. He grunted with pain. Even
so, his boot heel had connected solidly with bone, and the
snapping sound was almost as loud as the pistol shot. Cain
went silent and unconscious in the same instant. His chin
dropped forward onto his chest.
Doc pushed Juan to the floor, propping him against the
refrigerator well away from his confederate. “He’! ;s not going anywhere. But just to be safe, better bind his hands, Ronnie. His too,” he added, motioning toward Two.
Ronnie instructed Vern to tape the two men’s hands
and feet like Cain’s. He held the pistol on them while the
old man went about the task. Juan was too involved with
his injured leg to waste energy on invectives, but Two was
under no such constraints. He kept up a litany of what was
presumed to be Spanish vulgarities until Ronnie threatened
to gag him if he didn’t shut up.
The ringing telephone had gone unanswered and
largely ignored. Tiel, who had snapped on a pair of gloves
with an alacrity that amazed her, was working frantically to
replace the blood-soaked diaper beneath Sabra, when the
phone suddenly stopped ringing and she heard Ronnie
shout, “Not now, we’re busy!” before slamming the receiver
back into the cradle. Then he called, “How’s
Sabra?”
Tiel addressed him over her shoulder. “Not good.” She
was vastly relieved to see Doc returning. “What’s going
on?”
‘Juan kicked Cain in the head. He’s unconscious.”
“I never thought I’d be thanking that man for anything.”
“Vern is binding them. I’m glad they’re . . . contained.”
She noticed the intensity in his face, and knew that
Sabra’s worsening condition wasn’t the only reason for it.
“Because they’re loose cannons? They really had nothing to lose by trying to seize control of the situation.”
“True. But what did they have to gain?”
Did Ronnie Davison really represent a threat to tough-looking hombres like them? After thinking about it, she
said, “Nothing that I can see.”
“Nothing that you can see. That’s what bothers me.
There’s more,” he continued in a lower voice. “Me! n with rifles have taken up position outside. Probably a SWAT
team.”
“Oh, no.”
“I saw them moving into place and taking cover.”
“Has Ronnie seen them?”
“I don’t think so. That shot I fired must’ve got everyone
nervous. They’re probably thinking the worst. They might
storm the building, try coming in through the roof or
something.”
“He would freak.”
“That’s my point.”
The telephone rang again. “Ronnie, answer it,” Doc
called to him. “Explain to them what happened.”
“Not until I know Sabra’s all right.”
Although Tiel wasn’t a medical expert by any means,
Sabra’s condition appeared critical to her. But, like Doc,
she didn’t want Ronnie any more frazzled than he already
was.
“Where’s Katherine?” the girl asked weakly. Doc, who had done his best to stem the flow of fresh
blood, peeled off his glove and smoothed her hair away
from her forehead. “Gladys is taking good care of her.
She’s rocked her to sleep. Seems to me that baby girl is as
brave as her mother.”
Even a smile seemed too much of an effort for her.
“We’re not going to get out of here, are we?”
“Don’t say that, Sabra,” Tiel whispered fiercely, watching
Doc’s face as he read the blood-pressure gauge.
“Don’t even think it.”
“Daddy’s not going to give up. Neither am I. And neither
is Ronnie. He can’t now anyway. If he did, they’d just
put him in jail.”
She divided a glassy, hollow-eyed gaze between Tiel and
Doc. “Tell Ronnie to come over here. I want to talk to
him. Now. I don’t want to wait any longer.”
Although she didn’t specifically mention their suicide
pact, her meaning w! as clear.! Tiel’s chest grew tight with
anxiety and despair. “We can’t let you do it, Sabra. You
know it’s wrong. It’s not the answer.”
“Please help us. It’s what we want.”
Then, of their own volition and against her will, her
eyes closed. She was too weak to reopen them and lapsed
into a doze.
Tiel looked across at Doc. “It’s bad, isn’t it?”
“Very. Blood pressure’s dropping. Pulse is high. She’s going to bleed out.”
“What are we going to do?”
Sternly staring into the girl’s pale, still face, he thought
on it a moment, then said, “I’ll tell you what I’m going to
do.”
He stood up, retrieved the pistol from the shelf,
stepped around the Frito-Lay display, and approached
Ronnie, who was waiting for an update on Sabra’s condition.
chapter
1 3
Why aren’t they answering the phone?” Events had
reduced Dendy’s characteristic bellow to a high-pitched
squeal. He was beside himself.
Indeed, the gunshots had plunged everyone inside the
van into a state of near panic. Cole Davison had rushed
outside, only to return moments later, yelling at Galloway
because the SWAT team had been mobilized.
“You promised! You said Ronnie wouldn’t get hurt. If
you pressure him, if he feels like you’re closing in on him,
he might. . . might do something like he did before.”
“Calm down, Mr. Davison. I’m taking precautionary
measures as I see fit.” Galloway held the telephone receiver
to his ear, but thus far his call into the convenience store had gone unanswered. “Can anybody see anything?”
“Movement,” one of the other agents hollered. Via a
headset, he was communicating with another agent outside
who was equipped with binoculars. “Can’t mak! e out
who’s doing what.”
“Keep me posted.”
“Yes, sir. Are you going to tell the kid about Huerta?”
“Who’s that?” Dendy wanted to know.
“Luis Huerta. One of our Ten Most Wanted.” To the
other agent, Galloway replied, “No, I’m not going to tell
them. That might panic everyone, including Huerta. He’s
capable of just about anything.”
Ronnie answered the phone. “Not now, we’re busy!”
Galloway swore lavishly when the dial tone replaced
Ronnie’s frantic voice. He immediately redialed.
“One of the Mexicans in there is on the FBI’s Ten Most
Wanted list?” Cole Davison was becoming increasingly distraught.
“What for? What’d he do?”
“He smuggles Mexican nationals across the border with
promises of work visas and well-paying jobs, then sells them
into slave labor. Last summer Border Patrol got tipped of a
transport and were hot on his tail. Huerta and two of his
henchmen, realizing they were about to be apprehended,
abandoned the truck in the New Mexico desert and scattered
like the cockroaches they are. All evaded capture.
“The van wasn’t found for three days. Forty-five people-men, women, and children–had been locked in from the
outside. The heat inside the trailer must’ve reached two
hundred degrees or higher. Huerta is wanted on forty-five
counts of murder and miscellaneous other felonies.
“For almost a year he’s been holed up somewhere in
Mexico. The authorities down there are cooperative and
want him as badly as we do, but he’s a cagey bastard. Only
one thing could get him to risk exposure. Money. Lots of
it. So if he’s resurfaced here, then I’m guessing that
somewhere in the general vicinity there’s a shipment of
people waiting to be sold.” Daviso! n looked ready to heave his last meal. “Who’s the
man with him?”
“One of his bodyguards, I’m sure. They’re dangerous,
7
ruthless men, and their stock in trade is human beings.
What puzzles me is why they aren’t armed. Or if they are,
why they haven’t shot their way out before now.”
Dendy’s chest rose and fell, emitting a gurgling sound
like a sob. “Listen, Galloway. I’ve been thinking.”
Even though Galloway kept the telephone receiver to
his ear, he gave Russell Dendy his full attention. He suspected
that Dendy was tight. He’d been sipping at the
flask throughout the evening. He appeared extremely
upset, on the brink of losing control of his emotions. He was no longer being a belligerent pain in the ass.
“I’m listening, Mr. Dendy.”
‘Just get them out of there safely. That’s what’s important
now. Tell Sabra she can keep the baby. I won’t interfere.
That videotape of my daughter …” He rubbed the
back of his hand across leaking eyes. “It got to me. Nothing
else matters anymore. I just want to see my daughter
safely out of there.”
“That’s my goal too, Mr. Dendy,” Galloway assured him.
“Agree to any of the boy’s terms.”
“I’ll negotiate for him the best deal I can. But first, I’ve
got to get him to talk to me.”
The telephone continued to ring.
“Ronnie?”
The young man didn’t realize that Doc was in possession
of the pistol. Evidently, in all the confusion, Ronnie
had forgotten about Cain’s secreted weapon. Doc raised
his hand, and, seeing the gun, the younger man flinched.
Donna let out a squeak of fright before clapping both
hands over her mouth.
But Doc palmed the short barrel and extended the grip
toward Ronnie! . “! That’s how much faith I have in you to
make the right decision.”
Looking terribly young, uncertain, and vulnerable,
Ronnie took the gun and stuffed it into the waistband of his jeans. “You already know my decision, Doc.”
“Suicide? That’s not a decision. That’s a chickenshit
copout.”
The boy blinked in surprise over the blunt language,
but it served to shake his resolve, which Tiel surmised was
Doc’s intention. “I don’t want to talk about it. Sabra and I
have made up our minds.”
“Answer the phone,” Doc encouraged in a calm, persuasive
voice. “Tell them what happened in here. They
heard the shots. They don’t know what the hell is going
on, but they’re probably thinking the worst. Allay their
fears, Ronnie. Otherwise, at any second a SWAT team may
come barging in here, and somebody will wind up bloody,
possibly dead.”
“What SWAT team? You’re lying.”
“Would I lie to you after handing you a loaded gun?
Hardly. I saw men taking up positions while you were distracted
by tying up those Mexican guys. The SWAT team is
out there, itching for a signal from Galloway. Don’t give
him reason to activate them.”
Ronnie glanced nervously through the plate glass, but
he could see nothing except the growing number of official
vehicles that had converged on the area and created a
traffic jam on the highway.
“Let me answer the phone, Ronnie,” Tiel suggested, stepping forward to take advantage of his indecision.
“Let’s hear what they have to say about the video. Their reaction
to it might have been very positive. They could be
calling to agree to all your conditions.”
“Okay,” he muttered, motioning her toward the telephone.
She counted it a blessing to stop the infernal ringing.
! 220;It! 217;s Tiel,” she said upon lifting the receiver.
“Ms. McCoy, who fired those shots? What’s going on in
there?”
Galloway’s brusqueness conveyed his concern. Not
wanting to keep him in suspense, as succinctly as possible
she explained how Cain’s pistol had come to be fired. “It
was hairy there for a minute or two, but the situation is
now under control again. The two men who caused the
fracas have been contained,” she said, using Doc’s euphemistic
terminology.
“You’re referring to the two Mexican men?”
“That’s correct.”
“They’re secure?”
“Correct again.”
“And where is Agent Cain’s pistol now?”
“Doc gave it to Ronnie.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“As a sign of trust, Mr. Galloway,” she said testily, in
Doc’s defense.
The FBI agent expelled a long breath. “That’s a hell of a lot of trust, Ms. McCoy.”
“It was the right thing to do. You’d have to be here to
understand.”
“Apparently,” he said dryly.
While talking to Galloway, she’d been listening with one
ear to Doc as he continued trying to persuade Ronnie to
surrender. She heard him say, “You’re a father now. You’re
responsible for your family. Sabra’s condition is critical,
and there’s nothing more I can do for her.”
Galloway asked, “You don’t feel in danger of him?”
“Not at all.”
“Are any of the hostages in danger?”
“Presently, no. I can’t predict what will happen if those
guys in body armor charge the place.”
“I don’t intend to give that order.”
“Then why are they there?” He paused for a long moment,
and Tiel got the uneasy and distinct ! impressio! n that
he was withholding something, something important.
“Mr. Galloway, if there’s something I should know–”
“We’ve had a change of heart.”
“You’re giving up and going away?” At this point, that
would be her fondest wish.
Galloway ignored her facetiousness. “The videotape was
effective. You’ll be glad to learn that it achieved exactly
what you hoped. Mr. Dendy was touched by his daughter’s appeal and is now ready to make concessions. He wants
this to end peaceably and safely. As we all do. What is Ronnie’s
current state of mind?”
“Doc’s working on him.”
“How is he responding?”
“Favorably, I think.”
“Good. That’s good.”
He sounded relieved, and, again, Tiel got the impression
that the federal agent was withholding something
she’d be better off knowing.
“Do you think he’ll go for total surrender?”
“He specified the conditions under which he would surrender,
Mr. Galloway.”
“Dendy will concede that this was a runaway and not a
kidnaping. Of course the additional charges would stand.”
“And they must be allowed to keep their child.”
“Dendy said as much himself a few minutes ago. If Davison
will agree to those terms, he’ll have my personal guarantee
that no force will be used.”
“I’ll pass along the message and get back to you.”
“I’m standing by.”
She hung up. Ronnie and Doc turned to her. In fact,
everyone was listening intently. It seemed that the role of
mediator had been bestowed on her. She didn’t particularly
welcome it. Suppose, despite everyone’s best intentions,
something went terribly wrong? If this standoff ultimately ended in disaster, for the rest of her life she would! feel responsible for the tragic outcome.
Over the course of the last few hours, Tiel’s priority had
shifted. It had been a gradual shift, and until this moment
she hadn’t even realized that it had taken place. The news
story had become a secondary consideration. At what
point had it become an afterthought? When she saw
Sabra’s blood on her gloved hands? When Juan threatened
Katherine’s fragile life?
The people making the story were much more important
to her now than the story itself. Producing a prizewinning,
job-securing exclusive account of this drama
wasn’t as vital a goal as it had been previously. What she
wished for now was a resolution to celebrate, not lament.
If she blew it…
She simply couldn’t, that’s all.
“The kidnaping allegation has been dropped,” she told
Ronnie, who was listening expectantly. “You’ll have to face
other criminal charges. Mr. Dendy has agreed to let Sabra
keep the baby. If you agree to these terms and surrender,
Mr. Galloway gives you his personal guarantee that no
force will be used.”
“It’s a good deal, Ronnie,” Doc said. “Take it.”
“I_”
“No, don’t.” Sabra spoke in hardly more than a croak. Somehow she
had managed to stand. She was leaning heavily against the
freezer chest in order to keep herself upright. Her eyes
were sunken and her complexion was leeched of all color.
She looked like someone who’d had theatrical makeup
expertly applied for a character rising out of a coffin.
“It’s a trick, Ronnie. One of Daddy’s tricks.”
Doc rushed over to lend her support. “I don’t think so,
Sabra. Your dad responded to the video message you sent
him.”
Gratefully she clung to Doc, but her dull eyes beseeched
Ronnie. “If you love! me, don&! #8217;t agree to this. I
won’t leave here until I know I can be with you forever.”
“Sabra, what about your baby?” Tiel asked gently.
“Think of her.”
“You take her.”
“What?”
“Carry her out. Give her to someone who’ll take care of
her. No matter what happens to us–to Ronnie and me– it’s important to me to know that Katherine is going to be
all right.”
Tiel looked hopefully toward Doc for inspiration, but his
expression was bleak. He seemed to feel as helpless as she.
“That’s it then,” Ronnie stated firmly. “That’s what we’ll
do. We’ll let you carry Katherine out. But we’re not leaving
until they let us go. Free and clear. No compromise.” “They’ll never agree to that,” Tiel said with desperation.
“That’s an unreasonable demand.”
“You committed armed robbery,” Doc added. “You’ll
have to account for that, Ronnie. But because of extenuating
circumstances, you’d have a good chance of beating
the rap. Running away would be the worst thing you could
do. That would solve nothing.”
Tiel glanced at Doc, wondering if he were listening to
his own advice. The admonishment against running away
could be applied to him and his circumstances three years
ago. He didn’t notice her glance, however, because his attention
was on Ronnie, who was arguing his point.
“Sabra and I vowed that we would never be forced
apart. No matter what, we promised each other to stay together.
We meant it.”
“Your father–”
“I’m not going to talk about it,” the young man
snapped. Turning to Tiel, he asked if she would carry
Katherine out and deliver that message.
“What about the others? Will you release them?”! ;
He! glanced beyond her at the other hostages. “Not the
two Mexicans. And not him,” he said of Agent Cain. He
had regained consciousness but appeared still to be incoherent
from the kick in the head Juan had given him.
“The old folks and her. They can go.”
When he pointed to Donna, she clasped her claw-like hands beneath her chin. “Thank you, Lord.”
“I don’t want to go,” Gladys announced. She was still
holding the sleeping infant in her arms. “I want to see
what’s going to happen.”
“We’d better do as he says,” Vern said, patting her
shoulder. “We can wait for everybody else outside.” He assisted
Gladys up off the floor. “Before we go, I’m sure
Sabra wants to tell Katherine goodbye.”
The old lady carried the baby over to Sabra, where she
was leaning heavily against Doc.
“Shall I notify Galloway of your decision?” Tiel asked
Ronnie.
He was watching Sabra and his baby. “Half an hour.”
“What?”
“That’s the time limit I’m giving them to get back to
me. If they won’t let us leave in half an hour, we’ll… we’ll
carry out our plan,” he said thickly.
“Ronnie, please.”
“That’s it, Ms. McCoy. You tell them.”
Galloway answered her call before the completion of
the first ring. “I’m coming out with the baby. Have medical
personnel standing by. I’m bringing out three of the
hostages with me.”
“Only three?”
“Three.” “What about the rest?”
“I’ll tell you when I get there.”
She hung up on him.
As Tiel approached Sabra, the young woman was crying.
“Bye-bye, sweet Katherine. My beautiful baby girl.
Mommie loves you. Very much.” She was bent ove! r the
child, inhaling her scent, touching her everywhere. She
kissed Katherine’s face several times, then turned her own
into Doc’s shirt and sobbed.
Tiel took the baby from Gladys, who’d been holding her
because Sabra didn’t have the strength. Tiel carried Katherine
over to Ronnie. As the young man gazed at the baby, his
eyes filled with tears. His lower lip trembled uncontrollably. He was trying so hard to be tough, and failing miserably.
“Thanks for all you’ve done,” he said to Tiel. “I know
Sabra liked having you around.”
Tiel’s eyes appealed to him. “I don’t believe you’ll do it,
Ronnie. I refuse to believe you would–could–pull that
trigger and end Sabra’s life and yours.”
He chose not to respond and instead kissed the baby’s
forehead. “Bye, Katherine. I love you.” Then, his motions
jerky and abrupt, he stepped behind the counter to release
the electric door lock.
Tiel allowed the others to go ahead of her. Before stepping
through the door, she glanced over her shoulder at
Doc. He had eased Sabra back onto the floor, but he raised his head as though Tiel’s gaze had beckoned him.
Their eyes connected for only a millisecond, but, undeniably,
it was a meaningful span of time and contact.
Then she slipped through the door and heard the bolt
snap into place behind her.
From out of the darkness paramedics rushed forward.
Obviously, pairs of them had been pre-assigned to each
hostage. Vern, Gladys, and Donna were surrounded and
barraged with questions, which Gladys answered in a decidedly
querulous tone.
A man and woman wearing identical scrubs and lab
coats materialized in front of Tiel. The woman reached
for Katherine, but Tiel didn’t relinquish her just yet.
“Who are you?”
“Dr. Emily Garrett.” Sh! e introdu! ced herself as chief of
the neonatal unit at a Midland hospital. “This is Dr.
Landry Giles, chief of obstetrics.”
Tiel acknowledged the introductions, then said, “Regardless
of anything you’ve heard to the contrary, the parents
do not wish to put the child up for adoption.”
Dr. Garrett’s expression was as steadfast and guileless as
Tiel could have hoped for. “I understand completely.
We’ll be waiting for the mother’s arrival.”
Tiel kissed the top of Katherine’s head. She had a bond with this baby that she probably would never have with another
human being–she had witnessed her birth, her
first breath, had heard her first cry. Even so, the depth of
her emotion surprised her. “Take good care of her.”
“You have my word.”
Dr. Garrett took the baby and ran with her toward the
waiting chopper, the blades of which were already
whirling and kicking up a fierce wind. Dr. Giles had to
shout to make himself heard above the racket.
“How’s the mother?”
“Not good.” Tiel gave him a condensed version of the
labor and birth, then described Sabra’s present condition.
“Doc’s most worried about loss of blood and infection.
Sabra’s becoming increasingly weak. Her blood pressure
is dropping, he said. Based on what I’ve told you, is there
anything you can advise him to do?”
“Get her to the hospital.”
“We’re working on it,” she said grimly.
The man approaching with a long and purposeful
stride could only be Galloway. He was tall and slender, but
even in shirtsleeves he exuded an air of authority. “Bill
Galloway,” he said, confirming his identity as soon as he
joined her and Dr. Giles. They shook hands.
Gully hobbled up to her in his bandy-legged run.
‘Jesus, ! kid, if I! don’t die of a heart attack after tonight, I’ll live forever.”
She hugged him. “You’ll outlive us all.”
On the fringes of the growing group she noticed a stout
man dressed in a white cowboy shirt with pearl buttons.
He held a cowboy hat similar to Doc’s in his hands. Before
she could introduce herself to him, he was rudely elbowed
aside.
“Ms. McCoy, I want to talk to you.”
She recognized Russell Dendy immediately.
“How’s my daughter?”
“She’s dying.” While the statement seemed unnecessarily
harsh, Tiel was fresh out of compassion for the millionaire.
Besides, if she were to make a dent in this stalemate,
she must hit them hard.
Kip was standing in the background, capturing this suspenseful
conference on videotape. The camera-mounted
spotlight was blinding. For the first time in her career, Tiel
felt an aversion for that light and the invasion of privacy it
represented.
Her blunt response to Dendy’s question took him aback
momentarily, which enabled Galloway to draw the other
man forward for an introduction. “Cole Davison, Tiel
McCoy.” The resemblance between Ronnie and his father
was unmistakable. “How is he?” he asked anxiously.
“Resolute, Mr. Davison.” Before continuing, she looked at
each of the men independently. ‘Those young people mean what they say. They took an oath, which they intend to uphold.
Now that they know Katherine is safe and receiving
medical attention, there’s nothing to stop them from carrying
out their suicide pact.” She used the words deliberately
to emphasize the seriousness and urgency of the situation.
Galloway maintained his professional detachment and
was the first to speak. “Sheriff Montez says this Doc is a
large, brawny man. Couldn’t he simply overpower Ron! nie
! and get control of the gun?”
“And risk another casualty?” she asked rhetorically.
“Two men tried force a little while ago. It ended in bloodshed.
I think I can safely nix that idea on Doc’s behalf.
He’s been trying to persuade Ronnie to end this peaceably.
He’d lose any advantage he’s gained with the boy if
he suddenly tried to jump him.”
Galloway ran a hand through his thinning hair and
watched the chopper with Dr. Garrett and the newborn
lift off. “The hostages aren’t at risk?” he asked.
“I don’t believe so. Although there’s no love lost between
Ronnie and Agent Cain or the Mexican men.”
They exchanged an uneasy look all around, but before
Tiel could ask what it portended, Galloway said, “To summarize,
Ronnie and Sabra are bartering with their own
lives.”
“Exactly, Mr. Galloway. I was sent to tell you that you have half an hour to get back to them.”
“With what?”
“Clemency, and freedom to go on their way.”
“That’s impossible.”
“Then you’ll have two dead kids on your hands.”
“You’re a reasonable person, Ms. McCoy. You know I
can’t make that kind of blanket deal with an alleged
felon.”
Despair and defeat settled on her heavily. “I know, and,
honestly, I appreciate the position you’re in, Mr. Galloway.
I’m only the messenger. I’m telling you what Ronnie told
me. My gut feeling is that he means to do what he has said
he will. Even if he’s buffing, Sabra is not.”
She looked pointedly at Dendy. “If she can’t have Ronnie,
live with him freely, she’s willing to take her own life. If
she doesn’t bleed to death first.” Back to Galloway, she said,
“Unfortunately for you, it’s not! my gut f! eeling that counts.
The decision doesn’t rest with me. It’s yours to make.”
“Not entirely, it isn’t,” Dendy declared. “I have a say in
this. Galloway, for godsake, promise the boy anything. Just
get my daughter out of there.”
Galloway checked his wristwatch. “Half an hour,” he
said briskly. “Not much time, and I’ve got some calls to
make.” They turned in unison toward the van parked on
the apron of the parking lot.
Gully was the first to notice that Tiel didn’t fall into step with the rest of them. He turned and regarded her curiously.
“Tiel?”
She was walking backward. “I’m going back.”
“You aren’t serious?” Gully’s exclamation spoke for all
of them, who were looking at her with unmitigated dismay.
“I can’t abandon Sabra.”
“But–”
She shook her head firmly, checking Gully’s protest before
it was out. Continuing to backtrack and widen the distance
between them, she said, “We’ll be waiting for your
decision, Mr. Galloway.”
CHAPTER
14
TIEL stood facing the door of the store for a full ninety
seconds before she heard the bolt being released. As she
reentered, Ronnie eyed her warily.
She dispelled his suspicion. “I’m not carrying a concealed
weapon, Ronnie.”
“What did Galloway say?”
“He’s thinking it over. He said he has to make some
phone calls.”
“To who? What for?”
“I gather he doesn’t have the authority to grant you
clemency.” Ronnie gnawed his lower lip, which had already been so
brutalized it was raw. “Okay. But why’d you come back?”
“To let you know that Katherine is in excellent hands.”
She told him about Dr. Emily Garrett.
&! #8220;Tel! l Sabra. She’ll want to know that.”
The young mother’s eyes were half closed. Her breathing
was shallow. Tiel wasn’t sure she was completely aware
and listening, but after describing to her the neonatal specialist,
Sabra whispered, “Is she nice?”
“Very. When you meet her, you’ll see.” Tiel glanced over
at Doc, but he was taking Sabra’s blood pressure, his eyebrows
pulled together in the steep frown she’d come to
recognize. “There’s another very nice doctor waiting to
take care of you. His name is Dr. Giles. You’re not afraid
to fly in helicopters, are you?”
“I did once. With my dad. It was okay.”
“Dr. Giles is standing by to whisk you off to the hospital
in Midland. Katherine will be glad to see you when you get
there. She’ll probably be hungry.”
Sabra smiled, then her eyes closed.
By tacit agreement, Tiel and Doc retreated to their familiar
posts. Seated on the floor with their backs propped
against the freezer chest, legs extended in front of them,
watching the second hand on the clock tick off the time
limit Ronnie had imposed, it was the ideal moment for
Doc to ask the question that Tiel expected from him. “Why’d you come back?”
Even assuming that he would ask, she had no clear-cut
answer prepared.
Several moments elapsed. His jaw was dark with stubble,
she noticed, but it must be going on twenty-four hours
since his last shave. The webwork around his eyes seemed
more defined now than earlier, a distinct sign of fatigue.
His clothes, like hers, were grimy and bloodstained.
Blood was a cohesive agent, she realized. It wasn’t necessarily
the comingling of blood from two individuals that
formed an irrevocable, almost mystical, bond between
them. It could be anyone’s shed blood that united people. Consi! der survivors of plane crashes, train wrecks, natural
disasters, and terrorist attacks, who had developed
lasting friendships because of the trauma they had shared.
Veterans of the same war spoke a language among themselves
that was incomprehensible to those who hadn’t
been there and experienced similar horrors. Bloodshed
at the explosion in Oklahoma City, the public school
shootings, and other unthinkable events had soldered former
strangers together so solidly that the relationships
would never be severed.
Survivors shared a common ground. Their connection
was rare and unique, sometimes misinterpreted and misunderstood,
but almost always unexplainable to those who hadn’t encountered identical fears.
Tiel had taken so long to answer that Doc repeated his
question. “Why’d you come back?”
“For Sabra,” she replied. “I was the only woman left. I
thought she might need me. And …”
He raised his knees, propped his forearms on them and
looked at her, waiting patiently for her to complete her
thought.
“And I hate to start something and not finish it. I was
here when it started, so I figured I should stick around
until it’s over.”
It wasn’t quite as simple as that. Her reason for returning
was more complex, but she was at a loss to explain her
multilayered motivation to Doc when even to her it was
unclear. Why wasn’t she out there doing a live remote, taking
advantage of the extraordinary insight she had on this
story? Why wasn’t she recording a voice track to couple
with the dramatic images Kip was getting on video?
“What were you doing out here?”
Doc’s question roused her from her musings. “In Rojo
Flats?” She laughed. “I was on vacation.” She explained
how she was en route to New Mexico when she heard of
th! e so-call! ed kidnaping on her car radio. “I called Gully,
who assigned me to interview Cole Davison. On my way to
Hera I got lost. I stopped here to use the rest room and
call Gully for directions.” “That’s who you were talking to when I came in?”
Tiel’s gaze sharpened on him, her expression inquisitive.
He raised his shoulder in a slight shrug. “I noticed you
back there on the pay phone.”
“You did? Oh.” Their eyes connected and held, and it
was an effort for her to break that stare. “Anyway, I concluded
my call and was buying snacks for the road
when . . . who should walk in but Ronnie and Sabra.”
“That’s a story in itself.”
“I couldn’t believe my good fortune.” She smiled wryly.
“Be careful what you wish for.”
“I am.” After a beat of five, he added quietly, “Now.”
This time it was she who waited him out, giving him the
opportunity either to expound on his thought or to let
the subject drop. He must have felt the same implied pressure
from her silence that she had felt from him earlier,
because he rolled his shoulders as though his burdensome
reflections were resting on them.
“After I found out about Shari’s affair, I wanted her
to …” He faltered, began again. “I was so pissed, I wanted
her to . . .”
“Suffer.”
“Yeah.”
The long sigh he released around the word evinced his
relief over finally getting the confession off his chest. Confidences wouldn’t come easily to a man like him who had
dealt in life-and-death situations on a daily basis. To have
the courage and tenacity to battle such a seemingly omnipotent
enemy as cancer, there was surely a generous degree
of the god complex in Bradley Stanwick’s makeup.
Vulnerability, any sign of weakness, ! was incom! patible with
that personality trait. No, beyond incompatible. Intolerable.
Tiel was flattered that he had confessed a weakness, had
revealed to her even a glimpse of this all-too-human aspect
of himself. She supposed traumatic situations were good for
that, too. Like a deathbed confession, he might be thinking
this was the last chance he would have to unburden himself
of the guilt he had carried over his wife’s terminal illness.
“Her cancer wasn’t punishment for her adultery,” she
argued gently. “It certainly wasn’t your revenge.”
“I know. Rationally and reasonably I know that. But
when she was going through the worst of it–and, believe
me, it was sheer hell–that’s what I thought about. That I
had subconsciously wished it on her.”
“So now you’re punishing yourself with this self-imposed
banishment from your profession.”
He fired back, “And you’re not?”
“What?”
“Punishing yourself because your husband got killed.
You’re doing the work of two people to make up for the
industry loss created when he died.” “That’s ridiculous!”
“Is it?”
“Yes. I work hard because I love it.”
“But you’ll never be able to do enough, will you?”
An angry retort died on her lips. She had never examined
the psychology behind her ambition. She had never allowed herself to examine it. But now that she’d been confronted
with this hypothesis, she had to admit that it had
merit. The ambition had always been there. She had been
born with a type-A personality, was always an overachiever.
But not to the degree of the last few years. She pursued
goals with a vengeance and took perceived failures hard.
She worked to the exclusion of everything else. It wasn’t a
matter of her car! eer takin! g precedence over other areas of
her life; it was her life. Was her mad, singular desire to succeed
a self-inflicted penance for those few ill-chosen words
spoken in the heat of anger? Was guilt her propellant?
They lapsed into silence, each lost in his own troubling
thoughts, grappling with the personal demons they’d
been forced to acknowledge.
“Where in New Mexico?”
“What?” Tiel turned to him. “Oh, my destination?
Angel Fire.”
“Heard of it. Never been there.”
“Mountain air and clear streams. Aspen trees. They’d
be green now, not gold, but I hear it’s beautiful.” “You hear? You haven’t been there either?”
She shook her head. “A friend was lending me her
condo for the week.”
“You’d be there by now, all tucked in. Too bad you
placed that first call to Gully.”
“I don’t know, Doc.” She glanced at Sabra, then looked
at him. Closely. Taking in every nuance of his rugged face.
Plumbing the depths of his eyes. “I wouldn’t have missed
this for the world.”
The urge to touch him was almost irresistible. She did
resist, but she didn’t break eye contact. It lasted a long
time, while her heart thudded hard and heavily against
her ribs and her senses hummed with a keen, sweet awareness
of him.
She actually jumped when the telephone rang.
Clumsily she scrambled to her feet, and so did Doc.
Ronnie grabbed the receiver. “Mr. Galloway?”
He listened for what seemed to Tiel an eternity. Again
she curbed the impulse to touch Doc. She wanted to take
his hand and hold on to it tightly, as people are wont to do
when waiting to hear life-altering news.
Finally Ronnie turned to them and placed the earpiece
against his chest. “Galloway says he’s got the district attorney
of Tarr! ant County, and whatever this county is, plus a
judge, himself, and both sets of parents, agreed to meet and hammer this thing out. He says if I admit to wrongdoing
and submit to counseling, maybe I’ll get probation
and not have to go to jail. Maybe.”
Tiel nearly collapsed with relief. A small laugh bubbled
from her throat. “That’s great!”
“It’s a good deal, Ronnie. If I were you, I’d grab it,” Doc
told him.
“Sabra, is that okay with you?”
When she didn’t respond, Doc nearly knocked Tiel off
her feet as he brushed past her and knelt beside the girl.
“She unconscious.”
“Oh, God,” Ronnie cried. “Is she dead?”
“No, but she’s got to get help, son. And I mean fast.”
Tiel left Sabra in Doc’s care and moved toward Ronnie.
She was afraid that in his despair, he might yet turn the
pistol on himself. “Tell Galloway you agree to the terms.
I’m going to cut the tape binding them,” she said, gesturing
to Cain, Juan, and Two. “Okay?”
Ronnie was transfixed by the sight of Doc lifting Sabra
into his arms. Blood immediately saturated his clothes.
“Oh, Jesus, oh, God, what’ve I done?”
“Save the regrets for later, Ronnie,” Doc said in a stern
voice. “Tell Galloway we’re coming out.”
The dazed young man began mumbling into the mouthpiece.
Tiel quickly retrieved the scissors they’d used earlier
and knelt down beside Cain. She sawed through the tape around his ankles. “What about my hands?” His tongue
seemed thick. The man probably had two concussions.
“When you get outside.” She still didn’t trust him not to
try and be a hero.
His eyes narrowed to slits. “You’re in deep shit, lady.”
“Usually,” Tiel qu! ipped, an! d moved to the Mexican men.
Juan was enduring his leg wound stoically, but she could feel resentment emanating from him like heat from
a furnace. Keeping as much distance as possible between
him and herself, she cut the tape around his ankles. It
took some effort. Vern had done an excellent job.
She felt even more aversion for the one she’d nicknamed
Two. His dark eyes roved over her with unconcealed
malevolence and an intentionally demeaning,
sexual suggestiveness that made her feel in even more
need of a shower.
That chore completed, she said, “Doc, go first,” and motioned him toward the door. “Right, Ronnie?”
“Right, right. Get Sabra to someone who can help her,
Doc.”
Tiel moved to the door and held it open for him. Sabra
looked like a faded rag doll in his arms. She looked dead.
Ronnie lovingly touched her hair, her cheek. When she
didn’t respond, he moaned.
“Hang in there, Ronnie, she’s alive,” Doc assured him.
“She’ll be okay.”
“Dr. Giles,” Tiel told Doc as he moved past with the girl. “Got it.”
In a blink, he was gone, running across the parking lot
carrying the unconscious girl.
“You next,” Ronnie said to Tiel.
She shook her head. “I’m staying with you. We’ll go out
together.”
“You don’t trust them?” he asked in a voice made high
and thin by fright. “You think Galloway will try and pull
something?”
“I don’t trust them.” She hitched her head back toward
the other three hostages. “Let them go first.”
He contemplated that, but only for an instant. “Okay.
You. Cain. Go.”
The vanquished FBI agent skulked past them. Because
his hands were still bound, Tiel once again held the door
open. More injurious than the two clouts t! o his hea! d was
the blow his pride had sustained. No doubt he dreaded
facing his fellow agents, particularly Galloway.
Ronnie waited until Cain had been swallowed up by a
crowd of paramedics and officials before he motioned
Juan and Two toward the door. “You next.”
After trying twice to escape, they now seemed reluctant
to leave. They shuffled forward, muttering to one another
in Spanish.
“Come on,” Tiel said, impatiently motioning them through the door. She was frantic to know how Sabra was
faring.
Juan went first, limping noticeably. He hesitated on the
threshold, his eyes darting to various points on the parking
lot. Two, she noticed, was practically on Juan’s heels,
standing belly to butt as though using the other man as a
shield. They stepped through the door.
Tiel had turned to speak to Ronnie when suddenly the
front of the store was seared with blinding light. The
SWAT team, looking like black beetles, came scurrying
from every conceivable hiding place. Their number
amazed her. She hadn’t seen a third of them when she’d
gone out to confer with Galloway.
Ronnie cursed and ducked behind the counter. Tiel
screamed, but from outrage, not fear. She was too livid to
be afraid.
Oddly, however, the tactical officers surrounded Juan
and Two, ordering them to lie facedown on the ground.
The injured Juan had no choice but to comply. He practically
crumpled.
Heedless of the warnings shouted at him, Two took off
at a dead run but was almost immediately tackled and
knocked to the concrete. Before Tiel could assimilate
what had happened, it was over. The two men were shackled
and dragged away by the SWAT team.
The lights went out as suddenly as they’d come on. “Ronnie?” His name was bellowed through a bullhorn.
“Ronnie? Ms. McCoy?” It was Galloway. “Don’t be
ala! rmed. You! ’ve been in the company of some very dangerous
men. We saw them on the videotape and recognized
them. They’re wanted by the authorities here and in
Mexico. That’s why they were so eager to escape. But
they’re in our custody now. It’s safe for you to come out.”
Far from being calmed by this information, Tiel was furious.
How dare they not warn her of the potential danger!
But she couldn’t vent her anger now. She would take
it up with Galloway and company later.
With as much composure as she could muster, she said
to Ronnie, “You heard him. Everything’s okay. The lights,
the SWAT team had nothing to do with you. Let’s go.”
He still looked afraid and uncertain. In any case, he
didn’t move from behind the counter.
God, please don’t let me make a deadly mistake now, Tiel
prayed. She couldn’t push him too hard, but she had to
push hard enough to get him moving.
“I think it would be best if you left the pistols here, don’t
you? Lay them there on the counter. Then you can walk out
with your hands up, and they’ll know that you’re sincere in
wanting to work things out.” He didn’t move. “Right?”
He looked tired, depleted, defeated. No, no, not defeated, she corrected. If he looked upon this as a defeat, he might
not leave. He might take what would seem to him the easier way out.
“You did an exceptionally brave thing, Ronnie,” she
said conversationally. “Standing up to Russell Dendy. The
FBI. You’ve won. What you and Sabra wanted all along was
an audience, someone to listen and play fair with you.
And you’ve got them to agree to do just that. That’s quite
an achievement.”
His eyes strayed to her. She smiled, hoping it didn’t
look as phony and wooden as it felt–indeed, as it was.
&! #8220;Set! the guns down and let’s go. I’ll hold your hand if you
like.”
“No. No. I’ll go out by myself.” He placed the two pistols
on the counter, and as he wiped his damp palms on
the legs of his jeans, Tiel exhaled the breath she’d been
holding.
“Go ahead. I’m right behind you.”
She hesitated, worried about the handguns, which were
still within his reach. Was his seeming compliance a trick?
“Okay. I’m going. Coming?”
He licked his bruised lips. “Yeah.”
Nervously she turned toward the door, opened it, and
stepped through. The sky was no longer black, she noticed,
but dark gray, so that the silhouettes of all the vehicles
and people showed up against it. The air was already
hot and dry. There was a light wind, carrying sand that abraded her skin as it blew across her.
She took a few steps before glancing back. Ronnie had
his hand on the door, ready to push it open. There was no
sign of a weapon in his hand. Don’t do anything harmful
now, Ronnie. You’re home free.
Ahead, waiting for her, she could make out Galloway.
Mr. Davison. Gully. Sheriff Montez.
And Doc. He was there. Standing a little apart from the
others. Tall. Broad-shouldered. Hair lifting in the wind.
From the corner of her eye she saw the SWAT team
herding Two into the back of a van under heavy guard.
The door was slammed closed and the van sped from the
parking lot with a screech of tires. Juan had been confined
to a gurney, where paramedics were tending to him.
Tiel’s glance had just moved past him when she did a
double take. He began wrestling against the paramedic
trying to insert an IV needle into the back of his shackled
hand. Like a madman in a straightjacket, he twisted his
body, his head, his arms. His mouth was moving, forming
words, and she wondered why she found tha! t so puzz! ling.
Then she realized that the words he was shouting were
in English.
But he didn’t speak English, she thought stupidly. Only
Spanish.
Furthermore, the words made no sense because he was yelling at the top of his lungs. “He’s got a rifle! There!
Somebody! Oh, Christ, no!”
The words registered with Tiel a split second before
Juan sprang off the gurney, executed a horizontal body
dive off the concrete, and went airborne. He launched
himself into the man, his shoulder landing hard against
the other’s torso and knocking him to the ground.
But not before Russell Dendy got off a clean shot with a
deer rifle.
Tiel heard the shattering sound and spun around to see
the door of the convenience store raining glass onto Ronnie’s
prone form. She didn’t remember later if she
screamed or not. She didn’t remember later crossing the
distance back to the entrance of the store at a full-out run,
or dropping to her hands and knees despite the glass.
She did recall hearing Juan shout–to save his life– “Martinez, undercover Treasury agent! Martinez, Treasury
agent, working undercover!”
CHAPTER
15
The antiseptic the paramedic was dabbing onto her
hands and knees made them sting. The broken glass had
sliced through the fabric of her trousers, which had been
cut off above her knees.
Tiel hadn’t noticed the cuts at all until the paramedic began removing splinters of glass with tiny tweezers. Only
then had they begun to hurt. The pain wasn’t significant,
however. She was more interested in what was going on
around her than in the superficial wounds she had sustained.
Seated on a gurney–she had refused to climb inside
the ambulance–she tried to see around the woman who
was treating her. It was a chaotic scene. In the pale dawn,
the lights of a dozen police and em! ergency v! ehicles created
a dizzying kaleidoscope of flashing, colored lights.
Medical personnel, those who hadn’t rushed to Ronnie’s
aid, were seeing to her, Treasury Agent Martinez, and
Cain.
The media had been denied access to the immediate
area, but news helicopters buzzed overhead like brute insects.
Parked on a mesa overlooking the depression
known as Rojo Flats was a convoy of television vans. The
satellite dishes mounted on their roofs reflected the new
sun.
Ordinarily this would be the kind of scene on which
Tiel McCoy thrived. She would be in her element. But the
customary rush of adrenaline just hadn’t been there when
she stared into the lens of the video camera to do her live
report.
She had tried to work up her usual level of enthusiasm,
but she knew it was lacking and only hoped that the viewing audience wouldn’t notice, or that if they did that they
would assign her lack of verve to the ordeal she had endured.
The report certainly had a dramatic backdrop. She had
shouted into her microphone as the CareFlight helicopter
lifted off, bearing Ronnie Davison to the nearest emergency
center, where a trauma team was standing by to
treat the gunshot wound in his chest. The fierce winds created
by the whirling blades whipped sand into her eyes. It
was the blowing sand to which she attributed her unprofessional
tears.
As soon as she concluded her ad-libbed summary of the
events that had transpired over the past six hours, she listlessly
passed the wireless mike back to Kip, who kissed her
cheek, said, ‘Terrific,” then rushed off to shoot more B-roll,
taking advantage of the access he had to the scene because
of his association with her.
Only after finishing that piece of business had she consented
to having her bleeding palms and knees examined.
Now, speaking to the paramedic, she said, “You mus! t know something.”
“I’m sorry, Ms. McCoy. I don’t.”
“Or you aren’t telling.”
The woman gave her a retiring look. “I don’t know.”
She recapped the bottle of antiseptic. “You really should
go to the hospital and let someone look at these hands
under better light. There might be glass slivers–” “There aren’t. I’m fine.” She jumped off the gurney.
Her knees were becoming sore and stiff from the multiple
cuts, but she hid her grimace from the paramedic. “Thank
you.”
“Tiel, you okay?” Gully came huffing up to her. “These
sumbitches wouldn’t let me past till you got those hands
and knees seen to. The video looks great, kid. Best you’ve
ever done. If this doesn’t get you the Nine Live spot, then
life ain’t fair and I’m gonna quit the TV business myself.”
“Have you heard anything about Ronnie’s condition?”
“Not a thing.”
“Sabra?”
“Nothing. Not since the cowboy turned her over to that
Dr. Giles and they took her off in the chopper.”
“Speaking of Doc, is he around?”
Gully didn’t hear her. He was shaking his head and
muttering, “Wish they had given me a crack at Dendy. A
couple of minutes with me and he’d've been hating life.”
“I assume he’s under arrest.”
“The sheriff had three deputies–meanest-looking
cusses I’ve ever seen–haul his ass off to jail.”
Even though she had seen it with her own eyes, she still
found it impossible to believe that Dendy had shot Ronnie
Davison. She expressed her dismay to Gully. “I don’t understand
how that could have happened.” “Nobody was paying him any attention. He had put on
a good show for Galloway. Cry! ing, wrin! ging his hands. Admitted
that he’d mishandled things. He led us to believe
that he had seen the error of his ways, that all was for
given, and that he only wanted Sabra to be safe. The lying
bastard.”
Tiel’s pent-up emotions boiled to the surface, and she
began to cry. “It’s my fault, Gully. I promised Ronnie it
would be safe for him to come out, that if he surrendered,
he wouldn’t be hurt.”
“That’s what we all promised him, Ms. McCoy.”
She turned toward the familiar voice, her tears drying
instantly. “I’m very put out with you, Agent Galloway.”
“As your colleague just explained, I fell for Dendy’s act
of contrition. Nobody knew he had brought a deer rifle
with him.”
“Not just that. You could have warned me about that
Huerta character when I brought the baby out.”
“And if you’d known who he was, what would you have
done?”
What would she have done? She didn’t know, but somehow
that seemed irrelevant. She asked, “Did you know
Martinez was a Treasury agent?”
Galloway looked chagrined. “No. We assumed he was
one of Huerta’s henchmen.” Remembering how the wounded, shackled man had
flung himself at Dendy, she remarked, “He did an awfully
brave thing. Not only did he blow his cover, but he also
risked his life. If any of the other officers had reacted
more quickly…” She shuddered to think of the young
man’s body being riddled with bullets from fellow officers’
guns.
“I’ve thought of that,” Galloway admitted grimly. “He’d
like to talk to you.”
“Me?”
“Are you up to it?”
Galloway led her to another ambulance, apprising her
along the way of Martinez’s condition. “The bullet went
! straight! through his leg without nicking a bone or an
artery. Twice tonight he got lucky.” He assisted her into
the back of the ambulance.
The temporary dressing Doc had put on Martinez’s
thigh had been replaced by a sterile gauze bandage. The
bloody T-shirt had been added to the pile of other infectious
waste materials about to be discarded. Seeing it
caused Tiel’s heart to constrict. She recalled seeing Doc’s
hands fashioning the crude bandage for the wound he
had inflicted.
Martinez was hooked up to an IV and was also getting a
transfusion of blood. But his eyes were clear. “Ms. McCoy.” “Agent Martinez. You’re very good at your job. You had
us all fooled.”
He smiled, showing the very straight white teeth she
had noticed before. “That’s the goal of an undercover operative.
Thank God Huerta was also fooled. I’ve been a
member of his organization since last summer. A truckload
of people came across the border last night.”
“It was intercepted about an hour ago,” Galloway informed
them. “As usual, the conditions inside were deplorable.
The people locked in were actually grateful for
being taken into custody. They considered it a rescue.”
“Huerta and I were on our way to make the sale to a
wheat farmer up in Kansas. Huerta was to be arrested as
soon as the transaction went down. We stopped here to
get a snack.”
He shrugged, as though to say they knew the rest. “I’m
just glad that neither of us went into that store armed.
We’d left our weapons in the car–something that never
happens. It was a twist of fate, or divine intervention,
whatever. If Huerta had been carrying, it would’ve got
real ugly real soon.”
“Will you be in danger of reprisal?”
Again he flashed a smile. “I’m trusting ! the depar! tment
to make me disappear. If you ever see me again, you probably
won’t recognize me.”
“I see. One more question, why did you try and take the baby?”
“Huerta wanted to rush Ronnie, overpower him. I volunteered
to distract everyone by grabbing the baby. Actually,
I was afraid he’d do something to the child. That was
the only way I knew to protect her.”
Tiel shivered at the thought of what might have been.
“You seemed particularly hostile toward Cain.”
“He recognized me,” Martinez exclaimed. “We’d
worked a case together a couple years ago. He didn’t have
the good sense to keep his trap shut. Several times he
nearly blew it for me. I had to shut him up.” Looking at
Galloway, he added, “I think he needs a refresher course
at Quantic”
Tiel hid her smile. “We have you to thank for several
acts of bravery, Mr. Martinez. I’m sorry you got shot for
your effort.”
“That guy–Doc–did what he had to do. If the situation
had been reversed, I’d have done the same. I’d like to
tell him I don’t hold a grudge.”
Galloway said, “He’s already left.”
Hiding her disappointment and despite the small cuts
on her palm, Tiel shook Martinez’s hand and wished him
well, then was helped down out of the ambulance, where
Gully was smoking a cigarette while waiting. As the ambulance
pulled away, Gladys and Vern joined them. Apparently they had returned to their RV, because they
were wearing different clothes, smelled of soap, and were
looking as spry and alert as though they’d just returned
from a two-week visit to a health spa. Tiel hugged them in
turn.
“We couldn’t leave without giving you our address and
getting your promise to stay in touch.” Gladys handed her
! a slip o! f paper on which was written an address in Florida.
“I promise. Are you continuing the honeymoon from
here?”
“After a stop in Louisiana to see my son and grandchildren,”
Vern said.
“Who are without a doubt the five most ornery little
bastards on earth.”
“Now, Gladys.”
“I’m only telling it like it is, Vern. They’re heathens and
you know it.” Then her demeanor changed. She blotted
away the tears that suddenly appeared in her eyes. “I just
hope those two young people come through this. I’ll be
worried sick until I hear that they’re all right.”
“So will I.” Tiel squeezed Gladys’s small hand.
Vern said, “We had to give our statements to the sheriff,
then to the FBI agents. We told them you couldn’t help
hitting that Cain with the chili on account of he was such
an idiot.”
Gully snickered. Galloway tensed, but he let the criticism go without comment.
“Donna’s hogging the TV cameras,” Gladys said with
pique. “To hear her tell it, she was a heroine.”
Vern reached into his tote bag, removed a small videocassette,
and pressed it into Tiel’s hand. “Don’t forget
this,” he whispered.
Actually, she had forgotten the camcorder tape.
Gladys said, “We sneaked back into the store to get it.”
“Thank you. For everything.” Tiel got emotional again
when they said their final farewell and headed for their
RV.
“Honeymoon?” Gully asked as they moved away.
“They were terrific. I’m going to miss them.”
He looked at her strangely. “Are you okay?”
“Yes. Why?”
“Because you’re acting sorta weird.”
“I’ve been up all night.” Straightening her shoulders
and adopting the ! demeanor ! she assumed when cameras
were about to roll, she turned to Galloway. “I suppose you
have a lot of questions for me.”
In the van, Galloway plied her with coffee and breakfast
burritos donated by the ladies’ auxiliary of the First Baptist
Church. It took over an hour for him to get from her
all the information he required.
“I think that’s it for now, Ms. McCoy, although we’ll probably have some follow-up questions.”
“I understand.”
“And it wouldn’t surprise me if the respective DAs ask
you to attend when we convene to discuss the charges
against Ronnie Davison.”
“If you convene,” she said softly.
The FBI agent looked away, and Tiel realized he bore a
large measure of guilt over what had happened. Perhaps
even more than she. He admitted to being duped by Russell
Dendy’s playacting. He hadn’t noticed Dendy returning
to the private charter helicopter he had arrived in and
retrieving a deer rifle from it. If the unthinkable happened
and Ronnie died, Galloway would have much to account
for.
“Have you received any update on Ronnie’s condition?”
“No,” Galloway replied. “All I know is that he was alive
when they put him in the chopper. I’ve heard nothing further.
The baby is fine. Sabra is listed in poor condition,
which is better than I had hoped for. She’s received several
units of blood. Her mother is with her.”
“I haven’t seen Mr. Cole Davison.”
“They let him accompany Ronnie in the helicopter. He
was . . . well, you can imagine.”
They were quiet for a moment, impervious to the activity of the other agents, who were busy with the “mopping
up.” Eventually Galloway signaled her out of her chair and escorted her outside, where the morning was now full
blown.
! 220;Good-! bye, Mr. Galloway.”
“Ms. McCoy?” Having started to walk away, she turned
back. Special Agent Galloway looked slightly ill at ease
with what he was about to say. “This was a terrible ordeal
for you, I’m sure. But I’m glad we had someone in there
who is as level-headed as you. You helped keep everyone
sane and acted with remarkable composure.”
“I’m not remarkable, Mr. Galloway. Bossy maybe,” she
said with a wan smile. “If it hadn’t been for Doc–” She
tilted her head inquisitively. “Did he give you his statement?”
“Sheriff Montez took his.”
He motioned her toward the sheriff, whom she hadn’t
noticed leaning against the side of the van in the shade.
He tipped his wide-brimmed hat and ambled toward her,
but ignored her unspoken question about Doc.
“Our mayor has offered to put you up at the local
motel. It’s not the Ritz,” he warned with a chuckle. “But
you’re welcome to stay as long as you like.”
“Thank you, but I’m returning to Dallas.”
“Not right now you’re not.” Gully had joined them, and
with him was Kip. “We’re going back in the chopper and
deliver this tape to the editor so she can start putting the
piece together.”
“I’ll go too, and send someone back for my car.” He was shaking his head before Tiel finished speaking.
“Not enough room for more than two passengers, and I
gotta get back. No telling what that freak with the rings in
his eyebrow has done to my newsroom. You take the
mayor up on his kind offer. We’ll send the chopper for
you later, along with an intern to drive your car back to
Dallas. Besides, you stink. A shower wouldn’t hurt.”
“You really know how to turn on the charm when you
have to, G! ully.R! 21;
It seemed the matter was settled, and she was too exhausted
to put up much of a fight. They specified a time
and place for her to meet the helicopter, and Sheriff Montez
promised to have her there. Gully and Kip said their
good-byes and hustled off toward the waiting chopper
with the station’s call letters painted on the sides.
Galloway extended his hand. “Good luck to you, Ms.
McCoy.”
“And to you.” She shook hands with him, but when he
would have withdrawn, she detained him. “You said you
were glad it was me who was in there,” she said, nodding
in the direction of the store. “I’m glad it was you out here,
Mr. Galloway.” And she meant it. They’d been very lucky
to have him as the agent in charge of such a delicate situation.
Another might not have handled it with the sensitivity
he had shown. The implied compliment seemed to embarrass him.
“Thank you,” he said briskly, then turned and reentered
the van.
Sheriff Montez retrieved her bags from her car and
placed them in the back seat of his squad car. She
protested his chauffeuring her. “I can drive myself, Sheriff.”
“No need. You’re so tuckered out, I’d be afraid you’d
fall asleep at the wheel. If you’re worried about your car,
I’ll send a deputy over for it. We’ll keep it parked at our office
where we can keep an eye on it.”
Surprisingly, she found it a welcome change to relinquish
control and to not have to make any mind-taxing
decisions. “Thank you.”
It was a short trip to the motel. Six rooms were lined up
along a covered breezeway that provided a hair’s-breadth
of shade. All the doors were painted UT orange.
“No need to check in. You’re the only guest.” Montez
slid from behind the steering wheel and came around t! o
as! sist her out.
He had the room key and used it to open the door. The
air conditioner had already been turned on. The window
unit hummed loudly and one of its internal parts clanked
intermittently, but these were friendly sounds. A vase of
sunflowers and a basket filled with fresh fruit and baked
goods wrapped in pink plastic had been placed on the
room’s one small table. “The Catholic ladies weren’t about to be outdone by
the Baptists,” he told her.
“You’ve all been very kind.”
“Not at all, Ms. McCoy. Weren’t for you, it could’ve
gone a lot worse. None of us wanted Rojo Flats to be put
on the map by something like a massacre.” He touched
the brim of his hat as he backed out, pulling the door
closed behind him. “You want anything, call the desk.
Otherwise nobody’ll bother you. Rest well. I’ll be back for
you later.”
Ordinarily the first thing Tiel did upon entering a room
was switch on the television set. She was a news junkie.
Whether or not she was actually watching the screen, she
was always tuned to a twenty-four-hour news station. She
fell asleep to it, and woke up to it.
Now, she moved past the TV set without even noticing it
and carried her toiletry bag with her into the minuscule
bathroom. The shower was barely large enough to turn
around in, but the water was hot and there was plenty of
it. Standing beneath the steaming spray, she let it pound
against her skull before shampooing. She lathered lavishly
with her imported soap sold exclusively at Neiman’s. She
shaved her legs, avoiding the lacerations on her knees.
She used her hair dryer only long enough to blow out
most of the water, then bent over the sink to brush her teeth.
All of which felt wonderful.
So why did she feel so lousy?
She had just filed the most important story of her c! areer. Ni! ne Live was as good as hers now. Gully had said so.
She should be dancing on the ceiling. Instead her limbs
felt as though they weighed a thousand pounds apiece.
Where was the fizzy high she derived from a good news
story? Her spirit was as flat as three-day-old champagne.
Sleep deprivation. That was it. Once she had napped
for several hours, she would be right as rain. Her old self.
Recharged and ready.
Back in the bedroom, she took a tank top and briefs
from her suitcase and put them on, set her travel alarm
clock, then turned down the bed. The sheets looked soft
and inviting. It occurred to her that her knees and palms
might bleed on them, but she was beyond caring.
When she heard the knock, she took it for another ping
in the air conditioner’s mechanism. But when it was followed
by a second, she moved to the door and pulled it
open.
CHAPTER
16
He stepped inside, closed the door behind him, removed
his sunglasses and hat, and set them on the table
beside the untouched basket of goodies the ladies from the Catholic church had prepared for her.
He smelled of sunshine and soap; he was freshly shaved.
He had on clean but well-worn Levi’s and a plain white
shirt, a western tooled-leather belt, and cowboy boots.
If a team of mustangs had been pulling Tiel in the opposite
direction, they couldn’t have stopped her from
throwing herself against him. Or maybe he reached for
her. Afterward, she didn’t recall who moved first. And anyway,
who initiated it was unimportant.
All that mattered was that he drew her into an all-encompassing
embrace. Her body was flush with his, and
they held each other tightly. Her brimming tears flowed
freely and were absorbed by the cloth of his shirt. He covered
the back of her head with his wide hand and pressed
her face into his chest to cushion the sobs that issued from
her in sh! ort, nois! y bursts..
“Did he die? Are you here to tell me that Ronnie is
dead?”
“No, that’s not why I’m here. I don’t know any news
about Ronnie.”
“I guess that’s good.”
“I guess.”
“I couldn’t believe it, Doc. That sound. That horrible,
deafening sound. Then to see him lying there so still,
amidst all that glass and blood. More blood.”
“Shh.” Comforting words were whispered across her hairline,
along her temple. Then the words ceased, and only his
breath, his lips, drifted over her brow, touching her damp
eyelids. Tiel raised her head and looked at him through
tearful eyes. Reaching up to touch his face, she made a
small sound of want, which he echoed.
A heartbeat later, his lips were on hers. Insistent and
hungry, they rubbed hers apart. Their tongues flirted,
stroked, before his dominated. It claimed and explored
her mouth. Tiel’s hands met at the back of his neck. She
threaded her fingers up through his hair and submitted
to his kiss, which was symbolically, blatantly sexual.
As though boosted by a powerful stimulant, her senses
quickened. Each sensory receptor was sharpened to a fine
point. She had never felt more alive, yet she was also a little
afraid. Like a child at her first carnival, she was dazzled
and dazed by the sensual onslaught, enthralled by it, overwhelmed
by it, apprehensive of it, and yet eager to experience
it.
His belt buckle gouged her tummy, but it wasn’t an unpleasant
sensation. The cold metal turned warm against
the strip of bare skin between the hem of her tank top and
her bikini line. Strong and confident, his hands settled on
her lower back and pulled her closer.
He kissed his way down her throat. She angled her head to one side, and he feathered her earlobe with his breath,
his tongue. Following the ! course of ! her head, she turned
her body slowly, enabling him to kiss the side of her neck,
her shoulder. Lifting her hair, he kissed her nape. The
touch of his mouth there sent shivers of delight up her
spine.
With her back to him now, she leaned against his wide
chest while his hands smoothed over her front. He
pressed her breasts beneath his palms, cupped them, reshaped
them, before his hands continued down to her rib
cage–which he was almost able to encase. At her hipbones,
his hands rested.
Tingling with arousal, her movements against him were
feline, shameless, inviting. He responded by slipping his
hand into the front of her briefs, down, down deep into
the vee of her thighs.
When he found her center, she murmured his name,
turned her head, and sought his lips with hers.
They kissed while his fingers continued to caress, separate,
penetrate. She came up on tiptoes, her body arching
outward, straining toward his hand, until her shoulder
blades were propped against his collarbone and her head
was grinding into his shoulder.
She placed her hand over his, urging his fingers higher.
But that still wasn’t good enough. She wanted to be close
to him. As close as she could be … and she wasn’t nearly close enough.
Turning suddenly, she molded herself to his front. The
sound that rumbled from his chest was low, animalistic,
arousing. He palmed her bottom and lifted her against his
middle. They fit like two pieces of a puzzle. Perfectly.
Snugly. Breathtakingly. Tiel raised one leg and rested it on
his hip. As they kissed lustily, he stroked the underside of
her thigh.
Then he carried her to the bed. It was only a distance of
a few steps, but to Tiel it seemed to take forever before she
felt him stretched out alongside her. She readjusted her
body beneath his weight.
He pushed his fingers into her hair and held it off h! er
f! ace. His eyes, practically liquid with desire, seemed to
pour over her features. “I don’t know what you like.” His
voice was raspy. Even more so than usual. She wished it
were tangible so she could feel it abrading her skin like
the sand that had blown across her earlier.
Her fingertip traced the shape of his eyebrow, followed
the length of his straight, narrow nose, outlined his lips. “I
like you.”
“What do you want me to do?”
For one dreadful moment, she feared she would lapse
into another crying jag. Emotion made her chest and
throat tight, but she managed to contain it. “Convince me I’m alive, Doc.”
He began by removing her tank top and lowering his
mouth to her breasts. He kissed them in turn, but lightly,
teasingly, and he continued sipping at them until they
were ready, and then he applied his tongue. Watching this
was an incredible turn-on. She began to feel increasingly
restless and hot. Pressure gathered in the lower part of
her body.
Then his lips closed around her hard nipple. The silky
heat, the tugging motion of his mouth, felt erotic and empowering.
She couldn’t keep her hips and legs still, and
when her knee nudged his crotch, then stayed to prod
lightly the fullness there, he grunted with a mix of pleasure
and pain.
Suddenly he was off the bed. He undressed hastily. His
chest had just the right amount of hair. His skin was taut.
Muscles were well defined, but not grotesquely so. His
belly was flat. His penis jutted aggressively from the juncture
of tapering hips and strong thighs.
Just as he placed one knee on the bed, Tiel sat up. Her
fingertips followed the trail of silky hair that bisected his
belly down to the fan of denser growth. The shaft was
warm, hard, alive; the tip velvety in texture. Without a single
nod toward shyness, he allowed her to study! him.
Then she wrapped her arms around his hips and
hugged him close, so that her head was pressed to his lower chest and his sex was nestled between her breasts. It
felt delicious.
But after a moment, he groaned, “Tiel …”
Gently he eased her back onto the bed. He leaned over
her and removed her underpants. He paused for a moment,
his eyes focused on her with frank interest. Then he
bent down and kissed her just above the line of her pubic
hair. It was a lazy, sexy, wet kiss that prompted her to reach
for him with unabashed longing.
He stretched out on top of her. Her thighs parted naturally.
He slid his arms beneath her back and hugged her
to him.
And then he entered her.
They were twined together naked, without even the
benefit of the bedsheet to cover them. The air conditioner
was blasting cold air into the small room, but their
skin was radiating heat.
Tiel actually felt feverish. She lay sprawled atop him,
her head on his chest, one arm flung over his waist, one
knee securely lodged in his crotch. He was breathing
evenly and contentedly, idly stroking her hair.
“I thought I had hurt you.”
“Hurt me?” she mumbled.
“You cried out.” Yes. At his initial thrust. She remembered now. She
turned her head into his chest and nuzzled him. “Because
it felt so good.”
His arms tightened around her. “To me too. That thing
you do–”
“What thing?”
“That thing.”
“I don’t do a thing.”
He opened his eyes and smiled. “Yeah you do.”
“I do?”
“Hmm. And it’s bloody great.”
Blushing, she returned her cheek to his chest. “Well,
thanks.”
“The pleasure was mine.”
“I’m exhausted.”
“So am I.”
“But I don’t wan! t to slee! p.”
“Me either.”
Several moments passed, a time of sweet reflection.
Eventually Tiel stacked her hands on his sternum and
propped her chin on them. “Doc?”
“Hmm.”
“Are you asleep? Is it all right if I ask you something?”
“Go ahead.”
“What are we doing?”
He opened only one eye to look at her. “Do you want the scientific nomenclature, the polite phraseology, or will
twenty-first-century vernacular do?”
She frowned at his teasing. “I meant–”
“I know what you meant.” The second eye came open,
and he tilted his head on the pillow to look at her from a
better angle. ‘Just what you said earlier, Tiel. We’re con
vincing each other that we’re alive. It’s not all that uncommon
for people to want sex after a life-threatening experience.
Or after any reminder of their mortality, a
funeral for instance. Sex is the quintessential affirmation
that you’re alive.”
“Really? Well that’s the most fan-fucking-tastic assertion
of the survival instinct I’ve ever experienced.” He chuckled.
But Tiel grew quiet, introspective. She blew softly
against the chest hairs brushing her lips. “Is that all it
was?”
He placed his finger beneath her chin and lifted it until
she was looking at him again. “Anything between us would
be complicated, Tiel.”
“Are you still in love with Shari?”
“I love the good memories of her. I also hate the painful
ones. But, if you’re suggesting that I’m fixated on her
ghost, let me assure you that I’m not. My relationship with
her–good, bad, or indifferent–wouldn’t prevent me from having another.”
“You’d marry again?”
“I’d want to. If I loved the woman, ! I would w! ant to make
a life together, and to me that means marriage.” After a
moment, he asked, “What about your memories of John
Malone?”
“Like yours, bittersweet. We had almost a fairy-tale romance.
Probably married too soon, aglow with passion,
before we really knew one another. If he hadn’t died, who
knows? Career paths might eventually have led us in different
and irreconcilable directions.”
“As it is, he’ll remain in your memory as the martyred
Prince Charming.”
“No, Doc. My memory isn’t clinging to a flawless ghost
either.”
“What about that Joe?”
“That Joe is married,” she reminded him.
“But if he weren’t?”
She thought about Joseph Marcus a moment, then
shook her head. “We probably would have had a thing
going for a while, and then it would have fizzled. He was a
diversion, not an affair of the heart. Nothing serious, I assure
you. I can barely remember him.”
She levered herself up and combed her hands down his
chest. “You, on the other hand, I’ll remember. You look
exactly as I imagined you would.” “You imagined me naked?”
“I confess.”
“When?”
“When you first came into the store, I think. In the back
of my mind, I was thinking, ‘Whoa. He’s yummy.’ “
“I’m yummy?”
“Very yummy.”
“Why, thank you, ma’am,” he said, speaking in an exaggerated
drawl. Eyes moving to her breasts, he added,
“You’re right tasty-looking yourself.”
“Oh, I’ll bet you say that to all the girls who straddle
your lap.”
Smiling, he reached for a strand of her hair and rubbed
it between his fingers. Gradually his smile relaxed, and
when he spoke, his tone was more seriou! s.
&! #8220;We’ve been through a lot together, Tiel. A birth. A
near-death. Tense hours of not knowing how it was going
to play out. Trauma like that does something to people. It
binds them.”
His words echoed her earlier thoughts on the subject.
But it wasn’t very flattering that he ascribed their attraction
solely to trauma, or that he could mitigate carnal desire
with such a pragmatic, scientific explanation.
What if they’d met at a cocktail party last night? There
would have been no sparks, no heat, and they wouldn’t be in bed together now. Essentially that’s what he was saying.
If this meant nothing more to him than illustrating a psychological
phenomenon, there was no sense in prolonging
the inevitable goodbye.
Congratulations, Doc. You ‘re my first–and probably last
one-night stand. One-morning stand.
She moved to get up, but he used her motion to pull
her fully atop him, so that they were belly to belly and her
legs were lying between his.
“In spite of the danger to us–to everyone inside the
store–I had periodic and incredibly vivid fantasies of
this.”
She found enough voice to say, “Of this?”
His hands smoothed down her back, over her ass, and
as far as they could reach along the backs of her thighs.
“Of you.”
He levered up his shoulders in order to kiss her. At first
the kiss was slow and methodical, his tongue leisurely
stroking her mouth while his hands continued sliding up
and down her back from shoulders to thighs.
She felt like purring. In fact she did. When he felt the
vibration of it, the kiss intensified. His hands covered her
bottom and held her tightly against his erection. Provocatively,
she rocked against it. He hissed a swear word, making
it sound erotic. He slid his hands down the backs of
her thighs and separated them. Then ! he was in! side her again, a full, heavy, desired pressure.
Filling more than her body. Filling an unacknowledged
need she’d had for a very long time. Giving her
more than immense pleasure. Giving her a sense of fulfillment
and purpose that even her finest work had failed to
provide.
They moved in perfect rhythm. She couldn’t get as
deeply into him as she wanted, and he must have felt the
same. Because when he came, he held her possessively in
place, his fingers making deep impressions in her flesh.
She burrowed her face in the hollow beneath his shoulder
and pinched the flesh there between her teeth.
It was a long, slow, sweet climax. The aftermath was as
long, slow, and sweet.
Tiel was so totally relaxed, replete, that it felt as though
she had melted and become a part of him. She couldn’t
distinguish her skin from his. She didn’t want to. She
didn’t even move when he pulled the sheet and blanket
up over them. She fell asleep there, with him still
sheathed in her softness, her ear resting on his heart.
“Tiel?”
“Hmm?”
“It’s your alarm.”
She muttered grumpily and pushed her hands deeper into the warmth of his armpits.
“You’ve got to get up. The chopper’s coming back for
you, remember?”
She did. But she didn’t want to. She wanted to stay exactly
where she was for at least the next ten years. It would
take her that long to catch up on the sleep she had lost
last night. It would take her that long to get enough of
Doc.
“Come on. Up.” He gave her fanny an affectionate
smack. “Make yourself presentable before Sheriff Montez
gets here.”
Groaning, she rolled off him. Around a huge yawn, she
asked, “How’d you know our arrangements?”
“He told me. That’s how I knew where to find you.” She!
gav! e him a misty look and he said, “Yes, he knew I wanted
to know. Is that what you wanted to hear?”
“Yes.”
“He and I are buddies. Play poker occasionally. He
knows my story, why I moved out here, but he’s good at
keeping confidences.”
“Even from the FBI.”
“He asked if he could take my statement, and Galloway
agreed. He had his hands full.” He threw his legs over the
side of the bed. “Mind if I use the bathroom first? I’ll be
quick.”
“Be my guest.” In the process of bending down to pick up his boxers,
he caught her with her hands far above her head, back
arched, stretching lazily. He sat down on the edge of the
bed, his eyes fixed on her breasts. He fondled the raised
tip. “Maybe I don’t want you to get in that chopper.”
“Ask me not to and maybe I won’t.”
“You would.”
“I have to,” she said ruefully.
Sighing, he withdrew his hands. “Yeah.” He got up and
went into the bathroom.
“Maybe,” Tiel whispered to herself, “I could convince
you to come with me.”
She removed a bra and panties set from her suitcase,
put them on, and was just about to step into a pair of
slacks when she sensed Doc watching her.
She turned, ready with a suggestive smile and a saucy
remark about peeping Toms. But his expression didn’t invite
either. In fact, he was practically bristling with rage.
Mystified, her lips parted to ask what the matter was
when he held out his hand. Lying in his palm was the
audio tape recorder. It had been in the pocket of her
slacks, which she’d left along with her other dirty clothes
in a pile on the commode lid. He’d moved them, found
the recorder.
Her expression must have been a dead giveaway of her guilt because with a vicious p! unch of h! is thumb, he depressed
the Play button and his voice cut across the silence. “For instance, the hospital buckled beneath the weight of
bad publicity. Bad publicity generated and nurtured by people like
you.”
In a like manner, he stopped the tape and threw the
recorder down onto the bed. “Take it.” Looking scornfully
at the tangled bed linens, he added, “You earned it.”
“Doc, listen. I–”
“You got what you were after. A good story.” Pushing
her aside, he picked up his jeans and angrily thrust his
legs into them.
“Will you stop with the righteous indignation and listen?”
He flung his hand toward the incriminating recorder.
“I’ve heard enough. Did you get everything? All the juicy
details of my personal life? I’m surprised you’ve tarried
this long. I’d've thought you’d jog back to Dallas if necessary
just so you could start assembling all the good material
you’ve got on me.”
He buttoned the fly of his jeans and yanked his shirt off
the floor. “Oh, no, wait. You wanted to get fucked first.
After Joe what’s-his-name turned out to be a dud, your
ego needed reinforcing.”
The insult smarted and she reacted to it by striking
back. “Who came to whose room? I didn’t track you down.
You came here, remember?” He cursed when he couldn’t find but one sock. He
shoved his foot into his boot without it.
“Nor is it my fault that you’re a good story,” she
shouted.
“I don’t want to be a story. I never did.”
“Too bad, Doc. You are. You simply are. Once notori
ous, you’re now a hero. You saved lives last night. Do you
think that’ll go unnoticed? Those kids and their parents
are going to talk about ‘Doc.’ So are the other hostages.
Any ! reporter ! worth his paycheck is going to be clamoring
for the lowdown. Even your friend Montez won’t be able
to shield you from the publicity. You would’ve made news
no matter what. But since ‘Doc’ is the reclusive Dr.
Bradley Stanwick, you’re big news. Huge news.”
He gestured toward the recorder again. “But you’ve got
them all beat, don’t you? Is there another recorder under the bed? Were you hoping to get titillating pillow talk?”
“Go to hell.”
“I wouldn’t put anything past you.”
“I was doing my job.”
“And here I thought I was speaking confidentially. But
you’re going to use it, aren’t you? The stuff I thought I was
confiding to you?”
“You’re damn right I am!”
His jaw flexed with rage. He glared at her for several
seconds, then marched toward the door. Tiel barged after him, grabbed his arm, and pulled him around. “It could
be the best thing that ever happened to you.”
He yanked his arm free of her grasp. “I fail to see that.”
“It could force you to face up to the fact that you were
wrong to run away. Last. . . last night,” she said, stuttering
in her haste to make her point before he stormed out.
“You told Ronnie that he couldn’t run away from his problems.
That running from them was no solution. But isn’t
that exactly what you did?
“You moved out here and buried your head in this West
Texas sand, refusing to accept what you know to be true.
That you’re a gifted healer. That you could make a difference.
That you were making a difference. For patients and
families facing a death sentence, you were granting reprieves.
God knows what you could do in the future.
“But because of your pride, and anger, and disillusionment
with your colleagues, you aban! doned it.! You threw
out the baby with the bathwater. If this story draws you
back into the limelight, if there’s a chance it will motivate
you to return to your practice, then I’ll be damned before
I’ll apologize for it.”
He turned his back on her and opened the door.
“Doc?” she cried.
But all he said was, “Your ride is here.”
CHAPTER 17 Tiel’s cubicle in the newsroom was a disaster area. It
usually was, but more so now than usual. She had received
hundreds of notes, cards, and letters from colleagues and
viewers, complimenting her excellent coverage of the
Davison-Dendy story and commending her for the heroic
role she’d played in it. Many were yet to be opened. They
had been piled into wobbly, uneven stacks.
There weren’t enough surfaces to accommodate the
number of floral arrangements delivered over the past
week, so she had distributed them to offices and conference
areas throughout the building.
Vern and Gladys had sent her a mail-order cheesecake
that would have fed five thousand. The newsroom staff
had gorged themselves, and there was still more than half
left.
As anticipated, she had been the center of attention,
and not only on a local level. She had been interviewed by
reporters from global news operations, including CNN
and Bloomberg. Because of the compelling human ele ment, the love story, the emergency birth of the baby, and
the dramatic denouement, the story had piqued the interest
of TV audiences all over the world.
She’d been asked by a local car dealership to do their
commercials, an offer she declined. National women’s
magazines were proposing feature articles on everything
from her secrets of success to the decor of her house. She was the undeclared Woman of the Week.
And she had never been more miserable.
She was making a futile stab at clearing off! her desk!
when Gully joined her. “Hey, kid.”
“I took the rest of the cheesecake to the cafeteria and
left it there on a first come, first served basis.”
“I got the last piece.”
“Your arteries will never forgive me.”
“Have I told you what a great job you did?”
“It’s always nice to hear.”
“Great job.”
“Thanks. But it’s left me drained. I’m tired.”
“You look it. In fact you look like hammered shit.” She
tossed him a dirty glance over her shoulder. “Just calling it
like I see it.”
“Didn’t your mother ever tell you that some things are
better left unsaid?”
“What’s the matter with you?”
“I told you, Gully, I’m–”
“You’re not just tired. I know tired, and this isn’t tired.
You should be lit up like a Christmas tree. You’re not your
normal, hyperactive, supercharged self. Is it Linda
Harper? Are you sulking because she got the jump on you
and stole some of your thunder?”
“No.” She methodically ripped open another envelope and read the congratulatory note inside. I love your reports
on the TV. You’re my roll [sic] model. I want to be just like you
when I grow up. I like your hair too.
Gully said, “I can’t believe you didn’t recognize the Doc
of standoff fame as Dr. Bradley Stanwick.”
“Hmm.”
Gully continued, undaunted in spite of her seeming
disinterest. “Let me put it another way. I don’t believe you
didn’t recognize him as Dr. Bradley Stanwick.”
The change in Gully’s tone of voice was unmistakable,
and there was no way to avoid addressing it. She laid down
the note from the girl who identified herself as Kimberly,
a fifth-grader, and slowly swivele! d her cha! ir around to face
Gully.
He looked down at her for a long moment. Her eyes
never wavered. Neither said anything.
Finally, he dragged his hand down his face, the sagging
skin stretching like a rubber Halloween mask. “I suppose
you had your reasons for protecting his identity.”
“He asked me not to.”
“Oh.” He slapped his forehead with his palm. “Of
course! What’s wrong with me? The subject of the story
said, `I don’t want to be on TV,’ so, naturally, you omitted
an important element of the story.”
“It didn’t cost your news operation anything, Gully.”
Her mood testy, she stood up and began tossing personal items into her bag in preparation of leaving. “Linda got it.
So what are you complaining about?”
“Was I complaining? Did you hear me complaining?”
“It sounded like complaining.”
“I’m just curious as to why my ace reporter wimped out
on me.”
“I didn’t–”
“You wimped! Big-time. I want to know why.”
She spun around to confront him. “Because it got…”
She stopped shouting, drew herself up, took a deep
breath, and ended on a much softer note. “Complicated.”
“Complicated.”
“Complicated.” She reached around him for her suit
jacket, lifted it off the wall hook, and pulled it on, avoiding
his incisive eyes. “It’s sort of like Deep Throat.”
“It’s nothing like Deep Throat, who was a source.
Bradley Stanwick was an active player. Subject matter. Fair
game.”
“That’s a distinction we should debate sometime. Some
other time. When I’m not about to leave for vacation.”
“So you’re still going?” He fell into step behind her as
she left the cubicle and began w! ending he! r way through
the newsroom toward the rear of the building.
“I need the time away more than ever. You approved my
request for days off.” “I know,” he said querulously. “But I’ve had second
thoughts. You know what I was thinking? I was thinking
that you should produce a pilot Nine Live show. This
cancer-doctor-cum-cowboy would be a dynamite first
guest. Get him to talk about the investigation into his
wife’s death. What’s his viewpoint on euthanasia? Did he euthanize her?”
“He was motivated to, but he didn’t.”
“See? We’ve got a provocative dialogue going already.
You could segue into his participation in the standoff. It’d
be great! We could show this pilot show to the suits upstairs.
Maybe air it as a special report one night following
the news. It’d be your ticket to the Nine Live hostess spot.”
“Don’t hold your breath, Gully.” She pushed open the
heavy exit door leading to the employee parking lot. The
pavement was as hot as a griddle.
“How come?” He followed her out. “This is what you’ve
wanted, Tiel. What you’ve worked for. You’d better grab it,
or it could still be snatched away from you. They could
give the show to Linda, especially if they ever find out you
knew about Stanwick all along. Postpone this trip until
this is settled.”
“And then I won’t be able to leave because of all the
production meetings.” She shook her head. “Uh-uh,
Gully. I’m going.”
“I don’t get you. Is it PMS, or what?”
Refusing to take umbrage, she smiled. “I’m tired of the dance, Gully. I’m weary of the constant jockeying for position,
and the paranoia it breeds. Management knows what
I can do. They’re aware of my popularity with viewers, and it&#! 8217;s higher now than it’s ever been. They’ve got years of my
work, ratings, and awards to remind them that I’m the
best choice for that job.”
She opened her car door and tossed her bag inside.
“They’ll be hearing from my agent while I’m away. I’m
making Nine Live a condition of my contract. I don’t get
the show, they don’t get a renewal. And I’ve received at
least a hundred other offers this week to back up that
mandate.”
She leaned forward and kissed his cheek, which had
gone flabby with astonishment. “I love you, Gully. I love
my work. But it’s work; it’s no longer my life.”
She made one stop on her way out of town–at a Dumpster
behind a supermarket. She tossed two things into it.
One was an audiocassette recording. The other was the
two-hour videotape from Gladys and Vern’s camcorder.
Tiel cursed the hopelessly snarled fishing line.
“Dammit!”
“They aren’t biting?”
Thinking she was alone, she jumped, executing a quick
turn at the same time. Her knees went weak at the sight of him. He was leaning negligently against a tree trunk, his
tall, lean form and cowboy garb in harmony with the
rugged landscape.
“I didn’t know you could fish,” he remarked.
He’d come all this way to talk about fishing? Okay. “Obviously
I can’t.” She held out the tangled line and
frowned. “But since that’s what one is supposed to do
when there’s a clear mountain stream running behind
one’s vacation condo . . . Doc, what are you doing here?”
“Good news about Ronnie, huh?”
Ronnie Davison had been upgraded from critical to
good condition. If he continued to improve, he would be
released to return home within a few days. “Very good
news. About Sab! ra too. S! he’s already back in Fort Worth.
I talked to her last night by phone. She and her mother
are going to rear Katherine. Ronnie will have unlimited
visitation, but they’ve decided to postpone getting married
for a couple of years. Regardless of the outcome of
his legal entanglements, they’ve agreed to wait and see if
the relationship can stand the test of time.”
“Smart kids. If it’s right, it’ll happen.”
“That’s their thinking.”
“Well, Dendy can be glad he won’t be charged with
murder.”
“No, but dozens of witnesses saw him attempt it. I hope
they throw the book at him.” “I second that motion. He nearly cost several lives.”
The conversation flagged after that. The silence was
filled by the chirping of birds and the incessant, friendly
gurgle of the stream. When the pressure inside Tiel’s
chest reached the cracking point, she asked again, “What
are you doing here?”
“I got a cheesecake from Vern and Gladys.”
“So did I.”
“Huge.”
“Humongous.”
Feeling silly holding the casting rod, she laid it at her
feet, but immediately wished she hadn’t. Now she had
nothing to do with her hands, which suddenly seemed excessively
large and conspicuous. She slid them into the
rear pockets of her jeans, palms out. “It’s a beautiful
place, isn’t it?”
“Sure is.”
“When did you arrive?”
“About an hour ago.”
“Oh.”
Then, miserably, “Doc, what are you doing here?”
“I came to thank you.”
She lowered her head and looked down at her feet. Her
sneakers had sunk sole-deep into the mud of the creek
bed. “Don’t. Thank me, I mean. I couldn’t use the recording. I had a video, too! . From Gl! adys’s camcorder. The
quality of the tape wasn’t very good, but no other reporter
in the world had it.”
She took a deep breath, glanced up at him, then back
down. “But you were on the tape. Recognizable. And I
didn’t want to exploit you after . . . after what happened
in the motel. It was personal then. I couldn’t exploit you
without exploiting part of myself too. So I threw them
away. No one ever saw or heard them.”
“Hmm. Well, that’s not what I was thanking you for.”
Her head sprang up. “Huh?”
“I saw your stories about the standoff, and they were
great. I mean that. Outstanding broadcast journalism. You
deserve all the accolades you received. And I appreciate
your keeping our private conversations private. You were
right about the exposure. It was bound to happen with or
without help from you. I see that now.”
For once in her life, she had nothing to say.
“The reason I came to thank you is for making me take
a hard look at myself. My life. How wasteful it’s been. After
Shari died and all that followed, I needed solitude, time
and space to think things through, reassess. That used
up . . . say six months. The rest of the time I’ve been doing
exactly what you said, hiding. Punishing myself. Taking
the coward’s way out.”
The pressure building inside her now wasn’t tension, it was emotion. Maybe love. Okay, love. She wanted to go to
him, hold him, but she wanted to hear what he had to say.
Furthermore, he needed to say it.
“I’m going back. I spent the past week in Dallas talking
to some doctors and researchers, newcomers who share
my aggressive approach to fighting this thing, doctors who
are tired of having to go through umpteen committees
and legal counsels to get approval of a new treatment
when the patient is ! suffering! and all other options have
been exhausted. We’d like to take medicine out of the
hands of lawyers and bureaucrats and return it to the doctors.
So, we’re forming a group, pooling our resources
and specialities–” He looked hard at her. “Are you crying?”
“The sun’s in my eyes.”
“Oh. Well. That’s what I came to tell you.”
Economically, efficiently, in as business-like a manner as
she could, she rubbed the tears from her eyes. “You didn’t
have to travel all this way. You could have E-mailed me, or
called.”
“That would have been cowardly too. I needed to say
this in person, face-to-face.”
“How’d you know where to find me?”
“I went to the TV station. Talked to Gully, who also
asked me to deliver a message.” A small bob of her head
indicated that she was listening. “He said, Tell her I ain’t dense. I just figured out the meaning of complicated.’
Does that make sense?”
She laughed. “Yes.”
“Care to explain?”
“Maybe later. If you’re staying.”
“If you don’t mind my company.”
“I think I can tolerate it.”
He returned her wide smile, but his faltered, and his
expression turned serious again. “We’re both pretty intense
when it comes to our work, Tiel.”
“Which I believe is part of the attraction.”
“It won’t be easy.”
“Nothing worthwhile is.”
“We don’t know where it will lead.”
“But we know where we hope it will. We also know it will
lead to nowhere if we don’t give it a try.”
“I loved my wife, Tiel, and love can hurt.”
“Not being loved hurts worse. Maybe we can find a way
to love each other without it hurting.”! ;
&#! 8220;God, I want to touch you.”
“Doc,” she murmured. Then she laughed. “Bradley?
Brad? How do I call you?”
“A simple ‘Come here’ will do for now.”
Then he closed the distance separating them.


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