Agent out of Time (The Agents for Good) (21 page)

Read Agent out of Time (The Agents for Good) Online

Authors: Guy Stanton III

Tags: #Romance Thriller

BOOK: Agent out of Time (The Agents for Good)
3.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I let my hand brush over hers again, “Thank you for sharing. I know that was difficult.”

She shook her head no, “Not really, sharing with you isn’t difficult at all for some reason. I have many regrets that I live with. One of them is that I didn’t marry a man more like you than the one that I did.”

We met each other’s eyes briefly and then tacitly we went back to finishing up the dishes.

“So now that I’ve shared with you one of my deep dark catharsis of soul experiences perhaps you’d like to share one of yours secret agent man?”

I glanced over to her not able to keep from smiling cheekily, “I have many such moments, but I prefer to keep them secret and listen to you expose yours.”

She swatted at me, with a spatula, enough to sting and I chuckled as she accused teasingly, “You jerk! Egg me on into bearing my soul and share nothing of yourself in return!”

 

We finished the dishes and I glanced at the broken shards of the dish Deshavi had broken.

“Do they still sell the dish set that you always wanted?”

The corner of Ella’s mouth twitched slowly into a smile and in a low voice she said pointing across the kitchen at an elaborate cupboard full of dishes, “I bought them twelve years ago.”

The broken dish was a match for those in the cabinet. I started to say something, but she squeezed my arm, “Shhhh! Don’t tell her!”

I looked at her, it was the little things that told you the most about what someone was made of.

“What?” She asked noticing my look, but I didn’t answer.

I watched a gleam come into her eyes then, “I never did buy the serving platters to go with the dishes though. I suppose they still make them.”

“Want to find out?”

She smiled radiantly up at me showing off her dimples, “I’ll get my coat.”

She started to leave, but I reached out and brought her closer to me. She had time to back out if she wanted, but in the end it was her that closed the distance between our lips.

 

We left the kitchen to the discovery of an unpleasant surprise. Three police cars with lights flashing were pulled up outside. I stepped outside, as a group of officers approached Deshavi and Trent on the porch.

“Are you Deshavi Longtree?” One officer asked.

“Yes.” Deshavi answered in a small voice.

“Then it is my regret to inform you that it is my duty to place you under arrest for the crime of theft.”

Trent started forward when they put the handcuffs on, but I stopped him with a strong grip on his arm. In many ways we had become deeply bonded as friends. Surviving Siberia together can do that. He listened to the negative shake of my head and the intenseness of my gaze and let them lead Deshavi away. We watched the cars disappear down the street, until they were out of sight.

 

Trent shook off my grasp and turned to face me hotly, “If you think I rescued her from a Siberian death camp only to watch her rot in our joke of a penitentiary system you’re wrong!”

“No one is suggesting that!” I replied in kind. I went on to explain, “This is another whole ballgame, with a whole different set of rules to play by! We can’t just write our own way here Trent, as we did in Siberia!”

Ella grasped a hold of her son, “Listen to him Trent!”

Trent looked from her to me the muscles of his face working hard, “You have a plan in mind?” He asked in a measured tone.

“I have to make a phone call.”

I pulled a cell phone free of my pocket and dialed the number I was beginning to know by heart.

“Chantry its Shalako. I need to redeem my last favor.”

There was a pause on the other end of the line before Chantry asked, “Not Siberia again I hope?”

“No something more local this time.”

“I’m having my pilot redirect even now. I’ll be there in a few hours.”

“Thank you Chantry.”

“Don’t mention it.”

 

 

Chapter Twenty One

Love Letters

I stared through the glass at Deshavi, “Are they treating you all right?”

She nodded, “Why hasn’t Trent come?” She asked forlornly.

I sat forward, “I told him not to and for the moment he’s listening. He’s on the thin edge of reason right now and I don’t want to make the situation worse by him losing his temper and going off on a guard or something.”

She nodded understanding.

“He is going to write you letters. One for every day. You should start getting them soon. Deshavi I need to ask you something. The theft charges are they all true?”

“Yes!” She responded miserably.

“All right I need you to do something brave for me. I need you to plead guilty to all charges. Don’t try to plea bargain or cop a deal of any kind.”

She nodded, “Okay.” She said, as she began to cry.

“Grandpa?”

“Yes honey?”

“I can’t do this! I can’t survive in here!”

I placed my hand on the glass and she reached out to line hers up with mine.

“Do you trust me?”

“You know I do grandpa!”

“Then you know it’s true, when I tell you that there’s no way I’m going to let you stay in here, for long.”

She nodded.

“It might take a little while, but have faith and be strong. Some prayers wouldn’t hurt either okay?”

“Okay.”

“All right I have work to do to get you out of here.”

I left her then looking hopeful, but there were many hurdles yet to cross in getting her out of jail legally. Two weeks later she pleaded guilty to all charges and was sentenced to thirty years, with the possible chance of parole in ten.

 

Three months and seven days later

Deshavi sat on the edge of her bunk reading yesterday’s letter, as a soft smile played about on her face. Her cellmate on the top bunk groaned loudly, “Reading another of those mushy letters for the umpteenth time! I’ve had so much exposure to love in the last three months that I could puke for a month full of Sundays!”

Deshavi commented dryly never looking up from her letter, “I’ve never noticed you passing up an opportunity to read one that I’ve given you.”

“There’s precious little else to do.” Groused her cell companion grumpily.

 

Deshavi was grateful beyond words could express for her fellow prisoner. They’d come in to the prison at the same time together. One week into their stay they’d been cornered by a group of butch’s in the shower area. The four butch’s had hit the deck of the shower stall in varying forms of broken manglement so quickly that Deshavi hadn’t even gotten a punch in. Since then neither of them had been bothered in the slightest by guard or inmate alike.

The mail came and went, but there was no letter for her, which was strange as they had been coming faithfully every day. Had Trent given up on her?

“I thought I might be a sufficient substitute for a letter today.” I said softly.

Deshavi jumped up off her bunk so hard she hit her head off the top bunk.

Clutching at her head she came quickly to the bars and in a harsh whisper asked, “Grandpa you’re not here to break me out are you?”

I glanced to the side at the dubiously smiling prison guardswoman, “No, actually I thought it would be for the best if we just walked out.”

The guard stepped forward still smiling and unlocked the door.

“Well, as things turn out all these various pieces of stolen jewelry just happened to turn up and be returned to their owners plus some monetary compensation for their troubles. Now everyone is very happy and the governor after a quite substantial campaign donation thought he should cap the whole thing off with a full pardon. You’re now free to go so to speak. Just head along with this kind woman and she’ll take you through processing.”

Deshavi headed off down the hall with the guard looking very much in a state of shock, as she continually glanced back at me. When she was gone I stepped into the cell.

 

“Thank you Maria Christina for keeping her safe! You have a personal favor from me whenever you should require it.”

Maria shrugged and smiled, “Chantry doesn’t usually ask for much, but I have to admit that agreeing to this little extended vacation stay was getting old fast.”

“I know what you mean. In a few hours the warden will transfer you and you’ll be free again by nightfall. I really wish you’d let me pay you something for your time.”

“You know we agents don’t work for money. What we agents have need of is more than supplied by the Agency. I have no need of your money and in a way your favor is payment enough. A favor from a fellow agent, retired or not is in its way a priceless commodity.”

Maria gracefully got off the bunk and moved throughout the cell collecting up letters, “Here take these with you. She’ll want to have them to look back on some day.”

I thanked her and handed her a package in return. “From Chantry, with his regards, to help sweeten the remaining hours of your restful vacation stay.”

She snatched the package from my fingers, “Is this chocolate?”

Chantry had warned me about her sweet tooth and I chuckled, as she tore the package open, “I believe it’s your favorite kind too.”

Maria groaned and I shook my head, as I stepped back and swung the door shut. I had started away when she came to the bars, “Chantry told me something about you.”

I looked back into the vast depths of her intriguing black eyes, “Oh, what?”

“He said you saved the world once.”

“Chantry’s been known to exaggerate too.”

“I’ve never known a man that exaggerates less than Chantry does. He tells it just like it is. Tell me how does doing what you did make you feel?”

“What’s important Maria is not what you feel upon accomplishing something truly noteworthy, but rather remaining the same character driven person that you were to do the deed is what is important. That way you can do something noteworthy again, if life calls upon it. To live in just the moment of one accomplishment is to reach a peak, where you’ll never be as good, as you were before.”

She smiled, as if to herself, “Maybe someday I’ll learn to be humble so I can save the world like you did.”

“Be careful about what you wish for Maria.” I said knowingly.

She smirked slightly, “Learning to be humble or saving the world?”

“Both.” I responded with before heading off down the corridor of cells. She would learn.

 

I stood beside Deshavi, as they checked back her things to her. The woman behind the counter set down a ring on the counter and gave a soft whistle.

Deshavi stared at the ring in shock and turned to me, “But my ring was taken before I was sent to Siberia!”

I picked the pretty diamond ring up and slid it onto her finger, which had mended well from being broken, “Fancy that, I guess someone wanted you to have it back.”

She stared at the ring for a moment and then about knocked me over with her forceful hug. “Thank you grandpa for everything!”

The woman behind the counter smiled at me broadly.

“Come on don’t you want to get out of here?”

“Yes!”

 

As the last barred door opened and closed behind us and the long sidewalk of freedom opened up she saw the blue Mustang and the solitary man standing beside it with what looked like flowers in his hand. I watched Deshavi’s breath quicken, as well as her gait, but she curbed it back to match my slower walk.

“You know I’m really glad it worked out this way, otherwise it could have gotten messy and you’d be living the rest of your life on the run from the law.”

Deshavi looked up at me questioningly, “Trent came up with not one, but three escape plans for busting you out of here. I’ll be able to sleep at night now not having to fear he’s scaling barbed wire walls in a desperate attempt to rescue you.”

She looked back toward Trent. “What are you waiting around here for? Go!”

I shoved her along and she took off running and for the second time I watched her go free.

“Oh Lord I pray that there won’t be any need for another escape!”

 

She slammed into Trent so hard that the flowers went flying. After a brief torrid moment of unrivaled passion the blue Mustang tore away from the curb leaving a good bit of rubber burned to the asphalt.

I shook my head, “They’ll both be back here traveling at that speed.”

I walked up to the curb, as an older less sporty car pulled up.

Ella leaned down with a smile to look at me through the open passenger window, “Going my way stranger?”

“I believe I am.” I said sliding in beside her.

I looked around at the older style of the car’s interior.

“We really need to get you a newer car, something that looks faster anyway.”

Ella smiled, “Whatever you say money man.”

She examined the ring on her finger as she drove, “You don’t think Deshavi will mind having a double wedding do you?”

“Nah, she’ll probably be tickled about it.”

“Do you really think three days is enough time for her to get ready for the wedding?”

“This wedding needs to happen! Before anything else happens to disrupt it from taking place!”

 

One week later

Alex’s eyes were glued to the dancer in front of him. She was deliberately taunting him. Oh how she was taunting him! He loved it. He would have her too!

It would be okay. Adriana was out of town with the girls. He had time to have fun with this girl. Her coy erotic sensuality wouldn’t be so flagrant, when he got done with her though. He slipped a note to a backstage attendant and then left to sit in his car to wait. They always came.

They simply couldn’t resist the money that he offered. His chauffeur opened the door and in slid the erotic dancer to sit across from him. Oh he couldn’t wait to get the handcuffs on her and start her education. It had been a long time since he had treated himself to so much pleasurable fun.

Being a family man, not to mention all the mix up with the family business, as of late had absorbed all of his free time, but not tonight or tomorrow or the next day or however long the girl managed to last.

“How about sitting over here honey.

Her smile was full of welcome and inviting wickedness, “Whatever you say master.”

Other books

Grudgebearer by J.F. Lewis
Little Suns by Zakes Mda
Bedazzled by Bertrice Small
The Circle by David Poyer
Mail Order Misfortune by Kirsten Osbourne
Love by Proxy by Diana Palmer