Broken Trust (24 page)

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Authors: Shannon Baker

Tags: #Hopi, #Arizona, #Native American, #Mystery, #Eco-Terrorist, #Colorado, #Detective

BOOK: Broken Trust
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thirty-five

Sylvia’s Ferrari squealed off
the road and across the bridge and into the Trust’s lot. The goddamn parking lot light was out again. She was sick of this rinky-dink facility and their slip-shod maintenance. It was wrong. Everything was wrong tonight. She slammed on the brakes and skidded on the gravel. The few flakes falling hadn’t started to accumulate.

Birds! Goddamn birds. How did this happen? Petal had calculated the angle
, and
Sylvia
had
trusted her. Petal should have known. How could Petal make this mistake?

Eduardo would have been watching the news anticipating his victory. What would he do when he
saw instead
a sea of dead birds?

Brittle flakes of snow whirled through the frigid air. Clouds threatened to drop more before the storm moved on. Sylvia climbed from her car and hugged her fox-lined jacket close, thankful for the fur-topped snow boots with the rubber
-
tipped
heels. She may have to live in an inhospitable climate but at least she could maintain some style. Not like Alaska where she’d had to wear clothes straight out of survival catalogues.

Sylvia hurried across the front porch and unlocked the front door. She didn’t bother turning on lights and ran through the kitchen to her office suite.

Where was Petal? Sylvia needed her to recalculate the refractory angles of the tower and reset the beam.

But
no,
she couldn’t trust Petal. Sylvia should have known
that girl
didn’t have the brain power to accomplish something so delicate. Why hadn’t she checked Petal’s calculations?

Because Mark had shown up and ruined it all.

Think, Sylvia!
But her mind chased itself. Dead cats, Daniel’s body in her bed, blood on her carpet, the black Town
C
ar, her fur-topped boots, Daniel’s naked body, Mark’s bloody body, Mark, Daniel. Stupid, stupid Petal.

She leaned against the
doorjamb
and held her hands to her head trying to push the random thoughts into order.

Sylvia snapped on the light and ran across her office. She flung her bag onto her desk and booted up her computer. She’d checked the coordinates Petal calculated. They should have been correct.

Sylvia entered her passwords and navigated beyond the firewalls. In a matter of minutes she understood Petal’s mistake. The moron
had
transposed two numbers. Perspiration lined her body as she reset the program. Her fingers shook and her nails kept hitting the wrong keys.

Finally she sat back, her insides a molten stew of acid, her skin chilled from sweat. She’d done it. As only she could do.

Sylvia rummaged inside her bag for her phone
before s
he remembered
i
t lay
—hurled against the wall after Eduardo’s last
call—
broken on the floor
outside
her bedroom,
which was
spattered with Mark’s brains.

She grabbed the headset of the ancient landline phone
on her desk
. Her fingernail tapped the buttons and she dialed the country code, area code
,
and private number. She waited while it ran
g
.

Finally he answered. “Ah, Sylvia,
mi coraz
ó
n
.”

“Eduardo. Listen, I can explain.”

His robust laugh sounded cheerful. “No need. Truly.”

She didn’t trust his good cheer. “It was an error. I’m fixing it right now. I can send another ELF wave at dawn. You’ll see. I’ll do it for you, Eduardo.”

“Yes. Yes. That will be excellent. Goodbye, Sylvia.”

“Wait! Don’t—

He hung up
on her
.
Again.

Thud
.

What was that?
Sylvia ran across the room and slapped off her office light. She couldn’t stop her rapid breathing as she snuck into the dark kitchen. She stood on tiptoe to see out of the window above the sink.
In the unlit parking lot she made out the
black
Town
C
ar sitting next to her Ferrari.

The knob on the front door rattled and she felt the pressure in her ears as it opened.

Sylvia tiptoed to the back door and stealthily turned the lock. She grabbed the knob, twisted
,
yanked. She didn’t bother to shut the door, knowing that Juan

or whoever it was Eduardo sent to kill her

would already be chasing her.

She sprinted across the icy lawn, slipping.
Is this what Darla felt like just before the bullet ripped into her back?

thirty-six

Abigail had coaxed Petal
into Nora’s bedroom, convincing
her to lie down. Petal would only relax if Abigail stayed with her. Both were sleeping when Nora checked on them a half hour ago. Cole hadn’t made any move to leave and Nora hadn’t asked him to. They’d been sitting on the couch ever since, staring at the televi
sion.

After the Petal drama and the exhausting day, Nora didn’t know what to do. Tomorrow morning she’d take Petal and the spreadsheets to the police. Tonight, she felt helpless. She plopped down on the sofa and turned on
The Colbert Report
. Uninvited, Cole sat next to her. She didn’t complain. Colbert reported on the day’s events with pithy political commentary. Cole stared at the screen without any reaction and Nora assumed he heard as little of the show as she did.

Too bad Nora didn’t have any more beer. She could use
another
cold one.

Too many questions banged around her brain to concentrate on television. What if what Petal said was true? Did Sylvia really possess the means to alter the weather and kill birds? If so, did that mean Petal’s life was in danger?

Abbey lay in his bed under the corn
leaves
, snoring softly.

Cole stirred. “What was Petal saying about Tesla?”

Nora sat up. “I don’t have any idea. I thought Tesla was a car. I didn’t know
it
was a person.”

Cole scanned the apartment. “Do you have a computer?”

Nora hurried to a small desk in the corner of the room. She shoved the leaves of a corn plant out of the way and grabbed her laptop. She booted up. “Okay. We’ve got weather and Tesla and HAARP.” She typed them all into the search engine and hit
E
nter.

Cole leaned into her and read the screen. “Might want to narrow that down.”

She grinned at him as results appeared and she clicked on one. She scanned it then read to Cole. “
Tesla was also reportedly working on resonance machines, or devices whereby he could shake one or many large city buildings from some distance away
.
This capability has now blossomed into the ability to create earthquakes in any desired location on
E
arth, of the desired magnitude, and desired depth. HAARP can create such earthquakes.

Cole lifted the computer, settled it on his lap
,
and kept reading. “
Tesla’s experiments in Colorado produced powerful artificial lightning, in the millions of volts. Producing this lightning was one of the earliest examples of Tesla being able to create weather phenomenon. A mushroom
-
shaped radio tower was instrumental in Tesla fine-tuning his ability to create all manner of weather. As he beamed radio waves at the exact ELF frequency by which
E
arth’s weather is naturally created, Tesla discovered he could alter the weather
.”

A chill spiked up her neck. “
Sylvia
is going to create an earthquake.”

Cole’s eyebrows shot up. “Not jumping to conclusions, are you?”

“Well, maybe. It could be.”

Cole laughed. “You’re sounding like Petal. Just because the first site you randomly hit spouts crazy conspiracy theories, it doesn’t mean it’s true.”

Maybe she was getting carried away. She shot him a sheepish grin.

Instead of teasing, as she’d expected, he grew serious and his eyes darkened.

She caught her breath. She
tried to tell herself she didn’t really know him,
but she understood his expression. He leaned into her, sliding his warm fingers along the back of her neck. With the gentlest touch, he drew her toward him.

“Is it okay if I kiss you?” he whispered.

She nodded, not trusting her voice.

They’d only kissed once before and yet his touch felt natural and familiar. She closed her eyes and blood rushed through her ears. His lips moved with soft pressure against hers and suddenly her arms and legs felt like pudding. She smoldered against him.

Cole
stopped long enough
for Nora
to set the computer on the floor.

His arms encircled her, pulling her against him as his heat matched hers. They paused for breath and Nora sank into his eyes, dark with passion. Without thinking, she allowed herself to fall into another kiss. And another.

How many years
had it been since
she’d made out on a couch with her mother asleep in
the next
room? It was as exciting and erotic now as it had been at seventeen. The bad tension eased from her shoulders, replaced with the good kind
—t
he tingly kind that accelerated her pulse and made her warm all over, some places downright steamy.
She could go on like this forever. No guilt, no expectations, no past or future.

She was so far gone she didn’t hear anything until Abbey woofed and focused on the door. That’s when she realized the pounding came from fists on the door and not the blood in her ears.

“Oh.” She stood up and yanked at her shirt that had twisted around her belly. She walked to the door on shaky legs, rubbing her mouth and struggling to regain some dignity.

In the year Nora
had
lived
in the apartment
, she could count visitors at her door in the single digits. They’d all been trying to sell her wrapping paper or hoping she’d help fund a grade
-
school field trip or wanting her to buy magazine subscriptions to help an inner
-
city delinquent on the road to better himself. Maybe this time the cops waited on the other side. They might have found out Petal witnessed Darla’s murder and needed to question her.

Or it could be the bad guys that Sylvia supposedly worked for
,
come
to pop a cap in Petal’s brain. In which case, they’d kill everyone in the apartment.

Not overreacting or anything.

Nora slipped the chain on the door and opened it to peek outside. What waited outside trumped whatever fantasy she concocted. She slammed the door, unhooked the chain and swung it open again. She threw herself into waiting arms. “Charlie!”

He hugged her hard, his grizzled face roughing her cheek. “You are sunshine and light and give me reason to live.”

The snow fell in giant white flakes, swirling in the gusts. She drew Charlie inside, out of the storm. She’d missed his forest smell, the gravelly voice
,
and his strange way of speaking as though he
were
in a soap opera.

Abbey wagged his whole body in delight to see his old hiking buddy and Cole grinned.

Charlie scratched Abbey’s ears. “You’re a fine fellow. Fine fellow.” He straightened and surveyed the apartment. “Nice crop of corn.”

She hugged him again.

He grinned at her. “In a world of sorrow and pain you are a bright angel of joy.”

Cole grasped Charlie’s hand. “Good to see you, man.”

Charlie’s bright eyes traveled from Cole to Nora. “Awfully good to see you here.”

Nora grasped his cold hand in both of hers. “Why didn’t you call and let me know you were coming?”

His face grew serious. “A wise soldier relies on the element of surprise.” Charlie didn’t often speak in war metaphors. His eyes drooped with weariness.

“Take your coat off and tell me what’s the matter.”

“Element of surprise, is it?” They all whirled around to see Abigail standing in the dining area. Her hair
was
smashed against one side of her head and a dark rim of mascara smudged under one eye. Only a life-threatening emergency would bring Abigail out in in such disarray. “Don’t you mean ambush?”

“Now, Abbie


Nora tugged at the neck of Charlie’s army jacket as he shrugged to shed it.

“Don’t you ‘now Abbie’ me.” She pointed at Nora. “Don’t take his jacket. He’s leaving.”
Abigail made a chameleon seem consistent. She could go from pothead to Florence Nightingale to a panther all in the course of a few hours.

Charlie gazed at Abigail with sad eyes. “I’ve come to take you home.”

“I’m not going anywhere with you. My home is here now, with my daughter.”

Whoa!
Cole and Nora watched like spectators in the Thunderdome.

Charlie stepped toward Abigail. “You are my very breath. My home and my bed are cold and empty without you.”

Nora cringed.

Abigail held her hand up to stop him. “You’ve destroyed whatever home we had together. And as for your bed


“Okay, okay.” Nora stepped between the two. She had to stop this talk before she was scarred for life. “I’ll make some tea and we can sit down and discuss this like adults.”

Abigail’s voice rose an octave or three. “He won’t drink anything but beer so unless you have a twelve pack on hand, don’t bother.”

“Hey,” Nora said. “You knew he drank beer when you married him.” Everyone knew Charlie drank beer. He kept the pockets of his army jacket well supplied.
Come to think of it, she hadn’t felt any cans when she’d hugged him. Maybe he wisely didn’t drink and drive.



The heady party of our love has faded to the painful pounding of a hangover.

” Abigail cast about, probably for paper to record her poetry. The universe would be forever grateful to lose that particular verse.
Abigail turned her attention on Nora. Her eyes glistened with tears. “I won’t sit down with you and Charlie together. You always take his side.”

Nora stammered. “What side?”

Abigail ignored her and shot back at Charlie. “Are you so immune to your effect on women?”

Charlie? He didn’t stand more than five
-
eight. He smelled of pine forest and beer and wore baggy-butted jeans and a faded plaid shirt. He had a kind and gentle nature like a benevolent dwarf in a Disney movie. He was Nora’s dear friend but she’d never thought of him as romantic. Using the word
sexy
in the same sentence as
Charlie
would be a stretch.

“Can’t we talk about it?” Charlie asked.

“No. No. And no. You ruined our wonderful love with your thoughtless, selfish ways.”

Nora knew Charlie to be one of the most caring and considerate people in the world. “Come on, let Charlie explain.”

With all four of them standing in the apartment it felt as crowded as a Japanese commuter train at rush hour. And at least as uncomfortable.

Abigail tossed her head back. “You!” She shot a finger at Nora. “I would think after what you went through with that philandering husband of yours, you’d understand.”

Nora tried again. “Charlie wouldn’t cheat on you.”

“See? I told you. You’re taking his side and you haven’t even heard the facts. Fine.”

Charlie started, “I’m not


Abigail whirled around. “As far as I’m concerned, you deserve each other. I’m through with both of you.” Abigail stomped down the hallway and into her room. It surprised Nora that Abigail didn’t slam the door. She probably did that out of consideration for Petal.

Nora exhaled and said to Charlie. “I have to ask. Did you have an affair?”

Sorrow wafted around him like flies on a corpse. “No.”

Nora pulled out a chair at the table and sank into it. Cole and Charlie followed her. “Then what is she talking about?”

Abbey sat next to Charlie and rested his muzzle on Charlie’s lap.

Charlie stared down the hall and petted Abbey. His face grew rigid. “I would walk across hot coals for your mother. I would chase the great white whale to please her. I would rope the wind, cage the man in the moon. I would


Nora rested a hand on his. “Okay. But what did you do?”

He focused on Nora. “I gave up beer.”

Those were the last words she expected from Charlie.

Cole’s chair creaked as he sat back
,
as astonished as Nora felt. “That’s a pretty big deal.”

Charlie nodded. “I thought she wanted me to.”

“What does giving up beer have to do with you having an affair?” The connection didn’t seem obvious to Nora.

Charlie went back to staring down the hallway. “I had a little trouble giving it up cold turkey so I went to someone the VA paid for.”

“A therapist?” Cole asked.

“Yep. A pretty young thing about your age.” Charlie propped his elbow on the table and leaned his face against his hand.

Nora stood and slipped around to the kitchen. She spoke over the counter bar. “Good for you. Did she help you?” Nora filled her tea kettle and set it on a burner.

Charlie lifted his head to answer her. “Oh, sure. She helped me a whole lot. But she had me start going to meetings.”

Cole nodded. “AA meetings.” A gust rattled the patio slider.

Abbey placed a paw on Charlie’s knee as if commiserating. “And they helped. So I went to them every day. And I quit.”

“That’s great. Was Abigail happy?”

He turned his sad eyes to Nora. “If she noticed she never said a word.”

Nora leaned over the counter. “Ouch. Did you ask her about it?”

Charlie stroked Abbey’s paw. “She had other things on her mind. She wanted to know where I went every day. I lied and told her I went to the forest, like I always do.”

“Why didn’t you tell her the truth?” She pulled out three heavy mugs.

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