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Authors: Colleen Thompson

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BOOK: Fade the Heat
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Chapter Thirty-one

Jack raised his voice to speak over Reagan’s choked and intermittent wheezing—the most terrifying thing he had ever heard.

“I can wait for treatment, and I’m riding along with her,” he told the paramedic, a small man, thin as a whippet and at least as high-strung.

Moving at double-espresso speed, the paramedic ripped open the packaging for a plastic air mask. The assembled police cars, fire trucks, and two other ambulances strobe-lit him in red. “Hurley’s one of our own, Doctor. We’re doing everything we can. Now if you’ll step aside and let an EMT see to your burn…”

Though she’d been drifting in and out of consciousness, Reagan raised a shaking, bloody hand and clamped down on the paramedic’s forearm. “Please,” was all she managed, but it proved sufficient to melt the man’s resistance.

“All right,” he said. “If that’s what you want.”

Jack’s knuckles were as blistered as Reagan’s arm, but he let her hold his hand when all three were settled
inside the ambulance. With a mask strapped to her face and a breathing treatment humming, Reagan’s eyes closed and her tight grip eased.

Jack shot a worried look at the paramedic, who said, “We’re giving her some good meds, and we’ll get her to the hospital in no time flat.”

As if to underscore the point, the ambulance started, sirens blaring, and the driver called back, “Hold on. It could get a little bumpy until we’re back on pavement—and we’re not slowing down for anything.”

In spite of the crew’s haste, Jack knew things could go south quickly if Reagan’s airway swelled shut and cut off her oxygen completely. By the time they reached the closest hospital, she could be gone forever, lost to either death or a brain injury so severe it would amount to virtually the same thing.

“You
can’t
go,”he told her, hot tears scalding his eyes. “Reag, you can’t die on me. Because I love you. Because I want to marry you and make a life with you.”

The paramedic, who was rechecking her blood pressure, faded from Jack’s consciousness. With his attention focused on Reagan’s wheezing, he felt a hot tear course down, then drip onto her cheek.

Her eyes fluttered, and she looked up into his face.

“We’ll give my mother those
nietos
,” Jack swore; “a little boy with your chin and my cowlick, a tiny girl with dark hair and a stubborn streak a mile wide. Can’t you see them, Reagan? Can’t you see our children in your mind?”

Her eyes flared, and he heard her sharp gasp. Her hand squeezed his hard enough to send pain shooting up his arm.

Was this it? Was she dying?

“She’s sounding better,” said the paramedic, and
that was when Jack realized that her breathing had quieted, falling below the level of the ambulance’s siren.

“Vitals are improving, too,” the paramedic added.

Reagan’s eyes closed once more, and her tight grip loosened.

Jack gusted out a sigh, his entire body trembling with relief. “Thank God,” he said. “The medications must be working.”

“I don’t know.” The paramedic shot a grin his way. “It could just be that bedside manner you’ve got goin’. If she doesn’t marry you, I figure maybe I will.”

Jack laughed—when only moments earlier he couldn’t imagine ever smiling again.

Though the day had grown cool and Reagan’s hospital room felt chilly, Jack’s face was sheened with perspiration when he came in the door, as if he’d been rushing to get to her.

Still drowsy from her long nap, she smiled up at him. “Hey, stranger. I was afraid they might have changed their minds about keeping you at police headquarters.”

Her throat hurt, and her voice remained hoarse from the combined assaults of smoke and the breathing tube she’d had removed the day before. But she was determined not to fall asleep on him again.

Jack shook his head. “No chance of that. I won’t be charged in Paulo’s death, and since Sabrina’s run off with all that money from the mayor’s campaign fund, she’s not exactly in a position to file a complaint against me.”

Bending down to kiss her cheek, he asked, “How’re you feeling?”

“Better. The doctor said my tests look good. There shouldn’t be any permanent damage to my airway, and the other injuries are superficial.”

“That’s wonderful,” he told her, and gently squeezed her wrist above the burned spot.

She noticed that like her hands, which had been scraped raw in her efforts to escape, his right hand was bandaged.

“You’re hurt,” she said. “I didn’t notice it yesterday when you were here.”

“You didn’t notice much of anything. You were still out of it from the medicine they gave you when they scoped your lungs. I wanted to come back later, but the police—”

“That’s all right.” She was still focused on his bandage. “Did you get that saving me, Jack?”

He smiled. “It’s just a little burn, not much of a war wound.”

She looked into his dark eyes. “It’s everything to me. I love you, Jack. And never again will I hesitate to say it.”

The moment stretched between them like a strand of spider’s silk.

“Ah, Reag, you had me so damned scared.”

“I know. I remember the ambulance, that ride with you.”

A slow smile warmed his handsome features. “You heard me? You remember?”

A tap came at the door, and a nurse stuck her head inside. “I have another delivery for you.”

“You can bring it in,” said Reagan, “but I’m not sure where you’ll put it.”

Already, her room was packed with fruit baskets and balloon bouquets, even a box of gourmet cookies from
the mayor—who was claiming to be as shocked as anyone about his campaign manager’s crimes. Not that it much mattered, in terms of tomorrow’s election. Since the latest polls were indicating a large-scale—and surprisingly well-organized—Latino voter backlash against Darren Winter’s on-air rhetoric, it looked as if Thomas Youngblood was a shoo-in for a second term.

“Oh, I think I can find room,” the red-haired woman told her as she carried in a stand-up cardboard cutout of a huge bouquet of flowers. By way of explanation, she said, “When I told him respiratory patients can’t have flowers, he left and came back with this instead.”

Laughing, Reagan asked, “Who brought it?”

“Here’s a note. He made me promise to give it to you personally. I’d love to stay, but I have meds to pass out.”

Reagan thanked the woman and opened the sealed note. As she read, tears welled in her eyes, “Oh, Jack. It’s from C.W. and the rest of my old crew. Even—even that jackass Beau. Telling me how sorry they are for making me into a scapegoat after Joe’s death, for blaming me so they wouldn’t have to blame themselves. And asking if I would consider…coming back to help them put out fires. C.W. wrote here—”

She had to stop to wipe her eyes. “He’s written, ‘Even at half speed, you’re a damn sight better than most firemen.’ C.W.” He said that. About me.

Jack shifted in his seat. “So. Will you try to go back?”

Shaking her head, Reagan explained, “I’m putting in for paramedic’s training, Jack. It’s what I want now, more than anything.”

She searched her feelings, but she found no trace of bitterness, only a newfound optimism and a bright, fresh set of dreams. “Or I should say, more than anything but one thing.”

“What would that be?” he asked.

“What you said inside that ambulance,” she told him. “The future you described. Unless you just felt safe proposing because you figured I’d kick off.”

He moved to sit on the bed’s edge and wrapped his arms around her. “You’re saying you mean to hold me to that?”

Leaning back in his embrace, she smiled into his eyes, “Every last word, Jack Montoya. Every syllable.”

Epilogue

Seven months later…

Jack pulled on the sunglasses Reagan had bought him this past Christmas, turned up the volume on his favorite CD, and opened the red Explorer’s sunroof in homage to the coming weekend and the glorious June day.

He didn’t mind the thirty-minute commute home from Fort Bend County. For one thing, he rarely bogged down in traffic, since most drivers were leaving town this time of day and not coming home to Houston. For another, the drive gave him time to unwind from his workday. Though his new position was in a better-funded, less politically vulnerable clinic, he was still confronted with many of the challenges that he had faced in Houston: long hours, uninsured patients—many of whom spoke English as a second language—and poverty, which limited far too many lives. But here, he felt he was making a real difference. After months of meetings with area medical adminis
trators, doctors, and pharmaceutical representatives, he had set up a program to get more drug samples to patients in the greatest need. So far, they were concentrating on making sure that children, especially, received needed medications, regardless of the legal status of their parents.

But this particular Friday evening, Jack wasn’t thinking of his job, but of Reagan’s new one, which was to start next week. Tonight, he thought, he would take her out for a nice dinner to celebrate the completion of her paramedic’s training. Maybe he would even whisk his gorgeous wife to Galveston for a spur-of-the-moment overnight, if Peaches could be talked into dog-sitting.

At a red light, he pulled his cell phone from his pocket, with the intention of calling his and Reagan’s neighbor. But before he could start dialing, the phone quacked, a sure sign that Reagan had once again been playing with his ring tones.

Laughing, he answered without glancing at the ID, “Hey, Reag.”

“You can save the phone sex. It’s me,”Luz Maria said excitedly. “I had to tell you—they finally bulldozed it. And I was right there, whistling and cheering.”

“They tore down the apartments? That’s terrific.” Months ago, Las Casitas Village had been condemned due to toxic mold. Working in her new role in a private charity, Luz Maria had been instrumental in relocating the tenants to new and healthier housing over the past months. She had also worked behind the scenes to make sure the buildings would be demolished so crackheads and dangerous criminals would not move into them.

“So what’s your next project, now that you’ve gotten that accomplished?”

“Badgering the mayor and the city council until they
finally make good on their promises to do something about the flooding in the East End.”

“If they weren’t politicians, I’d almost feel sorry for them, having a professional pest on their case.” The phone gave a warning beep and he asked, “Can I call you back? My battery’s running down, and I don’t have my charger.”

“Don’t worry about it. I have a hot date tonight.”

“Another one?” If he’d ever needed proof his sister had recovered from her ordeal, her burgeoning social life provided it. Though both Sabrina McMillan and many of the principal players in BorderFree-4-All had at last been apprehended, Luz Maria seemed too immersed in her personal whirlwind of activity to care whether her former lover was ever caught.

They wrapped up their conversation just before the phone went dead.

By the time he arrived home, Reagan, dressed in a silver robe, was sitting back with her feet propped on an ottoman and her eyes closed. At the sight of Jack, Frank Lee raised his head from the blue sofa and yawned prodigiously.

“That’s quite the welcome home,” Jack said. “Rough day with your mother?”

Reagan smiled and stretched. “The woman dragged me from one end of the Galleria to the other. She’s still hell-bent on making up for lost time by teaching me the womanly art of combat shopping. And no matter what I do, I can’t convince her she doesn’t need to pay for all my purchases.”

“So other than that battle, how are the lessons coming?”

Rising from her chair, Reagan allowed the robe to slip off one shoulder and flashed him a knowing smile.
“You tell me,” she said, her voice as whispery as silk sheets. “I picked this up today at one of those froufrou, girly shops. What do you think? Is it me?”

Grinning, Jack made a show of unbuttoning his shirtsleeves. “Honey, if it’s lingerie, you can bet it’s you—until it’s
off
you, which won’t take me five min—What
is
that?”

She had removed the robe, revealing what she wore beneath. In a pale shade of turquoise, the dress would have been quite pretty—except it hung on Reagan like a sack.

“I’m—I’m very sorry,” he said carefully, mindful of how sensitive she had been these past few weeks. “But it looks almost like a maternity dress. It really doesn’t fit you.”

When her eyes lit up, he guessed her news, even before she told him, “But it will, Jack. In just a few months, according to the obstetrician.”

“Oh, baby,” he said as he took her into his arms and swung her into his embrace.

“Great diagnosis, Doctor,” Reagan answered. “Now how about we move on to the bedroom so I can show off that other little number I picked up?”

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I would like to express my heartfelt appreciation to a number of people who helped bring
Fade the Heat
from an idea to a finished novel.

First of all, thanks to my husband, Houston Firefighter Michael Thompson, for sharing the stories, the traditions, and the special bonds that connect the men and women of his department. Special thanks, too, to Acting Paramedic Supervisor Jim Turnbull for answering so many questions and allowing me to tag along throughout a memorable night shift. You’ll both be happy to know I left out the part about the rat.

I would also like to express my appreciation to Detective Roben H. Talton of the Harris County Sheriff’s Department for sharing her law enforcement expertise and to Bryony Aldous for research assistance. Any factual errors and omissions are my own.

On the writing front, I would like to thank agent Meredith Bernstein, who so ably represented the work, editor Alicia Condon, publicist Brianna Yamashita, and all the wonderful people from Dorchester Publishing.

Last but never least, I want to express my appreciation to the writing friends who never let me down. Thanks to Patricia Kay, Kathleen Y’Barbo, Barbara Taylor Sissel, Betty Joffrion, Linda Helman, and Wanda Dionne for their critiquing and their friendship. I am especially grateful, too, to Jo Anne Banker and the members of Northwest Houston and West Houston RWA for their encouragement and support. And a special thinks to my son, Andrew, for inspiring me to chase my dreams.

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