Authors: Dale Mayer
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Romance, #General, #Paranormal, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #Crime
Sad but true. Kali knew of no relatives, close or otherwise, in Stan's life. His wife had died years ago.
The doctor led her into the intensive care room where Stan lay covered in blankets, tubes running in all directions.
"Oh, Stan," she whispered. The injury had aged him. His heavy wrinkles should be smooth in sleep, but thin and flat, they'd piled up on top of each other.
"The swelling has distorted his facial features. But that's a temporary situation."
Seeing him lying like this hurt. He had so much vitality, so much to give in him. His skin was now the color of plaster, lifeless. "At least that's something." Kali walked over to Stan's bedside. She placed her hand over Stan's cool still one. Beside him machines hummed with smooth efficiency.
"Yes, but head injuries are tricky." The doctor returned the clipboard to the bed. "He's not out of the woods yet." He met her gaze straight on, a small smile in place. "Not to worry. We're doing everything in our power to make sure he pulls through."
She hoped it would be enough. Stan looked so ill. "I know you will, but that won't stop me from worrying."
"Caring does that to a person. Everyone deserves to be loved."
True. Kali's heart ached. After she lost her dad, Stan had stepped in as a replacement. He'd become that father figure to talk to, to visit with, and to offer well-meaning advice regardless of how wrong it was.
"Can I sit here for a few moments? I promise I won't disturb anything."
"Just a couple of minutes. No longer."
"Thanks." She appreciated the bending of the rules. Stan deserved to know someone cared. Kali barely heard him. "You're going to be fine, Stan. It's okay. You're safe. Honest."
For five minutes, she whispered to him. It didn't matter if he heard her or not but she needed to talk. To reach him in some way and hope that he heard her.
"Excuse me."
Kali turned to face the newcomer. A young nurse stood in the doorway, smiling apologetically at her. "I'm sorry, but it's time for you to leave."
Kali sighed. The nurse was right. It was time to go. On the way she smiled at the officer standing guard. Thank heavens for that. She had to find Julie and catch a killer.
She'd almost reached the outside the front exit when her phone rang. "Hi, Grant. Any chance of a ride?"
"Good timing, I'm on my way. We have a face on the camera through the research center. Thomas is working on cleaning it up right now." His voice was sharp and businesslike. "I'm hoping you can identify him. I need you to come back to the station."
Walking out the front entrance, Kali tried to put a face to Thomas. She knew she'd seen him before through this case, and that Grant and he appeared to have a rapport, but things being the way they were, she'd glossed over all those men. And that was wrong. They were working hard and she couldn't even put names to faces.
An oversight she'd have to fix.
Grant pulled up a few minutes later, Shiloh's head hanging out the window. She barked once at the sight of Kali, who laughed. Obviously Shiloh hadn't been upset at staying with Grant. She gave Shiloh an extra cuddle before getting in beside her. Minutes later they were on their way.
"You have a face from the center?"
"Yes, going into your office."
Kali frowned. "You realize it's not
my
office, right?"
The police station loomed ahead. Letting Shiloh out after her, she waited for Grant to lock up the car before walking toward him and the station. Shiloh danced around her. Kali called her over, bending slightly to put a calming hand on Shiloh's head.
Crack.
Pain burned in a fiery streak along Kali's shoulders and back.
"Ohhh." Kali's knees buckled. What happened? She glanced up, confused. Shiloh whined, her face nudging against Kali's cheeks. She tried to stand only to cry out before collapsing back.
"Stay down," Grant snapped, standing over her. She barely heard him for the agony burning her neck and head. Kali wrapped her arm around Shiloh's neck, huddling close. Her stomach really didn't feel well. Grant shifted, circling her, searching the surrounding area. Why wasn't he helping her? He should be, shouldn't he? What the hell had happened? Unaccountably, tears collected in the corner of her eyes. Whatever it was, he shouldn't have yelled at her.
She burrowed her face in Shiloh's side. Shiloh whined, nudging her cold nose against Kali's hand. Kali scrunched tighter. Somewhere in the background she heard Grant talking on the phone. What a time to socialize. Didn't he see she needed him?
"Kali, talk to me. Don't you faint on me? Buck up girl."
Lifting her head, she gasped with outrage. "I've never fainted in my life." She tried to shift onto her knees, only to fall forward. Her stomach knotted in a sudden fierce movement. "Ohhh, God, it hurts. Make it stop, please, Grant."
Grant bent trying to lift her to her feet. "I will, honey. Let's get you inside. The attacker might still be here."
"Attacker?" Kali shifted upward into a half crouch before making it all the way to a standing position with his help. "Someone attacked me?" Shiloh leaned against her.
Men poured from the building, spreading out to search the surrounding areas. Grant kept her snuggled tight against his chest while he yelled, "He bolted over there." Grant pointed in the direction in the far back of the lot. Guns at the ready, officers spanned outward.
Kali tried to watch, but black spots kept getting in the way. She blinked, trying to see around them, but they moved with her.
"How bad is it?" One officer ran toward her.
Kali turned her face into Grant's chest. Sweat dripped along her side. It tickled and bugged at the same time. Irritated, she swiped at it. And cried out.
"Shhh. Take it easy, Kali. Don't try to move." Grant whispered against her ear, his arms loosely holding her in place. Through the haze of pain, she caught part of the conversation happening, catching the new arrival's last comment.
"I've called for an ambulance."
Kali lifted her head, pulling back to frown at the men. "An ambulance?"
The two men glanced at each other, then at her.
In a soft gentle voice, Grant responded, "Kali, it's for you. You've been shot."
S
hot?
Pain blasted through her system tenfold with his words. "You shouldn't have told me," she said peevishly. "Now it really hurts."
Grant hugged her close.
Bile floated up her throat at the movement. Kali closed her eyes and clenched her teeth. A moan escaped and she rested against his chest. A whine first, then the gentle paw on her thigh, caught her attention. Shiloh sat beside her, her huge chocolate eyes focused on Kali. Reaching down, Kali tried to reassure her, but damn, it hurt.
"It's okay, Sweetheart." Grant rested his chin on the top of her head. "You're going to be fine. Appears to be a flesh wound-scraping through the fat on your back."
"Ohhh." Kali reared back and slugged him. "How dare you?"
Grant stared at her in astonishment. "Whoa! What's wrong? What did I say?"
Kali snorted at the glint in his eyes. "I don't have
any
," she emphasized, "
fat
on my back."
A telltale rumble ran through his chest as he wrapped his big arms around her, her fists tucked up against his hard chest. His voice thick with mischief, he added, "If you say so."
"I do," she mumbled burrowing deeper in his arms. Why'd she do that? The pain dug in deeper, grabbing on tighter. "I don't need an ambulance."
"No." he whispered, his cheek resting against her hair. "But I might."
"What?" she gasped, pulling free to pat his chest and shoulders. "Where? Did you get shot, too? Where does it hurt?" Damn the stupid male psyche, always having to play the big strong role.
With a tug, he pulled her tighter against him, cuddling her closer. "I'm not hurt. You are."
"But..." Kali stopped fighting to free herself, trying to understand.
"But nothing. I want
you
in an ambulance."
"Why?" She slugged him once for good measure, then collapsed against his chest.
"Ow. What was
that
for?" Grant asked.
"For making me worry."
Grant shook his head at her. "You're making me crazy."
Sirens sounded in the distance.
Pulling free, Kali distractedly ran her fingers through her hair. Pain bent her over double. She crumpled to her knees. Shiloh whimpered, nudging her nose against her hands. Gasping for breath, she rocked in place.
"Stay with me Kali. Don't faint. Focus on your breathing."
Kali heard him, only that irritating trickle deluged into a stream of wetness. She slapped her hand over the spot. As she pulled her hand away, blood dripped freely off her fingers. Christ. Her stomach revolted, she wavered. Digging deep, Kali struggled to remain conscious. Lord, she hurt. Grant's face appeared in front of her. His forehead creased with worry.
Kali drew a deep breath. "I'm okay. It's just blood." Attempting to reassure him, she patted his hand while ice trickled along her spine. Pausing her hand mid-air, Kali cast a puzzled gaze at Grant. "Something's wrong."
Ice pooled in her tummy. Kali gazed at her belly. The warmth drained from her face, converting her cheeks to frost. Grant's face blurred. Kali opened her mouth. The words froze inside.
She pitched head-first toward the pavement.
"Kali!" Grant caught her before she hit the ground, immediately checking for a heartbeat. It pulsed slow and steady. Several other men joined him. Shiloh twisted between them, getting in the way. Her nose pushing against Kali whenever she could reach her.
"Where's the damn ambulance?" The sirens screamed louder.
"They're here, Grant. Take it easy."
The ambulance peeled into the parking lot. Two men hopped from the vehicle. One ran toward them, the second one opened the rear doors, withdrawing a gurney.
"Move aside, please. Sir, please stand aside."
"Grant." Thomas placed a heavy hand on Grant's shoulder. "Move, buddy. These guys need to do their job."
As if shaking free of a mental hold, Grant allowed his friend to pull him back. Seeing Shiloh worried and anxious as the men worked, Grant stepped forward and tugged her toward him. "Come on, girl. Sit over here with us." He crouched, stroking her beautiful coat. Finally the overwrought dog calmed enough to lie down. He straightened to speak to Thomas. "There was such an odd look on her face when she collapsed."
"Shock."
"Maybe." The two men watched the EMTs work on Kali. Grant puzzled over the shooting. "It doesn't make any sense. There's no reason to have targeted her."
"How close were you to her at the time? Any chance you were the target?"
Grant closed his eyes, picturing Kali walking toward him with Shiloh at her side. God, he hoped not. He didn't want to live with that for the rest of his life. As he thought on it, he realized the direction had been wrong. With a decisive shake of his head, he said, "No, she was the target."
Thomas shoved his hands in his pockets. "I wonder if the killer is changing the game. Or maybe he wants to end it?"
Grant shook his head. "Doesn't feel right."
"Then what the hell is going on here?"
The EMTs had Kali on the gurney and were loading her into the ambulance. Grant moved forward. Thomas placed a restraining hand on his arm.
Frowning, Grant pointed to the ambulance. "I should go with her."
"No. Two men are going with her to stand guard. We'll check on her in a bit. Give the doctors time to do their thing. The best thing you can do is bring this to an end."
The ambulance peeled away, sirens blazing, leaving a parking lot of law enforcement officers staring after it.
Darkness settled on Grant's face. "Let's go. We've got an asshole to catch."
Grant strode toward the entrance, Shiloh at his side and the rest of the men scrambling behind him.
At the door, Grant turned back to for one last glimpse of the pool of blood drying in the early morning sun. Fury spiked through him. "I want this asshole caught. Today."
"We'll get him. Don't doubt it."
Jaw clenched, Grant gave a clipped nod before heading inside.
Kali moaned as she tried to shift her position.
"Damn, we're almost done. Just need another moment."
Metal clattered, weird sucking sounds and soft squishy noises penetrated Kali's conscious. Sharp pins stabbed her repeatedly. Words registered dimly. They didn't make sense. Nothing did. So much pain. What had happened to her? Her back burned. The pain made her twist away. "Hurts."
A hand soothed her shoulder. The movement blended into the confusion of sounds and sensations.
"Easy, sweetie. We're done. It's going to be okay."
Kali moved again, desperate to stop the deep aching pain. Her mind fogged. Why was she here? What were they doing to her?
"Try to stay still."
"Nooo," she moaned in protest as something jabbed her again.
"Let's go, people. We're not quite done. Put her under so we can finish this. We can't let her tear out the stitches before we get this closed."
Bright lights flashed in strobe symmetry as Kali blinked rapidly. Stitches. Injured? Hospital? Kali struggled to make sense of the distorted words and images interspersed with the pain. Then none of it mattered. Clouds and soft white cotton batting closed in. Sighing with relief, she drifted under.
Grant parked beside several other vehicles at the front of Second Chance. A couple of people wandered the large lazy verandah and there were fewer dogs than he'd become accustomed to seeing here. Shiloh woofed deep in her throat.
"That's right. This is a second home for you, isn't it, girl?"
"It's a busy place. So how do you want to play this?" Thomas studied the layout of the center and its adjoining fields.
Grant wanted to throw his cover and let everyone know he was FBI and meant business, damn it. But that could cost someone else her life if the wrong person figured they were onto him. "I'd love to go pound heads and get answers, but..."