Down the sidewalk directly in front of him, a dog’s white tail wagged. Bryant couldn’t see the dog because of a large oleander bush which covered the entrance to the home. His steps came quicker now. As he approached the home, he could see Margo sitting on the bottom step of a three-step concrete stoop which led to the front door. Her head was low as she allowed the white Labrador to lick the back of her hand.
“Margo,” he breathed out her name with a sense of relief. “Are you okay?”
She didn’t look up or even acknowledge his presence. “So much pain,” she said.
Bryant squinted. “Who?”
“Sugar.”
“Tell me, Margo. What’s going on?”
Finally she looked up at him. “She’s only thirteen and he beats her every single day.”
Bryant looked at the house. “She lives here?”
Margo nodded. “He just doesn’t understand her.”
Bryant’s natural impulse was to call Child Protective Services. He had a contact there who would send a social worker immediately. He could even request a local law enforcement official to inspect the situation. But that was before he dropped his practice and became known as the psycho protecting the alien girl. Besides, Turkle had half the city on his payroll. It only made sense that he had contacts there as well.
Bryant clenched his fists and was about to bang on the front door when it opened and a shirtless man wearing blue jeans and a cowboy hat looked at them with a disgusted expression.
“What do you want?” he sneered.
Bryant was all ready to charge the guy and find his own sense of justice. “We’re looking for Sugar.”
The guy stepped out onto the porch and cocked his head. “Sugar?”
“Your daughter.”
“You mean Abbey?”
Bryant glanced at Margo who kept petting the white Lab. She nodded ever so slightly.
“Yes, Abbey,” Bryant said, more firmly now.
The guy moved further out onto the porch. He had a large wad of something inside his cheek, causing it stick out. “What do you want with her?”
The guy was three steps higher than Bryant, and by his bare torso, it was obvious he worked out. Bryant had been a hard-hitting college cornerback, however, and some things just never left you.
A young girl came to the door. She wore shorts and a T-shirt. She also had a swollen lip, a black eye and a battered cheek. The shirtless guy followed Bryant’s gaze and saw her.
“Get back inside, Sugar,” the guy barked.
There seemed to be a glimmer of hope on her face until the guy turned back and squared up on her. The girl cowered backward until she was lost in the darkness of her dungeon.
“You like beating up young innocent kids?” Bryant seethed.
“What do you know about innocent?” the man said, turning his attention back to Bryant. He spit out a couple of sunflower seeds into the nearby bushes.
Bryant stretched his fingers wide, then curled them back into a fist. “You’re about to learn what I know.”
Bryant took a step up and saw the guy look out toward the street. A black Ford Expedition was rolling to a stop in front of the house.
Margo looked up at Bryant with wide eyes. Clearly she didn’t sense Turkle coming.
“Get inside the house,” Bryant uttered to Margo.
Margo got to her feet and as she moved around Bryant, he grabbed her and whispered, “Get Abbey and run out back to the restaurant.”
The shirtless guy seemed confused as Margo went past him. He tried to stop her, but she ducked and scampered inside before he could get a grip.
“What are you doing?” he said to Bryant.
Ron Turkle opened the driver’s side door to his car and smiled as he viewed the occupants of the front porch.
“Who’s that?” the guy asked as Turkle slowly made his way up the path. He left his truck running and the door wide open.
When Bryant saw the intensity on the child beater’s face, a thought occurred to him.
“He’s with the government,” Bryant said quietly. “He’s here to take your daughter away from you.”
The guy spit a giant wad of sunflower seeds into the rain. “Over my dead body,” he snarled.
Turkle seemed overly calm as he approached the steps. He looked up at the cowboy hat and said, “Howdy.”
“She’s inside,” Bryant told Turkle. “But he’s not going to let you take her.”
Turkle took his time now taking in the shirtless man. “Is that right, cowboy?”
“That’s right,” the guy said trying to match Turkle’s cool demeanor by spitting out sunflower seeds onto the porch steps, a couple bouncing off of Turkle’s shoes.
Bryant took a step back to allow the two alpha males a better angle at each other. One more step and he was behind Turkle.
“He’s not in the car,” Turkle said to Bryant without turning.
Bryant was so twitchy he’d almost forgotten about Jeff. He looked at the Expedition with the door open and the engine running, and came to a decision.
The guy on the top step of the porch pointed to the car and said, “You can just go on and get going ‘cause no one’s taking my girl from me.”
“I see,” Turkle said, pulling his jacket aside to show the guy his pistol. “She’s your girl now, huh?”
“That’s right. Always has been.”
Turkle was paying no attention to Bryant and for some strange reason this gave him solace. He was halfway to the Expedition when the two men went after each other. The cowboy was tough, but Turkle knew how to fight. A couple of well-placed jabs and an uppercut put the cowboy down onto the cement steps, tumbling to the walkway where Turkle kicked him in the face, forcing blood to seep out of the cowboy’s mouth.
Bryant was at the driver’s door to the Expedition when Turkle entered the house. He quickly hopped into the front seat and checked out the interior to make sure Jeff Davenport wasn’t inside, then shut the door and slammed the gear into drive. Just being inside the vehicle made him feel dirty somehow. He stepped on the gas and charged to the end of the block until he skidded to a stop. His heart was pounding now, desperately searching for the girls, hoping they’d made it out the back door.
Nothing.
Bryant turned left and scrutinized the neighborhood. He had the overwhelming sense that he was out of his league. A very sick thought ran through his mind. What if Margo hadn’t made it out of the house? What had he done?
Bryant rolled the car to the parallel street behind the cowboy’s house. He was all ready to double back and find them when he spotted movement in the bushes. He stepped on the gas, hoping for some good luck.
He didn’t get it.
Jumping from the bushes to his left came Turkle, charging toward his Expedition with his gun out and a snarl on his face. Bryant had no time to think. Staying still was not an option. It was either reverse or forward. He chose forward.
Bryant jammed on the accelerator and steered directly at the FBI agent, his engine roaring and tires spinning on the wet asphalt. But Bryant had stepped on the pedal too hard and the vehicle was now hydroplaning. Turkle was practically to the driver’s side, when Bryant gripped the handle. Turkle’s face was contorted into a malevolent scowl as he reached out for the door handle. At that very second Bryant shoved the door open with every ounce of strength his shoulder could muster. He felt the connection with Turkle’s torso and saw the man go tumbling back, his body hitting the street and his head bouncing off the curb.
Bryant needed to move, but he needed to stay as well. He had to find Margo and Abbey. As his tires slowed, he gained traction and was able to drive away from Turkle while desperately scanning the landscape for any sign of the girls. His adrenal glands pumped adrenaline through his system making him feel like he could rip the steering wheel from its column. He knew the excess adrenaline was now dilating his pupils, which would allow him to focus straight ahead, giving him tremendous tunnel vision. But it also reduced his peripheral vision and forced him to swivel his head aggressively.
Bryant looked through his side-view mirror and saw Turkle getting to his feet. When he looked back through the windshield, he swerved violently to avoid hitting a parked car. The back end of the Expedition slid sideways down the neighborhood street and he tapped the brakes until the vehicle came to a stop.
Turkle was on his feet now, rubbing the back of his head and staring at Bryant with disdain in his eyes. He bent over to pick up his gun and began hobbling toward Bryant. Without taking his eyes from Turkle, Bryant pulled the steering wheel to his right and rolled the Expedition away from the crazed man. As he straightened the vehicle he caught Turkle in the rearview mirror limp-running after him. He was just thirty yards away yet Bryant maintained gradual pressure on the accelerator so he didn’t hydroplane again. He was sure he wouldn’t survive another mistake like that. Bryant was so focused on Turkle he almost missed the turn at the end of the street. He swung the truck to the left again and backtracked. Now he was going in circles. Nothing made sense. He was acting irrationally and he needed help.
That’s when he saw her. Margo. On the side of the road, waving her arms, knowing it was him inside the Expedition. Abbey was next to her. Behind him, Turkle had turned the corner and was moving with a greater sense of urgency, his gun in his right hand.
Bryant slowed until he was just next to the girls. He turned the truck sideways to protect them from Turkle, then stopped.
“Get in,” he yelled, even though the windows were up.
Margo didn’t need to hear though. She knew. The back door flung open and she and Abbey jumped inside.
“Go,” Margo screamed, looking back over her shoulder and seeing Turkle gaining on them.
Once again Bryant had to start slowly for fear of the tires slipping. This allowed Turkle to come right up to the rear panel and pull on the back door. Margo yanked on the inside handle and slapped the lock down. Turkle used the butt of the gun to bang on the window, trying to show he was still in control. He looked extremely dangerous even as Bryant pulled away from him.
In the rearview mirror Bryant saw Turkle get into a crouched position with his arms straight out and his pistol trained on the truck.
“Get down!” Bryant shouted to the girls, while he hunched low behind the wheel.
As they pulled away, Bryant braved a peek into the side-view mirror and saw Turkle put the gun down by his side. Then, a more sinister expression came across the FBI agent’s face. An expression that sent a chill down Bryant’s neck.
Turkle actually smiled.
Chapter 34
Bryant drove Turkle’s Expedition to a greasy spoon diner in east Chandler with a parking lot in the back, away from the street. They sat at a booth against the window. Margo on one side, Meltzer and Bryant on the other. The three of them staring out at the rain-soaked world expecting the worst.
There was a dark-green SUV parked across the street with a couple of FBI agents inside, waiting for Turkle to show up. Abbey had already been taken to Child Protective Services to get the support she needed.
When Bryant recounted the events to Meltzer, he added, “So it seems Turkle isn’t afraid to make his obsession a secret any longer.”
Meltzer tapped his finger on the table. “He used technology to aid his search for you, including large payments to some of his law enforcement friends to do his dirty deeds.”
“So he still believes I’m an alien?”
“Apparently.”
“But,” Margo stared at the table, “what if he’s right? What if I really am an alien and just don’t know it?”
Bryant had to grin at that one. “You only see the best in people, don’t you?”
Margo shrugged.
They went back to gazing out the window. Bryant yawned hard, then briskly shook his head. How long had it been since he’d last slept?
“Is Abbey going to be all right?” Margo asked in a quiet voice.
“She’ll be fine,” Meltzer said, stirring his ice tea. “I’ll make sure of it.”
Bryant looked at the frown on her face and said, “The question is, are you okay?”
Margo developed a sudden fascination with her chocolate milk. She swirled the straw around and seemed to search for the right words.
The waitress dropped a grilled cheese sandwich with French fries in front of Margo and asked if they needed anything else. Bryant and Meltzer waved her off.
“Starving,” Margo said, as she bit into her sandwich.
While staring out the window, Meltzer said, “You know how this is going to go down, right?”
“Yeah,” Bryant said.
Margo looked up at them. “What are you talking about?”
“FBI agent Ron Turkle will want to trade Jeff for you,” Bryant explained.
Margo put her sandwich down and looked at Bryant with Bambi eyes. “You’re not going to do that, are you?”
Bryant frowned. “Of course not.”
With a big smile, she reached over and touched his hand. Bryant felt the touch linger long after she returned to her sandwich. He was getting too close to the girl, treating her like she was his surrogate daughter. If she were his patient that would be considered inappropriate. But at this stage of the game . . .
Margo looked outside and said what they were all thinking. “How are we going to get Jeff?”
Meltzer tapped the table with his index finger. “I have a plan.”
Just then Bryant’s phone vibrated. He looked at the number which wasn’t in his contact list and felt a tinge of apprehension as he answered. “This is Dr. Bryant.”
The man’s voice was suave and unyielding, “You think the green SUV can protect you?”
Bryant licked a pair of dry lips. Ron Turkle sounded swankier than he’d ever sounded.
When Bryant didn’t respond, Turkle added, “One of the guys in that vehicle is named Tom Braken. Something which might interest you about Tom—he was in my wedding party.”
Bryant’s face went pale.
Meltzer whispered, “Is it him?”
Bryant managed to nod as Turkle continued. “You ever want to see Jeff again, you take that alien girl and walk out that back door right now. There’s a black Honda Accord sitting in the back parking lot with the key in the ignition. You begin driving east on the Superstition Freeway until I call you and tell you where to go. If I see another police car or unmarked car or Federal SUV come within a mile of your vehicle, I’ll put a bullet in Jeff’s head. How does that sound?”