Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
She’d been saving up though, a few years now, and maybe that
money would get her out of Upper Ridgeway or at the very least
out of her father’s house. Or maybe—a notion almost too
painfully hopeful to entertain—it would help her get a house
with someone else someday. But her radar was off, as her father
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liked to say. She saw what she wanted to see in men and sometimes these days she didn’t even see that.
Brian raised a hand to her cheek (impossibly, impossibly
warm), his elbow braced on the bar so she could give his palm
the full weight of her chin and then the door smashed open and
a man with a gun charged them, screaming so loud flecks of
saliva dotted the bar.
“The safe—I
know
there’s a fucking safe get it open
now
.”
Laura backed against the glass shelves, a bottle of Triple Sec
bouncing twice on the floor and clattering to a quiet roll. Brian
remained on his stool facing forward, enveloped in an intense
calm that spoke of experience, his hands spread in view on the
bar. His eyes stayed straight ahead; he seemed to be tracking the
man’s movement in the mirror behind her.
The gunman wore several long-sleeved T-shirts, one on top of
the other. Snow and sweat had matted his wispy blond hair to
his skull. He fumbled a credit-card-size block of what looked like
beige Play-Doh from his pocket, his stare level on Laura.
“You’d better move, bitch.” The gunman shoved Brian’s shoulder with his gun. “And you, get up against the—”
Brian pivoted on the stool and drove his fist into the man’s gut.
The gunman doubled over and the gun barked once. Brian
grunted and staggered forward.
The man shuffled backward toward the door, screeching,
“Dammit, God
damm
it. You stupid idiot,” and then the bells shivered, the wind rushed, and he was gone.
Laura vaulted the bar. Gritting his teeth, Brian fought off his boot
and hurled it into the fireplace. His sock, drenched with blood, made
a peeling sound as he slid it off. This too went the way of the flames.
The bullet had pierced the outside of his right foot, two inches
back from his little toe. The shock had just caught up to Laura,
moistening her eyes. The comforting smell of the fire drifted in,
further disorienting.
“You’re okay.” Disbelief tinged her voice, and not a little relief. “You’re okay.”
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“It’s fine. Passed through the side, here.”
“I’ll bandage it and we’ll get you to the hospital. I have a firstaid kit…”
“Lock the door first. And check the parking lot, make sure
he’s gone.”
She did, bending the cheap venetians over the window. The
interstate was an oblivious white strip. A wall of snow encircled
the empty parking lot, white fading into the white trunks of the
firs. A white Subaru was parked at the side of the frontage road,
though she had to press her face flat to the glass to see it. The
headlights shot twinning beams into the snowfall, but the car was
apparently empty. “No one. But there’s a car still there. Lights on.”
“It’s gotta be his. No one else out here. And he’s not going far
on foot.”
“He could be hiding in it. Or in the trees.”
“Call 911.”
She ran behind the bar and snatched up the phone. Dead. “He
cut the line.”
“Okay. We’re isolated here. You have a gun?”
“No. You think he’ll come back, this guy?”
“Looked like he had C4 with him. For blasting a safe.”
“Jesus Christ,” she broke in, “C4, like action-movie C4?”
“I spooked him, but maybe he settles himself out in that car,
realizes that we’re holed up and injured. Plus, we’re riding the
aftermath of a blizzard—not exactly the best time for a speedy
police response even if he
hadn’t
cut the phone line. I say we
split.”
“Not before I stop the bleeding.” She was pulling bowls and
plates from the cabinet. She found the first-aid kit and returned
to him. He was sitting, arms braced over his knees, smiling at
her in the orange glow. She felt his stare as she worked. He
seemed oblivious to the pain. She didn’t really know what she
was doing, but she cinched a tourniquet midway up his foot and
wound an Ace bandage over some sterile pads, applying pressure
on the entry wound.
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“That happen a lot around here?”
“A correctional officers’ bar? You kidding me? A normal night,
someone came in here, they’d get beaten within an inch of their
lives.”
She finished and patted his calf. She could see the fire’s glow
reflected in his eyes and she touched his face, gently, letting her
fingers drift down over his lips.
His face darkened, his gaze shifting nervously to the window.
“Let’s get going.”
“My Bronco’s out back.” She helped him up.
He leaned on the walls, making ginger progress. “What are you
doing?”
Laura was on her knees, rolling back the shitty carpet by the
jukebox. She worked the dial of the floor safe until the gears
clanked. She withdrew three tight rolls of hundred-dollar bills
and stuffed them in her pockets. “There’s fifteen grand here. My
life’s savings. If that guy comes back, he’ll have plenty of time to
tear the place apart. If he doesn’t already know where the safe is.”
“Let’s go, let’s go.”
She put an arm around his waist and kicked through the back
door, waiting for the gunman to fly out of the white haze at them.
But it was just the wide swath of alley, the soggy stack of Budweiser cartons under the overhang and her truck. The wind hit
them hard, whipping flecks of snow into their faces. It tore at her
collar, the cuffs of her jeans. She deposited Brian in the Bronco
and waded around to the driver’s seat, her eyes holding fearfully
on the Subaru. The gunman’s car remained maddeningly motionless, its headlights beaming forward like a dead man’s gaze.
Brian was shuddering by the time she got the engine turned
over. She’d left the heat blasting and the radio on—Don down
at KRZ was spinning the Highwaymen, Kris Kristofferson as
smooth as good scotch, save for the pulses of static from the
weather. She blasted the heat. The Bronco bucked over drifts of
snow past the Subaru, its shadowed interior drawing briefly into
view through ice-misted windows, and then they were skating
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on the frontage road, heading for the interstate entrance. She
studied the rearview, frightened. As if on cue, the radio went to
fuzz, then warped into silence.
The windshield of the Subaru continued to stare after them,
but the car didn’t pull out. She watched it recede, her heart
pounding.
Barely visible up ahead through the snow were two sets of
flashing red lights. Laura eased up to the sawhorses, fighting
down the window. Four deputies blocked the overpass.
Before she could say anything, Earl leaned in and shouted over
the wind, “We just got word there’s been a break at the prison.
Miguel’s dead—bastard caved his head in on the escape. That’s
all we know except to lock down the road.”
“I just had a guy try to rob me. His car’s still back at the Furlough. We think he’s still around there.” She brought a trembling
hand to her face. “My God. Miguel. I just saw him over at the
garage yesterday, getting a new radiator in his…” Her eyes welled.
“Has someone told Leticia?”
“Thinning blond hair,” Brian shouted past her. “Five-eight,
five-nine, maybe. Skinny.”
Earl’s brows rose as his eyes shifted. “Who’s this?”
“Brian Dyer. He’s a CO up at the big house. He got shot protecting me. I gotta get him to the hospital.”
“Okay. Go. Go. We’ll take the Furlough.” Earl squinted
through the falling snow. The Subaru’s headlights were barely visible. “That car up there?” He turned to the others. “Move it, let’s
move.” He rapped a gloved fist on Laura’s hood and she pulled
past the roadblock, coaxing the Bronco back to speed.
They crossed the overpass, veering toward the south entrance,
and started the long curve around to the interstate.
The radio crackled and Don’s distorted voice came audible in
waves. “—deadly escape from the prison…Miguel Herrera’s body
found stripped and frozen in the east yard…”
Blocking the bottom of the on-ramp, just before the merge,
was a felled tree. Brian shouted and Laura hit the brakes, send-
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ing the Bronco sideways. They coasted peacefully to a stop, an
upthrust branch screeching up Brian’s door. She let out her breath
in a rush, and he laughed. Up ahead, on the interstate, was a furrow where some poor soul had trudged across from the frontage
road, probably a half-frozen construction worker seeing to the
sewage drains beneath the overpass.
“I’ll steer us around,” she said.
Brian leaned forward and punched the cigarette lighter. His
other arm was up around her headrest and he dropped it to the
back of her neck. His hand was warm, so warm—he’d been holding it over the dashboard vent. The backs of his knuckles drifted
down, grazing her cheek, her chin. She felt her neck muscles unclench, her body softening to his touch.
The radio reception came back in, if barely. “—security tapes
show…used a starter pistol in their escape…one of the inmates
shot in the foot going over the…”
Laura’s eyes widened. Her gaze jerked to the base of the tree—
ax marks, not splinters. A mosaic of images pressed in on her.
Miguel’s wife’s Subaru. The Furlough’s empty parking lot even
after Brian had arrived. His limp as he’d entered. The belt with
the baton ring, poking out from the bottom of his state-issue button-up shirt. His face, already pale from the injury. The sweat on
his brow—pain suppressed. And his stolen boot, thrown in the
fire after the ruse so she wouldn’t see that it had no bullet hole.
Brian’s hand continued to play across her face. Trembling, she
lifted her gaze but the stare looking back was unrecognizable.
The snow beat against the window behind him, the branch scraping against the door. And then she saw the pale hand reach up
over the tree trunk outside like something from a horror movie.
Brian’s hand tightened and he drove a fist down across her chin.
Her head smacked the window, her head lolled, and she slumped
against the door. Digging in her pockets, he removed the rolls of
cash. Then he reached past her ample breasts, tugged at the door
handle, and shoved her with his good foot out into the snow.
Teddy slid down off the tree trunk, stamping his feet and rub-
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bing his arms. Bits of ice stuck to his thin wisps of blond hair
and his lashes, which framed bloodshot eyes. Brian fished the
pack of Marlboros from his pocket, tapped out a cigarette and
extended it between two fingers across the console. Teddy
stepped over Laura’s limp body and climbed in, his breath clouding against the wheel as he slammed the door against the cold.
He took the proffered cigarette and set it between quivering lips.
He removed the beige rectangle from his pocket—a carefully
shaped block of used chewing gum—and tossed it into the back
seat. Then he cranked the heat even higher, shivering violently
and pressing his white fingers against the vents.
The cigarette lighter popped out and Teddy pulled it from the
dash and tilted his head, inhaling the warmth.
Brian made a gun with his hand and pointed south. “To the
sunshine.”
Teddy maneuvered the Bronco through the soft snow of the
shoulder, forging a path around the tree. As they pulled out onto
the interstate, sheets of snow began to layer Laura into oblivion.
Technology and its ills, together with Native American mysticism, contrasts two worlds often at war—science versus
back-to-nature values. In his first thriller,
Necessary Evil,
David Dun spun an action-driven tale of wilderness survival
that highlighted this war of the worlds, pitting Kier Wintripp against a ruthless corporate personality using human
cloning to achieve medical cures.
Kier Wintripp is part of the Tilok tribe. Most of Dun’s
novels have involved characters from that tribe, which, although fictional, is in many respects based on various factual accounts of Native American life, lore, myth, history
and religion. One aspect of Tilok culture is the Talth, a
medicine person, part psychologist, part political leader,
part judge, an expert on forest-survival arts. The pinnacle
of the Talth is propounded by Spirit Walkers. These men
come along only once a century and are recognized by their
profound intuition concerning the affairs of men and nature. Kier was Dun’s first, and perhaps most striking, Tilok
character. A superb woodsman and tracker, a guide to
youth, a teacher of the forest arts, he’s also a doctor of veterinary medicine. Science being the ultimate rationalism,
274
in Dun’s novels Kier has many times sought, often unsuccessfully, to find peace in reason.
This is the story of how he became a Spirit Walker.
The old people said it was the spirit of a man unloved as a
child, roaming the deepest forests of the mountains, but Kier
Wintripp didn’t believe in spirits that did the work of psychopaths.