Chapter 119
Suzanne looked my direction, her eyes s.h.i.+mmering with tears. "My boyfriend left me last night. With my best friend. I never saw it comin'." She bit her lip as her chin quivered.
I handed her a tissue. "I'm so sorry, Suzanne."
"I thought he was different." She blew her nose and looked at me, narrowing her eyes. "Honey, don't let no man do that to you." She pointed to my face. "They say they love you and they're sorry, but they're just mean, selfish sons of b.i.t.c.hes. You can do a whole lot better than that."
My mouth fell open in shock. If someone had told me two weeks ago that Suzanne would be nice to me, I would have suggested they try to sell me some snake oil, because I would have been far more likely to buy that. But I'd changed, and I realized sometimes people acted mean because they were hurting. Suzanne had obviously been hurting for a long time.
I thought about telling her I didn't get my bruises from my boyfriend. The Weston Garage bust had been big news. Daniel Crocker had been locked up in the hospital while he recovered from dog bites and a gunshot wound to his leg. He would soon face multiple charges that included murdering Sloan and my Momma, but that hadn't been released yet. Amazingly enough, my name had been kept out of it. But I had to wonder how Suzanne knew about my boyfriend. I hadn't told anyone. The person with the flash drive would probably know a lot about me since I took the fall for him. Or her.
We got busier and I didn't have time to think about it. Two o'clock rolled around, when I usually took my lunch break. I'd brought my lunch since Joe would be tied up with official state police stuff. He was still waiting to hear what his punishment would be. Joe said he didn't care. Let them fire him, he said. But the look in his eyes told me it would hurt him a whole lot more than he'd admit.
I sat at the table in the tiny break room, looking at the bulletin board. One of the other employees had posted pictures of her teenage son from his high school graduation. Betty had posted pictures of her grandkids, right next to the invitation to her retirement party. She only had a few weeks left.
I pulled my turkey sandwich out of a brown paper bag, courtesy of Joe. He was appalled at the lack of food in my house and insisted on packing my lunch. When I pulled out an apple, a note fell out onto the table, written on the back of a short grocery store receipt.
I'm counting the hours until I see you tonight.
Joe I wondered again how I got so lucky. I had a smile on my face when Betty walked in.
"How're ya doin'?" She asked, sitting down in chair next to me.
"Pretty good."
"Ya look like your doin' really well after all ya been through. I didn't expect ya to be in today."
In the middle of taking a bite of my apple, I nearly froze. Was she talking about Momma or the weekend?
"Ya know, if ya need more time off, you can take it without pay. I know it's against the rules, but considerin' all ya been through..." She patted my hand, giving me a look of motherly compa.s.sion.
My heart raced. "So Betty, you must be excited about your retirement. Do you have any big trips planned?"
"Nope, not unless ya count movin' as a trip. We're movin' to Dallas, to be close to my kids and grandbabies."
I suddenly remembered Betty had a son who moved to Dallas before I started at the DMV. He had been arrested for drug possession and trafficking right about the time I started, five years ago. It wasn't any secret he'd been involved in a gang. I racked my brain, trying to remember his name. Bobby Joe.
"I bet you're excited about spending more time with those grandbabies," I said, taking a nibble of my sandwich, trying to choke it down along with my anxiety.
Betty's face lit up. "Oh, they're getting so big without me. I'm movin' down the street from 'em. I'll get to see 'em every day."
My heart in my throat, I asked. "How's Bobby Joe? He still at Hutchins Prison?"
Betty's mouth and eyes froze in her smile but the sparkle vanished. She looked like a wax replica of the smiling Betty who was there a moment ago.
"He's doin' just fine. Why'd ya ask, Rose?" She still appeared friendly, but her left eyelid began to twitch.
A tight smile hardened on my face. "I dunno, I was just thinkin' about him."
She continued watching me with her plastered-on smile and I lost my appet.i.te. "Well, I need to get back to work," I said, getting up and throwing my bag in the trash. I had forgoten Joe's note on the table and reached over to pick it up.
"Is that from your new boyfriend?" she asked, her words like imitation maple syrup. They sounded sweet, but left an artificial aftertaste. "Ya waited so long for him. It'd be a shame if ya lost him so soon."
I turned around and hurried to my desk, scared witless. What did she mean by that? I reached into my drawer, to get my cell phone out of my purse and send Joe a text message, but as soon as I opened the drawer I remembered I didn't have my cell phone. For all I knew, it was still at The Trading Post, stuffed under a counter. I couldn't call him on the DMV phone. For one thing, personal calls were strictly forbidden. For another, if I got on the phone,
I just had to wait for Joe to pick me up at five o'clock. It was two-thirty now; I could surely last a few more hours.
We were slammed with customers at the end. It was a good thing because it kept me busy, but I couldn't concentrate. Suzanne gave me weird looks and Betty looked at me with a knowing expression that looked more and more grim the closer it got to five.
When the last customer left, Betty locked the front doors and she walked over to my counter. "Rose, could ya stay a little late so we can discuss your vacation situation?"
It was such a reasonable request, how could I refuse? "Um," my tongue stumbled, searching for words, "Joe's pickin' me up. I don't wanna keep him waitin'."
Betty smiled, the corners of her mouth lifting up, but her eyes cold and hard. No one but me seemed to notice. "That's okay, honey. It won't take but a minute."
Everyone packed up their belongings and headed for the back door. I started out the door, too.
"Rose," Betty called. "It's only gonna take a minute." Her words were thick and sweet like honey off a comb, yet I heard the threat that hid beneath.
I was already out the door, my heart beating frantically while I searched the parking lot for Joe's car. "I was just lookin' for Joe. I wanted to tell him I'd be another minute."
"Come on, darlin.'" Her grip told me she wouldn't take no for an answer. Before she pulled me in, I dropped my purse to the ground, propping the door open.
"Now, let's just go to my office, shall we? I have some paperwork ya need to fill out."
"But Joe..."
"Didn't I tell ya? Joe called and said he was gonna be a few minutes late. But I told him that I needed to keep you for a bit and I'd bring you home."
My heart fell into a pit of fear in my stomach. I pulled harder, knowing full well I'd look like an idiot if I was wrong about Betty. Who would believe it? This was Betty, everybody's mother, yet self-preservation overrode idiocy as I struggled against her grasp. In the end, it was pointless to struggle. Betty was taller than me and outweighed me by a good seventy pounds.
"Rose, if ya just cooperate, this'll all be done in a minute and ya'll be free to go."
She dragged me into her office and shoved me into her chair. A piece of paper and a pen sat on the desk. I looked up confused.
"I need ya to write me a note. Then you're free to go. That sounds okay, right?"
I nodded, my chin trembling, to my disgust. When was I ever going to be strong?
"You can thank your boyfriend and his love note for this idea."
I picked the pen up in my hand and tried to calm my panic. She wanted me to write a note, how bad could that be?
"Okay, now start writin'. I, Rose Gardner, confess to possession of the flash drive."
"What?"
"Write." It was the first time I had ever heard Betty sound really mean.
"Why would I do that?" I asked. She had lost her mind.
"I know how much ya love that sister of yours and her kids. It'd be shame if somethin' happened to 'em. Now write."
I had pinned my hopes on Joe showing up, but that dream was gone. I had to go along with her until I could figure out how to get away. I wrote, my handwriting looking like scribbles from my shaking hand.
"That's good, makes ya look upset." Betty said looking over my shoulder. She made me write a confession admitting to owning the flash drive, destroying it, and duping Daniel Crocker. "Now, they'll think ya did it and they'll stop lookin'."
"You didn't really destroy it, did you, Betty? Where is it?"
"It's in my safe deposit box. After I made my deal with Sloan, I realized I could get more money for it in a bigger city."
"I don't even know what's on it!" I cried out in frustration. "If I'm gonna die for a stupid piece of plastic I should at least know what's on it."
"Information about several gangs in Dallas and Houston, their weak spots, their business activities and partners. Interestin' stuff."
I realized she didn't deny I was going to die. I felt nauseated. "And you got it from Bobby Joe?"
"Yeah, stuff he knew from the gang he was in, other information he stumbled upon in prison. He finally came through for his Momma. Are ya done?"
I handed her the paper and she read it over. "Okay, looks good, let's go."
I got up and she grabbed my arm again, leading me out of the office to the back door. "Where are we goin'?" I asked as we walked through the darkened back room.
"We're goin' to set up your suicide."
I thought about digging in my heels and trying to fight her, but figured I had a better shot at getting away outside. Fear made my stomach churn. Maybe I could throw up on Betty and work it into an escape plan.
The cracked back door made Betty stop.
"How'd that door get propped open?"
She swiveled her head around, then stuck her foot forward to kick my purse out of the way. She was promptly tackled by none other than Joe. I barely got my arm out of Betty's grasp before she tumbled to the ground.
You would think it would have been an easy match for Joe, but Betty was sc.r.a.ppier than she looked. It took Joe a good minute to get her handcuffed.
"Are you okay?" he asked me when he finished, panting from his exertion.
I nodded. "What are you doin' here? I thought Betty said she'd bring me home."
"She did, but I didn't want to wait, so I came by anyway and found your purse in the door." He helped me outside and around Betty, who lay rolling around on the ground. "You know, you lose purses more than any other woman I've ever met. What's this, three in one week?"
I glared at him.
He pulled me into a hug. "I didn't think you'd just leave your purse in the door, in spite of your track record, so I snuck in and listened."
"You left me in there with her?" I pulled back in dismay, looking up at his face.
"Sorry." He looked sheepish. "But it seemed safer than comin' in. I was ready to act if I needed to." He leaned over and gave me a quick kiss. "Surely, you've figured out I wouldn't let anything happen to you if I could help it."
He was right. I knew he'd risk his life to save me. He already had and his job, too. I heard sirens in the distance.
"Henryetta's finest on their way." Joe snorted. "I called them once I knew what was going on, even though I told them no sirens. They sure love their sirens. I'd dare to say they've seen more action in the last couple of weeks than they've had in the past ten years."
I laughed. "I know I sure have."
Joe laughed too then gave me a serious look. "Rose, it's only just begun, you know."
I didn't know if he meant the action with criminals or the action between the two of us. I was just about to ask, but then he kissed me...and I just plain forgot.
THE END.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR.
Denise Grover Sw.a.n.k lives in Lee's Summit, Missouri. She has six children, two dogs, and an overactive imagination. She can be found dancing in her kitchen with her children, reading or writing her next book. You will rarely find her cleaning.
Website: www.denisegroversw.a.n.k.com.
Catch Me If You Can.
Liliana Hart.
CHAPTER ONE.
The slap, slap, slap of his shoes..h.i.tting the pavement echoed in the fog that crept over the sleeping city.
He was slicked with sweat and his lungs burned with each laboring breath, but still he ran faster, punis.h.i.+ng his body, punis.h.i.+ng himself, as he fought the urge to look over his shoulder. It never seemed to matter how fast he ran, because his past continued to haunt him.
Shane Quincy knew all about ghosts and personal demons. He knew about the terror of the innocent and their screams that still filled his head. He knew about heartbreak and sorrow because it plagued him with every breath he took. And most of all, he knew about fear-fear that clawed its way up from the pit of his belly and left a bitter taste in his mouth-and horrors so devastating they could break even the toughest FBI Hostage and Rescue Sniper.
And he had been the toughest. The best the FBI had ever had to offer.
He slowed his steps as a heavy drizzle blanketed the deserted New Orleans street and hunched over, propping his hands on his knees as he gasped for breath and tried to ease the aching in his chest. He knew from experience that the ache would never go away, but he tried just the same.
For two years his routine hadn't changed. The nightmares would come, waking him in a cold sweat with the taste of bile rising in the back of his throat. The covers would be damp and twisted beneath his restless body and his senses would be primed. But the echoes of the screams were only in his imagination, so he'd slip on his sweatpants and a t-s.h.i.+rt, leave his empty apartment, careful not to disturb the dark-haired woman he shared the third floor with, and he'd run for miles through The Big Easy. Fast and hard, as if he were running for his life. And in some ways he was.