Back to Part 1
SVS-10: Into the Jungle
by Alyjude, Part 2
Jim turned on the kitchen light as he watched his partner remove
his jacket and head toward the stairs.
"Chief, how about I send out for dinner?"
Blair paused mid-step but didn't turn around. "Not really hungry,
Jim. But you go ahead."
"Nah, no fun that way."
His words didn't faze Sandburg, who continued up the stairs. Jim
followed the leaden footsteps, listened as the blue flannel shirt
was removed, heard the gentle thud as shoes were toed off and the
quiet whisper of denim as it slid down over Blair's hips...
Rooted to the spot, Jim realized he didn't have a clue what to do
for his partner, how to help him. And it was weird because with
the tables turned like this, he now had a complete understanding
of how impotent Blair must have felt in Sierra Verde. And it was
a damn epiphany.
How often had Sandburg struggled with Jim's senses? How many
times must he have felt this impotence when faced with the
question of how to help Jim?
And yet -- Blair had always been successful -- until -- Alex.
Of course, Sandburg wouldn't see those successes, he wouldn't see
that every single challenge had been overcome -- by Blair.
Until -- Alex.
And fuck, why did everything keep coming back to her? And how far
would she actually go to capture the control she so desperately
needed? Control that he now enjoyed with very little thought.
Spurred to action, Jim flicked off the kitchen light, double
checked the doors and windows, then moved upstairs.
Reaching the top, he found Sandburg sitting motionless on the
edge of the bed, wearing only his briefs. Noting the stillness of
his partner and feeling the lurch his stomach gave at the sight,
he realized that he was probably feeling much the same as Blair
when witnessing one of Jim's zones.
Jim moved quickly to the bed and dropped down in front of the
quiet man. He rested both hands on Sandburg's thighs and in a
low, pleading voice, said, "Chief, don't do this to yourself,
please."
Blair's head didn't lift, but Jim could just make out his words.
"she loved that car. a real classic."
"Blair, it was a thing, a mass of metal. And Megan doesn't
blame you."
Sandburg looked up then, eyes blazing with anger. "Well I blame
me. I did this, I'm responsible, no one else. Because I
couldn't just be. I couldn't let it alone."
"Ah, God, Chief, you wanted to help her."
"Sure, I wanted to help her, but God damn it, I was ecstatic
about finding another sentinel. My judgement and everything I
ever learned from you flew right out the window. I was the
biggest jackass God ever created and she's made some doozies in
her time."
Jim stroked the side of Blair's face and smiled. "Well, if it
helps, you're my favorite jackass."
Blair snorted, "It doesn't help, Jim. I blew it but was ready to
learn, to move on, but now -- more will be hurt and I can't do
anything to stop it."
"We will stop her, Chief."
Blair seemed to focus on a spot over Jim's left shoulder as he
said, "You know what's really weird?" When Jim shook his head,
Blair went on. "I never helped her. I couldn't stop her pain,
couldn't get her to learn to filter out. All I did for Alex
Barnes was to tell her what she was and lead her to you."
Jim slid his hands up Blair's chilled and trembling body, then
placed them on either side of the man's face, gently forcing
Blair to look at him. "I love you, Blair Sandburg."
"Is that supposed to fix this?"
"Yes. Is it working?"
"It could, with a little extra effort -- maybe."
Jim leaned in and let his lips brush Blair's. "Did I also mention
that I'm very grateful to your God for bringing you to me?"
"Oh yeah, she's a great old dame. And aren't you the lucky one."
The tone of Blair's voice brought Jim up sharply and his hands
gave Sandburg's face a little shake.
"Blair, we can't let her do this to us. Remember? Partners in
everything, in all ways? What happened before, none of it
matters. This is all that matters."
He kissed him then and this time he let his tongue tenderly seek
entrance. Blair's mouth opened under his and the kiss deepened as
Blair sought reassurance and security in the feel of Jim.
Jim rose until his body was flush against Blair's. He kept moving
until Sandburg's back was pressed against the mattress, his own
body covering the younger man's. As he focused his attention on
Blair's neck, he could hear the low rumbling and realized that
Sandburg was talking. He lifted his head.
"I swear, you have a one track mind, Ellison."
"Oh, yeah?"
"Sex. All you ever think about."
"This from Mr. Sex? King of sex Sandburg?"
Blair snorted. "Yeah, right. King of the Nerds is more like it.
Duke of Dorksville. Geek Supremus."
"Well, my little geek god, wanna have some sex?"
Blair's laughter bubbled up and smiling, Jim went back to
attacking Sandburg's mouth and was very pleased when the laughter
turned to moans that tumbled over one another and sent Jim's dick
into orbit.
With some clumsy maneuvering and more laughter from Blair, Jim
somehow got them both positioned in the middle of the bed. He
then went back to turning the chuckles into lusty moans. And he
was doing a pretty good job too, until Blair took control. Which
was damn surprising. Not that Blair couldn't or hadn't before.
They were equal opportunity lovers, but it had never happened
quite like this. One minute Jim was lavishing love on his geek
god and the next he was flat on his back, Blair's hands gripping
his forearms like nobody's business. His face was centimeters
from Jim's, eyes blazing black velvet, the irises almost totally
eclipsed by the pupils. Sandburg's fingers dug in, bruising the
flesh as his features seemed to contort in pain.
"blair?" Jim whispered the name softly, his breath ruffling
through the hair hanging in his face, caressing his jaw.
"jim, she can't have you, not this time. not ever, do you
understand me?"
He brought up his hand and laid it gently over Blair's cheek.
"it's not me, chief. she doesn't want me. that's dead. because of
us, it's dead."
The eyes searching Jim's face seemed almost -- hypnotic.
"she can't have me either."
"no, she can't."
Blair's kiss was blistering, their lips fused by the heat.
Fingers ripped at Jim's shirt, fumbled with his zipper, tore at
sleeves, shoved, pulled and pushed until Jim was naked and
Blair's briefs were history. And still -- the kiss went on, with
lips parting only long enough to solicit a promise, to claim, to
urge words of need and love.
Someone got to the nightstand, to their supplies, but later Jim
wouldn't remember who.
But what he did remember and would remember until the day he died
and probably beyond, was the way Blair looked as he prepared Jim,
as he slipped the condom over Jim's dick, then prepared himself,
and finally as Blair positioned his body over Jim's.
In awe, Jim brought his arms up, grasped Blair's hips and
watched, eyes full of love, as Blair lowered himself.
"ah, god."
The smile given to Jim at that moment was -- utterly sublime.
Blair's eyes closed until Jim was completely sheathed within his
body. Then he held himself in place -- waiting -- savoring.
"bl-air..."
The word was pulled from Jim as he felt all control leached from
his body.
Blair moved slowly, drawing it out and teasing as he leaned
forward, hands braced on Jim's shoulders, tongue flicking out.
Jim's head lifted, lips parting, inviting, hands coming up,
fingers burying themselves in the rich depths of thick, unruly
and damp hair, the kinky curls capturing his willing fingers.
They devoured each other as Jim lifted his lower body and his
lips rang with Blair's sudden groan.
And all bets were off. The two men began to move then, hard,
urgent and fast, both working it, sharing it, needing it. Their
combined climax, when it came, was almost indistinguishable from
the experience as a whole and it wasn't until Blair collapsed
onto Jim's body, legs still twitching, that Jim knew it was over.
Eyes closed, Jim stroked the sweaty back even as he buried his
face deeper in Blairhair.
"she won't win, chief, i promise."
Blair lifted his head from Jim's shoulder and stared hard at the
older man.
"No, she won't."
The weekend passed uneventfully if one didn't count the action in
#307.
Jim and Blair found that leaving each other's side was virtually
impossible. They had to touch, look and confirm -- over and over
again.
Outside the confines of 852 Prospect, Rafe and Brown went about
their weekend quietly and carefully. And at Major Crime -- the
search for Alex Barnes continued.
For Simon, the weekend held only misery. Daryl had been scheduled
to spend Saturday through Tuesday with his father, but Simon had
wisely cancelled, to the supreme disappointment of his son.
Even though Simon's words on Friday had been aimed at Connor,
Brown and Rafe, the fact was that he too had, of course, been at
Rainier on that fateful day. He had to assume that he could be as
much a target as the others. And he would not put Daryl in harm's
way.
So he spent the weekend alone, talking to his son by phone and
doing yard work, with the occasional foray to his office to
double check the investigation. Which was going nowhere -- fast.
By Monday, Sandburg was almost back to normal -- or at least what
passed for normal for him.
The bullpen was a flurry of activity when Ellison and Sandburg
arrived earlier than scheduled, but none of the activity had
anything to do with Barnes.
A threat to the Mayor-elect had been delivered via one of the
many police snitches and the issue had been sent up to Major
Crime. Two detectives not involved with the Barnes case, namely
White and Sommerset, had been assigned to the Mayor, which left
Brown and Rafe tackling their case.
And it was a strange one involving a man who'd been holding up
whole families as they strolled the wooded area that was Furhman
Park. The perp not only held up the families, stealing wallets,
money and jewelry, he even took the children's toys.
Rafe was just leaving to meet Brown when Jim and Blair arrived
and the three men shared a few quiet words of caution, ending
with Rafe high-fiving Sandburg.
Simon came out of his office and caught Ellison's eye. The
detective stood and dropped a hand on Sandburg's back to urge him
up.
"What?"
Ellison nodded toward Simon's office and with heart in throat,
Blair stood and followed his partner.
As soon as the door shut behind Sandburg, Simon said quietly,
"Rafe and Brown are on their way back in. They caught the perp at
Furhman Park but something happened."
Blair gave an inward groan and waited for the other shoe to fall.
"You know Brown and his fetish for Roly Poly Donuts?"
Frowning, Jim and Blair nodded.
"Well, they were across the street from one of the shops and Rafe
agreed to run over while Brown finished up. But on his way across
Davis Avenue, a sports car came around the corner at
approximately fifty miles an hour and nearly ran him down."
"He's okay, right, Simon?" Blair asked worriedly.
"He managed to dive for cover and the car zipped past him. He's
banged up a bit, but otherwise, unharmed."
Jim had been watching Simon's face, and the fact that so far the
large man had failed to make eye contact was enough to set off
every alarm Jim possessed.
"What aren't you saying?"
Banks finally looked at Jim. "The car -- it was identified by
witnesses as a red Fiat -- Spider."
Blair's fist slammed down on Simon's desk as he angrily barked
out, "I don't fucking believe this."
Rafe and Brown had returned, Rafe looking a little green around
the gills, Brown looking just plain angry. Rafe's jacket was a
shambles and he was sporting a bruised face and favoring a sore
shoulder. Now, an hour later, he, Brown, Ellison and Sandburg sat
in Simon's office as Brown and Rafe were debriefed.
"Did any of the witnesses see the person behind the wheel,
Brown?"
Henri shook his head disgustedly. "And you know, I wouldn't be so
pissed if Detective Rafe hadn't landed on my jelly donuts.
They're history, man."
"Hey, my own glazed wonders were in that bag too, Brown."
Blair had been silent since joining the others around the
conference table, but he spoke up now.
"She made a mistake this time, guys."
"Yeah," Brown snorted, "She destroyed my donuts."
Giving the large black man a half grin, Blair added, "Well, other
than that, there aren't that many Spiders around Cascade. And
according to what we've found so far -- none have been reported
stolen."
Shaking his head at the puzzled faces around the table, he
groaned and added for clarification, "Dealers, guys."
"Well, shit." Simon huffed around his unlit cigar, then added
more calmly, "May I suggest you gentlemen get cracking?"
Blair was surfing the classifieds via the net while the others
tackled the dealerships. As he perused the Fiat ads, his email
system pinged. He moved to Outlook and opened the new mail,
thinking it was probably Naomi.
It wasn't.
At first -- he was only puzzled. The addy was unfamiliar and a
hotmail account. He opened the missive and as the words jumped
out at him, he was immediately grateful that Jim was in Simon's
office.
How long do you want to keep playing, Blair? And the Spider is
already back with its owner. It was a nice test ride, but it's
amazing the kind of trash you can run into out there. You know,
he ended up face down too.
Before he could stop himself, Blair hit reply and began to type
furiously.
Doesn't it worry you? Trying to play a game with a dead man?
He clicked on send and expelled the breath he'd been holding
while he'd typed. And he immediately realized he'd made an error.
He glanced guiltily over at Simon's office. Shit, he was a fool.
Wiping his sweaty hands on a pant leg, he stood and walked slowly
to Simon's door. Which opened and he found himself staring up
into Jim's pale blue eyes.
"What is it, Chief?"
"Shit, sometimes this sentinel thing..."
Jim grabbed his arm and pulled him inside. "Spill."
"I just received an email from Alex. I -- um, sort of -- answered
her."
"So she took a test ride from this guy?"
"Apparently. Trusting soul. She was gone thirty minutes, brought
the car back and told him she'd let him know."
Simon sat at his desk holding two printouts as Jim filled him in
on their activities since Blair had informed them of the email.
Sandburg stood at the window, his back to the two men.
"And this Martin Shoop was able to identify her absolutely?"
"She's not trying to hide anything, Simon. She wanted us to track
her to Shoop."
Simon glanced down at the email copy that Sandburg had sent to
Alex, then up to the rigid back at the window. He wasn't sure he
completely understood Blair's words but he was totally sure he
didn't want to ask. Too raw, too emotional.
Jim had no such compunction.
"Chief, what exactly were you trying to tell her?" An elegant
shrug was his only answer.
"Come on, Chief, that isn't going to work. What were you telling
her?"
"Not to mess with us."
The rest of Monday was spent checking hotels, motels, rentals,
anywhere that Alex could be hiding. Sandburg even suggested they
check with vehicle leasing for RVs that might have been rented
recently.
By five that evening -- their work paid off.
Connor had checked with Brimley's Leasing and found that a woman
matching Alex's description had rented a Shasta Travelmaster one
week earlier. The rental agreement was in the name of Alicia
Bannister and she'd paid in cash. She'd also possessed a valid
Washington license.
Which meant that Vince Shaw had done more for Alex than poison
Jim.
It was a tired, discouraged Simon Banks that trudged up the steps
to his home. They'd made great headway -- until it came time to
try and actually find Alex and her Travelmaster. For a brief
time, they'd been ecstatic. After all, how many places could one
hide a mobile home the size of a Travelmaster? And she had to be
somewhere fairly close. And yet, after three hours on phones and
in the field, they'd come up with nothing.
It was now after eight and he was exhausted. He'd sent Ellison
and Sandburg home thirty minutes ago and had quickly followed
suit. Maybe tomorrow they'd have more luck.
He opened his front door and received the shock of his life.
"Dad!"
Simon shut the door on the pizza delivery man and carried the
large box into the dining room where his son sat, hugely pleased
with himself.
"Daryl, this is not funny."
"Aw, come on, Dad. Just one night -- I'll head back to mom's
tomorrow morning."
He set the pizza down and took the chair next to his son. He
couldn't completely hide his pleasure at seeing Daryl and as his
son poured their sodas, he smiled.
"All right, one night, then home. You leave with me in the
morning."
"You got a deal."
As he pulled out two thick slices and plopped them on his plate,
he asked, "So you gonna tell me what the big case is that made
you cancel our weekend?"
"Well, it's a big case."
"Gee Dad, thanks. Come on, you can tell me."
"Actually, son, I can't.
Daryl licked mozzarella and pizza-sauced covered fingers as he
shot his father one of his patented come on, dad looks.
"Like, who am I gonna tell? Our high school newspaper?"
"Daryl, why don't you tell me how things are going with you and
your mother?"
"Man, I hate it when you do that."
"Yeah, I know."
"So, maybe some heated up chili and cornbread?"
"Sounds good."
Twenty minutes later, Jim set a large steaming bowl of Sandburg's
turkey chili on the table as Blair set down the cornbread. Two
cold beers followed. They quietly took their seats and started
eating.
Jim had polished off his first helping and was moving onto the
second when Blair finally spoke.
"You said what you're feeling with Alex this time is different.
What did you mean? What are you feeling?"
Jim swallowed and stared at Sandburg over his beer bottle. Then
he tipped it the rest of the way and took a big swig. Setting the
bottle down and wiping his mouth, he answered in as calm a voice
as possible. Which was pretty calm, considering that this was
mined territory.
"It's an itch, Sandburg. There, always, just under the skin."
Dark blue eyes narrowed. "Does it -- increase? Decrease?"
"No. Just always there and before you ask -- it started in the
morgue and blossomed at the cabin."
"I see."
Jim studied his partner's face for a moment, and convinced that
there was only genuine curiosity, asked, "What's turning in that
Dr. Frankenstein brain of yours?"
"I was just hoping, you know? That maybe, somehow, what you were
experiencing could be used to find her."
"What, like some sort of compass, Sandburg?"
Smiling sheepishly, Blair nodded. "Yeah, something like that. You
know, our very own Ellison Divining Rod."
Jim arched one eyebrow as his eyes narrowed. "Divining rod,
Sandburg?"
"Well, it's not out of the ordinary to expect something like
that. You're a sentinel, for crissakes. And let's face it, last
time, as her crimes escalated, you got, well -- weirder, you
know?"
Resigned, Jim just shook his head helplessly. "Sandburg, you're
the weird one in this relationship."
"Well, yeah, that goes without saying, but still... you'd think
that if she got close -- you'd get -- itchier."
"Sometimes you amaze me."
"That goes without saying too."
With a patient sigh, Jim said carefully, "Chief, she hasn't
come close yet. Don't you get it?"
"Jim, how can you say that? She was in Major Crime, at Megan's
desk, at mine, she was there, man."
Jim just glared at his partner and as Blair's eyes widened in
understanding, Jim nodded. "Now you've got it, Darwin. She was
there but we, meaning you, weren't."
"Well, I'll be damned."
"And you have a degree, jeesh. The American educational system
has some pretty heavy explaining to do, that's all I have to
say."
The fork in Blair's hand dropped suddenly as he stared wide-eyed
at his sentinel.
"Shit, you are a divining rod."
"What's that supposed to mean?"
"You acted pretty territorial at the station and she'd only
been there -- when we weren't. So what would happen if we
were in close proximity to her?"
"How the hell should I -- oh. I see."
Digging back into his bowl of chili, Blair chortled and said, "So
tomorrow, we hit the road, Jack. With my own personal divining
rod. Or in this case -- Alex rod."
Jim leered at him for a moment, then said, "But tonight, you're
gonna have to deal with your own personal -- Blairrod."
Sandburg rolled his eyes.
Simon closed the folder, sat back, removed his glasses, pinched
his nose, then rubbed his eyes. Daryl was in bed but the dining
room table still held the evidence of their evening: Simon's own
work, the empty pizza carton and Daryl's homework, which was
spread out across from Simon. He smiled fondly at the neatly
typed pages, handwritten notes and books encased in the red and
white colors of Daryl's high school.
Simon stood, stretched and after straightening up a bit, tossing
the remnants of their dinner and locking up, he walked down the
hall and checked in on his son.
Daryl was spread out in his twin bed, covers tangled in his legs,
one arm outstretched, palm up, fingers open. He was snoring
lightly. Simon rested one hand on his son's back, then dropped a
kiss on the top of his head.
"night, son."
Twenty-five miles away, a woman tossed and turned in a small bed
in the back of a Shasta Travelmaster. Her eyes hurt, her skin
itched and no matter how she tried, she couldn't get comfortable.
But she wasn't worried. Tomorrow it would end. The game was in
its final set and she would be the victor.
With great stealth, the cat moved through the dark, dense jungle.
It stopped, lifted its head and sniffed. No scent. The black
jaguar moved on.
It would continue until it dropped. Because somewhere in the
forest -- his mate needed him. A howl pierced the fragrant night
air and the black jungle animal paused. Its head tilted first to
one side, then the other. It took off at a run.
Long legs stretched out as the ears flattened back. Danger.
Ahead. Its mate. The jaguar sped through the foliage, bounding
over stumps and vines, breaking through the bush, speed growing
as the sense of danger increased. Another howl filled his ears
and the cat ran impossibly faster.
Close, so close now --
The sleek black jaguar charged into a clearing and thudded to a
stop at the sight that greeted its blue eyes.
A spotted jaguar had its teeth buried in the now bloodied throat
of a wolf. There was no life left in the canine. Blood flowed
freely, turning the ground beneath black. The spotted jaguar
lifted its mouth, blood dripping from its fangs. It raised its
head to the skies and yowled its victory.
The black jaguar leapt.
Jim's eyes popped open, his breathing harsh, body covered in
sweat. For a moment, he could neither see, nor hear. He was
surrounded by inky blackness. It was inside of him, gripping his
heart and squeezing relentlessly.
His arms rose, reached, found -- nothing.
"blair..."
The one word was breathed out in anguish, in hopelessness. He was
alone. Blair was gone -- dead.
Warm, silent tears slid down his cheeks. He'd failed to protect.
To save. To cherish.
"Jim? You okay?"
The low, mellow, beautiful voice penetrated his misery. He said
the one word again.
"blair?"
"No, it's the wicked warlock of the west."
The words were light, but the look on Sandburg's face was
anything but. His eyes were dark with worry as he stroked up and
down Jim's right arm. Blair was on his knees, on the bed and
naked as the day he was born.
Jim could have sworn Blair had gone to sleep in sweats. And
socks. Old, grey socks.
"you're naked."
"Nothing gets by you, does it?"
"why are you naked?"
"Why are you swimming in sweat?"
"nice alliteration."
"Dickwad."
"you were gone -- dead. I woke up and you weren't here and I
couldn't see, couldn't hear..."
"Shit, Ellison."
"well said, professor."
They were quiet. Blair continued to stroke easily and Jim took in
his fill. He couldn't seem to get enough of just -- looking at
the younger man. As his eyes moved down the stocky body, he
finally spoke.
"why are you naked?"
"I was taking a shower. You screamed loud enough to wake the de
--, you screamed and I ran up here. Somewhere along the way, I
lost the towel, okay?"
"and you were showering at," he glanced at the alarm clock behind
Sandburg, "three-thirty in the morning, why?"
"Well, see, I was, like -- hot, you know?"
"you were hot? You, Mr. Blair four layers of clothing Sandburg?
In the winter?"
"I had this dream, okay? Satisfied now?"
Jim's lips twitched. "and let me guess -- you were all sweaty?"
"Oh shut up."
Jim turned enough to reach out and pull the naked Sandburg down
onto his chest. With one arm slung around Blair's back, holding
him place, he lifted his head and kissed his captive as eager
fingers wrapped themselves in shower damp hair.
When they parted, Blair was shaking his head.
"Is sex always going to be the answer?"
"Yup. Can you think of a better way to reaffirm? To make the
ultimate connection? "
"We could try, say, bridge."
"Or maybe canasta?"
"Yeah, or," he paused, trying to remember the name of a card game
his grandmother had mentioned...
"whist."
Jim chuckled and said, "Sex is sounding better and better,
Chief."
"And I was getting all ready for a rousing game of cards. Well
fuck."
"The world is full of compromises, Chief."
"Sacrifices."
"Give and take."
"How 'bout I give and you take?"
"Just as soon as you tell me what got you out of bed and into the
shower."
"Jim, nothing, just a dream. No big deal."
Ever the skeptic, Jim said, "I told you mine, it's officially
your turn."
Jim hadn't been completely truthful about his dream, but he'd
shared enough to give his statement some validity. It worked.
"It was stupid. We were at the auto show."
Comprehension dawned. Ervin.
"Reliving something like the shooting is not unusual, Blair."
"I know, I know."
Jim sensed that Blair had just done a little of his own
rearranging of the facts.
"Tell me all of it, Sandburg."
"I didn't -- I wasn't -- in time. He killed you and before I
could pull the trigger -- Ervin became Alex. And yes, I know,
Freud would have a field day."
"Oh, I don't know, did the gun turn into a penis?"
Blair's mouth opened, then shut as his eyes blinked rapidly.
Finally, a smile pulling at the corners of his mouth, he said,
"Well, now that you mention it... it had a definite -- feel to
it."
Jim took Blair's hand and pulled it down. "Did it feel anything
like this?"
"oh, yeah."
"Yup, Freud would've had a field day with your dream."
Blair leaned in again and just before latching onto Jim's mouth,
whispered, "freud can get his own -- gun."
Alex Barnes couldn't move. If she tried, the pain would hit in
waves. Anything brushing across her skin felt like knives slicing
into her.
But she had to move. Now. The game was drawing to a close. Today
-- she'd play her final piece.
She closed her eyes, held her breath, mentally counted to ten and
rolled over.
And nearly screamed.
This. Would. Not. Defeat. Her.
She had not survived this long to fail now. Life would not be so
cruel. She tried to remember his voice -- the way it had sounded
in the Rose Garden at Rainier...
...soothing, warm, gentle -- if she could just recapture that
sound.
Breathe deep -- let it all fade away -- concentrate on the sound
of your own breathing, your lungs expanding and contracting, the
flow of your own blood through your veins...
Slowly, Alex sat up, then carefully swung both legs over the edge
of the bed. For a moment, she swayed, then using every ounce of
her steel will, she stood.
If she couldn't get Sandburg today -- she seriously doubted she'd
survive the week. Alex reached for the small tube bottle on the
nightstand. She smiled as she read the label: Dramamine.
Vince Shaw had done a great deal for her -- even if he'd failed
to kill Ellison. And this bottle of Dramamine was one of his
ideas. Of course, when he'd suggested it, he'd had no idea about
her senses, he'd just thought she'd been wigging out.
"Don't laugh," he'd said. "But you know that stuff people take
for flying?" And she'd nodded, which had prompted him to add,
"Well, it works on the nerves, Alex. You should try it. The
non-drowsy formula. My sister Ida swears by it." His sister Ida
was doing five to ten in the federal pen for manslaughter. If she
said Dramamine worked, who was Alex Barnes to argue?
And it had. If she took three or four at a time. The simple off
the counter drug actually seemed to calm her senses. She twisted
open the cap and shook five into her palm. She'd need a steady
hand today.
Twenty minutes later she felt almost normal. She'd managed to
shower and even choke down a piece of toast and lukewarm tea. Now
dressed in a tank top and soft gauze pants, she gazed at the
materials on the small table in the RV.
Red, green and white wires, a square of Plastique, a small clock
face, three small gears...
Today -- another member of Major Crime would experience
checkmate. And Blair Sandburg would willingly come to her.
"Daryl, you've got five minutes!"
"I'm almost ready, but if you keep yelling, I'll forget
something!"
"Well, get your butt in gear."
Daryl hurried into the kitchen, dropping his overnight bag and
book bag onto a chair. His father was dishing up his famous
one-eyed sandwiches and Daryl slid into the other chair.
He took a large swallow of orange juice and watched as two
sandwiches were dropped on a plate. His father swung around and
placed the dish in front of him. Daryl dug in.
"Um, just as good as I remember 'em. What made you fix these
today?"
Simon smiled as he dropped the last two onto his own plate and
sat opposite his son.
"Seemed a good idea. We haven't had them in awhile."
"Yeah, like -- ten years."
"I'm sorry about that, Daryl."
"Hey, Dad, I didn't mean anything. I know what your life is like.
You're a cop -- a good one. I'm proud of you, you know?"
"You still planning on the academy right after graduation?"
Daryl glanced away and fiddled with his napkin. "Yeah, kind of."
"Kind of?"
He looked up then and met his father's gaze squarely, his chin
lifting.
"Yes, yes I am. It's what I want, Dad."
Daryl expected anger so was completely unprepared for what he did
receive.
"Um, well, I've got how many months to change your mind?"
"I graduate in June, Dad."
"Yeah, same month as Father's Day. So -- plenty of time to show
you the error of your ways."
The two men smiled at each other.
Daryl unlocked the door to his Volkswagen and tossed his bags
into the back seat.
"So, maybe next weekend, Dad?"
"We'll try for it, Daryl, I promise. Say hi to your mother for
me, okay?"
"I will." Daryl paused and then, in a move uncharacteristic of a
seventeen year old, he hugged his father.
Five minutes later, the Volkswagen and Crown Victoria went their
separate ways.
And a large RV pulled up in front of Simon's home.
"Sandburg, you're skittish."
"Am not."
"Are too. You jumped when I turned on the garbage disposal. You
hit the wall when I turned on the blender --"
"That's because I couldn't believe you were fixing me an
algae shake."
"And the reason you whipped yourself around so hard, you bit your
tongue, when all I did was put my hand on your shoulder as you
got out of the shower?"
"Um, erotic fantasies?"
"Come on, this is a sentinel you're talking to, not some schmoe
on the street."
Sandburg held up his hands in surrender. "Okay, okay. I don't
know what's wrong. Just -- have this feeling. Like instead of
butterflies in my stomach, I have a few hundred Pterodactyls
flying around."
"You couldn't have just said a herd of stampeding elephants?"
"Bite me."
"Tonight. On your ass. But for now -- what do you think these few
hundred Pterodactyls are trying to tell you?"
"I can distinctly hear them saying watch your back, watch your
back."
"Sounds like good advice."
Alex stepped back to view her handiwork.
Damn fine job even if she did say so herself. After wiping her
gloved hands on the side of her pants, she gathered up her tools,
put them carefully back into the toolbox and exited the home the
same way she'd entered: by the back door. With a little help from
her superior skills as a master thief.
She opened the side door of the RV, set the box just inside and
climbed in. She stood a moment, still undecided. She'd been
arguing with herself for the last couple of hours. Wait nearby so
that the call would be placed at its most advantageous moment, or
simply call later that evening. The pain in her head and behind
her eyes said wait nearby. She couldn't afford to fail. She knew
that Ellison and Sandburg would come here, that Sandburg would
remain outside -- and that was when she needed to make the call.
Except -- by now, they knew about her RV. And she couldn't risk
Ellison getting close...
So -- plan B.
She climbed into the driver's seat, started the engine and drove
off.
Fifty minutes later, a local cable van pulled up and parked on
Chestnut. Five blocks south of Walnut -- the street on which
Simon Banks lived. The position of the van gave Alex Barnes a
complete, clear and unrestricted view between houses and alleys -- to Simon's home.
The bomb was not intended for Simon's arrival home; no, it was
intended only to bring them all here.
In just a few hours.
She settled back to wait.
Brown sat at his desk, fingers drumming restlessly on a folder.
Rafe was on the phone with another RV park and from the look on
his partner's face -- he was striking out. Again.
Henri glanced over at Megan and she too was on the phone, doing
exactly the same thing as Rafe. He looked down at the list in
front of him, the names and numbers of several RV parks staring
back at him. But he found that he was unable to concentrate.
Because -- he had to be next. And since arriving for work, Rafe
hadn't let him out of his sight. Not even to take a leak.
Everyone knew he was next. And they were probably all wondering
the same thing he was; how, when and what would she do?
Damn. Talk about nerve wrecking. He glanced over at Sandburg who
was busy at the computer and the vision came unbidden --
The body -- floating face down. Hair spread out, steam rising
gently --
He remembered Simon fighting back the tears, Megan's stunned,
disbelieving expression, Rafe looking lost and puzzled, and Jim
-- God, Jim.
And -- the glow. Brown had never told a soul, never asked Rafe or
Megan if they'd seen it too. But he knew it had been real.
Blair was on the ground -- dead. Jim had been pulled back and the
young paramedic had looked up and shaken his head and Jim seemed
to freeze and that's when Brown had seen the glow. Around
Sandburg.
And then Jim was down again, beside the body, and his hands were
on Blair's cold, pale face and they moved over Blair's lifeless
skin, almost as a lover would caress --
And then -- Blair coughed. And he was alive.
It was impossible. All of it. But he'd seen it. They'd all seen
it. Well, maybe not the glow, but they'd all known that Blair
Sandburg was dead -- and then he wasn't.
"Hey, partner, any luck?"
Brown was shaken from his reverie by Rafe's words. He blinked and
shook his head.
"Well, keep at it."
"Yeah, man, sure." But Brown made no move to pick up the phone.
Instead, he asked, "Rafe?"
"Yeah?"
Brown glanced over at the two desks, at Sandburg and Ellison,
both deeply engrossed in their tasks. He dropped his voice low.
"We've never talked about it, you know?"
Rafe didn't hold the rank of Detective for nothing.
"What could we say, H?"
"He fucking," Brown shot a quick glance at Sandburg, then lowered
his voice another octave. "He fucking died, man. He was gone,
you know it and I know it. And we're not talking like -- just no
pulse, or like machines keeping things going -- there was nothing
to keep going. There was never a heartbeat, never a pulse, he
was dead. He'd been dead."
"I know, I was there, remember? You've got to accept it for what
it was, H."
"Oh, and what was that?"
"A miracle of love."
Daryl checked his watch. Shit. He had forty minutes left of his
lunch period and he now knew exactly where he'd left his paper --
on the catch-all table by the front door. He'd been in such a
rush...
If he hurried, he could get to his dad's house and back in time
for English Lit. He grabbed his stuff, slapped his two buddies on
the back and took off for the parking lot.
Twenty minutes later he pulled into the driveway and leaving the
car running, hurried up the steps to the front door. He inserted
the key in the lock, turned it and pressed down on the handle. As
the door swung open, a voice hailed him from across the street.
"Hey, Daryl!"
It was Mr. Edwards. He was waving and pointing at the ground.
"You dropped something, son!"
His wallet. Shit, he must have dropped it while fumbling in his
pocket for the other set of keys.
He was halfway down the steps when the world exploded.
For Mr. Edwards across the street, one minute the young man was
running toward what he'd dropped, and the next, there was a huge
sound and the boy's body was flying.
Flames burst from the house and Edwards didn't stop to think. He
pulled his cellphone from his pocket, hit speed dial one and when
911 picked up, he told them quickly and succinctly what happened.
He also told them the home belonged to Captain Simon Banks. Then
he rushed across the street to help Daryl Banks.
The call came in to Major Crime within ten minutes of the Edwards
call to 911.
Simon tore out of his office, Jim trying to hold him back.
But it was Sandburg who stopped him.
"By the time you get there, they'll have transported, Simon. And
it's Station 27, so they'll take him to Mercy."
Jim grabbed the keys from Simon's frozen hand.
Brown, Rafe and Connor stood protectively around their Captain
while Jim stood at the corner of the hall trying to listen to the
action in ER 2. Simon was seated in the waiting room just outside
Emergency.
Blair had been right. The ambulance carrying Daryl had pulled in
moments before the Crown Victoria. The paramedics were just
lifting the gurney out as Simon ran up, eager to get to his son.
Jim and Blair had to pull him back so as not to impede their
progress into ER.
Daryl lay on his back, eyes closed, oxygen mask in place. The
side of his face was badly bruised and there was a large
contusion on his right temple.
All three men had followed the gurney inside and now could do
nothing but wait.
And Blair stood back, on the fringes, watching.
His fault. His.
Taggert brushed past him and walked over to Simon, his face grim.
"It was a bomb. Rigged to go off at a specific time. It wasn't
meant to --"
Simon lifted his haggard face. "It wasn't meant to hurt anyone?
Is that what you were going to say, Joel?" His tone was bitter,
his voice sharp.
Before Blair could catch Joel's response, a nurse tapped his
right shoulder.
"Are you Blair Sandburg?"
He blinked down at her and nodded, surprised.
"You have a phone call. It sounded urgent."
Blair swallowed the lump in his throat. He knew who would be at
the other end of the line. With a glance back at Simon and the
others, Blair followed the woman around the corner to the phone.
He lifted the receiver.
"Sandburg."
"I'm out front, Blair. Come now and it's over."
So much passed through his mind at her words. That night in the
bullpen -- when Jim had said he didn't think he could get past
what Blair had done. The moment Alex had entered his office, gun
in hand. Ervin's face as the bullet hit him, Megan, staring at
what was left of her car, Daryl -- so still -- and Simon's face
as he gazed down at his son...
"I'm on my way."
He hung up and headed for the front of Mercy Hospital.
Of course, Alex was wrong. It wasn't over, not for her. She
didn't have a fucking clue. But she'd just invited the enemy into
her camp. An enemy she couldn't beat.
He pushed his way out the front doors into the bright sun. At the
red curb sat a cable company van. The door opened and Alex said,
"Blair."
He climbed in.
No, it wasn't over -- it was just beginning.
to be continued...
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