Read Sky Zone: A Novel (The Crittendon Files) Online

Authors: Creston Mapes

Tags: #Homeland Security, #Reporter, #Christian Fiction, #Inspirational Thriller, #Suspense, #Terrorist Threat

Sky Zone: A Novel (The Crittendon Files) (20 page)

BOOK: Sky Zone: A Novel (The Crittendon Files)
4.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

46

Jack had pulled the blinds and stood staring out the window of Pam’s hospital room at the sparsely lit parking lot, the cars, the people coming and going. Most of them were probably worried, hurting, grieving; a few happy—those who’d had successful surgeries and healthy babies. But for the most part, he thought, hospitals weren’t the happiest places to be. In fact, no one wanted to be there, except perhaps the doctors and nurses who made their livelihoods there.

In the window’s reflection he watched as Pam sat up in bed and Lucy and Margaret spoke quietly, one on each side of her, eating sandwiches he’d picked up in the café. He had no appetite but sipped weak coffee from a dinky Styrofoam cup. He and Pam had just hung up with Rebecca and Faye, who’d stayed up late watching a movie at Tommy and Darlene’s house. Thank God they were safe.

What would he and Pam be up against in the days ahead? The years ahead?

Before Dr. Shapiro left the room, he whispered to Jack that he and Pam should prepare themselves mentally for anything. Jack hadn’t shared the physician’s comment with Pam.

What if down the hall in that progressive-care unit lay a baby boy with special needs? How would they ever manage? Would they need to build ramps and widen doorways, have a special hospital bed and a full-time nurse? Would the child be able to feed himself, bathe, get dressed, walk? What about all the doctors’ visits and physical therapy?

How would they pay for it all?

Jack’s face burned.

Why did it always come back to
money
?

It infuriated him.

Why hadn’t God provided a job for him? It had been almost an entire year!

He needed that editorial position at the
Gazette
desperately.

His stomach churned. The apple Lucy gave him was all he’d eaten in a long time, but he didn’t want to eat. He felt like starving himself—whatever it took to understand God’s purpose in all of this.

He needed some air—fresh air. On his way he would find a TV and get the status on Sterling.

“Jack, don’t you think you and Pam need to decide on a name?” Margaret said.

He turned around to find all three women staring at him. Pam rolled her eyes without a word.

“I think we’re going to wait till we see him, Mom,” Jack said. “Right, honey? I mean, who knows, we might want to name him something totally different.”

“Oh, but I thought Andrew would be good,” Margaret said. “He’s been a brave baby so far, to make it through all the tests and the whole thing at the arena.”

“That’s true. But I think we still want to see him first,” Jack said. “Did they say we need to name him within a certain time?”

“Well, they’ve got to do the paperwork—” Margaret started.

“They can wait,” Pam said. “Mom, we’ll get to that.” She patted her mom’s hand.

“You’re doing pretty well, aren’t you?” Margaret squeezed her hand.

Pam nodded. “I’m feeling okay.”

“You know, when I had you, they gave me ether. I wasn’t the same for days,” Margaret said. “Can you believe that?”

“Ether?” Jack said. “The solvent? No wonder Pam turned out the way she did.”

Lucy and Pam chuckled, but Margaret frowned.

“I don’t think that’s funny, Jack.” She shifted in her chair.

“Oh come on, Mom, you know I’m just teasing,” Jack said.

“Well, I don’t find it humorous.”

“Mom, lighten up,” Pam said. “We need to laugh. That was a pretty good one.”

Jack’s phone vibrated. He glanced at the caller ID and answered. “Hey, Brian.”

“How’s the baby?” Shakespeare said.

“We don’t know.” Jack caught him up to speed.

“You stay on top of those doctors. Don’t let them give you the runaround.”

“We will.” Jack walked into the hallway. “What’s the latest on Sterling?”

“What’s the last you heard?”

“That they’d taken him, but I saw there was breaking news—I haven’t had time to follow up.”

Jack wandered down the hall, bracing himself for the bad news that Sterling had been found dead.

“He escaped.”

Shakespeare’s words hit Jack like a shot of adrenaline.

“The chopper landed in Seneca Falls. Some vans met them. Somehow Sterling got away. Flagged down a car. He got shot, but from what I hear, he’s gonna make it. Don’t hold me to that; it’s secondhand.”

“No way! Where is he now?” Jack’s spirit soared.

“Not sure. So maybe you’ll get that job after all. Wouldn’t that be somethin’?”

“Oh, man. You know it.” Jack laughed. He turned back to the room and noticed a slender man in street clothes checking the name on the door to Pam’s room. “Hey, I gotta go. Can you give me an update when you know more? Call or text me.”

“Roger that. Remember, stay on those doctors. Get answers.”

“Will do.”

“Hey, and you and Pam are gonna meet with Sheena and me when this is all over, right?”

“Absolutely.”

Jack slipped the phone into his pocket and headed toward the room. The man was pushing the door open.

Jack’s heart lurched. “Excuse me,” he called.

The man leaned back into the hallway and stared at Jack but said nothing, his eyes open wide from behind gold-rimmed glasses that sat halfway down his long nose.

“Can I help you?”

The man waited until Jack got to him. “I’m looking for Lucy,” he said.

“Oh, hey,” Jack said, relieved. He reached out to shake the man’s large, bony hand. “I’m Jack, Pam’s husband. You must be Lucy’s husband.”

The man’s brown eyes moved mechanically up and down Jack. “That’s right. Victor. Dr. Victor Gambrell. Is Lucy here?”

“Yes, of course. She’s been a total godsend.”

“I’m sure.” Victor nodded and began to enter.

“Hold up.” Jack reached for the door handle. “Listen, if you don’t mind, my wife’s in there, and her mother. Lucy probably told you we just had a baby.”

Victor looked at the door handle and back at Jack. “She told me. I’ve been worried with all that happened at the rally. Is that where you met Lucy for the first time?”

The question threw Jack. It sounded like an interrogation.

“Yeah. Pam started going into labor while we were in the arena. Lucy came to help. She rode with her in the ambulance. She’s been amazing.”

“Uh-huh.” Victor took in a deep breath and set his shoulders back. “Look, if you don’t want me to go in, can you tell her I’m here?”

“Sure.” Jack got a really bad vibe as he squeezed past Victor to enter the room. “Just a second.”

Jack entered the room.

“What’d Shakespeare have to say?” Pam said.

“Sterling’s alive. He escaped. He got shot, but they think he’s gonna make it.”

The women squealed and began asking questions.

“We’ll turn the TV on in a minute, but first—Lucy, your husband’s here.” Jack motioned toward the door.

She shot to her feet, wide-eyed. “Victor? Here?”

In the whole time they’d known Lucy, through all of the trauma at the arena and hospital, Jack hadn’t seen her rattled—until that moment.

“Yeah, he’s right outside,” Jack said.

Her head dropped. She searched the floor, then the room, as if she was suddenly confused.

“Lucy?” Pam said.

Margaret stood and put a hand around her shoulder. “What is it, dear?”

“Nothing, nothing.” She snapped out of the fog and gave a chuckle. “It’s been a long day. I’m … He’ll want me to get home. I have to work tomorrow.”

The newspaperman in Jack immediately took over. He glanced at the bruises on her arm, her rail-thin frame, her pronounced hip bones protruding beneath her shirt. “Were you expecting him?”

Lucy looked at Jack and froze. Her face was ghostly white—even more so than normal.

“Yeah,” she managed. “Yeah … I told him I’d pretty much done all I could do. He’ll take me back to the arena for my car. Or we’ll just wait till tomorrow to get it; it’s probably still crazy over there.” She scanned the room and crossed to a chair where her purse was hanging. She took the strap with trembling hands and threw it over her shoulder.

“What is taking so long?” Victor barged into the room, muttering, and headed for Lucy like a magnet, not looking at the others. “What’s all this business about a presidential rally? I know you. I’m not about to fall for your tricks …”

Jack froze in shock, unable to think or move.

Victor’s narrow jaw clenched, and he grabbed Lucy by the upper part of her arm. She winced but said nothing. “You’ll have to excuse us.” He began muscling her toward the door, and she didn’t retaliate in the least. “We have a lot of talking to do, don’t we, dear?”

Silent alarms clanged in Jack’s head.

He had to intervene.

The horror on Margaret’s and Pam’s faces confirmed something was terribly amiss.

“Let’s just hold it a second.” Jack stepped directly in front of Victor, blocking the way to the door. “Lucy, what’s going on?”

Victor’s eyes burned with rage. He formed a claw with his free hand and pounded Jack’s chest with all five bony fingers, pressing them hard, pushing him back. “Oh, you do not want to do that, Mr. Crittendon. No, sir.”

 

47

A gust of wind kicked up and raindrops began to fall as the ambulance doors opened. A short, bleached-blonde paramedic wearing navy scrubs and blue surgical gloves jumped out of the back. She nodded to the group with a half smile, then squinted and covered her eyes as the TV guy flipped on his obnoxiously bright camera light.

“Is he going to want that?” Peek said to Jenny King, nodding at the light.

She nodded. “It’s okay. We’re good. This is going to be quick.”

A stocky Hispanic paramedic hopped out next, wearing the same garb, right down to the plastic gloves. He kept his head down and didn’t make eye contact with anyone except his female partner. They glanced at each other, nodded, and leaned into the back of the ambulance.

The anticipation was at a fever pitch as they bumped the stretcher out. On it sat Martin Sterling, wearing a somber expression. He still had on his white dress shirt, which was spotted with blood and dirt. It was unbuttoned to the chest. His tie was loose, and his sleeves were rolled up. His legs were covered with blankets.

The drizzle came harder and was lit up by the cameraman’s neon light. Derrick had chills. The paramedics got the stretcher stabilized on the uneven ground and stood on either side of the senator. The woman whispered something to him, to which he nodded.

It was extraordinarily quiet, when this type of scene would usually have been chaotic, with an onslaught of questions from reporters. But since there were only two of them, both present at the invitation of Jenny King, Derrick felt he should simply let the senator say what he was going to say and then possibly ask questions, if it seemed appropriate.

“That rain feels good, doesn’t it?” Sterling dropped his head back and opened his mouth, to a smattering of laughter. After a moment he evened his gaze at the faces around him, only a dozen or so people in all.

“I am a lucky man.” He paused and nodded, seemingly taken aback with emotion. “Columbus is a lucky city tonight.”

There were nods and yeses all around as the rain came harder, tapping at the police ponchos and umbrellas popping up.

“This event … what happened tonight at Columbus Festival Arena, is what I have been warning the American people about.” Again, an emotional pause. “If this isn’t a wake-up call, I sure as heck don’t know what is. Let me just say, it was only thanks to the courage and sacrifice of some remarkably brave individuals—US citizens—that there was not much more death, destruction, and bloodshed in our fair city tonight. Thank God. I will be recognizing those people in the days ahead.”

Derrick was getting antsy, wondering if Sterling was going to say anything about how he had escaped. That’s what his
readers would want to know.

“How could this happen on American soil? In the land of the free?” Sterling looked directly into the camera. “You want to know how? Ask your president! Ask him about the protocols and agencies and intelligence he has
slashed.
Ask him about the Homeland initiatives and security forces he has
cut
.”

Sterling dropped his head and combed a hand through his drenched, messy hair. After about fifteen seconds he looked up.

“The United States of America
must
awaken from its slumber. We used to be the most powerful force in the world, but not anymore—not under this administration. No matter what this president says, he has let us down. And we’re going to change all that next November.

“We don’t have to put up with this unbridled hatred and terror. We shouldn’t have to be afraid to go to a campaign rally or a concert or a ball game. We can snuff these terrorists out.” Sterling shook a fist, and the veins in his neck protruded. “But it must become our number one priority and not some bottom-of-the-list agenda item we continue to butcher so we can spend more on giving handouts to people who are too lazy to go out and work—”

He ran out of breath, and the Hispanic paramedic put a hand on his shoulder and whispered something.

Sterling looked down, listened, and nodded.

“Okay, okay,” he said. “This isn’t the time for all this. You don’t want me to get all worked up and have a stroke now, do you?”

A few people chuckled. “I’ll talk more tomorrow.” He looked at Jenny. “We’ll be having a press conference.”

“That’s right,” Jenny said. “I’ll get that out as soon as we finalize a place and time.” She extended a hand toward the senator. “What else would you like to say right now?”

Sterling sighed. “Uh, look … this is not about me. It’s about America. As for my condition, I’m going to be fine. I was shot in the back of the leg. These good people assure me I’ll be up and about in no time—on crutches, of course.” His words were concise and matter-of-fact, as if he truly didn’t want to talk about it. “I don’t know if we want to get into a lot more detail than that.”

Jenny raised her eyebrows, nodding at Sterling and bouncing on her toes as if encouraging him to wrap up.

Derrick couldn’t help himself. “Sir, how did you get away from the terrorists?” he said. “Is that when you got shot?”

Jenny glared at him. The TV guy took several steps toward Sterling. The blonde paramedic whispered something to him.

“Without getting into a lot of detail,” Sterling said, “because these good people need to get me to the hospital, yes, the wound to my leg came as I was getting away.”

“Can you tell us what happened—when the helicopter landed?” the TV guy said.

Good.
At least Derrick wasn’t the only one asking questions.

“We landed. They had vans waiting. I believed once I got in one of those, my chances would diminish a hundredfold. So I figured it was worth taking a gamble out here in this field.”

It was raining hard now. Derrick pulled his sleeve over his tape recorder and only hoped it wasn’t getting damaged by the rain.

“What happened was …” Sterling shook his head and chuckled because his voice was getting drowned out by the volume of the downpour. He spoke louder. “On the way from the helicopter to the vans I moved slowly on purpose, letting the guy in front of me get ahead.” He held up his left elbow and patted it. “I took out the armed guy behind me with this elbow to his face—and I ran. It was dark. I thought they’d have a hard time hitting me.”

“But they did hit you?” Derrick said.

Sterling smiled and nodded. “I fell down … twice, actually—the ground’s so uneven. The second time, one of them hit me with a shot to the thigh. I mean, it was like the Fourth of July. They unleashed all the firepower they had. I didn’t think I was going to make it, but I kept going. Had to. Thank God I ran into Mr. Scarborough over here.” He motioned toward the driver of the pickup, who was standing between two police officers. “I’ll talk more about Ed and the other brave men and women tomorrow.”

He looked at Jenny. She gave him one distinct nod and went into motion. “Okay, get him out of here,” she told the paramedics. “I will contact all of you with details about tomorrow morning’s press conference. Thank you all. Go get dry!”

 

BOOK: Sky Zone: A Novel (The Crittendon Files)
4.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Don't Tell by Amare, Mercy
Metamorfosis en el cielo by Mathias Malzieu
Gravelight by Marion Zimmer Bradley
The Emerald Prince by Morgan, Kayci
Deadly Offer by Caroline B. Cooney
A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry