Color Blind (Team Red) (19 page)

 

“This is the craziest-ass thing I’ve ever heard,” Fritz said.

 

“Welcome to our life,” I replied, with a grin. “I’ll warn you now, don’t swear or say things in front of the dog that you want kept private. He repeats everything.”

 

“It’s like being in a room with a friggin’ parrot,” Bas complained, with a decidedly affectionate tone to his voice. “I’ll get the front door. Show ‘em what you’ve got, Red.”

 

There was a plastic-on-wood scratching-clacking noise as Red plucked out the keys he wanted. I heard his nails click briskly across the foyer and out the door. We were a little more sedate following. I imagined it would take him a moment to maneuver the keys so that he could open the car doors. It’s not like dogs have thumbs, right? Wrong. Red and David must have been practicing for a while, because it was less than a minute when I heard the first, then second click of the door locks lifting.

 

David starting laughing, “Go on Dex, he’s waiting for you. He can’t do door handles.” For my benefit, David explained, “Red picked the right keys, of course, and is now waiting by Bas’ passenger door.”

 

“Could this guy be any slower?”
Red complained.
“Tell him to hurry up, I want to make the beeping noises.”

 

To Dex, who still hadn’t budged from our side, I said, “Red has requested that you get a move on; he wants to play with the locks again.”

 

There was a shuffling walk as Dexter slowly approached, then opened the car door. “Red just hopped up on the seat. He’s waiting, we forgot he can’t open the little door on the glove box.”

 

“Sucks to have paws,” I laughed.

 

“Just reach in and open the glove compartment if you would, Dex. He can’t work the latch.”

 

“His head just disappeared, so he’s probably looking for the laser,” David continued his commentary.

 

“It’s not in here,”
Red told me.

 

“Red says it’s not in the glove box, could you have left it somewhere else, Bas?”

 

“It’s in the vehicle. Maybe I tossed it in the cargo area.” In a louder voice, Bas said, “Check in the back or under the seats, Red.”

 

“Okee dokee,”
My dog said. Fifteen seconds or so into his search,
“Found it. It slipped down beside the passenger seat and the middle-thingy that Bas puts his music into. I can’t reach it.”

 

“Dex, my dog says the laser fell between the seat and the console. He can’t reach, are you able to reach it for him?”

 

“He found the laser. He says I’m the damnedest thing he’s ever seen. He wants me to put the laser on the table with the rest of the keys, but I want to lock the car,”
the dog whined.

 

“Just do as he says, Red. Then you can come back and we’ll let you lock the vehicle.” To the people surrounding me, I said, “We need to get out of the doorway so Red can get through.”

 

I felt the dog brush against my legs as he rushed by me, into the house. There was a clunking noise as he dropped the laser on the low table. Clicking nails let me know he was heading past us again.
“Woo hoo! I get to make the car beep!”

 

I shook my head at his antics. “Simple minds, have simple pleasures,” I mocked, as I listened to the sound of locks plunging down, and the bark of the car alarm.

 

“Okay, I feel like I have been dropped into the middle of a Twilight Zone episode,” Fritz sighed. “That dog is freakin’ surreal.”

 

Dexter joined us at the front porch, “Surreal? No, that dog is impossible. I’ve owned dogs all my life, they don’t have the mental capacity to reason things out like that one just did. The car locks could have been a trick, a real intricate trick. But Red understood exactly what item you were looking for, and he followed my directions to place it where I wanted. There were no hand signals or anything to give him direction. He’s amazing.”

 

“Don’t forget, Team Red is not just a dog that does cool tricks. Teresa is a huge component. We have incorporated hand signals so she can communicate with him silently, for example when she doesn’t want to interrupt people who are talking,” Bas clarified.

 

“It will help our mission, incredibly, that their range has expanded,” David added. “Hey Red, go grab the laser for me and we will check out the distance right now.”

 

Red brushed by us once more.
“Teresa, do you want to check the sight link also?”

 

“Yes, please, Red.” I had gotten used to the light watching Red do his demonstration, so was less concerned about my irritable stomach revolting.

 

“Okay, lights on,”
he warned. A moment later, my mind was flooded with brightness and I was focused on David, Bas, Dex, and Fritz, standing beside me.

 

Bas lifted an arm to point beyond Red, “Head over to the end of the driveway; that’s about two hundred feet and we can work our way in from there.”

 

Red turned and I watched his surroundings as he approached the main road, the pale blues and yellows of his world so closely matched to the muted shades of a faded photograph. He arrived at the mailbox and I was surprised that we still had a strong link. “We still have a connection,” I said, aloud. “Let’s send him out farther, maybe toward the western property line?” Rather than yell, I assumed Red knew we were still linked, and pointed my hand toward the west. Red looked in the direction I pointed and slowly trotted up the pavement. Eventually the link went black; before I could say something the link reconnected.

 

“Well, that answers my question as to if Red knows when you are no longer receiving feedback,” David said. I grinned, as I had wondered the same thing myself. “You barely got your arm up and he had already stopped and returned to the spot where the connection dropped.” I heard a few beeps as David, presumably, adjusted the laser settings. “And, once again, we have proof that dogs have no sense of distance- he is a little over one hundred eighteen YARDS away. This is a huge jump in your range!”

 

“Teresa, lights out. I’m going to see if it’s the same distance with just the mind speak.”
My world was dark, once again.
“I’ll go slowly, a few steps at a time.”

 

Assuming that Bas or David were watching me, as was the norm when we were running tests of some type, I signed that Red and I were switching to mind-speak only.

 

“Fuck me,” Bas muttered under his breath. I grinned, guessing he was impressed that we had just marked the mind vision point, not the mind speak range. None of us imagined we would have this much distance with it.

 

“What?” Fritz asked.

 

“They are going to try and amp it up to get a little more distance,” Bas was quick to lie.

 

“Can you hear me now?”
Red joked, and I repeated his words to the group surrounding me.

 

“We have connection, has he moved farther along?” I asked, a few seconds later.

 

“He’s at about one hundred forty three yards, and still moving. Wait, he just stopped, and backed up. He’s at one hundred fifty-seven yards.”

 

“I felt the connection drop so I came backwards a little bit. Can you still hear me from here?”
I put a hand up and waved it above my head. He would be too far away to clearly read sign language.
“Okay, I’m coming back then.”

 

“Wow, this is significant, Teresa. It makes the seating arrangements, and access to the balcony, at the BAWHG a lot simpler,” David said.

 

“Bog?” Dex asked. Poor guys. Being around Team Red must be like walking in to Act Three of a play you’ve never seen before.

 

“B-A-W-H-G, it’s the acronym we are using for the Black and White ball,” Bas explained. “We had been planning everything around last week’s thirty feet maximum range for Red and Teresa.”

 

“This extra distance gives us a lot more flexibility, and decreases the chance of Teresa getting caught in an area that would raise questions,” David added. “We were worried about getting her close enough to Red to act as a receiver, yet far enough away that Morales would be willing to talk openly.”

 

“Food’s on!” Ken yelled from the kitchen.

 

We all filed through the doorway, with Red bringing up the rear.
“I am so exhausted,”
he sighed dramatically.
“I may need bacon to help me get my strength back”

 

“No bacon, Red. You know better than to ask,” I scolded. “And no trying to wheedle scraps from the new guys. The ‘no begging at the table’ rule is still in full effect. But, knowing Ken, he’s probably dropped some scrambled eggs in your bowl.”

 

Obviously hearing me from his place at the stove, Ken added, “Not only do you have eggs in your bowl, but I added a spoonful of bacon drippings to them. That’s as loosely as I could interpret the rules for you buddy.”

 

I grinned at Red’s excited bark, followed by the scramble of paws as he ran to his bowl.

 

We were finished with breakfast and chatting like old friends when Red placed his head on my thigh.
“The cat invaded the deck while I was at the hospital. She got all the way to my dog door. I need to step up my plans to trap her tonight. She doesn’t seem to understand boundaries,”
He complained.

 

I shared Red’s feelings with my dining companions.

 

“Red may be a mighty hunter, but the cat is probably just as stealthy at night, so Red will have his work cut out for him,” Bas taunted.

 

“Oh, ye of little faith,”
Red said, with a hint of pity in his tone
. “I am sadly underestimated here. I bet I have a cat trapped by morning.”

 

Mmm, obviously my dog had been putting some thought into his plan if he was feeling so confident. I relayed Red’s bet to Bastian.

 

“Really?” Bas drew out the word. “Feelin’ mighty bold, are you Furface?” There was a pause while he deliberated the dog’s cocky challenge. I should have known, if anyone would consider the bet, it was Bas. “Just what are we betting here?”

 

“Fetch at the dog park every day for a week,”
Red said instantly. I grinned; I smelled a set up, but there was really no way that Red could know if his untested trap would work. Could he?

 

“Two Saturdays at the dog park,” Bas countered, after I relayed the opening bid in this afternoon’s parleys. “As soon as possible, but work comes first, Red. If you lose you will have to wear pink dog booties when we work our next crime scene.

 

“Really, Teresa? I hate the dog booties because they feel weird on my feet. Does he really think I care what color they are? Tell the Jolly Blond Giant, it’s a deal!”

 

“How will we know if Red really traps the cat? I want a picture,” Bas declared. “It’s not that I think Red would out-right lie, but he has been known to take liberties with interpretation of contracts. Even after we set up the Rules of Engagement, he took out two of the security drones.”

 

That statement earned Bas mirrored looks of surprise from both Dex and Fritz. He noticed their stares and defended, “Hey, you should hear how he interpreted the demilitarized zone when we fly drones. He was leaping off the deck to catch them, even ones we had agreed were in the Red Zone. We have video,” he added.

Chapter Nineteen

 

Much to everyone’s surprise, Bas lost the bet. The next morning, we woke up to find that Red had dragged a long narrow box out of the garage (Yeah, I think he had help too. My money’s on Ken). The cardboard box was left lying on the deck overnight, with the open end facing the house. Sure enough, the mysterious lure of the basic cardboard box was too much for her.

 

As soon as the cat crawled into the box, Red had sprung up from his hiding spot under the picnic table, and nosed the box towards the slider door, effectively trapping the cat within. Red laid on the box all night, to prevent the cat from getting away before we had proof of his success. David immediately snapped a picture to email to Bastian, who had stayed at his own place. We ran a copy of the photo off the printer and taped it low by Red’s dog bowls so he could gloat. The picture, taken from inside the house, showed the open end of the box shoved against the glass, the cat scratching pitifully at the window pane as she tried to get out. The full distribution of one hundred pounds of German shepherd, draped over the box, prevented the cat from pushing her temporary prison away from the glass. In the photo, Red, atop his cat trap, looked so happy with his doggie smile, while the poor cat looked bedraggled. It was a great picture. And, of course, we immediately insisted that the dog let her go.

 

Red was ecstatic when Bas showed up an hour later with a new tennis ball. They both decided to play fetch on the adjoining property rather than head to the park; a better plan, really, as we didn’t bother with a leash out here where the two closest neighbors are miles away.

 

Over the next ten days, we settled into a routine that included Dex and-or Fritz being somewhere within shouting distance of me wherever I went. Instead of trailing behind me in ninja stealth mode, Red and I included the guys in our daily walks.

 

Red and I practiced every day with the mind speak and the mind vision. We are finally to a point that we can go up to two hours before Red starts to feel any headaches forming. One of the biggest adjustments has been for me to learn how to function with the distraction of Red’s constant feed into my mind. When I was explaining the difficulty to David, I likened the mind vision with trying to write a letter when a song with catchy lyrics was playing next to you on a radio, and someone was streaking naked by the window. I had to learn to talk while not reacting to the things I was viewing through Red. And, not only talking, I had to learn to walk and talk also.

 

Yeah, laugh it up. Smartass Bas, made a point to share a pack of gum with everyone in the car the other day, and skipped me because he didn’t want me overwhelmed. Implying, of course, I couldn’t walk and chew gum. Bass-hole.

 

It was easier when Red was beside me, leading me somewhere, as then I was seeing where we were going and what we were doing. But consider how hard it would be to concentrate on counting stairs, while talking to David, while Red was in the backyard feeding me visuals of taking a poop (Yeah, we had a talk about that afterwards), or chasing birds through the brush. I still find it hard to compartmentalize the feedback, but I hope, if I remain seated while Red is on the balcony, I should be able to concentrate on business.

 

Our Wild Horses were heading to San Diego tonight to pick up their female partners-slash-dates and their BAWHG formal wear. The Team, along with Ken, Janey, and Jason, would be heading to San Francisco tomorrow afternoon.

 

My bruising was all gone, and the incident was fading almost as quickly. I surprised myself by having nervous bouts the first few times I found myself alone in the house - I know, such a tough girl! I thought logic would override fear. Silly me.

 

My first morning home, I had wandered downstairs to grab coffee and an apple for breakfast. I froze for a few minutes outside the pantry door, trying to convince myself to walk through the doorway to the shelf that held the apple bag. Dex is the one who found me, standing in the kitchen, frozen in my first-ever anxiety attack. He was pretty cool about it, guessing right away what my problem was. He approached me like I was a dangerous animal (maybe he was impressed by the pictures of Devon?), talking softly to let me know he was approaching and wanted to help. His touch on my shoulder seemed to release the tension in my body and I swayed a little as I realized what was going on. I got a nice, warm hug, as Dex folded me against his chest and stroked my hair while we waited for David to respond to the text he’d sent. David came up from the basement and eased me into his arms as shudders racked me, and I took a few huge gulps of air. Did I mention I was practically holding my breath the whole time I stood there? Apparently, everyone else had been prepared for this eventuality - well except me, of course.

 

That night, David placed a blown up cell phone picture of Devon’s bloody face on a cork board near the fitness area. He handed me a couple of darts and taught me how to throw them.  With Red’s visual aid, I was getting really good at targeting that area right between his eyes. Dex and Fritz think I am a damned lucky darts player, because we still haven’t told them about our mind vision capabilities.

 

It got easier each time I forced myself into the pantry, and after a week or so. I only felt a twinge of unease, rather than full-blown panic. I was very disappointed in myself for being such a ninny about the pantry, but I decided not to beat myself up over it.

 

David, of course, was Mr. Wonderful. While I was still in the hospital, he and Bastian had some in-depth sessions with a psychiatrist friend of theirs at the VA Hospital, to learn about possible emotional side effects from my attack. Dr. Allen sure nailed the whole anxiety thing with a sledgehammer. Thanks to their forethought, and understanding, they helped me work through the worst of the panic until I felt more in control.

 

I finished brushing my teeth, feeling fresh from a nice hot shower. This morning, I had gone to my beautician, Cyndi, to get waxed; my legs (and yeah, a few other things) were nice and smooth, and my nails were polished, at my request, in a bright crimson shellac polish. I was feeling sexy as I draped my damp towel over the shower door, flipped off the bathroom light, purely by habit, since there was no reason to have a light on in the first place. I padded, nude, to the window seat knowing David would be there, waiting. Relaxing each night on the long, pillow laden bench had become a ritual for us. Sometimes we talked, and other evenings we simply enjoyed the ease of being with each other, yet alone with our thoughts. David guided my bottom around until I was cuddled into the support of his lounging body, held protectively in the cradle of his arms and legs. He was still wearing jeans, and the denim was a sensual abrasion along the outside of my hips and thighs.

 

“How are you feeling about the mission? Any lingering questions or doubts?” David asked.

 

“I’m feeling really good about it. We have gone over the profiles and the possible scenarios a million times. Actually David, it seems like you guys are a little over protective. We will be surrounded by hundreds of people during the event. If I’m not with you or Bastian, then at least Red will be with me. And now we have the Wild Horse crew to act as added security, so I have no doubt I’ll be in view of someone at all times. It seems Red and I are at little risk here. This whole mission revolves around a relatively low probability that Javier Morales will meet an unknown contact, and that we will get into close enough orbit to overhear them,
AND
they will decide to talk about gun running at the ball, where hundreds of military are gathered for the holidays.”

 

“Yeah, suck it up Babe. Regardless of the fact you are near and dear to me, you and Red are an asset for this mission. As an asset, you will be protected as much as possible, while still giving you enough room to work together. There is a reason Morales worked so hard to get himself invited. With some luck and careful planning, we may be able to get some key information. Quite frankly, it will probably be pretty anti-climactic for you. You may be able to gather some much-needed intel, but circumstances may be that the military may not make a move that night, in hopes the new contact leads to something bigger at a later time. Ideally, even if you get the information we need, you and Red should not even register on their radar as connected to the case. That is the nature of intelligence work. Tedious, repetitive, and rarely rewarding on the first try.”

 

“I’m excited to go to the ball, wear my fancy new dress, and dance with my gorgeous man. That would be you,” I clarified, bussing a quick kiss to one of the arms crossing over my chest. I’m looking forward to seeing Jason dressed up in his Marilyn Monroe outfit. And I want to hear the stories Ken and Janey have to say about the club.”

 

“I’m kinda looking forward to seeing our Ken and Barbie couple decked out in club fetish wear. After they got back from their shopping trip in Seattle, I haven’t gotten any of them to drop a hint about their outfits. Mmm,” David added, “I wonder if we’ll get to see Janey in a black leather corset?”

 

It was easy to roll my head to the right and bite down firmly on his bicep. “There will be no lusting after my blonde, bimbette friend, who is Bas’ sister, I might add.”

 

Laughing, David leaned forward as his arms wove behind my knees and back to spin me around then lift me suddenly in the air. How in the hell does he do that? My man is always surprising me with his strength, doing crazy shit like lifting my un-petite frame as if I weighed no more than a child.

 

David snuggled his face into my throat, his beard tickling slightly along my nape, and I could hear his inhale of breath as he drew my scent deep into his lungs. Like me, David’s sense of touch and smell were getting more refined. He told me he frequently turns the lights out when we move around at night, or keeps his eyes closed when we lay together in the huge-ass bed he bought. He says it’s helped him gain a better understanding of how I experience the world. Pleasure tugged the corner of my mouth and I didn’t even try to hold back the full-blown grin when he groaned with hunger, and burrowed his nose to the sensitive area behind my ear. Earlier, after my shower, I had taken a few moments in the bathroom to slide my fingers into my damp pussy and dabbed a healthy measure of my natural fragrance down both sides of my neck, and a few other strategic spots. “Geez, woman. Who thinks of shit like this?” He asked, rhetorically, as he ran the flat of his tongue in an invisible trace along the trail of scent down my throat. “Only you would think of smearing pussy juice on your body to turn me on.” He bit down, holding me still while he took another deep breath, and laid me gently on our bed. He slid his hands down my arms and grasped my hands, pulling my fingers to his face to smell my fingers.

 

“I washed my hands when I brushed my teeth,” I laughed. “I didn’t want to give you a heads up.”

 

“Oh, my head’s up, alright,” he growled, retaining his grip on my hands and pressing them flat, against the mattress on either side of my face. “Where else did you spread it?”

 

“Now Lover, where’s the fun in me telling you where to look.” Yep, I was outright laughing now, as he purposefully dragged his facial hair over my neck and shoulders, under the guise of finding more, before stopping in the valley between my breasts, his nose leading him upwards to each of my scent-painted aureoles.

 

“Hot,” he whispered, drawing the smell on my skin deep into his lungs. He latched onto the right nipple while he drew my left hand, fingers linked with his, to his groin. He pressed my palm against his cock, rocking his hips against me in a dry hump, increasing the suction on my breast. Even through the material of his jeans, I could feel the heat of him. Laughter drained away with the sharp nip and pull of his teeth, then it was my turn for an indrawn breath, as I arched high to press my breast more firmly against his mouth. “What made you think of this?” he asked, in that split moment of moving from one nipple to the other.

 

“Oh geez, David,” I groaned. “I don’t know. I used to read a lot of stuff.” I could feel his tongue whipping side to side in rapid strokes. The feeling was intense when he combined it with the nip of his teeth, and an almost bruising suction. “There was an article… something about pheromones,” I moaned.

 

He mounded my breasts together, buried his slightly prickly face in the crevice he’d created, and drew another deep breath. There was something very erotic about the brush of his nose and softly bearded chin across my flesh as he tried to catch the faintest trace of aroma off my skin. Within moments, David was tormenting the undersides of my breasts and nibbling his way south, over my sensitive ribs and quivering stomach.

 

There was no more scent to be found, but I wasn’t about to tell him that as he paused to dip his tongue in the shallow well of my navel. David released my hands to stand beside the bed, removing his jeans. The whisper of his clothing being drawn off his body was erotic. My heartbeat increased at the rasp of his zipper being lowered and denim peeled down the length of his long, muscular legs. I imagined David’s nude form in front of me, overlaid against the image Red gave me earlier. My man was magnificent. And he had a dimple. I smiled at that.

Other books

A Life In A Moment by Livos, Stefanos
The Good Doctor by Barron H. Lerner
The Diviner's Tale by Bradford Morrow
1999 by Pasha Malla
The Trust by Norb Vonnegut
Nightrunners of Bengal by John Masters