Eye of the Storm (15 page)

Read Eye of the Storm Online

Authors: Renee Simons

"He's gone," he said. He pointed to the ground. "Here's where he waited, where the grass has been trampled." His hand traced an area. "This is where he lay. Here's the imprint of his body." Stormwalker picked up a slender green blade. "This was broken early enough in the day to have dried out in the heat. The guy was out here a long time."

"Did he leave anything behind," Zan asked.

 
"Nothing much.
He policed the area pretty thoroughly."

She knelt and examined the blind. "Here's a peach pit, still slightly moist, and this button."

"That could have come from any men's sport shirt."

Stormwalker sighted along an imaginary line to the wall of glass opposite them. "He was just under a hundred yards out."

They joined Mike, who had knelt at the base of the building to check the window.

"Did you know this glass was bullet proof?" Stormwalker asked.

"Not until now," Mike replied. "I'll have to thank the guys who installed it."

Zan held out a handkerchief cradling three spent shell casings. "Take a look at these, Stormwalker."

He examined the heads, flattened by their impact with the window. "Soft point, medium caliber. . . ." He looked at her. "Can you have someone do a ballistics test?"

"I'll ask Kenny Becker when I call to report the incident."

"How come you trust him?"

"Because Mac seems to.
So unless something happens to change my mind, I will also." She shrugged. "And if nothing else, we can use him and his connections."

"Well, I don't like the guy. There's something not right about him."

"We'll be careful with what we give him."

"Why don't you call from my office," Mike suggested.

They went inside while Mike inspected the window again.

Kenny answered on the first ring and listened while Zan brought him up to date on the latest developments. "We need finger print and ballistics tests on the shells and a background check on Billy Winter. Maybe even a DNA test on the pit."

"Why do you think he was responsible for this incident?"

"Just a hunch.
We want anything in his past that doesn't fit what we know about him."

"I don't know about that peach pit you mentioned. DNA testing is too expensive, but we can analyze the shells." After a pause he added, "I have to be out your way. Write up an incident report and get together whatever evidence you have. I’ll pick it all up and take it back with me.”

"When should we look for you?" she asked.

"In forty minutes.
Maybe an hour."

An hour and forty minutes later, Zan and Stormwalker watched Kenny’s four-by-four head back to Crossroads with a meager collection of evidence, a half-dozen spent cartridges and a summary of what had happened.

"I’m going to take my grandmother home,"
Stormwalker
said as they walked to his mother’s house. "This place isn’t safe."

"Will she be safe there?"

"More so than here."

"I’ll go with you,"
Zan
said.

He
nodded,
satisfied that he wouldn’t have to leave her behind, possibly exposing her to another attack. Being out on the plain carried another brand of risk, but he felt confident he could handle whatever came at them.

 
They reached the house and climbed the porch steps. Her hand swept the mass of hair from her neck and then let it fall.

"When does it cool off around here?"

Stormwalker saw the gesture and felt desire stir as he remembered the silky feel of that hair against his skin. He reached out and caressed a lock clinging to her neck,
then
freed it from her damp skin to let it fall to her shoulder.

"I want to be alone with you," he said. The roughness of his voice surprised him. He looked at her, afraid she might laugh at him and the emotions that left him feeling like a raw, callow youth with his first love. Her eyes were dark and warm and filled with longing and he was comforted.

"After we make sure my grandmother is safe, I’ll take you to a place where you can escape the heat for a while." They went inside. "So how about you pack some food while I saddle the horses?"

She moved closer and whispered against the side of his face, "How about you pack some food while I saddle the horses?"

He rubbed his cheek against hers. "How about we do it together?"

 

 

 

Chapter 9

 

 

When he'd gone into the barn,
Stormwalker
found Grandmother saddling her horse. She'd had enough of people for a while, she said, and needed to get back to the solitude that helped her find a balance in her life.

At her front door, she took Zan's hand. "You come visit me any time you want, Granddaughter." She nodded in her grandson's direction. "Let me know how this one is doing."

Certain that they hadn’t been
followed,
they left her seated in her high-backed wicker chair and continued on their way.

 
At the western edge of the reservation flowed a stream that overran its banks in spring and watered the wide grasslands on either side. Now it was nearly dry, another testament to the heat and infrequent rain that plagued the area in summer.

They followed the stream bed to where it disappeared into the woods marking the reservation's boundary. Zan gave Stormwalker a questioning look. He pointed ahead,
then
rode into the thicket as she followed directly behind. When the trees and underbrush became heavier, they dismounted and led their horses.

Finally, they broke through and entered a wide meadow carpeted in buffalo grass whose golden seed pods glistened in the sun. The last of the summer's wild flowers studded the field with faded purples and pinks.

"It's unbelievable," Zan whispered, "like a mirage."

"That's what it's called. A French explorer was so overcome by its existence he named it Le Mirage."

Zan listened to the sigh of the wind in the pines bordering the meadow, heard a bird's call and the gurgle of water. "It feels like we're the first people to visit."

"Time stands still here." He took her hand and they started across the field. "It isn't on most maps, so few people know of its existence and fewer still come here. We should have the place to ourselves."

"Not quite." She pointed to a doe and two fawns making their way through the grass.

"They've come to drink. We might even see some elk, if we're lucky."

They did see elk, as well as other smaller animals that came to drink. Further upstream a beaver dam held back some of the flow, raising the water's level. They unsaddled their horses and left them to graze while they walked down to the bank and sat on a driftwood log.

"I'm going for a swim." Stormwalker rose, took off his tee shirt and turned to Zan. "Join me?"

"Like this?" She glanced at her clothes.

"You might want to strip down to your skivvies and keep your outer clothes dry for later. It gets mighty cold after sundown and colder still if you're wet."

"You make going half naked sound so logical," she commented in a dubious tone.

He came to her and undid the top two buttons of her blouse. "There's no one here to see us, Red.
Except us."
His eyes held an irresistible twinkle.

"And we've already seen us."

"So how about it?"

Zan nodded. Stormwalker turned his back and chucked his jeans, giving her a moment of privacy. She shed her own shirt and denims and followed him out into the middle of the chest high pool formed by the beaver's dam.

The water cooled and soothed away the day's heat. They swam and splashed and played tag. Reluctant to indulge the emotions that had been aroused by its silky, sensuous power, they kissed and touched lightly. Finally, they floated on their backs, moving slowly with the current, watching the darkening sky fade from blue, to violet, to deepest gray.

Zan closed her eyes and rested on top of the water, pretending as in childhood that she was a leaf, light and free, drifting wherever the water took her. Something rippled the surface and she found herself looking at the snout of a long brown snake making its way up the length of her body.

She screamed in panic and thrashed about in an effort to escape. In the process, she swallowed water instead of air and sank beneath the water's surface. Unable to take a breath before submerging, she dropped like a stone. Her body weight carried her lower and her lungs compressed beneath the water's pressure. Reason told her she should have touched bottom by now, but her feet found nothing solid on which to rest.

The night she'd been shot she'd thought, "This must be what it feels like to drown." She'd reached out to her partner. He'd taken her hand, holding on to keep her from sinking too far, anchoring her with his voice and his touch until help came, refusing to let go even in the ambulance.

I was wrong, she decided. This is what it's like to drown. And this time there was nothing to hold on to. She sank further, expelling the last of her air to relieve the pressure on her eardrums.

An inner voice shattered the lethargy that gripped her. "Do something," it goaded. "Don't give in."

In the only move she could think of, she brought her knees up to her chest and kicked downward, pushing against the force tugging at her. The move slowed her descent. Another kick stopped it. The next sent her back toward the surface.

Using her arms now as well as her legs, she was able to propel herself upward, nearly colliding with Stormwalker, who was heading down through the murky, churning water. She felt his arm hook around her waist and they swam in tandem to the surface, where he held her while her body struggled to rid itself of the water depriving it of life-sustaining oxygen.

Beneath his hand, Stormwalker could feel her diaphragm spasm as she coughed again and again. Her rib cage rose and fell violently and he knew her lungs were straining inside her chest. He carried her ashore, laying her face down on the sand. Turning her head to one side, he pressed gently on her back, setting up a slow, steady rhythm that cleared her lungs, enabling her to draw breath smoothly.

Finally, he helped her sit up. As she leaned her shivering body against the log at the water's edge, he wiped the sand from her cheek with a gentle touch.

"I'll be right back."

She nodded, her gaze following him as he went for their clothes and bedrolls and slung the saddlebags over his shoulder. He returned and dried her with his shirt, vigorously rubbing her arms and legs to increase circulation. When she was warm again and the shivering had stopped, he helped her dress and draped a blanket over her shoulders.

He built a small but potent fire, and finally gave himself a moment to dress before sitting down beside her. She hadn't said a word but simply watched his every movement. He reached over and pulled her across his lap, cradling her in his arms, pressing her body toward his so she could feel the soothing rhythm of his heartbeat. He took comfort in her nearness and hoped his presence would help her in the same way.

"I was afraid for you," he whispered against her hair. "One minute you were here, the next you were gone. It was only then I remembered the sinkhole. But I couldn't see through the water to find you. All I could do was feel my way and think, 'I've killed her'.
" A
shudder coursed through him.

"It isn't your fault I'm afraid of snakes," she said. Her voice had gone hoarse from the coughing that had wracked her body.

"It was my brilliant idea to come here in the first place, and my fault you were out there with no warning of the danger."

Zan raised herself and kissed him lightly on the mouth. "I loved your 'brilliant idea'. I still do." When he started to protest, she laid a finger against his lips. "You're wasting precious time."

"It isn't wasted. It's time your body needs to come back to itself."

"Aren't you thinking about the reason we came out here? I'd be terribly hurt if you weren't."

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