2020: Emergency Exit (27 page)

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Authors: Ever N Hayes

BOOK: 2020: Emergency Exit
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“I get it, Ryan,” she said softly. “I’m so sorry.”

“You see, though, there’s really nothing to be sorry about,” I said, turning to finally look her in the eyes. “No one else but me should feel sorry about anything.” (This much was true though Danny, just inside the cave entrance, didn’t agree.) “The day Sophie died I was honestly more in love with her than I ever had been before. I
know
Sophie knew that. After years of never saying it, I was telling her how much she meant to me every day. I know Danny and Hayley might not have known that—although Hayley has told me she knew—but I honestly did love her the most I ever had. As best as I could, I’d given my heart and life to making up for the terrible person and husband I was for so many years. I didn’t deserve Sophie, but then I never thought I did. But Sophie only wanted me. I never had any right to question her loyalty. She
always
stood by me.” My voice was shaking now too. Man it hurt to say this stuff aloud.

“That night, as I held her in my arms before she died, she told me she loved me and she hoped I’d always remember that, but she also begged me not to give up on Danny. She asked me to call him for her, but he didn’t pick up. I tried him nine times. He never answered. Her last words were, ‘Tell him I love him.’ But he didn’t want to hear that from me, and I was probably even a little resentful on my own. A zebra can’t change its stripes.” I stopped for a second to make sure that analogy worked.

“Danny and I pretty much went our separate ways the next three years. Danny moved in with Cameron, and then they took off for the Marines after high school. I buried Sophie at our cabin, six hours north of our home. I moved up there and pretty much became a hermit. It sucked to lose Danny like I did for the next few years, but I eventually realized I’d had it coming. It was my fault. I didn’t know if Danny would ever come back to me, but I absolutely knew Sophie had my whole heart. I sat by her headstone by the lake and talked to her every day. I kept no secrets from her. There was no one else but Sophie for me.” I stopped and took a deep breath. “Period.”

We watched below us as a pair of headlights approached Old Fall River Road from Estes Park and turned, heading towards the Endovalley troop camp. Nothing about it struck Tara or me as out of the ordinary. The vehicle was sliding all over, but the warm day had melted a great deal of the snow, and the road had iced over as the temperature dropped. We didn’t think anything more of it.

 

From where Danny was sitting, inside the ledge entry, he saw the vehicle too. He didn’t see its movement the same as we did, though. Something about it wasn’t quite right. It was driving too fast and swerving all over the place. Not sliding. That wasn’t because it was icy, or because the driver couldn’t see through the fog that had begun to thicken along the road. The driver was either drunk, injured or distracted by something else in the vehicle. In any case if he weren’t careful he’d be flipping into a ditch shortly. Danny wanted to follow it further, on the monitor in the main room, but he knew we still had no idea he was there. If he moved now, Tara would see him for sure and know he’d been there. He wasn’t sure he should give that away.

He’d needed to hear what I had just said. Hayley had told him as much, but it had never felt true. He didn’t believe Sophie and I had honestly made up—that we’d really loved each other in the end. Now, four years later, he finally heard it from me, and he believed it. As he watched us now, he suddenly had no resistance to me moving on. To someone other than Tara? Maybe. But he liked Tara. She was pretty cool. She’d had a pretty tough life. He thought we might be good for each other.

Hayley had been right. I felt like I needed Danny to tell me it was okay before I let myself move on. I wasn’t willing to risk losing him again. When the truck moved past our location, Danny knew he needed to stand, even if it caught our attention, and he did. I didn’t see him, but Tara did. I saw a strange look on her face and turned back towards the entrance to the cave. “What?” I asked.

“Nothing,” she said. “Just thinking.”

“Okay,” I responded, giving her a strange look back. “Care to expand?”

“Ryan.” She paused. “I can’t imagine what you’ve been through.” I was already shaking my head, but she finally caught my hand with her own. “Please. Let me.” I nodded, and she went on. “I don’t know that I’ve ever been in love. Not once.”

Was she saying she was now?
My heart was pounding in my head again.

“I had boyfriends in high school and even dated a guy in college, but my life didn’t give me the time for a serious relationship. School was far more important to me. Then…” She took a deep breath.

I lifted her hand off mine and interlocked my fingers with hers. I knew what she was going to say, and she didn’t pull away or stop talking.

“Then, when I was raped, I wanted nothing to do with men. Ever. I thought about killing myself many, many times. One night I even walked out onto a bridge intent on going through with it. Something made me think about the life growing inside me, and I couldn’t follow through. I wanted to. I’ve never felt so worthless, but I honestly believe God stepped in.”

One more thing to be thankful for today.

“I called my dad from the bridge and told him what had happened. He flew down the next day and took me home. He and mom raised Emily like their own child, helping me all they could. I gave up on pursuing law and worked the farm, content to stay far away from people, especially men. I was embarrassed. I was hurt. I led a sheltered life for ten years, with no men—no relationships—and it was great. But I always wondered what it would be like to be cared for by someone other than my parents. Being a single mother, living with your parents, well, it’s a lonely life. I knew I wanted more. But where do you start? How in the world can you trust anyone after that happens to you?”

I didn’t know what to say. I couldn’t imagine what she’d been through, either. “Well,” I finally said. “I don’t know if this will help you or not, but when Sophie died, I never thought I’d care for anyone like her again. You don’t just replace your wife. I honestly hadn’t thought about anyone else since her until I met you in Medora and you were, well…”
Great genius, now what are you going to say?

“I was what?” Tara asked.

Just be honest
. “Hot!” I stated, almost embarrassed.

She muffled a laugh with her hand. “Ryan.”

“Sorry.” I smiled. “I probably could have come up with a better word.”

“Hot works just fine.” She smiled back.

“Okay.” I looked around to make sure no one else was there. “I don’t know how to explain it, but it was like all of a sudden I could see beauty again. I mean, come on, look at you.” She was trying not to laugh.

“What about me?” she asked, curious if I’d actually tell her.

I’d gone too far to turn back now. “Tara, you’re beautiful, in every imaginable way. Your body is—your face.”
Your body is your face?
“Look, I didn’t know your story. I figured you were way younger than me, and your ring said ‘married,’ but I don’t know. I couldn’t take my eyes off you.”

“I kind of noticed that,” she said with a grin. “Especially certain parts, eh?” She was trying not to laugh.

My face felt really hot now. She was clearly referencing where my eyes went every time she bent over, facing either direction. She was considerably more covered in Colorado, but I was still looking. My memory and imagination took care of the rest. “Great.” I shook my head, looking away. “I’m that obvious?”

“Well, girls notice those things.” Tara was obviously loving this. “I didn’t mind you checking me out. And your daughter kind of filled me in.”

Ah, of course
. I looked away.

“And…” She turned my face back towards her with a gloved hand. “And I’ve done my fair share of looking too.” She let that sink in and then leaned her head against my shoulder, prompting my heart to double its already accelerated pace.
Easy, boy
.

“Ah,” was all I said.
Brilliant
. “Tara.”

“Yeah?” She was still smiling.

“I need you to understand something—and I don’t know how you’ll take it.”

She lifted her head up. “Okay.”

“Telling someone—anyone—I’m even remotely interested in them is a giant leap for me. I mean, I know this is big for both of us, I guess.”

She nodded.

“I guess I don’t know what is going through your heart or mind. Or if you’re only interested in me because, for all we know, I’m basically the last man on earth.”
Boy did she have an incredible smile.
“But given what I’ve been through, I’m not looking to ‘date’ anyone.” I watched her brow furrow as she tried to figure out what I was saying. “It’s kind of an all or nothing thing for me. I don’t mean to suggest I’m leaving Sophie behind, because she
always
will be in my heart, but if I do move on, I have to know you want me to move on. I have to know that you mean—”

Her kiss cut me off.
Damn
. Her hot breath gave me major chills, her soft tongue smoothly making all the right moves. I turned towards her as we continued to kiss, moving my right hand to her left knee. She took that hand and lifted it to the side of her chest. I could feel her heart pounding every bit as hard as mine. I thought I was going to pass out. But her mouth-to-mouth skills kept me fully conscious.

When she finally pulled back for a second to look at me, I could see it in her eyes. She wasn’t looking to date, either. She too was all or nothing. It was an incredible leap of faith for her to trust a man—any man—but she was telling me she trusted
me
. I was speechless.

“I mean it, Ryan,” she said in total seriousness.
Damn
.

I leaned in to kiss her again, for one more perfect moment. And then we were interrupted by a bloodcurdling scream.

Drama had terrible timing.

FORTY-FIVE: “Black Friday”

 

Then there was another scream. This one was even louder, and clearly female. It also seemed a little bit closer.

About fifteen seconds later Danny was out on the ledge, with his Springfield drawn and pointed at us. Cameron was right behind him. “You guys okay?” Danny asked. “I thought you were being attacked!”

“It’s not us,” Tara replied.

I was looking down towards the camp. “It was down there.”

We heard one more scream. This one was definitely closer.

“Cam, get our rifles,” Danny whispered, and Cameron scrambled into the tunnel, returning a few seconds later with the guns.

“Blake was already bringing them to us,” Cameron whispered. Blake stepped out on the ledge with the rest of us.

Sam wasn’t far behind him. “What’s going on?”

Danny activated the night vision on his scope and scanned down the road towards the camp. He could see three men running down the road with guns in hand, chasing something—or someone. They were laughing and pointing ahead of them. There were no gunshots though. Danny kept looking, and finally he saw what they were laughing at. A girl was running down the middle of the road, stark naked and barefoot. Danny watched her fall and get back up. Then we heard a gunshot. Danny watched, but she didn’t flinch. They’d missed her.

He talked us step-by-step through what he saw, but never took his eye away from the scope or the scope away from the girl. She was clearly hysterical, but she wasn’t screaming anymore and seemed more intent on increasing the gap between her and the pursuers. But it was below forty degrees now, and she was naked. Where did she think she could go?

That seemed to be what the men behind her were thinking too. They had stopped running and were briskly walking after her now. One of them was carrying a bottle of some kind of alcohol, and they kept passing it around as they walked towards the girl. She was less than a half-mile from us now. “Danny,” Tara whispered.

“Uh huh,” he answered.

“Is she okay?” Tara asked, clearly concerned.

“No. I don’t know. She’s all bloody. Looks like she took a nasty beating.” He shook his head.

“Can we do anything?” Now she was even more worried.

Danny nodded, but didn’t answer right away. “We can. But it’s not a smart move.”

“We can’t just leave her,” Tara whispered.

No one knew better than Danny and me what she was feeling. Tara was envisioning that young girl as herself twelve years ago. No one had stepped in and helped her. We both knew Tara wasn’t telling us we
had
to do something, but it didn’t seem right to let the girl die like this. Whatever those men had done to her…

“Cameron and Blake,” Danny said then. “Let’s go.” He handed his R11 to Sam. “You stay here and watch with Dad. If you see me waving my arm at you, do what you can to help us without giving away your position. A few shots, but not too many. But
only
if necessary.”
Loud and clear!

They went inside and threw on their winter jackets. Dad moved the door for them, handed each of them a suppressed rifle, and they exited towards the falls. The sun had cleared the snow away from the path today, but it remained slick. Still, they made good time.

Sam and I were watching from above through our high-powered scopes. Tara had stepped just inside the entry, listening to our whispered updates. The thick fog was now blanketing the entire valley below us, but switching our scopes to thermal mode allowed us to keep following everyone’s movements. Danny and Cameron were distinctive; with their ghost suits on, their heat signals appeared as little more than tiny dots. Blake, the girl and the soldiers, by contrast, were large glowing rainbow blobs. It took a little more focus to tell them apart. The girl had run past our position but was still in sight and had collapsed face-first on the icy road. It seemed a mile, barefoot and naked, had been all she could manage. She was giving up.

The men were gaining ground on her, but apparently couldn’t yet see her lying in the road. About that time, one of the soldiers decided to turn back. The other two continued on and passed directly in front of where Danny, Cameron, and Blake were crouching in the fog-covered ditch. I watched as either Danny or Cameron’s dot split off to the right and the other went left with Blake. The dot that went right now was stationary alongside the road, apparently in an ideal tactical position. The soldiers closed in on the girl and seemed to have finally seen her. Their laughter eerily echoed up the face of the mountain as they took their final steps. The fog wasn’t as thick where she was lying in the road, so we quickly switched our scopes from thermal back to night vision. The two soldiers stood above her, and I watched as one of the men unzipped his pants, preparing to urinate on her.
What kind of sick…

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