The Target (6 page)

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Authors: Catherine Coulter

BOOK: The Target
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Both of them froze. Both of them looked into each other's eyes.

She spoke before he did. “Now, Em, you know he took you away from me. He's using you, he's—”

“No, I didn't kidnap her. I haven't hurt her. But I will tell you that this is the first time she's spoken since I found her in the forest more than a week ago.” Slowly, he came down on his haunches, his thigh screaming from the exertion, but he ignored it.

“Your name's Em? Is that short for Emily?”

“No, Emma,” she whispered. She was wearing one of his gray T-shirts, washed so many times it was softer than goat leather. She turned to the woman. “Mama, it's all right. Ramsey saved me. Really.” She put her hand on his shoulder. She said again in that small tired voice, “He saved me, Mama. He wouldn't let anybody hurt me again. He gets really mad whenever he even thinks about it.”

The woman slowly lowered the pistol, but he could tell she didn't want to. “Who are you?”

He picked up Emma and rose, aware that his leg wanted very much to give out under him. “Forgive me, but I've got to sit down. My leg hurts like the devil.”

The Detonics pistol jerked up again. “Don't you move, damn you. Put her down.”

6

H
E IGNORED HER
. She wouldn't shoot him now. He was holding her daughter. He carried Emma to the sofa and sat down. Only then did he say to her, “I've got lots to tell you. My name's Ramsey Hunt. You can trust me. Please.”

“Give me my daughter. Let her go.”

He set Emma on her feet, and she ran to her mother. The woman came down on her knees. He watched her as she crushed Emma to her. Tears streaked down her face. She kissed Emma, all over her face, ran her hands all over her, smoothing her hands over her hair, squeezing her until she squeaked.

Emma finally pulled back. She lifted her hand to her mother's hair and lightly patted it. “I'm okay, Mama, really. Ramsey saved me. He took care of me. You look like GI Joe. I like those black gloves.”

The woman laughed as she pulled off the black leather gloves. “I'm your mama again and not a soldier.” He watched Emma lace her fingers through her mother's. He saw the close-clipped nails, several broken off. The back of her hands were red and chafed from the cold.

He felt incredibly relieved. And suddenly very tired. He
sat back, stretching his leg out in front of him, watching them. Finally, when she was sitting across from him, Emma in her lap, held tightly against her chest, the woman raised her head and said, “Thank you. I'm sorry I nearly killed you. If I had, it would have been wrong.” She sounded only mildly sorry. He didn't mind. He could imagine something of what she'd gone through, what she'd thought.

“Yes, very wrong. I'm glad that Emma isn't mute. But you know, we've gotten along just fine. She draws really well.”

“Why didn't you say anything, Em?”

She shook her head, then frowned. She whispered, “Nothing would come out. Nothing until I thought you'd shoot Ramsey. I couldn't let you shoot Ramsey. I didn't know what to do so I just talked. Ramsey wanted me to write my name but I couldn't do that either. He didn't think I could write. I couldn't do anything, Mama, except draw pictures.”

“You did well,” her mother said and kissed her not once, but half a dozen times. “Oh, Emma, I love you so much.” She settled the child again in her lap.

“I'm glad to see you, Mama. I didn't think I'd ever see you again until Ramsey found me. It was scary, Mama. I was so afraid.” Emma threw her arms around her mother's neck. She was crying now, deep low sobs that rent the silence.

“It's all right, baby. We're together again. It's all right. I'll never let you go again, I swear it. Oh Emma, I love you. Oh God, I nearly lost hope.”

He turned away, giving them what privacy he could, but he listened to them both crying, Emma's sobs, strangely, deeper than her mother's. He waited until they'd begun to quiet, listened to the sniffs, then tossed her a blanket. She pulled it over both of them. She said blankly, “Emma's wearing a man's undershirt.”

“Yes, I forgot to buy her some pajamas. At least she doesn't trip over the undershirt.”

Ramsey rose, his leg screaming. “Let me lock the door. We can't take any chances.”

She didn't say anything, content to wait, he supposed, since she had her daughter back. He knew she watched him closely as he stared through the window, then fastened the chain and flipped the dead bolt. When he turned, he watched her pull off a close-fitting black knit cap. Red curly hair spouted out, most of it in a braid, the rest a riot around her thin face, a pretty face, one that was changing even as he watched. The tension was leaving her face, bringing color to her cheeks. Her mouth was curving into a smile, her eyes were growing lighter even as he stared at her.

There was so much to say, so much to ask, but what came out of his mouth was, “Would you like some coffee? It will just take a minute to make. We're really basic here.”

She nodded. “That would be wonderful. I'm so cold I think it's permanent now.”

He walked to the kitchen. He felt Emma's hand on his knee. She'd followed him out, his gray T-shirt nearly dragging on the floor and a pair of white gym socks pooling around her skinny ankles. He watched her walk to the small table and measure the coffee into the waiting pan. Then he poured the water over the coffee and set it on the stove. They'd gotten this routine down as of four days ago.

He looked over to the woman standing in the doorway, staring at them, more dazed than not. He didn't even know her name, but at this moment, it didn't seem to matter. What mattered was creating an air of normality. He said to her, “Emma and I are a good act. We got the coffee thing down first thing. We're just about ready to take it on the road. Hey, Emma, who gets top billing?”

“I don't know what that means, Ramsey.”

“Does your name go first on the signs or does mine?”

“I'm the youngest. I should go first.”

He laughed and ruffled her hair. He looked over at her mother. She was just standing there. He could tell she was trying to make sense of things, not just coming to
understand the relationship between her daughter and this man she didn't know, but she was also trying to come to grips with the fact that Emma was safe, that she actually had her daughter back.

She didn't say anything, just stood watchfully. She looked strung out and very tired. He said, “You'd think that boiled coffee would rot your fillings out, and it just might, come to think of it, but it doesn't taste too bad and it does zing your brain. As I said, we're basic here. We've got a small refrigerator and the lights in the living room, due to a generator. But it's a wood-burning stove and we heat the water for a bath.”

Emma said, “We toast bread with a metal thing that has a long handle.”

The woman shook her head, still trying, he knew, to understand what was happening here. “I'd drink anything that passed for coffee at this point. I've been sitting out there waiting and waiting for daylight, waiting for you to come outside, but when you did, you had that rifle and I was too far away to do anything with my Detonics.”

“I shouldn't have left the cabin door unlocked. It was stupid. If it hadn't been you, it could have been them.”

“Well, it wasn't. I didn't see anyone else out there. Who's them? Who are you talking about?”

“Let's hold that for just a little bit,” he said, and nodded toward Emma. He poured her a cup of coffee that was still bubbling. “Sit down and try to drink it. If anything it'll keep you buzzing until noon, when you'll probably crash. Emma, I'm going to fix you a bowl of Cheerios. You want peaches or bananas?”

“A banana. I don't really like peaches.”

“But you've eaten them without complaint.”

She said as she took the cereal box from him and poured Cheerios into her bowl, “I didn't want to hurt your feelings. But I do like bananas better.”

He sliced the banana over her cereal while she got the milk out of the small refrigerator. “Look, Mama,” she said,
pointing. “It doesn't have a freezer. We make everything fresh, just the way we do at home.”

“I've never seen one that fancy before. It's neat.” She didn't know how the words, such ordinary words, had come out of her mouth. She'd passed from blankness to disbelief. Here she'd expected to come in and fight her daughter's abductor and deal with a hysterical hurt child, and now she was drinking boiled coffee at a kitchen table, looking into a high-tech refrigerator, listening to her daughter chew her Cheerios. She looked at the big man who needed to shave. He'd saved her daughter? He'd protected her with his life? Nothing made sense yet.

Emma was eating Cheerios with a banana on top, nicely sliced by that stranger. She didn't say anything more until Emma was down to her last bite of cereal and he was drinking his second cup of coffee, seated across from her at the table. “I've been tracking her for two weeks. When I showed Emma's picture down in Dillinger, I just couldn't believe it. Several people told me she was Ramsey's little girl. I didn't know what to think. I've been watching since yesterday, but I couldn't get to you without taking a chance of hurting Emma. You never came out of the cabin. Neither of you did.”

“Who are you?”

“I'm Molly Santera.”

Emma looked up as she swallowed a banana circle. “Mama says it sounds like a made-up band's name—our last name—but it's real. It's my dad's name.”

Molly smiled at her daughter and leaned close, just to touch her. “That's true enough. But I'll bet you there are lots of Santeras in the New York phone directory.”

“I've never been to New York,” Emma said.

“We'll go when you're a bit older, Em. We'll have a great time. We'll stay at the Plaza and walk right over to FAO Schwarz. It's really close.”

Santera. The name was vaguely familiar. He remembered Emma's drawing of a man holding a guitar and his
jaw dropped. He said slowly, “Santera. You mean Louey Santera? The rock star?”

“One and the same,” Molly said, her voice clipped, colder than a late-spring freeze.

Ramsey wanted to know more about Emma's father, ask her why the hell the guy wasn't tracking with her, even though he was a famous rock star. But he could tell that Molly didn't want to say more about him right now. There would be time enough for her to answer all his questions and for him to answer all of hers. Emma had eaten her cereal, all the while smiling at her mother, then smiling at him, like any happy well-adjusted kid.

“I know who you are now.”

He cocked his head at her. “Me? How?”

“I recognize you now that I've thought about your name. Are you the famous Ramsey Hunt?”

Again, for Emma's sake, he used a light hand. “ Infamous is more accurate.”

“In your dreams.”

He sputtered in his coffee, raised his head, and stared at her. “Men,” she said, her hands wrapped around her coffee mug, “if they have a choice, would rather have the world believe them infamous—you know, rogues and bad boys—not heroes, not known for something worthy or moral they've done or tried to do.”

“No,” he said. “That's not me.”

She sighed, and shrugged, looking away from him. “This is tough to believe. You're a federal judge from San Francisco, but you're here. You found Emma.”

“Yes,” he said.

“Given what you did in your courtroom, I suppose Emma couldn't have been safer.”

He said nothing, just took another sip of the afterburner coffee.

A federal judge who was also famous, a hero truth be told, despite his reticence, and here both she and Emma were with him. Life had kicked her so much in the teeth for
the past two weeks that she supposed she shouldn't be shocked at this latest surprise. She said to her daughter, “Em, you look beautiful. How are you, love?”

Emma kept her head down. Reality had crashed in suddenly and she wasn't ready yet. Molly had sounded too serious, too strident. She felt stupid and so very tired. She could have kissed Ramsey Hunt when he said, his voice still light and calm, his attention seemingly on Emma, “She had to have other stuff to wear than just my T-shirts. I put off leaving the cabin for as long as possible, but she had to have some clothes. And that's how you found us. When Emma and I went shopping in Dillinger.”

“As I said, I showed her photo around and the town folks all believed she was your little girl. Truth be told, I didn't expect to learn anything at Dillinger. It was the last stop. I guess then I would have had to let the cops and the FBI deal with things. Naturally, they are dealing with things, in their own way. They didn't solve a thing, didn't turn up a thing. I gave them two days, then hit the road. I heard they called off the manhunt for her after four days.”

“Where do you live?”

“In Denver.” She picked up a spoon and fiddled with it, her eyes down on the white-and-red-checked tablecloth. “Her father is in Europe. He's on tour and couldn't leave, but he'll be back soon now.” She turned to her daughter and took her small hand. “I speak to him nearly every day, Em. He's very worried about you, really.”

Emma stared down into her bowl that had one banana slice floating in a bit of milk. She said, never looking up, “I don't know why he'd come. I haven't seen him for two years.”

He realized her daughter had knocked her flat. He said quickly, “I see. You're divorced.”

“Yes,” Molly said. She'd gotten herself together again. “Emma, it doesn't have anything to do with the divorce. Your daddy loves you. It's just that he's so very busy.”

“Yes, Mama.”

Time to move along, quickly, Ramsey thought, and said, “So you gave the cops all of two days then you struck out on your own?”

“Yes. There was nothing I could do at home except go quietly nuts.”

He wanted to tell her that if the kidnappers called, they'd have wanted to speak to her. Then he realized that any female police officer could do that duty. He didn't say anything. Emma was all ears.

“I've been traveling from Aspen to Vail to Keystone and all the places in-between. Dillinger was my final try.”

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