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“All right,” Shel said. “I’ll get my kit and meet you in the car.”

Will turned and headed back to the SUV.

Real fear settled in over Shel as he walked to the back bedroom.

He took a moment to get everything organized, but he didn’t know what he was supposed to do. His daddy was in a hospital, maybe fighting for his life. The Marines hadn’t had a checklist or training for that.

Shel felt helpless. In a situation like this, Don would pray. Shel envied his brother that feeling of being useful. But Shel knew he didn’t believe or trust enough to do that. He’d be a hypocrite if he tried to pray, and he didn’t wish for that.

Unable to do anything else, Shel grabbed the handles of his duffel and hoisted it to his shoulder. As he headed for the door, he looked around the house and wondered if it would ever feel like home again.

›› Love Field

›› Dallas, Texas

›› 0239 Hours (Central Time Zone)

Shaved and sporting a new haircut, wearing a suit for the first time since his last court arraignment, Victor Gant sat in the waiting area for his flight. Beside him, made over in a similar fashion, Fat Mike sat reading a copy of Playboy he’d bought in one of the magazine shops.

Neither one of them was GQ material.

A few bleary-eyed travelers gave Fat Mike hard stares over his choice of public reading material, but the biker ignored them.

Victor controlled the anger and frustration that slopped around inside him, but only just. If it hadn’t been for alcohol, he wouldn’t have been able to contain himself. He drank just enough to keep the edge off.

“You’re gonna have to let it go,” Fat Mike said quietly from beside him. “Maybe you didn’t kill Tyrel McHenry, but you seriously jacked his life.”

The local news had been full of the attack on McHenry’s ranch. Victor had seen footage all day while he’d made the necessary arrangements to catch this morning’s flight. If all went well and no one saw through the false papers he was carrying or identified him-which, based on the mug shots they were displaying on the television, Victor doubted-he’d be back in Vietnam in a few days.

He’d be safe.

That irritated him too, because it had been a long time since Victor had truly felt threatened. But there was something about that big Marine, something so intractable, that Victor had lost some of the confidence he’d always had even at the worst of times. Shel McHenry was one of those bona fide human assault weapons that just wouldn’t stay down.

Victor knew he’d have felt better if Shel were dead. But being in Vietnam didn’t mean he couldn’t work on that. He still had friends in the States, still had people who owed him favors and money.

It was just a matter of time.

“Did you hear me?” Fat Mike asked.

“Yeah,” Victor said irritably. He felt naked sitting there without a gun.

“Says here in this magazine that stress will kill you if you keep it internalized.”

Victor glanced at Fat Mike. “You saying I’m stressed?”

“No,” Fat Mike replied coolly, suddenly realizing he might be on dangerous ground. “I’m telling you it’s a good thing you’re not.”

Victor turned back to the windows overlooking the airfield. “I’m not stressed.”

“You don’t look stressed. Want a magazine? I got Penthouse too.”

“That old man should have been dead last night,” Victor said. He spoke in Vietnamese so none of the other passengers around them could understand their conversation.

“He got lucky. That’s all.”

“Lucky enough to kill three guys.”

“You and me, we seen guys go down in the jungle that shoulda lived, bro. And we seen cherries that should have gone down the first time Charlie opened fire live to fight another day. Don’t mean nothing. Just means we gotta let it go for now. We’ve put stuff on the back burner before. Ain’t no thing, brother.”

“The Marine should have been dead too. Out of the two of them, somebody should have been dead. Instead, we got a lot of dead guys behind us and a whole lotta heat coming down on top of us.”

“Maybe this just happened so you can get them both later.”

Victor didn’t believe that, but he knew he wasn’t going to stop trying.

“We get back to Vietnam, you’ll wrap your skull around this thing,” Fat Mike said. “You’ll figure out a way to get them. Nobody escapes you in the long run. But I’m telling you, bro, once you’re back in the jungle-where only the quick and the dead show up-you may decide it wasn’t all that important anyway. After a few days there, it might not even matter.”

That wasn’t going to be the case, though. Victor was sure of that. Whatever it took, he was going to balance the scales between himself and Shel McHenry.

›› Intensive Care Unit

›› Las Palmas Medical Center

›› El Paso, Texas

›› 0648 Hours (Central Time Zone)

“Are you his son?”

Shel disengaged himself from the confusion that filled his mind and focused his attention on the nurse who had just entered the ICU room.

She was Hispanic and looked like she was in her early thirties. Her scrubs fit her athletic build well. She wore her black hair pulled up.

“Yes, ma’am,” Shel said. His voice was thick from disuse. He’d sat at his daddy’s side for hours, worrying about him and wondering what he was supposed to do now. The constant chirping of the heart monitor and humming of other assorted machines provided an undercurrent of noise.

“Don’t call me ‘ma’am,’” the nurse said. “You’ll make me old before my time. My name is Isabella.” She turned from the chart and stuck her hand out.

Shel got to his feet and took her hand.

She smiled, obviously pleased. “So, you’re a gentleman.”

“No. I’m a Marine.”

“Is that better or worse?” Isabella’s face showed that she might have really been interested in the answer and not just making small talk.

“I guess it depends on who you talk to.”

“Well, either way, your father is going to be all right.”

“That’s what they said.” Shel resumed his seat out of the way while Isabella manually took his daddy’s vitals. Shel watched her with interest.

“I trust the machines,” Isabella said. “They’re good. But I don’t ever want to get out of practice doing things the old-fashioned way. In case I’m ever in a situation where I have to.”

“Redundant systems,” Shel commented.

She smiled at him. “I guess you could call it that. I just think of those kids working fast food when the computer crashes. They act like they don’t know how to add or subtract or how to make change. Computers are supposed to make things easier, not impossible. We’re supposed to be the redundant system. I suppose the military is really big on redundancy.”

Shel nodded.

“I’m going to be with your father-and, I suppose, you-during this next shift,” Isabella said. “The other nurses told me you were here most of the night.”

“Some of it, anyway.”

“And I’ll also tell you that if Dr. Abelard wasn’t a fan of the military, you wouldn’t be sitting in that chair. He likes his ICU kept clear of civilians. I suppose you can empathize with that.”

Shel felt magnanimous enough not to point out that the hospital didn’t have enough security people and orderlies in the building to make him leave if he decided to stay. He remained quiet.

“But Dr. Abelard can be a generous man if nobody makes any trouble,” Isabella said. “So here you are. They said there were two of you.”

“My brother, Don,” Shel said. “He was here for a while. But he had to go take care of his family. They’re going to stay in town for the next day or so. Until we get Daddy through this.”

“Like I said, your father is going to be fine. There’s no need for anyone to get stressed. In a few days, barring any complications, we’re going to send him home.”

But there already were complications, Shel couldn’t help thinking. The murder and Victor Gant were out there lurking like land mines along their path.