“Mr. Quamboa, it has been a pleasure, but we have to be going.” Albert gave Kaimi a smug salute.
“You will never make it in time.” Kaimi’s satisfied smile made Dante fume.
“If your man did anything—” Dante started to say as he took a step toward Kaimi. His father grabbed his shoulder.
“We don’t have time. We leave now, before the cops detain us further.” Albert’s expression was stern.
Dante let out an infuriated breath, then turned away from Kaimi’s haughty smile, opening the sliding door. He stalked out of the house, toward the tree line. He made it there in record time. The throbbing in his leg only propelled him further, leaving his father and uncle breathlessly trying to catch up to him.
“Wait, Dante! Wait. We have to be sure the police take him.” Bob waved him down.
Dante turned. He was desperate to get to the plane, but he could already hear the sirens.
“Dad—your phone. Try to call the house.” Dante gestured to his father with his chin.
Albert nodded, gasping to catch his breath. Fumbling, he pulled his cell phone out of his pocket as he turned to watch the police approach.
They watched from the safety of the trees as the police charged into the safe house, from front and back. Dante watched with a small sense of satisfaction as the local PD untied Kaimi from the chair, leading him from the house.
“Can we go now? They have him.” Dante turned on his heel.
“Yes, yes. Let’s go.” Albert waved him up the path to the rental car.
“Anything?” Dante asked over his shoulder.
Albert shook his head as he tried to re-dial.
“Keeps going to the machine. I’ll keep leaving messages.” He huffed as they began climbing up.
Dante trudged up the hill with as much haste as his leg and stamina would allow him. They hiked up the short trail, which led to the road above. Parked along the side of the road was their rental car, masquerading as another piece of junk car that had broken down. They piled in, and Dante drove it to the airstrip like he was on the Honolulu freeway instead of a small side road.
They pulled into the airfield parking lot, left the keys in the ignition, and sprinted to the plane. Bob went straight into the cockpit to request an immediate departure. Given that the skies were empty, ground control cleared them for departure. They taxied and took off, bound for Nebraska.
***
Laurie
“I just have this feeling, this awful feeling.” Laurie took a shirt from the laundry pile and began to fold it into neat little creases.
“Honey, it’s natural to be a little anxious. You’re a bundle of nerves and hormones now.” Emma smiled indulgently.
“No. I mean really.” Laurie huffed.
“Well, of course you have an awful feeling. You’ve been on the run for a long time. Now you’re in a delicate condition and Dante’s not even here—of course you have an awful feeling.” Gabriella smiled sweetly as she folded a shirt.
Laurie shook her head, sighing. They just weren’t listening to her. She couldn’t get either one of them to stop grinning and cooing at her since she found out she was pregnant. It would be infuriating, if they weren’t so happy for her. Meanwhile, Laurie just couldn’t shake a dreadful feeling of foreboding. It had crept up on her several days ago. It just wouldn’t let go.
Laurie gave up, sitting back on the pillows strewn across Gabriella’s bed. They were folding laundry, now that the boys were asleep in Emma’s room. Emma had started insisting that she take up residence on the couch downstairs so the boys could have a “proper place to sleep.” Laurie knew it had been a long day, and maybe she was just over-tired. Perhaps Gabriella’s interpretation was not quite so far-fetched.
“What should we start the boys on tomorrow?” Emma fluffed out a pillowcase. “Should we start with math or social studies?”
“Social studies.” Gabriella hated math and tried to put it off until the very end of the day.
“Why not English?” Laurie shrugged. “I can try to teach in the morning.”
“No, no, no.” Emma tisked. “You should still rest in the morning. Don’t want to overdo it.”
Laurie sighed, rolling her eyes.
“I think I can handle it.” Laurie let her impatience show as she gazed back at Emma.
They all heard something drop on the floor in the room below them. They stopped where they were. Laurie’s breath caught in her lungs. They listened to the silence for several long, tense minutes before they spoke in half-whispers.
“Did you hear that?” Laurie tensed.
“Probably just the boys.” Gabriella gave a nervous shake of her head. “Maybe they got out of bed?”
There were more muffled sounds and scrapings beneath them.
“Turn out the light,” Emma commanded in a whisper.
Gabriella got up, shutting off the light in her room.
“Maybe it’s the men?” Laurie strained to listen.
“You would never hear my husband coming. Get in the closet.” Emma shoved Laurie in Gabriella’s closet.
Laurie peeked out from the closet door. Gabriella handed Emma a gun from the drawer inside her dresser, taking another gun for herself. They took up stations behind the open door.
Laurie could hear more commotion from downstairs. There was a long wait after that, as she imagined the intruders going from room to room downstairs, looking for her. Her blood roared in her ears and she was breathless. Without even thinking about it, she placed a protective hand over her unborn child. She wished she at least had a gun to defend herself with. She felt around in the closet, but came up with only a broken coat hanger. Laurie wished Gabriella had a broken lamp in here. She cursed the universe for making her go through this again.
Armed with her tangled weapon, she felt footsteps begin to make their way up the stairs. Gabriella and Emma tensed. Laurie steadied herself. She felt calm, ready, even as adrenaline flushed her face and neck. Laurie didn’t care what came through that door—it was not going to kill her. She was going to do everything in her power to protect herself and her baby. She was going to fight like mad.
As the two intruders entered the room, she prayed for everyone she loved: Dante, Gabriella, Emma, Bob, even Albert, and most of all, the unborn child she carried. Then the room erupted into gunfire and strangled cries.
CHAPTER
TWENTY-ONE
Dante
Dante hurled himself through the door of the plane into the cold Nebraska morning. His leg throbbed like mad. The frigid air wasn’t much of a distraction from it. Bob had flown them all night, only stopping to refuel once. Albert and Dante didn’t sleep at all. They twisted and turned in their seats for hours, waiting to land.
“I know he was lying,” Albert had said to Dante somewhere over California. “No one has the faintest idea where we live. Kaimi wouldn’t even know where to start.”
Albert still fidgeted in his seat, to the point that Dante was ready to tie him to it. Dante held himself in check, knowing he was worried and exhausted. Instead, he passed the dreadful hours with dull tasks, redressing his wound, checking his gear. It all kept him sane long enough to make it to their final descent.
The three men jogged into the small airport. The same teenager sat at the counter as before. Albert told him what truck he owned, and the boy charged them a large sum for their parking. Albert paid without hesitation. Then they picked up their bags, racing to the door. They piled into the cold truck. The leather and plastic interior felt like ice. Albert didn’t wait for the engine to warm up, instead, he peeled out of the parking lot onto the road.
Snow had fallen, dusting the broken corn stalks of the landscape with a crisp, white shield. It blurred in Dante’s tired eyes as he stared out into the distance. He drummed his fingers on the pack settled in his lap. He ran his hand through his hair several times. The drive took much longer than he remembered, and with every passing minute, the nightmares in his head grew stronger, more insistent.