More pain.
Her horn was blowing. She must have hit that, too, she thought dimly.
Her driver’s door was opening.
She dazedly raised her head.
Someone in a brown jacket was standing in the road, the rain pouring off him.
He was smiling.
And he had a Luger pistol in his hand.
She instinctively tried to reach over, to grab her handbag, and throw it at him.
The air bag got in the way, and the handbag fell to the mud of the ditch.
The gun fired, exploded.
Agony.
Her chest …
He was throwing something at her. Something gold … a chain …
It didn’t matter.
Nothing mattered.
The pain was going away. The rain was going away. Everything was going away but the warm, golden light that was suddenly surrounding her.
And beyond that light was Trevor. Tall, strong, his blue eyes shining and full of love.
He was shaking his head, but she didn’t care. She could see the love, feel the everafter that was there for them.
“It’s okay, Trevor.” She was running toward him. “Do you hear me? It wasn’t my fault. I would have lived. I would have done what you wanted me to do. But this just happened. I couldn’t help it.” She was getting closer, and the golden light was around her, in her. Soon she’d be in his arms. “So you must be wrong. It must be okay that we’re going to be together…”
CHAPTER
6
“I’m fine, Catherine,” Eve said. “So is Joe. He’s right here.” She was trying to be soothing since Catherine was obviously upset. But her own heart had plummeted when Catherine had rattled out that frightening suspicion about Santos’s intentions.
“Jane.” Joe was at Eve’s elbow. “Jane’s not here. She should be home by now.”
“Call her.” She said to Catherine, “I’ve got to go. Jane was driving here from the airport. We have to check on her.”
“Jane…” Catherine repeated. “God, yes. Make sure she’s safe.” She hung up.
“No answer, Eve,” Joe said as he hung up his phone.
“Call that policeman who was supposed to be following her.” Eve was already shrugging into her rain anorak as she headed for the door. “We’ve got to go look for her.”
“It’s raining.” He was following her down the porch steps. “It could have slowed her down. Maybe traffic…”
“I’ve been telling myself the same thing,” she said jerkily as she jumped into the Jeep. “But I’m scared, Joe.”
“So am I.” He hung up the phone. “Particularly since I can’t rouse that security black-and-white that should have been following her. That’s damn strange. I’d call the precinct but … that can wait.”
And Jane might not be able to wait, Eve thought as she tore down the gravel road toward the freeway.
Not if Catherine was right.
Not if that bastard had decided to target Jane.
God, she wished this rain would stop. She could hardly see anything ahead of her.
No, that wasn’t true. She could see bright headlights ahead.
But not on the road.
The car was in a ditch, but the headlights were still blazing.
“Dear God,” she whispered. She stomped on the accelerator, and the Jeep jumped forward. They were stopping beside the Toyota in the ditch in seconds.
“The driver’s door is open,” Joe said. “But I don’t see the driver.” He jumped out of the Jeep and ran toward the Toyota. “Maybe the driver got out and is looking for help. It’s a poss—” He broke off as he reached the car. “No, she didn’t get out.”
Eve was beside him, looking at Jane pinned back against the seat by the air bag. Blood. Her chest was covered with blood. “Oh, baby.” She knelt beside the driver’s seat, tears pouring down her cheeks. “Jane…”
Joe had taken his pocketknife and deflated the air bag. He was examining the wound, trying desperately to find a way to stem the blood. “Shot in the chest, close range.”
“Dead?” Eve asked unevenly. “Is she dead? Are we too late?”
“She’s still alive,” Joe said. His eyes were glittering with moisture. “But I won’t lie to you. I don’t think she’s going to make it. She’s dying, Eve.”
Shock. Followed by overwhelming sorrow. She reached out and touched Jane’s hair. Then denial came, hard, fast, rejecting those words. “If she’s not dead yet, we have a chance. I’m not going to let her die. I’ll hold on to her until the last minute. You stop the blood. I’ll call 911.”
He nodded. “Yeah, you bet we’ll give her a chance.” He reached out and gently touched the curve of Jane’s lips. “What the hell? I think she’s … smiling.”
LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY
“I have to call Eve back,” Catherine said as she got out of the car in front of her house after driving from the airport. “I’ve been trying to leave her alone. I didn’t want to get in her way when she was trying to find Jane.” She watched Luke, Sam, and Kelly go into the house before she turned to Cameron. “And I’m nervous as hell about what she’s going to find. What she’s already found. Eve wouldn’t keep me waiting without knowing anything if there wasn’t a reason.”
“Then call her and stop fretting about it,” Cameron said. “From what you’ve told me, Eve is too responsible not to keep everyone informed.”
“I don’t need your permission. I told you I was going to do it.” Catherine was already dialing. The phone rang four times before it was picked up. “Catherine, Eve.”
“I meant to call you,” Eve’s voice was unbearably weary. “Sorry. I’ve just been busy. Things are … bad.”
“Jane?”
Silence. “We think she’s dying. Shot in the chest.”
“Oh, my God.”
“They got the bullet out, but there are all kinds of vein and arterial damage that can’t be repaired. She’s in a coma.” Her voice broke. “The doctors say that she won’t wake up.”
Catherine’s hand clenched on the phone as waves of pain washed over her. She seemed to be feeling Eve’s pain as well as her own. “Specialists?”
“We’re bringing in one from Houston. It might not help.” She cleared her throat. “But then it might. I can’t stop hoping, can I?”
“No. Look, I’m coming down there to be with you. What hospital?”
“St. Joseph’s. But I have Joe, Catherine.”
“And he’s probably all you need. But I need to be with you right now. I need to be with Jane.” Her voice was unsteady. “For God’s sake, she may be dying because of me.”
“Not because of you. Because of Santos.” She paused. “But it will be good to see you. I’m kind of ragged, and Joe is feeling torn about whether to help Jane or me. He’ll be glad to have someone around to strike a balance. Get some rest and come tomorrow morning. That will be soon enough.” She stopped and had to compose herself before she could continue. “The doctors think she may linger for anywhere from a week to ten days.”
“Okay, whatever you say. Tomorrow. God, I’m sorry, Eve.”
“I know you are. Good-bye, Catherine.” She hung up.
Catherine could feel the tears brimming as the waves of sorrow and regret overwhelmed her.
“Jane?” Cameron asked quietly. “Dead?”
“Not yet. Soon.” She wiped her eyes. “Shot in the chest.”
“If she’s not dead, there’s still hope.”
“That’s what Eve said, but she’s having trouble believing it. I’m going down to Atlanta to see her at the hospital tomorrow morning.” Hold on. Keep the pain at bay. Don’t think of Jane in that sleep that would probably last forever. She started for the front door. “Now I have to make sure that Luke and Kelly are settling for the night and that Sam has told security to put Kelly under their protection.”
“I’d bet that your Sam has already done it.” Cameron followed her into the foyer. “You can’t be responsible for everything, Catherine.”
“Yes, I can. I’ll accept responsibility for the whole world if it keeps the odds down that there won’t be another death Santos tosses at my door.” Her lips twisted. “You know about that kind of burden. You shoulder all kinds of responsibility your precious committee throws at you. After all, you’re the Guardian.” She turned to look at him. “But I suppose I should thank you for killing Shaw and saving Kelly. I might not have been there in time.”