PROMISES
TO KEEP
By Barb (circa 1999)
Jennifer screamed.
"Uncle Johnny's
here!" and with an enthusiastic bound she was out of the modest suburban
LA home and running to greet a slightly dilapidated Land Rover.
Roy Desoto,
Firefighter/Paramedic for LA County's Station 51 stood at the front door to his
home and, with a grin on his face, watched his young daughter leap into the
arms of the slender, dark-haired man exiting the vehicle. He waved at John
Gage, his partner of six years, and opened the front screen door to let the
younger man and little girl through.
"Hey Junior, right on
time. I can't believe it." Roy shook his blonde head and watched as Johnny
adopted a mock hurt expression before going on. "Chris is just finishing
up with the packing. He's in his room."
Roy led his partner into
the kitchen where his wife, JoAnne, was putting the finishing touches on a pan
of cooled chocolate brownies. She stopped long enough to give Johnny a quick
hug before turning back to her task.
"I've just got to cut
these and they'll be ready to go into a container for you to take along. Are
you really sure you want to do this?"
Johnny gave her his
patented grin. "Of course I'm sure! How often do we get a four day weekend
off, huh? Besides, you guys haven't had a weekend away from the kids for quite
a while and I haven't been camping for a while so this is perfect!" he
beamed.
"Yes, well, I'm not
sure you realize what you're getting yourself into camping with these
two." JoAnne murmured with a smile, then sobered a bit. "You have the
telephone number of the bed and breakfast Roy and I will be staying in
right?" Johnny nodded. "And you will stay in the more populated areas
of the campground, too?"
Johnny put his arms around
Roy's petite wife and reassured her.
"Jo, relax. We'll be
staying near the playgrounds and easier hiking trails. I promise they'll be
safe with me. I won't take them into the wilder areas. You guys just relax and
enjoy your romantic get away."
JoAnne and Roy smiled at
each other and Roy gave his wife a wink.
"I think we can
manage that."
* * * * * *
The campsite Johnny had
chosen was secluded enough to give him the feeling of being away from everyone
but close enough to the bathrooms, playground and hiking trails to make it easy
for the kids to enjoy themselves. He watched fondly as eight-year-old Jennifer
and twelve-year-old Christopher tried to puzzle out the workings of his four
man tent. They had insisted on putting the campsite up by themselves with only
verbal instructions from Johnny. Roy's kids loved camping with their 'Uncle'
Johnny and wanted to experience everything.
Johnny marveled at how
fast the two were growing. It only seemed like yesterday that he had first been
partnered with Roy. Jennifer had only been a toddler then and Chris just turned
six. Now here they were trying to set up a campsite. Johnny examined his
charges, as dear to him as if they were his own, and noticed how much they
resembled their parents.
//A miniature Roy and
JoAnne.// he thought to himself with some amusement. Christopher DeSoto shared
his father's blonde hair, medium build and gentle smile while his younger
sister looked like her petite, dark-haired mother. Currently Jennifer's hair
was trying to escape from a long braid down her back and with her face flushed
with exertion Johnny was suddenly struck with a vision of the kind of woman she
would grow to be. A smile curled his lips with wicked glee.
//Oh, Roy. You'd better
get your baseball bat polished up 'cuz you're going to have a real stunner on
you're hands.//
* * * * * *
The campfire cast a mellow
glow over the occupants of the campsite. Jennifer was trying hard to be a big
girl and stay awake but the combination of activity, fresh air, a good supper
and warm firelight was proving too difficult a combination to resist. Her eyes
were determined to droop shut.
Chris was feeling a little
sleepy, too, but enjoyed the feeling of 'the guys sittin' around shootin' the
breeze', as his dad would say. Uncle Johnny always treated him as an equal and
that made Chris proud.
The fire popped softly and
an ember sparkled in the hot updraft. The conversation was meandering about the
topic of the next day's activities when Johnny's ears caught a loud rustling in
the nearby bushes. He wasn't unduly alarmed. Raccoons were notoriously bold
around tourists here and made no bones about making their way into camp and
sauntering off with anything edible. On the other hand, coyotes had been making
themselves at home of late, too, and they were more worrisome.
Johnny had just decided to
find himself a handy stone to toss at the intruder when the foliage nearest him
burst apart with enough force to startle all three occupants to their feet. An
ugly giant of a man crashed into the clearing followed closely by his small,
balding companion. It was immediately apparent that the two dirty, ragged men
were wearing penal uniforms with numbers clearly emblazoned across the front of
each shirt. There was fear in their eyes. Fear and desperation. Not a good
combination.
All this and more
registered in Johnny's consciousness between one adrenaline pumping heartbeat
and the next and he was turning toward the children before he even realized it.
"RUN!!! RUN,
NOW!!"
The words had barely left
Johnny's mouth when he caught sight of the larger of the two convicts out of
the corner of his eye. With surprising speed one large, beefy fist backhanded
him brutally across the face. Johnny found himself spinning and crashing to the
hard packed earth. He was up again in a split second, ready to tackle the
monster and buy the children time to run. Pulling up short, Johnny realized he
was too late. The smaller man stood poised behind the frightened children, gun
pointed menacingly at the back of Chris's head. A government issue gun.
Probably taken off of a prison guard. A guard who was most likely dead at the
time, Johnny opined.
"All right, mister,
you just calm yourself and these two young ones of yours will be quite all
right." The balding little man hissed. He seemed to have a sharp cunning
and stared at Johnny with a challenging gaze.
Johnny paused uncertainly.
He took a moment to spit blood from his split lips, the coppery taste strong in
his mouth, and used the seconds to gather his scattered wits. He knew he was in
a highly dangerous situation. If he and Roy's kids were going to get out of
this alive he would have to use all of his imagination and resources. Right now
he tried to dredge up the professional voice he used to calm a fractious patient.
"Ok. Ok. I'm sorry I
got a bit carried away there. We'll just settle this nice and peaceful and you
can be on your way. If it's my jeep you want I've got the keys right here. I'll
toss them over to you. You can take any equipment or money that we've got. I
just want the kids to be safe, OK? Can you let them come over here to me? You
wouldn't want them cryin' out or anything, right?" Johnny spoke soothingly
and made little 'come here' motions with his hands.
The large convict took a
step toward Johnny and raised his hand again but the little man stopped him
with a gesture.
"No, Ollie, it's all
right. The kids can go to him. We're all going to sit down now and have a nice,
little chat. Isn't that right, mister. . .?"
"Gage." Johnny
reluctantly decided to play along for the time being. He couldn't afford to
risk the children in a foolish show of arrogance. He gestured again and sighed
with relief when Chris and Jenny scuttled fearfully to his side. Jennifer
immediately wrapped her arms around Johnny's legs and hid her tearstained face
against him. Johnny patted her gently on the head. Chris tried to look brave
but found Johnny's other hand on his shoulder an immense comfort. All three
lowered themselves cautiously to the ground.
Silence reigned for a few
moments. Ollie's small companion visually searched the campsite thoughtfully
while the hulking Ollie hovered menacingly over Johnny and his charges. Chris
nervously divided his attention between watching the little convict's crafty
eyes and his Uncle Johnny's, which burned with a cold fire. He had never seen
his father's friend like this and it was both thrilling and frightening.
Jennifer, settled protectively in Johnny's lap, was attempting to dab
solicitously at the blood on her Uncle's face with the sleeve of her
sweatshirt. In addition to the painfully smashed and bloody lips she noticed
the bruise spreading across the lower right half of his jaw. This violation on
her beloved Uncle infuriated her. With fire in her eyes she looked up into the
ugly face of the man standing above them.
"You hurt my Uncle
Johnny! I hate you!"
Johnny made shushing
noises and patted Jennifer on the back while a slow smile spread across Ollie's
face.
"Awwww, Max. She's a
purdy liddle one, ain't she."
Johnny's head whipped around
to glare menacingly at the huge man and froze at what he saw there. Before he
could form his next thought the little convict, Max, stepped smoothly into the
situation.
"Yes, Ollie, very
nice. Now leave them be until I tell you different, all right? It appears that
Mr. Gage, here, has quite an impressive array of camping equipment. I would
venture to guess that you are somewhat skilled at the practice of outdoor
living, Mr. Gage?"
Johnny tore his eyes away
from Ollie's face to look into the speculative eyes of Max. "Yes, I
suppose so. Why? I've told you, you can have the equipment, my truck, my
money....?"
"Ah, but those things
are easily come by if we so desired it. What we need is someone who can guide
us through this vast national park, my friend. As I'm sure you have deduced by
now, we are wanted men and even now I'm sure there are roadblocks up all over
the surrounding area. So you see, driving out would be quite stupid, wouldn't
it? No, I think it would be so much wiser if we did what the authorities
wouldn't expect and end up 50 miles or so from where they will be looking. I
have a feeling you are just the man to help us out. Am I right . . .
Tonto?" Max gave a ferocious grin and cackled a bit at his own joke.
Johnny remained silent as his thoughts spun wildly through all of his options.
Ollie tore his lustful gaze from the little girl and swung it to Johnny.
"He's a injun, Max?
Cool. He should get us through real good, then, right? You was right, Max. You
said you'd find us a way. You're always right, Max." Ollie's eyes were
full of hero worship for the little man. Johnny simply ignored the slur. He'd
had to put up with worse in the past and he could put up with far more for the
sake of these children that he loved so much.
"Ok. Ok. I'll guide
you anywhere you want but only if you let the children go." Johnny knew it
was a long shot but he had few options to deal with.
"Do I look stupid to
you, Mr. Gage? You know as well as I that these two have heard our plans and
will tell the first policeman they find. No, I don't think so, Tonto, but good
try. They both go with us, and if you don't guide us I'll simply shoot the boy
and give the girl to Ollie, here." At that Ollie's eyes lit up with
anticipation. Johnny's eyes narrowed. He glared at Max, gritting his teeth.
"I'll guide you, you
son-of-a-bitch, but if you let your trained ape over there lay one finger on
Jenny or hurt these kids in any way I'll lead you around in circles till you starve
to death. Is that clear?" Johnny had the small satisfaction of hearing a
growl rise up from Ollie's throat as he stared into Max's thoughtful eyes. Max
took in the fierce, determined set of Johnny's face and made careful note of
the black hatred that emanated from the man's eyes.
"Very clear, Mr.
Gage. I'll do my best to curb Ollie's more. . . unnatural proclivities. But
should you play us false the boy will die and all bets are off concerning the
young lady's future. I believe we have a deal, then. And now I think you should
take the children and retire to your tent for the remainder of the night. Ollie
will keep watch and we will set off before first light in the morning. Good
Night, Mr. Gage."
Johnny nodded and, rising
quickly, shepherded Jenny and Chris before him to the tent and zipped it shut
behind him. Ollie's fire lit silhouette splashed across the material of their
shelter like an ominous stain. He settled the children as best he could and
reassured them he would watch over them. Settling cross-legged at the front of
the tent Johnny rubbed his sore jaw and prepared for a sleepless night.
* * * * * *
Roy DeSoto sighed
contentedly. He was stretched out on an old Victorian high-rise bed watching
his wife of fourteen years apply her make-up. It had been a wonderful trip so
far. A romantic supper last night followed by a walk on the moonlit beach. What
followed the evening's stroll made Roy's lips curl into an even wider, and very
satisfied, grin. This morning, after sleeping in and a home-cooked breakfast
from the Inn's hostess, they had strolled and shopped in the quaint tourist
hamlet. Now, after a nap and showers, they were preparing for another night on
the town. As soon as JoAnne was done with her primping they could be off.
"Roy, have you caught
the weather yet for tomorrow? I hope it will be nice and warm. I'd love to go
for a swim. Try out that new bathing suit I bought today." Joanne's sultry
smile caused Roy to snatch up the TV remote.
"I'll just check on
it right now, hon. The local news should be coming on now anyway." He hit
the switch and watched Judy Lokk, the local anchorwoman, finish up a report on
the current rush hour traffic snarls. She plastered a synthetically fake smile
on her face and perkily went on to the next news item.
"Federal, state and
local authorities continue the manhunt today for two escaped convicts last seen
yesterday running on foot from an abandoned car on the off ramp of Interstate
210 and the 605. It is believed that Max Kertchkow and Ollie Stanforth are attempting
to elude followers by staying on the fringes of the Angeles National Forest.
All roads leading into and out of the national forest are roadblocked and all
campers are being warned. Kertchkow, convicted of Grand Theft and Second-Degree
Murder, and Stanforth, convicted of Child Molestation and First-Degree Murder,
killed two guards in their escape from a prisoner transport bus and are armed
and considered very dangerous. Citizens in the area of Monrovia, Duarte and
Azusa are advised to take extra precautions.
In other news..."
Roy did not notice when
the hairbrush fell from Joanne's nerveless fingers. His mind was racing. Johnny
and the kids were in the Coldbrook Campsite, just a few miles up Highway 39
from the Interstate area where the convicts had last been seen. He knew that he
was probably overreacting, but this was Johnny, after all. He turned to look at
his wife. She was staring at him, white-faced.
"I know. They're
probably safe, Roy. But I want to go there. Now."
* * * * * *
Johnny trudged wearily
along the hiking trail. It had been a long day, starting just as the first rays
of the sun pinked the eastern sky. Ollie had come to rouse them and was
surprised to find Johnny still awake and wary. They had quickly been ordered to
pack what was absolutely necessary and easy to carry. Max did not want the
campsite to look any more abandoned than it had to. The older convict's keen
mind frustrated and, he hated to admit it, scared Johnny. Max was a survivor
and that made him very dangerous. Ollie was a man run by impulse and need. That
made him even more dangerous.
Johnny had set a steady
pace that was easy enough for the children to keep up with. A few rest periods
and a break for a noon meal of trail mix and bananas were all that Max would
allow, however. The only near crisis had been when poor Jennifer had voiced a
need to relieve herself. Johnny had gone cold when Ollie began to follow the
little girl into the nearby bushes. He had sharply ordered Chris to go watch
over his sister and was surprised when Chris complied without complaint. He had
the feeling that Chris was becoming aware that Ollie posed a danger to his
little sister. Johnny felt a sadness at the thought that his twelve-year-old
friend had to face such ugliness. It had worked, though. Ollie had altered
directions and come to stand, glaring, at Johnny instead. Johnny glared right
back and then turned the glare on Max, who simply shrugged.
Now the woods were
beginning to take on the strange, surreal light of the gloaming. The last few
minutes of muted daylight just after the sun had plunged below the horizon.
Johnny usually loved this time of day but he found no enjoyment this time.
Darkness was his enemy, now. Too many possibilities, too little help or hope in
the dark.
The sun slipped away and
the forest became increasingly murky. When Max tripped and crashed to his knees
he called a halt. Chris and Jenny, reluctantly made to walk with the convict to
prevent all three hostages from bolting, sank wearily to the ground and shucked
their backpacks. Max rubbed his knee.
"I believe we've come
as far as were going to today, Mr. Gage. How far would you say we've
traveled?"
Johnny cast back into
memory and mentally tallied the landmarks he had seen that day, quickly doing
some calculations in his head.
"Well, I think we've
come about 15 miles." He watched Max's eyebrows shoot up with disbelief.
"I know that doesn't sound like much but considering the terrain were
hiking in that's pretty good. From where we started at Coldbrook Camp to the
Angeles Forest Highway, where I'm assuming you'd like to. . . hitch a ride,
it's straight north about 50 miles as the crow flies. But we aren't crows,
mister. We've had to detour around outcroppings and the deeper parts of Bear
Creek. Tomorrow we have to make our way down the south side of Devil's Canyon
and then turn East for awhile until we can come up again because there isn't
any way up the north side otherwise. We're smack in the middle of the San
Gabriel Wilderness, which is in the middle of the Angeles National Forest. This
isn't going to be a day trip, mister, so get used to it."
Johnny's face had taken on
a stone-faced look. He knew they were deep into the wilds, now, and his
expertise was their one and only bargaining chip. He was going to use it. Max
studied him in silence for a moment before turning away. Ollie, standing behind
Johnny, grumbled incoherently beneath his breath. He didn't like the way the
injun spoke to Max. Max deserved respect.
"Max, what you want
to do fer supper? I'm awful hungry, Max. Should I have Tonto fix us something.
Maybe liddle Jenny and me can go get some wood for a fire?" Ollie leered
at Jenny hopefully. Johnny put out a hand and drew the little girl to him as
Max quickly intervened.
"Ah, Ollie. As much
as I would like to have a nice, warm, toasty fire for us and a hot meal I'm
afraid that it would bring unwanted attention. No, my friend, I think we'll
have to eat cold meals for awhile yet. We'll make do with the packaged foods
and fruit we've packed along. Isn't it fortunate that Mr. Gage brought such
suitable foods with him? And I must compliment whomever baked the brownies.
They are the best thing I've eaten since I went into prison."
Supper that night was
eaten in weary silence. Johnny knew he didn't have the stamina to spend another
vigilant night awake and with no tent as even superficial protection he worried
that the huge monster, Ollie, would make his move on Jenny under cover of
darkness and fatigue. Max's assurances that he would, or could, control Ollie were
flimsy at best. Johnny knew it was only a matter of time. Even if they should
come all the way through to the highway unscathed, Johnny had no illusions as
to their fate once Max and Ollie had no more need for them. He and Chris would
die quickly. Jennifer would not be so fortunate, although she would die in the
end. Johnny had one shot. He knew what it was and he knew what it would cost.
He was willing to pay the price.
* * * * * *
The sun was just kissing
the horizon when Roy pulled the car up to the roadblock leading into the park
and gestured to the State Trooper standing guard.
"Sir, we have to find
someone in the campsite. My partner and my children are camping here. We want
to see if they are safe." Roy peered anxiously in the fading light toward
the park ranger station. The Trooper glanced in and saw a tense looking woman
scanning the road ahead. He looked over his shoulder and gestured to a Ranger
standing next to the small entrance station.
"Dave, you have
campsite assignments in there?"
The Ranger gave an
affirmative nod and stepped inside to retrieve the logbook. Jogging back over
to the Trooper's side he flipped it open to the most recent entries.
"Who's the campsite
registered to, sir"
"John Gage. He's got
two kids with him. Christopher and Jennifer DeSoto, although I doubt they'll be
on the log. They checked in yesterday afternoon. We just heard about the
escaped convicts on the six o'clock news. . . " Roy realized he was
rambling but he was just too nervous to reign himself in. Ranger Dave was
scanning the campsite entries and when his finger stopped so did Roy. The
Ranger was nodding.
"Yep. Right here. He
has a site reserved for four days. Site number 13." He turned to look at
the Trooper who was scratching his head.
"I can't leave my
post and I don't want you folks to drive up there alone so if you can wait for
five minutes I'll have another unit come up and escort you in. Mind you, I
don't think you have anything to be concerned about. We've got patrols all over
the campsites for the safety of the campers who refused to leave or were
unavailable when we notified them about the escape. We're more concerned with
the stretch of road between here and the campsites. We think the fugitives will
stick to the outskirts of the forest. The warden at the prison they were
transferring from doesn't think they are the woodsy type, ya know?" He
grinned and turned to his patrol car. Roy could hear him speaking over the
radio with his dispatcher and waited impatiently for their escort to arrive. He
turned to look at JoAnne.
"He's right, you
know. I'm sure everything is fine. We'll get there and the kids will be
embarrassed that we came to look for them and Johnny will think we are checking
up on him. . . " He trailed off at the resolute look on his wife's face.
"I don't care how
embarrassed the kids are or what Johnny thinks. I'm not leaving my children
anywhere near the vicinity of a homicidal child-molester." JoAnne looked
right back into Roy's eyes and saw that she really didn't have an argument on
her hands. Roy was talking as much for his own benefit as hers.
A State cruiser pulled up
next to them. The pair of State Troopers inside conferred momentarily with the
original Trooper and the roadblock was moved aside. With a tip of the driver's
hat and a smile they motioned the DeSoto's to follow them, proceeding around
the barricade.
Fifteen minutes later they
were pulling up to Campsite 13. Roy had originally heaved a sigh of relief at
the sight of Johnny's Range Rover and tent. Now, however, he felt a sense of
unease growing in his chest. The sun had dipped below the horizon and, although
there were a few vestiges of light in the sky, it was swiftly approaching the
point where it was too dark to still be out hiking. Yet here they were at
Johnny's campsite with no Johnny, no kids, no campfire or supper smells. JoAnne
began calling for her children. Roy and the older of the two Troopers, Jake,
walked toward the dead campfire. Stoney, the younger Trooper, wandered around
the perimeter of the site. Stooping by the fire Roy cautiously lowered his hand
towards the ashes. He found them cool on top and slightly warm below the
surface but with no large chunks of charcoal banked and glowing under the
ashes. His heart sank even further. Turning to Jake he sighed.
"This fire burned out
sometime in the early hours this morning. I find it hard to believe that Johnny
wouldn't have started it up again this morning for coffee and a hot meal for
the kids. He likes to cook over the campfire."
Jake was looking at Roy
with a bewildered expression. "How can you tell that? You some kind of
woods guide or something?"
Roy snorted. "No, I
don't really like camping, to tell you the truth. I'm a firefighter/paramedic.
So's my partner. After years of fighting fires you learn how they work."
Standing, he looked around carefully at what was at the site and, more
importantly, what wasn't there. Striding to the back of Johnny's Land Rover,
Roy scrutinized the interior contents carefully. When he noticed the rappelling
ropes Johnny always kept in the back were missing, he knew. Face ashen, Roy
turned back to find Jake.
"We've got
trouble."
* * * * * *
"Get over here,
Tonto."
Max gestured impatiently
to Johnny. Weary and sore from two days on the run, Max knew he wasn't going to
be able to keep an eye on his belligerent hostage. Ollie wasn't used to this
kind of exercise, either. Johnny eyed Max uncertainly but made no move to
comply. He knew what was going to happen. He wouldn't be able to protect
Jennifer if he was trussed up like a turkey.
"I don't think so,
mister. I've never been into bondage. Don't feel like starting now. If you
absolutely have to you can tie my foot to Jennifer's. Can't very well run that
way, now can I?" Johnny fingered his sore jaw and hoped Max would see it
his way. He hoped wrong.
"Ollie."
Max's word was enough to
spring Ollie into happy action. Grabbing Johnny by one arm he hauled him up.
Johnny let him and even helped him with a boost of his feet . . . and a fist
into the underside of Ollie's jaw. He heard the snap of Ollie's teeth as they
clacked together and felt his head snap back. The giant stumbled back a step or
two as Johnny whirled to face Max. The little convict was waiting for him,
however, with the gun shoved into Chris's ear. T he boy's face was white with
fear.
"I thought you might
try something like that, Mr. Gage. Why do you think I keep these lovely
children so nice and handy all the time. Ollie, truss him up for the night,
would you?" A feral smile danced across Max's face.
Ollie's mouth was bleeding
and he paused to spit out a tooth.
"You stinkin' injun!
You made me bleed!" Swinging a roundhouse punch he caught Johnny squarely
in the stomach and watched in satisfaction as the hostage doubled over with a
"Uuhhhng!" and desperately tried to suck in oxygen. Quickly taking
advantage of the paramedic's incapacitation he shoved Johnny to the ground and
had him bound hand and foot within a matter of minutes. Chris watched
helplessly. He had never known such a combination of hate and fear in his young
life. Nothing in reality had ever prepared him for this. Jennifer sobbed
quietly from behind Max. She didn't want her Uncle Johnny hurt any more. She
wanted to go home and she wanted her Mother and Father.
Johnny felt a wave of
despair wash over him. The odds of all of them getting out of this alive were
dwindling by the moment. He could not know that just 15 miles away statements
were being taken, swarms of investigators were combing the campgrounds and
search teams were being organized for first light.
* * * * * *
Christopher DeSoto
listened to the sounds of the forest. He had camped with his Uncle Johnny
before but never out in the open like this, lying on the hard earth in the
middle of the wilderness. Even as exhausted as he was it was hard to find
sleep. Although it was late summer, here in the foothills of the San Gabriel
Mountains the nights grew cool. He had reluctantly accepted Johnny's jacket
and, with his backpack for a pillow, was crowding as close to Jennifer as
humanly possible.
Johnny had made a
"Jennifer sandwich", as he jokingly tried to call it. With Johnny's
hands tied behind his back and his feet firmly bound he lay on his side facing
Chris. Between them the little eight-year-old had quickly dropped off, weary from
a long day's forced march. He had then beseeched the tired boy to take the
jacket and spread it over both children and to put his arm over his little
sister.
"Keep it there all
night if you can, Chris. It's important. Can you do that for me?"
Chris had been a bit
bewildered by the request but had nodded agreement and settled down to try to
find sleep. Eventually he heard the steady breathing of their two captors and
squirmed a bit trying to find a comfortable spot on the hard ground. He could
only imagine how uncomfortable it was for Johnny to lie on one arm all night.
As if Johnny had heard his thoughts a whispered voice came softly out of the
darkness.
"Chris? Chris, are
you awake?"
"Yea, are you OK,
Uncle Johnny?" Chris raised his head slightly to look over Jennifer.
Johnny's eyes were gleaming back at him through the little moonlight that
penetrated the foliage.
"Chris, we need to
talk." Johnny shifted a bit, trying to work his way off of a sharp pebble.
"I think you know that we are in big trouble."
"Yea. I kinda got
that idea" Chris paused for a moment. "They're going to kill us,
aren't they?"
Johnny was surprised at
the matter of fact tone the boy had used. He had been dreading this talk. To
force a twelve-year-old to face such harsh realities went against every
nurturing instinct he had but Johnny was going to have to push Chris DeSoto
into adulthood to save his life and that of his sister.
"Yes, Chris, I think
so. But not until they've gotten everything they need from us first."
Johnny sighed. "I think I have a way, though, for you to get yourself and
Jennifer away."
"What? We can get
away? Wait a minute." Chris frowned. "What do you mean me and Jenny?
What about you? We're not going without you!" he hissed.
"Chris, you're going
to have to. I can't go and you have to get your sister to safety! You are her
older brother and it's up to you to do this!" In spite of his fear for
Chris and Jenny, Johnny was surprised and incredibly proud of Chris's desire to
stay with him despite knowing the likely outcome.
"I can't, Uncle
Johnny! Don't make me leave you behind! We'll find a way for all of us to
escape!" Christopher was almost sobbing now. Johnny shushed him and gave
him a moment to settle down. After a few minutes he forced himself to press on,
to push the world's ugliness upon a child he loved.
"Chris, how much do
you know about. . . uh. . . um. . . about sex?"
Christopher was thrown for
a mental loop and struggled for a moment to rearrange his thinking. Feeling
like this was an important question of some sort he decided to answer honestly.
"Uh, pretty much, I think. I mean," he hastened to add, "I
haven't ever, like, kissed a girl or anything but Ernie Stanley told me a whole
bunch of stuff at Captain Stanley's picnic last month and he's 16, you
know." He couldn't see Johnny in the dark but he could almost hear his
mouth drop open then.
"Ernie. . . Stanley.
. . told you. . . uh. . . never mind. So you know what a guy does with. .
.?"
"Uh, yea."
"And with a woman. .
.? "
"Yea." Chris
felt himself blushing in the darkness and suspected he wasn't the only one. He
wondered what Johnny wanted with all this.
"Chris," Johnny
began hesitantly, "usually sex is a beautiful thing between two adults.
Sometimes, though, you get a person who is all twisted up inside and they see
it as an act of power over someone. Ollie is like that." Johnny let
silence settle for a moment to give the young man a chance to absorb the
implications. The voice that finally answered him out of the darkness was soft
and sad. Older, somehow, than it had been only minutes before.
"Ollie wants to do
things with Jennifer, doesn't he?."
"Yes."
"She's too
little!"
"I know."
"And when he's done,
he'll kill her?" It may have been stated as a question but Chris's voice
betrayed the fact that he already knew the answer.
"Yes, but not quickly
or easily." Johnny closed his eyes and sighed inwardly. He hated himself
for what he was doing. "And we'll die, too, when I've taken Max as far as
he wants to go. I can't bear the thought of watching both of you die, Chris. I
can't do it. You have to take Jenny and go. I'll tell you how but you have to
promise me you'll get her to safety." He was forcing a man's promise on a
twelve-year-old. He felt like throwing up.
A small silence lay
between them for a moment. Johnny could hear Chris's struggle not to break down
and sob. Finally, in a very small voice, so soft that Johnny almost missed it,
Christopher DeSoto agreed to abandon a loved one to a lonely death.
"I promise."
* * * * * *
JoAnne DeSoto had never
felt emptier in her life. She sat in the Ranger Station, now a Command Center,
and felt oblivious to the controlled chaos around her. Stoney, the young
Trooper who had helped her search the campsite earlier, had insisted she take a
hot cup of coffee some time ago. She still held it, untouched and cold, in
nerveless fingers. Vaguely, as if from a great distance, she could hear Roy
arguing with Jake about the planned search and rescue operation in the morning.
"I'm a trained Rescue
Man! I'm also a certified Paramedic. I'm going." The tight control in
Roy's voice was almost painful to listen to.
"Listen, Roy, I know
you want to help. I would, too. I haven't got clearance for you to be on one of
the search teams. And you wouldn't be able to go with any of the parties
searching South of here. Two miles from here LA County ends and San Bernadino
County begins. You're only certified in this county." Jake shook his head
in frustration. "I know how you feel, Roy, but. . . "
"No......., you don't
know how I feel. You get clearance and I'll stay with the teams searching in
this county. But I am going, with the teams or by myself, so you'd better find
a way to make it happen." Roy's haggard face was set, his voice quiet but
resolute. His mind was made up. Jake sighed, then nodded and turned to the
phone.
JoAnne registered the
conversation in the back of her mind as something that should interest her but
didn't. That fact bothered her for a fleeting second and then was gone. She
simply couldn't feel anything at the moment except overwhelming fear and loss.
Despair crowded close on the heels of those two emotions. She finally raised
her head when it registered that Roy had been kneeling in front of her for several
moments. She looked into his worried eyes.
"I want my babies
back, Roy."
Roy closed his eyes for a
moment as if steeling himself. "I know, Baby, I know. So do I. We'll find
them. You have to believe that. Why don't I call Emily Stanley to come and get you?"
JoAnne shook her head frantically.
"NO, Roy, I'm not
leaving here until I have my babies back! Johnny promised he'd take care of
them. He PROMISED! I should never have let them go." JoAnne knew she was
being unreasonable but she couldn't help herself. She wanted something,
anything, to help her make sense of this nightmare. "I'll never forgive
him if something happens to my children, Roy. Never."
Roy gently took her hands.
"Sweetheart, you know Johnny would do anything to keep those kids safe. He
loves them. He'll do his best, Jo. I sure of it."
"Well, his best
hasn't been very good so far, has it!! Where are my children, Roy?! I want them
back and safe and in my arms and. . . " Her breath caught on a sob and
suddenly she could feel again. Everything. In one big rush the days events came
crashing down on her and she found herself in Roy's arms, weeping as if the
world were ending. Which, for her, it was. Head buried in Roy's shoulder she
sobbed wildly.
"He.... he
promised....."
* * * * * *
The plan had been very
simple, really, after Johnny explained it to Chris. At a certain spot in
Devil's Canyon there was a ravine. It had been passable as a way to the top of
the canyon until just a year or two ago when a small earthquake had tumbled
rocks into one section of it. Now there was only a small opening left that led
through the rocks. Way too small for a man to get through . . . but large
enough for two slender children. When they reached the ravine Johnny planned to
call a halt to tie the laces of his hiking boots, which he would conveniently
step on to untie. While the two men were keeping a watch on him Chris would
slip his backpack off and, holding Jennifer's hand, slip up into the ravine. If
they were noticed, Johnny would hold the two men back as best he could until
Chris could send Jenny up through the hole and then, pushing his backpack in
front of him, follow her through. Once through he was to turn to his left and
find Mt. Wilson, which would be clearly visible above the trees almost all the time.
It would be a good days walk for the two children but at the base of Mt.Wilson
directly in their line of walking, there was the Devour campgrounds and Ranger
Station.
Johnny stirred and opened
his eyes. Morning had come too early for his tired mind but seemed too long in
coming for his aching body. Faint traces of purple were just beginning to tinge
the eastern sky when he nudged Jennifer, still cocooned safely between her
brother and Uncle.
"Sweetie, I need you
to wake up. C'mon, Jenny-pie." Johnny's murmuring voice slowly roused the
young girl from dreams of warm beds and Mommy's singing. Chris stirred as well
and cracked his eyes open. He quickly glanced over to see if their captors had
begun to rouse and was satisfied that the long, unaccustomed march of the
previous day was still exerting a toll.
Johnny took in two sets of
sleep-filled but suddenly alert eyes and leaned in as far as possible. His
voice, earnest and soft, plead with the children.
"Jennifer, I have
something very, very important to ask of you. It's the most important thing I
will ever ask you to do." He paused a moment to see if she was paying
close attention. When she nodded, he continued. "Chris is going to help
you get away today and go back to your Mom and Dad. We have to do this very
secretly and quietly. When it's time to go Chris will tell you what to do and I
want you to promise me you will obey him completely, with no questions and no
arguing, until you are back with your parents. Can you do that for me,
Hon?"
The little girl gazed deep
into Johnny's eyes before whispering, "Yes, Johnny."
Now came a more difficult
task for Johnny. "Now one more promise, from both of you. When it is time
to go you might hear some. . . fighting and other noises behind you. You are
not to look back or try to come back, under any condition. This is very
important, understand? Do not come back for me. Keep going until you get to the
Ranger Station." This last he directed straight at Chris. Both children's
eyes were wide and apprehensive but they nodded solemn agreement.
They heard a stirring from
the two sleeping convicts and quickly closed their eyes, pretending sleep.
Johnny could hear the large Ollie rising and moving toward them. When Ollie
leaned over them Johnny snapped his eyes open and glared straight into the
surprised eyes of the pedophile.
"Morning, Ollie. Out
for a jog before breakfast?"
The hulking Ollie snarled
and gave the bound man a kick in the shins. "Time to wake, injun. Max says
we need to git movin'." Bending swiftly he loosened the knots restraining
Johnny's hands and feet then moved back to where the elder escapee was trying
to shake the sleep drowse from his eyes. Able to move for the first time in
several hours, Johnny tried to pull his arm out from beneath him. He couldn't
feel it. His legs were cramped and sore. Gingerly sitting up he felt the first
rush of blood back into his numb limbs and sucked in a hiss. Jenny was there
immediately. Concern in her eyes.
"Pins and needles,
Uncle Johnny?"
He laughed at her simple
explanation. "More like pokers and knives, Sweetie. Could you give Chris
my pack. I don't think I can pick it up just now and he needs to get some
things out of it for breakfast." Johnny continued to rub his arm and legs,
trying to restore circulation enough to be able to move again. The pain was
almost excruciating but he wasn't about to let the children know that. It would
pass soon enough. He watched as Chris rummaged about in the paramedics pack,
ostensibly looking for the fruit bars which were to serve as their breakfast,
but surreptitiously transferring trail mix, water and an extra sweatshirt into
his own pack. Ollie and Max paid the boy no mind. Both intent on keeping an eye
on either Johnny or Jenny. The lanky paramedic kept it that way by getting up and
trying to move about a little, explaining that he needed to get the kinks out
before the set out for the day. Behind the two escaped prisoners a boy was
preparing himself for a man's task.
* * * * * *
Jake had personally
attached himself to Roy. If he was going to vouch for the driven paramedic he
was going to make damn good and sure that Roy wasn't going to do anything
foolish. True to his word, Roy chose one of the teams working their way north
across the LA county section of Angeles National Park. Something just whispered
to Roy that Johnny would stay in the county if at all possible. Some measure of
relief had been gained by both distraught parents when no evidence of blood or
foul play had been found at the campsite. Only backpacks, food and bare essentials
were missing, as if Johnny and the kids had gone for a day of hiking. If it
weren't for the sets of prison issue boot prints in and around the campsite Roy
could almost make himself believe that. All traces of the missing party had
disappeared a scant few yards from the site. Too much vegetation and too many
other campers had obscured any trace of the fleeing prisoners and their
hostages.
Jake had explained that
dogs were being flown in but it would be a least 24 hours before they would be
there and acclimated enough to be of any use. Roy didn't even want to think of
them being needed 24 hours from now.
Spread out in a long line
the searchers brought in for the task were experienced man hunters. Stretched
across a section plotted out on a map they were just within sight of each
other. Because of the large area that had to be covered it was impossible to
fill out the roster of searchers with all law enforcement personnel. Other
search and rescue personnel had been recruited and interspersed evenly with
armed local, state and federal authorities. Even off-duty firefighters, when
the word had gone out over the newscasts, had volunteered. Jake walked just
within sight to Roy's left while Stoney walked a ways off to his right. On the
far side of Stoney, Roy knew that Chet was keeping a keen eye peeled for any
signs of passage by the wanted felons. They had strict orders to quietly get
the attention of armed personnel if they found anything or caught sight of
something out of the ordinary. Helicopters whirred their noisy way overhead in
their own search patterns. The odds of the noisy choppers catching site of wary
people in the dense growth was slim but nonetheless helpful. Roy's thread thin
restraint on his psyche would have snapped had he known that the helicopters
were best used to find items that lay out in the open and not liable to dart
under cover. Like bodies.
* * * * * *
Johnny ran his hand back
through his mop of heavy, black, unruly hair and tried to steady himself. The
opening to the ravine was just up ahead and he freely admitted to himself for
the first time that he was terrified. He didn't know if he was going to live
past the next few minutes. He was more fearful, however, of what would happen
if he didn't go through with his plan. If he lived through this experience but
let the children come to harm he would be dead anyway. In every way that
counted.
It was time to set things
in motion. He casually looked down toward his feet and timed the motions just
right. His left foot brushed against his right and caught the shoestring he had
deliberately tied loosely. The shoestring snagged beneath his boot and
unraveled. He continued walking.
When Johnny was directly
across from the entrance to the ravine he paused and looked down.
"Hold up. I've got to
tie my boot." He watched carefully as Ollie came up beside him followed by
Max and the children. He glanced at Chris, catching his eye and winked. He
could only spare a second but in that time he tried to store up one last memory
of Roy's kids. They were both dirty and disheveled but beautiful to his eyes.
Chris had a scared yet determined look in his eyes, grown older this past day.
Jennifer was solemn. Her braid was more undone than done and she had a hole in
one knee of her jeans but childhood still shown in her face. That was all that
mattered to Johnny. That fact alone was enough to keep him moving to the next
step.
"What's a matter,
Ollie? You've never seen someone tie a shoestring before? Well, I'll tell you
how it goes so you can do it allll by yourself next time. See. You make a big
loop, then you take the other string and go aroooooound the loop. . . "
Johnny saw that he had both the convict's attention. Ollie had taken a menacing
step toward him and was turning red in the face. Max was stepping forward to
break up any potential problems. Chris had slipped his backpack off and was
holding it in one hand. Now he clamped onto Jenny's hand and they both began
stepping quietly backwards toward the ravine entrance.
". . . and tuck it
through the laces and pull it through. See how that makes a pretty little bow,
Ollie? Maybe when you grow up Max won't have to tie your shoes for you, now
will he?"
Ollie was beet red by now.
"You think you're so smart, Tonto. You won't be laughin' so hard when we
git to the highway. And you won't keep little missy so safe either!"
Max quickly put a
restraining hand on the big man's arm. He couldn't afford to let Ollie go off
just yet. They needed this brash young man to get them through this godforsaken
forest. Johnny grinned arrogantly up into Ollie's rage filled face. His
peripheral vision showed the two children at the entrance to the ravine and
slipping farther in. He didn't dare look at them directly. Max pondered this
sudden baiting on Johnny's part and felt alarm bells suddenly go off. Whipping
his head about the little man scanned the area for the children.
"Where are the
children?!" was all Max had a chance to squeeze out before Johnny's flying
tackle caught Ollie square in the stomach and forced him back into his smaller
companion.
"RUN!"
The one word warning shout
was all the wiry paramedic could manage as he sent all three men into a tangled
pile. Chris heard and, pulling his sister behind him, sprinted up the rocky
wash as fast as he dared. He could see the boulder dam that had blocked the
ravine just ahead of them. Urging his sister on he breathlessly explained to
her that he needed her to crawl through the hole he showed her as fast as she
could. She nodded in wide-eyed terror and pumped her smaller legs in an effort
to keep up. Skidding to a halt before the hole, Jennifer quickly dropped to her
knees and began to scuttle forward. Chris heard footsteps pounding up the wash
towards them and wasted no time in dropping the backpack down and shoving it
into the hole. Behind him he could hear the sickening sounds of flesh hitting
flesh accompanied by primal grunts and cries. Flopping onto his belly and
pushing the pack before him he began to worm his way into the hole.
"Jenny! Go! Go!
Go!" He could hear a man's fast panting now as well as the flap-flap of
shoes hitting the rocks. He tried to squirm faster. He could see his sister
just in front of him. He was almost through when he felt a hand clutch desperately
onto his foot. Chris felt himself slide backwards several inches, his hands
scrabbling at the dirt in front of him. Panic rose in his throat and he felt
like he was choking. In that instant his shoe slipped from his foot and he was
free. Scrambling frantically he shot forward and was out.
Chris didn't waste any
time. He was too afraid not to. He once again took possession of his sister's
hand and began to lead her the rest of the way up the ravine. She followed but
more reluctantly now.
"Chris! They're
hurting Uncle Johnny! I can hear them fighting!" She sobbed quietly to
herself as Chris gritted his teeth and clamped down on his own emotions.
"I know, Jenny. But
you heard what Uncle Johnny said. No matter what we hear we're suppose to get
to Mom and Dad. We have to. Don't you see? If we can find help maybe we can
rescue him." He looked down at his little sister. The sister whom he loved
to tease and fight with but who now seemed more precious than gold to him. She
was wiping her grubby face with an even grubbier fist and nodding.
"Yes. Let's get
somebody to help Uncle Johnny. Let's hurry, Chris." They had come to the
top of the ravine now and Chris looked to his left. Johnny had explained that
Mount Wilson had a funny looking top, almost like an old man looking off toward
Mexico. Chris spotted it right away.
"This way, Jen. Uncle
Johnny said if we go toward that mountain we will run straight into a
campground with a Ranger Station. Let's go." Taking the lead, one foot
shoeless, the young man began to lead his sister to safety.
* * * * * *
There was a nuthatch
singing somewhere of love and life and 'come look at my pretty nest'. Johnny
found this very disconcerting. As he swam his way back towards consciousness
his world consisted of pain, confusion and the struggle to draw in a breath.
Obviously this wasn't heaven as he had first thought. At least his version of
heaven didn't hold any pain. Johnny's last memory was of Ollie's large hands
around his throat, slowly and inexorably squeezing the life out of him. He
groaned and tried to force his eyes open. Only one complied. The other seemed
to be swelled shut. Gradually the vision cleared in his one good eye and Max's
disapproving features loomed above him.
"Welcome back, Mr.
Gage. That was a very nasty stunt you pulled on us and I have to admit that I
almost let Ollie finish his task of strangling you. Unfortunately, we still
need you." Max's face twisted into a distasteful frown.
Johnny pulled himself
painfully to a sitting position and tried to take stock of his condition. There
was quite a bit of blood saturating his tee shirt, which at first alarmed the
paramedic. Exploring with timid fingers he discovered a nasty gash just below
his right eyebrow. That certainly accounted for the swelling around that eye
and the pounding headache but certainly not for the quantity of blood covering
him and soaking into the ground around him. He could taste the coppery tang of
blood in his mouth; felt it as it slipped down his throat and discovered that
his nose was bleeding heavily down the front of his white tee shirt. It showed
no signs of stopping soon but as near as Johnny could determine it was not
broken. His lips were split again, more so than before, and his tongue detected
several gashes on the inside of his mouth where Ollie's fists had connected
with his teeth. Several bruises and abrasions were screaming for attention from
various parts of his body and several ribs felt cracked, one perhaps broken.
The injury that bothered him the most, at the moment, was his throat. The near
strangulation had left his neck and windpipe bruised and swollen. Already he
suspected there were handprints discoloring the skin of his neck and it was
somewhat of an effort to breathe. Johnny hoped that problem would subside after
a while.
Glancing up he caught
sight of Ollie. The big man's nose was very obviously broken and swollen to a
large degree. Blood had flowed down the front of his shirt, too, and two black
rings now graced both his eyes. Johnny noted with satisfaction that he was
moving somewhat tenderly as well and seemed to be favoring his stomach region.
"You look like a
'coon, Ollie. It suits you." Johnny couldn't resist. It just popped out. A
grin had tried to make it's way onto his face but the pain of his split lips
quickly quelled that idea. Max's face took on the look of a thundercloud.
"That will be quite
enough, Mr. Gage. You have managed to take away my trump card over you but I
warn you, you will complete your task. I know you are not stupid, Mr. Gage, and
I'm sure you have figured out what is waiting for you at the end of your
journey. You have a choice, however, of making this a swift and easy ending or
a long, slow and painful one. Think on this, Mr. Gage. And if you cause myself
or my companion any more trouble I'm sure I can convince Ollie, here, to forego
his predilection for little girls and satisfy his needs in other ways. We were,
after all, in prison, where such things are common. Do I make myself perfectly
clear, Mr. Gage?" Max's eyes bore into John's and watched as the
paramedic's face drained of color.
"Perfectly."
Johnny whispered.
Max nodded in satisfaction
and gestured to the sulking Ollie.
"My friend, please
bind Mr. Gage's hands. I don't think we can trust him, do you? Oh, and leash
him as well."
Ollie stepped forward and,
cutting a short length of the rope taken from John's Land Rover he bound the
protesting man's hands behind his back. Then, taking a long length of rope, he
slipped it under Johnny's arms and around his chest. The convict then knotted
it painfully tight across the front of Johnny's sternum, flipped the two ends
back over the paramedic's shoulders and tucked them under the rope again. This
made a very effective harness with two long reins which the big man gathered
up. Ollie loved the sudden look of panic in the paramedic's eyes.
"Good doggy. Now you
go on and sniff us out a trail." Ollie grinned maliciously and gave the
hostage a little nudge. John bowed his head and slowly set off.
* * * * * *
Chet, holding two steaming
cups of coffee, moved to sit next to Roy. Their search team, halting for a
30-minute break, was making use of the time to down cups of the stimulating
drink and wolf down sandwiches. Roy accepted the coffee, but waved away the
food. He knew he wouldn't be able to keep it down. Chet sat down silently
beside his friend. He couldn't even begin to imagine what Roy was going
through. It was hard enough for Chet to think of a friend in mortal danger much
less the children, too.
"Roy, Johnny and the
kids. . . they'll be all right. You gotta believe that." Chet struggled
for the right words. It was hard, though, when he doubted them himself. It had
been devastating to see JoAnne this morning in Emily Stanley's arms weeping for
her children. It was harder still to see this silent, stoic version of Roy who
moved like an automaton.
Both men looked up as
their team leader approached. He was accompanied by an expert search and rescue
man from the F.B.I. Both halted before Roy and he was handed a white hair
ribbon covered with yellow happy faces.
"We found this while
scouting out the trail up ahead. Does it look familiar?"
Roy held the bit of cloth
tenderly between his fingers and nodded mutely. Despair and elation warred for
dominance on his face. His daughter was indeed in the hands of madmen. They
were, however, on the right track.
At that very moment the
owner of the lost hair ribbon was attempting to get a rock out of her shoe.
"Chris, how much
longer are we going to be in these trees. Are there any bears in the woods? Do
you think they eat little girls? I hope we get to the campsite soon because I'm
getting really tired of eating trail mix. I want a McDonald's hamburger, that's
what I want. With lots of french fries and ketchup and a big chocolate shake.
Doesn't that sound yummy, Chris? What do you want?" The little girl
chattered on. Her big brother ignored her and continued to scan the surrounding
area. Even though he knew they were probably beyond any danger from Max and
Ollie he couldn't let himself relax his vigilance. The stakes were too high. He
once again found his bearings on Mt. Wilson. He didn't know if they would be
able to make the campground by dark and the thought of staying out here in the
wilderness without Johnny frightened him more than he wanted to admit. He
rubbed his shoeless foot. It was becoming more painful as the day wore on.
Stone bruises covered the sole but he tried to ignore the discomfort. He
couldn't be a whiny baby anymore. He was responsible for Jenny now and if Uncle
Johnny could take a beating for them he could put up with bruises on his foot.
With a sigh he rose and the two children set off once more.
* * * * * *
Johnny stumbled and went
to his knees yet again. With his hands tied behind him he couldn't maintain his
balance. Earlier, during the course of their climb out of the eastern end of
Devil's Canyon, he had fallen numerous times. The knees of his jeans were
shredded, as was the skin beneath them. In some places, where he had fallen on
rock, the gashes were deep enough to see the white bone of the kneecap
underneath. Every fall drove dirt and debris deeper into the wounds until he
felt his knees beginning to swell with infection. He knew it wouldn't be long
before he became feverish. A tug on the 'leash' around his chest brought him
out of his reverie.
"C'mon, Tonto. Be a
good dog and get movin'" Ollie was really enjoying his role as tether
holder. His frequent tugs on the rope around Johnny's already sore ribs kept
the paramedic's anger at a slow simmer. Which was better than creeping despair,
Johnny mused. He climbed painfully to his feet once again and set off in a
north/northwesterly direction. They were going to have to cross Adler Creek
soon and he hoped the icy stream was low this year. He didn't relish the idea
of being swept away with his hands bound behind him.
Two hours later found the
trio, wet and cold from the creek crossing, looking for a place to stop for the
night. Max and Ollie had discussed the possibility of a fire and, after some
arguing, finally agreed on having a small one if for no other reason than to
dry themselves out and warm up. Finally choosing what he hoped would be a
fairly smooth and secluded site, Max ordered a stop for the night. The sun was
fast approaching the horizon and they would need the last few minutes of
daylight to gather wood.
"Ollie, please leash
Mr. Gage for the night and find us some dry wood. I shall see what we have in
the way of food left in our packs." Max rummaged around and came up with
more of JoAnne's brownies, trail mix and two apples as Ollie looped the ends of
his rope high up on a tree limb and secured them. This left the tether loose
enough to allow Johnny some freedom of movement.
Johnny could care less. He
was exhausted, cold, wet and now feverish. His hands had been numb for hours.
Carefully sliding down the trunk of the tree and onto the ground he curled
himself into a shivering ball and looked up at the stars that were just
beginning to glimmer in the post sunset light. Within minutes he was asleep.
* * * * * *
Chris was beginning to
panic. It was almost completely dark now and they hadn't reached the Devour
Campground yet. He didn't want to spend the night out here alone. The forest
was cooling quickly now that the sun was down so they paused to dig out
Johnny's sweatshirt which Chris then insisted that Jenny wear. While she
struggled to pull it on Chris peered through the forest frantically. He was
almost ready to give up and suggest they stop right here for the night when he
thought he spied a light gleaming through the trees some ways off in the
distance. He stared harder. It was!
"Jen! I think I see
something! See? Over there. Do you see it? Do you think that's the campground?
It has to be! Let's keep going."
Jennifer nodded wearily
and took Christopher's hand. She had run out of chatter several hours ago and
just wanted to sleep now. She, too, had no desire to sleep out here in the
dark, however, and forced herself to place one small foot in front of the
other. She clung tightly to her brother's hand now. He seemed so different than
the irritating boy she had known just two short days ago. Now she didn't want
him out of her sight. They trudged on wearily for what seemed a small eternity.
The light continued to get larger and brighter, though, and that gave them the
will to keep walking.
Somewhere around eleven
p.m., California time, two very weary children trudged out of the forest and
onto the streetlight illuminated surface of the Devour Campground parking lot.
Chris spotted the Ranger Station right away and was intensely relieved to see
not one, but two cars pulled up next to it. One belonged to a State Trooper.
* * * * * *
Weary men gathered around
camp lanterns in cold camps in a line all across the Angeles National Forest.
The search teams heading toward the South had been radioed and called back to
join their northbound counterparts after Roy had confirmed the hair ribbon. The
discovery had also been radioed to the temporary command post but Roy had had
no word on how JoAnne had received the news. He was told that she was with a
Crisis Councilor when the news came in. State Troopers were patrolling the
Angeles Forest Highway now, as well, with the revised opinion that the convicts
had indeed set out across the forest and would try to hitch a ride at the
highway.
Roy leaned against a tree
and tried to make sense out of the last day and a half. He knew that for Johnny
and his kids this would be their third night in the company of convicted
killers. He tried not to dwell on the possibilities but they were just too
determined to haunt him. Chet was sitting with his back against the same tree,
wrapped in a sleeping bag and trying not to fall asleep on Roy. Stoney, on the
other side of Roy, snored peacefully. That was precisely what they were
supposed to be doing but Chet felt obligated to try and keep Roy company. He
wondered if he would be in trouble for not showing up for his shift tomorrow
but there was no way he could leave Roy alone during this. He knew that Mike,
Marco and Cap were on some of the other search teams during their off shifts
but he hadn't seen or heard from them.
Chet heard the squawking
of the team leader's radio some distance away and wondered vaguely what it could
be about but at the moment he was almost too tired to care. Until he heard feet
pounding in their direction.
"Roy! Roy
DeSoto!"
The team leader's shout
roused the entire search team. Roy and Chet tensed. It was possible that the
worst moment of Roy's life was now upon him.
"The Trooper over at
Devour Campground just radioed in. He said two kids just stumbled in, a boy and
a girl. The boy said his name was Christopher DeSoto!!"
The surrounding men
erupted into wild shouts of triumph. The sound seemed to be coming from a great
distance off to Roy as he tried to absorb the news. Suddenly he shot to his
feet.
"Take me there.
NOW!!!"
The team leader simply
nodded and called for a helicopter airlift. Chet stood up, determined to go
with Roy. He didn't say anything to Roy just yet but he had noticed immediately
that there was no mention of Johnny.
* * * * * *
After hauling the two
firefighters up on safety lines the chopper raced off toward the temporary
command post and set down. The pilot didn't even have to shut the engine down
for JoAnne DeSoto was there before he had time to register her presence. Jake,
who had been called back to the command center that afternoon, flung open the
door and assisted the frantic woman into the vehicle before climbing in himself.
Roy found himself with an armful of wife as she flung her arms around him and
cried with a mixture of joy and fear.
"They're alive Roy!
They're alive!! Oh, please God, let them be all right!" She clung tightly
to him as the helicopter rose once again and sped off into the night.
The were on the ground
again within 15 minutes and, bending low to avoid the deadly rotor blades,
raced across the parking lot of Devour Campground, Jake and Chet close on their
heels. When they burst into the Ranger Station the first sight that met their
eyes were two bedraggled, blanket wrapped children being attended to
solicitously by a Park Ranger and two State Troopers. Nothing in Roy or
Joanne's life had ever looked so beautiful.
Both children swept the
blankets aside and sprang into their parent's outstretched arms. Everyone was
weeping. Even the total strangers. JoAnne couldn't kiss her babies fast enough.
The kisses were interspersed with proclamations of love and moments of holding
each dirty child out to see if they were actually in front of her, in her arms.
"Jenny, are you all
right, sweetie! Oh, baby, you're so cold!! Christopher, you're limping! Roy,
he's limping! Look at his foot! Oh God, are you hurt? Are either of you hurt?"
JoAnne was distraught at the thought of either child being harmed. Roy was
quickly checking both children over with a practiced eye.
"Dad, Mom, we're
fine. I've just got bruises on the bottom of my foot. I lost my shoe."
Chris reassured them.
Suddenly Roy's face
clouded over. Contrary to what Chet had thought, he had noticed the omission in
the radio report. He asked quietly.
"Chris, where's. . .
where's Johnny?
Jennifer immediately burst
into tears and JoAnne gathered her quickly into her arms, looking at Roy with
renewed alarm. Jennifer sobbed brokenheartedly.
"The bad men were
hurting him, Mommy! He said to get away and not come back but I wanted to
'cause we could hear them hurting Uncle Johnny real bad! They're really, really
mean, see?" And with that she raised her arm and pulled up the sleeve of
the oversized sweatshirt to reveal the bloodstained sleeve of her shirt. JoAnne
gasped.
"Is that your blood,
Jenny? Are you hurt?"
"No, Mommy! Ollie hit
Uncle Johnny in the mouth and hurt him and I wiped the blood off." The
little girl's voice took on an angry tone. "He was mean, Daddy, and I want
you to shoot him!! He wanted to touch me and Uncle Johnny wouldn't let
him." Roy and JoAnne let out an inward sigh as Jennifer answered one of
the questions uppermost on their minds. Roy went on.
"Chris, I think you'd
better tell us everything you can, and make sure the officers, here, know as
much as you can tell them, too." Roy was beginning to have a very bad
feeling about the outcome of this rescue.
An hour later, with
Jennifer curled up and sleeping safely in her mother's arms, Chris finished his
story. Roy, JoAnne and Chet were having a hard time concealing their dismay at
the events that had unfolded. JoAnne, especially, was looking at Roy with haunted,
guilt-filled eyes. The boy held nothing back from his distressed parents, even
down to the conversation he and Johnny had had about sex. Roy was amazed at the
courage and responsibility his son had shown, but also saddened by his loss of
innocence. Chris's voice echoed with weary despair.
"I didn't want to
leave him, Dad. He watched over us, especially Jennifer, and kept that big goon
off of her and we just left him there. Ollie was beating the crap out of him
when we escaped. We could hear it. I don't even know if he's still alive, Dad!
I . . . I don't know. . . " Christopher finally gave in to his emotions
after holding them in so tightly. He was safe now. Back in his father's arms.
Johnny had told him he had to keep his promise to be responsible only until he
was back with his parents. Well, he was now. And he had fulfilled his promise.
He flung himself into his father's arms and wept.
* * * * * *
Johnny awoke with the help
of Ollie's boot to the small of his back.
"Hey, Tonto! Git'cher
ass up. It's time to be movin' again."
Johnny sluggishly pulled
his one good eye open and tried to orient himself. Like a movie with trick
photography his vision seemed blurred and wavery around the edges. His face
felt stiff and sticky. His mouth tasted of old blood. Looking toward the ground
beside him, Johnny realized that his nose had bled again, profusely, during the
night and had left the dirt beside his face soaked. Ollie may not have broken
his nose the previous day but Johnny was sure he had ruptured a blood vessel in
his sinus somewhere.
//Looks like I need to
stop in the body shop and top off the fluids. Bet I'm at least a quart low.//
John suddenly had an insane urge to giggle. He knew his lightheadedness was a
symptom of many problems; exhaustion, fever, dehydration, lack of food, and
blood loss but that didn't stop the urge to laugh. Fortunately, or
unfortunately, depending on how one wanted to look at the situation, a deep
breath quelled the urge quickly enough. Sharp pains stabbed through his chest and
he was suddenly wracked by a fit of coughing.
//Great. Just f***in'
great. Cracked ribs and now the beginnings of pneumonia. Guess it's a good
thing Max is going to put me out of my misery pretty soon. Won't have to worry
about a long stay at Rampart.// Johnny sighed in resignation and looked up at
the large convict looming over him. He was holding the end of Johnny's 'leash'
and waiting for Johnny to get up. Johnny looked down at his shredded knees, now
swollen to at least twice their normal size, hot and weeping infection. He
grimaced.
"Ollie, I hate to say
this, but if you want me on my feet you're going to have to pull me up. Unless
you want to untie my hands, that is?" Johnny questioned hopefully. He
regretted the suggestion immediately. Ollie bent at the waist and, laying two
massive hands around Johnny's arms, hauled the injured paramedic roughly to his
feet. Johnny let loose a hoarse cry. Bending his knees was more excruciating
than he had thought possible. They immediately began to bleed again, seeping
down over his already stiff jeans. A milky yellow suppuration also oozed from
the ravaged flesh. The pain left John gasping.
"Damn, Ollie! Next
time I'll do it myself!" The man in question just grinned maliciously and
moved back over to Max. John muttered under his breath.
"Asshole."
Another fit of wet, painful coughing followed the word. When the episode had
passed a spent and gasping Johnny was surprised to find Max holding their one
remaining water canteen in front of him.
"I think you had better
have a little, Mr. Gage. We have some distance to go yet, I believe?"
Max's voice was all false solicitousness. Although his stomach turned at the
thought of forcing anything down his bruised and swollen throat, Johnny knew he
was getting seriously dehydrated. He forced a few sips down.
"We should hit the
highway by late today." John answered in a raspy voice. "You can save
yourself a bullet, though, if you want. I don't think I can live another day
out here." Max's eyebrows shot up in true astonishment. The paramedic was
abnormally calm about his predicament.
Johnny was anything but
calm but he wasn't going to give the two convicts the satisfaction of knowing
that. Where there was life there was hope and even in his current condition the
thought of another few hours, a half-day, a day, meant the possibility of
rescue. It was worth an argument. He began a painful shuffle northward through
the foliage.
* * * * * *
First light found Roy,
Chet, Jake and a search crew hand-picked from the elite of Law Enforcement,
Search and Rescue and K-9 Search gathered near the entrance to the ravine that
had been Chris and Jennifer's salvation. Chris had wanted to come with them
instead of going to Rampart to be checked over. He wanted to show them
personally the spot where they had made their escape and to be in on the rescue
of his beloved 'Uncle'. The response, of course, was instantaneous and hadn't
required even a split-second of thought. JoAnne had been so forceful in her
resounding "NO!" that she had even startled Roy in her vehemence. He
had other reasons aside from his almost overwhelming need to keep his son safe,
however. As much as the idea horrified him, Roy had no idea what they were
going to find. If they did indeed discover the worst, he would not add to his
son's trauma by exposing him to Johnny's dead body. He was having a hard enough
time dealing with that concept himself. He had promised his anguished son that
he would find Johnny and bring him home. He couldn't promise Christopher that
Johnny would come home alive.
The leader of this search
team, a crusty old Marine who simply went by the moniker of 'Sarge', had
fleshed out a plan that would allow them to move swiftly and enclose the
escapees in a pincer movement. Even now a large party similar to theirs was
starting out in a large sweep pattern from the highway. Sarge's team would pick
up the trail from the prisoners last known location, which Chris had provided
from the safety of the Ranger Station, and allow the search dogs to scent out
the direction. What hadn't been said, although Roy and Chet had deduced it on
their own, was that the dogs would be able to follow the trail easier and
faster because of Johnny's injuries. Dogs always had an easier time following a
blood trail.
The rays of the rising sun
illuminated the area where Chris and Jenny had last seen their captors. Roy's
stomach twisted. It wasn't hard, even for him, to see some of what had happened
here. The dusty ground in front of the wash had been disturbed. Man sized shoe
prints where interspersed with the boot prints of hiking boots and the smaller
tennis shoe prints of children. There were several dark areas on the packed
earth that, had one not known what they were looking for, would have been easy
to miss. An experienced eye, however, could see that the ground had soaked up a
dark liquid at one time. One spot was quite sizable. Roy tried not to think of
the implications of all that lost blood. He turned his head away from the sight
of two German Shepherd dogs sniffing excitedly around the only physical traces
of his friend. A flash of color caught his eye and he took a few steps toward
an object on the ground. His stomach lurched again when he found his son's
tennis shoe. All the possible might-have-beens flashed through his mind as he stared
down at that forlorn shoe lying discarded in the dust. He dropped to his knees
and vomited.
* * * * * *
It was a beautiful day.
Much too beautiful a day to die, Johnny mused. The sun was warm on his face,
the breeze redolent of pine and wildflowers. Birds sang in the treetops and all
about him nature pulled the mantle of deep summer about her with sensuous
grace. Such a day was meant for picnics and bird watching; hide and seek or a
lover's tryst in a secluded glade. This would have been the last day of camping
and hiking for he and Roy's children. It would have been a perfect ending to a
wonderful weekend. Now it was destined for another kind of ending.
Johnny wondered how
Christopher and Jenny were doing. If all had gone as planned, and Johnny
wouldn't think of any other possibility than that of success, they should be
safe in Roy and JoAnne's arms. It bothered him tremendously that he would
probably not be able to see them safe again with his own eyes. He had promised
and had taken his best shot. He hoped it had been good enough. He hoped Roy and
Jo could forgive him for the trauma their children had gone through.
Johnny shuffled to a stop
and tried to get his bearings. Max stepped up to his side and peered at him
with concern.
"You're not lost, I
hope, Mr. Gage? That would be a great misfortune." Johnny just shook his
head. His voice was almost gone and he had no desire to use what little bit of
it he had left talking to this jerk. Ollie, standing behind the hostage, gave a
little jerk and slap of the rope tether leading from Johnny's chest.
"Giddy up,
horsey." Ollie thought he was very clever. Johnny thought Ollie was a
moron. He shuffled painfully ahead and stopped again as another coughing spell
seized him around the chest. The sharp pain from his chest and ribs would have
dropped him had he not been so unwilling to bend his knees. He bent at the
waist and hacked until he was gasping and dizzy, shocked to see blood-streaked sputum
flecking the grass.
//Full blown Pneumonia.//
He knew that it was a possibility but now his own diagnosis was confirmed.
//Damn.//
The three men continued
their northward journey. Johnny's vision began to waver and his attention
wander. He was finding it more and more difficult to keep his mind on the task
at hand. Fever and exhaustion were taking their toll. Several times a jerk on
his tether was required to bring him back to reality.
Toward late afternoon, as
the sun was beginning its slow, arcing rendezvous with the sea, Max was
startled out of the boring repetition of putting one foot in front of the other
by the 'whup-whup-whup' of helicopter blades above his head. He quickly
motioned for Ollie to seek cover with their unwilling guide and dove for a
large bush. Ollie simply swept Johnny off his feet and slammed him onto the
ground under the sheltering limbs of a large oak. Johnny immediately began a
new bout of jagged coughing. Max thought carefully on the significance of the
unexpected chopper. As he did so he heard the helicopter make a wide turn and
come back over just east of their position. This wasn't an area predisposed to
helicopter flight. Logically, his survivalist mind told him, they would only be
out searching for something or someone in unlandable terrain such as this.
Therefore, the brats must have won through to civilization and alerted the
authorities. The thought was galling. He wormed his way over to Ollie and their
hacking, red-faced tour guide.
"It seems, Ollie,
that your sweet little girlfriend and her brother have set the dogs upon
us." Max glared at the now gasping paramedic before returning his
attention back to the ugly, smash-nosed convict. "I would assume that
there are ground teams even now making their way toward us from several
directions."
Ollie's face turned from
studious concentration to stark fear as he deciphered the meaning behind the
little mans words. "There comin' to git us?? I ain't goin' back ta prison,
Max! You gotta do something! You'll figure out somethin'. You're real good a
figurin' out things. This is all the stupid injun's fault! Gimme your gun and
let me kill 'im now and then you and me can git away, O.K. Max?" One beefy
hand reached for the gun tucked into Max's waistband.
"No, Ollie. We can't
kill him now. I think the Feds are getting close. We may be able to use our
friend here as a bargaining chip. Tie his leash up and let's get ready."
Max ordered, then set about chewing on his lower lip, lost in thought.
* * * * * *
Johnny sat with his back against
a tree, legs flung wide and hands unfeeling in their tight bonds. Wheezing
painfully, he attempting to drop his head forward to cough but was brought up
short by the rope securing him to the tree. He opted to tip his head as far
back as possible and tried to draw breath into reluctant lungs. Casting about
him with one slitted eye, Johnny was vaguely disconcerted at the dreamlike
quality of his surroundings.
//I don't remember the
trees and sky ever looking so funny. Well, maybe that one time after sneaking
into the sweat lodge and breathing in the smoke from the ceremonial fire. It
was so hot in there, just like now. Hey, that's where I am! Here's 'ol Sammy
Crow preachin' on the spirits to me.//
Johnny's fevered eye
looked up into the face of Max standing over him with the gun. He was shouting.
Johnny could not make out his words but they seemed angry and defensive. The
noise hurt his ears. He tried to scan his surroundings and was surprised to see
a group of people several yards away. The scene shifted slightly and Johnny
found himself backstage at a Styx rock concert.
//I love these
assignments. Roy doesn't like the noise or the crowds but man do we meet some
interesting people. The crowd's really into it tonight. I wish that big roadie
would sit down though. He's blocking the view for the crowd.//
He watched in annoyance as
a large, ugly roadie stood at the front of the stage while the crowd stood just
beyond, booing and calling for him to move so they could get a better look at
the lead singer who, oddly enough, seemed to be standing right next to Johnny
with the microphone pointed at his head. The paramedic wondered fleetingly why
he was out on stage but was more annoyed at the way the stage lights hurt his
eyes. The heat was oppressive.
//I think maybe Roy's
right. These assignments aren't all they're cracked up to be. //
Johnny closed his eye
briefly and shook his head. He could hear a 'whup-whup-whup' somewhere
overhead.
//Tribal drums?// Looking
up he found a formal Powwow in progress, the drums beating steadily and the
dancers moving in a circle about him. Father Tall-Trees stood next to him
chanting toward the dancers and waving a painted stick about.
//Ah, rats. Not the bear
story again. Every year it's the bear story. Whoa! This is weird. The bear is
actually here!// Johnny watched in absolute fascination as a huge, lumbering
bear suddenly shuffled out to stand on two legs before the dancers. He was
roaring mightily. Father Tall-Trees was screaming now and Johnny was shocked to
feel the painted stick jammed into the side of his head.
//Hey! Watch it there!
You're the one who called the bear up, not me!// The bear turned as if to rush
to Tall-Trees side when suddenly a loud thunder clap filled the air and the
bear stumbled. Johnny watched as the mythical bear seemed to fold in on itself
in slow motion and sink to the ground.
//I know that's not part
of the story.// Further thought was cut off as Father Tall-Trees snatched him
by his collar and tried to yank him up. Johnny couldn't rise, however, and his
collar was strangling him. He fought for precious air as Tall-Trees shrieked
and waved his stick in Johnny's face. Spots had begun to dance in front of his
already wavering vision when another mighty thunderclap sent Father Tall-Trees
sprawling into the astonished paramedic's lap. Bewildered, he raised his head
to see the tribal dancers moving forward toward them. One dancer broke away and
sped to Johnny's side. The man seemed to be talking but Johnny couldn't make
out the words. He shook his head again and took another look at the dancer
whose Native American features slowly dissolved into the face of Roy DeSoto.
* * * * * *
The wait was almost
unbearable. Roy and Chet strained to be able to catch the words floating up
from the hostage negotiator. From their position well out of harm's way they
could only make out a word or two but it was quite evident that things weren't
going smoothly. As soon as the authorities had announced to the convicts that
they were effectively surrounded things had gone sour. The little escapee with
the thinning hair kept shouting and waving the gun around. His large companion
paced like a caged beast, gesticulating wildly and bellowing obscenities at the
encircled law enforcement. Johnny, slumped listlessly with his back against a
tree, seemed to take little or no notice of the melodrama being enacted before
him. This fact worried Roy almost as much as the ropes cruelly binding his
friend to a tree infuriated him.
Chet divided his attention
between the scene unfolding below and his colleague. From the moment the team
had come upon the three men below and found Johnny alive but tethered like an
animal Chet had worried that Roy's tenuous grip over his stoic outer shell was
slipping. The last few days had been nightmarish by anyone's standards and Chet
had determined to tag along as much for his concern for Roy's emotional health
as for Johnny's physical well being.
Roy interrupted Chet's
surreptitious spying. "I wish I could get down there. I can't see well
enough from up here. It seems that Johnny's struggling for breath. What do you
think?" His murmured voice was low and intense.
Chet peered intently at
the bedraggled and bound man far below. "I don't know, Roy. Yea, maybe.
He's been beaten. That much I can tell. His knees look really rough, too. He's
covered in so much dirt, though, that it's hard to tell for sure from up
here."
Roy chewed his lip in
consternation. Silence fell between the two for a moment and the words of the
negotiator again floated upwards to the knoll the men were perched upon. Jake,
their assigned 'baby-sitter', leaned in and spoke quietly. "I've just had
radio contact with Sarge. The situation is becoming shaky. They've put snipers
into place. Thank God your kids are out of this, Roy."
Roy nodded mutely, his
face tight with emotion. Down in the clearing the lumbering Ollie railed
against the fates that had taken his "little treasure" away from him.
Chet, shocked and sickened when he realized what the pedophile was shouting
about, turned to see Roy's face blanch to a sickening gray. He tentatively put
a hand out to steady his friend but Roy brushed his hand away and stood, color
sweeping back into his cheeks and a murderous rage filling his eyes. Chet had
never seen the mild and gentle man so incensed. Roy took a step forward, as if
to go to the deviant monster standing below and confront him with only the
weapon of a fathers wrath. Chet would never know if his companion would have
acted on the impulse.
A single sniper's bullet
felled the ox-like Ollie in his tracks. Chet and Roy froze in stunned disbelief
for only a moment before the stocky fireman pulled the standing man down to
safety again. He was amazed to see grim satisfaction on Roy's haggard face.
They now turned to watch the effect of the assassination on the remaining
convict.
They were not pleased with
the result. The smaller prisoner was almost beside himself with fear now. His
voice, while unintelligible from this distance, was raised to an almost
hysterical pitch. He waved the gun around again. Placating gestures were put
forth by the negotiator but they seemed to be falling on deaf ears.
Roy felt so helpless. He
gritted his teeth in frustration. "Chet, Johnny didn't even notice when
they shot that guy. He's really out of it. He's just sitting there like he
doesn't care anymore. I don't like this at all. They've done something to him,
Chet, and I can't do a damn thing to help. I promised Chris I'd bring him home
and if something happens - - - ." He couldn't finish. His only son, his
little boy, now no longer so little. Traumatized and forced to make adult
decisions of life and death. If Johnny died Roy didn't think his son would ever
truly heal. Roy knew exactly how he felt.
When the little convict
shoved his gun into Johnny's temple Roy was up and running down the hill. He
was not conscious of any decision to act. The action was instinctual and
surprised even Roy. Before he reached the bottom of the knoll another rifle
shot cracked the air open and the balding convict slumped across Johnny's lap.
He was across the clearing
almost before the lawmen were on their feet. He knew he would hear about this
later. His rashness, his foolishness. Roy didn't care. If the little man was
not yet dead he would be soon enough. Roy would make sure of it. It wasn't a
paramedic and lifesaver that stood over his partner, nor even a rational man,
it was an emotionally exhausted father and a friend.
"Johnny? Johnny, it's
Roy. Can you look at me?" Roy frantically tugged on the knots of the rope
tied around the tree. He could see how tightly the rope constricted this
friend's chest and the difficulty Johnny had breathing but the dark-haired man
didn't lift his head, didn't seem to even hear Roy. Chet arrived amidst a
flurry of pounding feet and shouted instructions from many voices. Roy spared
one glance for the mustachioed man. "Chet! I can't get this untied!"
His fingers scrabbled at the knot. Chet dug hastily in his pocket.
"Roy! Skip the knot.
I've got a pocketknife. We'll cut it off." Squatting quickly he slipped
the sharp edge between the tree and the rough hemp. Roy knelt down and took his
first good look into his partner's face. It was ghastly; bruised and coated
with dried blood, dirt and sweat. His lips were split and mangled. His eye
swollen and discolored, the edges of the gash below the eyebrow puffy and red.
Johnny's good eye looked out through eyelids at half-mast, distant and
unfocused. The dead body of Max was shifted carefully off of Johnny's lap by
officers after a few quick photos and crime scene experts began to detail the
area. An order was issued to radio the go-ahead to medical help waiting on the
nearest road. As a cleared and certified Paramedic, Roy was left to deal with
the hostage.
The rope parted and fell
away. Johnny listed slightly to the left and Roy steadied him with a hand on
his shoulder.
"Johnny? It's me,
partner. It's Roy. Can you look at me?" Roy tried to keep any anxiousness
out of his voice, tried to be calm and soothing. He placed a hand against
Johnny's forehead, felt the heat radiating and saw the fever glaze in his one
good eye. The rescued man slowly rose his head and turned to the sound of the
kind voice. Roy saw him struggle to bring the world back into focus, saw his
eyes shift and begin to clear. Johnny gazed with bewilderment at the person
before him and rasped in a voice raw with sickness, abuse and dehydration.
"Roy?" His eye
tracked slightly to the right, as if taking in a scene only he could see.
"Roy? Why are you . . . dancing at a Powwow?"
Chet couldn't help the
almost hysterical snort that erupted. Before he could remark on the unusual
question Johnny burst forth with a series of deep, painful and bubbly coughs.
He slid over onto his side this time and Roy gently eased him down. The
paramedic in Roy was dismayed to see bloody sputum flecking his partner's lips
as the wracking cough went on and on. Finally Johnny lay, gasping and spent,
trying to suck in enough air to keep his congested lungs working. His eyes were
clearer, however, when he looked up into the concerned gaze of his friends. He
tried a lopsided grin but it only served to crack his lips open again.
"Shit. That
hurt." Johnny looked around and took in the chaotic tableau. Law enforcement
personnel contained the scene, radios crackled with distant commands and a
helicopter hovered overhead. He let it all sink in as he labored for breath.
With Johnny now on his side Chet could clearly see the bound wrists and moved
to free them. He tried to slip the pocketknife between the rope and the skin
but Johnny's wrists were so swollen that it was impossible to wedge the knife
between the skin and the hemp without cutting his friend in the process. For
some reason this tiny act of help that he was unable to perform bothered Chet
more than anything else up to this point. He threw the knife down and stood
abruptly.
"I can't get him
loose, Roy! The ropes are too tight and his hands are really swollen and I
can't get him LOOSE!" Chet choked out the words and turned away, his
shoulders hitching in an effort to contain a sob. Roy felt for him but couldn't
leave his partner to offer any solace. Now that he had something to do he was
feeling more in control and calmer.
"Chet? Chet! You need
to go meet the medical personnel and show them where we are. Get a pair of
bandage scissors from them. They have blunt ends and won't hurt Johnny when we
cut the ropes off." Roy's voice was sure and professional now. Chet soaked
it in and shook himself. He had been given a task. He nodded purposefully.
"Got it." Chet
declared and jogged off.
Johnny swiveled his head
slowly back to look at his partner's face. Roy was busy unscrewing the cap of a
canteen full of water.
"Roy." Johnny's
anguished whisper stopped Roy in mid-action and he looked into a face full of
remorse and fear. "Roy, the children. Please. . . tell me you're here . .
. because you found Chris . . . and Jenny?" The gasps of breath came
quicker now and Roy was astonished to see tears welling in Johnny's eyes, even
around the swollen lids of the injured one. "They have to be . . . all
right, Roy. If they aren't . . "
"Johnny. They're
fine. You kept them safe, Johnny. You kept them safe."
* * * * * *
Chet stumbled over a tree
root and righted himself. He could hear the medical team, a little distance
behind him, panting and swearing softly as they lugged their heavy equipment
through the dense trees. The clearing came into view and the stocky firefighter
put on a burst of speed. He ignored the controlled chaos of flashbulbs popping
and people shouting back and forth. He had seen crime scene investigations
before and was careful to skirt around the major area to avoid any
contamination.
Chet slid to a stop beside
Roy, panting and triumphantly brandishing a pair of bandage scissors. Johnny
was now propped up on several backpacks in an attempt to ease his breathing. In
Chet's previous haste to free his friend he hadn't really gotten a good look at
his friend. The dark haired paramedic hardly looked human. Covered with dirt,
sweat and blood, his clothing torn and crusted, Johnny looked like something
from one of Chet's B-movies. His hair stuck out in stiff spikes, glued together
by old, dried blood. Panting in short, gasping breaths Johnny looked wearily up
at his friend and attempted a grin.
"Ches . . . Chester
B. . . . stop staring . . . and get . . . me loose."
Chet flushed in
embarrassment and dropped to his knees beside his friend. "Sorry, Gage,
but you look like something the cat dragged in."
He heard a snort from the
prone man as he gently turned him to the side. Roy steadied his partner as Chet
very carefully slid the tips of the bandage scissors between the first loop of
rope and the swollen skin of Johnny's wrist. The scissors were not meant for cutting
through such a thick barrier and it took several minutes of sawing before the
tough hemp finally parted. Chet quickly unwound the remaining loops and very
slowly brought the injured man's arms around to the front for the first time in
almost 36 hours. Johnny moaned as his cramped muscles protested.
The two man SAR team
approached the threesome and nodded a hello to Roy. He recognized them from a
couple of previous search and rescues that had included the two paramedics. He
never thought to be working with them on his own partner. They knelt, setting
the portable stokes aside for the moment and began opening their equipment
cases.
"We were told there
was a certified paramedic on site, Roy. Didn't know it was you. We brought
equipment for you." Lonnie, the senior member of the team grinned in
satisfaction. While certified in emergency first aid, the pair was not
paramedic trained and couldn't administer drugs. It was an issue they had
discussed with Roy and Johnny. It was ironic that their argument to the Search
and Rescue department would get a strong boost from a paramedic's misfortune.
Don, the younger member of the team, turned to Johnny.
"Geez, Gage. We asked for help convincing Headquarters to send us to paramedic training but you didn't have to put yourself this far out!" His joking demeanor masked a worried scan of the patient's condition. Johnny was rubbing his puffy, discolored hands together, obviously agitated and in pain from the returning circulation. His lips were pressed tightly together and the cords in his neck stood out as he gritted his teeth. Roy was busy setting up the biophone. He cast quick looks at his partner. He knew Johnny was trying to tough it out but the effort to stay awake and coherent was costing him. His energy was flagging fast. Another round of coughing overtook the ailing man as Roy finished his connection with Rampart. He watched as Chet helped Johnny to sit up. His partner was attempting to wrap weakened arms around his chest to supp