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Copyright © 2005 by Rene Gutteridge. All rights reserved.
Cover photograph of truck © by Photodisc. All rights reserved.
Cover photograph of storm © by Corbis. All rights reserved.
Cover photograph of businessman © by Digital Vision. All rights reserved.
Author photograph copyright © 2005 by Christine Luton. All rights reserved.
Edited by Lorie Popp
Designed by Dean H. Renninger
This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of either the author or the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Gutteridge, Rene.
Storm gathering : prequel to The splitting storm / Rene Gutteridge.
p. cm.
ISBN 0-8423-8765-X (pbk.)
1. Football coaches—Fiction. 2. Self-destructive behavior—Fiction. 3. Brothers—Fiction. 4. Texas—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3557.U887S76 2005
813'.6—dc22 2004023860
Build: 2013-02-28 13:59:14
Contents
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Acknowledgments
For Don and Sonja And Don Sr. and Helen
The Mekong Delta, Vietnam 1968
Innocence was drowning in the blood of this jungle. All around him the sickening sound of small explosions, like the delicate and steady tap of a snare drum, shattered nature’s tranquility. He hoped he wouldn’t have to shoot a kid. Back home in Texas he never thought life was that interesting or wonderful. So why was he fighting so hard to survive?
A bullet screamed past his ear and he fell to the ground, clawing the dirt to get a grip so he could scoot under some brush. Gasping for air, he trembled underneath the brush, trying not to make a sound. He prayed. He didn’t even know whom he was praying to. Please, please, please. Whatever held his life, he begged mercy of it.
Words . . . shouting . . . nothing he could understand. But he knew what they meant: Kill them. Kill all of them. He fingered the trigger of his weapon. His mother’s face smiled in his mind.
Either he was going to live or die. He could hear them walking. Talking. It sounded like the language of the devil.
Lowering his head, he put his cheek into the dirt. A tear rolled across his nose, but he didn’t dare move to wipe it. And he didn’t dare acknowledge it. He had no training for this, only simple human instinct. The part of him that still felt human wanted to curl up and cry.
They were only yards away, hacking at the shrubs and the trees. He could stand up and go out in a blaze of glory, killing as many of the maggots as he could, or he could try his luck and hide. If captured, he would enter into a hell he couldn’t even fathom.
Another tear trickled around his nostril, and he could faintly smell his mother’s perfume.
Ten feet away. Crunching. Walking. Talking. He wanted to shut his eyes, but he could only stare forward. All he could see was a tangled mess of limbs and leaves.
And then a sandal. Black and dirty. It was in front of him now, hardly visible through the shrubbery. It had stopped and turned slightly. The shouting seemed far away. Yet one man lingered, waiting, sensing his enemy was near.
A few seconds passed, and the sandal moved away. Random machine-gun fire echoed against distant hills. Minutes ticked by, but Sammy didn’t move.
Finally, rolling over onto his back, he released the grip on his gun and carefully wiped the sweat off his brow. Mud trickled into his eyes, burning them.
Sammy started to sit up. On the other side of the shrubbery he’d hidden under, he could see someone about eight yards away. He’d been found. He jostled for an angle to shoot.
But it was too late. Gunfire filled his ears, and Sammy reached up and covered them, curling into a ball and falling back into the bushes. His fingers climbed up and down his torso. He stared at his hands, expecting to find blood dripping off his palms. He looked through the shrubbery and saw the bottoms of two boots, mud caked in the crevices of the soles.
He scrambled to his knees. “Matty?” he cried. Crawling toward the body as fast as he could, he could see blood trickling out of his best friend’s mouth. His baby blue eyes stared at the sky of the same color. “Matty!”
Matty’s eyes moved slightly, acknowledging that his name had been called. He focused on Sammy and Sammy took his hand, his eyes roaming down Matty’s gaping and bloody chest.
One more breath would be his last, and Matty’s face froze out the life that had been there just seconds before. An anguished scream threatened to crawl out of Sammy’s throat.
A noise from behind caused him to turn around. Ten yards away in the shadows stood an American soldier with a trail of smoke twirling up toward the treetops from the barrel of his gun.
Taylor Franks stood behind the Delta ticket counter, her feet swollen from a day’s worth of stress. She slipped off one of her shoes and crunched her toes toward her heel, trying to relieve the pain. She’d been on since 6 a.m.
Twisting at the waist, she popped the vertebrae in her spine while staring out the large pane of glass that gave a nice view of the planes rolling to their gates but also allowed the late-afternoon sun to make the gate area too warm.
“Hey, there.” Her fellow gate agent, Liz Lane, logged on to the computer next to hers. Liz glanced up. “Looks like we got a full boat today.”
Taylor nodded. A busy crowd swarmed in front of them.
Liz smiled and said, “Saw those roses in the break room.”
Taylor typed in her password for the tenth time today.
“From?” Liz asked.
“Who do you think?”
“No way.” Concern swept over Liz’s jovial expression.
Taylor didn’t want to say anything more. She couldn’t. The thought of it made her stomach wilt with dread for so many more reasons than she could say. “You’re a great friend, Liz.”
Liz looked at her with surprise. “Well, thanks. Why do you say that?”
Taylor concentrated on the computer screen. “You should just know that. I don’t think I’ve ever met a lovelier person.”
A dazzling grin spread across Liz’s face. “Thanks.”
The red phone at the counter rang. T
aylor’s heart sank, and Liz seemed to hold in a curse. “Please tell me this isn’t what I think it is,” Liz said. She snatched up the phone and listened to the voice on the other end, glancing at Taylor and mouthing flight operations desk.
Liz hung up the phone. “Flight 1565 is canceled. Flight attendant got sick and they don’t have a replacement.” It meant they were about to handle a riot.
Taylor studied the oblivious crowd. A family in the corner was dressed in Hawaiian shirts. Three businessmen stood together, each holding their golf-club cases. A father tried to juggle two suitcases and a rambunctious toddler. Two kids, barely over sixteen, kissed as they sat between two elderly people with equally disapproving expressions on their faces. Taylor rubbed her fingers across her forehead.
“You okay?” Liz was looking curiously at her.
“I’m . . . um . . .”
“You’re white as a ghost!” Liz said. “Are you feeling all right?”
“This is going to be a nightmare.”
“I know, but remember our motto!”
“One passenger at a time.” Taylor checked the clock in front of her. Thirty more minutes and she would’ve been gone. Thirty more minutes.
“I’m switching the sign,” Liz said, grabbing the Delayed sign from underneath the counter.
In a few seconds, the two hundred people in front of her would all make a mad dash for the counter. Taylor wasn’t sure she could handle it. Not today. She keyed the microphone. “Ladies and gentlemen, Flight 1565, service from Dallas/Fort Worth to Los Angeles, has been delayed.”
The crowd roared like a stadium full of fans just witnessing a fumble.
She kept her eyes forward, not looking at anyone directly. “A flight attendant has fallen sick, and we do not have a replacement for this flight. Another attendant is on her way, but because of regulations on how many hours a flight attendant can fly, we cannot board the plane for two hours.”
Another angry groan.
“We have another flight coming in from LA, which will be here in one and a half hours. Please approach the counter to have your tickets reissued if you do not have baggage checked. If you do have baggage checked, please go to the front ticket counters at the entrance of the airport. Thank you for your understanding and patience.”
Liz eyed her. It wasn’t normal for them to send passengers back to the front ticket counter. But it was a way to manage the crowd.
A mob of bickering people shoved its way forward, businessmen pushing elderly people, women screaming at children.
A sharp line of pain traced itself over the top of Taylor’s head and down her neck. And then it kicked in. Survivor mode. It always did. Her fingers flew over the keyboard while she handled each passenger swiftly and easily, hardly regarding their faces, just trying to get them to their destinations.
After she helped a family of six, a man approached the ticket counter and handed her his ticket. “What are my options?” he said gruffly.
Taylor didn’t look up but instead entered his number into the computer.
“I said, what are my options?”
“One moment, sir. I’m checking.”
“I have to get to Los Angeles by seven o’clock.”
Taylor typed in the codes. “Sir, I’m sorry. That doesn’t look poss—”
“Make it happen!” the man demanded.
Liz glanced over as Taylor jumped. “Please, settle down. I am trying to help you.”
“I don’t care if you have to put me on another airline; I want out of here. Now.”
Taylor continued to type quickly despite her shaking hands. After a few moments she swallowed down her nervousness and looked the man in the eyes. “All that’s available is a flight on American Airlines, but it won’t get there until seven thirty. Will that work?”
“That’s no good!” the man yelled.
“Sir!” Taylor gasped. “Control yourself!”
The line behind the man, at least a hundred people long, seemed oblivious to his rage. She could tell that Liz was watching his every move.
“I don’t expect you to understand,” the man said through clenched teeth, “but it is vital that I get there by seven.”
“Sir, there is nothing I can do here. You can wait and I can try to put you on the other flight coming in from LA, or you can board the one that will leave in two hours, and that will get you there by eight thirty. Or I can put you on American. All the other flights that would get you there by seven are completely booked.”
“No!” The man pounded his fist on the counter.
The people behind him hushed their conversations.
Taylor pressed her shoulders back and stared hard at the man. “Sir, I’m going to tell you this one time. Step back and lower your voice. Now.”
“Why you whiny little piece of trash,” the man seethed. “What kind of moron does it take to do this job? It’s not my fault this flight was canceled! I deserve to get on another flight! Do you hear me! I deserve it!”
“Step back, sir,” Taylor said, but her voice trembled.
“Get me on another flight!” the man shouted, sticking his finger into Taylor’s face.
Beside her, Liz picked up the phone. “We need assistance at Gate 12. We have an irate.” That was the word they used for a passenger out of control. It seemed to be an understatement today.
The man’s red face whipped toward Liz. “What do you think you’re doing, lady? Calling the cops?!” His voice had risen to a high-pitched shrill.
In the distance the pattering footsteps of the police neared.
The man drop-kicked his carry-on bag toward the gate window. It nearly hit an old man observing the scene.
Taylor backed up to the wall. She wanted to get in this man’s face. Stand up for herself. But she couldn’t. In fact, Liz was the one who called security. Shame made her knees weak. She had never been able to stand up for herself. Not to her alcoholic father. Not to her dominating supervisor. Not to her whacked-out boyfriend.
But that was all about to change.
Suddenly Taylor lunged forward. “Get out of my face, you loser!” she screamed.
The man froze. The line behind him moved back. Liz’s mouth hung open. But before Taylor could say anything else, the police seized the man and threw him to the floor. Quickly handcuffing him, they picked him up and dragged him away. He was hollering obscenities all the way out of sight.
Taylor shut her eyes, took a deep breath, and stepped forward, trying to smile at the next passenger, an older businessman.
“Whatever flight you can get me on is fine,” he said meekly.
Taylor typed in his passenger number, then felt a hand on her shoulder. “You better come with me,” Edward Foster, her supervisor, said. Behind him, Roger, another agent, was waiting to take her place.
“I’m fine,” Taylor said, brushing the hair out of her face. “It’s over.”
“Come with me, Miss Franks,” he said, taking her arm and forcing her toward the Jetway.
Taylor glanced at the crowd. A few sympathetic faces scattered among the mostly annoyed ones told her she might as well have been the sick flight attendant.
Inside the Jetway, Edward stopped and stood in front of her. “What was that back there?” he said in his usual demeaning tone.
“The guy went nuts.”
“So did you.”
“I just stood up for myself.” Taylor knew perfectly well that Edward couldn’t possibly understand the power she drew from this one small incident.
“That isn’t protocol, Taylor,” he said in his squeaky little voice that made her want to set a mousetrap.
Taylor bit her lip, not sure what was more maddening: Edward Foster and his dreamworld of authority or half-insane passengers with airport rage. “It’s 1995, Edward. People do crazy things these days. How was I to know that guy didn’t have a knife or something worse? I was just defending myself.”
“First of all, he’s already been checked through security, so he wouldn’t have a
weapon. Secondly, screaming at him and calling him a loser wasn’t even close to appropriate. I’m going to have to write you up. I hate to do that, but what you did back there was unacceptable.” His white blond eyebrows elevated halfway up his forehead. “Go ahead and go on home. I’ll see you tomorrow.” He turned and exited the Jetway.
Taylor was trembling from head to toe. Little did Edward know she’d just been stepped on one too many times.
The skin on Aaron’s cheek burned and tingled as if someone had struck a match against his jawbone. He panted underneath the heavy hand that was clasped over his nose and mouth. His body twisted and writhed against his brother’s. If he could only get his knee loose . . . there!
Cusswords mingled with spit spattered across Aaron’s face, but now his brother was on the ground and beneath him in one quick maneuver. Mick had always cussed like a sailor, and today was no exception. Years of anger bubbled just beneath the surface, hot lava about to spew.
“Settle down!” Aaron yelled at him.
Pinned against the ground, Mick stared hard into Aaron’s eyes, trying to catch his breath. “Don’t tell me to settle down.”
The gaping wound across Mick’s left eyebrow shimmered like the fiery indignation in his eyes. Aaron had caught him with a left hook only moments before. He had not meant to split the skin, but it had been his first instinct when Mick swung at him.
“I’m going to stand up, Mick. If you try anything again, though, I’ll put your face in the dirt and knock you unconscious.”
“I’d like to see you try that.”
“Make a move and you’ll be licking dirt in your sleep.” Aaron rose, cautiously backing away from him.
Mick sat up, touching the back of his wrist to the wound above his brow while looking at his brother.
“You’re going to need stitches,” Aaron said.
Mick cursed again under his breath and scooted a few feet away so his back was against a large maple tree.
“My goodness, you have a mouth on you.”
“Shut up,” Mick said. “I’m so sick of your holier-than-thou act.” He stood, causing Aaron to take guard. He hobbled toward his house. “It was stupid of you to come here today. What did you think was going to happen? I’d throw my arms around you? pat you on the back? beg to be your best man?”