Read Every Precious Thing Online
Authors: Brett Battles
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #General, #Suspense, #Mystery, #conspiracy, #Thriller
“Dr. Paskota, put your gun down, and come out,” Harper said.
He was only a few feet away, just around the front of the shed.
I’m
not
getting out of here, am I?
The thought actually relaxed her for the first time in…years.
Harper had said she would be going to prison, but he was wrong.
She unscrewed the suppressor from her gun, and slipped the barrel into her mouth without hesitation.
C
HAPTER
E
IGHTY
-F
IVE
A
S MUCH AS
Logan hoped she would come out peacefully, he knew she wouldn’t. Her arrogance wouldn’t allow that. He would just have to keep her there until the police arrived. They could figure out how to get her out.
He heard the faint squeak of something being unscrewed.
What the—
With sudden realization, Logan raced around the corner.
Dr. Paskota had the muzzle of her gun in her mouth. She was opting for the coward’s way out, but he couldn’t let that happen. He dove, his hand knocking into the weapon just as she pulled the trigger. The blast was so loud that Logan didn’t even hear himself hit the ground. He did, however, feel her gun fall on his back and roll to the ground. He flipped around, intending to grab the weapon before she could get it again, but he needn’t have bothered.
Dr. Paskota was lying on the ground, unmoving.
“No, no, no!” Logan said as he pulled himself to his knees.
“You all right?” Dev called out, his voice sounding tinny and far away.
“I’m fine.”
Logan put a hand on the woman’s neck, sure she was dead, but there was a pulse. It wasn’t very strong, but it didn’t seem to be in danger of stopping.
He flipped her over, and saw what had happened.
He hadn’t hit the gun in time to pull it out of her mouth before it fired, but he had moved it enough so that the bullet ripped through the doctor’s cheek instead of the back of her head, leaving a nasty hole that was now covered with dirt.
But she was alive, and she
would
answer for what she’d done.
He ripped the sleeve off his shirt and tore it into several pieces. He used a strip to wipe the dirt away from her facial wound, and stuck another over the hole. A third he used to tie off the wound on her arm. He then grabbed her by the shoulders and pulled her out from behind the shed and into the yard.
He checked the others. Of all the injured, Richard had it worst. Gut shots were never good, and his only chance was to get to a hospital soon.
Logan looked over at Kurt, who had yet to move from where he’d been standing. “Come here.”
Kurt mouthed something, but Logan couldn’t hear it.
“What?”
“I’m fine where I am,” Kurt said, his voice barely audible to Logan.
“Come here and keep pressure on this,” Logan told him, his hand pushing down on the makeshift bandage over Richard’s wound. “He tried to save your life, for God’s sake.”
That got Kurt moving. He took over for Logan, who then joined Dev next to Alan. The bullet had caught Sara’s husband in the meaty part of the thigh.
“Don’t think it hit the bone,” Dev said. “And it’s not bleeding
too
bad, so no artery.”
Logan glanced at Alan, wanting to ask what he thought he’d been doing, but the pain in the man’s eyes stopped him. The truth was, Logan knew what Alan had been trying to do.
“Where the hell are the cops?” he asked Dev.
His friend gave him an odd look. “They’re like a block away. Can’t you hear them?”
Logan shook his head. “Ever had a gun fired right next to your head?”
His friend grinned. “Once or twice.”
The police rushed in a few minutes later, shouting at everyone to get on the ground. Of course, everyone was already on the ground, either injured or tending to them.
Once the cops secured all the weapons and confirmed the danger had passed, the EMTs were allowed to come in and assess the wounded.
Richard, as Logan expected, was the first out the door. Dr. Paskota went next, then Alan and Dr. Paskota’s companion.
Logan and Dev were ordered to sit at the patio table and wait with an officer assigned to watch them.
A thought suddenly occurred to Logan. “There’s another one,” he said to the cop. “He’s across the street, on the other side of one of the sedans parked there.”
“You mean the one the two old guys with the tire iron were watching?” the officer said.
That answered that.
Fifty minutes after the police stormed the house, FBI Special Agent Kara Sanchez arrived. She didn’t look much older than Logan, and had her dark hair pulled back into a tight ponytail.
“You’re Logan Harper?” she asked.
“Yes.”
“What the hell were you thinking? Do you know how many people could have been killed here?”
“I do. Do you know how many people
were
killed?”
She narrowed her eyes. “You’ve created one giant mess here, my friend, and I don’t envy you.”
Logan looked past her, making it clear he was checking to see if anyone else was around. “Really?” he said. “What I thought I had here was a case that could make an FBI agent’s career.”
“Oh, is that so?” she said, her attitude unchanged.
“It is.”
She looked at him for a moment, and he saw what he knew he would—a subtle shift in her eyes.
C
HAPTER
E
IGHTY
-S
IX
L
OGAN WAS IN
the middle of his story when Callie arrived. As soon as she had made the calls to the police and Special Agent Sanchez, she’d left Riverside. Now, as Logan went on, she confirmed many of the points he told Sanchez, and soon they were all heading to the hospital.
Though Sanchez wanted them all to travel together, Logan insisted on taking his own car. He had a very important reason for this, a promise he had yet to keep. So, after Callie gave Sanchez her personal assurances that Logan wouldn’t bolt, they headed over separately—Callie with the agent and Dev with Logan.
Logan and Dev arrived first and found Harp and Barney sitting in the lobby. Barney had insisted that Harp be taken by one of the ambulances so he could be checked out after his hostage ordeal.
“What did the doctor say?” Logan asked.
“About me?” Harp said, surprised.
“Yeah, Dad. About you.”
“Said for a man my age, I seem to be in perfect health.”
Logan looked at him skeptically, but Barney nodded.
“Yeah. If I hadn’t been there, I wouldn’t have believed it, either.”
“Means I’m going to be around for a while still, so you should remember that,” Harp said.
“Great,” Logan replied, rolling his eyes in mock disgust. “I hear you’re pretty handy with a tire iron.”
“As a matter of fact, I am.”
“You should have seen him,” Barney said, swinging his arm through the air. “He didn’t even think about it. He just did it.”
Beaming, Harp said, “See? I can be useful.”
“Of course you can, Dad. I’ve always known that.” Logan paused, then said, “I have something for you.”
Harp raised an eyebrow, curious. “What?”
Logan pulled the envelope from Len out of his pocket, and held it out. “Just a little late on my promise.”
Harp lit up. “Thank you. I…I appreciate it.”
The outside door opened and Sanchez and Callie came in.
“When we have a little time,” Logan said to his dad, “we’re going to talk about what’s inside.”
“I thought you said you didn’t look,” Harp said.
“I did. Sorry, Dad.”
“Oh.”
“But I didn’t read it.”
Harp hesitated, then nodded. “Okay. We’ll talk.”
“Mr. Harper? Mr. Martin?” Sanchez called out. “Are you coming with us?”
They proceeded into the emergency room, where they learned that both Richard and Alan were in surgery. They found Sara, Diana, Rachel, and Kurt in a private room waiting for news of their loved ones. Emily was there, too, wide awake and clinging to her mother.
There was a happy moment of reunion as Logan and the others walked in.
“Boy, was I wrong about you,” Diana said.
Logan shrugged. “Maybe a little.”
“Thank you,” Sara told him. “Is…Dr. Paskota…”
“Probably in surgery right now,” Logan said. “And under arrest. It’s over.”
Judging by the look on her face, she didn’t agree. He knew she was thinking about the client still out there who’d paid for Emily’s existence.
He looked over at Rachel and Kurt. “Do you mind giving us a few minutes alone? We need to talk to Sara and Diana.”
Rachel nodded. “We’ll be in the cafeteria.”
Once they were gone, Logan turned his attention back to Sara and Diana. “I know you’re still worried, but this can be over if you want it to be.” He glanced at the other two women in the room. “Sara, you already know Callie. The person with her is Special Agent Sanchez with the FBI. I think you all have a lot to talk about.”
C
HAPTER
E
IGHTY
-S
EVEN
A
LAN SLOWLY OPENED
his eyes, finally waking from his surgery. His head was still a bit cloudy, but the searing pain in his leg seemed to be gone. He knew that was just temporary, the drugs he’d been given dulling his senses.
He closed his eyes again, trying to piece the evening back together, and wondering what had happened. After several seconds he realized something was pressing against his hand. He forced his lids open and glanced down.
“So you are awake.”
He froze. Despite the words, he thought he might still be sleeping, lost in a dream.
Using what strength he had, he forced himself to look to his right.
“Hi,” Sara said.
It was really her. She was sitting in a chair beside his bed, holding his hand.
“Hi,” he managed.
“The doctor says you’re going to be okay. A little sore for a while, but okay.”
He stared at her, unable to form any words.
She smiled. “You will have to stay here for another couple days, though.”
“Oh,” he said, suddenly tense. “Emily. Where is she?”
“Rachel has her. They wouldn’t let me bring her in.”
“Is she all right?”
“She’s fine. She just wants to see her dad.” She hesitated. “I’m…I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to hurt you. It was never about you. It was…my past.”
“Don’t,” he said.
“I’ve never loved anyone like I love you.”
He watched her for a moment. “Are you going to disappear again?”
“Never. I promise.”
He could see the pain and the truth and the love in her eyes.
He squeezed her hand. “If you do, I’ll send Logan to find you again.”
She laughed, and after a second, he did, too.
C
HAPTER
E
IGHTY-
E
IGHT
Three Weeks Later
Manila, The Philippines
L
OGAN MET HIS
father in the lobby of the hotel.
“You ready?” he asked.
Harp looked nervous, but he nodded and tried to smile.
Logan guided him out the front door to the car waiting for them at the curb. Harp climbed in first, sliding over so that Logan could get in behind him. Moments later, their driver was navigating them through the notorious Manila traffic.
It took nearly an hour to reach their destination southeast of downtown, near Aquino International Airport. The sign out front read:
MANILA AMERICAN CEMETERY AND MEMORIAL
They passed through an open gate in a gray, barred fence, but had to stop just on the other side for a guard. The driver rolled down his window and the guard stuck his head in.
When he saw Harp and Logan in the back, he said, “American?”
“Yes,” Logan said.
“Okay. Park over there.” He pointed at a white building off to the right with the word
VISITORS
etched in the stone at the top of a small portico.
Suddenly, it was like they were in a different world. The chaos of Manila disappeared, replaced by an empty road running up a tranquil, grass-covered hill. At the apex of the gentle slope, Logan could see their destination.
“I can ask if it’s okay to drive up there,” Logan said to his father. The road did go all the way up.
“I’d rather walk.”
They exited the car and headed up the road. On either side of them was a well-kept expanse of grass, lined with row after row of white stone grave markers, crosses, and Stars of David. These were soldiers and sailors and marines who had died in World War II, but Harp and Logan weren’t there to see one of those tombstones.
As they neared the end of the road, the monument came into full view. Two arcs, each half of a circle separated enough so that a wide stone walkway ran through the openings at either end. The arcs, constructed of a similar stone, were maybe fifteen feet high, the curving roofs held in place by dozens of walls set up like dominos in side-by-side pairs.
These were what the two Harper men came to see. Carved on both sides of the walls were names, nearly forty thousand in all. These were the ones who had never been able to receive a grave like their fellow servicemen buried nearby. There was nothing of these men to bury, for they were the missing in action.
“Just a second,” Harp said as they reached the steps that led up to the arcs.
“Sure, Dad.” Logan was actually glad to rest a moment.
As a former soldier himself, he couldn’t help but think about those he’d served with who had never come home. Those he was surrounded by here were as much his brothers and sisters as the ones back in Afghanistan had been. A wave of sadness and loss threatened to overwhelm him. Feeling his eyes grow moist, he turned away from his father and took a few deep breaths.