Authors: Jonathon King
Chapter 29
T
hey were lying on their backs, looking up at a dome of stars that seemed so close you wanted to reach out and poke one. A thick comforter softened the hardwood deck beneath them. Danny was still breathing hard from his exertion and orgasm, but Rae had already recovered. She always wondered why he was the one doing the heavy breathing when she had been on top and doing all the work.
Not that she thought of it as work. She loved making love with him. But she also had her motive. She knew it was selfish, but what the hell, what did one of her high school teachers call her? A great multitasker? Yeah, that was it, two birds with one stone.
She did like the view out here. It kinda grew on you. When they'd started out in the airboat, it had been, yes, exhilarating, the speed and the wind in her face and all the stuff just whizzing by. At one point, Danny leaned down from his driver's seat and aimed out in front with his finger, and when she followed his line, she saw something just sitting on the surface of the water. Just before they came too close, she recognized it as the floating snout of an alligator. She watched with surprise as it whipsawed its tail and dove down just before they came close to clobbering it with the hull of the boat.
It reminded her of shining deer on the roads back home, the animal frozen in the headlights, staring at you with those weird luminous eyes, but most times breaking for the woods when you swerved. But a fucking alligator! Jesus. She'd only seen them on TV when those hick swamp assholes hooked them with baited steel and then head-shot them with shotguns.
It wasn't the only thing that amazed her on this damn trip. After about an hour of buzzing over the watery landscape, Geronimo had extended his long arm and pointed out something in the distance. As they approached, she'd made out a man-made structure low on the horizon. As they came closer, it became a floating collection of buildings and then a raised camp with four distinct cabins all squatting on a flat deck on pilings. It was a little wooden island in the middle of nowhere.
Danny had eased back the throttle, and then took them in slow and docked the airboat against a slanted ramp. When he killed the engine, the sudden lack of both noise and vibration felt like a cone had been pressed over Rae's ears; the sensation kind of stunned her. It was like when you stopped your snowmobile in the middle of the snow-covered woods at night and let the quiet envelop you.
Danny jumped onto the dock and called for one of the lines and tied up the boat. The braves were careful taking the woman off. She'd seemed to have lost her ability to stand on her own, weak and slouched. Geronimo pointed to one of the smaller cabins, and the braves half-dragged her across the big deck and took her inside.
Geronimo had gotten out and stepped up onto the deck and then just stood there, imposingly tall and straight, looking out at the sky and curve of the planet like he was some damn Indian elder in those old anti-littering ads on TV. But Rae knew this Indian wasn't going to have any tears running down his face. She looked at the spot on his back where she'd seen the knife handle and her mind was working, working, working: How the hell would they get out of this goddamn mess?
Rae had watched the big Indian survey the place. After her hearing had recovered, she picked up on the sound of a humming engine in the direction of the smallest cabin at the far end of the deck. Geronimo strode to the opposite end, to the biggest cabin, and without hesitatingâlike he knew it would be unlockedâopened the door and disappeared inside. Either someone was already here, or they'd set it all up for them. They weren't just pulling up on some abandoned place hoping for the best. Rae went over to Danny and, since they were alone, let him have it.
“Did you know about Geronimo's fucking knife?” she hissed as he bent over a cooler someone had loaded onto the boat. She heard the slosh of water and ice as he hefted it up onto the deck.
Danny looked into her face and said, “What? What knife?” and Rae knew he wasn't lying or covering. Although she knew she really didn't have the ability to see the future, she sure as hell knew when a man was lying to her, and Rae knew Danny's every twitch and tell. He was honestly surprised.
“In the small of his backâthat big-ass bowie he carries,” she said. “I saw it when he bent over to lift Ms. Prego out of the trunk.”
She waited for some kind of reaction from Danny, who slid the cooler onto the deck.
“I never saw it when we were at the warehouse.”
“Well, maybe things have changed since we left the warehouse,” Rae said, recognizing the questioning tenseness in her own voice. Again, she awaited a reaction. Danny held to character, not jumping to answer⦠.
“Yeah, well, it ain't going according to plan, that's for sure. But I still want to get us paid, and then we'll get the hell out of here.”
Rae was not so thoughtful in her reactions. Hers came from the gut.
“Uh, Danny, look around. Does it look like we control where we're gonna go to get the hell out of here?”
She was looking at Danny's cheeks and neck this time, but no coloring came to them. He simply nodded back toward the airboat.
“Geronimo could no more handle this thing than he could fly. Unless somebody else shows up, we've got control of the only way out of here.”
She knew then that he, too, had been working on alternatives, had maybe become as wary as she was over this entire screwed-up operation, and had been formulating a plan of his own.
The braves came out of the cabin where they'd stashed the woman and headed across the deck to the big house, gawking at the surroundings. For the first time, Rae saw them whispering to each other. The code of silence might indeed be dead, but she and Danny ended their conversation and followed them.
Geronimo had gone weird and maybe Rae could see why. Inside the big cabin, the place was laid out like one of those huge private bungalows up at the Grand Traverse Resort and Spa. It was all done in some kind of polished pinewood: a kitchen with an island bar and stools on one side and then an open living area with big stuffed chairs and couches all done in muted green material. On end tables were what looked like hand-carved statuettes of Indians with waist-length coats and beaded necklaces and others standing up in narrow canoes with long poles in their hands. But the showcase was the western wall made of smoked, floor-to-ceiling glass with a view of the Everglades, its expanse reaching out to the end of the damn earth.
Geronimo was standing in the middle of the big room, silhouetted by the light from the huge window, staring at a large tapestry hanging over a stone fireplace on the eastern wall. The tapestry was made of some kind of woven cloth interspersed with strings of colored beads. The big Indian was stock-still, his thick hands clasped behind him, forearms encircling the spot Rae knew held the knife. If he was seeing something in the wall art that mesmerized him, it was beyond her. Yeah, it was pretty cool; the colors were bright and pure and interesting, but snap out of it, dude.
The braves wandered around, first opening the refrigerator and smiling at its contents. Rae noticed the light come on when they opened the door
â
electrical generator, she thought. That's what she heard coming from the smallest cabin. Mike Pierce's dad had one at his hunting cabin in the Upper Peninsula, where a bunch of kids from high school went after graduation just to party. Full electric, water heater, and everythingâreally roughing it.
The braves started going through the cupboards, probing like little kids in a candy store.
Finally, Geronimo seemed to snap out of his trance and turned to her and said, “Squaw, make us something to eat.”
Rae looked at Danny and he looked back, awaiting her eruption at being ordered in such a way. He squared his feet in order to react, especially now that he knew Geronimo was armed. But Rae gave him a little nod⦠.
“No problem, Big Chief, what's your pleasure? A little alligator tail and some palm salad?”
Geronimo just gestured toward the kitchen.
“OK, Big Man, just let the little woman see what she can rustle up for you all.”
Rae had been in enough restaurant kitchens to know her way around. She'd fended for herself since she was a child, cooking meals in her mom's little trailer. Not a big deal as long as you had the goods. As she rooted through the fridge, she found that the place was loaded: steaks, hamburger, peeled shrimp, pre-made salads, French bread, eggs, and butter. It conjured up a menu for anyone from anywhere. There was some mystery meat that might indeed have been alligator tail and some raw fish that she didn't recognize. But she stayed with what she knew and put together a dinner that the CEO of any Fortune 500 company would have loved. And while the Indians weren't looking, she spit in every dish she served them.
Those trips to the restaurant kitchens had taught her more than culinary arts.
Twice during the preparation and serving, Rae sent a plate of scrambled eggs with Danny out to the cabin where the woman was still locked up. Geronimo didn't question it. But Danny came back both times saying the woman was still out.
“I checked her breathing, Rae. She isn't dead, just sleeping.”
“Did you try to give her water?”
“Yeah, I tried. It just dribbled off her lips, and she fussed a little but never opened her eyes.”
“How do you know she didn't open her eyes?”
In a voice loud enough for everyone in the big cabin to hear, Danny said: “I took the damn hood off. It's fucking stupid to keep that thing on out here. What's she gonna see?”
Geronimo looked up from his steak for a second, but then continued eating without comment. Rae and Danny exchanged glances.
After the meal, which Rae had to admit was pretty damn good, all had withdrawn to their own corners of the wooden island as night settled in. Geronimo lorded over the big cabin, and the braves staked out the other cabin, a bunkhouse of sorts. Danny and Rae simply took some comforters and made up a nest on the dock where they dozed and made love in the cool open air and rehashed their situation in whispered voices.
“Should we just make a break for it?” Danny asked her. “I know I can get that boat started and get it moving. And in the dark, even Geronimo's not gonna throw a knife in our backs.”
“And you know where the hell we are and how to get back to the road?” Rae said.
Danny hesitated. “Maybe.”
Rae knew the difference between Danny knowing and maybe knowing.
“How much gas is in it? How long is it gonna run and how long if we get fucking lost in the dark?”
“We just get away and then shut it down and wait until daylight and figure from there.”
“Ha,” Rae barked sarcastically. “On the way out here, did you see any damn thing different from east to west to north to south?”
“No, but the sun rises in the east, Rae, so we go from there.”
They were quiet for a while and then Rae rolled into him, wrapping one leg around his, and felt the warmth and knew he felt it, too.
“So we just run away with nothing?” she said. “Everything they asked us to do, we did. Don't you want to get what they promised us?”
“Ten thousand might not be worth all this.”
“I'm thinking you're right. Hell, fifty each ain't enough for kidnapping a damn federal judge.”
There. She'd spilled it, and now she had to wait for Danny's reaction, which wasn't nearly as slow in coming as it usually was.
“You're still thinking she's a judge?”
“She told me.”
“And since when do you believe anybody, Rae? Maybe she just said that to make you scared.”
“I checked,” she said, going deeper into it now.
“What do you mean, you checked?”
“With Kelsey.”
Danny's legs cinched up, squeezing hers, and then he rolled away. It was hard to check his eyes with only starlight to see by, but she knew anger would be there.
“Rae, Christ! You've got your damn cell phone? Geronimo will go fucking nuts if he finds out. You were supposed to leave all that shit back at the airport locker.”
This time, she held on to her own response, letting the moment of her truth-telling pass.
“He hasn't found it yet and he isn't going to.”
She'd told Danny of her hiding place before. He'd actually blanched and raised his eyebrow the way he did when he thought people were bullshitting him. But it was Danny who'd told her the stories of the prison work camp in Grayling where both the inmates and their women visitors hid packets of drugs and other contraband in their body cavities. He even told her of one woman who smuggled in a single-shot zip gun and ammunition that way. She hadn't believed him, but experimented and found out, yes, it was possible.
“So who the hell you been talking to, Rae, besides Kelseyâthe fucking FBI?”
She let that go also. Danny knew she didn't like it when he was a smart-ass to her. She also knew he'd be contrite about it if she let him. After a few moments, she said: “I only texted her.”
“Rae, they can track a text just as easy as a conversation.”