by Brenda Joyce
She stared at him.
"Now," Shoz said.
"Don't shoot," Lucy cried.
Shoz stepped partly into the doorway, saw the man hesitating with his gun cocked, and threw his knife, before his opponent could even fire. He took him in the heart and the man fell with a gasp, the gun dropping to the floor. Shoz grabbed Lucy, wheeled her in, shut and locked the door, and propelled her to the glass doors on the far wall. Lucy was shaking. On the way to the balcony, he pulled the knife from the dead man's chest, wiped it front and back on the man's pants, and stuck it back in his belt. Except for Lucy's cry, they hadn't made a sound.
"I'm going to throw up," Lucy gasped.
"No you're not," Shoz said, pushing her against the wall. He stared outside while beside him, she wretched dryly.
Were there men out back? Shoz peered through the win¬dow carefully at the back gardens and didn't see anyone. It was too fortunate to be possible. He searched the area again, and was certain this time that no one was within it. They could use the balcony to drop to the ground. The livery, was only a short distance away, and once they were across the lawn, the trees would provide cover. There was only one other open stretch, the path between the hotel and livery, which was directly across from the alley where Rathe Bragg was hidden.
"Now what?" Lucy whispered.
"We're jumping," he said grimly, wrapping his arm around her waist and pushing them both out of glass doors before she could protest. Instantly they froze against the glass, directly under the overhanging edge of the roof. Shoz thought he had heard something—from the roof above.
Shoz listened. He heard nothing. He kept listening. Lucy was breathing harshly, distracting him, and in his hold, she shook. After more intent concentration, he was rewarded with the sound of a broken piece of tile skittering over the edge of the roof and falling to the ground below—from almost directly above them.
There was someone on the roof.
Lucy had heard it, too, and she was frozen in his embrace, her gaze cast up at the dark overhang above their heads.
Abruptly Shoz reached inside the doors to lock them from within, then pulled them closed. Now they were locked outside on the balcony—and just in case Lucy had second thoughts, she was temporarily contained. "Don't move," he whispered in her ear. He lifted her chin. "Are you going to scream?"
Her eyes went wide with surprise and outrage.
It was on the tip of his tongue to tell her that it was her family out there, stalking him, stalking them, to test her. He didn't.
Shoz went to the left edge of the balcony, climbed over the railing, then leapt for the adjacent terrace. Five feet were between the two and he made it easily. Staying away from the glass doors, just in case someone was inside, he climbed onto the railing, pressed against the building, clawing it for grip. He had to hunch down so he would fit beneath the overhang of the roof. He listened and heard the guard above him walking away. Which meant that his back was turned.
Quick as a cat, Shoz gripped the roof's edge and hurled himself up. Tiles broke and slid. He was on his hands and knees when the agent turned and saw him. Shoz reached for his knife; the agent lifted his rifle. Shoz threw his blade while the man cocked his gun. Shoz was faster. His target dropped.
On his hands and knees, keeping purposefully low, Shoz scrambled for the man, because he had not a doubt that he would need his knife again. The man was still alive. Shoz retrieved the knife, waiting for shouts to erupt from the street below. If someone had been watching their partner and seen him fall...
But no shouts came. The cards had turned. On this hand, so far, luck was riding him like a winner.
He re-joined Lucy on the balcony. Her eyes were frightened, questioning. He grabbed her arm. "Sorry," he said, hustling her to the edge of the balcony. "Bend your knees, drop, and roll."
She stiffened when she realized what he was doing, and when he lifted her over the railing, she cried out. "Shoz! No, please!"
His heart went tight—he didn't want her hurt. "Bend your knees and roll when you hit the ground, Lucy," he ordered, lowering her as far as he could. His arms felt like they were being ripped out of his sockets. He let her go.
She landed and went down and lay still. He was over the railing and hanging from the balcony with the speed of a cat burglar. He landed hard, winced, and rolled, came up on all fours and scrambled to her. "Are you okay?" he asked huskily, lifting her to a sitting position.
"Yes," she gasped. Then her eyes darkened. "You bastard!"
He got up, dragging her with him.
"You could have warned me."
There was no time to argue. He had expected her to be madder than a hornet for heaving her over the second-story balcony. He grabbed her arm and they ran hard across the lawn to the safety of some trees at the edge of the hotel's property. To their right, if they peered past the trunks, they would see the main street, just a hundred feet away. A dirt alley that bisected the main street lay at their feet, and directly across it was the livery and their horses.
To their right was also Rathe Bragg, hidden between the bank and post office, just on the other side of the main street, with the rest of his family and all the Pinkertons they had hired undoubtedly staking out the hotel and the entire town. Shoz dared to look and saw no one and nothing on the broad thoroughfare, except for a passing dray. The tim-ing could not be better; the dray would shield them from her father's—and any cohort's—view. "Let's go!"
Shoz and Lucy ran across the short distance of the road into the stable. A boy was forking hay. Shoz didn't wait; he was already grabbing one of their saddles from the tack room and barking at the boy to grab the other one. The boy obeyed with alacrity and no small amount of curiosity. Three minutes later, their horses were tacked and ready.
Shoz shoved money into the boy's hand as Lucy mounted. He also yanked the kid's beaten hat from his head and jammed it on. Shoz grabbed Lucy's reins. "You won't need these," he said, his gaze lancing her. Why couldn't he trust her? She was his wife. She loved him. But he was afraid she would see her father and change her mind.
She was affronted. "I can ride better if—"
"Forget it."
With that, he spurred his mount forward, and they came out of the barn at a fast walk. They were going to have to!
run for it sooner or later, but if they could get out of town disguised as they were, they might have a chance to escape. Shoz was tempted to cut across the back garden, but had no doubt that the livery was being watched—that they were being watched—and it would be damn suspicious. Instead, they would try to ride sedately out of town right under the Braggs' collective noses, hoping that they would not be identified.
They walked up the alley toward the main street. Shoz sat slouched low with the kid's hat hiding his face. Lucy looked like a gangly boy in his jacket and Stetson—or so he prayed. They stepped onto the main street, the bank and post office directly across from them—as was the alley where Rathe Bragg hid. Sweat drenched Shoz's body. He could feel their unseen eyes. Would her father recognize her? Recognize him? He waited for the searing pain of a bullet, but it did not come.
Nothing happened. The seconds slowly ticked by. They turned left. Their horses, sensing their riders' tension, moved with tight, coiled energy, fighting the hold and the pace Shoz kept. Lucy rode on Shoz's left, away from the north side of the street, where her father lay in wait. They rode knee to knee. Shoz muttered to her to keep her head down. She obeyed. Ahead of them lay open country, but beyond that were the mountains, which offered them their only hope.
If they could walk undetected out of town, they just might make it.
In the alley, Rathe squatted behind a barrel, squinting at the riders passing practically in front of him. He was impatient; he wanted them to get out of his line of vision, so he could watch the hotel where Shoz Cooper and Lucy had aroom. Behind him, Nick said, "Why is that rider sweating like a pig at high noon when it's still so cool out?"
The two riders were past them now, and Rathe and
Nick edged around the corner of the bank to watch the rumps of their horses. Nick was right, the rider was sweating like a pig. Something else struck a discordant note: their mounts were tense and collected as if ready to gallop at the drop of a hat. Rathe looked at the boy, frowning because something was familiar. A flash of pale skin drew his attention-and he saw the bare heels of his feet.
Nobody went with bare feet.
Such tiny bare feet, even for an adolescent boy.
But not for a girl.
He jumped up, aiming his rifle very, very carefully. "What are you doing!" Nick cried.
"It's them," Rathe said very calmly, and he fired.
Shoz heard the gun's retort at the same time that he fell the bullet strike his neck. Lucy screamed. He was already spurring his horse into a gallop as blood poured from the wound. They raced out of town.
He rode bent for hell. He ignored the searing pain, the sticky wetness of his shirt on his shoulder. He ignored Lucy, who was shouting at him. If he was going to die, he would die, but until that moment, he'd ride for freedom, giving it all he was worth. They raised a cloud of dust as they galloped past the last houses in Matamoros. Then they heard the thunder rumbling behind them.
The mountains were hours away. But if they could outride their enemy, they would make the foothills sooner, where! they might be able to get lost. The problem was, at this pace, they would kill their mounts quickly.
"Oh my God," Lucy cried, looking over her shoulder. "Shoz, we have to stop! God, you're bleeding..."
The pain in his neck had reduced itself to a stinging numbness. He knew exactly how many men were following him, because Fernando had told him how many men the Braggs' had invaded Casitas with. But the noise the Braggs's private army made was deafening, and he had to look back, to see a small army in hot pursuit.
He had a bad feeling.
Like his luck had just run out.
After a few miles, their horses began to tire. Shoz was feeling a bit dizzy from the loss of blood. Yet if they could make it another couple of miles, there were gorges they could enter and disappear into, at least slowing down their enemy. They had to make it. He spurred his mount on.
Another mile passed. As their own mounts flagged, so did those behind them. Lucy was screaming at him again, screaming that they had to stop. Shoz twisted and saw that the gap between them and the Braggs had remained the same. There was hope after all.
"We'll never make it," Lucy cried. "There's blood all over your shirt. Please!"
"We'll make it," he gritted.
He spoke too soon. Weak and dizzy, he failed to ride his mount at that breakneck speed as he should. When his mount stumbled slightly, exhausted, Shoz lost his balance. He felt the courageous animal buckling as if time had slowed. Somehow he jumped free of the horse before it hit the dirt and crushed one of his legs. Still holding Lucy's reins, he was dragged a few yards before her horse came to a terrified, blowing halt.
He got to his feet and lunged for her mount, to leap up behind her and push on. But he was weak and not as fast as he should have been. Lucy had already slid off and was screaming and running to him.
"Get back on," he shouted hoarsely, through the thick, choking dust.
"We have to stop," Lucy screamed, pushing at him, preventing him from getting to her mount. He saw that she was crying. Of course she wanted to stop. She had to have seen her family. New pain seared him, and it wasn't completely physical.
She was crying incoherently about the blood. Shoz grabbed her and dragged her toward the quivering horse while she fought him every step of the way. The mount shied and backed away. Lucy suddenly dug in her heels and slapped him hard across the face.
He was stunned for a moment, stunned and dizzy, while the thundering of the Pinkerton army grew louder and louder, coming closer and closer. "You're going to die, you bastard," she was shouting, sobbing.
He let go of the reins, and the gelding jumped away. It was too late, the cavalry of riders was drumming down on them, but she wasn't right, he wasn't going to die, not if he could help it.
The hundred riders came to a halt, surrounding them.
The dust cloud enveloped them. They could not see through it, and their world was reduced to one of sounds: the horses blowing and stomping, saddles creaking and groaning, bits jangling, Lucy's sobs. A hundred rifles were cocked almost simultaneously. The dust settled.
He looked up to face the most formidable foe he had ever had, a hundred Pinkertons and the Braggs. Everyone sat motionless on their mounts looking down upon them, with a hundred rifles aimed at his heart. Shoz was determined not to collapse, but he was dizzy and he swayed, while Lucy sank to the ground, weeping at his feet. It was over.
It was finally, irrevocably, over.
PART THREE
HEAVEN AND HELL
HAVANA, CUBA
Chapter 36
Near Havana, December 1897
The coal-burning freighter moved north out of Havana Bay before heading east toward the Straits of Florida. The sky was a delicate shade of azure blue, the waters of the Caribbean translucent and nearly turquoise. The freighter chugged gently through the bay, leaving a single cloud of black smoke in its wake. Behind the ship, Cuba grew smaller with every passing moment; her tropical palms waving above pearl-white beaches; green, jagged mountains rising above the thick, lush jungles; the scene peaceful, picturesque, idyllic. The vessel's sole passenger was unaffected, standing easily on the deck near the railing, for he only looked forward, never back.
Shoz stood with his legs apart and rode the ship's rhythmic lurching as if he'd been born to it. He'd been in the Caribbean long enough to be indifferent to the vista he was leaving behind him, but not long enough to be indifferent to the suffering he was also leaving behind. Shoz lifted his face to the hot sun and let the light drench him. The warm feel of it could not erase the images he would probably associate forever with Havana. Nothing could erase those images. The sickness and starvation, the death and dying. Emaciated children begging for food beside piles of corpses. Their mothers grabbing pitifully at his clothes, begging for something, anything, as he passed by. But Shoz had long ago given away his last dollar.
When he had agreed to take weapons to the rebels in Cuba, he had never expected to find such tragedy, nor had he anticipated becoming so involved. Yet no one could spend any length of time in Cuba and remain neutral, not when faced with this enormous conflict and with the poignant suffering. But even had he known, he would have come anyway. They hadn't given him any choice.
And just the reminder of those few days after he'd been captured outside of Matamoros brought another image to his mind, one that still came too easily and too frequently, one that even the horrors of a revolution could not erase, one with red hair and blue eyes. He still hated her. No matter that she had knuckled under to her family, and he could well imagine the pressure they had exerted upon her. If she had really loved him—if their marriage hadn't been some rich girl's whim—she would have never signed those divorce papers. He would never forgive her, and he would never forget.
He had arrived in Havana four months ago. As he'd agreed, he had transported the guns directly to Cuba. The rebels did not question his mercenary motives or his claim that the U.S. authorities were too close for comfort and he needed a temporary change of venue. As it was, they had been having trouble recently with the Spanish blockade, and welcomed placing the burden of running it on Shoz's shoulders.
General Valeriano Weyler y Nicolau had also just arrived from Spain, with the goal of crushing the uprising. The rebels wanted independence; Weyler was determined to reestablish Spain's stranglehold upon the island and was ruthlessly using all the means at his disposal. The rebels were nervous and wary, with good cause. They insisted he deliver the guns to one of their hideouts, and gave him four men to aid him. Shoz delivered the shipment to a working plantation a few miles from Havana, which was used as a base by the rebels. There they were stormed by the Spanish, and Shoz found himself in
the midst of the fighting. The rebels succeeded in defending their position and escaping into the hills, Shoz with them. Running away with the rebels was a matter of survival.
Since Shoz's real purpose in coming to Cuba was to spy, once he was ensconced within the rebel army deep in the hills of Havana province, he stayed there. Soon he was an accepted leader. Most of the rebels were farmers, and the need for skilled leadership was crucial. The war consisted of continuous guerrilla engagements and sabotage, the one side against the other, striking as frequently and destructively as possible. Neither side offered any mercy to the other. Civilian casualties were careless and atrocious. Shoz tried to avoid all engagements that would hurt the innocent, and concentrated his band of rebels in attacks he deemed to be most damaging and effective: on the supply lines of the Spanish troops and on the corrupt government itself.
Shoz was hardened; he had endured the hell of the past months and seen the worst anyone could see. Yet his stomach turned over just from the memories. He was keenly aware that McKinley was negotiating with Spain for a cessation of hostilities, Cuban independence, and reparations. Shoz was certain that McKinley would never come to terms with Spain, for the situation in Cuba had escalated dangerously. There were now more than two hundred thousand Spanish troops in Cuba, and that kind of buildup meant that Spain's recent assurances to McKinley in the negotiations were all lies. Spain had said it would grant autonomy, but if she was building up such a massive army, she was intending a final and decisive assault on the rebels, one that would crush them into oblivion. Shoz had been called to Washington to report in person, and he had the numbers to back up his convictions.
The freighter chugged into the straits. Shoz stared ahead at the blue-green sea. In another couple of hours he would be able to make out the Florida Keys. Something inside him clenched up tight.
And he wasn't thinking of Washington, oh no. He was thinking of New York.