I was too scared even to scream.
“Indy.” I heard Lee’s voice in my ear and didn’t realize I’d put the cell there.
“Yeah?” I replied, sounding calmer than I actually was.
“Bump him again, girl,” Tex encouraged.
“Where the fuck are you?” Lee, on the other hand, didn’t sound calm.
Another cop car going north screeched to a halt and swung a uie. I looked behind us and we had three squad cars trailing us now, their sirens blaring and lights rolling. It looked like other cars were back there too, members of the chase, and one of them looked a whole lot like Lee’s Crossfire.
I turned back forward and answered Lee.
“We saw Pepper Rick so we’re following him. Going south on Broadway.”
A car shot passed us, looking like it had Terry Wilcox’s goons in it. It jerked in front of Pepper Rick and slammed on its brakes. Everyone behind it, including us, slammed on their brakes and went into evasive maneuvering. Ally’s Mustang did a couple more sickening lurches and then we all accelerated, Pepper Rick and Coxy’s boys jockeying for position in front of us like they were on a NASCAR track. Thankfully everyone on Broadway was pulling well over because of the squad car posse behind us.
“Pull over,” I heard Lee demand in my ear.
“She won’t listen to me,” I told Lee. “She and Tex are on a mission.”
“Indy, tell Ally to pull… the fuck… over,” Lee repeated.
“Ally,” I said, “Lee wants you to pull over.”
“I can’t,” Ally returned. “I can’t do it. He’s not gonna get away. He shot at you.”
It was then I lost my mind, pulled the phone from my ear and screeched, “Pull over, God dammit!”
We were well into Englewood when a squad car came up beside us, Willie Moses at the wheel. I saw Brian Bond sitting in the passenger seat doing hand gestures at us, his face a mask of disbelieving fury. Ally turned her head to look at him and lost control of the Mustang.
We pitched right then left, nearly side-swiping Willie and Brian. Willie avoided us, shot forward and then we bounded across the median, cars coming the other way swerving and blaring their horns.
With incredible luck, we careened into an old, unused lot, knocked down a chain link fence, driving over it and then coming to a smashing, bone-jarring halt when we slammed into a concrete slab.
Chapter Fourteen
Was He Makin’ A Call?
Upon impact, the airbags blew out.
I sat in a daze for a few seconds, my mind automatically doing a body inventory to assess any damage. When I realized that I was okay, I pulled back from the airbag and asked, “Everyone all right?”
Ally mumbled something, there was a grumble from the backseat and my door was wrenched open.
I saw a penknife puncture the bag, which deflated immediately. A hand was at my chest to hold me back against the seat so I didn’t crumple forward with the loss of the airbag. Not that my seatbelt was going to let me go anywhere, it had contracted on impact and my chest was killing me. Lee was crouched in the door beside me.
“You okay?” he asked, though he was finding out for himself, his hands running along my limbs, his eyes doing a body scan, searching for blood or bones protruding through my skin. In the lights illuminating the vacant lot, I could see his face was pinched with anger and concern.
Hank was on the other side, Ally’s bag was flat and he was doing the same thing.
“Yeah. I think so,” I told Lee.
“We need to get them free of the car,” Hank told Lee.
Lee reached across me and undid my buckle. He helped me out and walked me well away from the car toward the street. I used this time to pull my head together, take stock of the new aches and pains coming my way, flip my cell shut and slide it back in my pocket.
Ally and Tex were standing five feet away, Tex stomping his feet for some reason looking like he was doing a war dance without moving his arms. There was a blood stain at the shoulder of his sling. Luckily, that was the only blood on any of us.
I decided in an instant I was going to kill them both.
“You’re both nuts!” I shouted, charging forward, intent on murder or at the very least, maiming. “You could have killed us!”
I’d made it two strides before an arm snagged around my middle, hooking me and jerking me back. I slammed against Lee’s body but still struggled forward, pumping my arms and stamping my feet.
“I can’t believe, cannot believe, you just did that,” I shrieked at Ally “You’re crazy. Totally gonzo! What were you thinking?” I shouted.
“He was gonna get away,” Ally shouted back.
“Who cares!” I screamed.
“I care!” Ally screamed back.
“It wasn’t very smart,” Hank interjected his understatement in an angry voice. In fact, his voice, his face and his body screamed not only anger, but barely controlled fury.
Ally glared at me, her head swung to Hank and then she blew out a breath of pure exasperation.
“He shot at Indy! Twice! He kidnapped her. I’m not gonna let him get away. Give me a fucking break. I’m a Nightingale. If either of you…” she pointed to Hank then to Lee, “were sitting in a car and saw the opportunity, you’d take it without a thought. What? I can’t because I’m a girl?”
Okay, she had a point there.
I stopped struggling to get at her.
“And you,” she pointed to me, “someone did those things to me or your Dad or any of us, and you were behind the wheel of a car and had a chance to nab him, would you even hesitate?”
Hmm, another excellent point.
I bit my lip.
Being caught up in the events of the last several days, I had not stopped to consider how the people I loved, who loved me, felt about everything that was happening.
So I put my foot in the other shoe and the feeling it gave me was overpowering. Tears came up my throat and I swallowed them back.
“Ally, girl,” I whispered.
Ally wasn’t done. “I’m not a badass cop or a badass…” she stared at Lee, “whatever-you-are but if I get the chance to do my bit, I’m gonna do it. I mean, that guy interrupted ‘No More Tears’. Burgundy and Indy were kicking ass up there. Something had to be done!”
“I think you made your point,” Lee said from behind me. His arm was still around me tight.
A car angled into the lot and Dad, Malcolm and Kitty Sue were there.
Malcolm charged out of the car, assessed that his loved ones were breathing and healthy and then roared at Ally, “Tell me you didn’t just participate in a high speed chase!”
“We’ve covered this ground,” Hank said.
Lee let me go and turned me into Dad’s arms. Dad held me and kissed my forehead.
“You okay?” Dad asked.
“Yeah,” I answered.
A squad car angled in and Jorge and Carl were there. Carl shot out of the car, his face angry.
“Have you lost your mind?” he shouted at Ally.
It obviously wasn’t going to be Ally’s night.
Though I had to admit I found it a tad interesting how upset Carl was.
Hmm.
Jorge came out slower, his face set and showing little emotion. He approached Lee, Dad and me.
“I don’t know what’s goin’ on, Nightingale, but you should consider putting Indy in a safe house until it’s over,” Jorge remarked.
Lee made no comment to this. Ally and Carl were shouting at each other and Dad was holding on tight. Lee and Hank started making phone calls, Jorge got out his notebook and we all made statements.
Lee put me in the Crossfire after a wrecker came in to tow Ally’s Mustang. Carl sat in the car, the radio microphone in his hand, calling in a report. Tex was going with Carl and Jorge who were taking him back to the hospital to get re-stitched up. Ally and Hank were catching a ride with Malcolm back to BJ’s to pick up Hank’s SUV.
I waved to everyone as Lee pulled away, heading north on Broadway.
“I don’t want to go into a safe house,” I told Lee.
“You’re in a safe house, the condo’s safe. You just keep leaving it.”
I didn’t like the way he said the second sentence.
“Are you thinking of cuffing me to the bed again?”
He didn’t hesitate. “Yes.”
Great.
“I wouldn’t do that if I were you.”
“Thinkin’ about it isn’t the same as doin’ it. You’re a security challenge. I have to keep you safe while not lowering my chances of gettin’ into your sexy underwear, or, more to the point, gettin’ you out of them.”
I thought it likely that Lee was up to that challenge. At least I hoped so.
“By the way, nice performance back there. I especially liked the part where you kicked the guy in the chest. Class.”
Great.
At least his voice sounded a mixture of amused and admiring.
When we got to the condo, Lee let us in and I told him I had to do the round of calls to make sure everyone was all right.
I stood on the balcony with my phone and without me having to ask, Lee brought me three ibuprofens and a glass of water. He watched as I guzzled them, took the glass and then disappeared.
Holy shit.
He was very good at this togetherness stuff.
I called Tod and Stevie first.
They were home, safe and sound and maybe a little freaked out but not mad at me. At least Tod wasn’t, he was more interested in dissecting our act on stage.
“Girlie, we kicked ass. They were on their feet. They were chanting. We gotta go shopping, we gotta get you some mini-Burgundy outfits. We gotta take this show on the road!”
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