Chapter
Forty-six
“YOU ABOUT PACKED?” Kerry came out to find Dar busy at her laptop. “Dar?”
“Mmm?” Dar looked up. “Oh, yeah, almost.” She nodded.
A knock rattled on the door in a familiar rhythm. “That’s Dad.” Dar chuckled, going over and opening the door, and stepping back to allow her parents to enter. “Just about ready to leave?”
Andy carried both their bags and now he ambled over and took possession of Dar and Kerry’s as well.
“Hey!” Dar put her hands on her hips. “I’m capable of carrying a couple of bags.”
“Don’t bother.” Her mother waved her off. “I’ve tried that. He’s just in a feisty mood today or something.”
Dar shook her head and finished packing up her computer. “Fine, fine. Let’s just get the hell out of here. I hear a conch fritter calling my name.”
“Wait.” Kerry smiled, pulling out her camera. “I want a picture.” She waved them together. “C’mon.” She waited for Andrew to shed his burden, then join his wife and daughter in front of the window. Light poured in the other side of the room, and Kerry smiled as she focused her shot, shifting the lens slightly to frame her subjects. Andrew had taken the center and put an arm around the women on either side of him. Ceci, of course, was almost dwarfed by his height, but she leaned against him with a warm sense of familiarity. Dar had amiably wrapped her arm around her father’s back and looked at the camera with her usual air of wry self deprecation. “Perfect.” She snapped the shot, then lowered the camera. “Thanks.” She grinned at Ceci.
“Just you wait until you see what I have in mind for revenge,” the older woman warned, smiling back. They gathered their things, slipped out the door, and managed to achieve the freight elevator without much trouble. They got to the bottom floor and were about the leave, when Dar heard her name called. “Damn.” She turned. “Yes, Hamilton?”
The tall, urbane lawyer caught them up, and ushered them into a small antechamber, out of sight of the press. “Where do you all think you are going?”
“Home,” Dar replied. “Why?”
Eye of the Storm 427
“Not yet you can’t,” Hamilton told her blithely. “This afternoon you have to be here so the mayor, bless his heart, can give you both a pair of shiny little old medals.” He waggled two fingers at Dar and Andy. “Now Dar, don’t give me a hard time with this, it’s great PR for the company and ah’ve got two choice interviews set up, not long ones, with some very top news personalities.”
“Son of a bitch,” Dar reacted.
“Now, now. Flattery will get you nowhere, Paladar,” Hamilton informed her. “Just sit your butt down and make us look good, and it’ll be over sooner than you think.” He patted her shoulder. “Ah’ve been working real hard to get us some very positive press and have painted you as just below an archangel, so don’t mess my garden up, hear?”
“Hamilton, I am going to kill you,” Dar told him, seriously. “I have tickets on the one p.m. flight out of here.”
“Phone call will take care of that for you, so just you relax.” The lawyer chuckled. “C’mon now. How often do you get to get up on TV and get a medal pinned on you?” He glanced at his watch. “Let’s duck into the Batmobile. We’ve got an hour or two before the first TV spot. Wait here.
I’ll find a good way out.” He ducked out the door, leaving them staring at each other.
“I am not going to stand here for—” Dar started in, her voice rising, as Kerry put a hand on her arm.
“Dar,” Andrew spoke very quietly, making his daughter fall silent,
“ah have a box of medals for killing folks. Ah think I’d like just one for saving ’em.”
You could have heard a pin drop easily in the silence that followed, Kerry mused, just like that old cliché.
“Okay,” Dar replied in a subdued voice. She walked over to a bench near the door and sat down to wait, letting her briefcase rest on the floor.
Ceci walked over and sat down next to her, but didn’t speak. Kerry just stood next to Andrew, cradling her arm, unable to come up with a thing to say.
DAR SQUINTED, SHADING her eyes as the bright lights invaded what Hamilton had insisted on dubbing the Batmobile. Technicians bustled around, moving cables and arranging cameras, and the interviewer was off to one side, going over some notes with two assistants. It was cramped inside the bus, but it was private, and the news people appreciated the closed environment and ready access to phones, power, and a fax machine.
Kerry was curled up in one of the leather chairs nearby just watching and Dar’s parents had taken over the long couch, also reviewing the chaos with interested eyes as though it had been arranged for their benefit.
Hamilton had wanted Dar to dress up, but she had put her foot down, refusing to force her still tired and aching body into a wool skirt 428 Melissa Good and blazer, not to mention heels. She stubbornly insisted on her faded jeans and sneakers and had grudgingly agreed to wear her gunmetal gray jacket over her plain white T-shirt as her only concession.
A makeup person approached, carrying a case. Dar glared at her until she slowed down, pausing hesitantly outside her reach and giving her an overly bright smile. “Hi.” The woman was of middling height and athletic build, with wavy blonde hair not very different from Kerry’s.
Dar strategically lifted an eyebrow. “Got a problem?”
“Well, I thought you might like some powder…or…something…eye shadow?”
“No thanks,” Dar replied. “I’m allergic.”
“Oh.” The makeup woman smiled easily. “It’s hypoallergenic. It’s safe, really. I mean, you don’t need any blush or anything, maybe just a little color…fluff your hair?”
Dar’s nostrils twitched and she rotated an eyeball over to where Kerry was biting her knuckle to keep from laughing. “Can you make my hair look like hers?” She indicated her lover’s wavy locks.
“Um, no. I don’t think so.” The woman eyed Kerry apologetically.
“Then forget it.” Dar settled back, sipping her root beer. “I’m just fine as is, thanks.” She glanced up as the interviewer came over and settled down in the chair next to her.
Cheryl Abramson was tall, almost as tall as Dar herself, and slender, with exotic, high cheekbones and rich chestnut hair. She had a tiny spattering of freckles and intense hazel eyes, which she turned on Dar along with a dazzling smile. She wore a meticulously tailored navy blue suit, with a pale blue silk shirt, and the effect was clean and sophisticated and quite attractive.
“Ms. Roberts? Let’s go over a few things before we start.” Abramson spoke in a low, melodious voice. “I have most of the details I need on you, but I want to just check a few things.”
Dar leaned on the chair arm and sucked at her straw. “Sure.” She deliberately injected a touch of the South into her speech. “What would you like to know?” The other woman glanced up at her and unconsciously straightened, a hand going up to touch her hair in an instinctive gesture Dar well understood. Interesting.
“Well, we’ve got your professional details—ILS provided them to us.
You’ve been with them for fifteen years?” Her voice lifted in question and she peered over her papers at Dar’s youthful appearance.
“That’s right.” Dar didn’t see any reason to relieve her confusion.
“Okay.” Abramson went back to her checklist. “You’ve been the CIO
of the company for…six months? And before that you were the VP of Operations for three years, is that right?”
“Yep,” Dar agreed readily.
“Right. You normally work in Miami, correct?”
Dar nodded.
“And you were in Washington for…” She looked up in question.
Why indeed? Kerry and Dar had discussed what they were going to Eye of the Storm 429
tell the press, who had been sniffing interestedly around Kerry as well, and now Dar stretched her legs out, crossing them at the ankles before she answered. “My co-worker, and friend, Ms. Stuart, was called to testify in her father’s hearings. I was just here for moral support.” Strict, absolute truth.
Abramson glanced at Kerry who had slumped in her chair, curling a leg over one arm of it and dozing off. “I see.” She scribbled a note.
“You’re headed back to Miami now, I take it, after the ceremony?”
Dar nodded.
“Okay.” Cheryl scribbled more notes. “Let me make sure I’ve got this down. You arrived. You were involved in the ATM shutdown, you were interviewed by one of my colleagues, you went to the hospital to visit Ms.
Stuart’s sister, the explosion happened, you dug out some survivors, you directed the escape and rescue of the people you found, then you got out…are those the high points of your week?” Her tone was dryly humorous.
“Essentially.” Dar chuckled, finding herself liking the woman. “We were hoping for a short investigation, a few days sightseeing, and maybe a tour of the White House, but you take what you can get.” Her face relaxed into an easy grin.
Cheryl looked up and met her eyes, then went back to her writing, the edges of her own lips twitching a little. “Do you have any idea who did it?”
“No,” Dar answered. “I leave that to the police.”
“Do you think the senator was the target?”
Dar shook her head. “Again, that’s not something I want to speculate on.”
“Okay.” Abramson nodded at the cameraman. “We’re ready. Do you have a good angle?” She shifted in her chair and motioned the makeup woman over, checking herself in the hastily provided hand held mirror.
The makeup woman took out a rotary brush and carefully fluffed the anchorwoman’s bangs, then backed off to study her work. “You want highlighter?”
Cheryl peered at her reflection, then took a sideways glance at Dar, who ran her fingers through her dark locks, settling them in sort of an order, before she folded her hands over her stomach in a waiting attitude.
“No. I’ll be fine.” She nudged the makeup woman out of the way and carefully arranged herself, posing with her pad in Interviewer Position A.
“Ready?”
Dar cocked her head. “Whenever you are.”
“WELL, DAR, I have to admit, you do one hell of an interview,”
Hamilton complimented. “You were made for the camera. Now, just one more little jaunt up on to that stage out there and you can get on your little plane and make tracks for the Sunshine State.”
“Great.” Dar exhaled, wishing she had half a bottle of aspirin at her 430 Melissa Good fingertips. “Dad, you ready?”
“Dar, do you think you could put on a collared shirt? You look like a beach bum,” Hamilton complained.
“No.” Blue eyes pierced him. “One more comment like that and I’ll pick up the damn thing in my sports bra.”
The lawyer tapped a long finger against his teeth. “Hmm. Be good, Hamilton, be good.”
Andrew walked over and laid a hand on his daughter’s shoulder.
“Ah think she looks just fine,” he said. “Leave her be.”
“Or?” Hamilton inquired archly. “I have to know what the conse-quences are of giving up my favorite entertainment.”
Andrew blinked at him. “Or I will take hold of them parts that makes you a man and pull them up out your eardrums,” he rasped seriously.
Dar watched Hamilton’s face with interest, knowing the level of unflappability the corporate legal chief possessed. Certainly, she’d never been able to put a dent in it. Hamilton eyed the taller, burlier Andrew, then shifted his eyes to Dar.
“You know, Dar. I always knew I’d find something to redeem you in my eyes. I just never expected it to be that you had a proper Southern daddy.” He inclined his head towards Andy. “My pardon, sir. I’ll leave her be.” He wandered over to the bar and poured himself a drink, chuckling under his breath.
Dar paced across to the window of the bus, leaned her arms on the wall and tried to stretch her tense back out. The long interview with charming Cheryl had made her stiffen up and she just wanted to get the ceremony over and leave. Kerry was curled up in a corner of the couch, the painkillers she’d been taking for her shoulder making her very sleepy, and Ceci had settled her coat over the blonde woman’s shoulders and was seated next to her, sketching.
Dar stared out at the gathering crowd, watching the various technicians preparing the platform, putting cameras in place, and setting up microphones. She felt a warm hand on her back and turned to see her father peering over her shoulder.
“You all right, Dardar?”
Dar rubbed her eyes and exhaled. “Got any aspirin?”
“Yeap.” Andrew fished in the small pouch he wore around his waist and removed a bottle. “Gave me this stuff at the hospital, after I got back.
Take care of any kind of headache you can come up with, I’ll tell you that.”
Dar accepted the tablets gratefully, walked over to the bar and poured a glass of water, then swallowed the small pills. “Thanks.” She glanced enviously at Kerry’s dozing form. “How much longer?”
“An hour, Dar.” Hamilton shrugged into his impeccably cut jacket.
“I’m going to go romance the press. I’ll send a runner over when they’re ready.” He ducked out the door and closed it behind him, leaving them in relative peace and quiet. Ceci got up and moved to a different seat, tucking one leg under her as she resettled her pad. She caught Dar’s eye, then Eye of the Storm 431
motioned towards the couch, smiling when her daughter didn’t argue and took the place she’d been sitting in and trying to relax.
Kerry must have sensed her presence, Dar mused, because the blonde woman stirred, reached out a hand and touched Dar, then reversed her position and curled up with her head in Dar’s lap and one arm tucked around her lover’s thigh.
“Aww.” Andrew chuckled.
Dar draped an arm over Kerry’s body and stretched her legs out, then let her head rest on the back of the couch. The pills seemed to be working, she idly mused, as the cramping in her back eased and the throbbing ache in her head subsided. She closed her eyes and breathed a sigh of relief.
The bus was silent for a few minutes then Dar’s mother peeked over her sketch pad and shook her head. “Out like a light.” Ceci laughed softly. “What did you give her?”
Andrew juggled the small bottle, then tossed it to her. “Don’t know, but they put me out, so I figgured they’d work on her too.”
Cecilia reviewed the label. “Muscle relaxant and painkiller.” She looked up at her husband. “Hope they wear off before the ceremony or you’ll be up there by yourself, sailor boy.”
Andrew ambled over and sat down next to her, laced his fingers together and cocked his head at her drawing. “Kid was stiffer than a board. I figured a catnap was a good idea. What is that?”
Ceci tilted the pad. “It’s that platform outside.”
Andy grunted. “It’s empty.”
His wife smiled. “It won’t be for long.”
THE WIND HAD died down, and the late afternoon sun had come out in full force, warmly lighting the platform now decorated with red, white, and blue bunting. Staff had set chairs in place as well, and dignitaries were gathered, networking together and sharing cups of distilled water while the television crews warmed up their equipment.
At last, it was time and everyone took their seats. Kerry tucked her feet under her in the somewhat uncomfortable chair in the front row of the audience and fastened her eyes on the two figures at one end of the platform’s plusher chairs.
Andrew was seated with military erectness, even though he was dressed in dark blue denims and one of his hooded sweatshirts instead of a uniform. His hands were folded in his lap and he faced forward, but his eyes flicked everywhere, watching the crowd, the dignitaries, and the security officers.
Dar looked… Kerry sighed. Her beloved friend looked like she’d just woken up, a fair statement since she practically had, and her eyes had a faintly dazed look about them as she peered around idly. “I think Dar’s toast.”
“Mmm,” Ceci agreed wryly. “I told Andy he shouldn’t have given her two of those pills. He takes them, but he forgets he’s twice her size.”
432 Melissa Good She sighed. “Poor kid.”
“Well,” Kerry analyzed, “at least she’s not nervous.” She casually turned her head and reviewed the crowd, unsurprised, but disappointed not to see her family there.
The television crew gave a signal and the mayor stepped up to the microphone and cleared his throat self-importantly. “Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for joining me here on the Mall for a celebration of gratitude to people, ordinary people, who risked their lives to save the lives of their fellow men.”
The crowd applauded wildly.
He thanked the police next, and the firefighters, and gave out a plaque to the fire company who had rescued them from the building.
Kerry smiled at that, glad to see they’d gotten some recognition. Then the mayor made a long, somewhat boring speech about how terrorists only succeeded when they inspired terror.
“Duh,” Ceci and Kerry managed to say at the same time.
And that the city would never bow to that kind of pressure, being the capital of the land of the brave, and all that patriotic stuff. Kerry, having heard political speeches all her life, tuned most of it out. She knew the mayor was up for re-election this year and most of the speech was directed more towards raising his polls than celebrating heroes.
At last, it was over, and he cleared his throat, carefully arranging two velvet cases resting on the podium.
Ceci nudged Kerry, spotting a familiar figure making his way towards the mayor. “Hey.”
Kerry was very surprised to see her father there. “What on earth is he doing?”
Roger Stuart arrived next to the mayor and straightened his jacket with a smooth motion. The mayor turned and gave him a welcoming smile.
“Senator Stuart has asked, since his was one of the lives affected by the rescue, that he be allowed to present the medals. I am honored to turn the podium over to him.”
“What?” Kerry blurted, almost falling off her chair.
“Shh. Take it easy,” Ceci whispered, as her husband and daughter exchanged identical, startled looks.
Roger Stuart placed his hands on either side of the podium and acknowledged the applause. “Thank you.” He had a low, powerful voice.
“It has been a hard, anxious week for us all.”
Applause.
“But through it, strangers and friends, family and adversaries, have come together to save lives, and push past the normal, everyday disagreements to work together in what was, without doubt, a horrible tragedy.”
“I can’t believe he’s doing this,” Kerry muttered.
“When my wife and I were trapped inside that building, we thought our lives were at an end. Instead, through the courage of the two people Eye of the Storm 433
we’re here to honor today, our lives were saved, along with those of seven helpless children and many others.”
“I think Dar’s going to lose her lunch,” Ceci commented. “I seem to remember that particular look on her face.”
“Oh yeah,” Kerry agreed. “Hope she waits till she’s up there to do that.” Her voice took on an edge of anger. “I can’t believe he’s cheapening this just for his own publicity.”
“Kerry,” Cecilia watched her husband and daughter stand when Stuart called their names, “maybe this is the only way he has of saying thank you, without having to say it.”
Andrew and Dar walked quietly across the platform, their steps slightly hollow on the wooden boards. Dar was a half step behind her father and she stood, her hands braced behind her back in a very military, but very unconscious pose as the gleaming, golden medal was lifted up and settled over Andrew’s close cropped head.
“Good job.” Roger Stuart held a hand out, his eyes meeting Andy’s.
“Thank you, Commander.”
“You’re welcome, Senator,” Andrew replied in a quiet voice. Then he stepped back and glanced to his right, where Dar was waiting.
Stuart was very lucky, Dar considered, that the drugs still in her system put a slightly hazy barrier between herself and her instinct to kick him in the groin. Right there on national TV.
“Ms. Roberts?” Stuart opened the second case and removed the medal. Dar forced herself forward, aware of the camera eyes leering at her greedily, and stood absolutely still as his hands came close to her, lifting above either side of her face to settle the ribbon over her neck.
For a bare instant, their eyes met.
“Good job,” the senator stated flatly. Then his gaze wavered. “Thank you, Dar.”
She was too shocked to even raise an eyebrow.
“And thank you for being such a good friend to my daughter, as well,” the senator finished, as though it were the most natural thing in the world, there on television, and in front of a thousand watchers, as his words echoed softly over the grass.
Into the tense silence, Dar said, “You’re welcome.”
The crowd applauded and stood and cheered. Roger Stuart nodded briskly, lifting a hand and waving it as he turned and walked off the platform.
Andrew retreated in the other direction, holding Dar by the elbow as they headed towards the steps leading down, to a crowd already clustering and press calling questions. “Son of a biscuit,” he uttered under his breath.
Dar merely exhaled.