| Return Create A Forum - Home | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| UCC (UMMA) Managers Forum | |
| https://umma.createaforum.com | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| Return to: Rampage Sports | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| #Post#: 3025-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Haunted by the Past - Chapter 29 - Storm Front | |
| By: RampageSports Date: April 7, 2016, 10:12 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Author's Note: The Spenser, Hawk, Susan Silverman, Vinnie Morris | |
| and Ives characters belong to mystery novelist Robert B. Parker. | |
| Mr. Parker is one of my favorite authors, and his work is a | |
| major influence on the the way I write. Whether I even come | |
| close to mimicking his style is open to considerable debate, but | |
| I have chosen to use his characters in this story as something | |
| of an homage. My goal is to handle them as lightly as possible | |
| and to maintain them as Mr. Parker created them. Any failure on | |
| that front is completely my own. | |
| [hr] | |
| Haunted by the Past - Chapter 29 - Storm Front | |
| After an equally relaxing Sunday, we were feeling pretty loose | |
| as we headed for RSI Monday morning. Meghan had the escort | |
| duties, and she was already waiting when we emerged from the | |
| house. | |
| I had the wheel today, and set out along our now-usual route. | |
| With Danni living so close to the RSI facility, we had a number | |
| of options available that all cost about the same amount of | |
| time. We usually chose the coastline approach, which provided | |
| views we both agreed were more picturesque when nature glazed | |
| the scenes with ice than they were in the summertime. | |
| I turned the radio on, pleased to hear the soothing tones of | |
| Phil Collins' You'll Be In My Heart playing. | |
| Danni � who was apparently not as pleased � reached up and | |
| changed the station, finding We're Not Gonna Take It, by Twisted | |
| Sister. | |
| "Don't touch my radio," I said, my voice reflecting my disbelief | |
| that she had even dared to so. | |
| The song she found was fine, but only under certain | |
| circumstances. Those circumstances cannot exist at seven | |
| o'clock in the morning, so I changed the station again. This | |
| time, I came up with Storm Front. | |
| "There," I said. "You can't argue with Billy Joel." | |
| "Hmmm... I don't think so," she said, changing the station | |
| again. | |
| Next thing I knew, Panama by Van Halen was playing. | |
| I've noticed Danni and I share a similarly eclectic taste in | |
| music, and I think we could both put Collins, Twisted Sister, | |
| Billy and Van Halen in a single playlist and not think twice | |
| about it. On top of that, Panama was an eighties classic. But | |
| this wasn't about music anymore. This was about not messing | |
| with my radio. | |
| I flipped the station again, and up came I'm Shipping Up To | |
| Boston, by the Dropkick Murphys. I was not particularly partial | |
| to this song, with the exception of the segment that serves as | |
| the theme song for Rizzoli & Isles. At this hour of the | |
| morning, I truly didn't want to hear it, at all. But I | |
| stubbornly stayed with it just because it was the station I'd | |
| picked. | |
| I kept my eye on my passenger as I slowed to make the turn at | |
| Rumson Road. She was still, and appeared disinterested, but as | |
| soon as I was distracted by driving again she made her move. | |
| I slapped at her hand as she tuned the radio once more. A | |
| country station this time, playing Miranda Lambert's rocking | |
| duet with Carrie Underwood. | |
| I narrowed my eyes at her, but held my tongue. She waited, and | |
| eventually I nodded my grudging acceptance. | |
| Truth is, once I heard the song, I knew I was going to let it | |
| play. This is not a song you turn off. | |
| As the chorus rolled around, Danni sang, "Stand on the bar, | |
| stomp your feet, start clappin'..." | |
| "... got a real good feeling somethin' bad about to happen," I | |
| finished. | |
| We sang along together, laughing and moving to the beat as we | |
| approached the Shrewsbury River Bridge. But I missed the last | |
| line as time slowed to a snail's pace, my eyes locking on the | |
| driver of a beat up Ford sedan coming in the other direction. A | |
| man whose vicious smile and enormous bald head were | |
| unmistakable. | |
| As he passed me, Mr. Clean cut the wheel sharply to the left, | |
| knifing the Ford behind the Subaru and into Taylor's car behind | |
| � a sickening crunch accompanying the impact. The angle caused | |
| the Ford to spin with the blow, while Meghan's car stopped dead, | |
| having taking the full force of the collision head-on. | |
| I was so focused on the mirror and Meghan's condition, I almost | |
| drove straight into the Lincoln Continental that was suddenly | |
| blocking the lane in front of me. I slammed on the brakes and | |
| cut the wheel left, sending us sliding sideways. We skidded to | |
| a stop just short of the Lincoln, and no sooner had we come to | |
| rest when the heavily bandaged face of Rat Boy appeared from | |
| across the hood of the luxury sedan. | |
| "Get out! Get out!" I yelled at Danni, and we scrambled out of | |
| our respective doors and instinctively ran behind the station | |
| wagon. | |
| "You can run b*tch, but you can't hide," Rat Boy said in | |
| sing-song. | |
| B*tch. Singular. | |
| Gee, I wonder which one of us he was talking to. | |
| "We can't stay here," I said to Danni. | |
| "Where, then?" she asked. | |
| I looked around frantically, peripherally aware of the sound of | |
| gunfire to my right. | |
| Meghan, I thought, though there was nothing I could do. I was | |
| too preoccupied with my own problems. | |
| The Subaru had ended up facing the center of the roadway. From | |
| where we hid behind it, we could see the sidewalk and the stone | |
| railing meant to keep cars from careening into the river. | |
| Jutting up from one of the railing supports was a light pole | |
| with a sign attached reminding people that fishing and crabbing | |
| from the bridge was prohibited. | |
| "Over the railing," I said. | |
| "You want to jump in the river?" | |
| I nodded to the left. | |
| "There's a tree, which means there has to be some land." | |
| Of course, I had no idea how far the drop was until we found | |
| that land. | |
| "Just stay to the right of the tree," I finished. | |
| "I don't like this..." | |
| Rat Boy's footsteps echoed from the concrete bridge surface as | |
| he crept ever closer. | |
| "No choice," I said. "Go!" | |
| She was up and over the railing without another moment's | |
| hesitation, and I went over right behind her. A gunshot rang | |
| out behind me, and shattered concrete exploded from the railing | |
| at the spot where I'd cleared it. | |
| The drop wasn't bad at all, and we both came to our feet | |
| immediately. The open field in front of us offered little | |
| cover, so I pushed Danni left and we ran along the side of the | |
| bridge toward the river. I was hoping there would be a strip of | |
| river bank that would let us pass underneath, but it was not to | |
| be. A thick concrete support ran right up to the water's edge, | |
| leaving us no room to walk. | |
| We hesitated for only a second before another bullet landed in | |
| the marshy area behind me. I looked left to see our assailant | |
| coming down toward the river bank. | |
| "Gotta go!" I yelled. | |
| I shoved us both along, and we slipped and skidded down the | |
| steep embankment and into the frigid waters � the thin sheets of | |
| ice along the river's edge cracking and splintering into jagged | |
| pieces as we tore through it. As soon as we touched the water, | |
| I knew we were in desperate trouble. It was painfully cold. | |
| Cold like I had never felt before. My body immediately started | |
| to shut down, but I screamed against it � forcing my limbs to | |
| go. Danni battled through it too, and we thrashed our way | |
| beneath the bridge. I could still hear gunfire echoing from | |
| above. | |
| Meghan was alive, and she was fighting. We had to fight, too. | |
| But we had to do it fast, because we didn't have much time in | |
| this water. | |
| We kept swimming, distance the only thing that could save us. | |
| Another shot... Rat Boy firing from the point where we'd gone | |
| down the river bank. But the bridge support was blocking him, | |
| making it impossible to get an angle. | |
| Then he disappeared, and now there were two clocks ticking. | |
| If he got back on top of the bridge before we found a place to | |
| hide, we would be sitting ducks. | |
| If we didn't get out of this water within about the next minute, | |
| we were going to freeze to death. | |
| Nice to have options. | |
| Another twenty yards upstream, a private dock extended from | |
| behind one of the muti-million dollar riverside homes. | |
| "D-D-Dock," I stammered, my body beginning to succumb to the | |
| deadly cold. | |
| If Danni heard me, she gave no sign of it. She just kept | |
| fighting through the water as best she could. | |
| Every stroke � every movement � became torture. It's not an | |
| exaggeration to say I'm a strong swimmer. In fact, I was once a | |
| certified lifeguard. But those skills were useless to me now. | |
| Forget saving other people. I could barely save myself. My | |
| limbs felt as heavy and agile as tree trunks, and every fiber of | |
| my being just wanted to quit. | |
| As we floundered along, the world went silent. No more gunfire. | |
| No traffic noise. No sounds other than the two of us thrashing | |
| in the water until we floated beneath the wooden anchorage. | |
| For a moment, I wondered if maybe something had happened. If | |
| maybe our attackers had fled, for some reason. | |
| Now, if we could just keep from dying in this god-damn river. | |
| We each caught hold of a piling supporting the dock, and I | |
| immediately searched for a way out of the water. | |
| A metal handrail extended along the side of the pier, and I used | |
| it as a ladder to haul myself up. Then I reached back and | |
| helped Danni out, as well. It was the first chance I'd had to | |
| get a good look at her since this had started, and what I saw | |
| made me want to cry. She was, literally, frozen stiff. She | |
| seemed barely capable of moving. Her hair was matted and even | |
| frozen in spots. Her teeth were chattering uncontrollably, and | |
| her lips were visibly blue. | |
| Footsteps on the wood pulled my defeated expression down the | |
| walkway to find Rat Boy marching toward us, ending any notion | |
| that we had been left to our own fate. | |
| That was it. It was over. There was nothing more to do. There | |
| was no sign of Meghan, and I sadly told myself she was likely | |
| dead or dying. Danni and I lay side-by-side, sprawled out | |
| face-down on the dock � both too exhausted and too cold to | |
| function. Not that it mattered. Our only route of escape was | |
| back into the river, where we would surely die anyway. | |
| All of that struggle, and the only thing that had changed was | |
| that we were now going to die cold and wet. | |
| "Have a nice swim?" Rat Boy taunted, pointing his gun at me. | |
| I ignored him and looked again at Danni. | |
| "I'm sorry," I mouthed. | |
| Then I turned to the man who was going to end my life, and | |
| waited for it to be over. | |
| The sharp crack of a gunshot echoed along the frosted river. | |
| It took me a moment to realize that I wasn't dead. Rat Boy, on | |
| the other hand, appeared stricken... a look of absolute shock | |
| frozen on his face. Within seconds, a dark spot appeared in the | |
| middle of his heavy, winter jacket. The spot spread rapidly � | |
| like a paper towel soaking up a stain. Then he collapsed... | |
| falling straight down as his legs failed beneath him. | |
| With what little strength I had left, I rolled my head to look | |
| toward the bridge. | |
| There, standing along the railing nearly fifty yards away, was | |
| Detective Meghan Taylor, award-winning markswoman. Her right | |
| arm was extended in my direction, and, in her hand, was her NJSP | |
| issued semi-automatic � the one with which she'd won all those | |
| awards. | |
| Then I watched as she slowly sank to the bridge deck. | |
| The sound of squealing tires registered somewhere on the | |
| periphery of my fading consciousness, but I was in no shape to | |
| figure out what it meant. | |
| Meghan was hurt. She needed help. | |
| I put my hands beneath me, but no amount of effort got my body | |
| off the wood. I looked again at Danni. I couldn't even tell if | |
| she was breathing. | |
| We were hurt and needed help, too. | |
| That was the last thought I had before the blackness pushed in | |
| from the edges of my vision and overwhelmed me. | |
| [hr] | |
| Character Reference | |
| http://s19.postimg.org/x7gm9w22n/Richelle_100x120.jpg | |
| Name: Richelle Winterfeld | |
| Nickname(s): | |
| Background: Owner of the RSI stable, former underground fighter | |
| http://s19.postimg.org/9av3z511b/Danni_100x120.jpg | |
| Name: Danneel Harris | |
| Nickname(s): Danni | |
| Background: RSI stable leader, reigning DEF welterweight | |
| champion | |
| http://s19.postimg.org/bwegrvukf/Meghan_Taylor_100x120.jpg | |
| Name: Meghan Taylor | |
| Nickname(s): | |
| Background: New Jersey State Police Detective, works for Major | |
| O'Rourke | |
| #Post#: 3026-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Haunted by the Past - Chapter 29 - Storm Front | |
| By: BadAssBunnies Date: April 8, 2016, 10:54 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| WOW! That was intense. Having fallen in frigid water, your | |
| description is perfect. That's exactly what it feels like. Of | |
| course I wasn't dodging bullets but you are spot on. I can't | |
| wait for the next chapter. | |
| #Post#: 3027-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Haunted by the Past - Chapter 29 - Storm Front | |
| By: RampageSports Date: April 8, 2016, 11:58 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Woah... are you saying you fell in accidentally?!! That's not | |
| good. Being able to add detail to a story via life experience | |
| is great, but that's an experience that isn't worth it. | |
| My cold water education came with much less drama. I've done a | |
| couple of those 'polar bear swim' things. Which means I did it | |
| to myself voluntarily, so take that for whatever it's worth. | |
| First time I did it, I remember thinking that I was going to die | |
| as soon as I hit the water. Brutal. Then I had to get out into | |
| the winter air, which was colder than being in the lake. So, | |
| I've never tested what long-term exposure to ice-cold water does | |
| to you, but I can approximate pretty well. | |
| I'm glad you liked the chapter. I always wonder if the way I | |
| write these action scenes is sometimes confusing. There's a lot | |
| of detail to keep track of, and I sometimes catch myself | |
| assuming things in my head that I never actually wrote out for | |
| people to read. So, it's always easy for me to know what I was | |
| trying to do, but that's not really the goal, is it? :P | |
| Thanks again for the comments. :D | |
| ***************************************************** |