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"Can you keep them here until my people arrive?" His voice rasped with fatigue. "We'd really rather
they didn't print this story." To put it mildly.
"Security has them in custody." She was watching him closely. "Are you sure you don't want the wheelchair?"
"I'll be all right." His broken leg had gone numb during the flight, but the circulation was returning with
a vengeance. Pins and needles p.r.i.c.kled from his foot to his thigh. He felt woozy from lack of sleep and the sustained tension of the past few hours. But he had to keep moving. If he didn't, he would probably collapse, which he couldn't let himself do yet. He had too much to take care of first-like ensuring no one shot Alpha.
Thomas took a step. Pain stabbed through his leg and he stumbled, but at least it didn't buckle under him.
"d.a.m.n stubborn man," Alpha muttered. She put her arm around his waist. "Lean on me."
Thomas laid his arm across her shoulders and limped up the sleeve with her supporting over half his
weight. The manager walked with them, her expression both curious and tense. He knew she wanted him to sit down. But he couldn't pause, or he feared he wouldn't start up again.
As they entered the gate, he saw a welcome sight: C.J. Matheson was striding down the concourse, accompanied by airport personnel, Air Force officers, and sec-techs. Thomas would have been even more relieved if doubts weren't plaguing him. He was no longer certain he trusted Matheson. He and C.J.
had played football together, watched each other's children grow up, worked through crises large and small. He hated these doubts, but until he figured out who had helped Alpha, he couldn't trust anyone.
Alpha was watching the sec-techs. As she let go of Thomas, he took her shoulders and turned her to face him. "Trust me."
"Good-bye." Then she said, "Tell your granddaughter I'm sorry I scared her."
He lifted his hand to touch her face, but before he could, people surrounded them: C.J., staff, guards, sec- techs.
"Thomas!" Matheson took his arm. "Are you all right? We have an ambulance waiting." As he deftly separated Alpha from Thomas, the sec-techs surrounded her. She didn't protest, she just kept watching Thomas-while the officers locked her wrists behind her back with manacles that even an android couldn't break.
"Wait," Thomas said. But the sec-techs were already taking her away, down the concourse. Alpha looked back once just before they turned a corner. Then she was gone.
XV: Home Fires
The moment the guards let Jamie into the house, she dashed into the living room. As Thomas got up from the couch, his granddaughter ran over and threw her small arms around him.
"Grampy!" She squealed when Thomas lifted her up into his arms.
"Hey, Moppet." He kissed her cheek. "It's good to see you."
Jamie hugged him around the neck with that unrestrained affection he had always loved about her. He held her close, looking over her shoulder, and saw Leila standing by the stairs with Sergeant Hernandez, one of Thomas's bodyguards. Leila was holding her ID, which Sergeant Spaulding at the front door would have already checked, after scanning her. Thomas knew from her strained expression what she wanted to ask: if the danger was over, if his kidnapper was in custody, why was he confined to his house with bodyguards? She probably thought it had something to do with Alpha, and he had no choice but to let her believe that. His health would explain his confinement, but he couldn't tell her that he might be in danger from the obsessive machinations of a dead man.
Alpha was in the safe house under even more stringent security than before. Thomas had spent yesterday at the Bethesda National Medical Center while medics treated him and the Air Force debriefed him.
Everyone had wanted him to stay overnight. Thomas had wanted to go home, but grumbling at his doctors never worked, so he did as they said, and today they let him come home.
Leila walked slowly into the front room. She didn't seem to know whether to smile or frown. She
stopped by the table where he had one of his mesh consoles.
Bewildered, Thomas set Jamie down. He had expected more response from Leila. It was the first time he had seen her since his kidnapping. "Is something wrong?" he asked.
"No. Nothing." She indicated his right leg with its new cast, which came up to his knee. "Is it okay?"
"Great," he said, and heard how forced that sounded.
"That's good." Leila stood stiffly by the table.
"Mommy?" Jamie asked. "Aren't you happy to see Grampy?" She looked up at Thomas. "She cried a lot
when you went away."
"Oh, honey, don't." Leila's voice caught.
Thomas went over to his daughter and spoke gently. "It's all right."
"We thought . . . I was afraid you were hurting or-or dying somewhere. I-I-" Tears gathered in
Leila's eyes.
"Hey," he murmured, and pulled her into his arms. She hugged him hard, silent with her tears. She was a lot like him, this daughter of his, struggling to express her emotions.
"I'm just so glad you're all right," she whispered. She let go and laughed awkwardly. "Well."
Warmth spread through him at the sight of her, so much like her mother with her blue eyes and yellow
hair. "It's good to see you."
Jamie had gone back over to Sergeant Hernandez. She gazed up at the sec-tech. "Do you protect Grampy?"
Hernandez blinked at her. "Grampy?"
Jamie pointed to Thomas. "Him."
"Yes, ma'am, I do."
"If you get scared, you can borrow my kitty." She showed him her stuffed cat. "She scares away bad
guys."
Hernandez smiled. "Thank you, ma'am."
Leila called to her daughter. "Jamie, let the man alone." Her voice trembled and her face was wet with
tears, but she was smiling.
Karl walked into the living room, holding his ID, and Jamie immediately dashed to her father, full of excitement. Thomas was glad she didn't understand the full import of his bodyguards. He caught Karl's gaze, and his son-in-law nodded, understanding; Jamie didn't need to know her grandfather was in danger. Karl scooped the small girl up into his arms and kissed her cheek as he carried her back to Leila
and Thomas. For a disconcerting moment Thomas thought his son-in-law was going to hug him, too, even while holding Jamie.
Karl didn't, though. Watching Thomas's face, he just said, "Lord almighty, it's good to see you."
Thomas laughed, a bit unsteadily, and so did Leila. Then his son-in-law was shaking his hand, Leila was
telling Thomas he should sit down, Jamie was giggling, and Thomas knew he would be all right. His worries about Karl were easing, too. From what Leila had said on the phone last night, Karl had been spending more time with his family since the first kidnapping.
He thought of Alpha's last words to him: Tell your granddaughter I'm sorry I scared her. He would find the right way to tell Jamie without upsetting her. He wanted to see Alpha, or at least know how she was doing, but no one would tell him anything. Given what had happened on the island, he doubted Chang would even let him near Alpha until the general was convinced his judgment hadn't been compromised.
"I want to sit with Grampy," Jamie announced. She started to kick, catching her father in the side.
"Hey!" Karl said, laughing. "Take it easy with your old man." He handed Jamie to her grandfather. "You win all the ladies' hearts, Thomas. The rest of us don't have a chance against you glamour boys."
Thomas smiled at Jamie. "h.e.l.lo."
"You're awakier today," Jamie said.
Leila nudged Thomas's arm. "Dad, why don't you sit down? Karl and I will fix lunch."
He suspected Leila knew he was already tiring. "I guess I could."
Leila winked at her daughter. "Jamie will watch over you."
"Me and Soupy," Jamie said.
Thomas grinned. "I'm a lucky man." He knew what Leila wanted; Jamie needed the rea.s.surance of
seeing her grandpa was all right. A few minutes with him might do her good. Him, too.
While Leila and Karl went into the kitchen, Thomas settled on the couch and put Jamie next to him. "So how is your math?"
"It's fun. Mommy and Daddy got me tests."
So they had done it after all. He chucked her under the chin. "What did they say?"
She snuggled next to him. "The test lady was nice. She said for me to go to college in this many years."