did,â Mike said. âMaybe it was random, Lynda. Random acts of violence happen all the time. People break into houses randomly, shoot at passing carsââ
âSome world we live in, huh?â
âYouâre right; itâs not a pleasant thoughtâbut itâs better than thinking someone tried to kill you.â
âWhat if theyâre still trying?â she whispered. She felt fear rising inside. âI mean, they failed, didnât they? What if they havenât given up?â
Mike got up and came to lean against the windowsill. âThink, Lynda. Is there anyone in your life who hates you enough to want to kill you?â
âWell, I didnât know there was, but obviouslyââ
âNot so obviously. I mean, yes, thereâs somebody out there who was trying to get his kicks, but that doesnât mean heâs after you.â
âKicks?â she whispered. âCausing a plane crash gave him his kicks?â
âThereâs a lot of evil around us, Lynda. We donât have to let it consume us.â
âWhat if we donât have a choice?â she whispered. âTheyâre probably going to let me go home tomorrow. Am I gonna be a sitting duck? And what about Paige and Brianna? Theyâre staying in my house.â
âIf heâd wanted you, whoever it is, he could have found you at home before, donât you think? Thatâs what makes me think itâs random.â
Lynda shrugged, unconvinced.
âAnyway, the two cops who are working on it are planning to come by and talk to you today. If there is someone after you, they can get to the bottom of it.â He leaned over and pressed a gentle kiss on her forehead and wiped a stray tear off her cheek. âItâll be okay.â
âI just need some time alone to think about it, I guess.â
âIâm going,â he said. âBut first, I want to tell you that the cops who are investigating this are Tony Danks and Larry Millsaps. Larryâs a buddy of mine from church. Iâve known him for years. You can trust him.â
She felt some comfort in that. âThank you, Mike,â she whispered.
T he two people assigned to rehabilitate JakeâAllie Williams, a 120-pound dynamo who approached occupational therapy with a determination that rivaled Jakeâs determination to sink into depression, and Buzz Slater, a former paraplegic whoâd become a physical therapist after learning to walk again himselfâdidnât seem to care that Jakeâs head was still on the verge of bursting with pain or that nausea was hiding just below the surface, waiting to assault him at any given moment. Since he awoke from the accident, their hands had been all over him, poking and prodding, flexing and massaging, despite his venomous verbal resistance.
Nothing he said daunted them, no insult offended them, at least not enough to make them leave him alone. Every two hours they came in and turned him over, massaged him, and bent him this way and that until finally heâd vowed to learn how to turn himself over just to get a little peace.
âThatâs not all youâll learn to do today,â Allie said brightly as she wheeled a gurney into the room. âToday youâre going to the tilt table in the rehab room. Weâre going to get you sitting up, so you can get out of bed.â
That sounded easy enough, and Jake was almost hopeful as they wheeled him down the hallway, flat on his back to the big room where a dozen or more people like him workedâon mats, in a pool, on parallel bars, with walkers.
He didnât object when they transferred him to the flat table, but when they began strapping him down, he got worried. âWhat are the straps for?â
âTo keep you from sliding off, Jake,â Buzz said. âYouâve been flat for three days. We have to get you upright gradually. You may have some problems.â
But Jake
Marie Harte
Mark Brandon Powell
Edmund Morris
Marc Laidlaw
Cassandra R. Siddons
Annalisa Gulbrandsen
Alan Shapiro
Nina Bruhns
KH LeMoyne
Gayle Tzemach Lemmon