Amarillo,â he said. âTheyâve got to have some.â
Sky frowned. âWait . . . Natalie should have antivenin. She keeps a supply for dogs.â
âCall her,â Beau said.
While Sky speed-dialed Natalieâs number, Beau busied himself with adjusting the bandana around Willâs thigh. The whole leg had begun to swell. Will purpled the air with curses as Beau retied the cloth. âBad?â he asked needlessly.
âHurts like bloody hell.â Will spat in the direction of the dead reptile. âAnd the timing sucks. Whoâs going to boss the roundup?â
âThe men know their jobs. And Sky can manage things fine.â Beau glanced upward. âThe helicopter should be here soon. Just be quiet and take it easy.â
âI could use a swallow of whiskey.â
âNot a good idea, brother.â
Sky had ended the call. âNatalieâs got antivenin. It will be fastest if she drives to Lubbock; she should get there about the same time the copter lands.â
An eternity seemed to pass before they heard the drone of the red and white Life Flight helicopter. Refusing to stay quiet, Will had spent the interim giving Sky a running litany of muttered instructions, things Sky doubtless already knew. Even in his dire condition, Will couldnât let go of his duties.
By the time the paramedics loaded him in the helicopter, Willâs pulse was racing at a gallop. Beau insisted on riding along. Though it wasnât usual policy, the paramedics didnât argue. Will was a powerful man and not in his right mind. If he got hard to handle in the air, they might need help calming him.
Beau clasped his brotherâs hand while the technician inserted an IV with a saline drip in his arm. Will was mumbling now, demanding that he be taken back to the ranchâa sign that the venom was already seeping into his system.
Although the flight to the hospital was a relatively short one, each minute in the air seemed three times as long. As the helicopter began its descent to the hospitalâs landing pad, Beau clasped Willâs shoulder, giving it a reassuring squeeze.
âHang in there, big brother,â he ordered. âEverythingâs going to be fine now.â
Will looked directly at him and said something back, but the roar of the engine drowned out the sound of his voice. Even so, Beau was able to ascertain the words his lips shaped.
Call Tori, Will had said.
Beau answered with a nod of promise.
As soon as the helicopter touched down, the engine was cut back, and the paramedics scrambled to unload their patient onto a waiting gurney. Will was already being whisked inside by the time Beau climbed out of the chopper.
Once inside the emergency department, Beau had a brief glimpse of Will on the gurney before the set of double doors to the trauma unit slid shut behind him. One of the paramedics motioned for Beau to join him at the admissions desk.
âThey need some information on your brother.â
Reluctantly Beau allowed himself to be sidetracked from following Will into the trauma unit. Other than the absolute basics of name, age, blood type, address, and next of kin, there was scant information that Beau could provide. Any allergies or medications Will might be taking, Beau had to admit he didnât know.
After that was finished, someone else handed him a bag of his brotherâs personal itemsâhis watch, wallet, and cell phoneâand pointed him toward the emergency departmentâs waiting room.
It was a small area, mostly unoccupied at that hour, with soothing blue walls, black vinyl couches, and framed prints of Texas wildflowers. Timeworn copies of People magazine, Golf Digest , and Good Housekeeping littered the tables. A frayed-looking woman was knitting what appeared to be an orange muffler while an unshaven man was sprawled on one of the side couches, lightly snoring.
Unwilling to twiddle his thumbs on one of the couches, Beau
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