by Неизвестный
I Never Thought I’d See You Again
Table of Contents
Title
Introduction by Lou Aronica
36 Hours by Allison Brennan
Facing the Mirror by Dianne Despain
Solomon’s Paradox by Kelly McClymer
Play it Again, Sam by Deb Stover
Christmas Eve at Alison’s Diner by Janet Tronstad
Persephone’s Granddaughter by Alyssa Day
The Greek, the Dog, Shangri-La and Me by Janet Woods
A Streetcar Named Death by Greg Herren
The Tower by Mary Hart Perry
Fabian’s Wake by Laura Resnick
Katy’s Place by Barbara Meyers
Backdraft by Kathryn Shay
Because of You by JoAnn A. Grote
Skipper and I by Ann La Farge
The Only Girl in the World by C.B. Pratt
Tide Change by Shirley Parenteau
Title
These stories are works of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons living or dead, is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of either the author or the publisher.
The Story Plant
Studio Digital CT, LLC
PO Box 4331
Stamford, CT 06907
Copyright © 2013 by Novelists Inc.
Jacket design by Barbara Aronica-Buck
“36 Hours” copyright © 2013 by Allison Brennan
“Facing the Mirror” copyright © 2013 by Dianne Despain
“Solomon’s Paradox” copyright © 2013 by Kelly McClymer
“Play it Again, Sam” copyright © 2013 by Deb Stover
“Christmas Eve at Alison’s Diner” copyright © 2013 by Janet Tronstad
“Persephone’s Granddaughter” copyright © 2013 by Alyssa Day
“The Greek, the Dog, Shangri-La and Me” copyright © 2013 by Janet Woods
“A Streetcar Named Death” copyright © 2013 by Greg Herren
“The Tower” copyright © 2013 by Mary Hart Perry
“Fabian’s Wake” copyright © 2013 By Laura Resnick
“Katy’s Place” copyright © 2013 by Barbara Meyers
“Backdraft” copyright © 2013 By Kathryn Shay
“Because of You” copyright © 2013 by JoAnn A. Grote
“Skipper and I” copyright © 2013 by Ann La Farge
“The Only Girl in the World” copyright © 2013 by C. B. Pratt
“Tide Change” copyright © 2013 by Shirley Parenteau
Print ISBN-13: 978-1-61188-079-3
E-book ISBN-13: 978-1-61188-080-9
Visit our website at www.thestoryplant.com
Visit the Novelists Inc. website at www.ninc.com
All rights reserved, which includes the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever except as provided by US Copyright Law. For information, address Studio Digital CT.
First Story Plant Paperback Printing: July 2013
Introduction by Lou Aronica
When we began to think about creating a follow-up to our first anthology, Cast of Characters, those of us on the Novelists Inc. board at the time considered a number of options. Should we choose a particular genre? That didn’t feel right, because, while all of our members are novelists, what they write is so diverse. Should we choose a particular setting? That might work, but it would mean excluding writers uncomfortable with that setting, and it didn’t seem appropriate that anyone be disqualified for such an arbitrary reason.
Ultimately, we decided to go back to third grade. We’d offer a writing prompt. The sort of thing an elementary school teacher might assign to get kids to express themselves: if I were a farm animal … or the thing I love most about school is …. Since we were dealing with seasoned, highly successful writers, we assumed we could go with a more sophisticated prompt and that we could expect considerably more sophisticated results.
I gave this quite a bit of thought, but one morning the phrase, “I never thought I’d see you again” came to me. I resonated with it immediately. A few days later, I was sitting with the other Ninc board members at our annual conference and I tried it out on them. Their response confirmed that I’d hit on something. One board member said the phrase immediately made her think of a love story. Another heard a note of threat in the phrase and imagined a story of suspense. A third saw possibilities in the magical.
This was exactly what we wanted, a prompt that would be open to wildly different interpretations that would also connect the stories with a core emotion. I never thought I’d see you again. I’d like to believe that an image or scene flashed in your own head as you read that line.
I hope you find these offerings fascinating. These are very fine storytellers working at the tops of their games. If you’d like to learn more about our organization (or even join if you’re a novelist with at least two full-length publications to your credit), you can find us at www.ninc.com.
Lou Aronica
June, 2013
36 Hours by Allison Brennan
Allison Brennan is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of twenty thrillers and numerous short stories. A five-time RITA award nominee for Best Romantic Suspense, she also won the Daphne du Maurier Award for Best Suspense for Fear No Evil. RT Book Reviews has called her books “pulse-pounding” and “wonderfully complex” and said that Allison is, “A master of suspense — tops in the genre.” Lisa Gardner said, “Brennan knows how to deliver.” Allison lives in Northern California with her husband Dan and their five children. Visit her website at www.allisonbrennan.com for more information about her books.
When I was given the prompt, “I never thought I’d see you again,” Angel Saldana came to me fully-formed. She was feisty, strong-willed, and street smart but I had no idea what her story was. Was this a romance, where she never thought she’d never see her boyfriend again and he pops in to help her? No, it didn’t feel right. Angel is only fifteen. What about her alcoholic mother? Where was she and how did Angel end up in juvenile hall? No, not that either. Her best friend is missing, was Marisa going to return? Nope. Then something just clicked. I thought of all the kids who never knew their fathers while growing up, including me. Each one has a different story. Angel’s dad walks into her life to help her — when she didn’t even know he’d been keeping tabs on her in the first place. “I never thought I’d see you again” goes both ways for father and daughter as they meet for the first time in ten years — while running from people who want Angel dead.
Chapter One
Angel Saldana knew she was in danger the minute the assistant warden told her two detectives had arrived to escort her to a group home.
She was sitting in the waiting room, reading a paperback thriller she’d stolen from the back of the squad car that had brought her to juvie this morning. It’d been on the floor, no place for a book, and she didn’t figure the cop would notice. The book was about some guy named Reacher who was just walking down the highway, minding his own business, when he got arrested for a crime he didn’t commit. The cops didn’t know anything until the Reacher guy set them straight, and they still sent him to prison for the weekend. He’d practically solved their entire case, and they just ran around like idiots. Angel could so relate. Here she was sitting in juvie against her will all because she was trying to do the right thing.
“Angel, the officers are here to take you to the home,” the assistant warden, Lambert, said.
Not her home, but the home. A
group home. She’d been stuck in one before; they were almost worse than juvie.
“The district attorney’s office feels you’ll be safer elsewhere.”
Safer? Hardly. But at least outside the building she’d have a chance of survival.
But if she ran, her deal was off. Wasn’t that what they called a Catch-22? Dead if she runs, dead if she doesn’t.
Angel had agreed to testify against Raul Garcia, the head of the G-5 gang, because she didn’t really have a choice — wrong place, wrong time, all trying to help a friend stay out of trouble. The minute Angel found out that Marisa was dating Raul’s brother George, she’d warned her to stay far away. But Marisa hadn’t listened to Angel when they were five, why’d Angel think she’d listen to her now that they were fifteen?
Angel was more worried that something had happened to Marisa. She hoped she was just in hiding, that she’d simply chickened out of testifying against the Garcias. But Angel hadn’t seen or heard from her in three days.
Assistant District Attorney Kristina Larson assured Angel that she wasn’t in any trouble, as long as she told the truth Monday morning. Telling the truth wasn’t going to be the problem. Staying alive for the next thirty-six hours? The jury was out on that one. Angel had asked Larson about Marisa; she said the cops were still looking for her.
That didn’t make Angel feel any better.
Lambert continued. “I hope you can stay out of trouble this time, Angel. You’re a smart kid. Too smart for this shit you get yourself into.”
Trouble was relative. Lambert only knew Angel by her record and the two stints she’d already done in juvie. Being picked up for vandalism for keying the Bastard’s car after he’d pinched her on the ass for the hundredth time. (His name was Mr. Bernardo, but Angel preferred the Bastard. Call a spade a spade, right?) For truancy when she didn’t go to school, protesting that the Bastard was still teaching even after Angel reported his grabby hands to the assistant principal. And then the time she got arrested for joyriding past curfew without a license. (Where’s the joy in picking up her drunk mother from a bar?)
The trouble Angel was most concerned about was the kind that hurt. Or, considering that the Garcia family was involved, the kind of trouble that killed.
“You’re not under arrest,” Lambert said. “This is for your protection.”
“I know.” She almost wanted to take her chances here in juvie.
Don’t be a dumbass — there’s no way out of here.
What she really wanted was to go home, but no way they’d let her do that when her mom was in rehab (again) and everyone who was anyone (anyone bad) seemed to know she was going to testify against Raul Garcia. Angel had asked Kristina the lawyer if she could go home with her for the weekend, and the ADA seemed so flustered and surprised that Angel had backed down. Angel realized the woman was nice because she needed something; when all was said and done, Kristina Larson was a ladder-climbing lawyer, and she was still Angel Saldana, a half-Hispanic, half-whatever, juvenile delinquent who just happened to get good grades and ace standardized tests.
Some genius you are, Angel. You certainly know how to pick your friends.
Lambert handed Angel her backpack that had been confiscated when she’d arrived this morning. She stuffed the stolen paperback into the front pocket. An older plainclothes detective stood in the doorway. He looked her up and down, surprised. “This is Saldana?” He frowned at a folder in his hand.
“Yes,” Lambert said.
“It’s the hair,” Angel said with a fake smile. “I got bored with brown.”
She’d bleached the underside of her hair, then dyed it fire engine red. Added a couple blonde highlights on top and became a different person. At the time it seemed like a good idea, but unfortunately, the radical color made her stand out. First chance she got, she’d do something less dramatic to blend into a crowd.
The cop raised an eyebrow but didn’t say anything. Maybe it wasn’t just the hair. The nose stud might have done it. Or the two Chinese characters tattooed on the back of her neck that meant strength. She certainly wasn’t out to impress this cop or anyone else.
Lambert signed the paperwork and the cop escorted Angel out of the building. It was already dark, not surprising because it was January. She’d bolted from her apartment so fast after Marisa disappeared and the creeps showed up that she hadn’t grabbed a jacket. Everyone thought L.A. was all sun, all the time, but January and February got damn cold when the sun went down. There might even be rain this weekend. Terrific. At least the weather suited her mood.
The cop said, “I’m Detective Jim Friday.” He nodded to the other plainclothes cop leaning against the hood of the sedan. “That’s Detective Martinez.”
“Hola.” She gave Martinez a partial salute. “Can I convince you guys to swing by In and Out? I’m starving.” Juvie food was a step up from garbage, but she’d been so nervous that she hadn’t eaten.
“Sorry,” Friday said.
“Jim Friday.” Angel smirked. They didn’t have cable in her apartment and she’d spent one summer watching reruns of sixties television shows. Anything was better than the soap operas her mother devoured like the wine she drank. Mister Ed, Bonanza, Adam-12. Dragnet made her laugh, though she didn’t think it was supposed to be funny. “Anyone call you Joe?”
Martinez laughed spontaneously and Friday scowled. She grinned as she climbed into the backseat. The two cops sat up front.
“Don’t start,” Friday muttered to Martinez as his partner turned the ignition.
As soon as the car left the juvie compound, Angel breathed easier. She wasn’t out of the woods yet, but she was no longer locked up. Angel knew the San Fernando Valley inside and out and was confident she could find someplace to hide if the group home situation was messed up.
“Where are we going?”
“Reseda,” Friday said.
“My apartment is in Reseda — think we could swing by and get some of my stuff?”
“No.” Martinez glanced at her in the rearview mirror. “Don’t you think it’s unusual that you have a police escort? We don’t usually go about transporting juvenile delinquents from lockup. It’s either corrections or social services.”
“I’m not a delinquent.”
Martinez snorted. “I saw your file.”
She stuck her tongue out at him in the mirror and leaned back.
Friday said, “The DA’s office is taking all precautions, considering.”
“Considering I have a target on my back.”
“If there was a real threat, they’d put you in a safe house. This is simply a precaution.”
“Whatev.” Of course there was a real threat. Angel had always steered clear of the gang and drug scene, though it wasn’t easy. Between her apartment and school, by the time she was running through multiplication tables Angel knew every street name for meth, coke, pot, heroin, and anything else grown, cooked, or manufactured to get someone high. When Marisa started dating Raul’s brother George, she’d brought the drug gangs to their doorstep. Angel should have told her to take a hike, but loyalty — best friends forever — won. Marisa and her parents were the only stable people in Angel’s life. They’d lived in the same apartment building for as long as she could remember. Marisa’s parents taught her Spanish and fed her when her mom didn’t buy food — which was often.
“Why’d you do it, Marisa?” Angel mumbled.
“What?” Friday said from the passenger seat.
“Nothing.”
Because it was Saturday evening and traffic was moving, it didn’t take long to cross the Valley. The group home off Vanowen looked like every other ranch house built in the fifties. The front was mostly concrete with a small square of lawn, a three-foot high chain link fence that might keep a Chihuahua caged and not much else. A white van in the driveway had Los Angeles County Group Facilities Management painted on the side.
I so do not want to be here.
“These people know I’m not in trouble, right?
”
“They know you’re a material witness and we’ll be picking you up at seven thirty Monday morning to escort you to the courthouse.”
“My own chauffeur service,” Angel said.
Martinez turned off the car and stared at her. “Your mouth gets you in trouble, doesn’t it chica?”
She shrugged.
“Don’t cause problems,” he said.
She gave him her most angelic smile. “Who me?”
Friday got out, opened her door and said, “Watch your step.”
She got out and then hesitated. Just a moment.
Angel had survived fifteen and a half years because she had sharp instincts honed in the womb. Every synapse told her to duck. She didn’t know if it was the van, if she saw it move, or if it was a sound, but something was wrong and Angel trusted her gut.
As if Friday could read the expression on her face, or maybe she’d said his name, or perhaps his own cop instincts had kicked in just a moment too late, he turned, his hand on the butt of his gun.
The van’s side door slid open and Angel flattened her body on the ground as soon as she saw the glint of a weapon under the streetlights.
She rolled under the cop car the second before gunfire started. Semi-automatic weapons, the kind that weren’t legal and probably never had been, broke the silence with a roar. She slid to the other side of the car, the underbelly scratching her leg, the rough asphalt scraping her arms and stomach. When she was clear, she half crawled, half ran across the street.
She heard shouts and screams behind her, and one of them yelled in Spanish, “She’s across the street!”
Then she heard, “Bitch! Get back here, punta!”
Like she was going to stop for him or anyone else who was shooting at her.
The gunfire stopped and the van came to life, the headlights bright.
A burst of energy, her survival gene, had her sprinting. She should be a damn Olympic runner, she thought as the van squealed behind her.
She had to get off the street and into hiding. Her apartment wasn’t far, maybe a mile away, but they probably knew where she lived.