by Tim LaHaye
“We all need you here, Buck.”
“Spill it, Doc. Is she OK?”
“Buck, let me get free for a minute here so we can talk.”
“Please!”
Buck heard Floyd asking someone named Leah if she would excuse him. “All right, Buck. Are you on schedule?”
“I’m surprised I’m not ahead of schedule, but yes, we’re looking at a 10:00 p.m. arrival.”
“That late?”
“You’re scaring me, Doc.”
“The truth is, Buck, I’ve been misleading Chloe and Rayford today. The fetal heartbeat has been dropping for a few days, and it’s at the alarming stage.”
“Meaning?”
“I’m putting Chloe on oxygen as soon as I get back there. I wanted to do it hours ago, but I ran into a snag at the hospital. I dropped in on somebody Rayford knows who was recuperating here. He sounded real interested in hearing about the judgments and what they meant, and I wound up spending way too much time with him. Hattie’s been talking to his younger friend, who’s apparently already been released.”
Buck stood in the cold wind and hollered into the phone. “Doc, I haven’t a clue what you’re talking about. I’m sorry to be rude, but get to the point. Why did you think it necessary to mislead Chloe and Ray when they’re right there and can deal with the problem, but you drop it on me in the middle of nowhere when I can do nothing?”
“If you had seen how they reacted when I just hinted at the problem, you’d know I was right. I need Chloe to stay upbeat, and if she knew how serious this is, she would not be in a position to do her part.”
Abdullah signaled Buck to reboard. “Will I still be able to talk on the phone?”
“Yes, yes!”
But in the air the noise was awful. Buck and Floyd had to repeat almost every sentence, but Buck finally got the whole scoop. “Is there any chance you’ll have to induce before I get there?”
“I’m through making promises.”
“Do what’s best for Chloe and the baby!”
“That’s what I wanted to hear.”
He needs permission for that? Buck wondered.
“And tell Rayford the truth, Doc! I think Chloe can take it too, but if you think it would put her into a tailspin, use your own judgment. She’s pretty tough, you know.”
“She’s also very pregnant, Buck. That floods the body with a hormone wash and turns a woman into a mother hen.”
“Just don’t say or do something you have to apologize for later. She’s going to want to know why she wasn’t fully informed.”
“Rayford will be there to get you, Buck. I’ve got another call. Godspeed!”
Rayford was relieved when Doc Charles finally answered. “Where are you, man? You’ve been gone for hours!”
Floyd told him of meeting Bo and getting sidetracked telling him about God. “The other guy was discharged this morning. Anyway, what’s up?”
“Chloe is not feeling well, and of course she’s worried. Is there anything we should do for her?”
“What’s her complaint?”
“Shortness of breath. Extreme fatigue.”
“I’ll get there as soon as I can. Put her in a position where her lungs can expand the most. Can you handle the fetal monitor?”
“We’ll get it done between the two of us if it’s important.”
“Call me with the results in ten minutes.”
Buck liked Doc, and it felt strange to be angry with him. But a trained medical professional should be more buttoned-down, less hung up on periphery. Here he was, his own life in Abdullah’s hands, rocketing through the air to get home to his wife, and he gets this news. What was he supposed to do but pray? Buck believed in prayer and exercised it to the fullest. But anxiety just about did him in, and he could easily have been spared it. There’d be plenty of time to worry once he got there.
Rayford felt all thumbs getting the fetal monitor working, and at first he feared the heartbeat had disappeared. “God, please, no!” he prayed silently. “Not this on top of everything else.” For all the talk about the inadvisability of bringing a baby into the world during the Tribulation, everyone in the house had a huge stake in this birth.
Suddenly they heard the speeding heart. “Do you just count and multiply?” Rayford asked.
“I don’t know,” Chloe said, panting. “Can you count that fast? It’s still fast, but is it slower than before?”
“It wouldn’t change enough in a few hours that we’d be able to tell without precise measurement.”
“Then get it to work!”
An LCD readout came to light. When Rayford called the figure in to Floyd, he told Ray to worry more about Chloe than the baby. “I want her to breathe deeply and get all the oxygen she can until I get there. But Ray, I’ve got a problem. I’m being followed.”
“You’re sure?”
“No question. I’ve taken several detours, and I can’t shake him.”
“What kind of car?”
“A motorcycle. One of those little jobs they race off road. No way I’m going to outrun him.”
“Lead him around awhile. See if he gets bored. Some guys just get a kick out of worrying people.”
“He’s smooth, Ray. He’s far enough back to not be obvious, but he’s stayed with me for miles. I don’t want to give away our location to anybody, but I also need to get this oxygen to Chloe.”
“I’ll take care of her. Keep me posted.”
“Uh, I’m a little low on fuel, and those cycles can go forever.”
“How close are you to Palwaukee?”
“Close.”
“I’ll call T. Whoever’s following you isn’t going to follow you into an enclosed area. And T will gas you up too.”
“Great.”
Rayford called T and filled him in.
“Oh, no,” T said.
“What?”
“Ernie’s a bike racer. He probably followed your man from the hospital, trying to find out where Hattie lives. They’ve been talking more.”
“How do you know?”
“A phone girl here said Hattie called for Ernie, and she told her he was at Young Memorial. But if Hattie wanted to see him, wouldn’t she just have told Ernie where she was?”
“She doesn’t know where she is, T. She knows it’s Mount Prospect, but there’s no way she could tell him how to get here.”
“If your man leads Ernie here, I’ll give him what for. We’ll keep him from finding you, you can be sure of that. What’s he driving, and what does he look like?”
“The Rover and you.”
“Come back?”
“He’s driving Buck’s Rover, and he looks a lot like you.”
Rayford arranged pillows so Chloe could lie back and raise her arms over her head without hurting herself or the baby. That opened her lungs more, and she said she felt a little better. Rayford was startled when he turned and saw Hattie at the top of the basement stairs.
She looked awful, like a ghost or worse, a zombie. Thin, eyes dark, skin pale. She limped to Chloe.
“Hattie!” Chloe said. “It’s been ages.”
“I wanted to see how my godchild was doing.”
“Not here yet, Hattie. We’ll let you know.”
“And I wanted to tell you I’m not jealous.”
Rayford squinted, watching Chloe’s reaction.
“You’re not, huh?” she said. “I never thought you would be.”
“Who would blame me if I was? I lost my baby, but you get to have yours. You’re lucky, I’m not. The story of my life.”
Rayford wanted to talk to her alone. No way he wanted Chloe to know what was going on. “We’re sorry for your loss, Hattie,” he said. “And we’re grateful you still want to be godmother to Chloe’s child.”
“We were going to be godmothers to each other’s,” she said.
“It has to be painful,” Chloe said.
“It’s going to be for the one who did it,” Hattie said.
“If you
’ll excuse us,” Rayford said, “we’re trying to do a little doctoring by phone here.” He dialed Floyd.
Hattie drifted away without a word.
Floyd told Rayford he was within a mile of Palwaukee. “But this guy’s still hanging with me.”
Rayford didn’t want to leave Chloe, but he didn’t want to alarm her either. “If you’re comfortable for a while, honey, I want to talk with Hattie.”
Buck found himself fighting drowsiness. That should have been no surprise. He had been up since dawn in the Middle East. Despite the noise and thin air, he was desperate to talk with someone in Mount Prospect. He feared upsetting Chloe, and Rayford might be tending to her. He understood Hattie had been incoherent for months. That left Tsion.
What time was it in the States? Late afternoon? The rabbi should be putting the finishing touches on his daily missive. Buck called him. They’d have to yell and repeat themselves, but any contact was better than none.
“Cameron, my friend! How good to hear from you! Where are you?”
“First, Tsion, assure me I am not keeping you from your work. The world waits with bated breath for everything you—”
“I posted it not twenty minutes ago, Cameron. This is a perfect time to talk. We’re all excited about the baby and your return. Now where are you?”
“I wish I knew. We’re chasing the sunset, but at high altitude in an old jet fighter, I can’t even look down. I’d be looking at the Atlantic, that’s all I know.”
“We will see you in a few hours. There are few small pleasures left in this life, Buck, and rejoining friends and brothers and spouses is one of those. We have been praying for you every day, and you know Chloe is most excited. You’ll be home in plenty of time for the birth, which will likely take place at the hospital in Palatine.”
Buck hesitated. “Tsion, you will be honest with me, won’t you?”
“Always.”
“Are you trying to keep me upbeat because you don’t know about complications with Chloe and the baby, or because you do?”
“Your father-in-law briefed me. Dr. Charles seems to have it under control. Rayford reached you with the news?”
“Actually, Floyd did, and it’s worse than Rayford and Chloe know.”
“Should he not tell them?”
“He has his reasons. I just wondered if Floyd had talked with you.”
“No. I heard someone leave hours ago. I assumed it was he.”
“He’s worried I won’t be back in time if he has to induce.”
“Induce? Why did he not take her to the hospital then?”
“Frankly, Tsion, I’ve been killing myself with questions since he called. I don’t know what Floyd expected of me.”
There was a pause. “Cameron, there is nothing you can do until you get here, except to pray. You have to leave this with the Lord.”
“I’ve never been good at that, sir. I know we’re not supposed to worry, but—”
“Oh, Cameron, I think even the Lord himself allows some latitude on that during the Tribulation. The admonition to not worry was written to people who lived before all the judgments. If we did not worry about what was coming next from heaven, we would not be human. Don’t feel guilty about worrying. Just rely on the Lord for the things you cannot control. This is one of them.”
Buck loved talking with Tsion. They had been through so much together. It hit him that he was whining about his wife’s complicated pregnancy to a man whose wife and children had been murdered. Yet somehow Tsion had the capacity for wisdom and clear thinking and had a calming effect on people. Buck wanted to somehow keep him on the phone.
“Do you mind talking a little while longer, Tsion?”
“Not at all. I was beginning to feel isolated anyway.”
“How’s Hattie?”
“Quieter. The worst is over for her, though she is going to require a long recovery.”
“No movement spiritually, Chloe tells me.”
“A tough case, Cameron. I fear for her. I hoped she was merely getting things off her chest and that once she spewed her venom she would turn to God. But she has convinced me she is sincere. She believes in God, knows that he loves her, and knows what he has done for her. But she has decided that she knows better than he, and that she is one person who chooses not to accept his gift for the very reason the rest of us jumped at it.”
“She knows she’s unworthy.”
“It’s difficult to argue with. She is an adult, an independent moral agent. The choice is hers, not ours. But it is painful to see someone you care for make a decision that will cost her her soul.”
“I don’t want to keep you, Tsion, but what was your message today? It’s unlikely I’ll get to read it for days, and I need all the encouragement I can get.”
“Well, Cameron, as we come to the end of the suffering caused by the locusts, it’s time to look ahead to at least the next two ‘woes.’”
“So Trumpet Judgment six is next. What do you expect there?”
Tsion sighed. “The bottom line, Cameron, is an army of two hundred million horsemen who will slay a third of the world’s population.”
Buck was speechless. He had read the prophecy, but he had never boiled it down to its essence. “What possible word of encouragement could you have left people with after that bit of news?”
“Only that whatever we have suffered, whatever ugliness we have faced, all will pale in comparison to this worst judgment yet.”
“And the ones after this get even worse?”
“Hard to imagine, isn’t it?”
“Makes my worry over our baby seem insignificant. I mean, not to me, but who else can get worked up about it when a third of mankind will soon be wiped out?”
“Only one-fourth of the people left behind at the Rapture will survive until the Glorious Appearing, Cameron. I am not afraid of death, but I pray every day that God will allow me the privilege of seeing him return to the earth to set up his kingdom. If he takes me before that, I will be reunited with my family and other loved ones, but oh, the joy of being here when Jesus arrives!”
Rayford found Hattie outside. “What’re you doing?” he asked.
“Getting some air. It’s nice to be able to move around a little.”
“Doc thinks it’s too early.”
“Doc’s in love with me, Rayford. He wants to keep me here, incapacitated if necessary.”
Rayford pretended to study the horizon. “What gives you that idea?”
“He didn’t tell me in so many words,” she said. “But a woman knows. I’ll bet you’ve noticed.”
Rayford was happy to say he had not. He had been surprised when Floyd told him of his feelings, but he was also surprised to know that Hattie had sensed it.
“Has he told you, Rayford?”
“Why do you ask?”
“He has! I knew it! Well, I’m not interested.”
“He had a crush. I’m sure you’ve pushed him away by now.”
Hattie looked disappointed. “So he’s got the picture that there’s no hope?”
Rayford shrugged. “It’s not like we talk about it.”
“Does he know you had a crush on me once?”
“Hattie, you sound like a schoolgirl.”
“Don’t deny it.”
“Deny what? That I had a wholly inappropriate attraction to a younger woman? We both know nothing ever came of it and—”
“Only because a bunch of people disappeared and you started feeling guilty.”
Rayford turned to go back into the house.
“I still make you nervous, don’t I?”
He turned. “I’ll tell you what makes me nervous. It’s your obsession with this kid at the airport.”
“Ernie? I want to meet him, that’s all.”
“Did you tell him where we are, how to get here?”
“I don’t even know.”
“Did you tell him Floyd was coming to the hospital?”
Hattie looked away. “Why?”
&
nbsp; “Did you?”
“I might have.”
“That was pretty stupid, Hattie. So what’s the plan? His buddy, Bo, distracts Floyd long enough for Ernie to go get his bike and follow Floyd back to you?”
Hattie looked stricken. “How do you know all this?”
“You’re working with a teenager, Hattie. And you’re acting like one too. If you want to see this kid so bad, why don’t you ask one of us to take you there?”
“Because Floyd is jealous of him and doesn’t want me to even talk to him on the phone. Then he convinces you I’m too sick to go anywhere, so you won’t take me.”
“So Ernie’s trying to come here to what, get acquainted?”
“Yeah.”
“Bull. Do you know he faked being a believer to get next to Ken and might have infiltrated us if we hadn’t caught on?”
Hattie appeared to be hiding a smile, which infuriated Rayford. “You knew about that too?” he demanded.
“When I told him I wasn’t really part of the Tribulation Force, he told me his plan. It’s what I kinda like about him.”
“That he would endanger our lives? That he’s an opportunist? A gold digger?”
She shrugged. “The other men in my life are getting boring.”
Rayford shook his head. “I hope you’re happy with him.”
“Is he coming here?”
“Floyd’s trying to shake him, but he may have to lead him here. We can’t withhold oxygen from Chloe just because Floyd has a kid following him. I hope you’re happy. There’s no way we can trust that kid once he knows where we are. We’ll have to move again, and where will we go? And could we, with a woman about to give birth or with a brand-new baby? You go on about not being worthy of God’s forgiveness, and then you try to prove it.”
Rayford went in and let the door shut behind him. He hesitated, wanting to say more but not knowing what. She opened the door. “Come back, Rayford. Chloe’s in trouble?”
“Could be. Needs that oxygen.”
“Floyd obviously has his phone with him.”
“Yep.”
“Call him. Let me talk to him.”
Rayford dialed.
“Hey, Rafe,” Floyd said. “He didn’t follow me into the airport, but after meeting T, I know why. We’re thinking of switching cars and seeing if the kid will follow him. That’s one advantage to our looking alike.”