Texas Hero

Home > Romance > Texas Hero > Page 3
Texas Hero Page 3

by Merline Lovelace


  There they were again. The fire, the impatience.

  She hadn't learned to bank, either. Jack found him­self hoping she never did.

  "And this hypothesis is based on what?" he asked, the evenness of his tone a contrast to hers. "Start at the beginning. Talk me through the se­quence of events."

  "It would be better if I showed you." She speared a glance at her watch. "It's only a little past two. If you want, we can start here at the Alamo, then drive out to the site."

  "Good enough. Give me ten minutes."

  With the controlled, smooth grace that had always characterized him, he executed what Ellie could only describe as an about-face and passed through the connecting door. It closed behind him, leaving her staring at the panels.

  The old cliché was true, she thought with a little ache. You can take a man out of the Marines, but you never quite took the Marine out of the man.

  Like dust blown by the hot Texas wind, memories skittered through her mind. She could see Jack the night they'd met. She'd accompanied her aunt and uncle to a formal function at the American embassy. As head of the security detail, Gunnery Sergeant Car­stairs had stood just behind the ambassador, square-shouldered, proud, confident. And so damned hand­some in his dress blues that Elena hadn't been able to take her eyes off him all evening.

  She'd been the one to ask him to dance. She'd called him a few days later, inviting him to join her for a Sunday afternoon stroll through Chapultapec Park. She'd let him know in every way a woman could that she was attracted to him.

  And that's all it was. A sizzling, searing attraction.

  At first.

  How could she know she'd fall desperately in love with the man? That she'd find a passion in Jack's arms she'd never come close to tasting before? That she'd swear to give up everything for him—her scholarship, her family, her pride—only to have him throw them all back in her face.

  If she closed her eyes, she could replay their final scene in painful, brilliant color. Jack was already un­der house arrest. Her uncle's overly protective, knee-jerk reaction to his niece's affair had forced the U.S. ambassador to demand Sergeant Carstairs's imme­diate reassignment and possible disciplinary action.

  Steaming, Ellie had ignored her uncle's stern or­ders to the contrary, marched to the marine barracks and demanded to see Jack. He'd come to the foyer, stiff and remote in his khaki shirt and blue trousers with the crimson stripe down each leg. With brutal honesty, he'd laid his feelings on the bone.

  Ellie still had a year of college and at least three years of grad school ahead of her. He was going home to face a possible court-martial and an uncer­tain future. He refused to make promises he might not be able to keep. Nor would he allow her put her future on hold for his.

  He was so noble, Ellie had railed. So damned, stu­pidly obstinate. Traits he continued to demonstrate even after they both returned to the States.

  Cringing inside, Ellie recalled the repeated at­tempts she'd made to contact Jack. He wouldn't re­turn her calls. Never answered her letters. Finally, her pride kicked in and she left a scathing message saying that he could damned well make the next move. He never did.

  Now here they were, she thought, blowing out a long breath. Two completely different people. She'd fulfilled the early promise of a brilliant career in his­tory. Jack, apparently, had bottomed out. Despite his extensive training and experience in personal secu­rity, he'd evidently drifted from one firm to another until going to work for some small-time operation in Virginia. Ellie wouldn't have known he was in the bodyguard business if one of her colleagues hadn't stumbled across his company on the Internet while preparing for a trip to Bogota, Colombia, the kidnap capital of the universe.

  It was guilt, only guilt, that had made her insist on Jack when her uncle urged her to accept the ser­vices of a bodyguard. She'd caused the ruin of his chosen career. Her own had exceeded all expecta­tions. The least she could do was throw a little busi­ness his way.

  From the looks of him, he could use it. She didn't know what was considered the appropriate uniform for bodyguards, but her uncle's security detail had always worn suits and ties and walked around talking into their wristwatches. She couldn't remember see­ing any of them in thigh-hugging jeans or wrinkled, blue-cotton shirts with the sleeves rolled up. Or, she thought with a small ache just under her ribs, black leather boots showing faint scuff marks.

  More than anything else, those scratches brought home the vast difference between the spit-and-polish sergeant she'd once loved and the man in the other room. Her throat tight, Ellie turned to gather her purse and keys.

  Jack flipped open the palm-size phone and punched a single key. One short beep indicated in­stant connection to OMEGA's control center.

  "Control, this is Renegade."

  OMEGA's chief of communications responded with a cheerful, "Go ahead, Renegade."

  As little as a year ago, operatives at the headquar­ters stood by twenty-four hours a day to act as con­trollers for agents in the field. Mackenzie Blair's im­provements in field communications allowed for instant contact with headquarters and eliminated the need for controllers. Instead, Mackenzie and her communications techs monitored operations around the clock.

  Mostly Mackenzie, Jack amended. The woman spent almost all her waking hours at OMEGA. She needed a life. Like Jack himself, he thought wryly.

  "I've made contact with the subject."

  The terse report no doubt raised Mackenzie's brows. After all, the background dossier she'd com­piled had included a summation of Elena Maria Al­azar's affair with Sergeant Jack Carstairs.

  "Tell Lightning I'm working the preliminary threat assessment. I'll report back when I have a bet­ter feel for the situation."

  "Roger that, Renegade."

  After signing off, Jack slid the small, flat phone into his shirt pocket and hiked his foot up on a handy footstool. His movements were sure and smooth as he drew a blue steel short-barreled automatic from its ankle holster. He made sure the safety was on, released the magazine, checked the load and pushed the magazine back in place. A tug on the side cham­bered a round. With the 9 mm tucked in its leather nest, he shook his pant leg over his boot and rapped on the door to Ellie's room.

  "Ready?"

  Pulling on a ball cap in the same chili-pepper red as her top, she hooked a bag over her shoulder.

  "Yes."

  Chapter 3

  Outside, the July sun blazed down with cheerful brutality. Exiting the hotel, Ellie turned right toward Alamo Plaza. Jack walked beside her, his eyes nar­rowed against the glare as he scanned the crowd.

  It included the usual assortment of vendors and tourists, with a heavy sprinkling of men and women in Air Force blue. They were basic trainees, released for a few precious hours from the nearby Lackland Air Force Base. With their buzz-cut hair and slick sleeves, they looked so young, so proud of their uni­form. So unprepared for the crises that world events could plunge them into at any moment.

  What they didn't look like were riled-up patriots seeking vengeance on a historian who dared to ques­tion the courage of a local legend. Nonetheless, Jack didn't relax his vigilance.

  "What do you know about the Alamo?" Ellie asked as they approached the mission.

  "Not much more than what I absorbed from the John Wayne movie of the same name."

  And in the data Mackenzie had pulled off the com­puters. Jack kept silent about the background file. Right now, he was more interested in Ellie's version of the Alamo's history.

  "It's one of a string of five missions located along the San Antonio River, founded in the early 1700s," she informed him. "Originally designated Mission Antonio de Valero, it didn't become known as the Alamo until much later."

  With a sweep of her arm, she gestured to the adobe structure dominating the wide plaza ahead.

  "There it is. The shrine of Texas liberty."

  The distinctive building stirred an unexpected dart of pride in Jack. As a symbol of independence, its image ha
d been seared into his consciousness. Of course, all those John Wayne movies might have had something to do with the sensation.

  "Originally the mission compound sat by itself, well across the river from the settlement of San An­tonio de Bexar," Ellie related. "Now, of course, the city's grown up all around it."

  They wove a path through sightseers snapping photo after photo. A red-faced, grossly overweight candidate for a stroke backed up to frame a shot, banging into several fellow tourists in the process. Swiftly, Jack took Ellie's elbow to steer her around the obstacle.

  Just as swiftly, he released her.

  Well, hell! Here it was, going on nine years since he'd last touched this woman. Yet one glide of his fingers along her smooth, warm skin set off a chain reaction that started in his arm and ended about six inches below his belt.

  For the first time since Lightning's call some hours ago, Jack conceded maybe Eduardo Alazar had rea­son to be concerned. The fires weren't out. Not en­tirely.

  Jack had been so certain the embarrassment he'd caused Ellie and himself had doused any residual sparks. The sudden flare of heat in his gut screamed otherwise. Clenching his jaw against the unwelcome sensation, he tried to concentrate on Ellie's recita­tion.

  "A series of droughts and epidemics decimated the mission's religious population," she related. "In 1793 the structure was turned over to civil authori­ties. At that point, Spanish cavalry from Alamo de Parras in Mexico took occupancy, and the fort be­came known at the Pueblo del Alamo. When the Spanish were driven out of Mexico, Mexican troops moved in. About the same time, the Mexican gov­ernment opened the province of Texas to foreign set­tlers."

  ''Foreign meaning Americans?''

  "Americans and anyone else who would put down roots and, hopefully, help stem attacks on settlements by the Commanches and Apaches. Given the prox­imity to the States, though, it's only natural that most immigrants were Americans. Led by Stephen Austin, they flooded in and soon outnumbered the Mexican population five to one. It was only a matter of time until they decided they wanted out from under Mex­ican rule."

  "Those pesky Texans," Jack drawled.

  "Actually," she replied with a smile, "they called themselves Texians then. Or Tejanos. But they were pretty pesky. Tensions escalated, particularly after General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna seized control of the Mexican government and abrogated the con­stitution. In the process, he also abrogated most of the rights of the troublesome immigrants. There were uprisings all over Mexico—and outright rebellion here in Texas.

  "After several small skirmishes, the Americans declared their independence and sent a small force to seize the Alamo. When Santa Anna vowed to march his entire army north and crush the rebellion, the tiny garrison sent out a plea for reinforcements. William Travis, Jim Bowie and Davy Crockett, among others, answered the call."

  The names sounded like a roll call of America's heroes. Jim Bowie, the reckless adventurer as quick with his wit as with his knife. Davy Crockett, leg­endary marksman and two-term member of Congress from Tennessee. William Barrett Travis, commander of the Texas militia who drew a line in the sand with his saber and asked every Alamo defender willing to stand to the end to cross it. Supposedly, all but one did so.

  Those who did met the fate Ellie related in a his­torian's dispassionate voice.

  "When Santa Anna retook the Alamo in March, 1836, he executed every defender still above and burned their bodies in mass funeral pyres. Or so the few non-combatants who survived reported."

  "But you think those reports are wrong."

  "I think there's a possibility they may be."

  With that cautious reply, she led the way through the small door set in the massive wooden gates front­ing the mission. Inside, thick adobe walls provided welcome relief from the heat. A smiling docent stepped forward to greet them.

  "Welcome to the Alamo. This brochure will give you... Oh!" The smile fell right off her face. "It's you, Dr. Alazar."

  "Yes, I'm back again."

  "Our museum director said you'd finished your research here."

  "I have. I'm playing tourist this afternoon and showing my, er, friend around."

  The docent's glance darted from Ellie to Jack and back again. Suspicion carved a deep line between her brows. "Are you planning to take more digital pho­tos?"

  "No. I've taken all I need."

  "We heard those were stolen."

  "They were," Ellie replied coolly. "Fortunately, I make it a practice to back up my work."

  The volunteer fanned her brochures with a snap. "Yes, well, I'll let Dr. Smith know you're here."

  "You've certainly made yourself popular around here," Jack commented dryly.

  "Tell me about it! The exhibits are this way."

  Exiting the church, they entered a long low build­ing that had once served as the barracks and now housed a museum of Texas history. Ellie let Jack set the pace and read those exhibits that caught his in­terest.

  They painted a chillingly realistic picture of the thirteen-day siege. There was Santa Anna's army of more than twelve hundred. The pitiful inadequacy of the defending force, numbering just over a hundred. Travis's repeated requests for reinforcements. The ar­rival of the Tennesseeans. The wild, last-minute dash by thirty-two volunteers from Gobad, Texas, through enemy lines. The final assault some hours before dawn on March sixth. The massacre of all defenders.

  The mass funeral pyres that consumed both Texan and Mexican dead. The pitiful handful of non-combatants who survived.

  The original of Travis's most famous appeal for assistance was preserved behind glass. Written the day after the Mexican army arrived in San Antonio, the letter still had the power to stir emotions.

  Commander of the Alamo Bexar, February 24th, 1836

  To the People of Texas and All Americans in the World

  Fellow Citizens & Compatriots

  I am besieged by a thousand or more of the Mexicans under Santa Anna. I have sustained a continual bombardment & have not lost a man. The enemy has demanded a surrender at discre­tion, otherwise the garrison are to be put to the sword if the fort is taken. I have answered the demand with a cannon shot, and our flag still waves proudly on the walls. I shall never sur­render nor retreat.

  Then, I call on you in the name of Liberty, of patriotism, & of everything dear to the Amer­ican character, to come to our aid with all dis­patch. The enemy is receiving reinforcements daily & will no doubt increase to three or four thousand in four or five days. If this call is ne­glected, I am determined to sustain myself as long as possible and die like a soldier who never forgets what is due to his own honor & that of his country.

  Victory or death

  William Barrett Travis

  Lt. Col. Comdt

  P.S. The Lord is on our side. When the enemy appeared in sight, we had not three bushels of corn. We have since found in deserted houses 80 or 90 bushels & got into the walls 20 or 30 head of Beeves.

  Travis.

  "Whew!" Jack blew out a long breath. "No won­der the mere suggestion that this man didn't die at the Alamo has riled so many folks. He certainly made his intentions plain enough."

  Nodding, Ellie trailed after him as he examined the exhibits and artifacts reported to belong to the defenders, among them sewing kits, tobacco pouches and handwoven horsehair bridles and lariats. A small, tattered Bible tugged at her heart. It was in­scribed to one Josiah Kennett, whose miniature showed an unsmiling young man in the wide-brimmed sombrero favored by cowboys and vaqueros of the time. Silver conchos decorated the hatband, underscoring how closely Mexican and Tejano cul­tures had blended in the days before war wrenched them apart.

  When Jack and Ellie emerged into a tree-shaded courtyard, the serene quiet gave no echo of the can­nons that had once thundered from the surrounding walls. Tourists wandered past quietly, almost rever­ently.

  "Okay," Jack said, summarizing what he'd read inside. "Susanna Dickinson, wife of the fort's artil­lery officer, said that Travis died on the n
orth battery. Travis's slave Joe said he saw the colonel go down after grappling with troops coming over the wall. They make a pretty convincing argument that Wil­liam B. stuck to his word and died right here at the Alamo."

  "An argument I might buy," Ellie agreed, "ex­cept that Susanna Dickinson hid in the chapel during the assault. After the battle, she reportedly saw the bodies of Crockett and Bowie, but never specifically indicated she saw Travis's. She probably heard that he died on the ramparts from other sources."

  "What about Joe's report?"

  "Joe saw his master go down during the assault, then he, too, hid. Travis could have been wounded yet somehow survived. The only document that in­dicates his body was recovered and burned with the others is a translation of a report by Francisco Ruiz, San Antonio's mayor at the time. Unfortunately, the translation appeared in 1860, years after the battle. The original has never been found, so there's no way to verify its authenticity."

  She knew her stuff. There was no arguing that.

  "On the other hand," she continued, "rumors that some of the defenders escaped the massacre ran ram­pant for years. One held that Mexican forces cap­tured Crockett some miles away and hauled him be­fore Santa Anna, who had him summarily shot. There's also a diary kept by a corporal in the Mex­ican army who claims he led a patrol sent out to hunt down fleeing Tejanos."

  Her eyes locked with Jack's.

  "Supposedly, his patrol fired at an escapee ap­proximately five miles south of here, not far from Mission San Jose. The corporal was sure they hit the man, but they lost him in the dense underbrush along the river."

  "Let me guess. That's the site you're now exca­vating." "Right."

  It could have happened, Jack mused. He'd expe­rienced the confusion and chaos of battle. He knew how garbled reports could become, how often even the most reliable intelligence proved wrong.

 

‹ Prev