"Miss!"
The
word slithered from the bushes behind her, startling Catherine
Bennett out of the few wits she'd managed to recover in the
peace of the dark, quiet garden. Thready strains of violin
music and the buzz of voices drifted across the lawn from
the open door to the house. In the light spilling out from
it, she could distinguish a couple of people sitting at a
table on the deck. Cathy measured the distance with her eye.
A good, heavy-duty scream would be heard, even over the party
noises.
"Please,
miss!" Tense urgency drove the voice as it called again.
She
didn't need this. The evening had been disastrous enough already
and a man hiding in the garden spelled trouble with capital
letters. She got up and backed away, while turning to face
the source of the call.
"Don't
run away, please," the voice begged. "I won't hurt you. I
promise. I just want to ask you something."
A
ring of sincerity in the pleading tone kept her from sprinting
straight back to the house, an action the more cautious part
of her brain urged. Cathy strained for a look at the person
in the shrubbery. The voice was male and adult, though probably
not very old. "Come out where I can see you," she demanded.
"Shhh!"
he ordered in a fierce whisper. Leaves rustled, and a slender
shape detached itself from the bushes. In the darkness she
couldn't distinguish his features.
A
light breeze in her face set her shivering. "What do you want?"
She backed another step away. They both jumped when a particularly
loud laugh rang across the yard.
He
turned to face the house. "You been at the party?"
At
it, not of it, Cathy thought. She didn't say so; the young
man wouldn't understand the distinction. "Yes," she answered.
"You
know a guy named Peter Lowell?"
"Yes,"
Cathy admitted, wondering where this was leading.
The
young man's indrawn breath sounded almost like a sob. "He's
in there, ain't he?"
"Yes."
"Could
you ask him to come out here?"
"I
don't know. We just met tonight and I. . . I don't think he
liked me very much. He might not come."
"Please.
It's real important. You gotta try." A quiver shook the young
man's body and voice. Tension or fear -- or both? Whichever
it was, he sounded near the breaking point.
"All
right. Who should I tell him is here?"
The
clouds drifted apart and the moon emerged from their shadow.
A sliver of light fell across the man's cheek and glinted
off the sheen of perspiration there. "Tell him . . . Tell
him it's Bobby. He'll come, I promise."
Cathy
sighed. "All right, I'll try. Wait here." She turned toward
the house when another noise sounded behind them -- the crackle
of twigs or dried leaves underfoot.
Bobby's
head jerked around toward the bushes, then he called again,
"Wait!" There was no mistaking the sheer desperation in his
voice now. "Please. Wait." He looked from her face to the
shrubbery and back again. "I better give you the message.
Tell this to Mr. Lowell, and no one else. Promise you won't
tell anyone else?"
Cathy
went back to him, found one of his arms, and pulled him back
into the shadow of a large boxwood. The arm she held was trembling.
"All right," she said. "What's the message?"
The
young man looked around the yard and took a couple of quick,
shallow breaths. "Tell him Danny was framed. I got the proof.
Tell him--"
Another
rustle shook the bushes, followed by a sudden, sharp crack
which reverberated for a few seconds afterward. Bobby groaned
and collapsed, sagging against Cathy. The abrupt burden of
his weight drove her to the ground, where she found herself
half crushed by the young man's bulk. She moved out from under
him, a rush of adrenalin sharpening her senses so that she
could hear, over Bobby's ragged breathing, the squish of a
footstep in the shrubbery and the churning of leaves and branches
fading rapidly as the gunman retreated.
Cathy
stood up and started toward the brush to follow the noise,
but changed her mind when a choked groan from Bobby called
her back. He sprawled motionless on the ground where she had
pushed him when she stood up. The moonlight provided little
illumination, but a new, large smudge stained the young man's
light shirt. "Please. Tell Lowell--" He choked on the words.
Cathy
found one of his hands and tried to tell him to be still,
to be quiet, she'd get help. His breathing was harsh, rattling,
and difficult.
Bobby
moved his head in a bare negative motion. "Tell Lowell . .
." He worked for a breath. "God, please . . ." He tried again.
"Danny . . ." He paused and the hand she held clenched. "In
the air . . ."
Breath
and strength deserted him at the same time. The fingers clasping
hers went slack and slid out of her grasp.
Cathy
did scream then, yelling for help at the top of her voice,
though she knew the man on the ground was beyond assistance.
She stood and ran back to the house. People responding to
her cry met her as she got to the bottom of the stairs, and
she managed to choke out the words to explain that someone
needed to call the police and an ambulance.
When
a man said he'd make the calls, she went back to the site
of the shooting, leading a knot of strangers. The young man
still sprawled, face up and unmoving, on the grass. Cathy
collapsed beside him. She picked up his hand again, and held
it while they waited in the darkness. She asked one of the
people to find Peter Lowell and bring him. She shivered as
the breeze blew across her bare arms again, but the tears
sliding down her face burned.
Other
people joined the group and several pressed questions on her.
She explained only that she'd met this person in the garden
and he'd been shot by a sniper while they were talking. Someone
brought a flashlight and by its glow they ascertained that
the young man was indeed dead. Cathy looked away after her
first view of him. Stripped of personality, the face told
her nothing she didn't already know: he had been young. The
crowd was beginning to overwhelm her when she heard a voice
she thought she recognized asking to be allowed through.
"Lowell?"
she said.
The
flashlight swung toward the newcomer, picking out a tall,
slender man in a gray suit. The beam glinted in his blond
hair and reflected off the lenses of thick glasses. "Yes,"
he answered. "What's---?" He stopped abruptly. "God Almighty!"
The
light had moved back to shine on Cathy. She must look even
worse than she knew. She lifted a hand toward him and saw
in the light it was red with blood; she let it fall back into
her lap and shut her eyes against the glare.
"Turn
that away!" Lowell ordered the man with the torch. "You wanted
me?" he asked.
"He
wanted you." She gestured toward the man on the ground. "He
was trying to get a message to you."
"Who
is it?"
"He
said his name was Bobby."
"Bobby?"
The name meant something to him. Lowell went down on one knee
beside the body.
"He's
dead," Cathy warned.
"Dead!"
She could hear his shock. "Bobby? Are you sure?"
"I'm
not a doctor, but yes, I'm sure."
"Dead?
No." Pain sharpened Lowell's voice to a thin wire of sound.
"Oh God, no." His hand moved to the dead man's throat, felt
for a pulse, then reached up to smooth the hair. "He was trying
to get a message to me?" He stopped and swallowed hard. "Did
he say what the message was?"
"Yes,"
Cathy said.
"What---?"
The sharp blaze of a siren cut through the night and the chatter
of the crowd. Lowell looked up and surveyed the people gathered
around them. "Later," he said, and Cathy nodded agreement.
The siren approached and swooped into the driveway, cutting
off abruptly as the police car reached the end of the driveway
at the back of the house. Blue lights swirled, reflecting
off trees, grass and crowd, throwing crazy shadows over them
all. Another siren heralded the arrival of an ambulance just
seconds later. People piled out of the ambulance and police
car, hauling lights, weapons, and medical equipment.
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