Peter's Return. Cynthia Cooke
nodded.
“Okay, then, let’s hear it.”
He squeezed his eyes shut so hard that his cheeks compressed and his small mouth straightened into a thin, serious line. As Emily watched him, pure joy filled her heart. He was such a treasure. His little voice, weak and tired, sounded crystal clear like the first drops of rain on a cool fall morning. She sat up straighter to listen.
“Dear Lord, now it’s time for me to rest, today I tried to do my best. Watch over me as I lie in sleep, help me to have faith in Thee. Care for all the world’s little children, the sick and the poor, give them Your blessing. Care for Dr. Armstrong and Dr. Fletcher and Papa the same, this I pray in Jesus’s name. Amen.”
His big brown eyes opened, capturing hers, and from that moment on her heart was lost.
“You’re supposed to say ‘Amen,’” he whispered.
“Amen,” she said quickly.
He gave a triumphant smile and she rustled his hair. “Are you ready to go to sleep now, young man?”
He nodded.
Emily leaned over and kissed his forehead. “Sweet dreams.”
“You, too, Dr. Señorita,” Marcos said with a sleepy smile and fell back to sleep, as only children can do, the instant he closed his eyes.
Emily sat staring at him. She had just prayed. It was as simple as that—as simple as closing her eyes and talking to someone who loved her. She sighed. Nothing was ever that simple. She rose, straightened his covers, and then turned toward the small connecting room that held his medication and other supplies.
“You’re very good with him,” Baltasar said, startling her as she entered the room.
Surprised, Emily wondered how long he’d been standing there watching her. “Thank you,” she responded and cringed as her voice broke. The last thing she wanted was for him to suspect she’d figured out the truth about him. “He’s a special boy.” Too special to deserve a drug lord for a father.
His eyes softened, and he dropped onto a stool next to the long blue counter. “He’s all I have left in the world that matters to me.”
As much as she didn’t want to, Emily believed him. She’d had to deal with parents of terminally ill children before. She knew only too well the heartache that lay ahead for him. She wouldn’t wish that on her worst enemy. Not even her kidnapper.
“Are the phones up and working yet?” she asked, though she knew it was futile, knew if he had any intention of being aboveboard, he would have asked for her assistance, not demanded it.
“Why do you want to contact the outside world so badly? Are you not happy here? Not treated well? Is the food okay? Your quarters?”
“Yes, everything is fine, that’s not the point. There are people at the clinic waiting for Dr. Fletcher and myself, other people, other children, who need us.”
“I have talked to Dr. Haynes, the Doctors Without Borders representative, and have assured him that you both are fine, and that you are assisting me with my son on an extremely sensitive issue. He understands completely and has asked me to tell you not to worry about the clinic, things are fine. They have sent for other doctors who will be arriving within the next few days.”
“That sounds convenient,” she said, the words coming out more bitter than she’d expected.
Baltasar stood. “I love my son and will do whatever I have to do to ensure his last days are comfortable. You can either have a pleasant stay here at my estate, or you can be treated like a prisoner. The choice is entirely yours.”
The gloves had just come off.
Emily stiffened and was thankful when he turned and abruptly left the room. She walked into the kitchen and with trembling fingers poured herself a cup of iced tea. As nice as the estate was, she was still a prisoner being held against her will and unable to communicate with anyone. Anyone except for Peter. She had to convince him to help her, and right now was as good a time as any.
She downed her iced tea then made sure Esteban wasn’t lurking around before heading out the front door. As soon as she stepped outside an invisible barrier of heat, hot and clinging, hit her. She pushed through it, hugging the side of the house, hoping no one had seen her. She kept to the cobblestone path that led through the tall bushes. Their branches reached for the sky, fighting for the sparse rays of sunlight that made it through the thick canopy of trees.
As she traveled deeper into the grounds, the trees became denser, the sounds more foreign to her. What was she thinking? How could she ever find Peter out here? She didn’t even know if he was still at the estate. She would do better to try and find a way to escape on her own. The truth, whether or not she cared to admit it, was that she didn’t know who Peter Vance was anymore. He certainly wasn’t that long-haired ruffian she’d seen talking about kilos in Baltasar’s study.
A loud squawking sounded above her. Her gaze snapped up onto the beady black eyes of a multi-colored bird. The raptor-looking thing was more menacing than an object of beauty, with its clawlike beak that could easily tear into her flesh and rip it to shreds. She rubbed her arms. The birds in her travel brochures certainly hadn’t looked like this one.
Even the thick tangle of flowering vines appeared to be slowly squeezing the life out of the trees, rather than draping down their trunks like the bridal veils the brochures described. Ha! It was more like suffocation, slow and Machiavellian. She gulped a deep breath, finding it harder and harder to breathe. There was no air here, not even the slightest breeze.
In some places she thought she could see steam rising from the soft earth buried under a thick layer of dead leaves. She grimaced, not even wanting to think about what she could be stepping on. “I’m slowly being cooked alive,” she muttered. And, for a second, wondered when she’d veered off the cobblestone path.
A giant insect buzzed past her head. She ducked, then dragged her forearm across her damp forehead. She’d better go back. This wasn’t such a good idea. Even if she could find her way off this compound, she’d never find her way out of the jungle. She was trapped.
Something crunched beneath her canvas tennis shoe and her face contorted in disgust. She stared down at the giant cockroaches scurrying around her feet. They were as long as her hand! A hoarse cry erupted from her chest, then caught in her throat and choked her. She turned and ran, unsure of where she was going, just heading back in the direction she’d come, hoping to find her way back to the estate.
She’d been such a fool to come to South America! “An adventure,” she muttered. She had seen brochures of incredible beaches, water so blue it made you think you’d found heaven on earth—tropical flowers, waterfalls, beautifully colored birds, paradise on earth.
Paradise? Ha! She was a fool and an idiot. A sharp pain stitched her side, making her stop and double over. “Lord, please help me,” she begged, then realized she’d just prayed, again. Twice in one day! A twinge of guilt jabbed her. She stared at the ground waiting for it to open up and swallow her.
She was such a hypocrite, only asking for help when she was desperate and then not living up to her promises, not giving Him the respect He deserved. And this place was her punishment, she thought as she walked down the path carefully watching each strategically placed step. Perhaps if I ask God to forgive me, if I tried harder to be good….
Something shifted in the corner of her eye. She stopped and turned, her eyes widening painfully as she stared into the diamond-shaped slits of a hissing reptile. A snake! Not a common garden snake that kids scurry about to catch, but a giant snake with a body the thickness of her thigh. She stood frozen, her heart pounding, unable to move, to scream, to breathe.
Then it began to move. She stood horrified as its sinewy thickness slid up the vine-laden tree beside her. Involuntarily, her mouth snapped open and she gasped a breath of air, allowing the adrenaline to slam into her chest and give her control of her body once more.
Her