Turquoise Guardian. Jenna Kernan

Turquoise Guardian - Jenna Kernan


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call Arizona Highway Patrol. You safe?”

      “For now. We’re heading north.”

      “You guys clear?”

      “Not sure. Any chance you can send Kurt down here for us?”

      Carter was referring to their youngest brother, who was one of the pilots for the air ambulance transport team out of Darabee. In other words, Kurt might be able to get his hands on a helicopter.

      “Either of you injured?”

      He glanced at Amber, who was ashy and bleeding from the knees.

      “If you need us to be, then, yes,” said Carter.

      “There’s a hospital in Benson. Head there.”

      “En route,” Carter said.

      She disconnected and dropped the phone in his front breast pocket. She leaned in, wrapping her arms about his neck.

      “You saved my life.”

      She stared at him in a look that made his stomach tug. Those big, beautiful eyes open and grateful to him. How he’d missed her. Nine years since she’d broken it off. Seven since he’d laid eyes on Amber, but his heart remembered. He knew because it banged against his rib cage. He was thirsty for her, as thirsty as the desert longing for the yearly floods. He forced his gaze back to the road. He couldn’t do this again. The longing receded, replaced by the betrayal. Why did she leave her people?

      Why did she leave him?

      They could have worked it out. He’d been so stupid, and she’d been so stubborn. Blown to hell like that Humvee back in the Sandbox. No way to put back the pieces.

      He glanced at her. Was there?

      He looked in the rearview, spotted the van and stiffened. Amber followed the direction of his gaze, turning to stare through the rear window as Carter uttered a curse.

      “It’s them!” she cried.

      Carter accelerated toward the highway. His truck was tough, eight cylinders, but the van was gaining on them. That didn’t make any sense.

      Amber spun in the seat, kneeling to look out the back.

      “He’s got that rifle out the window.”

      Carter pressed her head down. Then he brushed her off the seat so that she sprawled into the wheel well.

      “Hold on.” His truck might not be as fast as whatever engine they had in that van, but it had higher clearance and tires especially made for riding over rock and through soft sand. Carter braked and swerved from the highway into the shoulder and then veered off toward the cover of the trees that lined the San Pedro River. He braced as more bullets punctured a line of holes across his truck’s rear gate. The rooster tail of dust and sand obscured the view of the van and hopefully them as a target from the shooter.

      He needed both hands on the wheel to hold his course as they bumped across uneven ground and plowed through cacti; as the tall dry grass lashed against his bumper, sounding like heavy rain. He kept going, making for the river that he knew was dry in certain stretches for much of the year. Amber sat on the floorboards with one hand thrown across the seat and one on the glove box as she braced herself for the jolting ride through the thick chaparral to the flat stretch of the thirsty San Pedro. He had to get her out of here.

      “Are they following us?” she called to be heard against the thudding of brush against the fender.

      “Can’t see,” he said and lowered his chin as bursts of another desperate flight flashed through his mind like a thunderstorm.

       Chapter Four

      Carter made it to Benson and found the hospital. Jack had called in some chips, and Carter found Kurt waiting beside the air ambulance to transport him, Amber and a cooler full of blood to Darabee.

      “Lucky you, there was a wreck on Route 88, and Darabee needs blood.”

      “Fatalities?”

      “Not if we hurry. Hop in.”

      Kurt began his check as Carter helped Amber up and onto the gurney where the single paramedic waited. Carter wouldn’t feel safe until the chopper was airborne. He hadn’t felt this afraid since Iraq. But this time it wasn’t his own survival he contemplated, but Amber’s.

      She lay on the cot beside the paramedic who had already cleaned up the abrasions on her knees and palms. She was wrapped in a blanket and still shivering. Carter scowled and adjusted the headset that allowed him to fill Kurt in on the details.

      When they touched down, both the sheriff and his twin brother, Tribal Detective Jack Bear Den, were waiting. Behind them stood a member of Carter’s tribal council, Wallace Tinnin, the chief of tribal police, and Jefferson Rowe, the police chief from Darabee. Rowe was an Anglo, with dark curly hair that was receding and was clipped short at the sides. The deep parallel lines that flanked his mouth and the broad hooked nose did not quite balance his eyes, that were too widely set. Carter glanced to the parking lot beside the landing pad. He’d never seen so many police cars all in one place. Though he imagined the Lilac Copper Mine looked much the same about now.

      “We have a welcoming party.”

      “Looks like a welcoming party from Grey Wolf,” said Carter, referring to General George Crook by the name his people used. Crook had defeated the Tonto Apache with the help of Apache scouts, who were from a different tribe, back in 1883.

      The slowing rotor blades kept back the welcoming committee temporarily, but Carter knew they needed to get onto sovereign land if he was to protect Amber.

      The sheriff approached first. His brother was at the man’s heels.

      The sheriff shouted louder than necessary to be heard over the helicopter.

      “Mr. Bear Den, I’m Sheriff Bill Taylor. I need you and Ms. Kitcheyan to come with us.”

      “Why?”

      “She is a person of interest in an open investigation in Lilac,” said the sheriff.

      “Is she being charged with a crime?”

      The sheriff shook his head, his hand going to his fleshy neck and then up to the bristle of hair that was all that remained after someone had taken clippers to his head.

      “No. A witness.”

      “She’s a member of our tribe and as such will be returning to Turquoise Canyon.”

      It was a lie. She wasn’t a tribe member anymore and had no rights to protection from their people. But none of his tribe members corrected him. In fact, Jack had already opened the door to his tribal police unit and retrieved Amber, who was now flanked by tribal police officers and tribal officials.

      Chief Rowe and his men watched as the sheriff took a step to move past Carter, but he shifted to intercept.

      “I’ll go with you,” he said.

      “I was told Ms. Kitcheyan was in need of medical attention.”

      “Delivered en route,” said Carter.

      Amber was now in the backseat of Jack’s police car. Possession was now theirs. Carter placed two fingers above his brow and gave the sheriff a mock salute.

      Then he trotted to his brother’s unmarked car and slipped into the passenger seat, dragging the door shut with a satisfying snap.

      “I hope Kurt isn’t fired over this,” said Jack.

      “Me, too.”

      Police Chief Rowe stood beside Sheriff Taylor, who watched them with hands on hips as their chief of police, Wallace Tinnin, and tribal council member, Zach Gill, ran interference.

      “They get the two in the van?” asked


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