Lee groaned. “Please don’t let this be the end. Give it more time. I’m good with that. I’ll wait. I’ll wait as long as you need.”
She wanted to say yes. She loved him. God help her, she loved him to distraction, but she was afraid.
“I don’t know. Maybe,” she said.
Relief surged through Lee so fast his knees nearly buckled.
“Thank you, Trina! Thank you. I swear on my daddy’s grave that I will never let you down again.”
She frowned. “I didn’t say yes. I said maybe.”
“I know, and I’ll take a maybe any day. I love you. You’re all that matters to me.”
Trina’s phone began signaling a text. She glanced down, then saw it was from her mom and read it.
“That was from Mom. She’s ready to go home. Look, call me tomorrow evening after I get off work. We’ll talk, okay?”
“Yes, yes,” Lee said, and then he took her by both hands and kissed them, one after the other. “I love you, Trina. Thank you for giving me a second chance.”
She sighed. “I love you, too, Lee. That’s why it hurt so much.”
She pulled her hands away and left him standing, but it was more than he’d hoped for when he had come here today. He took a long shaky breath, and then left the church and headed for his car.
Trina went over to her mother, slid a hand across her shoulders and gave her a quick hug. “You’ve had quite an afternoon. So you’re ready to get out of here, huh?”
“Yes, but I saw you talking to Lee, and if you’d rather stay and spend some time with him, feel free. I just didn’t want to leave without letting you know I was going.”
Trina shook her head. “No, I’m ready to leave, too. I told him to call me tomorrow after I get home from work. I said I’d talk.”
Betsy smiled. “If you love him, this is good. Forgiveness is a powerful thing, and no one’s perfect.”
Trina smiled. “I know, Mama, but I’ve given him all the time he deserves today. Let’s go. I’m ready to get out of these shoes.”
“Then, we’re gone,” Betsy said.
She got in the car, sent Trey a text that they were going home and buckled up.
A few minutes later she and Trina passed the city-limit sign on their way out of town. The drive home usually took around fifteen minutes, and they were eager to get back. They were both talked out and rode in comfortable silence, each locked into her own memories of the day.
It wasn’t until Betsy topped the hill leading down to their drive that she noticed a car stalled on the side of the road. The hood was up, but she couldn’t see the driver. “Looks like someone is having car trouble,” she said.
Trina sat up, and then straightened the seat belt over her breasts. “I’m sure they used their cell to call for help,” she said.
“Most likely, but I can hardly drive by without checking. We don’t have to get out, okay?”
Trina frowned. “Mama, your life is in danger.”
Betsy sighed. “Sweetheart, you cannot hide from life and then say you’re living. Understand?”
Trina rolled her eyes. “I hear you, but I don’t have to agree.”
Betsy laughed and began to brake as they approached. Then the driver stepped out from behind the raised hood, and Betsy snorted as she put the car in Park.
“See. Hardly the big bad wolf. Roll your window down a second. We’ll make sure help is on the way.”
“Hey!” Betsy said as the man bent down to look in the window. “Looks like you’re having a little car trouble. Do you need any help?”
“Not a bit,” he said. Then he raised the handgun and shot Trina point-blank in the chest and Betsy before she had time to scream.
Then he went back to his car, lowered the hood and drove away, leaving the women’s car idling and the two of them dead where they sat.
It was the squawk of a crow sitting on a nearby fence that Trina heard first, then she heard herself moan as she fought her way back to consciousness. She didn’t know where she was or what was happening, but her chest felt like it was on fire.
“Mama, Mama, I’m sick,” she mumbled, and was grabbing at her breasts as she opened her eyes.
Then she saw where they were and the blood—God, the blood. Her mother was slumped over the steering wheel with a hole in the side of her face, and Trina knew she was dead. The pain of that loss was beyond measure. She wanted to scream, but she had no breath to spare, and in that moment she knew if she didn’t do something, she was going to be dead, too.
She was struggling to stay conscious when she felt something in her hand. Her phone! It was her phone. She managed to punch in 911. She was trying to stay conscious, but by the time the call was answered she was slumped sideways, her head hanging partway out the window.
* * *
When the call first came in, dispatcher Avery Jones got no answer, but he kept repeating, “911, what is your emergency? Hello! This is 911. What is your emergency, please?”
Trey was standing in the hallway outside his office when he heard the dispatcher repeating himself and walked over.
“Got a hang-up?” he asked.
“I don’t think so,” Avery said. “I can hear an engine running, like a car. The line is still open. I think someone called and passed out. It’s a cell phone, so it’s not registering an address.”
Trey frowned. “Give me the number. I’ll see if we can triangulate from the location.”
Even before the dispatcher was through reading out the last two digits of the number, every muscle in Trey’s body had turned to stone. His ears were roaring, and he felt like he was going to throw up.
“Did you get it?” the dispatcher asked. “Want me to read it out to you again?”
“No need,” Trey said. “That’s my sister’s number. She and Mom were on their way home from the church.”
His hands were shaking as he tried his mother’s cell, but the call rang unanswered, then went to voice mail. He tried Trina’s number, but just as he’d expected, it went straight to voice mail.
“I’m going out to the farm. Get an ambulance en route to the farm.”
“Yes, sir,” Avery said. “Do you want company? Earl is on patrol.”
“I’ll let you know.”
Trey ran for his patrol car, and left town with lights and sirens blasting. He wanted to pray, but the only words that would come to mind were No, please, please, no.
The miles flew past so fast that the roadside was a blur, and then he topped the hill just above the driveway to their farm and his heart dropped. Betsy’s car was idling in the middle of the blacktop only a few yards away from the mailbox. He could see someone’s head hanging partway out of the passenger side window, and he started to scream.
“No, damn it, no!”
He slammed the patrol car into Park as soon as he was close and got out on the run.
The driver’s-side window was covered in blood and brain matter, and he was struggling with the need to vomit as he opened the door and slid a hand along his mother’s neck checking for a pulse that he already knew wasn’t there.
“Jesus, Mary and Joseph,” he sobbed, staggering around to the other side of the car with tears rolling down his face and a pain he couldn’t describe in his chest.
Trina’s head was lying partway out the window, and it was quickly obvious that she’d been shot in the chest. When he saw the phone in her hand, he thought about how scared she must have been to call for help.
He ran his hand down the side of her neck, feeling desperately for a pulse, and when it kicked faintly beneath his fingertips he was so shocked he almost forgot what to do.
“Shit! She’s alive,” he mumbled, and ran back to his patrol car to call it in.
“This is Chief Jakes. Radio the ambulance en route to 19929 West Covell Road that I have a live one. Gunshot wound to the chest. Then contact the coroner’s office and dispatch him to the same address. Then contact the county sheriff and get him here ASAP. I need all available deputies at this site.”
“Yes, sir. Dispatching, sir.”
Trey threw the mike down, popped the trunk for the first-aid kit and then ran back to the car. Within seconds he had made pressure bandages out of some disposable towels and was holding them on both Trina’s entrance and exit wounds, trying to stop the bleeding. He couldn’t look at his mother because he knew he would lose his mind. There was still a chance, albeit a slim one, to save his sister’s life, and he wasn’t going to fail her if he could help it.
And so he stood in the road, engulfed by the scent of blood and exhaust fumes, his sister’s body sandwiched between the two pressure bandages he was holding, unaware that he was sobbing. The blood continued to ooze between his fingers as he prayed.
He didn’t think about the fact that every local with a scanner had heard his broadcast, or that a good number of listeners would recognize the address of the Jakes farm, but it was apparent to everyone who’d heard him that his call for help at the church earlier had come too late. Someone was dead, and someone else was probably dying. They’d all seen Betsy and her daughter together. Which one of them was still alive?
The killer heard the news as he was gassing up his car and nearly dropped the hose. The chief had requested an ambulance and the coroner. That couldn’t happen. That couldn’t be true. He’d completed kill shots to the both of them. One in the heart. One in the head. What the fuck had gone wrong?