Part 59 (1/2)

Charlie sat with Vince in the hospital, waiting for the doctor to give him a clean bill of health so they could go home.

Joan and her young officer had come to this hospital, too. Mike was getting his arm st.i.tched, and Joan bounced back and forth between their two rooms.

”Well,” Charlie said, ”I think today answers the question of whether or not we're going to Hawaii next year. I'd rather skip the VIP treatment next time, thank you very much.”

Joan stuck her head in the door. ”Gramma, there's a reporter outside who'd like to talk to you.”

”Not interested,” Charlie said. ”Someone just shot my husband. How does it feel? It stinks, thank you very much. He could have died, so of course I'm very relieved, yet, funny, I'm also angry as h.e.l.l that that b.a.s.t.a.r.d was shooting in the first place. No further comments.”

”I'll tell him no, thank you.” Joanie disappeared.

Vince was shaking his head. ”I'm fine. This isn't that big a deal, and you know it. You've seen real bullet wounds, Charles.”

She had. Still, she had the right to be good and mad.

”You saved Joanie's and my life,” she said. ”And you put yourself in the way of a bullet that could well have ricocheted off the metal of the stage and hit the President of the United States. And still it's me they want to talk to. When are they going to ask to interview you? You're the hero. You've always been my hero, Vince.”

He actually looked embarra.s.sed. ”Well, thanks, Charlotte, but...” He shook his head and laughed.

”But what? You're so annoyingly easygoing. Everything's okay with you. Aren't you even the slightest bit mad that you were shot?”

”In the a.s.s,” he pointed out. ”And sure. It's a... pain in the a.s.s.” He laughed, but then he got sober really fast. ”I thought we were going to die, Charlie. I thought I was going to watch you bleed to death in front of me like...”

”Ray?” she asked softly.

”Like Ray and a lot of other good men. Brave men.”

”And you think they 're the heroes,” she said. ”Like James. Because they didn't come home.”

”Yes,” he said quietly. ”Like James.” He cleared his throat. ”We've never really talked about him. All these years, and... I'm the one who didn't want to talk about him. Maybe you did, and I apologize for not letting you do that.”

”Vincent...”

”I think we should go to Hawaii,” he told her. ”It doesn't have to be part of this ceremony next December. That's fine if you don't want to do that. In fact, I think we should go before then. Soon. I think it's important for you, and frankly, it's even more important for me.”

Charlie shook her head. ”I don't understand.”

His smile was so sad it nearly made her start to cry as he said, ”Don't you see, Charles, I've lived his lifea”the life that should have been his. I want to go there and visit him and... well, properly pay my respects.”

”Vincent, you didn't live his life. You lived your life. Our life. You don't really thinka””

”Answer this for me,” he said. ”Would you have married me if you hadn't been pregnant?”

”Yes!”

”Come on, Charlotte,” he said. ”All those nights when we were first marrieda”I heard you crying.”

”My G.o.d.” Charlie was shocked. ”For all these years, you've actually believed... ?” She stood up and went to the door and called down the hall. She could be good and loud when she put her mind to it. ”Joan! Is that reporter still out there? I changed my minda”will you ask him if he'd like to come to our home for .an interview? This evening, at seven?”

Mary Lou Starrett's car wasn't in the driveway of her little house on Westway Drive.

Husaam Abdul-Fataah sank down low in the driver's seat and waited for her to return, listening to the news on the radio.

Twenty-four people wounded, four killeda”not counting the terroristsa”two of them members of the Secret Service. It was a pathetic outcome, considering two of the three weapons he'd helped smuggle onto the base had been submachine guns.

President Bryant was, of course, untouched. Husaam had pretty much a.s.sumed that would be the case, although he hadn't attempted to correct his a.s.sociates' hopes. Who was he to crush their pathetic little dreams of glory? He was just the man who helped them with their plan in exchange for a generous fee.

A briefing from the White House revealed that one man concealed his weapon in a baby stroller. Another carried a lady's purse. The third had a side arm hidden beneath his jacket.

They'd been identified as Jalaal Izz Udeen, Mamdouh Ihsaan, and Ghiyaath Abdullah. Two were from Saudi Arabia and one was from Syria. All had strong al-Qaeda connections.

What a surprise.

All three had come into the country on student visas that had long since expired.

All three of the terrorists had left this earth and gone on to their heavenly rewarda”although there were several others in critical condition in the hospital that the authorities were planning to question in terms of a possible connection to the attack.

And that was good news. Confusion always helped. In this case it was the United States with their ”No, we don't do racial profiling” promises, even as they did just that, that were muddying the waters. He was willing to bet that all of the ”several others” questioned would be of Arabic descent.

While Husaam Abdul-Fataah, formerly known as Warren Canton from Lenexa, Kansas, aka Bob Schwegel, or Luke Daniels, or John Manning, or Doug Fisk, was nowhere near the list of suspects.

And he was determined to stay that way.

As Husaam watched, Sam Starrett pulled into his driveway and went inside his house. The sun was starting to set, but there was still no sign of Mary Lou.

A few minutes later, the radio announcer said that a new Pentagon briefing revealed that holes had been cut in the fence surrounding the parade grounds. The gunmen and their weapons were believed to have entered the secure area that way, directly from the Navy base. Officials believed the three men had entered the base as part of a tour group, and remained in hiding there for four, possibly five days prior to the attack.

That was uncomfortably close to the truth, and Husaam started his car and pulled away.

It was time to get out of Dodge. To keep a low profile for a while.

Mary Lou would have to wait.

Vince had to sit with part of his b.u.t.tocks centered on a plastic blow-up kiddie flotation ring, which, in his eyes, lacked a certain dignity for a gentleman of his years.

To make matters worse, Charlotte was holding a press conference right there in their living room with a reporter from the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Joan and Mike had come over, too, although they both looked about ready to drop. Over at the hospital, they'd made Charlie the happiest grandmother in the world by announcing their plans to get married.

They now sat on the couch, holding hands.

As they all gathered there in the living room, Charlie told their entire storya”Vince's quest to talk to Senator Howard about Tarawa, his illness, their friends.h.i.+p that became something more. She'd even told the tale of Upstairs Sally.

She spoke at great length about the unsung bravery of the Underwater Demolition Teamsa”UDT mena”throughout the war, about the important part they'd played clearing the beaches during the Normandy invasion and their vital roles in the Pacific island-hopping campaign.

She talked about James, about her unbearable grief after losing him, about her heartache as she thought of him dying so far from home and so terribly alone.

”I wasn't looking to fall in love again,” she told them, told Vince, too. She looked right at him as she spoke. ”But there he was. A young man who was so very special. My mother-in-law, Edna Fletcher, loved Vince, too, right from the first moment they met.

”Well, time came for him to go off to join the UDT training down in Florida. I'm ashamed to say mat I took him to the train without so much as a kiss good-bye. I cried about that all the way home. And then I cried some more when I found out he'd left behind a letter asking me again to marry him. I have it here.”