The Reading Garden - Single Title


Important notice: All excerpts have been submitted by the author.


Author: Margery Harkness Casares


CHAPTER ONE

NORWICH, GEORGIA - JUNE, 1993


Maura Sinclair glanced at the tower clock as she jogged onto the university campus toward the science lab parking area. Almost seven. Even at that early hour the heat was oppressive. She labored to draw the sultry air into her lungs and blew at tendrils of sweat-dampened hair that escaped her headband and fell into her eyes. A tiny rivulet of perspiration trickled a path between her breasts.

A sudden sharp blast jerked Maura's head up. A man who jogged ahead of her, twisted awkwardly, and slammed to the ground. His blood spilled out on the walkway in an ever widening splash of color. A staccato burst of gunshots froze Maura where she stood. Her heart jumped into her throat.

For a dreadful moment she stood paralyzed while her brain registered the wild chaotic disorder that followed: screams, shouts, more gunshots. The few people on campus at that early hour scattered in terrified erratic flight.

She thought she screamed but didn't recognize her own voice in the hysterical outcries that pierced her ears. Her shocked mind seemed to be locked on the blistering heat of the sun that seared her exposed skin and on the breath that was caught in her throat.

She looked up instinctively at the university tower and saw the man with the rifle. The image fixed itself indelibly in her brain. Bullets thudded into the ground at her feet. She fled from the tower, running so hard a needle of pain stabbed her side. It all seemed to be happening in slow motion.

But it couldn't be happening! Tomorrow was to be the most important day of her life; she couldn't die today, not like this.

A quick look over her shoulder told her the campus area was now clear, except for those who lay wounded, and an awesome silence hovered in the air.

A car pulled into a parking slot. Maura raced toward it. A man whose attention was focused on papers he held, got out of the car and stepped up on the curb. He walked onto the sunlit grass of the campus.

Maura hurdled a low bush and tackled him. He fell back under fragrant white-blossomed azaleas with her sprawled on top of him.

"Whoa!" he exclaimed. "Can't we talk about this?" Startled gray eyes behind gold-framed glasses reflected his surprise. He rubbed the shoulder that took most of the impact of the fall.

"Lie still," she pleaded. "Don't move."

"That's a rather difficult order, especially with you lying on top of me."

"Please!" The high pitch of her voice echoed her anxiety. She quickly rolled off him.

Bullets whined through the hot air. "My God! Are those gunshots?" he asked, sharply alert now.

Maura's breath fluttered from her lungs. Her heart thudded. "Yes. A sniper."

"Sniper?" She watched incredulity etch his classic features and darken his slate gray eyes to a hue of old pewter. He repeated the word slowly as though he must test the sound of it before his brain could assimilate it. He lay beside her under the covering foliage, his mouth grim, his eyes bright. A muscle in his jaw tightened. He lay so near her that when he moved his lips brushed her cheek, and Maura was aware of a faint scent of after shave on his tanned face and a hint of mint on his breath.

His arm went about her protectively and she clung to him, comforted by his strength.

Sirens split the air, screaming in from all directions. Police, ambulances, firefighters, rescue equipment, and media vehicles converged on the scene.

"Where is the sniper?" he asked. "Do you know?"

"He's on the tower. I was looking . . . I can't breathe." She pressed a hand to her breast and drew air into her lungs. "I was looking for a place to hide when I saw you get out of your car. I knew you had no idea what was going on."

"You might have made it to a safer spot, if you hadn't--"

"No. This was the only cover nearby, and I ran for it."

He lifted his head. His gaze searched the tower. A hail of bullets slammed into the ground near them.

"Stay down," she pleaded, "don't give him a target."

Inching closer to her, he said gently, "We'll be okay."

With his body wedged against hers, Maura felt less distressed. She inhaled deeply and asked, "Why don't the police do something?"

"They're probably trying to get a fix on his exact location and determine the range of his weapon."

Maura parted the leaves of a bush and saw the door of a patrol car open. An officer got out. Bullets sprayed the area. The awful sound of metal striking metal chilled her. She stared helplessly as the officer clutched his chest and fell against the side of his vehicle, then out of sight. Her hand flew to her mouth.

Someone screamed.

Maura's gaze followed the long line of official vehicles as they moved farther down the street. The area exposed to her view was now filled with police and medics. Camera equipment and reporters were everywhere. A police helicopter hovered overhead, quickly joined by a second one carrying a television camera crew, and a third, the SWAT Team.

"Are you okay?" he asked.

She inhaled deeply and nodded. "I can't get enough air, and my hands won't stop shaking. I hope something is done before anyone else is hurt."

"I'm sure everything possible is being done."

She pressed her trembling fingertips to her tense mouth hoping to stem her rising fear. "Can we make it to your car, do you think?"

"I don't want to try. See those medics? They've come for the injuried officer behind a shield."

Maura watched through the foliage as the injured man was rescued. Bullets ping-pinged into the emergency vehicle that pulled away from the curb. Sirens wailed and throbbed and left her ears ringing. Her breath escaped in a spasm of little shudders. The sweet scent of the blossoms were suddenly too cloyingly sweet, and her stomach churned.

He pressed her hand. His grip was strong and warm. "Don't worry. We'll be okay."

"How long do you think we'll have to be here like this?" She was aware of his magnetic, intelligent eyes that studied her, and the shadow of a smile that lifted the corners of his wide, firm mouth.

"Shouldn't be too long. I wouldn't mind this at all under different circumstances. Here I was, thinking you found me so attractive you couldn't control yourself, and all the time it was just a bad guy with a gun."

She laughed. The sound startled her. Biting at her bottom lip, she confessed, "It was mostly reflex action."

He chuckled, "Thanks, anyway. Since we're fated to be close, I'm Simon Boyd, professor and research biochemist here at the university."

She clasped his hand and noticed that her own no longer shook. "I'm Anna Maura Sinclair." Now, why did I tell him my full name? "Don't call me Anna," she added quickly. "I'm marketing consultant for SkyBarr Pharmaceuticals."

"I occasionally test a product for your company, Maura Sinclair."

She nodded and smiled faintly. "My left side is numb. I can't stay in this position much longer. What are they doing? Can you see?"

"Not very well. There's a great deal of activity. Some of the uniforms I see are those of the SWAT Team. It won't take long for them to move up close enough to get inside the tower. I also see armed men on top of the administration building. If the sniper shows himself now, he's dead."

A sudden burst of bullets ripped through the azaleas. A loud thud, and a hiss like air rushing from a balloon, ended with a whispered "Oh". Maura clutched at the fire in her left shoulder, brought her hands up and stared at the blood that dripped down her arm and discolored the white petals.

"No!" Simon's protest was quick and harsh. "No, you can't be hit!"

She saw his shock and outrage and anger. She looked at him in confusion, not sure what had happened. Everything was misty, as if the sun unexpectedly hid itself behind a cloud.

Simon pulled her shirt away from the wound to inspect the damage.

"What happened?" she breathed, her words barely above a whisper.

"You were shot, but don't be alarmed, it was a clean shot. You're bleeding badly, and I need to slow the flow of blood. Don't worry, I'm a medical doctor. I know how to do this and I'll try not to hurt you, okay?"

She nodded weakly.

Simon quickly folded his handkerchief into a pad and pressed it firmly over the gaping wound. He lifted her gently into his arms, covered her with his own body and ran in a crouch toward the end of the row of bushes near the curb.

Bullets struck the ground all around them, and dirt clods leaped into the air. He laid Maura under the covering hedges and shouted to get attention. "We need help! Over here in the azalea garden."

His shouts drew the sniper fire again. Leaves and blossoms exploded from the bushes. An ambulance pulled to the curb beside them. Paramedics arrived behind the protective shield. Simon lifted Maura into his arms, and his voice was quietly reassuring as he whispered in her ear. "Don't be afraid. You'll be okay. Trust me."

He got into the ambulance with her. © 1997
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*About the author: My name is Margery Harkness Casares. I am unpublished in romance but I have had three horror short stories published. Each won first place in a contest and a small amount of money--three years in a row. I have also been a winner in five romance contests. Write to Margery Harkness Casares.


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