Good morning! This continues my
J&B adaptation of Mary McBride’s novel, “Just One Look.” I’m hoping to finish the last chapter of
this story to post by the end of the week.
Readers should also take note – this chapter contains what might be
considered strong language and violent scenes.
It’s not for the weak of heart. ------------- Jan
Faceoff
Chapter 19
“What the *heck* is going on out
there……..”
Brenda peered through the lace panels
at either side of her front door, watching Jax as he jogged up her street
towards Blue’s car. The full moon
reflecting off the fresh blanket of snow cast enough light so that she could
still see him almost until he reached the corner.
“The moon, as it shone on the
new-fallen snow, gave the luster of mid-day to objects below……” she recited to
herself softly. When Jax’s dark bomber
jacket and jeans helped him disappear into the night, Brenda turned back
towards the foyer and leaned against the doorjamb. The box of Christmas decorations still lay half in and half out
of the living room, sending her even further into a holiday fantasy as she
closed her eyes.
They would find the tallest, fullest
evergreen that Mr. Evans had at the small charity tree lot just around the
corner. She could almost picture Jax
dragging it back to the brownstone, where she would be waiting with mugs of hot
cocoa and freshly-baked cookies. After
stringing popcorn in front of the fire, they would spend the evening decorating
the tree. Then she would make her
special recipe for roast chicken and dumplings, which they would eat picnic
style on the coffee table. The only
light in the room would come from the tree and the flickering blaze in the
fireplace. And then, after she cleared
the dishes, Jax would lay her down on the large cushions from the sofa and make
love to her until they both fell asleep snuggled in each others’ arms…….only to
wake and make love again……
Suddenly, her eyes shot open. The blare of a car horn pierced her dream,
bringing her back to reality with a start.
Brenda turned back to the door and pushed the curtains aside, trying to
see what was causing all the commotion.
She could vaguely hear someone shouting, but the horn was wailing so
loudly that she couldn’t make out what he was saying.
“Punk kids…..” Brenda let the curtain fall back into place
with a disgusted snort. “I hope they
don’t cause so much noise that they spoil Jax’s plan and scare off
Junior……” She turned and was about to
go back towards her kitchen when she heard it again. Someone was calling a name.
As she slowly revolved and strained her ears, the sound grew closer. And clearer.
It was HER name. Somebody was shouting HER name. Brenda’s hands trembled as she reached for
the curtain. Was Junior really stupid
enough to announce his arrival? Or
could it be Jax? She chewed on her
lower lip and then placed her ear against the glass of the windows that flanked
the door.
“Jax……” She breathed his name softly when she recognized his voice. It WAS Jax!
He was calling her name – no, he was frantically SCREAMING her
name. But why? Brenda reached for the latch to open the
deadbolt on the front door but then hesitated.
He was shouting something else – not just her name. What was it?
She put her ear to the window again,
then peeked through the curtains. She
could see him now, racing back towards the brownstone. He cupped his hands to his mouth
occasionally as he called to her – but she still couldn’t make sense of what he
was saying. Was it – lock the door?
Brenda stared down at the deadbolt and frowned. {It IS locked. He specifically *told* me to lock it before he left – he even *saw* me lock it. So why would he…..} The shouting grew closer – Brenda was *sure* now that she was hearing him correctly. Lock the door. Lock the door. But why would he be telling her to ……
“Oh, my God…….OH, MY GOD!!!” Brenda’s hands flew to her mouth to stifle
her scream. He meant the *back*
door! Something must have gone wrong
with the plan and he wanted her to keep Junior out! Her chest heaving, precious seconds ticked by before Brenda’s
feet got the message from her brain to move.
She finally propelled herself through the foyer, past the open bathroom
door and down the hallway towards the darkened kitchen.
The *darkened* kitchen.
She froze in place about five feet
from the kitchen door. {Did you leave
the lights on, or didn’t you? You
usually turn the lights off when you leave a room, but you were walking with Jax
and then his cell phone rang…..} Brenda
hesitated a few more seconds, then snaked an arm around the doorjamb from the
hallway to flip a switch and flood the kitchen with light.
The *empty* kitchen. Everything looked just as she had left it –
back door closed, pots and pans draining in the rack from supper, the
dishwasher humming contentedly. Brenda
put her flat hand to her chest, willing herself to calm down, and took a deep
breath. She walked briskly towards the
back door to do as Jax instructed and was almost there when she slipped on a
large puddle on the floor. Managing to
catch herself on a chair, she was stretching an arm towards the back door when
it hit her.
A puddle. Just like that morning when Brian delivered the groceries and the
snow melted off his shoes. She slipped
then, just as she did now. When she
took a closer look at the back door, her heart skipped a beat. It was locked. Somebody had come into her kitchen while she was at the front
door, made puddles with his wet shoes, and locked the door again – trapping her
in there with him.
“BRENDA!!!!”
The scream was still bubbling up from
her diaphragm when Brenda heard the pounding at the back door. She almost fainted with relief when she saw
Jax’s tousled blonde curls through the window.
“Jax!”
“Open the door, Brenda!!” Her hands trembled but somehow she managed
to throw back the bolt. It barely
cleared the doorjamb when Jax burst through, gathering her into his arms. “Brenda!
Oh, my God, Brenda, you’re OK!”
She only indulged herself in the
pleasure of resting her head against his chest for a split second. “Jax!”
She pulled back and gripped his forearms tightly, speaking in halting
sobs. “The door was open before, and
now it was locked……”
Before she could finish, Jax put his
hand over her mouth to stop her hysterical ramblings. “Brenda, I need you to just shut up and listen to me, OK?” She nodded her agreement, her chest still
heaving as he stared deeply into the dark velvet of her eyes. “I want you to go next door to old lady
Boyer’s house and call 9-1-1. Tell them
that there’s an officer badly hurt and they should send the paramedics pronto.”
He lowered his hand and her mouth
shifted into gear again as her eyes widened and she pointed to the kitchen wall
phone. “Blue’s hurt? I can call right there……”
“I want you *out of this house*, Brenda
– do you understand me? ” Jax gripped her forearms tightly and her
eyes got even wider. “Tell them your
address and that another officer needs assistance – NOW!!”
Her hands trembled and tears formed in
the corners of her eyes. “But Jax……I
can’t…….” She shook her head to refuse
even as he was opening the back door pulling her onto the porch. “I can’t leave you…….”
“I’ll be fine, Brenda…..” He pulled the Glock 9mm from his shoulder
holster, checked the clip of ammunition, and then released the safety. “Now do as I told you!” Jax yanked open the back door and gave her a
gentle shove. “RUN!!”
Brenda quickly wiped the tears from
her cheeks with the back of her hand and then took off down the steps at a
sprint. She wrapped her arms around her
chest to ward off winter’s chill that seeped through her silver silk shirt as
she gingerly picked her way through the snow drifts towards the gangway between
the two brownstones. Jax came down the
steps as far as he needed to see her make her way safely through and then, when
she dug her foot into the snow bank of her neighbor’s front lawn, he turned his
attention back to Brenda’s porch.
He was a silent angel of death,
floating up the back steps, gripping his weapon tightly with both fists and
holding it over his head at the ready.
After entering the kitchen, Jax closed the door and then eyed the darkened
hallway warily. He moved just to the
entry to the hallway, propping his left shoulder against the doorjamb as he
peered into the blackness.
“MAC!!” His hands trembled slightly on the pistol as Jax wiped his own
brow to clear his vision of nervous perspiration. “You might as well come out!!
It’s just you and me!!”
Silence met his greeting, drawing some
muttered obscenities that he was glad Brenda wasn’t around to hear. Jax licked his lips, re-adjusted the grip on
his weapon, and then inched his way slowly into the hallway. He swung back and forth erratically, holding
the pistol out in front of him, one eye narrowed to aim at the first moving object
that came into his line of sight.
He was almost halfway down the hallway
– near the entrance to the bathroom – and still no sign of an intruder. “Mac!!”
Jax called his name again, eyes darting forward, behind, all around
frantically. “Come on out, man!! The jig’s up!! You haven’t got a prayer!!”
As he passed the darkened bathroom,
Jax glanced inside long enough to catch the glint of metal. The sniper rifle still was leaning against
the sink, just where he had left it earlier.
He debated getting it, but in a close encounter inside the house, it
would be wasted firepower. He’d do
better with his trusty Glock. Taking
another determined breath, Jax gritted his teeth and moved farther down towards
the front foyer of the brownstone.
He stopped to wipe the perspiration
from his brow again, muttering a few more things his mother wouldn’t at all
have approved of. {How can I be
sweating like a bloody pig when it’s colder in here than a witch’s …….?} A chill ran through Jax’s body, which he
attributed to nerves. But then he
noticed it – he was close enough to the front door to see the small table where
Brenda usually stacked her mail. The
lace-trimmed doily thing that covered it was blowing gently in the breeze.
The breeze. As Jax edged out of the darkness of the hallway into the lighted
foyer, he saw the source of the icy breeze that was ruffling the doily and
sending shivers up his spine. The
breeze was coming through the wide-open front door to the brownstone.
“D*MNIT!!” Jax’s jaw firmed and he swung the pistol around wildly, hoping
against hope as he looked up the staircase that it was just a trick. But he was unfortunately – maliciously –
disappointed. He had been so anxious to
get Brenda out of the house – never figuring for an instant that Mac might have
tricked them both and snuck out the front door. Nausea rose in his throat as he realized that he had just probably
sent the one woman he loved to her certain death in the front yard. “D*MNIT ALL TO BLOODY BLUE H*LL!!”
Jax stood there for a fraction of a
second and then his jaw firmed with determination again. If Mac had gone outside hoping to waylay
Brenda, his Glock wouldn’t be worth a tinker’s d*mn at long range. His best chance would be with the sniper
rifle, especially with the night-scope attachment. He strode quickly towards the hallway as he reached towards his
shoulder to re-holster the pistol.
Just as he was about to turn the
corner into the bathroom and flip on the light switch, he caught sight of it
coming out of the darkness. There was a
soft rustling, and then a banshee yell that echoed to the bowels of h*ll as the
glint of steel flashed down before his eyes.
Jax barely had time to deflect the blade before it sank into his chest,
sending spears of white-hot pain though his body. His finger tightened reflexively on the trigger of the Glock, but
his arm was tilted up at such an angle that the shot passed into Brenda’s
ceiling uselessly. The last thing he
saw as he passed from consciousness, sinking onto Brenda’s hallway floor, were
Mac’s demented eyes behind the ski mask.
*****
“Mrs. Boyer!!” Brenda pounded harder on the front door of
the neighboring brownstone. “MRS.
BOYER!!!” After what seemed like an
eternity, a white-haired old lady gingerly opened the door a crack. “It’s Brenda, Mrs. Boyer, and I’ve got an
emergency! Can I come inside and use
your phone?”
She almost sang loud hosannas when the
old lady closed the door and she heard the rattling of the security chain being
released. “Come in, dear,” Mrs. Boyer
crooned. “You’ll catch your *death* out
there without a coat on!”
“Yeah – something like that!” Brenda smiled grimly as she rushed past Mrs.
Boyer for the hall phone. Her hands
trembled as she punched in the three digits for emergency assistance. Again, time seemed to crawl by before
somebody answered the phone.
“9-1-1 Emergency – how may we help
you?”
Brenda took gulps of air, trying to
calm herself. “This is Brenda
Barrett. I’m at 982 Water Street, and I
need the police and paramedics here right away!”
“And what is the nature of your
emergency, ma’am?”
Brenda glanced up at the ceiling,
trying desperately to remember Jax’s exact words. “There’s a police officer hurt and another one needs assistance
right now!”
“What is the nature of the officer’s
injuries, ma’am?”
“I don’t know!!” Brenda danced from one foot the other
impatiently. “I just know that
Lieutenant Jacks told me to come here and call for help and said he needs it
RIGHT NOW!!”
She heard papers rustling – then the
sound of her “Einstein” of an operator talking to another emergency operator
before she came back on the line.
“We’ll send someone just as soon as we can, Miss Barrett. Now if you’ll just stay on the line so I can
get a little more information from you…..”
“I can’t…….” Brenda kept glancing towards the front yard anxiously. She hadn’t heard anything since she had left
Jax in the brownstone with Junior.
Surely if there was some kind of confrontation, she would have heard
shouting – or even the sound of Jax firing shots in the air to scare the
kid. “I can’t stay on this line any
longer. I have to go,” she blurted,
waving her free hand in the air nervously.
“Bye!!”
She slammed the receiver down on the
phone and rushed past her gawking, open-mouthed neighbor. “Thanks for letting me use the phone, Mrs.
Boyer.” Brenda started to pull the front
door closed behind her. “You should
just probably stay inside here until the police come!”
“But what about you, dear?” Mrs. Boyer
asked shakily. “Shouldn’t you stay
inside where it’s safe, too?”
Jax’s orders flashed through her
brain. He told her to get out of the
house – to go next door and call 9-1-1 – to tell them about an officer being
hurt and him needing assistance – but he hadn’t *specifically* told her not to
come back. She chewed on her lower lip,
debating whether or not she should try to go back to help him somehow. Of course, she didn’t want to get in his way
or be more trouble to him, either.
Handling Junior would be problems enough.
She was still standing in Mrs. Boyer’s
doorway when the brainstorm hit her.
{V’s at the other end of the block!
She would have a gun or something to use to protect herself – maybe she
could help Jax fight off Junior! Or
maybe she could help Blue!}
“Thanks for the offer, Mrs. Boyer, but
I think I’ll just go stand down at the end of the block and watch for the
police!” Brenda smiled and pulled the
door shut behind her, not wanting to scare the little old lady any more than
she needed.
She stood on the front porch for a few
moments, wringing her hands and stomping her feet briskly. {Are you *sure* you should be doing this,
Brenda? Maybe you should stay in
side……} Just as she rubbed her arms to
try to warm herself in the cold night, the sound of a shot from inside her own
brownstone made her heart skip a beat.
“Jax!” Tears sprang to Brenda’s eyes and she rushed down the steps of
Mrs. Boyer’s porch towards the side yard.
{He’s OK – he was just scaring off Junior. You’ve got to think positive.}
She kept repeating the mantra to herself as she waded through the snow,
retracing her steps from just a few minutes earlier. Then, just as she came to the edge of Mrs. Boyer’s yard, Brenda
froze in place when she saw her front door standing wide open.
{It was locked. It was closed and locked when I ran back to
the kitchen – before Jax came.}
Brenda’s heart rate tripled.
{Maybe this wasn’t such a hot idea after all. Maybe I should go find V.}
She backtracked into the snow drift, keeping her eyes trained on her
front porch the entire time. {Go get
V. She can help Jax and keep you safe
if something went wrong and Junior wasn’t scared……}
Brenda almost tripped when she
stumbled out of the snowdrifts and her feet hit the pavement of Mrs. Boyer’s
front walk. She stamped off the excess
snow, clutched her midsection to try to ward off the cold, and then headed down
the steps and onto the sidewalk. After
pausing only briefly to make sure which way was south, she turned to her left
and started jogging as well as she could on the icy concrete towards the
corner.
The night was cold and still – deathly
still. Brenda’s breath came out in
small clouds as she made her way towards help.
There were no sirens yet – she said a word to herself that wasn’t very
ladylike to express her opinion of Port Charles’ 9-1-1 service. Suddenly, a shiver that had nothing to do
with the wintry temperatures went down her spine. There was somebody else on the street with her. Somebody following about 25 feet behind her.
{Make a run for it.
V will know what to do.
She’ll……} The crisp clearness of
the night only contributed to Brenda’s panic.
She had gone about three houses past Mrs. Boyer’s when she got an
unobstructed view of the corner. There
were no cars parked there. None at
all. Not even close by.
{Oh, my God…..where’s V? Did Junior do something to V?}
“Nice night, isn’t it?”
Her scream erupted full-blown the minute Brenda
heard his voice. It was the same voice
she had heard that day in the traffic jam – and at the press conference. She could feel his presence not three feet
behind her. Just as her adrenaline
kicked in and she tried to make a mad dash around him, the Slasher wound his
arms around Brenda’s waist, lifting her clear off the ground.
“LET ME GO!!!”
Brenda kicked wildly, her arms pin-wheeling in the air. “JAX!!!!!”
But the Slasher was much bigger and stronger than
she was. He quickly brought her back
down, wrapping an arm around her neck from behind. “He won’t be able to help you any more, Miss Barrett,” he
chuckled demonically. Brenda whimpered
when she felt something sharp prick through her silk blouse at the
collarbone. “And I’m afraid we have a
little overdue business to settle.”
{Keep your head.
Make every move count.} Brenda
tried to remember the things she had learned in a self-defense class that she
took before the agoraphobia confined her to the brownstone. When her feet touched the ground again, she
tried to reach behind her to claw the Slasher’s face, but he was one move
ahead. He pulled the blade of the knife
up to her throat as they did an obscene dance of death on the sidewalk,
spinning and turning in the night.
*****
{Help Brenda…….you’ve got to help
Brenda……}
Jax swam up through the red fog
towards consciousness. He shifted his
weight, trying to push his head up off the floor, and immediately blinding pain
locked a vise-grip on his chest.
Profanities flowed freely but somehow he managed to pull himself to a
sitting position in the hallway of the brownstone.
When he looked down at his chest, the
blossoming red stain on his shirt came as no surprise. Mac obviously wasn’t going to make the same
mistake with Jax he had made with Blue.
Removing the knife would guarantee that he would bleed to death in very
little time at all.
Jax chewed on his lower lip, blinking
his eyes and trying to keep himself coherent.
He knew he had to do something to stop the bleeding just long enough so
he could get to the rifle and save Brenda.
No doubt Mac had gone outside after her – and Jax’s pistol would be of
little use if they were too far out of range.
Gritting his teeth and calling on
every deity he had ever heard of, Jax dragged himself across the floor the
short distance to the bathroom. His
hand shot out and closed around the barrel of the rifle triumphantly – he had
foolishly allowed Mac the upper hand once.
He wouldn’t do it again. Using
the butt of the rifle to push himself along, he scooted over to a towel rack
and pulled down a fluffy white bath sheet, which he pressed over his chest with
a loud groan.
A few minutes later, pale and shaking
like a leaf, Jax emerged from the bathroom on his feet. His eyes were feral – feverish and shocky
already from the knife wound, yet intensely determined to stop Mac before he hurt
anyone else. His shirt bulged over the
bulky towel, which he had tied crosswise across the gaping slice in his chest
to try to stop the flow of blood. He
staggered into the hallway, pausing to debate which way to go when he heard
Brenda’s scream.
{Somebody up there must be on my
side. At least I didn’t waste precious
time and energy in the back yard.} Jax
stumbled towards the front door, ramming his shoulder against the doorjamb in the
process, which drew another round of obscenities. He kicked open the screen door and strode haltingly onto the
porch, squinting against the pain and perspiration that flowed freely into his
eyes.
Another high-pitched scream drew his
attention. Jax lurched to the south end
of Brenda’s porch, steadying himself against a concrete column. He shook his head to try to clear it and
then peered into the darkness, where he finally spotted two figures engaged in
a struggle about four houses down on the sidewalk. Narrowing his eyes to try to focus them, he gave thanks when he
made out Brenda’s slighter form and pale silver shirt that shone like a beacon
in the moonlight.
“D*mnit!!” Jax put the rifle to his shoulder, wincing at the pain that
gripped his body once again. He fitted
his eye to the night scope but unfortunately Brenda and Mac were locked in a
fierce struggle. One bobbed, the other
wove, one came up, the other came down – and they remained wrapped around each
other, making a clean shot virtually impossible.
“Come on, love – move away from him
just a little……..just so I can get one shot.”
Jax whispered the words to himself, biting his lower lip until he tasted
blood. “One shot is all I’ll need……”
The sirens. Jax heard them wailing in the distance, coming closer but not
quickly enough. Brenda must have gone
to the neighbor’s and called for help, but then come back outside. He could almost see the flashing lights now
– that, or he was about to faint again.
Either way, he couldn’t afford to wait much longer.
God
helps those who help themselves.
Jane Jacks’ words to her family came back to echo in Jax’s ears just as
things looked bleakest. Brenda landed
an elbow in Mac’s gut, spinning him off balance just enough that he loosened
his grip on her. Jax pressed his eye to
the scope again, squeezed the trigger, and shattered the peaceful night with a
rifle blast that probably woke people three blocks over.
He remained conscious long enough to
see Mac go down into the street. Jax
could tell by the way the body jerked that his aim was true – even though
Brenda went sprawling too, he knew Mac’s momentum probably took her with
him. If he just had managed to get the
shot off before Mac cut her……
The sirens were getting closer now,
the flashing lights getting brighter.
Jax slumped down the side of the porch onto the floor, holding the rifle
triumphantly against his side. “I got
him………” he mumbled groggily. “I kept
you safe, Brenda……..I kept my promise……..”
*****
She was falling. It didn’t feel like she had been stabbed, or
like Junior had slashed her throat, although Brenda vaguely considered the
possibility that perhaps dying didn’t hurt after all. The last thing she remembered was the sound of the sirens. She had taken one last deep breath to try to
fight Junior off– if she were going to die, at least she’d hurt him in the
process.
Brenda had called on her last ounce of
strength to pull her elbow back and jab Junior where it counted. Unfortunately, she hadn’t considered his
height and only ended up landing it in his stomach. Just as she felt the “woof” of his breath on the back of her
neck, there was a loud crack. She
almost thought it was a tree limb breaking under the weight of ice. Then she felt a sharp jerk and the both of
them went flying into the street.
The stars in the sky weren’t the only
ones Brenda saw for a few moments. She
felt Junior’s body on top of hers, but somehow he felt different –
relaxed. Almost crushing her. When he didn’t move for a few seconds, she
sucked cold air into her lungs and then let out another blood-curdling scream.
The previously-quiet night was turning
into a symphony of sound. Brenda heard
the sirens, echoing from every corner of the street, it seemed. She felt the pavement reverberate with the
pounding of feet. The low roar of a
helicopter’s rotors overhead hummed in her ears. Just as her shivering went into overdrive, she felt somebody pull
Junior’s heavy body off hers.
“Miss Barrett!!” V’s voice cut through the fog. “Miss Barrett!! Are you OK??!!”
“I’m…….I’m……..” Brenda rubbed a shaky hand against her
forehead as V helped her to her feet.
“I don’t know……..”
V peered at her through the darkness,
holding Brenda with one hand and her pistol at the ready in the other. She suddenly re-holstered her weapon and
then turned to shout over her shoulder, “Get those paramedics over here, NOW!!”
Brenda felt the street rumble with
more rushing footsteps. Hands came at
her from every direction, helping her to sit and wrapping a large blanket
around her shivering shoulders. She
looked up as another patrolman shoved the Slasher’s body away from her while a
partner trained a pistol on his head.
“Is he…….”
V glanced over at them. One of the patrolmen leaned down, pulled off
the ski mask, pressed two fingers to his throat, and then nodded
brusquely. “He’s dead, Miss Barrett.”
More paramedics moved expert hands
over Brenda’s body, checking for cuts and bruises. Suddenly her head came up and she clutched for V’s arm. “Jax!”
She tried to get to her feet, only to be pushed back down again. “I have to go to Jax! He’s back in the brownstone, and I think
he’s hurt……”
Just then, another uniformed officer
came trotting up to V. “Lieutenant
Jacks is alive, ma’am,” he muttered.
“He shot the Slasher and then passed out on Miss Barrett’s porch. He’s got a pretty nasty stab wound to the
chest.”
“No……NO!!” Brenda became frantic as V tried to grab her hands and calm
her. “I have to go to him!”
“I’m sure the paramedics are doing all
they can for Jax, Brenda,” V crooned.
“Now why don’t I have one of the other officers take you back inside the
brownstone so you can get warm and cleaned up…….”
“NO!!” She watched wide-eyed as a gurney zipped past them bearing Jax’s
unconscious body. “I want to be with
him!!”
V cast a wary eye towards the
paramedic who had treated Brenda.
“She’s OK,” he said grimly. “A
few minor cuts and scratches but nothing that a little antiseptic won’t help.”
“Miss Barrett, Jax is going to the
hospital.” V gripped Brenda’s arms
tightly as she stared deeply into her eyes.
“Now I know how you feel about going ………places, so why don’t you just
come back to your brownstone with me and I’ll make sure to have somebody call
us as soon as he……”
Brenda suddenly whipped her arms in a
circular motion to throw off V’s grasp.
“You let go of me!” she growled, her eyes fiercely protective. She pointed a shaky finger at Jax’s
retreating form. “Jax put his life on
the line to keep me safe! He made me a
promise, and he kept it!! I’m going
with him to the hospital!!” She inched
her way towards V, inspiring the officer to retreat a few steps. “Now are you going to get the H*LL out of my
way, or do I have to *move* you myself??!!”
V hesitated just a split second and
then stepped aside. Brenda clutched the
blanket more firmly around her shoulders and then marched regally towards the
ambulance – and the man she loved.
To be concluded……..
Author’s note: Please remember that at this point in the
story, Brenda doesn’t know yet that the man who attacked her was really Mac,
and not his son.