Chapter 1-2

2197 Words
She’d stayed away much too long. If any place in the world held safety and healing for her, she’d find them here, in the stark, harsh simplicity she had once so eagerly fled. Before she could fully enjoy the sensations, she sensed someone approaching, coming up close behind her. Logic told her it had to be the pilot, but her weary mind succumbed to imagination. A chill danced along her spine as she hurried down the short stairs from the plane, but the tribal pride Grandma Jonas had instilled in her years ago still remained. “You must never let the enemy see your fear,” the old medicine woman always said. Now, as in the past, Fran trusted her grandmother’s wisdom. Although she both wanted and dreaded to look back, she drew her tired body up straight and walked evenly. The other passengers had already vanished, leaving her alone in the deepening dusk. Except for the unseen someone behind her. She felt exposed and vulnerable, as if she stood out, radiating fear like a beacon, with ‘victim’ tattooed on her brow. * * * * Although Ben Yazzie could no longer count the times he’d landed, everything from the first Piper Cub to the Harrier on the USS Contender, he never ceased to feel a thrill of accomplishment in a completed flight. To be not only a professional pilot but a founding partner of the fledgling Fifth Corner Airline still seemed a miracle. Now, if he could only make it grow, expand into a real regional airline, that would prove an Indian could be more than another drunken failure. Twelve years ago, he’d graduated from Red Gap High School, a thin notch above the bottom of the class. At that point, no one would have voted him “most likely” to be anything but another drink-sodden bum lying in a Flagstaff or Gallup gutter. Still, after a tough drill instructor and a couple of good Marine officers pointed the way, he’d managed to fulfill the potential no one had previously recognized. His success amazed everyone, him most of all. Deep in thought, Ben moved out of the cockpit, stooping to accommodate the low overhead. He paused, waiting as his passengers disembarked. Only seven today. Maybe that was why his attention settled on the last one. The slender woman looked tall, not much under his six foot one. Her faded jeans hung rather than clung, barely hinting at her well-shaped bottom. Her bulky sweater, in colors and patterns that brought to mind the traditional hand woven rugs his grandmother used to make, hid most of her body. Caught back in a silver clip, straight, thick hair fell past her waist. Hair blacker than a spill of oil on a clean hangar floor, with the same iridescent highlights. At first glance, he saw little to distinguish her from the local girls who’d gone off to college. His second look hinted her story was different. She moved with wary caution. A furtive, fearful intensity molded her features—like his uncle and other InDinay Marines who’d come home from Vietnam with key pieces of themselves missing. The wounds weren’t always physical, but that didn’t make them any less real. She stopped just outside the plane at the top of the stairway. When she straightened her shoulders as she raised her head, her hair shifted and shimmered in the fading light. He saw something familiar in her profile, but full recognition teased and evaded him. He waited and watched, appreciated, wondered. Her grace and striking, distinctive beauty contrasted with the wounded air surrounding her. Although he didn’t want to notice or intend to care, something about her refused to be ignored. She presented him with a living paradox, an intriguing mystery. When she moved on, he ducked out and followed her across the asphalt to the terminal. He stood aside to observe, driven by curiosity. Although she seemed naturally graceful, she moved as if every step pained her. Approaching the ticket clerk, she spoke with peculiar hesitancy. “Excuse me. Can I catch a taxi here to go into town? I don’t have a reservation, but I suppose there’ll be some vacancies in the motels in the middle of the week, won’t there?” Her low, soft-toned voice pleasantly tickled Ben’s ears, although it carried a hint of an unfamiliar accent. He paused, waiting to see what would happen next. Kerry Begay, the clerk, didn’t impress him as a good ambassador for either the airline or the area, but maybe she was learning. Kerry looked up from her magazine. “Reservations for the Reservation, huh? That’s a laugh. Yeah, there’s rooms in town, but no taxi. Last one we had went outta business two months ago. Tourists usually rent a car in advance, and local folks have someone meet them. This is the rez, you know, not Phoenix or Santa Fe.” “No taxi? Oh dear, that presents a problem.” “Well, there’s the shuttle bus, but the last one left a few minutes ago, so it’s walk or hitch, I ‘spose. It’s only a mile to town. I walk it all the time since my brother wrecked the truck.” The clerk snapped her gum and closed the conversation by turning away. Irritation flashed through Ben. He’d have to speak to the terminal manager about that girl. She had no call to be rude to customers, even if they weren’t familiar with the local scene. Dismay etching her face, the strange woman stared at the girl. “A mile? In…in the dark?” Her unsteady voice held shock, near horror. Before he quite realized what he was going to do, Ben approached her. “I can give you a lift to town, ma’am.” She whirled around. When she came face to face with him, she backed sharply away. Her dark eyes widened. He could see the pulse pounding in her throat. He smiled, trying to ease her obvious fear. “You trusted my flying. My pickup’s no taxi, but the idea’s the same. Can’t you trust my driving?” She drew a breath and let it out slowly, catching her full lower lip between even white teeth. He saw in her eyes the moment she recognized his uniform. “Yeah,” Kerry put in. “You hardly ever bite, do you, Mr. Yazzie?” Ben darted a chastening glare at the pert girl, but didn’t reply. Finally the woman nodded. “I guess—er—of course. Thank you.” “Wait right here and I’ll bring my truck around. Do you have any bags?” She shook her head, hefting a gym bag in one hand. “Just this. I’m traveling light these days.” Her attempt at flippancy sounded brittle. As he walked back outside, he felt her troubled gaze follow him. She didn’t step out of the flagged entry until he drove into the pool of light beyond the door. He jumped down and circled the truck, reaching to help her into the four-wheel drive’s high cab, but she twisted away to scramble up unaided. When they started off, she pressed tightly against the passenger door, hands knotted in her lap. Hoping to put her at ease, Ben tried to draw her into a conversation. “You live around here?” “No.” “Been away in school for a while?” “No.” Her single-syllable answers held no willingness to confide; no warmth, barely even courtesy. “Maybe on vacation?” “Not really.” With a glance, he took in her pale, drawn face and the weariness etched in every line of her body. He noted she still held herself defensively erect. “Lady, what is your problem? Are you in some kind of trouble?” When a hint of irritation crept into his tone, he tried to soften his approach with humor. “Am I risking arrest for aiding a fugitive or something?” She looked at him sharply, then shook her head, indignation lending brief animation to her face. “No, I’m not a fugitive! I haven’t done anything wrong.” “Well, you could’ve fooled me. I’m usually pretty good at reading people.” He took his attention off the road long enough to flash her another quick, intent glance. “Or is it that you need help?” She shook her head even more vehemently. “No! Everything’s fine. I just needed—a break, a little time away.” Ben eased down on the brake. As the truck rolled to a stop at the junction of the airport road and the highway, the engine sputtered once and died. He turned the key twice but it wouldn’t fire again. Great way to end the day. He muttered a curse under his breath. Perfect timing. “It’s that damn distributor. Cap’s cracked. Knew I needed to change it, but thought it’d wait ‘til tomorrow.” Sensing her tense up even more, Ben turned to his passenger. “No big deal—I can change it in five minutes. Got the new one in the glove box.” He reached across, jabbing the button to open the box. While he pulled out a small cardboard box, a screwdriver, and a flashlight, she shrank back as if to insure he wouldn’t touch her by accident. “If you’d get out and hold the light, it’d help a lot.” She hesitated a moment, perhaps weighing her options. “All right,” she said finally. She slid down and circled the truck to stand beside him, poised and wary. Before he raised the hood, he handed her the light. She took it in a wobbly hand, jerking back as if the touch of his fingers would burn her. The wind picked up suddenly, whipping a few strands of her hair across his face. Hair that felt like silk, sending a streak of lightning-bright heat slashing through him. Even carrying the stale, recycled air and dust of her travels, it held a faint sweet floral scent. He brushed at the tickling wisps impatiently, but they clung like cobwebs, teasing him. For a moment, he visualized burying his face in that silky hair while he… No! He wasn’t going to fall prey to this spooky woman, even if she was undoubtedly gorgeous when she wasn’t sick, tired or whatever was wrong. And sexy as hell. Women only brought him trouble, and the gorgeous, sexy ones were the worst. Struggling with his irritation, he reached out and steadied her hand, directing the flashlight’s beam where he needed it. When their shoulders brushed, he heard her gasp. Tamping down his temper, he tried to speak calmly. “I don’t know how to convince you, but I swear I won’t hurt you. My name’s Ben Yazzie. I’ve lived here in Plateau for six years, since I left the Marines. Everyone knows I’ve got too much at stake to do anything as stupid as attack a woman I just met.” In the flashlight’s reflected glow, he saw her turn slightly toward him. Her pale face still looked strangely familiar. She smiled slightly before she spoke, both actions catching him by surprise. “I’m Fran, uh, Fran Jonas. Since I used to come here with relatives years ago, it seemed like a good place to come—for a visit. I’m not really afraid, just tired. It’s been a long trip, and I’ve been ill.” She spoke so softly he had to lean towards her to under-stand, but at least she spoke, something beyond monosyllables. That had to be progress. “Cold? You’re shaking like an aspen. The wind is kinda brisk. I’ll have this fixed in a minute and we’ll be on our way.” He worked fast. Loosening the clips, he pulled the old cap off and set the new one in its place, inserting in order the wires from each of the eight spark plugs. She didn’t flinch when he took the light back, and this time she let him help her into the truck. As he circled the vehicle to get in, he grinned. “If the motel’s out of your way, I’ll be glad to pay you.” When Fran spoke, Ben jumped. “No.” His frustration slipped again, sharpening the one short word. “No, it’s not out of your way or no, you don’t want my money?” “No both. Out here we call it being neighborly, but it’s not out of my way.” As he spoke, Ben turned off the highway and pulled in at the Lake View Motel, the newest and nicest in Plateau. A neon vacancy sign blinked beside the office door. Ben glanced across at his passenger. She sat hunched and silent, withdrawn like a desert tortoise into its protective shell. Every instinct told him something was wrong, and he trusted his instincts completely. In spite of himself, he was still curious, more than casually interested. He could never resist a puzzle, and she was certainly that. Her features and tall, slender build hinted at InDinay blood, but her voice and mannerisms denied it. The nagging sense of familiarity taunted him. Could she be someone he’d met, maybe in California? Surely, he’d remember. She had fine, classic, Native American features, chiseled with perfect delicacy, high cheekbones, square jaw line, a narrow, high-bridged nose, almond shaped eyes of clear, dark amber with just a hint of ‘tilt, and full but finely shaped lips. Her face, with its strange mixture of defiance and vulnerability, piqued his interest. No, he wouldn’t have forgotten her. In contrast to her appearance, her tension and clipped speech were all city, perhaps Boston or New York. He didn’t know much about the eastern tribes. She might belong to one of them. Yet the desert seemed to enfold her comfortably, as if it recognized and accepted her. He couldn’t let this riddle alone. Who was she? What was she running from?
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