“Marcus? I’m sorry, it’s Indy. Is Daisy there?”

Marcus felt an unaccustomed chill slide up his spine as Daisy moved, rolled and he felt her eyes on him in the dark.

“Is everything okay?” he asked Indy, as always wanting to make any fall his wife was going to take a softer one. She’d already had more than her fair share of the hard ones. These days she only experienced some bumpy rides with the Rock Chicks, though some were bumpier than others.

So far, they’d been lucky.

“No. Everything isn’t okay. Lee wanted me to call her. I’m not sure why but…” She hesitated and he could tell she was seeking privacy before she started talking again. Daisy was up on an elbow now and he could feel her body getting tense. “The thing is, Sadie Townsend was beaten up really badly tonight.”

Marcus felt it like a punch in the stomach.

Ricky f**king Balducci. Or one of his f**king brothers.

“Fuck,” he whispered.

“What?” Daisy was sitting up and Marcus sat up too.

Marcus turned and snapped on the light. Twisting back to his wife, he shook his head.

“Is she going to be all right?” Marcus asked.

“I… there’s more,” Indy replied.

Marcus waited and Daisy slid closer.

“What is it?” Marcus prompted.

“She was raped.”

Marcus threw the covers back on the bed and knifed out.

“Where is she?” he snapped.

“Denver Health,” Indy answered.

“We’ll be there in thirty minutes.” He didn’t say good-bye; he put down the phone then walked to the closet.

“Marcus, honey bunch, you’re scarin’ me,” Daisy said from the bed.

“Get up, darling. Get dressed. Sadie Townsend is at Denver Health. She’s been beaten up and raped.”

Daisy’s gasp was sharp and Marcus heard rather than saw her jump from the bed.

That was his wife. She still thought Sadie had shoved a knife in her back and yet she was out of the bed like a shot.

He didn’t look forward to telling her what he was going to have to tell her.

He got dressed, Daisy got dressed and he stood over her while she pulled on her boots.

“I have to tell you something,” he said to her bent head and it snapped up so she was looking at him.

“Tell me later, we have to –”

Marcus shook his head then crouched in front of her. Daisy took a breath at his unusual actions and he knew she was preparing.

“First, you must know I did what I did because Seth Townsend was a dangerous man. I didn’t want you anywhere near him. Not even if near him meant being around Sadie.”

Daisy’s eyes narrowed. “What did you do?”

“It’s what I didn’t do.”

She stood and put her hands on her hips.

Marcus knew this was a very dangerous pose for Daisy to assume.

“Okay then, what didn’t you do?” she asked, looking down her nose at him.

Marcus stood too then pulled his fingers through his hair. “I didn’t tell you about Sadie.”

Daisy jutted out a hip. This was an even more dangerous pose.

“What didn’t you tell me about Sadie?”

He ignored her and continued, “And, I didn’t tell you about Nanette and Monica.”

“Marcus, honey bunches of love –” Daisy said warningly, losing patience when Marcus hesitated.

Marcus went on, “I didn’t tell you that I’ve known Sadie for ten years and I’ve known what kind of woman she was since I first saw her. I didn’t tell you that she would no more talk about you behind your back than I would.”

Marcus watched his wife’s face grow pale.

He continued, “I also didn’t tell you that after you thought she did, she called the house and came by and tried to explain and I didn’t let her.”

That’s when Marcus watched his wife’s face go red.

He carried on, “Then I forced her father to warn her off.” When Daisy’s face looked in danger of turning purple, Marcus kept explaining (quickly). “I did it to protect you.”

Daisy’s brows were drawn and her eyes were narrowed when she said, “Is that it?”

“No.”

“Well then, finish it.”

Marcus blew out a sigh. “Lastly, I didn’t tell you that she was the reason Nanette’s husband left her for the pool boy. Which, if I read Sadie’s actions right, considering she outed Charles Hardy in front of a room full of people and he was so relieved, he didn’t give a damn but Nanette was so humiliated, she hasn’t shown her face in society since, was Sadie’s retribution for Nanette being mean to you.”

Daisy glared at him.

Marcus waited.

Then Daisy spoke. “Let’s get to the goddamned hospital.”

Chapter Two

Stretch My Legs A Bit

Sadie

I knew I was in the hospital before I opened my eyes.

Hospitals had a certain feel and a certain smell and, before I opened my eyes, I experienced both.

The first thing I saw was the ceiling. Then I decided, if they had a suggestion box, before I left I’d suggest they should get a ceiling cleaner. Sick people were on their backs a lot and the ceiling looked filthy. Major gross. Sick people didn’t need to see that.

Then I realized I had to go to the bathroom, like, bad.

This kind of stunk considering when I looked down at my arm there were tubes and stuff sticking in it. Not easy to get to the bathroom with tubes stuck in you.

I also saw my wrist was in a cast but I blanked that out as quickly as I saw it.

I was kind of hoping some of those things sticking in my arm were what was taking the pain away.

I remembered the pain. I would never forget the pain. But I had the strength of mind borne of loads of practice to set the pain, and what caused it, aside.

For now.

As I looked down at my arm, on the floor I saw something weird.

It looked for all the world like a pair of cowboy boots. Not just cowboy boots but jeans and cowboy boots. Not just jeans and cowboy boots but legs in jeans and feet in cowboy boots. The legs were crossed at the ankle and stretched straight out.

I followed the legs up, up, up until I saw Hector “Oh my God” Chavez sleeping in a chair by my hospital bed.

Maybe I wasn’t awake. Maybe I was dreaming.