21
Posted: Wed Apr 07, 2004 6:56 am
Most of the answers to the questions you all are looking for are in this chapter, and the following one should clear the rest up.
PART 21
Max came into the room as Phillip was pulling an orb from a hidden panel in the wall.
So much for thinking he knew everything, Max thought with dismay.
"What is that?" Max asked suspiciously.
"We need to call Michael to tell him to get over here," Phillip said.
Phillip picked up his own phone and dialed Manuel.
"Manuel, please go upstairs and check on Elizabeth. There's been an unforeseen complication, and I'll need you to look out for her," he said.
As Phillip made his call Max did as he was asked, barely seconds on the phone before hanging up.
"He's on his way. Now tell me what the hell is going on," Max said angrily.
Phillip looked down at the silver orb in his hand.
"Your mother gave me this right before she died. If you want to know the truth, then take it," Phillip said, holding it out to Max.
"What does any of this have to do with Mom?" Max asked, impatient.
Phillip didn't answer, merely holding the orb out to him.
After a momentary hesitation, Max took it, and felt his whole body stiffening in reaction.
His mind was bombarded with images and his mother's voice. He saw her sweet face, and her gentle smile, and she began to speak. The message was for his father.
"I know that you hate human beings, Phillip. That's why I couldn't ever chance revealing what really happened to me during those two days the FBI had me in their custody," she said. "You have to understand. I felt like I had no choice. I hope you can forgive me."
"Afterward, I was afraid to tell you too much, afraid to tell you the truth after I'd revealed myself to her. For while I lived in terror that she would tell someone, but she never did. I knew how you'd react if I told you what I had done, especially after healing the children in the hospital. But I hope now that you might understand," she continued wistfully.
"Help Max to understand Phillip. I need you to understand this so, so that you can make him understand. For years I felt I couldn't tell you, but now I'm dying, and it doesn't matter. None of it matters but what you two take from my words now," she said.
"Phillip, we are stuck on this planet. We're never going home. Neither will our children. Isabel has accepted it, but I worry about Max. You know how I worry," she lamented. "Show this to him when the time is right. Trust that he will do the right thing."
"I need to start from the beginning...."
Everything went dark for an instant and Diane disappeared, but then she spoke again.
"A human woman helped me Phillip. I didn't know her, and she didn't know me, but she put her life on the line," she said.
"You know this now, but in the hope that Max is holding this orb, I will explain everything," she continued.
"Two years before you were born Max, I was working as a candy striper at a hospital in Colorado. Just as it had always been, we all kept up appearances of normality."
"I became close with two sick children; too close. Both had terminal forms of cancer. I couldn't stand to see them suffering, and I healed them," she said.
"I know it was impulsive, rash even, but if you had seen these children, had seen the injustice of the things they had to go through...." she paused.
"They never complained. Not once, even when I could plainly see they were in terrible pain. My heart went out to them. I couldn't help myself. I just took their pain away."
"I didn't know that an orderly saw me do it, until I saw the story on the cover of a tabloid. The man was a drunk. He joked that he thought he'd better lay off the drink because he was starting to have hallucinations. But a day later, after hearing that the children were in remission, he told a security guard, who had called the paper with the story. Of course there were no photos, and no concrete evidence, even my handprint faded within a day. The doctors didn’t know what to make of it," she said.
"Ed was furious when he saw the article and he knew what I had done. We had to move. We couldn’t take the chance. We needed two days, and we would be gone to Texas. He had to go to make arrangements. He didn’t want to leave us alone, but he had no choice," she said shaking her head.
"Phillip, do you remember how scared you were for me? You made me stay in the house with the door locked all day while you went to work," she laughed.
"It was only two days, and we would have been safe," she mused in a small voice.
"But I got cabin fever. I only half-believed that anyone would take a story from a news rag seriously, and it was just a small trip to the store. I didn't think it would do any harm," she trailed off.
"I shouldn't have been so naïve," she said, and Max could sense the regret in her voice.
"I was captured outside the store and taken to a facility outside of Denver, though I didn't know the location at the time."
"I never wanted to you to know what I went through while I was there, Phillip. I could never bring myself to tell you, but by now you've seen some of it. For two days, horrible things were done to me while I was in that place and I'll never forget it. But I know now that Max needs to know," she said. "He needs to know everything."
Max braced himself against the images of mother's torture at the hands of a man named Pierce. Pierce, the head of the Special Unit, the group that was the reason they'd had to hide all of their lives.
Syringes, and shock treatments, skin samples, auditory tortures, he watched it all as his mother cried out for mercy. They showed her none.
He felt outrage of the like he hadn't felt since that night on the beach, the night Ed had died.
"They did horrible things to me. Things I never wanted to think about again. They decided it wasn't safe to keep me at that facility. They wanted to move me to Eagle Rock, a permanent facility in New Mexico, and was then where the story really began..."
Max prepared himself for another barrage of images.
******
He saw a young woman coming out of a door. It was late at night. He immediately recognized the younger version of the woman from the nursing home.
Nancy Parker... his mother's voice whispered.
She was a dancer at a nightclub. The hour was late and the bar was closing.
She was tired and the only thing she wanted to do was to go home to sleep. She said goodnight to Charlie, the bouncer who was stationed at the door.
She got in her car and started it with a yawn.
Moments later she was driving down the deserted highway, when she spotted a bloody young girl at the side of the road, a ghoulish apparition in her headlights.
The girl was panicked, waving frantically at her car.
Nancy didn't even think twice seeing the girl was obviously in trouble. She pulled over, quickly unlocking the door.
"Are you all right?" she asked the girl concerned.
"Please, just drive!" the girl screamed, almost frantic.
"It's ok now. Tell me what happened," Nancy said, trying to calm the girl down.
"Men...they're after me. They're going to kill me," the girl sobbed.
"Who?" Nancy asked.
"I can't to tell you! Then you'll be involved. Please, just drive!" the girl sobbed.
"Just get me to a phone."
"Ok, ok," Nancy said, putting the car in drive.
Seconds later, A loud roaring sounded from behind the car, and her car was jolted. Nancy saw headlights behind them.
"Jesus, What the hell are you into?" Nancy muttered, suddenly realizing that she probably made a mistake picking the girl up.
"I'm sorry," Diane whispered with a desolate sob.
In the next instant, Nancy screamed felt another violent jolt, which pushed her car off the road and into a drainage ditch.
Then, everything went black.
When she came to a man was holding the girl, and she was struggling, screaming in terror.
Without thought, Nancy reached into her glove compartment and grabbed her gun, the one Charlie insisted she carry, stumbling out of the car.
The man was so focused on the girl, he didn't notice her
But the girl did.
Nancy fired the gun, and the man slumped to the ground.
Nancy felt her breath leaving her body in violent pants, unable to comprehend what she'd just done. She dropped the gun from trembling hands.
"Watch out!" the girl cried, and Nancy barely had time to turn before another man was on her.
She struggled as the man got his hand around her throat, cutting off her oxygen. She struggled in a vain attempt to dislodge it, to no avail.
Her eyesight was growing dim, and she knew she would soon lose consciousness.
Through a haze, she saw the girl raise her hand, and a bright flash erupted from it.
She felt heat, smelled burning flesh, and man slumped against her.
As Nancy pushed him off of her, she already knew that he was dead.
Nancy got to her feet slowly, trying to put distance between herself and the girl.
"What are you?" she asked the girl, terrified.
"I won't hurt you. You saved my life," the girl said.
"You saved mine," Nancy whispered.
"Then I guess we're even," the girl answered shakily.
"We should call the police," Nancy said.
"They are the police," the girl said in a dull voice. "If you call them, they'll do the same to you that they did to me. It won't be jail, it will be something much, much worse."
Nancy took in the girl's appearance, her hair bloodied, her limbs scratched, bleeding and bruised, and she knew that the girl wasn't lying.
"We have to cover this up, make it look like an accident," she said suddenly.
The girl paused, and then nodded.
Almost on auto-pilot, Nancy directed the girl to help her load the bodies into the trunk of the men's car, and took the gas can out of her car.
She picked her gun up off of the ground, and got into the sedan with the girl.
She drove the car into a field near town, careful to make sure no one was around. They placed the bodies the front seat of the car.
She poured the gas over the seats, and lit the match.
She and the girl walked back to town staying far from the road, and Nancy called Charlie from a pay phone.
"Charlie," she said in a trembling voice.
The girl watched Nancy on the phone, seeing that she was still terrified.
"I've been in an accident....no, no I'm ok, but the car's in a ditch.....I walked back to town. I'm sorry, I didn't know who else to call......yeah, yeah, I'll be here....see you soon," she said.
She hung up the phone after he promised he was on the way.
"He's going to tow my car back into town. You'd better get out of here," Nancy said gruffly to the girl. "I can't explain you being here."
The girl nodded.
"Thank you," the girl said.
Nancy shrugged, studying the girl.
"You gonna keep running?" Nancy asked.
"I have to go home," the girl said quietly.
"Where's home," Nancy asked.
The girl looked stricken for a moment.
"Ok, ok. I won't ask," Nancy said.
"What you...did back there, scared me," Nancy said, eyeing the girl. "It wasn't...normal."
"No it wasn't," the girl said in a low voice. "But I never would willingly hurt anyone."
As Nancy looked into the girl's terrified face, somehow she knew she wouldn't.
"I will repay you, I promise," the girl said.
"No worries. You got enough trouble," Nancy said. "'Just keep your mouth shut and that'll be fine. I'll keep mine shut too. This never happened."
"Give me a number or an address," the girl said. "I'll contact you."
Nancy shrugged and wrote down her trailer's address.
"Take this," the girl said, pushing a metal object into her hand. Nancy looked down at the broken pendant lying in her palm. It was blue, with silver markings on it.
"What's this?" Nancy asked.
"Keep it. Hide it. I have the other half. That way you'll know it's me," the girl said.
"I'll be in touch," the girl said, backing away from her.
Nancy only half-believed her.
*****
The car fire was investigated by the police. Two victims were found in the car, one with bullet in his head.
Foul-play play was suspected, and the FBI was called in. What the police didn't know, was that the victims were members of the FBI's Special Unit.
A young dark-haired agent was called in to investigate. He had a bone to pick with the agents' killer.
It didn't take him long to find an account from an old busy-body who had trouble sleeping.
She told him that she had seen one of the young "whores" who worked down at the strip joint on the payphone across the street at about 5 am that morning.
Two nights later, he showed up at the bar during Nancy's shift.
********
Diane covered her tracks, hiding in the fields until dark, and then using her abilities to break into a dark house to use the phone.
She called Edward.
Edward hired a man to pick her up and bring her back to Colorado. From there, they moved on to Texas. Immediately, they shape-shifted their appearances.
Phillip created new identities for all of them and they established a meat packing business.
Though Phillip and Edward had prodded her to reveal what had happened to her, Diane remained vague. Her wounds bore testament to what she had endured at the hands of the FBI. But she did not reveal her connection to Nancy, ever.
But Diane couldn't forget about Nancy. It was her secret, one she is afraid to tell Ed. She couldn't tell him that revealed herself to a human, in fear that he will be furious with her, or worse, that he might eliminate Nancy in fear of her telling the wrong people.
But Diane had felt an immediate trust of the woman, and her gut had told her that she wouldn't say anything.
Diane and Phillip married five months later.
********
Diane did her own research, keeping tabs on Nancy.
Nancy made complaints against the FBI to the police; harassment, unlawful entry into her house. The FBI filed counter-reports that they were keeping tabs on her for the old murder of two of their men. One agent in particular suspected her involvement. But there was no mention in any of the reports of Diane.
Diane finally got the courage to pay a detective to go back to Colorado on surveillance. She had to know if the woman who'd saved her was all right.
What the detective came back with scared her to death. He reported that the woman had been receiving regular beatings over a period of days.
She knew then that the FBI was waiting, on the off chance that Diane might return. She was sure of it.
Shortly afterward, she discovered Phillip was attending a conference in Colorado, and Diane knew she had to go with him.
While Phillip was at the conference, she took the car and headed out to Nancy's trailer.
She was terrified, but she had to know. As an extra measure, she went to every house on the road around Nancy's trailer, offering pamphlets for an elected official of the county who was up for re-election before finally approaching Nancy's home. She couldn't take any chances.
She pulled up to the shabby trailer with a feeling of fear. Even though she looked completely different, she was still terrified of being discovered.
She knocked on the door with a shaking hand.
She saw a shadow beyond the screen door, and then Nancy appeared.
"Yeah?" she said wearily, squinting against the sun.
This wasn't the young woman who had saved her in the dead of night. She looked...hopeless, beaten.
Diane knew that Nancy couldn't possibly recognize her, as her appearance has been altered so drastically.
Diane smiled.
"I was wondering if I could have a few minutes of your time. I'm here from your local Congressman's office," Diane said.
Nancy nodded and let her in.
"Now, I wanted to give you some literature on Congressman Green," she continued with a smile, "and to give you an idea how he can help you the taxpayer if you vote for him."
Diane started droning off the issues she'd memorized that Green had a firm stand on, and pushed a piece of paper over to Nancy.
I am the girl from the side of the road. You picked me up. Your house may be bugged. We need to talk.
Nancy's eyes widened as she interrupted Diane.
"Why don't we take this out back?" Nancy said in a pleasant voice. "It's a shame to waste the sunshine."
Diane agreed, and followed her outside.
Nancy whipped around to face her.
"I don't know what you're trying to pull lady, but you've got the wrong woman," she hissed.
"Do I?" Diane pulled out her half of the pendant, and waved her hand in front of her face, altering just her facial features.
Nancy shook her head, tears brimming in her eyes.
"Go away. Just get out of here! If he finds you here..." she whispered frantically.
"I know what they're doing to you," Diane said.
"You don't know the half of it," Nancy said, turning her head.
"I'm sorry," Diane whispered, taking Nancy's hand.
"It's too late for sorry. I made a decision to help you and I have to live with that," Nancy said bitterly.
Diane leaned forward.
"You could call them and tell him that I'm here, yet you're still standing out here with me. Why?" she asked.
"I won't do that. I can't. Even if I wanted to, once he found you, he'd kill me. The only reason I am still here is because he thought you'd come back to kill me. The minute he has you, I'm dead," Nancy said.
"He's working toward a job in the Department of Defense, a promotion to a very powerful position. And he knows you’re out there," Nancy said, shivering.
Diane sensed the fear coming off of Nancy, and yet still, she sensed a determination, a goodness about her.
"You wouldn't tell him even if things were different, would you?" Diane asked, incredulous.
Nancy looked away from her.
"What has he done to you?" Diane whispered.
Nancy looked away in shame, and Diane knew.
She made up her mind in that moment that she was going to help this woman who had stopped to pick her up on a deserted road in the middle of the night, and in doing so, had saved her life.
"Look, maybe I can help you, " Diane said, standing. "I know people, people who can keep you safe."
Nancy shook her head frantically.
"I can't leave," she said. "He'll find me."
"Not if we plan it right. Please, I want to help you," Diane said.
"Why?" Nancy asked dully.
"Because you restored my faith in humanity. And...I am pregnant. With twins," Diane said. "I want them to know that not all people are evil, that this place can be a home for us."
"You...you're from up there, aren't you?" Nancy asked, pointing to the sky.
Diane paused and nodded.
"Are you ever going to get to go home?" she asked.
"I dream about it, but I don't think so. I think about my children a lot," Diane said. "I don't want them to live like this. I don't want them to be lonely. But we can't trust people. We can't let people in on the secret."
"You let me in," Nancy pointed out.
"I had no choice, but I don't regret it," Diane answered.
"I can't go," Nancy said, looking out over the land behind her trailer. "I'm sorry, but I can't."
Diane sighed.
"Please, at least take this," she said, handing her a card. "It has a phone number on it. Memorize it and burn the card. If you need me, if you need anything, call the number, and you will have help."
Nancy nodded half-heartedly, and Diane knew then that she would never call it.
"Take care of yourself," Nancy said, standing.
"You too," Diane said softly.
*******
Nancy never called the number. But then, Diane had known she wouldn't.
She kept the investigator on Nancy for two years, waiting for the moment when Nancy would have the courage to call the number.
By appearances, the Agent was content to merely mentally torture Nancy.
But things almost turned deadly late night two years later.
The Agent had gotten his promotion to the Department of Defense.
Furious that he was no further toward capturing Diane, he came to her trailer, drunk, with murderous intentions.
That night, he brutally raped and beat Nancy, leaving her for dead.
If the investigator had not happened by as he left, she surely would have died.
The investigator took the girl to the hospital, leaving her in the emergency room, and contacted Diane.
Diane was horrified, riddled with guilt over what had happened to her. She knew she had done as much as she could have, that Nancy had refused her help, but that did not alleviate the shame that she should have done something more.
Nancy was in the hospital for two months with the injuries she sustained. The investigator kept a watchful eye on her in the hospital, being compensated handsomely by Diane for doing so.
Posing as an orderly, he heard the conversation between one of the agents and Nancy soon after she regained consciousness.
The agent threatened her with unspeakable tortures if she breathed a word of what happened in her trailer that night.
She never did.
Diane found out when Nancy was supposed to be released from the hospital, and decided she would take things into her own hands.
She prayed that Nancy would go along with it.
Diane's pet project had become involving herself with organizations that helped battered women. Phillip and Edward thought it would be good for her to involve herself in something, and she did so with a vengeance.
She had grown close to the women she worked with, close enough that they trusted her with a little-known secret; a sect of the community called "Without A Trace." WAT was reserved for special cases, battered women married to cops, members of organized crime, or men of professions in which the system did not bear on their actions. WAT did not discriminate when it came to these women. Whether officers of the law, high profile figures, or criminals, the only criteria for entry into the program was a clear and present danger to the women's lives.
WAT was funded and supervised by women in positions of power, women who had seen the effects of domestic violence on these women. Once a woman entered into the program, she virtually vanished, moving into a new life and a new identity provided by the money donated by other women who were sympathetic to the cause, for a variety of personal reasons.
Diane decided to approach WAT about Nancy. She withheld details of her involvement, instead choosing to tell them that she'd heard of Nancy through a friend. She explained Nancy's situation and the dire need for her protection.
Nancy's case was voted on, and it was agreed she could be inducted into the program.
Diane could only hope that Nancy would agree to join the program.
Two days before she was to leave the hospital, Nancy found out she was pregnant, and two of the Agent's coworkers paid her a visit, warning her to get an abortion, or things would get ugly.
Nancy was at her wit's end. She had nowhere to go, and was beside herself that she was carrying the Agent's child.
As she was about to be released, an anonymous note found it's way to her.
In it was money all in unmarked bills, and an address, with a symbol at the bottom of the page.
She would have recognized the symbol anywhere. It was the whole of the symbol on her half of the pendant.
The investigator approached her, showing her another letter with a symbol on it, and told her that he would get her to the address safely, without being followed.
Terrified, she agreed.
She was dropped off at the address, and then another woman met her and drove her to Chicago, giving her new identification and instructions on how to alter her appearance. She was introduced to Amy Deluca, another abused woman who had entered the program. Her husband had been a Sergeant with the Miami police department. Four months prior, he had beaten her until her face was unrecognizable. Amy was terrified for her baby, and when a friend, a wife of the Police Commissioner approached her about making a break, she took it gratefully.
Amy and Nancy became close. But Nancy never revealed Diane, or her ties to her.
As far as Amy knew, Nancy had been unwillingly tormented by the Agent and the FBI because she'd been in the wrong place at the wrong time. She had picked up a girl on the road, and when the FBI came after them, Nancy shot one of them in self-defense, and the girl had killed the other.
She had vowed that she would never tell Diane's secret, and she kept that promise.
Nancy had mixed feelings about the child growing within her, for though she knew the child was a product of the Agent's cruel tortures inflicted on her, it was still an innocent life.
She could not bring herself to even think of aborting it.
Nancy and Amy's daughters were born within six months of each other, Maria first, and then Elizabeth.
Elizabeth was a great joy to Nancy, a sweet child who didn't fuss, quiet and extremely aware of her surroundings.
For years, they moved together from place to place, whenever given notice from WAT. When the notes came, they knew they had to move on. Another residence was always provided in another city. In that time, Nancy never saw the Agent, but she lived in fear that he would find them.
Liz and Maria were close, as close as sisters. Liz never knew the truth, for her mother had told her the same story as she had Amy.
All she had ever known was running, picking up and moving on at a moment's notice, and it had become a way of life for all of them. The one constant in her life was her mother, who she loved dearly, and Amy and Maria, who were the only people she allowed herself to get close to.
Always, she was aware of her surroundings. From a young age, she knew the face of the Agent. Nancy had taught her from the beginning, that if she ever saw him, she was to run and never look back.
******
"Nancy and I never dared to meet again, but we kept in contact through letters," Diane said. "She is a beautiful soul. I want the both of you to know that, and my hope is that you see just what she gave up for me, and in turn for all of us."
"Her letters didn't come often, but I looked forward to them. We talked of our children, because we both adored them. Remember the quilts that used to cover Max and Isabel at night? Nancy sent them. She made them herself. You all have no idea what she gave up for us. I hope you can understand the magnitude of the sacrifice she made in stopping on the road that night," Diane said.
Then, suddenly, the letters stopped. I received a frantic message from Maria and Amy. Liz and Nancy had disappeared," Diane said, her voice trembling.
"I desperately tried to find Nancy, but they were gone, without a trace. I didn't dare ask you to help Phillip, after what had happened with Portia. After that, you merely used humans, were cordial to them, but I knew you would never help me with this," she said.
"I want a promise from you Phillip. If you love me at all, you'll find them. They need protection. I owe Nancy that. I owe her my life, and the lives of my children," she continued.
"Please, Phillip. Help them," she pleaded quietly, and the orb went dark.
********
Max stared at his father in astonishment, his eyes glistening with tears.
"All these years, Mom kept that secret," he whispered.
Phillip nodded.
"So you promised her, and you found them," Max said, running his hand through his hair.
"Your mother was my life, Max. You all were. Everything I did was to protect all of you," Phillip said.
"I know," Max said quietly. "You taught me well."
"Nancy and Liz need our help. If David Pierce finds them-" Phillip said.
"Pierce?" Max gasped. "Pierce is Liz's father?"
Max was floored. Pierce was the man who ordered the attack on them at the beach. He was the reason Edward was dead.
And apparently, now he wanted Liz dead too.
His heart clenched with fear. Their enemy was hers all along, and he had thought she was working with him. He'd been so wrong...about everything.
"There's more, Max," Phillip said. "You need to understand everything."
Max sank down into a chair, wondering how much worse this story could get.
TBC.....
PART 21
Max came into the room as Phillip was pulling an orb from a hidden panel in the wall.
So much for thinking he knew everything, Max thought with dismay.
"What is that?" Max asked suspiciously.
"We need to call Michael to tell him to get over here," Phillip said.
Phillip picked up his own phone and dialed Manuel.
"Manuel, please go upstairs and check on Elizabeth. There's been an unforeseen complication, and I'll need you to look out for her," he said.
As Phillip made his call Max did as he was asked, barely seconds on the phone before hanging up.
"He's on his way. Now tell me what the hell is going on," Max said angrily.
Phillip looked down at the silver orb in his hand.
"Your mother gave me this right before she died. If you want to know the truth, then take it," Phillip said, holding it out to Max.
"What does any of this have to do with Mom?" Max asked, impatient.
Phillip didn't answer, merely holding the orb out to him.
After a momentary hesitation, Max took it, and felt his whole body stiffening in reaction.
His mind was bombarded with images and his mother's voice. He saw her sweet face, and her gentle smile, and she began to speak. The message was for his father.
"I know that you hate human beings, Phillip. That's why I couldn't ever chance revealing what really happened to me during those two days the FBI had me in their custody," she said. "You have to understand. I felt like I had no choice. I hope you can forgive me."
"Afterward, I was afraid to tell you too much, afraid to tell you the truth after I'd revealed myself to her. For while I lived in terror that she would tell someone, but she never did. I knew how you'd react if I told you what I had done, especially after healing the children in the hospital. But I hope now that you might understand," she continued wistfully.
"Help Max to understand Phillip. I need you to understand this so, so that you can make him understand. For years I felt I couldn't tell you, but now I'm dying, and it doesn't matter. None of it matters but what you two take from my words now," she said.
"Phillip, we are stuck on this planet. We're never going home. Neither will our children. Isabel has accepted it, but I worry about Max. You know how I worry," she lamented. "Show this to him when the time is right. Trust that he will do the right thing."
"I need to start from the beginning...."
Everything went dark for an instant and Diane disappeared, but then she spoke again.
"A human woman helped me Phillip. I didn't know her, and she didn't know me, but she put her life on the line," she said.
"You know this now, but in the hope that Max is holding this orb, I will explain everything," she continued.
"Two years before you were born Max, I was working as a candy striper at a hospital in Colorado. Just as it had always been, we all kept up appearances of normality."
"I became close with two sick children; too close. Both had terminal forms of cancer. I couldn't stand to see them suffering, and I healed them," she said.
"I know it was impulsive, rash even, but if you had seen these children, had seen the injustice of the things they had to go through...." she paused.
"They never complained. Not once, even when I could plainly see they were in terrible pain. My heart went out to them. I couldn't help myself. I just took their pain away."
"I didn't know that an orderly saw me do it, until I saw the story on the cover of a tabloid. The man was a drunk. He joked that he thought he'd better lay off the drink because he was starting to have hallucinations. But a day later, after hearing that the children were in remission, he told a security guard, who had called the paper with the story. Of course there were no photos, and no concrete evidence, even my handprint faded within a day. The doctors didn’t know what to make of it," she said.
"Ed was furious when he saw the article and he knew what I had done. We had to move. We couldn’t take the chance. We needed two days, and we would be gone to Texas. He had to go to make arrangements. He didn’t want to leave us alone, but he had no choice," she said shaking her head.
"Phillip, do you remember how scared you were for me? You made me stay in the house with the door locked all day while you went to work," she laughed.
"It was only two days, and we would have been safe," she mused in a small voice.
"But I got cabin fever. I only half-believed that anyone would take a story from a news rag seriously, and it was just a small trip to the store. I didn't think it would do any harm," she trailed off.
"I shouldn't have been so naïve," she said, and Max could sense the regret in her voice.
"I was captured outside the store and taken to a facility outside of Denver, though I didn't know the location at the time."
"I never wanted to you to know what I went through while I was there, Phillip. I could never bring myself to tell you, but by now you've seen some of it. For two days, horrible things were done to me while I was in that place and I'll never forget it. But I know now that Max needs to know," she said. "He needs to know everything."
Max braced himself against the images of mother's torture at the hands of a man named Pierce. Pierce, the head of the Special Unit, the group that was the reason they'd had to hide all of their lives.
Syringes, and shock treatments, skin samples, auditory tortures, he watched it all as his mother cried out for mercy. They showed her none.
He felt outrage of the like he hadn't felt since that night on the beach, the night Ed had died.
"They did horrible things to me. Things I never wanted to think about again. They decided it wasn't safe to keep me at that facility. They wanted to move me to Eagle Rock, a permanent facility in New Mexico, and was then where the story really began..."
Max prepared himself for another barrage of images.
******
He saw a young woman coming out of a door. It was late at night. He immediately recognized the younger version of the woman from the nursing home.
Nancy Parker... his mother's voice whispered.
She was a dancer at a nightclub. The hour was late and the bar was closing.
She was tired and the only thing she wanted to do was to go home to sleep. She said goodnight to Charlie, the bouncer who was stationed at the door.
She got in her car and started it with a yawn.
Moments later she was driving down the deserted highway, when she spotted a bloody young girl at the side of the road, a ghoulish apparition in her headlights.
The girl was panicked, waving frantically at her car.
Nancy didn't even think twice seeing the girl was obviously in trouble. She pulled over, quickly unlocking the door.
"Are you all right?" she asked the girl concerned.
"Please, just drive!" the girl screamed, almost frantic.
"It's ok now. Tell me what happened," Nancy said, trying to calm the girl down.
"Men...they're after me. They're going to kill me," the girl sobbed.
"Who?" Nancy asked.
"I can't to tell you! Then you'll be involved. Please, just drive!" the girl sobbed.
"Just get me to a phone."
"Ok, ok," Nancy said, putting the car in drive.
Seconds later, A loud roaring sounded from behind the car, and her car was jolted. Nancy saw headlights behind them.
"Jesus, What the hell are you into?" Nancy muttered, suddenly realizing that she probably made a mistake picking the girl up.
"I'm sorry," Diane whispered with a desolate sob.
In the next instant, Nancy screamed felt another violent jolt, which pushed her car off the road and into a drainage ditch.
Then, everything went black.
When she came to a man was holding the girl, and she was struggling, screaming in terror.
Without thought, Nancy reached into her glove compartment and grabbed her gun, the one Charlie insisted she carry, stumbling out of the car.
The man was so focused on the girl, he didn't notice her
But the girl did.
Nancy fired the gun, and the man slumped to the ground.
Nancy felt her breath leaving her body in violent pants, unable to comprehend what she'd just done. She dropped the gun from trembling hands.
"Watch out!" the girl cried, and Nancy barely had time to turn before another man was on her.
She struggled as the man got his hand around her throat, cutting off her oxygen. She struggled in a vain attempt to dislodge it, to no avail.
Her eyesight was growing dim, and she knew she would soon lose consciousness.
Through a haze, she saw the girl raise her hand, and a bright flash erupted from it.
She felt heat, smelled burning flesh, and man slumped against her.
As Nancy pushed him off of her, she already knew that he was dead.
Nancy got to her feet slowly, trying to put distance between herself and the girl.
"What are you?" she asked the girl, terrified.
"I won't hurt you. You saved my life," the girl said.
"You saved mine," Nancy whispered.
"Then I guess we're even," the girl answered shakily.
"We should call the police," Nancy said.
"They are the police," the girl said in a dull voice. "If you call them, they'll do the same to you that they did to me. It won't be jail, it will be something much, much worse."
Nancy took in the girl's appearance, her hair bloodied, her limbs scratched, bleeding and bruised, and she knew that the girl wasn't lying.
"We have to cover this up, make it look like an accident," she said suddenly.
The girl paused, and then nodded.
Almost on auto-pilot, Nancy directed the girl to help her load the bodies into the trunk of the men's car, and took the gas can out of her car.
She picked her gun up off of the ground, and got into the sedan with the girl.
She drove the car into a field near town, careful to make sure no one was around. They placed the bodies the front seat of the car.
She poured the gas over the seats, and lit the match.
She and the girl walked back to town staying far from the road, and Nancy called Charlie from a pay phone.
"Charlie," she said in a trembling voice.
The girl watched Nancy on the phone, seeing that she was still terrified.
"I've been in an accident....no, no I'm ok, but the car's in a ditch.....I walked back to town. I'm sorry, I didn't know who else to call......yeah, yeah, I'll be here....see you soon," she said.
She hung up the phone after he promised he was on the way.
"He's going to tow my car back into town. You'd better get out of here," Nancy said gruffly to the girl. "I can't explain you being here."
The girl nodded.
"Thank you," the girl said.
Nancy shrugged, studying the girl.
"You gonna keep running?" Nancy asked.
"I have to go home," the girl said quietly.
"Where's home," Nancy asked.
The girl looked stricken for a moment.
"Ok, ok. I won't ask," Nancy said.
"What you...did back there, scared me," Nancy said, eyeing the girl. "It wasn't...normal."
"No it wasn't," the girl said in a low voice. "But I never would willingly hurt anyone."
As Nancy looked into the girl's terrified face, somehow she knew she wouldn't.
"I will repay you, I promise," the girl said.
"No worries. You got enough trouble," Nancy said. "'Just keep your mouth shut and that'll be fine. I'll keep mine shut too. This never happened."
"Give me a number or an address," the girl said. "I'll contact you."
Nancy shrugged and wrote down her trailer's address.
"Take this," the girl said, pushing a metal object into her hand. Nancy looked down at the broken pendant lying in her palm. It was blue, with silver markings on it.
"What's this?" Nancy asked.
"Keep it. Hide it. I have the other half. That way you'll know it's me," the girl said.
"I'll be in touch," the girl said, backing away from her.
Nancy only half-believed her.
*****
The car fire was investigated by the police. Two victims were found in the car, one with bullet in his head.
Foul-play play was suspected, and the FBI was called in. What the police didn't know, was that the victims were members of the FBI's Special Unit.
A young dark-haired agent was called in to investigate. He had a bone to pick with the agents' killer.
It didn't take him long to find an account from an old busy-body who had trouble sleeping.
She told him that she had seen one of the young "whores" who worked down at the strip joint on the payphone across the street at about 5 am that morning.
Two nights later, he showed up at the bar during Nancy's shift.
********
Diane covered her tracks, hiding in the fields until dark, and then using her abilities to break into a dark house to use the phone.
She called Edward.
Edward hired a man to pick her up and bring her back to Colorado. From there, they moved on to Texas. Immediately, they shape-shifted their appearances.
Phillip created new identities for all of them and they established a meat packing business.
Though Phillip and Edward had prodded her to reveal what had happened to her, Diane remained vague. Her wounds bore testament to what she had endured at the hands of the FBI. But she did not reveal her connection to Nancy, ever.
But Diane couldn't forget about Nancy. It was her secret, one she is afraid to tell Ed. She couldn't tell him that revealed herself to a human, in fear that he will be furious with her, or worse, that he might eliminate Nancy in fear of her telling the wrong people.
But Diane had felt an immediate trust of the woman, and her gut had told her that she wouldn't say anything.
Diane and Phillip married five months later.
********
Diane did her own research, keeping tabs on Nancy.
Nancy made complaints against the FBI to the police; harassment, unlawful entry into her house. The FBI filed counter-reports that they were keeping tabs on her for the old murder of two of their men. One agent in particular suspected her involvement. But there was no mention in any of the reports of Diane.
Diane finally got the courage to pay a detective to go back to Colorado on surveillance. She had to know if the woman who'd saved her was all right.
What the detective came back with scared her to death. He reported that the woman had been receiving regular beatings over a period of days.
She knew then that the FBI was waiting, on the off chance that Diane might return. She was sure of it.
Shortly afterward, she discovered Phillip was attending a conference in Colorado, and Diane knew she had to go with him.
While Phillip was at the conference, she took the car and headed out to Nancy's trailer.
She was terrified, but she had to know. As an extra measure, she went to every house on the road around Nancy's trailer, offering pamphlets for an elected official of the county who was up for re-election before finally approaching Nancy's home. She couldn't take any chances.
She pulled up to the shabby trailer with a feeling of fear. Even though she looked completely different, she was still terrified of being discovered.
She knocked on the door with a shaking hand.
She saw a shadow beyond the screen door, and then Nancy appeared.
"Yeah?" she said wearily, squinting against the sun.
This wasn't the young woman who had saved her in the dead of night. She looked...hopeless, beaten.
Diane knew that Nancy couldn't possibly recognize her, as her appearance has been altered so drastically.
Diane smiled.
"I was wondering if I could have a few minutes of your time. I'm here from your local Congressman's office," Diane said.
Nancy nodded and let her in.
"Now, I wanted to give you some literature on Congressman Green," she continued with a smile, "and to give you an idea how he can help you the taxpayer if you vote for him."
Diane started droning off the issues she'd memorized that Green had a firm stand on, and pushed a piece of paper over to Nancy.
I am the girl from the side of the road. You picked me up. Your house may be bugged. We need to talk.
Nancy's eyes widened as she interrupted Diane.
"Why don't we take this out back?" Nancy said in a pleasant voice. "It's a shame to waste the sunshine."
Diane agreed, and followed her outside.
Nancy whipped around to face her.
"I don't know what you're trying to pull lady, but you've got the wrong woman," she hissed.
"Do I?" Diane pulled out her half of the pendant, and waved her hand in front of her face, altering just her facial features.
Nancy shook her head, tears brimming in her eyes.
"Go away. Just get out of here! If he finds you here..." she whispered frantically.
"I know what they're doing to you," Diane said.
"You don't know the half of it," Nancy said, turning her head.
"I'm sorry," Diane whispered, taking Nancy's hand.
"It's too late for sorry. I made a decision to help you and I have to live with that," Nancy said bitterly.
Diane leaned forward.
"You could call them and tell him that I'm here, yet you're still standing out here with me. Why?" she asked.
"I won't do that. I can't. Even if I wanted to, once he found you, he'd kill me. The only reason I am still here is because he thought you'd come back to kill me. The minute he has you, I'm dead," Nancy said.
"He's working toward a job in the Department of Defense, a promotion to a very powerful position. And he knows you’re out there," Nancy said, shivering.
Diane sensed the fear coming off of Nancy, and yet still, she sensed a determination, a goodness about her.
"You wouldn't tell him even if things were different, would you?" Diane asked, incredulous.
Nancy looked away from her.
"What has he done to you?" Diane whispered.
Nancy looked away in shame, and Diane knew.
She made up her mind in that moment that she was going to help this woman who had stopped to pick her up on a deserted road in the middle of the night, and in doing so, had saved her life.
"Look, maybe I can help you, " Diane said, standing. "I know people, people who can keep you safe."
Nancy shook her head frantically.
"I can't leave," she said. "He'll find me."
"Not if we plan it right. Please, I want to help you," Diane said.
"Why?" Nancy asked dully.
"Because you restored my faith in humanity. And...I am pregnant. With twins," Diane said. "I want them to know that not all people are evil, that this place can be a home for us."
"You...you're from up there, aren't you?" Nancy asked, pointing to the sky.
Diane paused and nodded.
"Are you ever going to get to go home?" she asked.
"I dream about it, but I don't think so. I think about my children a lot," Diane said. "I don't want them to live like this. I don't want them to be lonely. But we can't trust people. We can't let people in on the secret."
"You let me in," Nancy pointed out.
"I had no choice, but I don't regret it," Diane answered.
"I can't go," Nancy said, looking out over the land behind her trailer. "I'm sorry, but I can't."
Diane sighed.
"Please, at least take this," she said, handing her a card. "It has a phone number on it. Memorize it and burn the card. If you need me, if you need anything, call the number, and you will have help."
Nancy nodded half-heartedly, and Diane knew then that she would never call it.
"Take care of yourself," Nancy said, standing.
"You too," Diane said softly.
*******
Nancy never called the number. But then, Diane had known she wouldn't.
She kept the investigator on Nancy for two years, waiting for the moment when Nancy would have the courage to call the number.
By appearances, the Agent was content to merely mentally torture Nancy.
But things almost turned deadly late night two years later.
The Agent had gotten his promotion to the Department of Defense.
Furious that he was no further toward capturing Diane, he came to her trailer, drunk, with murderous intentions.
That night, he brutally raped and beat Nancy, leaving her for dead.
If the investigator had not happened by as he left, she surely would have died.
The investigator took the girl to the hospital, leaving her in the emergency room, and contacted Diane.
Diane was horrified, riddled with guilt over what had happened to her. She knew she had done as much as she could have, that Nancy had refused her help, but that did not alleviate the shame that she should have done something more.
Nancy was in the hospital for two months with the injuries she sustained. The investigator kept a watchful eye on her in the hospital, being compensated handsomely by Diane for doing so.
Posing as an orderly, he heard the conversation between one of the agents and Nancy soon after she regained consciousness.
The agent threatened her with unspeakable tortures if she breathed a word of what happened in her trailer that night.
She never did.
Diane found out when Nancy was supposed to be released from the hospital, and decided she would take things into her own hands.
She prayed that Nancy would go along with it.
Diane's pet project had become involving herself with organizations that helped battered women. Phillip and Edward thought it would be good for her to involve herself in something, and she did so with a vengeance.
She had grown close to the women she worked with, close enough that they trusted her with a little-known secret; a sect of the community called "Without A Trace." WAT was reserved for special cases, battered women married to cops, members of organized crime, or men of professions in which the system did not bear on their actions. WAT did not discriminate when it came to these women. Whether officers of the law, high profile figures, or criminals, the only criteria for entry into the program was a clear and present danger to the women's lives.
WAT was funded and supervised by women in positions of power, women who had seen the effects of domestic violence on these women. Once a woman entered into the program, she virtually vanished, moving into a new life and a new identity provided by the money donated by other women who were sympathetic to the cause, for a variety of personal reasons.
Diane decided to approach WAT about Nancy. She withheld details of her involvement, instead choosing to tell them that she'd heard of Nancy through a friend. She explained Nancy's situation and the dire need for her protection.
Nancy's case was voted on, and it was agreed she could be inducted into the program.
Diane could only hope that Nancy would agree to join the program.
Two days before she was to leave the hospital, Nancy found out she was pregnant, and two of the Agent's coworkers paid her a visit, warning her to get an abortion, or things would get ugly.
Nancy was at her wit's end. She had nowhere to go, and was beside herself that she was carrying the Agent's child.
As she was about to be released, an anonymous note found it's way to her.
In it was money all in unmarked bills, and an address, with a symbol at the bottom of the page.
She would have recognized the symbol anywhere. It was the whole of the symbol on her half of the pendant.
The investigator approached her, showing her another letter with a symbol on it, and told her that he would get her to the address safely, without being followed.
Terrified, she agreed.
She was dropped off at the address, and then another woman met her and drove her to Chicago, giving her new identification and instructions on how to alter her appearance. She was introduced to Amy Deluca, another abused woman who had entered the program. Her husband had been a Sergeant with the Miami police department. Four months prior, he had beaten her until her face was unrecognizable. Amy was terrified for her baby, and when a friend, a wife of the Police Commissioner approached her about making a break, she took it gratefully.
Amy and Nancy became close. But Nancy never revealed Diane, or her ties to her.
As far as Amy knew, Nancy had been unwillingly tormented by the Agent and the FBI because she'd been in the wrong place at the wrong time. She had picked up a girl on the road, and when the FBI came after them, Nancy shot one of them in self-defense, and the girl had killed the other.
She had vowed that she would never tell Diane's secret, and she kept that promise.
Nancy had mixed feelings about the child growing within her, for though she knew the child was a product of the Agent's cruel tortures inflicted on her, it was still an innocent life.
She could not bring herself to even think of aborting it.
Nancy and Amy's daughters were born within six months of each other, Maria first, and then Elizabeth.
Elizabeth was a great joy to Nancy, a sweet child who didn't fuss, quiet and extremely aware of her surroundings.
For years, they moved together from place to place, whenever given notice from WAT. When the notes came, they knew they had to move on. Another residence was always provided in another city. In that time, Nancy never saw the Agent, but she lived in fear that he would find them.
Liz and Maria were close, as close as sisters. Liz never knew the truth, for her mother had told her the same story as she had Amy.
All she had ever known was running, picking up and moving on at a moment's notice, and it had become a way of life for all of them. The one constant in her life was her mother, who she loved dearly, and Amy and Maria, who were the only people she allowed herself to get close to.
Always, she was aware of her surroundings. From a young age, she knew the face of the Agent. Nancy had taught her from the beginning, that if she ever saw him, she was to run and never look back.
******
"Nancy and I never dared to meet again, but we kept in contact through letters," Diane said. "She is a beautiful soul. I want the both of you to know that, and my hope is that you see just what she gave up for me, and in turn for all of us."
"Her letters didn't come often, but I looked forward to them. We talked of our children, because we both adored them. Remember the quilts that used to cover Max and Isabel at night? Nancy sent them. She made them herself. You all have no idea what she gave up for us. I hope you can understand the magnitude of the sacrifice she made in stopping on the road that night," Diane said.
Then, suddenly, the letters stopped. I received a frantic message from Maria and Amy. Liz and Nancy had disappeared," Diane said, her voice trembling.
"I desperately tried to find Nancy, but they were gone, without a trace. I didn't dare ask you to help Phillip, after what had happened with Portia. After that, you merely used humans, were cordial to them, but I knew you would never help me with this," she said.
"I want a promise from you Phillip. If you love me at all, you'll find them. They need protection. I owe Nancy that. I owe her my life, and the lives of my children," she continued.
"Please, Phillip. Help them," she pleaded quietly, and the orb went dark.
********
Max stared at his father in astonishment, his eyes glistening with tears.
"All these years, Mom kept that secret," he whispered.
Phillip nodded.
"So you promised her, and you found them," Max said, running his hand through his hair.
"Your mother was my life, Max. You all were. Everything I did was to protect all of you," Phillip said.
"I know," Max said quietly. "You taught me well."
"Nancy and Liz need our help. If David Pierce finds them-" Phillip said.
"Pierce?" Max gasped. "Pierce is Liz's father?"
Max was floored. Pierce was the man who ordered the attack on them at the beach. He was the reason Edward was dead.
And apparently, now he wanted Liz dead too.
His heart clenched with fear. Their enemy was hers all along, and he had thought she was working with him. He'd been so wrong...about everything.
"There's more, Max," Phillip said. "You need to understand everything."
Max sank down into a chair, wondering how much worse this story could get.
TBC.....