We have tried to reach Heather F, but have not gotten any replies. This story has been rescued. Since Lady Angel's Library (now M7FC) was already hosting some of Heather's other stories, we assumed implied permission to host this one as well. If you know how to reach the author, please ask her to contact us.
Disclaimers: Not
mine, no money made…
Acknowledgements:
The June Challenge offered by Katherin Lehman (who's wicked funny)
Of the boys, we
know about Ezra's mother, Vin's mother, JD's mother, Buck's mother....Josiah's
father, Nathan's mother and father, and not a thing about
"
"Let 'im go, you sons of bitches." Larabee pulled on the rusted cell door to no avail. He braced one hand against the barred wall and pushed against the door; the locking mechanism clanked within its fasteners, but held. He would not be exiting through the door. The low stone ceiling with its heavy three foot wooden beams rested nearly flush to the rusted iron cage that held him.
The abandoned zoo and its cage were more than adequate to contain and hold a mere 170 pound man.
Anger and concern warred with one another as Larabee watched in frustration as his undercover agent, fastened to a wooden chair, had the sleeve of his right shirt torn away.
Not that Standish hadn't fought. The black eye and the cut above the eyelid that had ceased seeping blood only a few minutes earlier were a testament to his resistance.
They had both fought, fought hard and
desperately, after
Ezra and he were only scheduled to meet with two lackey's today. Buck and the others had been given word but only at the very last minute. The call for the meet had come unexpectedly and try as Ezra might, he could not cancel the impromptu gathering.
Hence the two of them were alone in the old
abandoned zoo on the outskirts of the derelict section of
Things had gone from bad to worse when Larabee had been recognized. The two they were suppose to meet had swelled to four. Standish tried to talk them out of their 'false and heinous' accusations and Larabee had done his best to intimidate them with his looks and serious alternative of meeting a bullet…head on.
In the end four against two, no matter how desperate the two were, did not prevail.
As a result, Larabee stood caged behind bars pacing back and forth snarling and bristling at the men who moved outside his barred walls, threatening them with an unholy death should he escape. It was as if the ghosts of the last residents stalked behind the bars.
Standish had been dragged into a chair. His wrists and forearms were taped to the arms just as his ankles were taped to the wooden legs. It left his head and shoulders with some mobility. The gun traffickers soon learned that shoulders and the quick snap of a head were, in fact, brutal weapons.
Standish and Larabee were not the only ones sporting vicious deep bruises or lacerations.
A section of yellow flimsy tubing was tied tightly around Standish's right bicep, just near the insertion of the deltoid muscle. The veins of the lower forearm and hand quickly swelled in response.
Standish watched with growing trepidation, his fear rising exponentially.
"
The simple plea for help set Larabee off again, as if someone had intentionally put an electrical charge to a tiger's flank.
"You sons of bitches let ‘im go; he doesn't know anything." Larabee's deadly soft voice somehow filled the room and quickened the heart rates of those that dared defy him.
"Guess we're gonna make sure, now aren't we?" Markus held up a small syringe partially filled with a clear liquid. He spared Larabee a mocking smile, taunting the man as he showcased the syringe making sure the supervising ATF agent saw the needle.
He approached the undercover agent with all the grace and finesse of a panther about to pounce for the kill.
Ezra struggled within the confines of the chair, trying desperately to free his wrists and arms or legs, anything to keep the syringe away from him and his veins.
"Kirby hold ‘im still."
Ezra swung his head left and right, bobbing and weaving, trying to keep his one last weapon free. Kirby merely waited and suddenly snapped a massive arm out and curled it around the trapped agent's neck. Kirby cinched his arm up close, bringing his wrist back toward his chest, and grasping it with his other hand, essentially locking the agent's head between the crux of his elbow and upper arm.
"He's told you everything….There isn't anything else to know….Let ‘im go." Larabee clenched the bars again and pushed them, never taking his eyes off his undercover agent and the man that converged on him.
With his head pulled back and trapped, Standish strained and followed Markus and the syringe with eyes.
The tight bite of the tourniquet was forgotten.
"He's right you know," Ezra hissed out, unable to work his jaw, "I really don't know much about anything….Quite sad really, expensive education but truly learned nothing of any importance." There was a pause, "hence my current occupation."
Ezra hissed a breath in as he watched the needle pierce the skin just adjacent to an over enlarged bluish vein.
Markus started pressing the plunger. Liquid was forced through the hub of the syringe, down the needle and into the vein.
Standish jerked. He pulled his elbow back and twisted the arm the best he could with what little latitude the tape allowed him.
"Hold him still!" Markus continued to depress the plunger forcing the drug out of the syringe.
The needle end slipped from the vein. The drug collected beside the vessel creating a bleb. He angrily pulled the needle from the skin when the syringe was emptied.
"Shit," Markus spat. "Gawd damn it." With anger he lashed out and punched the undercover agent square in the left eye.
"Son of a bitch," Marcus shook his fist and brought it close to his chest. Gawd damn that hurt. He leaned forward and pulled the ATF agent's hair forcing the trapped man's head to the side, "Gawd damn rebel bastard, you're gonna be whimpering for ya momma by the time this shit's through with you."
Markus pushed Standish's head back into Kirby's chest, enhancing the agent's sense of captivity.
Markus straightened up, "Let ‘im go. He ain't goin' anywhere." As the angry man straightened up he unfastened the rubber tubing.
The veins in Standish's forearm and hand immediately shrunk.
Kirby slowly uncoiled his massive arm from around the southerner's neck and cautiously stepped back as if expecting to have to tackle the man.
The two federal agents had proven to be tough and resourceful. Kirby was taking no chances.
"Ezra?"
"I'm fine Mr. Larabee, though I fear my tailor may be put out," Ezra sighed. He eyed his bared arm and the mark the tourniquet had left on his upper arm. His swelling green eyes slowly slid down to focus on the small bleb just under the skin near his vein on his inner forearm. It burned as if someone had left a torch lit under the skin.
Thunder boomed and rolled overhead.
Thunder tolled again and suddenly it sounded as if the sky opened out.
"Sounds like hail."
Ezra merely nodded and wondered if the dizziness he felt was from the blows to the head or the drug. He could feel his heart race and struggled to discern if it natural fear or artificially induced.
"You doing ok?"
"I am fine Mr. Larabee," a half hearted smile tweaked his face, "the imbecile couldn't hit a vein with a knife."
"Hey, he's in the room asshole." Kirby spoke up in defense of his boss. The big man glared at the back of the man taped in the chair and then sent a threatening glare at the blonde in the cell.
Larabee met the gaze.
Kirby diverted his eyes and focused back on the card game with the other three.
"Making friends again," Ezra chuckled, feeling the dregs of weariness pulling on him. He cast his eyes down and away from Larabee. It unnerved Standish to see his friend and boss bruised and trapped, helpless. Instead, he focused his attention on the sounds surrounding him, the men playing cards, the howl of wind rushing just passed the over head windows and his own racing pulse. He stared at his own bare arm trying to will the bleb of fluid beside his vein not to leach any further into his system.
The metal bars of Larabee's cage remained in his peripheral vision.
Hopeless.
Silence was never Standish's forte, and words were something he could manipulate and control. They were a way to exert some control and independence in a deplorable situation that left him none.
"You know Mr. Larabee, it would behoove you to try and be a little less threatening. It has been my experience that terrorizing everyone you meet might not be conducive in earning others' trust." Standish paused and then added, " tell me, in grade school did you ever 'Play well with others'? or was it always marked as an 'N'….needs work?" Standish chuckled at his own remarks.
"Ezra?"
"Mr. Larabee do you hear a train?" Ezra rubbed his cheek on his shoulder. He could feel sweat running down his face. Had it been this hot all along?
Larabee furrowed his brow and pushed back from the bars, his stomach clenching and the hairs on the back of his neck and arms raising. He searched left and right, his brow furrowed trying to pinpoint the danger that seemed to permeate the air.
"Ezra?…"
Then the world exploded.
The small table with the four men simply disappeared within a maelstrom of noise, wind and crushing force.
The ceiling over the far side of the room was sucked from its braces and joints pulling chunks of the heavy stone wall with it.
As quick as the wind and storm had come, it had left.
What had once been the stone basement of the medical wing of the old zoo was now simply a partially covered hole in the ground.
Of the six men that had been in the basement only two remained.
The section under the missing roof was remarkably bare of debris while the section that housed the cages and the simple wooden arm chair lay in rubble protected from the elements by a sagging wood beamed roof.
For a moment nothing moved. A soft breeze tickled the air, stirring dust and moving small leaves of paper that somehow defied the laws of logic and physics.
Then movement. At first it was just a stirring of dust; then a low groan and finally true discernable movement.
~~~~~~~~~~
Ezra Standish lay still for a moment trying to get his bearings. He lay on his side still trapped in the damnable chair. His eye hurt. Instinctively he raised a hand to rub at it. It was then he noticed he was no longer confined to the wooden seat.
Things were looking up.
The undercover agent raised the hand and was rewarded when the broken arm of chair slapped him in the cheek.
The southerner cursed. He slowly sat up, dust cascading from him in a small shower of grey particles. He coughed slightly and felt the pull of some muscles. He raised a hand again and noticed that tape still bound his wrist to the chair but the wooden arm was no longer attached to the rest of the furniture.
The same appeared true of his ankles and other wrist. Standish sighed and began the tedious task of untaping himself from the remnants of the chair with his teeth.
Just as he was pulling the last of the grey tape away from his ankles a quiet voice broke through the unnerving silence.
"Ezra?"
Standish stopped moving and listened. Nothing. No noise. Perhaps whatever had ruined the building had deafened him.
"Standish?" This time the voice sounded a little peeved.
Larabee.
Ezra closed his eyes and tried to beat back the dizziness that seemed to sit just in the background but present enough create an unsettling feeling.
"Mr. Larabee?" Ezra rolled forward and tried pushed himself to his feet. The crumbling, sloping ceiling had him hunching over. The undercover agent waved his hand in the air trying to clear some of the suspended dust that seemed to defy gravity.
"
"Damn…Mr. Larabee?" Ezra shuffled forward, bent at the waist, "can you hear me?" the undercover agent saw the bent and twisted bars of the cage. The roof had all but collapsed filling the small straw covered pen. The metal door had warped and bent, bowing out, while the cage walls had crumbled and bent inward.
The collapsed ceiling appeared to have filled the whole cage. There wasn't enough room left within it for a small dog let alone a grown man.
"Good Lord," Ezra stood outside the bars afraid to touch them afraid to shift the precarious balance of the rubble. Even if he had a key for the cell door there was no way he would be able to get it open. The cage had become a twisted wreck, buckled under the weight of the collapsed roof.
"Ezra?" The voice sounded weak, but held a touch of ire.
Standish eased himself down to his knees. He wiped sweat from his eyes and pulled on the torn edges of his shirt collar. The basement seemed to be getting hotter. His skin tingled and his face felt flush. It was hot.
"Mr. Larabee?" Ezra knelt outside the bars and searched the rubble within the cage. He let out a small gasp when his uncooperative eyes settled on his friend.
Ezra and
Neither flinched, or averted their eyes. They stared at one another in silence.
"Mr. Larabee, I don't mind telling you, but you look like Hell."
"Ezra,"
Both men contemplated one another. Their complexions were covered in grey dust. They were close enough to almost touch but might as well have been separated by miles.
"Are you injured?" Ezra suddenly rediscovered the convenience of Josiah's religious beliefs and sent up a hasty request….a prayer.
"Don't think so." Larabee sounded bewildered. Ezra didn't like it. He wanted, needed to hear the anger, the disgust and the promise of hellish retribution on those that got them into this situation. He needed to hear Larabee fight and buck the situation they found themselves in. The undercover agent needed the strength because he himself was not a leader.
A leader would infer that someone followed
and depended on you for their well being. Ezra Standish had no delusions about
himself, nor did his team. Ezra was a survivor, they all knew that; he would do
his best to keep them safe, everyone was aware of that too; just as they were
all cognizant of the fact that
Ezra wasn't a leader, never aspired to be one, never wished to have that dreadful label of responsibility thrust upon him….and he certainly didn't seek it out…unless it was as the CEO of a Fortune 500 company…then he could lead, financially.
Ezra slipped from his knees to his rump and settled against the bars. As he sat on the floor of a ruined basement in an abandoned zoo staring at the one man that had proven to be able to lead his men against insurmountable odds and win time and time again, Ezra could only think of…..tigers. Tigers. The edges of his vision sparkled with color and light.
"Mr. Larabee?" Ezra leaned his head against the bars and closed his eyes. He could feel pins and needles in his legs, and his face felt tingly.
"Ezra?" Larabee watched his undercover agent slouch against the bars and hoped that it was not the unknown drug in his system that was making the Southerner so apathetic.
"Tigers?" Standish felt the bars bend against his weight. He immediately straightened up and pushed on them. They didn't give.
"Tigers." Standish pushed on the flaking iron bars. They felt like putty in his hands but they wouldn't budge. Out of the corner of his eye he saw movement. He snapped his attention up and blinked the dizziness away. A tiger melted into the shadows.
"Are you hurt Mr. Larabee?" Standish stumbled over the name and was curious as to why his tongue felt as if it had no sensation. He chewed on it for a bit, marveling at the gummy texture of it and wondered if a Cow's tongue was as gummy. It would be most unappetizing if it were as chewable.
"Ezra, stay focused" Larabee answered tiredly. He could feel his legs, but worse he could feel something running down the inside of one of his knees. It was thick and warm and seemed constant. He couldn't take a deep breath, because of the crushing weight on his torso but also because of searing pain that lanced through the left side of chest.
He was afraid to take a deep breath, but felt as if he was running out of air. It was becoming increasingly difficult to keep his eyes open. He was nervous and Ezra staring at him like a piece of beef wasn't making him feel any easy.
Standish scrutinized Larabee wondering if the tiger watching them from the shadows was sizing his team leader up for an impromptu meal.
"Mr. Larabee I am focused, it is the rest of the world that is out of focus."
Ezra sighed and watched Larabee. The man was losing color. Ezra leaned his head against the bars. It felt as if they gave a little, like play dough. He tested the bars with his head, they didn't give completely but perhaps in a few minutes they would simply melt.
Larabee furrowed his brow as he watched the
undercover agent lean heavily against the bars and then bang his head against
them. The iron bars gave a slight toll.
"Today is father's day."
The southern laced statement had Larabee opening his eyes and staring at the slouching undercover agent.
"Do you celebrate father's day Mr. Larabee?" Ezra quirked an eyebrow at his boss and wondered why something told him not to broach this particular subject with this man.
Standish ignored it.
Instead, he kept his eyes on
"Did you celebrate it with your father?" Standish raised an impossible heavy hand and brushed it against an iron bar, marveling at the complexity of a rust spot and the flaking sliver of metal that clung defiantly to it. He silently wondered if Tigers celebrated father's day or mother's day. The Tigress watching from the corner seemed like she could use some flowers. Did Mr. Larabee see the tiger?
"Yeah Ez, I did,"
"You? what?" Ezra asked lifting his
head from the bars to stare at Larabee.
"If you deem it so, Mr. Larabee," Ezra nodded in acquiescence as if trying to appease someone unable or unwilling to see the obvious. "It's Father's Day, you know."
"I know."
"Did you know your father?" Ezra leaned back against the bars and slowly tossed dirt and dust into the air. Amazing how the dust could simply fly and capture light all at the same time. He watched the Tiger watch the dust. Ezra felt sweat run down his back. It was getting hot. Wonder if the tigers got hot?
"Yeah Ez, I did."
Ezra stared at Larabee and noted the large
dilated pupils. The eyes were amazing. The tigress eyes seemed to glow in the
dark. Standish resisted the urge to wave at her. She might not like that, Maude
certainly did not like such displays of overt public gestures. Ezra turned his
attention away from the Tiger in the corner and stared at
"Was he a good man?…Your father?" Standish asked. He felt the urge to move. It was difficult just sitting here not moving. Sure he was tired, but his feet and legs were itching to move, do something. It was hot and he could feel his heart beating. He looked down at his chest and could see it beat right through his ribs. His heart wanted him to move too.
Lord it was hot though.
"Yeah Ez, he was a good man,"
"Did he like you?" Ezra asked. He could feel his heart beat through the iron bars. The tigress could feel it too, he could tell by the way she looked at him. She didn't appear ill tempered though. He could tell.
Larabee shook his head a little. It hurt his
ears. He wouldn't be doing that again. "Yeah Ez, he liked me."
"You have a step dad that liked you, Ez?" Larabee would try anything to get his agent's attention away from the dark corner and invisible tiger.
"Huh?," Ezra turned his attention
back to
Standish furrowed his brow. Tigers couldn't read father's days cards, and besides she deserved a mother's day card. Mr. Larabee was being silly. Yes, perhaps a good brisk run would do him some good. He could feel his heart beat in his toes. Surely that was an indicator that he should go outside expend some energy. Was this how Mr. Dunne felt every day?
"Heavens no, Mr. Larabee," Ezra
cranked his head around. He could hear the dust particles move against the
floor. He could here
Ezra watched his ribs bow out and retract with each heart beat. His heart was going to beat right out of his chest. Amazing.
"Was he nice to you?"
"Who Ezra?"
"Your Father. It's Father's Day. Did you
know?" Ezra picked at a flake of iron from the bars. He could probably run
to
"Yeah, Ez, and he was nice, greatest man
I've ever known,"
Sirens? About time.
Larabee tried to raise his head but hissed
when shooting pain sparked his body. "If I could have been half the father
he was Ez, I would have been a hell of Dad."
He spoke to an empty room.
Ezra and the tiger had decided to make a whiskey
run to
Standish had made the Tiger promise not to slow him up.
He even missed the swarms of news crews and
field lights that sat perched like vultures on the edge of the hulled out
basement. He missed the talk of the F4 tornado that had swept through the
surrounding areas of
Only four reported deaths.
Numerous missing pets. One missing ATF agent, though no pictures hit the wire to identify the man.
Josiah had quietly stopped any APB's or city wide alerts for a large Siberian Tiger. Though they existed, this particular tigress lived only in a drug induced imagination. Unless, of course, one took the time to visit the Colorado Zoo. Then, in fact, one would meet the felid that inspired such vivid hallucinations.
Larabee saw but did not register the sharp
intakes of breath, or rush of activity as he was eased from his entrapment. He
watched with detached fascination as two IV's were quickly sunk into his veins.
It was then he remembered Markus and his syringe.
Funny how the world swirled about him when the pressure was released from his back and legs.
Between all this, he saw visions of his
father, tall and proud. A hard strong man with a soft tender side reserved only
for his wife of forty years.
His dad was his hero. It was Father's day, perhaps it was time he told his father just how much he desired to be as strong as his namesake.
Tanner and Jackson exchanged unsure looks at Larabee's contented expression. Perhaps Markus used drugs on both agents.
Buck and JD scoured the surrounding area by truck driving slowly checking side streets and back allies. They drove all night through the west part of town.
Vin and Josiah joined the search and took the east side.
Evie Travis leaned out the passenger side window while her husband silently cursed a particular southerner undercover agent, as he drove North of the city.
Casey Wells held a halogen light out the side window while Nettie navigated through the south side of town.
No sign of any tigers or undercover agents.
Nathan Jackson sat by
~~~~~~~~~~~
24 hours later
Larabee practically growled at the doctor who
stated
Rain sat by his bedside and stared out the window. Searching the little part of the city she could see from the hospital window.
Team 8 had checked the other hospitals.
Team 10 checked the morgue. No one wanted to hear from them.
~~~~~~~~~~~`
Mr. Larabee always won, and secretly
~~~~~~~~
48 hours later
Larabee sat in his living room surrounded in blankets with a fire crackling. Slanting, wind whipped rain pelted the windows and wind snapped branches and thrashed leaves from trees.
The other five men sat with him. Josiah spoke
on the phone to Ryan Kelly of team 8. The other teams had called it a night at
Hopefully Ezra would be holed up somewhere keeping dry. The man did hate getting wet.
Buck stood leaning against the couch next to phone and watched as Josiah walked back into the room from the kitchen. The big man shook his head 'no'. No word. No surprise.
Nothing.
Josiah slowly boiled.
Diablo lay by the front door and waited patiently. Occasionally the dog would let out a mournful off key howl and then listen for a bit before falling back onto his side, dejected.
Buck took a breath. Something had to break soon.
The phone rang. A suddenly intrusive sound.
With a mixture of anxiety and dread
"
"Yes!" A pause, "Ezra?!…Ezra where the…." a pause, and then softly, "shit…Yes! I accept…Yes! Damn it…I accept…Ezra! ….gawd damn recordings…" Buck paused again waving at the others in the room to shut up, though no one had spoken, just all sat up more alert, "Ezra?!" Again a pause.
"Geezus fuckin'
"Ezra?!…" Buck kept one hand over his ear, "Yeah! It’s me Buck!…Where the Hell are you?…you ok?…You hurt? Tell me where you are, we'll come get you."
"Brother give him a chance to answer," Josiah schooled.
"No, no everyone's fine…where the Hell are you?" Again a pause, "Where?…" bafflement colored his voice as a smile tweaked his face, "Ez, man, no offense pard' but just Left of The Middle of Nowhere, ain't gonna be on a map."
Again there was an indeterminate long pause, "No shit, it ain't rainin' over there….ok, ok we're on our way….see ya in a few….jist sit tight ok…we're comin'…you sure you're ok?"
"Come on Buck!" JD implored as the others grabbed their coats.
"Ok listen I'm hangin' up, but you just stay right there, don't you move your wiry ass or we'll nail it to the floor." Buck motioned for JD to hand him his coat. "We'll be there in a few hours ok…jist don't go anywhere. Stay put…you here me?"
"I say if he don't hang up in the next three seconds, we leave his sorry ass behind and git Ez ourselves," Vin whispered none to quietly to Nathan, as he jutted his chin out toward Buck.
Josiah scrutinized the group and finally
spoke softly to
Larabee hesitated and almost argued with
Josiah but Sanchez whispered one more thing. It had
The others nodded and filed out the door.
Diablo watched them go and then padded over to his master and lay at his feet.
The big dog thumped his tail when
It was now Ezra's turn.
Larabee put the phone to his ear. "Ezra, shut up…and tell me where the Hell are you?"
Following Josiah's advice,
The only difference, was this time, the man who spoke hardly less than six words a day, would take the time to keep a conversation going, no matter the hours, until the rest of the team got to where ever, just Left of the Middle of Nowhere, really was situated.
"I know you’re tired Ezra, but ya got to keep on the line." Larabee sighed and leaned back against the couch with his free hand against his forehead. He should have had Josiah stay. How was he suppose to keep Standish on the phone until the others arrived?
Larabee sighed and quietly pointed out,
"You missed Father's day, Ezra,"
"I told my old man about you,"
Larabee pulled the phone away from his ear and chuckled at the southern laden offense that crossed the wire with sparkling clarity, despite the storm.
The end.