CHAPTER 1
San Antonio, the present
"This isn't your play, Ranger Strong," Captain Consuelo
Alonzo of the San Antonio police said to Caitlin Strong
beneath an overhang outside the Thomas C. Clark High
School. Her hands were planted on her hips, one of them
squeezing a pair of sunglasses hard enough to crush the
frame.
Caitlin took off her Stetson and let the warm spring
sunlight drench her face and raven–black hair that
swam past her shoulders. Her cheeks felt flushed and she
could feel the heat building behind them. She'd left her
own sunglasses back in her SUV, forcing her to keep her
view shielded from the sun which left the focused intensity
in her dark eyes clear enough for anyone to see. Her
cheekbones were ridged and angular, meshed so perfectly
with her jawline that her face had the appearance of one
drawn to life by an artist.
Caitlin met Alonzo's stare with her own, neither of them
budging. "Then I guess I heard wrong about a boy with a
gun holding hostages in the school library."
"No, you heard right about that. But this isn't a
Ranger matter. I didn't call you in and my SWAT team's
already deployed."
Caitlin gazed at the modern two–story,
L–shaped mauve building shaded by thick elm and oak
trees. The main entrance was located at the point of the
school where the L broke directly before a nest of
rhododendron bushes from which rose the school marquee
listing upcoming events, including graduation and senior
prom. A barricade had been erected in haphazard fashion
halfway to the street to hold anxious and frantic parents
behind a combination of saw horses, traffic cones, and
strung–together rope.
"SWAT team for one boy with a gun?" Caitlin raised.
A news helicopter circled above, adding to Alonzo's
discomfort. "You have a problem with that? Or maybe
you've never heard of Colombine?"
"Any shots fired yet?"
"No, and that's the way we want to keep it."
"Then I do have a problem, Captain. I do indeed."
Alonzo's face reddened so fast it looked as if she were
holding her breath. She'd lost considerable weight since
the day Caitlin had met her inside San Antonio's Central
Police Substation a couple years back. They had maintained
a loose correspondence mostly via e–mail since, both
appreciating the trials and tribulations of women trying to
make it in the predominantly male world of law
enforcement. Plenty accused Caitlin of riding her
legendary father and grandfather's coattails straight into
the Rangers. But Alonzo's parents were Mexican immigrants
who barely spoke English and lacked any coattails to ride
whatsoever. She was still muscular and had given up
wearing her hair in a bun, opting instead for a shorter cut
matted down by her cap.
"This is the Masters boy's school, isn't it?" Alonzo
asked Caitlin.
"Yes, ma'am. And he still uses his mother's last
name—Torres."
"Well, I can tell you the son of that outlaw boy friend
of yours is in one of the classrooms ordered into lockdown,
while we determine if there are any other perpetrators
involved."
Caitlin glanced at the black–clad commandos
squatting tensely on either side of the entrance. "When
was the last time your SWAT team deployed?"
"That's none of your goddamn business."
"Any shots fired, innocents wounded?"
The veins over Alonzo's temples began to throb. "You're
wasting my time, Ranger."
"And you're missing the point. You're going in with
SWAT without exhausting any of the easier options."
"Like what?"
"Me," Caitlin told her.
CHAPTER 2
San Antonio, the day before
It had been four months now since Cort Wesley Masters
had turned himself into the Texas authorities on an
extradition request from the Mexican government. The first
two of those months had been spent in a federal
lock–up and the next two in the infamous Mexican
Ceresco prison just over the border in Nuevo Laredo across
the Rio Grande. With no other adult in the lives of his
two teenage sons besides an aunt who lived in Arizona they
didn't remember meeting, Caitlin had taken it upon herself
to step in and fill the void.
She'd moved into their home in the San Antonio suburb of
Shavano Park, never imagining Cort Wesley's freedom
wouldn't be secured in a timely manner, much less him being
imprisoned south of the border. Having the responsibility
for his boys Dylan and Luke thrust upon her for what was
now an indefinite stretch of time left her feeling anxious,
feeling trapped and claustrophobic. On edge in a way that
made her feel like a tightrope walker negotiating a
typically precarious balance, while blindfolded to boot
since she'd never been responsible for anyone but herself.
Given her already close relationship with the boys, Caitlin
had assumed the transition would be easy and the duration
relatively short, neither of which had proven true.
Rangering and child rearing, even in modern times, just
didn't seem to mix well. Although she'd cut back on her
duties as much as possible, raising a pair of teenagers was
without question a full–time job that had hit her
with the brunt force of a glass door you didn't know was
there.
"Mexican authorities haven't given at all on the
visitation rights," Caitlin had told her captain, D. W.
Tepper, just yesterday in the smaller, shaded office he'd
moved into because it was cooler in the hot summer months.
The office already smelled of Brut aftershave and stale
cigarette smoke with stray wisps clinging to the shadowy
corners well after Tepper had finished sneaking a Marlboro.
"What happened that one time they let you in?"
"I made a few comments about the conditions."
"Imagine that didn't go over too well."
"Apparently not."
"State Department help some?"
"Well, since they got involved, even the e–mails
stopped. He could be dead for all we know."
"This is Cort Wesley Masters we're talking about,
Ranger," Tepper said matter–of–factly, as if
that were something Caitlin didn't already know.
"So?"
"He ain't dead." Tepper pulled his finger from a furrow
that looked like a valley on his face and checked the nail
as if expecting he'd pulled something out with it. "How's
this mothering thing going?"
"How do you think? I figured it would last a few weeks
tops. That was four months ago now."
"No choice I can see. And they're good boys
anyway, ‘less Dylan gets in his head to mix it up with
stone killers again."
"I think he's had his fill of that. Caught him with a
joint, though."
"You arrest him?"
"Thought about it."
"Shoot him?"
"Thought about that too."
"I caught my oldest smoking a Winston when he was
twelve. Made him put it out and eat the damn thing."
"Now that," Caitlin told Tepper, "I didn't think about.
I don't believe it's a regular thing."
""Course it's not," Tepper said with a smirk. "Never is
for a high school boy."
"Dylan's got himself in the Honors program now.
Starting to get his mind set on college, even talking about
a college prep year. And Luke's so smart it's downright
scary."
Tepper leaned back in his desk chair far enough to make
Caitlin think he was going to topple over. "So how's it
feel?"
"How's what feel?"
"Hanging up your guns."
"When you start doing stand–up comedy?"
"When was the last time you drew your pistol?"
"Been awhile."
"Patriot Sun shoot–out, right?"
"What's your point, Captain?"
"That in a crazy way this experience has been good for
you. Something to bring you into the current century
instead of figuring yourself the last of the old–time
gunfighters."
"It was never me doing the fancying."
"You embrace it or not?"
"What's that matter?"
Tepper tightened his gaze on her, the spider veins
seeming to lengthen across his cheeks. "It's bound to
catch up with you, that's all I'm saying."
"You ever been known to be wrong?"
"I was going to ask you the same question."
"Nobody's perfect, D.W."
Tepper's eyes didn't seem to blink, looking tired and
drawn. "'Cept when you draw your gun, Ranger, you'd better
be."
CHAPTER 3
San Antonio, the present
Captain Consuelo Alonzo closed the gap between them in a
single quick step, close enough for Caitlin to smell sweet
smelling perfume and stale spearmint gum. Alonzo's neck
was sunburned as if she was religious about slathering
sunscreen on her face while neglecting pretty much
everywhere else.
"Listen to me and listen good, Ranger," she said,
shoulders stiff and squared to Caitlin. "You got a
reputation that precedes you by about a mile, and the last
thing we need is your trigger finger making the call in
there."
"Save it, Captain," Caitlin returned dismissively. "I
had six weeks training with the FBI in Quantico and I've
diffused more hostage situations without gunplay than your
SWAT team has even dreamed of."
"And this has nothing to do with Cort Wesley Masters'
son being inside the building?"
"You told me he was in a locked–down classroom,
not a hostage. School of 1,500, nice to see you've got
your thumb so centered on the situation."
Alonzo's cheeks puckered, her eyes suddenly having
trouble meeting Caitlin's. "Truth is we haven't got a firm
fix on who the gunman's holding in the library."
"I thought so. What about the suspect?"
"Near as we can tell, it's a junior named William
Langdon, age 16. Honor student with no previous criminal
record. Principal says he's been bullied."
Caitlin turned her gaze again on two SWAT officers
poised on either side of the school entrance, armed to the
teeth and wearing black gear and body armor. "Yeah, men
like that oughtta be able to talk him down for sure."
"Why don't you just button it up?"
"Because your actions are about to get people killed,
Captain."
"I'm well aware of the risk, Ranger."
"I don't believe you are. In rescue situations most
hostages are actually shot by SWAT team commandos acting
like they're playing paintball. Once the bullets start
flying, they tend to do strange things, like hit people
they weren't necessarily aimed at who have a tendency to
start running in all directions."
Alonzo looked Caitlin in the eye again. "You know your
problem? You take this ‘One Riot, One Ranger' crap too
much to heart. That might have been the case a hundred and
fifty years ago, but the simple truth is it's not any
more. You're a dinosaur, Ranger Strong, a goddamn
anachronism."
"You finished, Captain?"
"Yes, I am, and so are you. You just haven't figured it
out yet."
Spine stiffened, Captain Alonzo walked off to confer
with a deputy San Antonio police chief who'd just arrived
to provide political cover once the press showed up in full
force. Caitlin waited until her back was turned before
approaching the school entrance as if she was doing exactly
what she was supposed to, pausing at the entrance to eye
the SWAT commandos posted on either side.
"I'm glad to be in the background on this one, boys,"
she said, reaching for the glass door. "Don't bother
moving. I'll let myself in."