28 May 2010 ~ Comments Off

Learning to Stand :: Chapter 17 ::

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CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

“Charlie always believed Cecil was running the company,” Joseph said.

“Why did Charlie believe that?” Ben asked.

Joseph nodded toward Alex.

“Someone held Cee Cee’s strings. It wasn’t the Board of Directors, that’s for sure. Every time Cee Cee would get out on the skinny branches, someone would pull him back. Except when he got himself in trouble. Like this time.”

“The record shows you extracted him five times,” Vince said. “Why was he held so many times?”

“We rescued him five times. He was in trouble more times than that,” Joseph said. “Anyone know the total number?”

“Eight,” Ben said. “Maybe ten but not more than twelve.”

“Sometimes, he would disappear,” Alex said. “He had a way of turning up again. A couple times, we received the call to go get him. By the time we could go and get him, he’d show up as if nothing happened. I always thought he was up to something.”

“Something?” Raz asked.

“I can’t explain it. He knew every nasty on every continent,” Alex said. “He only spoke English. So he’d miss the finer points of any negotiation.”

[...]

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21 May 2010 ~ Comments Off

Learning to Stand :: Chapter 16 ::

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CHAPTER SIXTEEN

Forty minutes later
Thursday evening
March 27 – 7:00 P.M. MDT
Denver, Colorado

Standing in the doorway, Alex looked around the basement room where the men had assembled. She smiled when Ben touched her back on his way into the room. She chose to sit alone in a chair near the wall. Alex didn’t trust them. She would rather sit alone with her pad of paper, a yellow pencil and her cup of coffee than even be near any of them.

Reading her decision, the men shifted in their seats. Joseph smiled at Alex then nodded when she didn’t return his smile.

“Would you like to call the meeting to order?” Joseph asked.

“I’m no longer active military, Major Walter,” Alex said. “But I’m happy to assist you in your endeavors.”

Alex felt Joseph’s eyes on her face. Rather than look at him, she kept her eyes on the mug in her hands.

She had thought she was all right.

She had even thought she was over it.

But looking at the men assembled, her heart ached. The men had worked harder in the last twenty-four hours than they ever had for her. Tapping her pencil on her pad, she knew her decision to leave the military was justified.

“You’re making up stories to hurt yourself,” Jesse said. “These men worked hard for you. They want to prove themselves to you, not Joseph.”

Alex glanced in Jessie’s direction. Matthew came into the room. Moving slowly to minimize his pain, he came to the corner where Alex was sitting. Leaning down, he whispered in her ear.

“Jesse’s right, you know.”

Matthew kissed her cheek then pulled a chair over to sit near her.

“We are meeting tonight to discuss Cee Cee Joiner,” Joseph said. “In the next hour, we’ll share everything you have uncovered in your search. This is the time to share everything. The smallest detail can make the biggest difference in the final analysis. I believe Captain Olivas should begin. Second only to the Lieutenant Colonel Hargreaves, Captain Olivas is an expert on Cee Cee Joiner. Lieutenant Colonel? You may interrupt when you feel necessary.”

“I spent the last twelve years in Central and South America,” Troy said. “Most of what I will tell you is hearsay, rumor and will not stand up in a court of law.”

“But true?” Trece asked.

“Probably,” Troy said. “I think the most important aspect to understand about Joiner is his appetite for women. It’s almost a defining characteristic. Anyone know what wife he’s on?”

“He’s currently married to wife number five,” Raz said. “His divorce from wife number four was final only three months ago. Wife number five is seven or so months pregnant.”

“Do you know the gender of the child?” Alex asked.

“Male,” Raz said. “Would you like to see the latest imaging?”

Alex shook her head.

“A second defining characteristic is that Joiner has a lot of children,” Troy said. “Do you know how many legitimate children?”

“Eight. Four boys and four girls,” Raz said. “All Texas named: Mitzi, Cody, Candy, Tristan…”

“Eight legitimate children with one on the way,” Troy said. “I know of at least six illegitimate children spread all over the Americas. A few in the US, a couple in Central America and at least two in South America. Any in the Middle East, Matthew?”

“There’s a whisper of a couple children but no one is quite sure,” Matthew said. “He’s not popular in the Middle East.”

“Not popular is an understatement,” Alex said. “He’s been kicked out of almost every Arab speaking country. Even OPEC won’t negotiate with him.”

“Cee Cee Joiner is the father of sixteen children?” Larry’s voice echoed with shock.

“At least sixteen children,” Troy said. “He may have children no one knows about.”

“Troy used this term: ‘appetite for women,’” Alex said. “I don’t think he likes women. He’s no ladies man.”

“He uses women as a means to an end,” Joseph said. “That’s why the Fey Special Forces Team was involved with him. Joiner sees the Lieutenant Colonel as a tool for his use. If he gets in trouble, he wants the Fey.”

“The President said the Fey fixes Joiner’s problems,” Raz said.

“Joiner demands my help,” she said. “I’m his personal extraction agent or so he tells anyone who will listen.”

“What does he get by having so many children?” Vince asked. “He can’t interact with them or even see all of those children.”

“Good question, Vince. I don’t know,” Alex said. “Anyone?”

The men shook their heads. Alex looked at Ben. He seemed to be deciding whether or not to say something.

“Ben?” she asked.

“I’ve heard it’s about money,” Ben said. “Raz and I went to visit Joiner Sr. He has an ocean-side home outside of Cancun.”

As if to pull the information out of his head, Ben tugged his shoulder length salt and pepper hair.

“I don’t remember who said it, sorry. I get the impression it was… dinero para los niños.”

“Money for children?” Troy translated.

“Those were the words, I don’t remember the context. I don’t think the person realized what she was saying. Who was she?”

“Ágeuda?” Raz asked. “Joiner Sr. has Alzheimer’s. He has a full time nurse named Ágeuda.”

“No, it was the cook,” Ben said. “Remember she mumbled to herself.”

“Almost all the time,” Raz said. “You listened?”

“I make it a practice to listen to that kind of thing,” Ben said. “Mostly it doesn’t make sense, but sometimes it’s vital.”

“We need to find out why Joiner has so many children,” Alex said.

The words left her mouth before she realized she had given up her neutral position. Shit. She made her face go blank.

“Sergeant Flagg? Are you keeping the list?” Joseph asked.

“Yes sir,” Larry said.

“Add to your list: why does Joiner have so many children?” Joseph asked.

“Yes sir.”

Alex could hardly believe the interaction. Larry did what he was told without a word of back talk. Looking at Joseph, he winked at her. She gave him a soft smile.

“Lieutenant Colonel Hargreaves, will you share your information with the group?”

“Yes Major,” Alex said. “Where should I start?”

“Joiner was all over South and Central America,” Troy said. “I ran into him a couple of times, but he doesn’t know who I am. He says he’s exploring for oil reserves, but don’t they do that by satellite now?”

“They determine regions of interest by satellite,” Alex said. “Usually they will send an engineering team or a field team. For example, you were supposed to work out the transportation details for a specific region of Afghanistan the Corps of Engineers asked me to re-map.”

Troy blinked. He opened his mouth then nodded. He had not even looked at what had been assigned to him.

“Do we need to add the re-mapping to our list, Lieutenant Colonel?” Joseph asked.

“You’ll have to ask your superior officer, Major,” Alex said. “I’m not certain what your team’s priorities are at this time.”

Joseph squinted at Alex in response. The room became very still. At that moment, there was a small bark. Max stood in the doorway holding Maggie.

“Excuse me,” Alex said.

She felt every eye on her as she went to speak with Max. Max pressed his forehead against hers in support.

“I’m going to take her out for a little walk,” Max said. “John called. His attending figures if he’s not in a class, he can do a few surgeries. He thinks he’ll be home by nine. Cian’s making dinner.”

Alex nodded.

“Go easy,” Max said. “You’re not yourself.”

Alex closed her eyes and leaned forward. She felt the familiar comfort of Max’s forehead on hers. Wishing she could go with him, she watched him leave the basement.

Turning in place, she heard Joseph’s raised voice. Looking across at her former Fey teammate, she saw he was furious.

“And exactly what did you expect? Olivas, did you do the work your commanding officer asked you to do? Did you even look at it?”

“No sir,” Troy said.

“Then what do you expect? You are the laziest, bunch of babies I have ever seen in ANY team, let alone elite soldiers. The President of the United States has asked for our assistance and you can’t even keep your egos in check to get the information you need.”

Nodding to Joseph, Ben stood to walk over to Alex. He hugged her to him then, as if she was a small child, he took her hand and led her to an empty loveseat. He helped her settle in then sat with his arm around her. His body language was clear. He was protecting his fragile child.

“Before we continue, we must make a decision. Are we willing to do what it takes to become a team?” Ben said in French. “If not, we will not waste any more time here.”

“I can only speak for White Boy and myself,” Trece replied in French. “We’ll do whatever it takes.”

“I will do whatever it takes, even if it costs me my life,” Vince replied in French. “I owe Alex my life. It’s hers to do with what she’d like.”

“I’m willing to go as far as it takes to regain the trust and friendship lost,” Matthew replied in French. “Alex owns my life, as well.”

“What did Ben say?” Larry asked. “He spoke so fast. I didn’t get it.”

Joseph raised his eyebrows to Larry.

“Anyone like to translate for Sergeant Flagg?” Joseph asked.

“Ben wants to know if we are willing to do what it takes to become a team. You need to put ‘learn French’ on your list, Flagg,” Troy said in English. Switching to French, he said, “I’m even willing to translate for the jerk off. I will do what it takes.”

“I will do anything, anything, really just ask me,” Larry said in English.

“To hear you ask if I shall love always, and myself answer: Till the end of days.” Speaking in his mother’s tongue of Patois, Raz quoted a line from Jamaican poet Claude McKay poem. “My allegiance is yours, my queen.”

“What language was that?” Larry asked. “What did he say?”

“None of your business,” Joseph said. “Alex? Are you willing to continue?”

Overwhelmed by the men’s words, Alex gave a small nod.

“We were discussing Cee Cee Joiner,” Joseph said. “Joiner told people he went around exploring for oil, Alex?”

“Joiner works for Pecos Oil, a company his father, Cecil Joiner Sr. started,” Alex said. “Joiner Sr. was dirt poor when he married his wife. They lived with her parents while he worked the oil fields. One day, they discovered oil on the in-laws property.”

“Like Jed Clampett?” Trece asked. The men laughed. “I apologize for my interruption, sir. I will return to practicing my listening skills.”

Alex smiled at Trece. He responded with a shrug.

“Joiner Sr.’s in-laws died in a freak accident maybe six months after they discovered oil on their property. Raz helped me research the records. The police report indicates drunk driving on the part of the father-in-law. But they were a Baptist family: no drinking, no drugs.”

“Flagg, put the accident on your team list,” Joseph said. “Joiner Sr. was fond of his in-laws. So it’s kind of a dead end.”

“Was Cee Cee alive when the accident happened?” Matthew asked.

“Yes, he was about three,” Ben said. “Raz and I went to Mexico to speak with Papa Joiner. He was incoherent. Raz? The photo?”

Clicking a button on his laptop, Raz brought up a photo showing a gray haired man slumped in a wheelchair. He turned the laptop so everyone could see the image. With a flick of Raz’s finger, an image of the gentleman with a young Hispanic woman came on the screen.

“This is the lovely Ágeuda. She said Joiner Sr. has been in this condition for the last four or five years. She prays every day he will finally go to see our Lord. His file says Alzheimer’s. Anything happen four or five years ago? Alex? Troy?”

Both Alex and Troy shook their heads.

“I’ll put that on our team list,” Larry said.

“Cee Cee technically runs Pecos Oil,” Alex said. “However, Joiner Sr. set up an executive committee and C class officers before retiring. Cee Cee is little more than a figure head. I’m not sure he attends to or knows any of the company’s details. One time, when we were trudging through another jungle with Cee Cee Joiner, Mike quizzed him about Pecos Oil. Mike loved to harass him. Joiner’s answers changed from day to day. When you’re stuck in the jungle, it’s pretty funny to listen to the moron scramble.”

Alex smiled then remembered that this moron probably had her entire team killed. Her face fell and she sighed.

F

Learning to Stand is the second novel in the Alex the Fey thriller series
written by Claudia Hall Christian.

The novel is available in paperback at Amazon, our store, your local library and bookstore.
Entire chapters are be published at On-a-limb.com,
StoriesbyClaudia.com and AlextheFey.com.

Join the Alex the Fey Facebook Group

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14 May 2010 ~ Comments Off

Learning to Stand :: Chapter Fifteen ::

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CHAPTER FIFTEEN

One and half hours later
Thursday afternoon
March 27
– 1:10 P.M. MDT
Evergreen, CO

“Do we know where we’re going?” Alex asked.

They had been driving for more than an hour.

“We know where we’re going, you don’t.” Max replied.

“You’ve planned this a long time,” she said.

“About a year,” John said.

Trece pulled the car to a stop in front of a small house up the road from downtown Evergreen.

“I’ll be right back.”

Trece went up to the door and was let into the house. Within minutes, he waved them into the house. John came around and helped her out of the back seat. With his arm tight around her, they walked up to the front door.

“Max! John!” A middle aged woman stood in the doorway. She was average height and had the physical bearing of someone who was capable and strong. She wore riding pants, a loose top and a flowered apron. “You must be Alex. I mean, I knew you were twins but… Wow, you look alike.”

Alex smiled.

“Oh I forgot, you don’t know anything about this,” she laughed. “Come in! Come in!”

[...]

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07 May 2010 ~ Comments Off

Learning to Stand :: Chapter Fourteen ::

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CHAPTER FOURTEEN

An hour and a half later
Thursday morning
March 27
- 10:10 A.M. MDT
St. Joseph’s Hospital, Denver, CO

“Hi,” Alex whispered.

John was sitting on the side of her hospital bed holding her hand.

“Where am I?”

“St. Joes. You’re making quite the tour of Denver hospitals. Are you checking up on me?”

“To meet all your girlfriends?” Alex asked. “I’d have to be conscious and armed for that assignment, sir. What about your class?”

“I’ve spoken with my attending,” he said. “As long as I can pass the test, I should be fine. I’ll need to study tonight but… Some things are more important. Do you remember getting here?”

“Vaguely,” she said.

“I’m sorry about the water. You probably didn’t remember the hot water was shut off today.”

“Hooking up the new boiler to the solar, yes,” she said. “I only turned it on so the men wouldn’t hear me cry.”

“Ah,” John said. “Good reason to give yourself hypothermia.”

[...]

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30 April 2010 ~ Comments Off

Learning to Stand :: Chapter Thirteen ::

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CHAPTER THIRTEEN

The wheels of Alex’s mind clicked through the information from the Weasel. Feeling a hand on her arm, she looked up to see Joseph. He held a pad of paper and yellow pencil which she took. Wandering in front of the stunned men, she found a table and began to write. She looked up when Sergeant Flagg touched her.

“Lieutenant Colonel?” Sergeant Flagg asked.

“Leave her,” Joseph said.

“But I’m an intelligence officer. She needs my help.”

“She doesn’t need anyone’s help. Why don’t you make a fresh pot of coffee? She’ll be done in a minute,” Joseph said. Turning to Matthew, he said, “This is what I told you about. And it is your job, Mac Clenaghan, to make sure she gets it.”

“What?” Matthew said.

“A pad of paper, a pencil and about fifteen minutes of silence.”

Matthew nodded his head.

Alex had no idea what happened. It was like walls of a maze lined up in her mind. Working with her pencil and paper, she tracked the flow until she reached the conclusion. It was something she had always been able to do. Sure, her father had trained her how to track her mind, what questions to ask and what to follow. She was also Ben’s daughter.

But when things began to click together, the world faded. She had been told she hummed and tapped her pencil against the pad. She only remembered the maze of facts. Max had the same capability but he didn’t like the way it felt. He preferred a more logical approach over her ‘woo woo’ methods.

Nodding her head, Alex looked up to the men. Sergeant Flagg put a mug of coffee within reach. She looked at the coffee and realized it was black. She was about to get up when Troy set a carton of milk next to the mug. He shrugged a shoulder to her thanks. Taking a drink of her coffee, she was ready to start.

“I thought we could talk about Joiner,” Joseph said.

He motioned for Matthew and Raz to take the ancient brown leather couch. Troy reversed a metal folding chair and sat down. Vince slid into a leather arm chair. Trece and White Boy stood at attention toward the edges of the meeting. Larry looked confused then stood between them.

“You’re going to leave them there?” Alex asked Joseph.

Joseph glanced at Trece, White Boy and Larry.

“They have not made their peace with their superior officer. Until they do, they will remain at the fringes of this group.”

[...]

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23 April 2010 ~ Comments Off

Learning to Stand :: Chapter Twelve ::

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CHAPTER TWELVE

An hour later
Wednesday evening
March 26 6:20 P.M. MDT
Lobby of Denver Health, Denver, CO

Against doctors’ orders, and any kind of reason, Alex agreed to walk the two hundred yards between the ICU and the exit. Of course she was laying down when she made that agreement. Raz rolled her out in a wheelchair to the edge of the hospital atrium. They argued back and forth about her walking until, frustrated, she stood up ready to walk.

And passed out from the pain.

When she woke up, Max was there. He had dressed her in her digital fatigues. With Max’s help, she was able to stand, get ready and walk a little bit. Only her twin knew that, for Alex, the pain of letting anyone down was much worse than any amount of physical pain.

Everyone expected her to be fine. She would be fine.

Coming in, Troy popped her beret on her head and they were off across the atrium. Dressed in identical digital fatigues and a beret, Max led the way, Raz walked behind her and White Boy held the rear position. They walked casually, trying to look like a group of soldiers leaving a shift.

They were near the front of the hospital when they were joined by the Jakker and four US Air Force soldiers. Without saying a word, the soldiers joined the group. Zack came to walk beside Alex.

Across the atrium, Alex saw the backs of the Fort Carson battalion and a sea of photographers and videographers. Her stomach gripped with anxiety. She stumbled then stopped walking.

Glancing to the side, she saw Vince Hutchins with five fellow Navy SEALs waiting for them. She smiled at Vince and he winked at her. The SEALs mixed in with the Air Force and Army soldiers.

“Ready?” Max asked.

[...]

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16 April 2010 ~ Comments Off

Learning to Stand :: Chapter Eleven ::

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CHAPTER ELEVEN

Three hours later
Wednesday afternoon
March 26
3:20 P.M. MDT
Denver Health, Denver, CO

“Hi,” Raz whispered.

“Boy Scout,” Alex said.

She opened and closed her eyes. Raz moved to sit on the edge of her bed.

“He’s gone,” he replied. “Before you ask, Matthew is out of surgery. The doctors believe he will make a full recovery.”

He smiled at her. She frowned.

“You hurt me,” she said.

“Yes, I did,” he said. “I won’t insult you with excuses. I will regret it for the rest of my life.”

“I wish I knew why,” she said. “It’s so very confusing.”

“I know,” he said. “I think it’s confusing too.”

“Aren’t you supposed to be in Washington?”

“Joseph is leading the group until you are up and around. He has assessed each of us and offered us a tentative contract.”

Alex closed her eyes. She was hallucinating.

“I thought I heard you say Joseph?”

“Yep,” Raz nodded. “The President wants us to find Cee Cee Joiner. Colonel Gordon put Joseph on the table as the way to make it happen. The Fort acquiesced to the Commander and Chief.”

“Joseph who? Which Joseph?”

“Joseph Walter. Major Joseph Walter. In fact, you’re now a Lieutenant Colonel.”

“Now I know I’m hallucinating,” she said.

[...]

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09 April 2010 ~ Comments Off

Learning to Stand :: Chapter Ten ::

CHAPTER TEN

Wednesday afternoon
March 26 – 1:17 P.M. MDT
University of Colorado Denver
Anschutz Medical Center, Aurora, CO.

John sat in his Diabetes class thinking about Alex. For some reason, she popped into his mind. Truth be told, he thought of her a lot. Sometimes he remembered what she looked like when he woke up or the flush he felt in her presence.

Today, his mind drifted to Alex lying on the beach. They spent a lot of time at the beach when he was at UCLA. She wore these tiny bikinis to torture him. He pretended to study. Mostly he watched her sleep in the sun until he couldn’t stand his own arousal. She would giggle as he carried her off. Hotel rooms, bathroom stalls, the backseat of the car… They would hit it hot and fast. She was always ready to go. Back at the apartment, they would continue slow and easy, usually for the rest of the afternoon. John grinned at the scenes of passion floated through his mind.

His vibrating cell phone brought him back to the small, warm classroom and his boring class. Glancing at his phone, he saw a text from Max. John shifted his face to convince the other doctors of the importance of his message. He flipped his phone to read a text from his best-friend.

“@ in Denver Health. Get there.”

They always used an ‘at’ sign for Alex. Somehow it seemed appropriate. John continued his mock serious face and texted back.

“@ having lunch w MM. In bs class. Where r u?”

John looked up at the lecturing doctor. No one seemed to notice his text activity. Being raised PIRA gave John one advantage. He knew how to fake any attitude. His phone vibrated again. John’s eyes glanced down.

“Denver Health Emergency. @ dying.”

[...]

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02 April 2010 ~ Comments Off

Learning to Stand :: Chapter Nine ::

CHAPTER NINE

Jumping to Matthew, she felt mammoth hands clamp onto her shoulders.

The large man threw her against the mural on the restaurant wall. Managing to stay on her feet, Alex jammed her elbow into the man’s solar plexus. He fell back. Rotating her leg, she threw a roundhouse kick in her assailant’s direction. To avoid her kick, he stepped back and tripped over a parking curb. He fell backward landing on his behind.

She rushed to Matthew’s side. Pressing her knit cap into the bullet hole, she turned him onto his back. He had a gaping wound in his chest. She threw her down jacket over him for warmth. She pulled off her sweater to put under Matthew’s head. Using all her weight, she pressed her wool scarf and turtleneck into the wound. His eyes popped open when her shadow crossed his face. Matthew grabbed her hand.

“Boy Scout,” Matthew whispered. “Get the motherfucker.”

Sensing movement, Alex raised her left arm to catch a blow. Her arm made a sickening pop.

[...]

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26 March 2010 ~ View Comments

Learning to Stand :: Chapter Eight ::

CHAPTER EIGHT

Three hours later
Wednesday morning
March 26 – 10:45 A.M. MDT
Fort Logan National Cemetery, Colorado

Alex stepped back to admire her work. She spent the last hour cleaning the eleven granite stones which marking the final resting place of the Fey Special Forces Team. As she often did when she was here, she talked to her friends and teammates. She told them about her life. She shared her loneliness and grief. While Jesse hovered nearby, she detailed everything that happened.

In her effort to keep her few living friends close, she had lost them all. She’d known Troy since basic training, Trece and White Boy almost as long. Matthew had been her sparing partner, her buddy and her closest friend through some very dark nights. She spent six months in Walter Reed with Vince. Within a few days, they would be scattered to the wind.

And she would be alone.

Moving from stone to stone, she lit incense with Jesse’s Zippo lighter. Peace be with Alexander, the stone they laid for her, Nathan, Paul, Jax, Dean, Scott, Tommy, Dwight, Jesse, Mike and finally Charlie. Standing in the fragrant smoke, she wondered what was next for her.

Her failure was complete.

[...]

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