An adventurous young woman faces her final challenge
24-year-old Tracy Anders' best friend has been using blackmail to compel her to ever more difficult missions, but now the battle between Tracy and Donna is reaching its conclusion. As this series progressed, some elements have grown darker, though this final episode is somewhat lighter. And let's be clear, this is a fantasy, not real life. There is nudity but no sex. The characters are over 18 years old.
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Chapter Eight
Fighting to the End
I woke up in my own bed. In my own apartment. The handcuffs were gone, and I was in pajamas. Not my pajamas. Cotton. Very soft. My knees and elbows were wrapped. A bandage nearly covered my left eye. I didn't hear anyone else. What the hell?
I tried getting up, but it was hard. My body didn't want to move. I rolled on my side, slid off the bed to my knees, and tried to stand. That wasn't working so well, either. I heard the front door. Was it Donna? Hopefully not Miranda and her thugs. I considered ducking into the closet but even crawling that far was impossible. I was doomed.
"Tracy? What are you doing out of bed?"
It was Ryan, carrying groceries. I looked up in disbelief before bursting into tears. The handsome police detective set the bag down to take me in his arms.
"It's okay, it's okay, you're safe now," he whispered, stroking my hair. It had been washed by someone. I was still crying, unable to stop. He pressed me against his chest. "I know how scared you must have been. Please understand that from the moment I realized you were gone, every cop in the city was looking for you. Miranda's henchmen got away, but it's just a matter of time until we catch them."
"How did I get here?" I asked, sniffling.
"That's a little complicated."
I was lifted back on the bed. Tucked in. Ryan went to the kitchen with the groceries and returned with a cup of Earl Grey. "This will help settle you down." I sipped slowly.
"Thank you. Were you here all night?"
"Yes, I slept on your couch." He reached over to the dresser, retrieving several bottles of pills and a glass of water. "You need to take these."
"What are they?" I asked.
"A pain killer, antibiotics, and a sedative."
"Why?" I questioned.
"Tracy, you were banged up pretty bad last night. You need rest now."
"I am a little sore," I confessed.
"Only a little?"
"Okay, maybe a little more than sore. Last night is kind of a blur."
I noticed Ryan looking at me with the strangest expression.
"What is it?" I asked.
"What do you remember?"
"You and I were in the restaurant, and then Miranda lured me into the alley. She kidnapped me, stole my clothes, and said she was going to torture me. I really didn't like that idea, so I jumped out the window of her car and started running. Carl and that other guy eventually found me in a store somewhere. I think Carl was going to shoot me. Then police cars showed up and they ran away."
"We have surveillance video from the mini-mart. It's not public yet, but everyone in the department is sharing it."
"That is so embarrassing. I must look like a mess," I said, wondering if my hair was brushed.
"Sweetheart, you put your body between an armed assailant and a wounded police officer. You sat there, on your knees, willing to take a bullet for Officer Franklin. She thinks you're crazy, but she's also very grateful. We all are."
Ryan was choking up. I knew the bond between the men and women serving in uniform was strong. A thin blue line. Such loyalties run deep.
"I don't know. I wasn't really thinking, just reacting. They were after me. It didn't seem right that someone else should be hurt. How is she?"
"Pam is okay, just bruised. Her vest stopped the bullet. She was the one who chased you to the alley, covered you with a blanket, and carried you to a patrol car. She says you weigh nothing and need to put on weight."
I laughed a little. My mother always said that, too.
"That's better. I'm glad to see the light coming back in your eyes," he said, taking my hand. "You were ... you were in bad shape when we brought you home. Our doctor had to tranquilize you before treating those injuries."
"Was it that bad?" I asked.
"I may owe you an apology. A doctor wanted to keep you under observation overnight. In a mental ward. For a psych evaluation. I said no. I told him that by this morning, you'd have it back together and be ready for a fight. Am I forgiven?"
I tried not to smile.
"You've studied me very closely, Detective Sutherland," I teased. "Is there anything about me you don't know?"
"I know that under your quiet exterior, there's a fighter," he answered. "I suspect a woman of terrific passions, and inherent decency. A woman who's embarrassed when she puts herself before others. And a person who wants to see Miranda taken down. Am I wrong?"
"You told the doctor the truth, detective. I am absolutely ready to get back in the game," I answered, trying to straighten up. "What else do you need to know?"
"Something important," he whispered, suddenly leaning forward to give me a kiss. A light one. I looked at him, wanting more. He pulled me close for a far more passionate embrace, blissfully robbing me of my breath.
"I was so afraid of losing you," he muttered, squeezing me tightly. "What you did. Escaping from the car. Evading them until we could get there. Staring Carl Mathers down while he was pointing a gun at you. That was very courageous. It was your best run yet."
"Are my runs becoming famous?" I asked.
"I can't talk about that. Not now. Just so you know, we brought you back here so Donna wouldn't discover you've been speaking with us. We don't want her warning Miranda. You might consider this an undercover operation."
Ryan's phone issued an alert. "It's Donna. Can you handle her?" Ryan asked.
"I think so. I sure won't tell her about you," I replied.
"I'll be in the closet again, listening. There are two detectives in the apartment across the courtyard, and a patrol car standing by, so you have nothing to be afraid of."
"Ryan, I'm always afraid. I have been since this nightmare started. But thanks for trying to help."
He disappeared into the hall closet. A moment later, I heard a key turning in my front door. Donna entered holding frosted donuts and a bottle of wine.
"Oh, good, you're awake," she said, sitting on the foot of the bed. Then she noticed the bandages. "My God, honey, what happened to you?"
"I fell down a flight of stairs. It's nothing," I answered.
"Tell me about you and Miranda. She said you were on a mission last night and ran off. I didn't schedule a mission."
"It was just a misunderstanding," I said. "Miranda is such a nice lady. She must have become confused."
* * * * * *
Donna decided to wait an extra week before scheduling another mission. She wanted a naked streaker, not a bandaged escapee from an emergency room. But finally, she announced there was a new plan. The biggest one yet. I realized it would be the last one and put my affairs in order. I cleaned my apartment so Mrs. Johnson wouldn't have to. Wrapped up projects at work. I wrote personal notes to friends, leaving them in a box on my kitchen table. Mementos and photographs were packed and addressed to my parents in Ohio. After seeing pictures of their naked slut daugther that Donna threatened to release on the internet, I didn't know if they'd ever talk to me again, but I had no place else to send them.
Ryan asked me out on a date, still posing as an insurance adjuster. I didn't know if he wanted to see me, or if he needed an update on Miranda, who I hadn't seen since the kidnapping attempt. He was looking better than ever. Tall and handsome like a 30-year-old football player. I was stressed, nervously toying with the collar Donna made me wear.
"Good news," Ryan whispered over club sandwiches at his favorite deli. "We caught Carl Mathers and Jeepers Sanderson. Several more, too. Gathered in a warehouse behind Poppin's Department Store. We're still looking for Miranda." I briefly glanced over my shoulder, as if Miranda might be standing there. Which Ryan noticed.
"Poppin's? Does that mean Donna is involved?" I asked.
"We don't have proof of that yet. We're keeping everything under the radar for now. Just keep talking to her. She may reveal more than she thinks."
"I'll try. You know I'm not a good spy," I confessed.
"Don't worry, we have that covered," he replied.
* * * * * *
Donna was unusually quiet as we drove downtown on a Wednesday afternoon. She wore jeans and a pullover sweatshirt despite the warm weather. I was in a long plastic windbreaker and tennis shoes. And nothing else.
"Going to explain the mission?" I finally asked.
"When we get there. You've gotten so good at escaping that I won't divulge anything prematurely," she answered.
"You can still call this off," I hinted. "We were friends once. That could still mean something."
"We will always be friends, Tracy. But I need to do this. I can't say why because I don't know. I never wanted to hurt you."