all-too-familiar tattoo running down his neck.
She saw him reach inside his jacket.
Lauritzia knew. Even before she watched him search through the elevator for her eyes, scanning through the other people getting off.
Before she saw him pull out his weapon.
She knew.
And in the horror of what she knew was about to happen, her thoughts ran to the one thing she knew she could not lose.
âTaylor, Jamie!â As they stepped forward, she lunged for them, pulling them behind her as the first deadly pops rang out.
People began to scream.
The chilling sputter of the gun was a sound that had riddled through Lauritzia a thousand times back in her own town, as common as church bells. A sound she knew all too well, and that had cost her everyone she once held dear.
If this is my time, let it be so, she said to herself. But Jesus, Mary, please, not the kids.
The familiar sounds of panic rang all around her. The gunman was quick on the trigger and did not wait. Jamie and Taylor screamed, not fully realizing what was happening. Lauritzia forced them to the floor, pressing herself on top of them, praying that whatever evil was being done, it would leave and not take them.
Just spare the kids, she begged God. Please, do not take these kids!
She pressed her face against Taylorâs, saying her own prayers, and tried to stifle the girlâs cowering sobs. Someone fell in front of her, and she waited for the bullets to hit, for the end to come.
But suddenly there was a different sound. Not the ear-splitting sputter of a machine pistol. But two loud pops .
Then there was only silence where a moment before there had been mayhem. Silence and that awful, smoke-filled smell that always came before the wails.
She looked up. The tattooed young killer was on his back, dead, his semiautomatic pistol at his side. A young policeman came up with his arms still extended. What happened next was the aftermath she knew all too well: the awful smell of lead rising like smoke. The anguished screams and moans. The hushed murmurs of shock and disbelief.
The woman with the shopping bags who had smiled at her was dead, her once kindly eyes frozen and wide. One of the black guys was moaning, his T-shirt soaked in blood. The young man who got on with his girlfriend on Level 2 was holding on to her body, moaning in disbelief. âKelly . . . Kelly . . .â
Beneath her, Jamie and Taylor were sobbing.
The policeman finally took his gun away from the shooter. âIs everyone all right?â Then, shouting into a radio, âEmergency. Emergency! Shooting at the Westchester Mall. Level One. We need EMS immediatelyâeverything youâve got. Suspect down.â
Other people wandered up and began to help the shell-shocked people out of the elevator. Lauritzia lifted herself up, and then the kids, who were whimpering in shock. I have to get them out of here, she knew. Before anyone comes .
Before they ask her questions that she did not want to answer.
âIs it over? Is it over, Lauritzia?â Jamie kept muttering.
âYes, yes,â Lauritzia reassured him. She hugged them with all her might. âYou are safe.â But she knew it wasnât over.
Only then did she feel the burning on her face and put her hand there and notice the blood. Her blood.
âLauritzia, youâre hurt!â Taylor yelled.
âWe have to go!â
She pressed their faces close to her as they stepped over the bodies to shield them from the horrible sight.
âEveryone wait over there,â the policeman instructed them. âEMS is on the way. You too,â he said, guiding Lauritzia.
But she could not wait.
âCome!â she told them, lifting them off the ground and carrying them past the swarm of bodies. They were trembling and whimperingâwho would not be?âbut there was no time to delay. She took a last, quick look at the shooter. She had seen his face a thousand times. The tattoo. Only by the grace
Jane Washington
C. Michele Dorsey
Red (html)
Maisey Yates
Maria Dahvana Headley
T. Gephart
Nora Roberts
Melissa Myers
Dirk Bogarde
Benjamin Wood