1
The Call
As he thought back on it, he thought he could remember her from several years ago when he first downloaded her gorgeous pictures from the
All Over 35
internet site. She was the most beautiful and arousing creature he'd seen, and that included several girls he dated in college.
Laurel Madison was a beauty somewhere in her thirties or early forties. She had coal black hair that fell thickly about her striking face and to her shoulders. Hers were the most piercing blue eyes Hunter Carroll ever felt drill into his, and though it may have been partly because of the manner in which she applied her eyeliner and mascara, she mesmerized him.
Her face was mature, yet she radiated a lusty desire for whoever might be viewing her erotic pictures. Her lips were a slash of wet red that he longed to taste and feel. Her body was simply stunning, and she had a gorgeous creamy skin that he'd never seen characteristic of any other woman...'Believe me,' he thought, 'I've got the files of ten thousand selected erotic photos to bear that out.' He'd collected every picture of this beauty he could scarf up from anywhere and carefully titled them, then filed them in her folder in his computer.
Then she vanished. Completely. It was as if she had never existed. Hunter even tried to contact the
All Over 35
site to see what had happened or if she would continue making pictures. No answer. Big surprise, that...these days nobody cares enough to respond to a customer. That was four years ago.
At any rate, he went on about his professional life as a financial advisor with a couple of sidelines, one in antique and modern weapon repair, the second in photography when he had the spare time. Financial advisor was not exactly a babe magnet when it came to meeting new girls, though he had done extremely well; overall his experience there resembled a desert wasteland.
'Yep,' he thought, 'I'm pretty sure it had a lot to do with the title of the job and whatever it was that girls are looking for today. Nope, I don't think it had much to do with me personally, at least appearance-wise.'
He'd always worked hard physically, training himself for some time in the future when he imagined he'd be a sort of "equalizer" as another sideline. He envisioned himself being strong, skilled, dangerous, and willing to fade into the background to aid some helpless or defenseless person who had been royally screwed by one of the 'elites' and they had gotten away with it. Just the sort of characteristics that an equalizer would have to have.
'I believe I actually overdid it on the fade-into-the-background aspect of my plans,' he mused.
Hunter Carroll was over six feet tall and had a powerful build, thanks to his parents' fine genes. He was good-looking in the generic sense. A lifetime of summer part-time and then full-time hard work on loading docks reinforced that characteristic during and after college. Along the way he earned three black belts in
Isshin Ryu
, an Okinawan martial art, because it had always been a dream. That along with some detailed and friendly but exceedingly painful instruction by a couple of SEAL friends he'd made along the way gave him the specific tools necessary to come out on top of most dangerous situations a person might encounter.
But if you're smart, you don't advertise those as you walk around daily. To be effective, they have to reside deep in the background, to be brought into action only when you must surprise an enemy and protect yourself or someone else. Not exactly date material a guy can advertise.
And so here he was heading for the mountains of northeast Alabama in mid-fall for a few days' break at a cabin he'd bought from a friend, one located near Little River Canyon. He needed to do some planning and strategizing for his businesses and wanted to simply kick back on the deck and listen to the forest. 'I'm like that,' he thought with a smile.
He had just stopped for gas and a soda at a little railroad stop called Valley Head when his cell phone chimed the "Song of the Volga Boatmen," something guaranteed to get stares at lunch but not women.
"Hunter, this is Reagan Laribee. You probably don't remember me, but I'm your aunt on your father's side of the family. For that matter, you may not even know me." She stopped, waiting for my response.
"Reagan, actually I do recall Dad mentioning you, but I don't think we've ever met, have we?"
"No, I regret that we haven't. Hunter, I need your help. I would never inconvenience you like this if I didn't need you badly. I wonder if there is any way I can get where you are, even for just a few hours. I need your assessment of something special and an idea about something I must do for my safety. This is a matter about which I can't get to first base with the police."
"Reagan, of course I'll be happy to meet with you. Where are you right now?"
"Chattanooga, at this minute. I'll go anywhere you are."
"Reagan, Lady Luck just shined on us. I'm on my way to a cabin I bought near Little River Canyon in northeast Alabama. If I tell you how to get here, could you join me for however long you wish? It's quiet here, and nobody else will want us because nobody else knows where we are."
"Oh, Hunter, that's a godsend. I am familiar with that area, and if you'll tell me where you are, I'll program it into my Garman GPS system. I'm finishing a conference here and I can be there in about four hours. Is that all right?"
"It's fine, Reagan. I'm just arriving in a few minutes, and that time will give me what I need to get us some food and open this place so that it doesn't smell like cross between a locker room and an abandoned warehouse."
He heard her chuckle at this, but underneath he heard something else, a note of worry or pain or...something. They said their goodbyes and hung up. He then set about throwing open the doors and windows to air out the place and plugging in the refrigerator and oven; in about an hour he closed up made a trip down the mountain to the local general store where he jawboned with the folks there. After that he bought a healthy stock of groceries. The first was, of course, miles out in front of the second in importance.
Although the day was beautiful as the sun began its slow descent through the trees of yellow, gold, red, brown and green, the word at the store was that a storm was coming from out west and would lock everybody in starting late tonight. Might be followed by a cold snap, too. He collected the phone numbers of the sheriff, store manager, his all-too-attractive and physically blessed teenage assistant who had no compunction about staring a hole through him, and the local towing service. Then he headed back to the cabin.