Jade Star - Catherine Coulter [141]
There was a loud shout from outside the cave. Then a rapid staccato, at least six more shots.
Suddenly Saint felt Wilkes’s hands clutching at his wrist, bearing downward. Again he looked into Wilkes’s eyes, and saw madness and more pain than a human being should have to suffer. Stomach cancer, he thought, a slow, agonizing death. He saw something else in his eyes, something he couldn’t yet understand. Then he did. He realized, deep in his soul, that Wilkes could have shot him in the confusion. He saw another pistol lying in the dust very close to Wilkes and knew Wilkes could easily have grabbed it. He knew that Wilkes had made a decision. For a split second Saint wavered. He closed his eyes, knowing what was to happen, what the dying man wanted to happen. He let him bring the gun between them.
Jules was weeping softly. “No, please, no.”
There was a muffled shot.
Jules screamed.
Neither man moved. Then Saint very gently eased Wilkes’s limp body down to the cave floor.
Jules backed away, turning her head, unable to bear the fixed gaze in Jameson Wilkes’s eyes.
Brent burst into the cave, drew up short, and slowly slipped his gun back into its holster. “He’s dead?” He nodded toward Wilkes’s body.
“Yes,” Saint said. Just as he wanted to be. Thank God, he didn’t linger, even for a moment. Jules couldn’t have borne that.
“Josh shot the other man. I see you got this scum,” he added, nodding toward Hawkins’ body.
Saint nodded. He looked one last time at the man who had caused so such suffering, lived with such suffering, then walked slowly over to his wife. “Love,” he said, taking her into his arms. “It’s all over now.”
Jules leaned against him, beyond tears now. She wrapped her arms around his back, burrowing her face into his shoulder, feeling his strong heartbeat against her. He rocked her, gently stroking his hand through her tangled hair. He looked over at Wilkes again, a strange sadness filling him. Had Jules somehow become twisted in his opium dreams into a fantasy to save him from himself? Or had he wanted her with him when he died, to complete some eerie ritual, some twisted dream? Saint shook his head. He doubted he would ever understand. He certainly wouldn’t speak to Jules about it. She’d suffered too much already. And most of it had been for him.
“You’re a godmother, Jules,” Saint said. “Come, let’s go admire Byrony’s perfect child.”
“I’m a godmother?” she repeated blankly, and he knew she was striving desperately for something real to grasp.
“Yes, and I’ll wager Brent will even let you suggest names for the little fellow.”
“Yes,” Brent said, “I will, Jules.”
“I want to see my godson,” she said.
“I’m proud as hell of you,” Saint said, kissing her, and led her from the cave.
He became aware of Wilkes’s blood on the front of his shirt.
There was so much hell on earth. But then, there were also other people who made life bearable, people who made meaning of things, who gave joy and love. And he had his wife, he had his Jules. He realized something then that would be with him throughout his life: he loved someone more than his own life. God, he was lucky. The fragility of life, the preciousness of life . . .
He clutched her against his side. And that’s where she would be, always. Beside him, part of him.
Jules stared around the Hammonds’ parlor, feeling disoriented for a moment, until Michael said gently to her, “You think we can make as cute a little boy as Byrony did?”
“What about me?” Brent said, grinning down at his wife. She was still dreadfully pale, but the sparkle was back in her eyes. Their child, Damon Michael, was sleeping in a crib beside her chair.
“What about you?” Saint said, his voice sardonic. “All you did was enjoy yourself, repeatedly.”
“So true,” Byrony said, giving her husband a radiant smile. “Jules, if ever you tire of that husband of yours, I will gladly take him. A most useful man. A most caring man, and he told me the