A Hero’s Homecoming
By Carlene Havel
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER ONE
Colonel Rich Martino was more exhausted than he could ever
remember being. After so many delays and time zone changes, he couldn’t even
figure out how long he had been traveling. It was three-twenty p.m., Manila
time, when he left the Philippine Islands. His flight was supposed to have left
at noon, but a mechanical problem held things up for three hours. He missed his
connection in Hawaii and spent an extra day in
the Honolulu Airport
waiting to get on a flight to San Francisco .
After a brief stop in Guam, he finally touched down in California .
Back in the good old U.S.A. for the first time
in two years. He would have enjoyed it more if he hadn’t been so worn out.
By the time Rich reached San Francisco ,
his whole travel itinerary was a mess. He’d been through enough delays to take
it in stride—up to a point. Eyes gritty, he went to the airline counter to see
what he could do. Somehow, he managed to get in the slowest line. The trainee
agent had to ask for help three times to get Rich ticketed. Since he sounded
almost incoherent to himself, he sensed he wasn’t making a lot of sense to the
ticket agent. After what seemed like an eternity, the arrangements were made,
his boarding pass in his hands, and he was on his way home. Home. San Antonio , Texas .
That was going to be a welcome sight.
After clearing through security, Rich located a pay phone to
call his wife. There was no line, since everyone else who wanted to make a call
was using a cell. Technology had no use in the jungles of Mindoro .
There, a man needed a reliable weapon and his wits about him. Rich promised he
would fix himself up with a cell phone as soon as he got a chance. Maybe even
tomorrow. He smiled at the thought. Who was he kidding? Tomorrow he would sleep
all day.
He knew he couldn’t be functioning well when he heard a
recording indicating the number he entered was not a working telephone. “Can’t
even remember my own phone number,” he groused to no one in particular.
Rich had emailed Rita from the American Embassy in Manila to inform her he was on his way home. He couldn’t
remember if that was on Sunday or Monday. Occasional email and even rarer phone
calls had been Rich’s only contact with his wife since their brief vacation in Hawaii last summer.
During the last year he’d reached the realization he was
tired of living in the jungle, chasing terrorists. Though proud of his work as
a special agent, he figured at forty-four it was someone else’s turn to carry
the load.
Realistically, Rich knew as long as he was in the Air Force
he would have essentially the same kind of job. Not many American Air Force
officers were fluent in Tagalog. Even fewer could survive for months at a time
in the jungle. The more he let himself think about retirement, the more Rich
wanted it. He could live in a comfortable home with his beautiful wife, spend
time with his Dad, take a cruise every year, and fly off to Vegas any time he desired.
After a while, retiring seemed not merely the right thing, but the only thing
to do. He could always work for his dad if he got bored. But he wouldn’t have
to do anything he didn’t choose to.
Rich had planned his finances carefully. He and his wife
could live comfortably on his savings and substantial stock portfolio, without
ever touching his retirement pay or Rita’s income. Some of his friends sank
into depression just thinking about leaving the service. He told the embassy staff—when
was that? Monday?—“I’m leaving with mixed emotions, happiness and joy.”
That tired old cliché made the rounds in military circles
for years, but it still got a laugh.
A broken seat delayed the flight from San
Francisco to San Antonio for
thirty minutes. After they pushed away from the gate, the pilot announced bad
weather brewed over Texas and they would wait
just a bit before taking off. While serving a third round of free drinks, one
of the flight attendants doubled over with stomach cramps and started throwing
up in the aisle. So they returned to a gate to wait for a cleanup crew and a
replacement flight attendant.
As tired and frustrated as he was, Rich couldn’t help
thinking the whole situation was somewhat comical. What a way to end his Air
Force career! Maybe it was the liquor. He chuckled, thinking how much fun he
would have telling his wife and dad about the trip home. Rich wondered if his dad
would be present when he arrived. Several of Rita’s recent emails mentioned his
father was doing a lot of traveling back and forth to New
York . Must be some kind of business deal.
Rich’s plane touched down in what his dad always called the
Great State of Texas a few minutes after midnight. The weary travelers
straggled into an almost deserted airport. Rich was glad he hadn’t asked Rita
to meet him. He always said you never knew what could happen with an overseas
flight and this trip clearly demonstrated Murphy’s Law had not been repealed.
He was mildly surprised when his suitcase came around the carousel. Losing it
would have been the final touch. When Rich saw an available taxi sitting
outside the baggage claim area, he decided his string of bad luck had run its
course. He was only a thirty-minute ride from his cool, comfortable bed.
A twinge of guilt nipped at Rich when he slumped into the
back seat of the taxi, leaving his oversized bag for the short little driver to
load into the trunk. I’ll take care of the guy with a good tip, he thought. He
was way too tired to fool with luggage.
Normally, Rich would have chatted with the taxi driver,
asking where he was from and catching up on San Antonio ’s
endlessly entertaining local politics. Instead, he said curtly, “Fifty-seven
hundred Glen Oak Meadow, near Randolph .”
Only when he heard the high-pitched, “Yes, sir. I know right
where that is,” did Rich realize his driver was a woman. Regret cut deeper for making
her lift his suitcase, but his remorse wasn’t enough to keep him from falling
asleep.
A noise startled Rich awake and he reached for his assault
rifle. In a single quick motion, he was on the sidewalk. His suitcase too. The
thumping noise proved to be the little driver closing the trunk of her taxi. Reality
presented itself.
Nothing but twenty-dollar bills in his wallet. Rather than
wait, he paid for his nineteen-dollar ride with two twenties and said, “I don’t
need any change.”
The girl’s eyes bulged. “Thanks!”
In an instant she was nothing but tail lights, obviously
making a quick getaway in case the big tip was a mistake. For a brief moment,
Rich wondered why that little girl drove a taxi on the night shift, but his
attention turned quickly to the front door of his tan brick home.
The neighborhood was quiet, the only movement a yellow cat
stealthily prowling across a nearby lawn. The spacing of street lights and
front porch lights gave the street a dim glow of suburban security. Yards were
neatly maintained. Everything looked so
clean. Back in the U.S.A. at last. San Antonio was equally as hot and humid as the jungle,
but on the other side of that door would be a wonderful invention called air
conditioning.
Rich’s luggage made a muffled, rubbery noise as he rolled it
to the front porch. Rattling keys out of his pocket, he wondered if Rita had
thought to put his favorite flavor of ice cream in the fridge. A bowl of dulce de leche would be great.
Rich fought to unlock the door, which only rattled in his
grasp. He pulled the key out of the lock and examined it. Fatigue overwhelmed
him...maybe he had the wrong key. But, no, that was the one, the silver key
that said TRU-SEC across it. He tried again, but the lock was frozen. A light
came on upstairs. Well, as long as Rita was awake, he would ring the doorbell. The
chimes sounded at the press of a button. The upstairs light suddenly flicked out,
but no one came to the door. He rang again, trying to shake off the sense that
he was being watched. If this was Rita’s idea of a joke…
Fury mounted as he stood outside his own home and knocked
sharply on the door. “Rita? Let me in. It’s Rich.”
There were scurrying sounds, but still no Rita. This time he
pounded on the door with his open hand. “Rita! Open this door or I’m going to
break it down.”
Too bad if he woke up the neighbors. He was hot, hungry, and
exhausted. He wanted inside that house. Now.
The safety chain kept the door from opening more than a few
inches. In the soft porch light, Rich made out the concerned face of a man he
had never seen before. Pakistani, perhaps? Indian?
In his clipped British accent the man asked, “Is it possible
you have arrived at the incorrect street address?”
For a moment, Rich thought he might be at the wrong place.
But, no. This was his house. He had planted that boxwood under the front
window. He had painted the shutters and trim white.
With a voice of authority, he fired questions. “Who are you?
What are you doing here?”
“I am Chandra Pulashty. This is my home. Is it possible you
are searching for the previous owner, Mrs. Martino?”
Previous owner? “I’m Mrs. Martino’s husband.”
“Quite so?” the man said gently, almost sadly. “My family
bought this house last month. It is possible you will be able to locate Mrs.
Martino elsewhere, but I do not know where.”
With that, he slowly closed the door. Rich heard the
deadbolt click. If he were twenty years younger, Rich would’ve kicked down the
door. The wisdom that came from making too many mistakes of that kind reminded
him breaking and entering would not solve his problem.
He was stunned. The scene was surreal. Rich collected
himself for a few minutes, then pulled his suitcase to the next block and sat
on a bus stop bench. He needed some time to clear his head.
Things had been great between him and Rita when she was
married to Jack. When the couple split over Rich and Rita’s affair, Dad warned
him, “Son, if she ran around on her last husband, she’s going to run around on
the next one.”
He didn’t listen. Rita was gorgeous and Rich lonely. He
tried to ignore the way other men looked at her when they went to a bar for a
few drinks. Although he often resented the way she looked back at them, he tried
not to think about that too much. He suspected she was glad when he got his
orders for the Philippines , but didn’t want to
believe their marriage was falling apart.
Somehow, he convinced himself Rita would be waiting when he arrived
home, ready to welcome him with open arms. Well, maybe she was waiting, somewhere. Maybe things were not what they seemed.
Rich would sort that out as soon as he could. The immediate problem was finding
a place to spend the night.
Rich considered his options. He could wake up a neighbor and
ask to use the phone to call his dad. But he didn’t know for sure who lived in
any of these places now. If he could talk his way into someone’s house, there
was a good chance his father would still be out of town.
He could find an unpopulated area and sleep under the stars.
He’d done that more nights than he cared to remember in the last twenty years.
But that had been in the real jungle, not the urban one. How many houses had
been built, and where, since he left town? Sleeping in some guy’s yard could
get a man picked up by the local cops and slapped with a record for misdemeanor
vagrancy.
So far, retirement had nothing to recommend it.
Rich opted for his long-time refuge, the U.S. Air Force. He
had driven from this neighborhood to Randolph Air Force Base and back five days
a week when he was assigned there. So he knew the distance—four-point-three miles,
one way. On a good day, jogging the round trip wouldn’t work up a good sweat.
Dog tired, hungry, hefting a carry-on, walking and dragging a suitcase?
Probably an hour and a half. That would put him at the main gate about three a.m.
With a little luck, he could secure a place to spend the night at Randolph , maybe even catch a ride from the main gate to
his room.
Rich opened his carry-on bag and removed the duty-free
champagne he had planned to share with Rita. It was good liquor, but he didn’t
feel like carrying it four miles tonight. He grinned, thinking about some
surprised schnook finding the intact bottle at the bus stop the next morning.
One would think any fool who would carry a magnum of
champagne eight thousand miles would at least have a drink. The prospect was
tempting, but his survival instincts told him to stay completely alert until
the situation was under control. He fished around in his luggage for some fresh
socks and athletic shoes. Thus prepared, Rich slung his small bag over his
shoulder, grabbed the handle of his suitcase and started hiking.
“Welcome home, Colonel Martino,” he muttered. “A grateful
nation thanks you for your many years of faithful service.” What else could go
wrong today?
The first raindrops began to fall.
Enjoyable read, July 19, 2012
By
Billie Houston (San Antonio, TX USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: A Hero's Homecoming (Kindle Edition)
When atheist Rich Martino meets devout Christian Charlotte Phillips, sparks fly. He suspects she's out to gain control of his father's money. She thinks he's crude and uncouth. Along the way, he learns to trust both Charlotte and God, and in so doing, finds once more, everything he thought he had lost. Charlotte comes to knowA Hero's Homecoming that first impressions can be deceiving and is able to unload much of the baggage she's been carrying around for years. The book is well-written, the plot is easily followed, and the characters are flawed and loveable. all in all, this is a most enjoyable read.| Print List Price: | $8.99 |
| Kindle Price: | $2.99 |
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