Laura Resnick - Fever Dream.pdf

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Copyright ©1997 by Laura Resnick
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CHAPTER ONE
The heat in Montedora City was sticky and oppressive, even after sundown. The dimly lighted bar wasn't
air-conditioned, and the ancient electric fans overhead, which groaned with each sluggish rotation, only
managed to push the hot, damp air around the room, as if trying to ensure that everyone enjoyed an equal
level of discomfort. Even the omnipresent flies seemed heat-stunned, for they had taken to buzzing in a
strange calypso rhythm, flying straight into the walls, and then falling to the floor, apparently unconscious.
Madeleine Barrington sipped glumly on her tepid rum and coke; the Andrews Sisters would never have
sung so cheerily about the drink if they could have tasted this one. Madeleine wished desperately for a
glass of mineral water with a slice of lemon, a cool, fragrant bath, and the comfort of a firm mattress and
clean sheets. But all of that, she acknowledged resignedly, was several thousand miles away in her
Manhattan apartment. And she was stuck in Montedora for another night.
A poor South American country, Montedora boasted only one real city, Montedora City, its chaotic
capital. Not exactly a tourist mecca, the entire city had only two or three big hotels. The Hotel Tigre,
which hadn't been decorated in nearly twenty years, was the best and safest of them; and it really wasn't
all that bad if you didn't mind threadbare towels, sagging beds, peeling paint, squeaking ceiling fans, bad
food, and sullen service.
Madeleine minded.
She took another sip of her drink and closed her eyes, sternly fighting the wave of depression which
threatened to engulf her. What a rotten day it had been. After spending twelve hours in miserable
discomfort at the airport, she had been informed that her flight, scheduled to take off this morning, had
finally been cancelled. The news had been disappointing enough, after a whole day of unexplained delays,
but then something worse happened. When she tried to reclaim her luggage, she was informed that it had
been mistakenly loaded onto another flight, and now no one knew where it was.
So here she was, stuck for another night in Montedora City, and she couldn't even change into a fresh set
of clothes. She couldn't even buy some, since—due to the curfew—all the shops had already closed by
the time she caught a taxi back into the city. Well, she supposed she could wash out her things in the
bathroom sink in her room.
She sighed and decided that she had better finish her drink in the Bar Tigre and go across the courtyard
to the reception desk, where she could get a room for the night. Perhaps the taxi-sized cockroach which
had shared her room last night would still be there. It could keep her company. She grimaced and
finished her drink. Then, although she was usually abstemious, she ordered another. She'd need a little
fortification if she was going to face one of those sullen desk clerks again. Not to mention the slightly
brown water in the bathroom.
“Make it a double, please,” she said to the bartender.
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“Ah, you like?” The chubby man smiled.
“Actually, I'm trying to get the mosquitoes drunk,” she explained seriously.
He didn't get it.
It had not been a good week, and Madeleine regretted that another trip to Montedora would probably
be necessary before her goal was accomplished. Her grandfather had bought a huge plantation in this
country over fifty years ago and named it El Rancho Barrington. It hadn't been a bad investment at the
time; the year-round growing climate and rich soil produced tomatoes, sugarcane and other crops for
Barrington Food Products.
However, social, economic, and political conditions had changed considerably over the years.
Montedora had become unstable, for one thing; President Juan de la Veracruz was the country's third
military dictator in seven years. Moreover, the farm was only producing half of what it used to, due to
bad local management. Madeleine had been urging her father, Thackery Makepeace Barrington, to sell
the plantation for several years. Not only did she worry about losing the property to nationalization, but
she also firmly believed that Barrington Enterprises should support the U.S. agricultural economy rather
than operating a feudal estate in a foreign country.
Her father had finally listened to her. Having gotten him to agree, she had come here to Montedora to
review the property and the local management before putting El Rancho Barrington on the international
market.
It had been a grueling, lonesome, and depressing week, and she wished desperately that her flight home
hadn't been cancelled. She also wished she could feel more optimistic about her chances of getting out of
here tomorrow. The airport seemed more like a county fair on its last legs than an international flight
center.
“Another, senorita?” the bartender asked, noticing she had finished her second drink.
She probably shouldn't. She never had three drinks in an evening. But what else was she going to do? Go
check into a shabby room and stare at its four walls? Re-read the two books she had brought from home
and already finished? Review the paperwork which made her despair of ever being able to sell El Rancho
Barrington?
“Yes, I'll have another,” she said.
She felt her elegant dress of thin silk clinging to her back, and her brow was damp with moisture. She
pulled out a monogrammed handkerchief and pressed it delicately to her overheated face. She was
sweating. Amazing. She never sweated. It was one of the many things her sisters disliked about her.
Oh, she knew they loved her, but there were a lot of things about her they didn't like. In fact, she
supposed the same thing could be said about almost everyone who knew her. The uneasy, slightly snide
jokes about her magna cum laude degree from Princeton, her mastery of every area of the enormous
family business, her fastidious personal appearance, and her general competence were legion. The more
she proved herself, the less affection she seemed to inspire.
Sitting here alone in a strange, seedy bar at the ends of the earth, she had to admit that, despite a large
family, a prominent social position, and a vast personal acquaintance, there was no one she could call
long-distance right now to simply say she was feeling lonely and demoralized. She wasn't that close to
anyone.
 
She was thirty years old, healthy, wealthy, and socially and professionally successful. And, as she
downed another swallow of flat coke and cheap rum, she felt ... empty.
What had gotten into her? It must be the heat. She should stop being so appallingly maudlin. Thank
goodness there was no one around to see her in this condition—sweaty, cranky, and wallowing in
self-pity. She never permitted people to see her this way. She never permitted herself to feel this way.
Fortunately, the bartender didn't seem to care, and the three other patrons of Bar Tigre were all involved
in a poker game in the corner.
Still, she was a disciplined woman who never gave in to despondency. There was a dirty, cracked mirror
lining the wall behind the bar. She looked up at it, staring forcefully into her own eyes, and ordered
herself to feel capable and confident, as usual.
That was when she saw him staring at her.
* * * *
Feeling uncharacteristically moody after his final day at the Presidential Palace, Ransom walked through
the dark, muggy, filthy streets of Montedora City. He had dismissed his chauffeur-driven car twenty
minutes ago, wanting to clear his head with an evening stroll. Besides, despite the danger which lurked in
the city's streets after dark, Ransom figured Miguel's driving was more likely to kill him than any mugger.
What a hell of a job this had been. Ransom liked working for Marino Security International, and he had
willingly accepted this assignment to recommend and implement new security measures for President
Juan de la Veracruz. He'd done his duty here, but he wouldn't be sorry to say goodbye to this miserable,
oppressed country and its squabbling, egocentric rulers.
The assignment was finally over. Today he had finished reviewing the new security measures, and his
written report would be done by the end of the month. Veracruz had invited him to spend the night at the
Palace, but he had declined, preferring the quiet privacy of his shabby hotel room to the ostentatious
glitter of the Palace, where everyone seemed to scheme and plot even in their sleep.
Ah, well. It was over. Tomorrow morning, the President's private car would pick Ransom up and take
him to a military airfield, where the President's private plane would fly him back to the States.
He could hardly wait. He wanted some time off. He wanted some decent company, after putting up with
Veracruz and his cronies. He wanted to get a little pleasure out of life after being stuck in Montedora for
over a month. He wanted to undress and relax, after wearing a tie at yet another formal dinner tonight;
ever since leaving the Secret Service, he seldom wore a tie for anything but weddings and funerals. He
wanted someone to soothe his guilty conscience about having worked so hard to help preserve the
power, position, and lifestyle of a greedy dictator. Despite the moral ambivalence he felt about it,
Ransom had done a damn good job here; and because of that, he wanted a reward.
He pushed open the door of the Bar Tigre and saw the answer to all of his wants and needs sitting right
there at the bar.
She was very beautiful, almost intimidatingly so. But he'd never been easily intimidated, so he stalked
forward, eyes fixed on her.
Her flaxen blond hair was starting to wilt in the heat, its fine tendrils clinging to her neck and shoulders as
she pressed a lace-edged handkerchief to her cheeks and forehead. Her wide eyes were a rich, deep,
royal blue, fringed by long, curling lashes. Her skin was as fair as a pearl, as smooth and perfect as
alabaster, as firm and enticing as ripe, young fruit. She wore an expensive-looking dress of thin, dark
purple silk with a high neck and a belted waist. It left her shoulders bare, and the hem stopped just above
 
her knees, revealing long, shapely legs. Her simple bracelet and matching earrings were gold, and her
shoes had probably cost two hundred dollars.
He wondered what a woman like her was doing in a place like this. Her fine, aristocratic bone structure
and perfect posture confirmed his impression that she was a class act. What was she doing sitting alone in
Bar Tigre? She obviously wasn't a prostitute. No woman from the embassy staff would venture out alone
after curfew, Peace Corps workers didn't dress like that, and, as far as he knew, hardly any foreigners
did business in Montedora City anymore. They'd all pulled out after the last coup.
If she was a traveller, she sure didn't seem to be enjoying herself. He had seldom seen such a bleak
expression. What was she thinking about?
Whatever it was, it made her look into the mirror with a flash of cold fire. God, she was gorgeous!
Whoever she was, whatever she was doing here, he was half-willing to believe she had been sent by the
angels, expressly for him, to be his comfort and his reward. Except, of course, that Ransom's just
desserts were more likely to come from some place other than heaven.
Their eyes met in the mirror. He smiled slowly. No, this woman hadn't been sent by angels. There was
too much challenge in her gaze. She had been sent by someone who understood Ransom very well,
indeed. He never liked anything to be too easy.
Hot as hell, he loosened his tie, undid a couple of his buttons, and joined her at the bar.
* * * *
Madeleine glanced askance at the man who had looked her up and down so boldly, then sat beside her
at the bar without even asking.
“Hi, there,” he said easily.
“Good evening.” She held his gaze for a moment, letting him know that she wasn't shy or flustered, but
that she definitely wasn't interested in talking to him. Then she accepted another rum and coke from the
bartender.
“It's on me,” the man said when the bartender asked her for payment.
She said, “No, thank you. I—”
“Then do you want to buy me one?” he asked.
She frowned. “But—”
“Thanks! Senor, the lady's buying my drink. Make it a beer.”
She looked at the stranger with rising irritation. “Excuse me, but I'm—”
“You're American, aren't you?”
“Yes. But—”
“So am I.”
“Yes, I can tell. However—”
“You staying at the Hotel Tigre?”
 
She glared at him. “Your technique is very clumsy,” she said rudely.
“I know. I usually have to rely on charm and sex appeal.”
To her surprise, she laughed. It must be the rum.
He grinned. An undeniably sexy grin. “That's better.”
“Better than what?” Why was she talking to this man?
“Better than the expression you had on your face when I walked through that door. You looked like you
were thinking of jumping off a bridge.”
“No, I wasn't.”
“You looked like you were moping about being all alone in this rotten city on such a miserable night.”
“Well...” She paid for his beer, suddenly glad for the company. Talking to anyone, even this impertinent
stranger, seemed better than being alone with her thoughts.
He raised his glass. “Here's to golden days and purple nights, both of which have been in short supply
lately.”
“As you say.” She clinked her glass against his, wondering what his version of a purple night would be.
Probably a waterbed motel, a few “adult” videos, and the sort of woman whom Mother would describe
as “obvious.”
“Had any purple nights, lately?” he asked, his amazingly green eyes sparkling at her.
“I don't believe so.”
“Nice accent. You sound like a debutante.”
“Please, don't say that.” Visions filled her head of the silly, overdressed girls she had never been able to
understand or emulate.
“Ah, a working woman, huh?”
“Yes.”
“What do you do?”
“I don't want to talk about it.”
He shrugged easily. “Okay. No shop talk. It's been that kind of a day for me, too.”
“No shop talk,” she agreed, surprised at herself. She was never this blunt. Perhaps it was the heat. Or
perhaps it was the man himself. It was funny how easily she had accepted his presence at her side,
strange how comfortable she felt with him. She'd heard about such things, about people who told their
most intimate secrets to a stranger, comforted by the anonymity, freed by the lack of a shared past and
all the baggage it carried. That probably explained it.
God, it was hot! She had never known such debilitating heat. It played tricks on her mind and heightened
her senses. She was very aware of the stranger's body heat, his musky scent, the subtle sound of his
breathing.
 
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