It Had to Be You (Chicago Stars #1)(121)



And then an ugly thought struck him. What if the police didn’t believe that she had been kidnapped? If Hardesty got away, there wouldn’t be any tangible proof other than her own testimony. Dan was the only one who could back up her story, and his personal involvement with her would make his word suspect. She could very well be accused of fabricating the kidnapping simply because the Stars had lost and she wanted another shot at retaining ownership. There was no way the NFL would let this game be replayed.

He forced himself to face the painful fact that his failure to notify the police was going to cost Phoebe the Stars. Still, he couldn’t do anything else. He wouldn’t take a chance with her life, not for the world.

Gary Hewitt’s voice crackled through his headset. “Dan, what the hell’s going on? Why did you tell Jim to keep it on the ground? That’s not our plan. He’s never passed better.”

“I’m making some changes,” Dan snapped. “We’ve got the lead, so we’re going to play smart.”

“It’s only the third quarter! It’s too early to get conservative.”

Dan couldn’t have agreed more, so he simply removed his headset and glued his eyes to the field. No matter what he had to do, he was going to keep Phoebe safe.

By the middle of the quarter the Sabers had scored their first touchdown while the Stars’ ground game had failed to move the ball, reducing their lead to seven points. The fans’ booing had grown so loud that the offense was having a hard time hearing Biederot’s signals. Dan’s assistants were furious, the players livid, and, two minutes into the fourth quarter, when the Sabers evened the score at seventeen, the network’s color man ran out of patience.

“Can you believe what you’re seeing?” He was practically shouting into the cameras. “All season, Dan Calebow has been one of the most aggressive coaches in the NFL, and it’s terrible to see him fold like this. This isn’t the kind of football the fans came to watch!”

Phoebe tried to shut out the commentator’s understandably harsh assessment of Dan’s coaching, just as she’d been trying to ignore the sound of the crowd’s jeers. She didn’t want to think about what this public humiliation was doing to his pride, and she knew she had never loved him more.

Her wrists, chafed raw by her struggles to get free of the ropes, were bleeding. Ignore the pain, she told herself. Play through it. Everything she had heard the players say, she repeated to herself, but she was beginning to think the knots would never loosen.

Hardesty had tied her wrists in a figure eight of rope, then secured the free ends to the vertical post that supported the back of the chair. Although her fingers had become sticky with blood as she worked at that tight double knot that held her in the chair, it wouldn’t give. Play through the pain. Shake it off.

Hardesty stared at the screen, took a drag on his cigarette, and coughed. The air was so thick with smoke that she could barely breathe. Sometimes she thought he had forgotten her, but then he would look at her with eyes so empty of any remorse that she didn’t doubt he would kill her.

Five minutes into the fourth quarter, the Sabers pulled ahead. On the sideline the emotions of the players and assistants reflected everything from fury to despondency, while the crowd had begun to throw debris on Dan. He stood alone, isolated by the players and the coaches. Only his iron discipline was keeping a full revolt from breaking out on the bench.

Sabers 24, Stars 17.

As the Sabers kicked the extra point, Biederot slammed his helmet against the bench, hitting it with such force that the face mask cracked. Dan knew it was only a matter of time before Jim ignored the threat to bench him and began calling his own plays. With less than ten minutes left on the clock and the temper of the crowd growing uglier by the minute, he could no longer keep the game on the ground.

All his life Dan had been a team player and going it alone had become too risky. Praying that he wasn’t making a fatal mistake, he called Jim and Bobby Tom over just before the offense took the field again.

Jim’s face was ruddy with fury, Bobby Tom’s rigid. Both of them started spewing obscenities.

“Bench me, you cocksucker! I don’t give a skit because I don’t want to be part of this.”

“We didn’t work this f*cking hard to have you f*ck us like this!”

A minicam zoomed in on them. Dan grabbed their arms and ducked his head. His voice was low and fierce. “Shut up and listen! Phoebe’s been kidnapped. The man who has her is crazy. He says he’s going to kill her if we win this game.” He felt the muscles in their arms grow rigid, but he didn’t glance up because he was certain the cameras were on him. “He’s watching on television. I can’t let the team score even a field goal because he’s threatened to hurt her if we put any numbers on the board.” He sucked in his breath and lifted his head. “I believe he’ll do it.”

Biederot swore softly, while Bobby Tom looked murderous.

Dan let every one of his emotions show in his eyes as he called the next series of plays. “Make it look good. Please. Phoebe’s life depends on it.”

He could see they had a dozen questions, but there was no time to ask them, and to their credit, neither man offered any argument.

In the subbasement below the dome, Phoebe heard the crowd cheer. Her bloody fingers grew still on the knot, and her eyes snapped to the television. She stopped breathing as Jim threw a long pass over the middle to Bobby Tom. Bobby Tom extended his body in the lean, graceful line that had been photographed so often, with his weight balanced only on the tips of his toes. How many times this season had she seen him snatch the ball out of the air from exactly that position, defying gravity as effortlessly as a ballet dancer?

Susan Elizabeth Phil's Books