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The church members rustled paper programs nervously as he made his way to the microphone. Men adjusted their legs. Women dug into their purses. But once Jack took his position, the church settled in a still hush.

Jack looked out over the congregation and gripped the podium with both hands. He turned to look at the coffin positioned in the center of the altar. Bouquets of blood-red roses covered the lid and spilled out in every direction.

He cleared his throat. Just as he feared, being here made everything rush back to him. Bits of memory flashed in his mind. The accident with Huckley. The visitation at his house. His first time in the cave. The creature locked in the stone structure, now buried forever. Seeing his little girl shot. Holding her bleeding body in his arms.

Nervous coughs from the church brought him back. He looked down to Lauren who sat holding Becky’s hand. She smiled bravely and nodded for him to go on. Lauren the brave. Lauren the strong. She was still there for him.

And beside her, still to Jack’s disbelief and wonder, sat his little Sarah, smiling so sweetly that tears jumped to his eyes. Nothing had prepared them for her miraculous recovery from the gunshot wound. Lauren still found herself trying to explain the rapid healing to colleagues, but Jack found himself wrestling with another questions.

If Sarah’s interaction with the Source had given her the ability to self-heal, how else had the experience changed her? How would those changes manifest?

But these were questions for another time. He turned his attention to the full church waiting for him to speak.

“Thank you for coming today.” He paused and looked at the woman next to his wife. Kristi Dahl sat with her youngest daughter on her lap and her oldest hanging on her arm. Jack nodded toward them. “Thank you Kristi for asking me to say something about Max. He was a good friend. A loving husband and a father who would give anything for his two little girls.” Jack fought back the emotion in his voice and eulogized his friend.

Afterward, sitting in the pew for the rest of the service, he realized that he alone fully knew what Max had been and what he had given out of love for his children. He wondered if Max’s last selfless act somehow made up for so many sins he committed in that dark cave. Jack looked up at the cross hanging in front of the church and believed for the first time in his life that someone else would be judging Max. Maybe there was someone like Melissa Gonzales who would be there ready to help him. Max didn’t deserve it, Jack knew that. But then again, neither had he.

Jack closed his eyes and prayed that Melissa Gonzales had finished her journey and was at peace. He said the same for his friend Max Dahl.

NINETY

The sun settled behind the far hills and turned the cemetery into rows of long shadows. Jack, Lauren and Becky stood together as the pallbearers lowered the coffin into the ground. During the short ceremony, Jack caught sight of Joseph Lonetree watching the proceedings from a distance. Once people headed back to their cars, he whispered to Lauren that he would catch up. Lonetree waited as Jack made his way up the small hill toward him.

“Thought you weren’t coming,” Jack said.

“Came to say goodbye. Knew you’d be here,” Lonetree said.

Jack studied the big man’s face. Unreadable as always. “So where are you going?”

“Not sure. Maybe take up my father’s work,” Lonetree said.

Jack smiled “Dig around in caves looking for bogeymen?”

“Pretty much. Why? Want to come along?”

Jack held up his hands in protest, “I’ll leave that to you and your buddy Sorenson.” They shared an easy laugh together.

Lonetree nodded toward the cars. “How’s your wife handling it?”

“It’s been hard on her. She’s a scientist and what we went through doesn’t fit into any of her medical categories. She’s already created a hundred different explanations for things.”

Lonetree shrugged. “If it helps her.”

“We’ll work it out,” he said, realizing that he truly believed they would.

Lonetree nodded toward where Sarah and Max’s daughter Jesse ran around on the grass lawn.

“And how about Sarah?” Lonetree asked.

Jack smiled. “She’s doing great. Almost like nothing happened.” He looked down at the ground. “You think she’s going to be all right?”

“Huckley and that creature knew there was something special about her. I’m guessing you’re in for an interesting time. Same with Max’s daughter with the heart problem. He said he transferred the energy to her. Who knows what that will do.”

They stood quietly and watched the little girls running down to the cars. Night was coming on and the cold breeze rattled the few dry leaves still on the trees. Jack broke the silence. “Listen, we’re going to go get something to eat. Why don’t you come along?”

“Are you trying to bond with me, Jack?”

Jack laughed. “No, it’s just that I feel safer if I know where you are. Don’t like you slinking around in the shadows.”

Lonetree pursed his lips and looked down. “I don’t know.”

“Come on. You saved her life, for Gods sake. You might as well get a hug.”

Lonetree finally nodded. Jack smiled and jabbed him in the stomach. Lonetree doubled over. “Hey, watch the stitches bruiser.”

“Gee, and I thought SEALs were tough,” Jack said.

They walked down the hill together, slowed by their injuries and bruises, but sped along by the chance to put the past behind them.

At the car, Lauren opened the door for Lonetree and gave him a smile as he climbed into the back seat with the kids. She closed the door behind him as Jack walked by. She reached out, stopped him and pulled him into a hug. Jack held her tight.

“Let’s get started,” she said.

“You bet.”

He leaned in and kissed her on the lips.

Suddenly there was a loud knocking on the car window beside. They looked over and saw Becky and Sarah making funny faces at them.

Jack and Lauren both laughed.

Lauren climbed into the car as Jack walked around to the driver’s side. As he did, he couldn’t help but take one more look at Max’s newly dug grave and the mix of emotions swelled up in him once again. Max was a monster who killed others so he might live, but, in the end, this consuming selfishness proved no match for a father’s love for his child. Ironically, Jack found that final act of giving had brought Max closer to immortality than anything the Source could have given him.

Max had realized it too late, after nearly destroying that which he loved the most. Jack resolved he would not make the same mistake.

“Rest in peace, Max.”

Jack got into the car, fired up the engine and wound his way through the cemetery.

Inside the car, Lonetree felt Sarah suddenly shudder next to him. He looked over at her and saw a plume of breath come from her as if she were sitting in a freezing room. She looked out sharply over her shoulder at the rear window and Lonetree followed her line of sight.

There, on the hill above the gravesite, was a solitary figure dressed in a black trench coat, watching the car leave.

Lonetree watched the man in black until the car dropped down the hill and the man disappeared from view. He looked over at Sarah who stared up at him. He reached out and took her tiny hand in his.

She smiled and leaned her head against his shoulder.

“How long are you planning on staying in the area, Joe?” Lauren asked from the front seat.

Lonetree looked down at Sarah leaning against him.

“I think I’ll stay around for a while. See if I still have any friends living in the area.”