Author's Note - Although this was originally a oneshot based on a prompt, I've come up with a couple more chapters.
As her spirit looked down upon the earth with dampened eyes, Jamey smiled as she noticed her son. Praying for him, hoping that he would be safe and enjoy a long and healthy life, she wept openly. Her motive had been selfless, but she couldn't help but feel as if she was being selfish by not being there for her son. Glad that her mother could provide him with love and shelter, she allowed herself to rest in peace.
Kyle's small and insecure hands clutched a bunch of white flowers as he stood at his mother's grave. His grandmother muttered quietly to herself in Spanish as she gazed at the polished black gravestone, with it's golden message engraved neatly onto the marble. Erica promised herself that her grandson, her rayo de sol, would never have to discover the morbid details of his mother's final moments. Recalling that tragic day, she shuddered with horror as she remembered that woman, Nina, who had seemed so kind and sympathetic, yet had to turned out to be her daughter's murderer. Having heard that Jamey was not the only victim of Nina Myers at CTU, she tried but failed to understand why Nina had taken lives so callously, with no hesitation or remorse.
It was a few weeks after Jamey's funeral, and Erica Vasquez was attending the hearing which would see Nina Myers sentenced for her crimes. Glancing around the room nervously, she noticed some of the CTU people who were in attendance, such as Tony Almeida, who she was quite fond of, and Jack Bauer. She felt a deep connection to Jack, and they had helped each other come to terms with their losses. The room fell deathly silent as Nina Myers was escorted into the room, shackled and guarded by three security guards. She had a defiant look on her face, and her eyes betrayed no sign of remorse as she stared straight ahead.
Life with no possibility of parole was the verdict, and the people present at the hearing had made their approval of the sentence known to Nina, who did not react to the sentence at all. As she was led out of the room, she couldn't resist smirking at Jack as she passed by. She knew that incarceration was simply a temporary problem, that it would not be long before a chance at freedom would present itself.
