Girl Missing

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Girl Missing Page 21

by Tess Gerritsen


  She tumbled, gasping, onto the deck. No time, no time! She struggled to her feet and dashed to the starboard side, ready to leap off onto the pier.

  Too late. Ratchet was already running along the shore. He’d reach the head of the pier before she could. Her escape route was cut off.

  She scrambled to the ship’s pilothouse, yanked at the door. It was locked. What now? Back in the water?

  She ran back to the stern and gazed down at the roiling waves, preparing herself for another dive. But she knew she didn’t have the strength to swim any longer. Her whole body was shaking from the cold. Another ten minutes in the sea would finish her.

  She looked toward shore: Ratchet was on the pier now, and coming her way.

  Her gaze shifted back to the stern, and two words stenciled in red on a deck locker caught her eye: EMERGENCY SUPPLIES.

  She threw open the lid. Inside were life jackets, blankets, tools.

  And a flare gun.

  She reached for it. With trembling hands, she slipped a flare in the barrel, cocked the gun. One shot—that was the only chance she’d have.

  Ratchet’s footsteps thudded closer across the pier.

  Kat swiveled, ducked around to the port side of the pilothouse. There she crouched, waiting, listening. She heard his footsteps come to a stop on the pier somewhere along the starboard side. Then she heard the soft metallic thump as he stepped aboard.

  Which way was he coming? Fore or aft?

  She took a gamble—maybe the last she’d ever take—and moved toward the bow, crouching at the edge of the pilothouse. Not a sound reached her. Not a footstep, nothing. There was only the roar of her own blood through her ears.

  Then, suddenly, there he was. He stepped around the corner of the pilothouse, right in front of her. There was no pity in his gaze, no expression at all. He raised the pistol.

  She brought the flare gun up and fired.

  His shriek was like a wild animal’s, cutting through the roar of the wind. He staggered backward, his chest hissing with phosphorescent sparks. His gun clattered to the deck. Kat scrambled forward and grabbed it. Ratchet fell on his back and lay jerking in agony, screaming, tearing at his clothes. Kat clutched the pistol and stood over him, the barrel pointed at his head. I could pull this trigger, she thought. I could blow you away. I want to blow you away.

  But she only stood there, watching him twitch. The terror, the exhaustion, had drained her of the ability to move. She was afraid to turn her back on him, even for an instant, afraid he’d suddenly rise up like a monster from the grave. So she kept the gun pointed at him, even as the sound of sirens wailed closer, even as the wind shrieked in her ears. She heard car doors slam, heard footsteps pounding up the pier. Only when they’d twice yelled the command: “Drop it!” did she finally look up.

  Two cops stood on the pier, their guns pointed at her.

  “Drop it or we shoot!” one of them shouted.

  She dropped the gun and kicked it away, where Ratchet wouldn’t reach it, even if he could. Then, slowly, she turned to the cops and staggered toward them.

  “Help me,” she said. She stretched her hands to them, and her voice dissolved into a moan of grief. “Help me …”

  He still had a pulse. Crouching beside him in the darkness of the warehouse, Kat felt the faint throb of Adam’s carotid artery. “He’s alive!” she cried.

  The cop shone his flashlight, and the beam came down on Adam’s blood-soaked shirt. “Jesus,” he muttered, and turned to yell at his partner. “Get the ambulance crew in here first!”

  “Adam,” whispered Kat. She brushed back his hair, cradled his face in her lap. “Adam, you have to live. Do you hear me? Damn you, you have to live!”

  He didn’t answer. All she heard was the sound of his breathing. It came in short, unsteady gasps, but at least his lungs were working.

  She was still holding him in her arms when the EMTs arrived. They swept in with their stretcher, their IV bottles, their bag of tricks. As she stood by uselessly, they bundled him up and away, into the ambulance. She was left standing in the buffeting wind as the wail of sirens faded into the distance.

  “You have to live,” she whispered. “Because I love you.”

  Footsteps creaked across the pier. Dazed, she turned to see Lou Sykes, holding out a blanket. “Blue lips aren’t very becoming,” he said, and slipped the blanket over her shoulders. “You okay, Novak?”

  “Just … cold.” She shuddered, and the tears suddenly flooded her eyes. “He saved my life.”

  “I know.”

  “And I didn’t believe in him. I was afraid to believe in him …”

  “Maybe it’s time you did.”

  She looked up at Sykes’s gleaming face. Leave it to a homicide cop, she thought. An old hand at death dishing out advice to the living.

  She turned to his car. “Take me to the hospital.”

  “Right now?”

  “Right now,” she said, and climbed into the car. “When he wakes up, I want to be there.”

  She was there when he came out of surgery. She stayed at his bedside as he slept all night. Other visitors came and went, but she remained. He slept most of the next morning as well, kept under by narcotics. The bullet had passed through his left lung, nicked his pericardium, and missed his ventricle by a fraction of an inch. He’d lost huge amounts of blood, his lung was collapsed, and he had plastic tubes gurgling out of his chest, but he was a lucky man.

  At ten A.M. Sykes appeared to fill her in on the latest. Ratchet had massive phosphorus burns on his chest, but he would be okay—certainly well enough to stand trial for murder times three. Ed Novak was telling the press he’d long had suspicions about Ben Fuller’s death, and only his tireless efforts had broken the case. He was going to come out smelling like a rose, but Kat didn’t care. She figured that if the voters of Albion chose to elect Ed Novak and Mayor Sampson, then mediocrity was exactly what they deserved.

  At noon, another visitor showed up. There was a knock, and then Maeve appeared. She didn’t come in at first; she just stood in the doorway, staring across the room at her sleeping father. She was stuffed tight as a sausage into a black leather dress, but her rainbow-tinted hair had been gathered almost demurely into a ponytail, and her face was white with fear.

  “Is he gonna be all right?” she said.

  “I think so,” said Kat. “Why don’t you come in?”

  Maeve crept almost timidly to the bedside. She said, “Dad?” Adam didn’t stir.

  “Sleeping meds,” said Kat. “He’s out cold.”

  Maeve touched her father’s face, then pulled away, as though embarrassed.

  “He almost died,” said Kat.

  For a moment Maeve didn’t respond; she just stared at Adam. Softly she said, “He drove me crazy, y’know? Telling me what to do, what not to do. But he was always there. I have to say that for the old man. He was always there …” She wiped her hand over her eyes. Then, abruptly, she turned and walked toward the door.

  “Maeve?”

  Maeve stopped, looked back. “Yeah?”

  “Come back. When he’s awake.”

  Maeve shrugged. “Maybe,” she said, and left the room.

  You’ll be back, Kat thought with a smile.

  It was late afternoon when Adam finally stirred and opened his eyes. The first face he saw was Kat’s, gazing down at him.

  “Hello, hero,” she said.

  He groaned. “Who are you talking to?”

  “To you.” She leaned forward and kissed him. As she pulled back, his face blurred away through her tears. She shook her head and laughed. “You are one crazy man. Do you know what you did?”

  “What?”

  “You saved my life.”

  “If that’s what it takes,” he whispered. “To keep you around.”

  She smiled. He smiled.

  And they both knew that, this time, she would be staying.

  BY TESS GERRITSEN

  Harvest

  Life Supp
ort

  Bloodstream

  Gravity

  The Surgeon

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  The Sinner

  Body Double

  Vanish

  The Mephisto Club

  The Bone Garden

  The Keepsake

  The Silent Girl

  Rizzoli & Isles: Last to Die

  Girl Missing

  RIZZOLI & ISLES

  TNT’S HIT CRIME DRAMA

  IS BASED ON

  THE BESTSELLING NOVELS OF

  TESS GERRITSEN

  Don’t miss the entire RIZZOLI & ISLES case file.

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