He started to swing his arms against the tide, his right arm nearly worthless in the current. Right. It didn’t work well anymore. Had taken him out of the SEALs. Gave him a new life. This life.
His body slid back in the cresting wave. No. No. He had to forget about the pain. The weakness. She needed him. A woman needed him. He wouldn’t fail her.
He gulped in air and put his face in the shadowy water. When he reached the spot where she’d gone down, he dove in. Deep. To the bottom. Felt through the murkiness. Touched fabric. Grabbed it and jerked her up, then swam to the surface.
The petite woman broke the water. She coughed and gagged, but didn’t fight him. From behind, he got his good arm around her chest to ensure he didn’t lose her in the pummeling waves and paddled with his gimpy arm. Something wet and sticky found his face. Not water, but blood. He knew the feel. The smell from his military days. She’d likely hit her head on a boulder or the boat. Not only was she at risk for hypothermia if he didn’t get her out of the water soon, but the head injury put her in even more danger.
He tried to pick up his pace, but his arm slowed them down.
“David?” He heard her ask, and he assumed she meant the boy.
“On shore…he’s fine,” Gage replied, though he had no idea if the child really was okay.
He wanted to reassure the woman she would be fine, but he had no breath left to talk. He’d once been so able-bodied and could have brought this woman in easily. But since the accident, he’d had to work twice as hard with his arm to accomplish half as much.
“Mommy,” the boy’s shriek broke through the roar of the storm. “I called 911. They’re coming!”
The woman sagged against Gage, the little fight she’d had evaporating—the protector was gone, now that her son was safe. Gage couldn’t relax. Not yet. He estimated she’d been in the water for less than fifteen minutes, but still cold shock had likely caused a loss of breathing control, and she would become progressively weaker. Still, it took at least thirty minutes for hypothermia to set in for average adults, even in freezing water. Thankfully, it hadn’t been that long yet and the water wasn’t freezing.
He paddled the last few yards, then found his footing in the chest-deep water. After using the last of his strength to push through the current, he clambered to safety and collapsed on the sand, still holding her. He maneuvered her limp body carefully, pulled soggy red hair aside, and caught his first look at her face in the moonlight.
Shock traveled through his system, and he blinked hard to look again.
“Hannah?” he asked, but her eyes were closed and she didn’t respond.
Could it really be her, back in his life again after so many years?
Tons of questions followed, but the sight of her wounded temple grabbed his attention. He wished he had a first aid kit. He needed to disinfect the wound and immediately warm her body until the medics arrived. Air temps weren’t much higher than the water, and if he didn’t slow her heat loss, she’d be headed for hypothermia.
David came stumbling toward them, his large blue eyes so much like Hannah’s.
“Hey, buddy, let’s put my jacket around your mother.” Gage wrapped Hannah snugly in his large coat and tucked David under his arm for warmth.
“Mommy. Wake up, Mommy.” David took her limp hand and peered up at Gage, his eyes wide and terrified. “Is she going to be okay?”
“Of course,” Gage said. But—as he’d once experienced with his wife as she lapsed into a coma for months before losing her battle—he had no idea if Hannah would make it. None at all.
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Want to play a game…
When research chemist Kiera Underwood receives a cryptic phone call about her twin brother, she tries to contact him to no avail. Her twin sense tingles, warning her that something is wrong. When he doesn’t return her call and his supervisor at Oceanic Labs claims he didn’t come into work, she heads to Cold Harbor. But when she arrives in town to find the door to her brother’s house ajar, she races to the lab to question his fellow employees.
Solve the puzzle and save your brother…
Kiera’s terrified when an attempt is made on her life. Then Blackwell Tactical operative Cooper Ashcroft delivers her second shock of the day. Someone stole a deadly biotoxin. The main suspect? Her brother—and Blackwell Tactical has been hired to bring him in. If that wasn’t distressing enough, she’s suspected of colluding with him. She had nothing to do with the theft, and despite the evidence staring her in the face, she knows that her brother is innocent of all charges. She sets out to prove it, putting her in the thief’s crosshairs. As Coop tries to protect her as well as solve the crime, he grapples with the possibility she’s telling the truth and someone has likely abducted her brother—perhaps killed him. Now Kiera’s life is in serious danger and Coop must protect her while discovering the cold truth behind the theft.
Chapter One
“Want to play a game?” the scrambled voice rasped through Kiera’s phone.
“Who is this?” she asked, irritated that someone would prank call her and use one of those voice-altering devices to do it.
“Solve the puzzle and save your brother.”
“What? What puzzle?” She was getting angry now. “And my brother is fine.”
“Are you sure?”
“Of course I am. I just talked to him last night. Not that it’s any of your business.” She sighed. “Who is this anyway?”
“I guess if your brother is fine, you don’t need to know.” Silence filled the phone for an uncomfortable moment. “Open your mind to my request, Kiera, or your brother will die.”
The line went dead. She stared at her phone. This had to be some sort of a joke. A stupid joke, but still, a senseless one.
She pressed redial for the caller. No answer. No voicemail message. Just silence. “Sure, run and hide, but when I find out who you are...”
She punched her twin brother Kevin’s icon on her phone. It rang. Once. Twice. Continued ringing. voicemail picked up.
“Kev,” she said after the tone. “Call me the minute you get this message.”
Other people might panic after getting a call like this and their sibling not answering, but Kevin often failed to answer his phone. He got lost in his work. Day or night, it didn’t matter. She understood that to a degree. After all, she was a research chemist, too, but he took his withdrawal from the world to extreme lengths when he was working on something he loved. And right now, he was involved in a big hush-hush project to synthesize a biotoxin carried by seafood, and he hoped to create an antidote. The lab put great pressure on Kevin to succeed, as they could make big bucks on the antidote. Money that would fund all of their other research.
She scrolled down the contact list on her phone and punched the number for Oceanic Labs in Cold Harbor where Kevin was employed. “Kevin Underwood, please.”
“I’m sorry, Kevin isn’t working today,” the polite female voice responded.
Not at work. Really. Now that got Kiera’s attention and a spark of worry ignited in her brain. He never missed work. Never. “Are you sure?”
“Pretty sure.”
“Transfer me to his supervisor, please.”
“She’s not in either.”
“The lab manager then.”
“May I tell him who’s calling?”
“Kiera Underwood. Kevin’s sister.”
“One moment, please.”
Kiera got up and started pacing across her living room. Back and forth she moved over the smooth wood floors gleaming in the sunlight pouring through her window. She glanced at her watch. Ten thirty. She’d had a dentist appointment this morning, or she’d be at work by now. The hygienist had made a mess of her blouse, and Kiera popped home to change. Good thing she’d stopped
by. With a call like this, she wouldn’t be able to concentrate at work, and that could be deadly in her research for a pharmaceutical lab.
“C’mon, pick up the call already,” she muttered under her breath as she stared out the window of her high-rise apartment in downtown Portland.
If the manager didn’t know where Kevin was and why he hadn’t come to work, she needed to come up with a plan of action. She could call his local sheriff’s department, she supposed, but with nothing to tell them other than her brother hadn’t gone to work and wasn’t answering his phone, they’d dismiss her.
So what could she do other than drive to Cold Harbor and check out his house? Nothing. She’d have to make that five-hour drive to the southern Oregon coast.
“Ms. Underwood, this is lab manager, Nigel Moody. How can I help you?” He sounded helpful, but his tone was restrained.
“I’m trying to locate my brother. The receptionist said he didn’t come to work, and he’s not answering his phone.”
“We’d like to know where he is, too.”
“He didn’t call off work?”
“No.”
“Do you know why?”
“I have my suspicions, but I’m not at liberty to share that with you.”
Her spark of worry burst into a full-blown flame, and Kiera resumed pacing. “Do you think something’s wrong with him?”
“Yes. Yes, I do. Something very wrong.”
“What do you mean?” Kiera’s worry reached full blaze.
Nigel sighed. “Like I said, I can’t give you any information, but if you talk to him, be sure he calls me.”
“But you have to help me. You just have to.” She waited for a response to her plea.
Nothing.
“Hello. Are you there?” She held her phone out. The call had ended. He’d ended the call.
What in the world is going on?
She dialed Kevin again, and when he didn’t answer, she ran to her bedroom to pack an overnight bag. She made quick work of it and phoned him again as she started for her front door.
Still no answer.
She exited her apartment and ran for her car in the parking structure. On the way, she called her work to tell them she had a family emergency. She settled her phone in the car’s dashboard holder and wasn’t surprised to see her hands trembling. Not with her twin missing.
It took all of her concentration to get her car safely on the road and pointed toward Cold Harbor, but once she left the city behind, she dialed Kevin again. Recent legislation now made it illegal to use her cell in Oregon while driving, but her brother’s life could be at stake, so she’d risk using it on speaker while it sat in the holder.
The call went to voicemail, and her hope died. “Kev, please. Please call me. I’m worried about you.”
As the miles rolled under her car, she replayed the garbled phone call in her brain. Why did this person—a man by the sound of things—want to play a game? A game involving Kevin. A game of life or death. Could this be some sick joke or was Kevin actually in trouble?
She dialed him again. Got his voicemail. She wouldn’t give up. She punched his icon every fifteen minutes during the long drive to Cold Harbor. Usually she loved pulling into the small ocean side town. Loved hearing the waves crashing against a craggy shoreline. Loved the smell of the salty ocean air. But today she couldn’t get down the beach road fast enough to arrive at his small bungalow.
She raced across the sandy lot and up the stairs. She lifted her hand to pound on the door. Found it open.
No. No. God, no. Don’t let this be real.
She wrapped her hand around the mace she carried in her purse and entered. Her fear of finding her brother lying on the floor from some altercation nearly stole her last breath. She flipped on the overhead light and searched the room. His traditional sofa held no pillows or any other item. The set of three matching tables had no décor save a lone lamp. No dust. Not a speck. The usual immaculate place.
“Kev?” she stepped forward. “Are you here?”
No response.
Her pulse pounded in her ears as she made her way to the small kitchen. Then the bedroom he used for an office. She desperately hoped to find him, face in the computer, working on something, and he’d simply not heard her.
His chair was empty and computer off. His desk clear of all objects.
Her anxiety ratcheted up and her legs felt weak, but she continued down the hall to his bedroom. He’d made his bed—not a crease in it, but no Kevin. “The garage.”
She raced back down the hallway and jerked open the door. His car sat on the far side of the two-stall garage. She hurried to the small Prius hybrid. Empty. She popped the trunk and headed toward it. Held her breath and looked inside. Just his fishing equipment.
“Where are you?” she cried out in panic and shot a look around the garage trying to figure out what to do next.
She dialed his phone. Waited, prayed for an answer. None.
She glanced at the clock. Almost six o’clock. The lab had already closed. She couldn’t call. She’d have to go there and hope he’d shown up.
She pulled the door closed behind her, and locked it with the key he’d given her. She sped across town and pulled up to the lab secured with an impenetrable gate. No. No. She’d forgotten. She couldn’t get into the parking lot. The lab had few visitors, meaning no guest entrance.
Parking on the side street, her mind raced for a way to get through that gate. She spotted a car heading for the exit. She could question the driver. She ran to the driveway and stood in the middle of the road, waving her arms and signaling for the driver to lower the window. The thirty-something blond woman complied, an uneasy look on her face.
“I’m Kevin Underwood’s sister,” Kiera said quickly. “Do you know him?”
The woman’s apprehension faded. “Yeah, sure. He works on the second floor.”
“Did you see him today?”
She cocked her head as if Kiera was asking a difficult question. “No. I heard something’s going on up on his floor and no one is working up there today.”
“You’re sure he didn’t come in? Not at all?”
“I didn’t see him, but then things were kind of chaotic today.”
“Do you know what’s going on?”
“No, but I heard rumors that it involved the police. Can’t imagine what kind of crime could’ve occurred here, but the management is keeping it quiet. But I do have to say the way some of the guys dress up there should be against the law.” She chuckled.
Kiera couldn’t even work up a hint of a smile. Not with Kevin missing and her hope of finding him disappearing with the sun sinking below the horizon.
“Look, I gotta get going,” the woman said.
“Will you call me if you hear from him or see him?” Kiera held out her business card.
“Sure, but I doubt I will.” She took the card and studied it before looking up, her face tight with concern. “Sounds like you think something bad’s happened to him.”
“He never takes off work. Never. His car is at his place and he’s not answering his phone. I don’t know where he is.” Kiera’s panic inched higher.
“I promise I’ll let you know if I see him.” She gave a tight smile. “I’m sure it’s nothing, and he’ll turn up.”
Nothing. Right. No way.
Kiera watched the car move down the road and disappear into the dusky night. She stood waiting for the next vehicle. Damp winds rolled in from the ocean, the fishy smell strong. She rubbed her arms for warmth, but the salty air had settled into her lightweight jacket the moment she’d stepped from her car, and she shivered.
Another car approached, and she went into questioning mode. The man hadn’t seen Kevin either, so she stepped back and watched his car disappear down the road. She waited for the next car, time ticking away. Thirty minutes passed, and no one came out. She was too cold to remain standing there. She’d go back to Kevin’s place and regroup.
She started across the
street to her car. Headlights gleamed from the main road, heading toward the lab, the vehicle’s engine sounding more like a motorcycle than a car.
Odd. The road dead-ended at the lab. Maybe this person was coming in to work. A person she could question, maybe who would allow her access. She remained in place and would wait for the vehicle to slow at the gate before approaching.
Instead of slowing, the motor revved, and the vehicle picked up speed. It swerved from the path to the gate and headed straight for her.
Headlights pressed down on her.
Didn’t he see her?
He came closer. Closer.
She screamed.
She needed to run, but she couldn’t get her feet moving.
Move now! She screamed at herself.
And Coop thought his surveillance detail was going to be boring.
He charged out of the trees and scooped the woman up in his arms. She shrieked and flailed against him, but he held tight and dove for the ditch to dodge the ATV barreling toward her. He landed hard on his shoulder and tried to hold his position, but he rolled and came to rest on top of her. She let out an unh, sounding like he’d knocked the wind out of her.
The vehicle swerved. Maybe the driver had gotten distracted or hadn’t seen her standing there.
Coop rose up on his arms and waited for the driver to stop and apologize, but he reversed course and charged away from the lab, the roar of his engine disappearing into the cloudy night. Coop had tried to get a good look at the driver and his vehicle, but it was too dark to make out any details.
“Please let me up,” the woman demanded in a clipped tone.
Right. Her. He’d been so busy watching the ATV that he forgot he was resting atop the very curvy, very pretty woman he’d been watching for the last hour while she’d approached people leaving the lab.
“Sorry about that.” He pushed to his feet and offered her a hand.
She ignored it and stood. She brushed off her clothing. Why, he didn’t know. She couldn’t possibly see any dirt or leaves in the pale glow of distant streetlights.
Cold Case Page 28