She texted Ricky again.
Are you at the mine? Please tell me if Bobbie is there with Sean. He’s in grave danger.
“Tim and Adam said the C-4 was stored at the mine, right?” she asked.
“Yes.”
“And that’s where Bobbie dumped Victoria’s body. Vengeance. Jon wants her in the mine. For him, it’s closure. Doing what he should have done months ago.”
Ricky responded.
She’s coming.
“We have to get to the mine. Ricky just confirmed Bobbie’s on her way!”
As she sent Noah the information, she prayed they weren’t too late.
* * *
Sean kept quiet during the drive from the Callahan house to the mine. Carl drove and Bobbie sat in the passenger seat, playing with her gun in her lap. Handcuffed in the backseat, he listened to their conversation as he considered his options.
Sean gathered that the explosives came from Sampson Lowell. He’d used Bobbie’s operation to transport three cases to a domestic terrorism group. Sean tried to figure out who and where the group was, but Bobbie wasn’t specific, nor did she seem to care. The group didn’t have the funds for the entire shipment, so Bobbie had kept the remainder, which Lowell agreed to let her have as a sign of good faith in their gun distribution agreement.
As best he could figure, Lowell wanted to use Bobbie’s pot warehouses to store the extensive collection of guns he sold—to anyone from foreign governments to revolutionaries to street gangs. Lowell didn’t have a secure storage facility in the Northeast and while Spruce Lake was remote, it had the advantage of a nearby private airstrip, privacy, and an established and protected distribution network.
When the Hendricksons announced they were opening their resort, Bobbie feared tourists would come across her pot farms, and Lowell was nervous about the added influx of people. Bobbie wanted to delay the resort opening, at least until her operation with Lowell was up and running. Carl came up with the sabotage plan, thinking the Hendricksons wouldn’t be able to open on time. When it became clear they still planned to open over Memorial Day weekend, Carl instructed Ricky to burn down the main lodge.
Bobbie had sold the remaining C-4 she’d gotten from Lowell and was supposed to deliver it to the buyer next week. That Jon used some of it to blow up her warehouses meant she couldn’t fulfill her obligation. That put her name and trustworthiness at risk—not good for business. Worse, though, was that she’d just lost her entire inventory of weed, meaning she wouldn’t be able to fill orders for months. Nor were her secure warehouses even standing. They would not be stowing Lowell’s guns anytime soon.
Jon Callahan had effectively destroyed her entire operations in one explosive night.
Carl said, “Shoot him on sight.”
“Don’t tell me what to do,” Bobbie retorted.
Sean couldn’t see anything through the dark windows of the moving car. He calculated it would take only ten minutes to reach the mine. Think, Rogan.
“Arguing with Jon will only delay our departure.”
“I want my money and the rest of the C-4.”
If Sean were in her shoes, so would he. She needed the money to stay free, and alive.
“There are only a few places he could have put it. It’s either with him or at the bar,” Carl said. “He didn’t have more than a few hours to hide it.”
“Then we won’t just drive up where he expects us. Pull over here.”
Carl turned off the highway and onto an unpaved road. Sean had no idea where they were.
“We’ll go in on foot,” she said.
“It’s thirty degrees out there!” the reverend objected.
“Come on, old man, you have a coat.”
Carl didn’t look happy, and Sean had no idea how far they had to walk.
“What about him?” Carl glanced back to where Sean was handcuffed in the backseat.
“We might still need a hostage when we leave. We’ll kill him once we get into Canada. Make sure he’s secure,” Bobbie ordered.
Carl reached over the seat to check Sean’s cuffs. He then wrapped duct tape around his ankles and a strip across his mouth. “Not that anyone’s around to hear you. You just irritate me.”
With the car heater off, the temperature plummeted. They hadn’t given him back his jacket at the house, and Sean had on only jeans and a T-shirt.
As they sat in the car, Sean heard a truck on the highway pass them, then slow down.
“Who the hell was that?” Bobbie said. “It just turned down the road to the mine. White truck. Who has a white truck? It’s not Jon’s.”
“Let’s just leave,” Carl said. “I don’t like the feeling of this.”
“We’re not leaving without my money, or we might as well just turn ourselves in to the fucking police.”
Carl sighed, resigned, and opened the car door.
Bobbie turned in her seat to look at Sean. She double checked the handcuffs and duct tape. “Stay put, sugar.” Then she followed Carl into the woods.
Sean had rented a white truck. The last person driving it was Patrick.
FORTY
Omar stopped the truck on the edge of the road just before it opened into the Kelley Mine clearing. “We don’t have the element of surprise. Callahan’s waiting.”
Noah glanced around the perimeter. “I don’t see Lucy and Patrick.”
“We were closer when they called.”
Jon Callahan’s vehicle was parked to the side of a small, boarded-up building that, at second glance, looked like several of the boards had been removed. Noah didn’t see Callahan anywhere, but at this point, his job was to secure the rest of the explosives, find the teen Ricky Swain, and bring Callahan into custody, in that order.
He called Candela, who was now the liaison between the FBI, ATF, and local police.
“ETA?” asked Noah.
“Fifteen minutes to first explosion site by team Bravo, twenty-two minutes by team Charlie.”
Noah and Omar were apparently team Alpha. “We need all available agents at the site of the abandoned Kelley Mining Company.”
“Negative. I can send Team Delta your way. Twenty to thirty minutes.”
“Sir,” Noah said, “we have the alleged bomber’s vehicle in sight. We believe he has a hostage who is a minor: Paul Richard Swain, Junior.”
“A hostage or an accomplice?”
Noah wanted to give the Swain kid the benefit of the doubt, but he had to respond truthfully. “I can’t say for certain, but we believe he’s a hostage who has sympathy for his kidnapper.”
“Understood,” Candela said. “I’ll see if I can reroute anyone your way, but the lives and safety of the local citizenry are our priority. There are four separate structure fires, and a small forest fire they’re hoping to contain quickly. The main road into town has been roadblocked—no one is getting in or out.”
Omar could hear the conversation and said, “There are a dozen ways to get off this mountain without even setting a wheel on the main road.”
“Sir,” Noah began.
Candela said, “Give me a few minutes to set it up. But you’ll still be dark for fifteen minutes, minimum.”
“Understood.”
Noah hung up.
Omar said, “You know we can’t just sit here on our butts for fifteen minutes.”
He knew, but he didn’t like strategically planning with only a hotshot ATF agent as his backup.
“And we don’t have time to talk about it,” Omar continued. “Callahan knows we’re here. It’s pretty damn obvious, don’t you think?”
Noah put aside his dislike of Omar Lewis and made swift decisions. “We exit the vehicle. You go left along the perimeter, I’ll go right and engage. You said he was the only person who knew you were undercover, correct?”
“Yes.”
“Good. Stick to the shadows and focus your sharpshooter skills on the bad guys. I’m trusting you on this, Agent Lewis.”
“You can.”
&nb
sp; Omar squelched the indoor lights before they opened the doors. He disappeared quickly, blending into the dark of night. Noah took the direct approach.
“Jon Callahan,” he shouted, “this is Special Agent Noah Armstrong with the Federal Bureau of Investigation. I just want to talk.”
He put his hands up to show he came in friendship.
“Jon, I’m here to help you.”
He surveyed the surroundings. He didn’t see anyone, but could feel eyes upon him.
He walked toward the building at the base of the hillside, near the mine entrance. The moon gave only a little light, but the fires to the northeast made the sky glow a deep orange.
The door was open; the place had been emptied. Whatever C-4 and equipment was inside was now either set to detonate or hidden elsewhere by Callahan.
Noah cautiously skirted the outside of the building. In his left periphery, he saw movement. It could have been Omar, but it didn’t feel right. The ATF agent was too skilled to be spotted.
“Jon, I’m a friend of Sean Rogan. You know Bobbie has him, right? We don’t know where she is or what she’s planning to do to Sean. She sent someone to kill both me and my partner, Lucy Kincaid. You met her already. Sean’s girlfriend.”
Noah passed the building and glanced into the truck. The C-4 wasn’t inside.
“Jon, you don’t want to hurt anyone.”
“Hold it.” The voice was to his right, just on the other side of the truck. “Keep your hands up,” said Jon. “I don’t want to shoot you, Agent Armstrong, but if I have to I will. Bobbie is on her way, and this ends tonight.”
“Correction,” a female voice came from the hillside above them, “Bobbie is here, and you’re going to give me my money and my C-4 or die.”
Patrick had studied the area earlier in the day and decided they’d approach the mine from the back, which would take longer but give them better cover. Lucy deferred to her brother, but was nervous that they were taking too long to get there. They couldn’t drive the entire way, and jogged a half mile to the mine, almost all uphill.
They regrouped behind an entangled overgrowth of blackberry bushes.
“Voices,” Patrick whispered, nodding his head toward the mine entrance.
The clearing in front of the mine was a semicircular hard-packed area roughly the size of a football field. The mine was cut into the hillside, and based on the elevation of the ventilation shaft Sean had fallen in earlier, the tunnels inside must be graded downward. The building where the C-4 had been stored was on the opposite side of the entrance from where Lucy and Patrick were hidden, built up against the hillside. Above it, the hill sloped up gradually about five feet, then leveled off where the trees began.
The glowing sky behind the mine illuminated the area, but details were hard to identify. Everything was framed by shifting shadows. Distant helicopters and the trill of emergency vehicles broke the silence, but here, at the mine, they had no backup.
“We need to get closer,” Lucy said. She looked around for a way. “We’ll go around the boulder near the entrance.”
“If they see us we’re sitting ducks.”
“We’ll only be exposed for a minute or two. As soon as we step into the mine, we’ll be covered and much closer.”
Lucy didn’t wait for Patrick to concur. She started out, her heart pounding. She skirted the rock face, neither fast nor slow, until she made it to the entrance.
Someone was already there.
Gun drawn, she aimed it at the figure standing flat against the inside of the rough cave.
“Identify yourself,” she demanded, in a coarse whisper.
“Don’t shoot me. I’m Ricky Swain.”
Lucy let out a quiet sigh of relief. “Lucy Kincaid.”
“You’re Sean’s girlfriend.”
“Have you seen him?”
“No. But my aunt Bobbie is outside somewhere and I’m worried. Jon thought—” Ricky shook his head. “I don’t know what he was thinking. No one knows Bobbie better than me, and I told him this wasn’t going to work. But I want to help him. I know how he feels.”
From Ricky’s vantage point, Lucy could see the small building and Jon Callahan’s truck about thirty yards away. Bobbie Swain was on the roof of the building, a gun on Noah and Jon who had their hands up. As she watched, a white-haired man emerged from the shadows. It was Reverend Carl Browne, she thought, though she couldn’t see his face. Browne disarmed Noah and Jon. She glanced around quickly. Where was Omar Lewis? Was he in a position to shoot? He was a sniper, he could take Bobbie and the reverend down immediately. Or had he abandoned them?
Patrick stepped in behind her. “Dammit,” he said when he saw what was happening outside.
“Ricky, this is my brother, Patrick. What is Jon planning?”
“He’s going to kill Bobbie.”
“He already lost his advantage,” Lucy said.
Ricky didn’t say anything for a moment.
“My mom told me if I had an emergency, call Jon. And he would fix it. He’s fixing it.”
“This isn’t protecting you, not now. Jon is no longer the man your mother trusted. Look at his grief—Bobbie killed the woman he loved.”
Lucy glanced into the dark mine. Two tunnels blacker than a moonless night, branched off. One of those led to where she found Victoria’s body.
“Lucy,” Patrick said and pointed to the ceiling.
C-4 had been pressed into the crevices around the mine entrance. Blasting caps were inserted into the C-4 at regular intervals, the wires all coming out to merge into one small box with a blinking red light.
“Does Jon have the detonator switch?” she asked.
Ricky didn’t answer right away. “Aunt Bobbie will come in here. Then it’ll all come down.”
“You don’t want to kill someone in cold blood,” Lucy said. “Not even Bobbie.”
“Don’t talk to me like I’m a child!” Ricky said. He pressed the palms of his hands against his forehead. “She stole everything from me. My whole family is gone. Joe.” His voice cracked.
“She kidnapped Sean. She’s not getting away. Help me stop her without anyone else dying.”
Patrick’s attention was diverted from the C-4 to movement outside the mine. Lucy followed his gaze. Bobbie was forcing Noah and Jon toward the mine at gunpoint. Lucy didn’t see Sean anywhere. Where had Bobbie left him?
She’d killed him.
Lucy refused to believe that. But she couldn’t get the thought out of her mind.
“What’s in here that she wants so badly?” she asked.
“A half-million dollars.”
Patrick said urgently, “Lucy, we have to get out of here now.”
Lucy said to Ricky. “He’s right. Let’s go.”
He was still uncertain, and Lucy grabbed his arm to encourage him. Patrick led the way, then Lucy heard a female voice shout, “Ricky, stop.”
Ricky did, forcing Lucy to stop as well. Lucy didn’t know how she hadn’t spotted Patrick. Then, from the corner of her eye, she saw a glimpse of his face. He’d stepped into a small, natural alcove in the mountain. If he stood still, Bobbie might not see him. But if she did, he was an easy target.
Bobbie walked to Ricky and Lucy. “You’re the girlfriend.” Her face twisted as she looked back at Noah. “You—you’re both supposed to be dead!”
“I think—” Lucy began stepping to the left to keep Bobbie’s attention on her.
“Not a word from you. Carl, watch them. Jon, come with me. You, this bitch, and I are getting my money.”
From the second Sean knew Bobbie and the reverend were out of earshot, he started working on the handcuffs. They were too tight to slip off, a trick he’d done a few times in his life. But deep in the pockets of his jeans was a bobby pin. He remembered when he was little his sister had once told him she always had bobby pins in her hair and a rubber band around her wrist because they could solve any number of fashion emergencies.
Sean took the advice, but applied it t
o personal security. He always had a bobby pin in his pocket, pushed into a seam, so that on a quick search, it couldn’t be felt. He couldn’t risk it while being watched because he had to go through contortions to remove the pin and then to pick the handcuffs.
He had to remain calm and steady, because if he dropped the pin it would delay his escape, putting Lucy and everyone else at greater risk. He closed his eyes and felt for the small hole in the cuffs. He bent the bobby pin and inserted the thinner end into the lock. He moved it slowly around, using his skills and sense of touch and a hint of a sixth sense that had helped him more times than he could count. Clearing his mind, he pictured the inside of the lock, focused on seeing the pin hit the right spot to spring the latch. Click.
Sean removed the cuffs and pulled the duct tape from his mouth, then let out a long breath as he tore through the duct tape around his ankles, which took him longer than picking the lock.
Free, he searched the car for a gun or knife, anything he could use as a weapon. The only thing he could find was an old tire iron, which he grabbed, then ran through the woods toward the mine.
He reached the edge of a cliff and stopped, his momentum almost taking him over the edge. But it wasn’t a long fall—below him was the roof of a small building. To one side was Callahan’s truck, to the other was the white truck. Now that he was closer, he saw that it wasn’t his rental and he breathed a bit easier. There was still trouble, but Lucy wasn’t here.
There was a lot of movement at the mine entrance, and he saw Noah and Ricky emerge, followed by Reverend Browne, who had a gun on them.
Timing was everything. Browne glanced back at the mine, distracted. Someone else was in there. Sean slipped down to the roof, then dropped off the side, out of sight from the entrance. That’s when he saw Patrick, flush against the rock wall of the mine, tightly wedged in a crevice only yards from Browne’s position. If Browne looked to the right, he’d see Patrick and have a direct line of fire. There was no way Sean could get to the group without being seen.
Trusting both Patrick and Noah to take advantage of the opportunity, Sean exposed himself to distract Browne. He ran from the building, directly toward the group, his eyes on Browne’s gun.
If I Should Die Page 29