by Radclyffe
“I noticed,” Cam said. “I’d rather we had a little company.”
“Yeah. Sometimes potential witnesses are a good thing.” Dunbar looked around the room. “What do you think of the bartender?”
“Hard to say. He gave me cream for my coffee.”
Dunbar laughed shortly. “I think that might be points for him, but I’m not sure it’s a valid recommendation.”
“How sure are you of the person who set up this meet site?”
“Totally sure,” Dunbar said with conviction. “I’ve worked with the guy for years. He’s solid.”
“What about his intelligence?”
“There shouldn’t be anybody else in on this. We’ve kept this operation quiet.”
“All right, but let’s make this quick all the same,” Cam said. “What I’m looking for is a connection to someone in a militia in this state, particularly a well-organized group that is potentially growing their own from the ground up.”
“Well, we’ve got plenty of paramilitary groups,” Dunbar said, “but all of that’s in the bureau files. You didn’t come all the way here for background.”
“What’s in there is all pretty superficial. I’m looking to track specific individuals, and I need to cut through the camouflage quickly.”
“Names?”
Cam shook her head. “Probably not real ones. The aliases are Jennifer Pattee and Angela Jones. I don’t suppose that means anything to you?”
Dunbar shook her head. “No. We’ve got a few names, but we can’t be sure that those are real, either. How’d you get this far?”
“My gut tells me this group probably homeschools their kids, then trains them to infiltrate organizations for later action. That takes sophisticated, long-range planning, and the radical fringe groups aren’t stable enough to pull it off. We need to be looking at some of the grassroots paramilitary groups with professional leadership and resources.”
“Putting people inside where?” Sky asked. “How high up are we talking, in terms of infiltration?”
Cam regarded her silently.
“So that’s why you’re here personally,” Dunbar murmured. “Jesus. That takes a whole hell of a lot of resources, and a leader with charisma and power.” Dunbar’s sculpted red-brown brows creased. “The biggest group is right here in the Bitterroots, and from what we can tell, they’re large, well established, and well organized. They’ve also got money behind them.”
Cam felt the first stirring in her gut that usually meant she was on the right trail. “How big and how much money?”
“Enough that they can come up with a quarter of a million on short order.”
“That’s a lot of money. The kind of money that a group would need, to put together the type of operation I’m investigating.” Cam took out a photo of Jennifer Pattee and the slightly blurry image of Angela Jones that had been on file in her Eugen Corp portfolio and passed them to Dunbar. “Have you ever seen these women?”
“No,” Dunbar said after studying them for a few moments. “They look a little alike.”
“Jones managed to pass off a faxed photo on her job app, so it’s hard to tell, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re related. We can’t connect them, but I think they are.” Cam glanced at her watch. The tavern owner had been gone awhile. The building was silent. “Tell me about the group you’re looking at.”
“The main man running the militia goes by the name of Graves. Might be real, might be one of those identities cultivated so long ago that his original name would be tough to trace. We know he’s got women in his organization, but that’s about the best I can tell you.”
“Do you have anyone on the inside?”
Dunbar didn’t hesitate. “No.”
“But you’ve got someone who can get close.”
Dunbar held Cam’s gaze for a long moment, nothing showing in her eyes. She was making a decision, and Cam wondered about the source of her reluctance. Someone she wanted to protect. Cam said, “I’m not going to jeopardize your operative.”
“I don’t know that,” Dunbar said. “No disrespect intended.”
“None taken. I’m not going to pull the national security card on you, either, because I don’t have to, do I?”
Dunbar grimaced. “You don’t have to. I’ve got someone who will be getting close. We might be able to get you some more information about the other members of the group.”
“How long?”
“Soon. A matter of a week, maybe two.”
“I take it you’re after who’s behind it? The moneyman?”
“We’re after all of them,” Dunbar said, steel in her voice.
“I need you to jump on this.”
“Any chance the information highway will run both ways?”
“I can’t promise you that. But if we need local help, you’ll be my first call.”
“Fair enough. I’ve got other contacts who might be able to help research people who fit the profile,” Dunbar said. “If they’re homeschooling, they’ll eventually need an entry point into the official system, and they often use insiders who help pave the way. We might be able to track that.”
“Good.” Cam shook her head. “The coffee’s taking too long.”
Dunbar stood. “Yeah. I say we get out—”
The door from the kitchen swung wide, and the woman Cam knew as Angela Jones, dressed in camo and carrying a Glock in her hand, walked in.
“You’re going to want to put your weapons on the floor,” Jones said casually. She smiled almost pleasantly at Cam. The automatic looked like an extension of her arm, steady and comfortable. “Slowly. And then you’ll want to come with me.”
“I don’t think so,” Cam said quietly.
Jones fired, and Dunbar lurched back with a sharp cry and went down.
Cam drew her weapon and aimed at Jones, who was aiming at Dunbar on the floor, seemingly unconcerned by the automatic in Cam’s hand.
“Please don’t resist,” Jones said, “or I’ll shoot her in the head this time.”
Dunbar writhed on the floor, blood seeping between the fingers she pressed to her upper arm, and gasped, “Forget about me. Fucking shoot her.”
The tavern door behind Cam opened with a gust of cold air, and she knew by the look on Jones’s face she was outnumbered. She lowered her weapon.
Jones nodded. “That’s better. Now, come with me.”
“She comes too,” Cam said, indicating Dunbar. If she left without her, Jones would have Dunbar killed. No witnesses that way. “If she doesn’t, neither do I.”
“Why not,” Jones said. “Maybe she’ll be useful.”
Cam leaned down, got an arm behind Dunbar’s shoulders, and helped her up. “How bad is it?”
“Flesh wound, I think.”
Someone prodded Cam in the back with a gun barrel.
Jones said, “Let’s go.”
Cam had no choice if she wanted to keep Dunbar alive. She went.
Chapter Thirty-one
“Pat them down,” Jones said to whoever was behind Cam.
The gun barrel in the small of Cam’s back shifted away, and someone quickly and efficiently checked her legs and torso for a backup gun, then did the same with Dunbar.
“They’re clean,” a gruff male voice announced.
“Out the back.” Jones gestured toward the kitchen with her Glock as Cam and Dunbar walked toward her with another militiaman right behind them. She pushed open the kitchen door, and a redhead who didn’t look more than twenty, dressed in combat gear and carrying an assault rifle, pointed them down the aisle of a long, narrow kitchen.
The bartender lay face down on the floor in front of a chipped cast-iron stove. Cam couldn’t tell if he was dead or alive. Beside her, Dunbar weaved unsteadily. “Can you make it?”
“I’ll make it,” Dunbar said through gritted teeth.
They proceeded in single file out the back, across the rickety porch, and down three wobbly steps to the lot behind the tavern. Mounds of dirty snow r
inged the small parking area.
“Into the woods,” Jones said from behind Cam, and they followed the redhead up a shallow embankment to what looked to be a twisty deer trail wending into the trees, the snow trampled flat by the passage of many hooves. Neither Cam nor Dunbar was dressed for hiking. Dunbar slipped on the snowy slope, and Cam grabbed her to keep her from falling.
“I’m all right,” Dunbar said, but her face was as white as the surrounding snowpack.
Cam had no doubt if they were forced to leave Dunbar behind, the militia would dispose of her, and she had no intention of letting the agent fall. “You’ll make it.”
They stumbled through towering, dense pines for twenty minutes, as near as Cam could estimate. Perhaps half a mile. No wonder she hadn’t seen any signs of an ambush. They hadn’t come by the road. Two others, a man and a woman, fell in with them en route, automatic weapons at the ready. They made no attempt to hide their faces, which meant they planned to execute their captives when they were no longer of any strategic value, or they were confident their stronghold was unassailable.
Eventually they emerged into a small clearing where a Humvee awaited. A huge Dumpster with a sign reading Caution, bear feeding area took up the rest of the space. They’d walked into the back end of what was probably a campsite, almost certainly deserted this time of year. The redhead opened the rear of the Humvee and motioned them in. Cam half lifted Dunbar into the compartment, and she collapsed against the sidewall instantly. Cam pulled off her topcoat and threw it in before climbing in after her. Two of the four kept their weapons trained on them until Jones came around the side and climbed into the backseat. As soon as she knelt on the rear seat with her weapon trained on them, the others piled in, and the Humvee pulled away.
“I want to look at her wound,” Cam said.
Jones appeared to deliberate.
“She’s of no value to you dead.”
“Don’t make any sudden movements,” Jones said in her persistently casual tone, “because I really don’t want to have to kill you.”
“What do you want?” Cam asked, gripping the neck of Dunbar’s sweater in both hands and pulling hard. The material frayed around the bullet hole, and she was able to tear the material enough to see the wound. An entrance wound the size of a quarter in Dunbar’s upper arm bled slowly. A larger ragged exit wound high on the back of her shoulder streamed copiously.
“I just want you to keep us company for a few days,” Jones said. “Until we can trade you in.”
Cam looked over her shoulder. “For Jennifer Pattee?”
Jones smiled. “You’re quick.”
“Now that I see you in person, the resemblance is clear. Sisters?”
Jones’s mouth hardened. “She’s one of ours. That’s all that matters.”
“Got a med kit in this truck? Letting her bleed out is not going to serve any purpose.”
“She’ll keep for a while.”
Cam unbuttoned her shirt, stripped it off, and folded it into a makeshift field dressing. She pressed it firmly to Dunbar’s shoulder. “Can you hold pressure on this?”
“Yeah,” Dunbar said, gripping the shirt. Her eyes were glazed, but she was sitting up under her own power, which was as much as Cam could hope for.
Cam’s T-shirt wasn’t much of a barrier to the cold, but she leaned back against the side of the Humvee and folded her arms, contemplating Jones. She couldn’t be much older than Pattee, and she had the same burning fervor in her eyes as her sister. They had to be on the way to the compound, and once they got there, their options would be limited. But they’d be better than they were right now, with a zero chance of escape. Cam settled down to wait. They’d be missed soon enough. Discovering their location in the heart of this wilderness might be more problematic.
*
Loren hadn’t slept, replaying her conversation with Sky over and over. She should have insisted on providing backup. She should have kept her mouth shut about her feelings—as if Sky had given her any reason to think how she felt mattered, anyhow. Sky had come to do a job and that was what mattered, all that mattered to her. They’d gotten into their roles, sure, and why not? No rule against physical attraction, or acting on it, for that matter. But Loren was the one who’d lost sight of reality. Maybe she’d been living in a shadow world so long, she couldn’t tell the difference any longer.
And now Sky was out there alone.
She’d tried drowning her self-recriminations in a long hot shower, but as soon as she’d finished, she’d started watching the clock. She’d expected Sky to call an hour ago. No matter what was going on between them, Sky was a professional, and she would’ve kept Loren in the loop. When she didn’t call, Loren got dressed, climbed on her bike, and rode to Sky’s motel. Sky’s rental car wasn’t there. The meet had been almost three hours before, and Sky should’ve been back by now.
Loren straddled her bike, the engine rumbling, and considered options. She couldn’t call Sky on the phone in case the meet had gotten complicated and she was in the middle of something. She could use the number she had to reach her handler in event of trouble, but she figured that number would go to Sky as well. She had a backup number she’d never used, but she suspected that would go to Sky’s task-force partner. She’d try him if she didn’t hear from Sky soon, but first, she’d take a look for herself. She wheeled her bike around and headed for the Timberwolf Bar and Grill.
*
Sky shut her eyes and fought to keep the nausea at bay. The throbbing in her shoulder accelerated into a gut-wrenching stab of pain every time the Humvee hit a bump, which was every other second. Her head spun and her mind kept sliding away into a gray fog, where time morphed into one long trail of agony.
“How are you doing?” Loren asked.
No, not Loren.
Loren was gone.
Loren had said…she’d said…why had Loren walked out, left her?
“Dunbar,” the voice came again, sharper. Command voice.
Sky opened her eyes. Cameron Roberts’s eyes were winter gray, hard as ice. Sky’s blood surged, her mind cleared. “I’m a little fuzzy,” Dunbar said in a whisper.
“Let me check the wound.”
Roberts lifted the makeshift bandage from her shoulder. She was gentle but unflinching.
“Looks like the bleeding is slowing. How’s your hand?”
Sky flexed her fingers. The movement propelled searing shock waves through her arm. “Not so good.”
“Numb?”
“I wish.”
“That’s good, then. The nerves are okay.” Roberts pressed the folded shirt, soggy now with blood, back against her shoulder. “Keep holding. And I need you to stay awake.”
“I will.”
Roberts settled back beside her. Sky concentrated on staying awake. She had to stay awake, because if she didn’t, they’d get rid of her and Roberts would try to stop them. She wasn’t going to let that happen. She had to hang on. Couldn’t let them use her against Roberts. Had to protect the mission, protect Loren.
Loren would miss her. At least Loren wouldn’t know where to look. At least she’d be safe.
*
Cam estimated they’d been riding an hour when the Humvee bounced off the highway onto an uneven trail. The windows were smoked and she couldn’t see much outside, except that they were in a dense forest. They appeared to be climbing, and the Humvee was cold. Beside her, Dunbar shivered. “I’m going to get my coat and put it around her.”
“Slowly,” Jones said.
Cam pulled her topcoat over Dunbar. “You with me?”
“Yes,” Dunbar said. “Better.”
“Good.” Cam settled back, and ten minutes later the Humvee stopped. Jones kept them in her sights while the others piled out. The rear door opened.
“Climb out,” Jones ordered.
Cam helped Dunbar down from the vehicle and jumped out beside her. The camp was dark. All she could make out was a ring of buildings with a few lights showing through window
s here and there. There could be a hundred militiamen in the place, or ten.
Jones appeared beside her and motioned to the left with her gun. “That way.”
“If you’ve got a field hospital, she—”
Jones kicked Cam behind the knee and she went down, barely managing to catch herself before she fell flat. Small stones cut into her palms. Jones crouched beside her.
“You’d do well to worry about yourself.”
“If you expect to trade us,” Cam said, slowly pushing to a kneeling position, swallowing her rage, “it would probably be a good idea to keep us healthy.”
“I didn’t say I was going to trade both of you.”
“I don’t take you for a fool, and two hostages are always better than one.”
Jones pushed the barrel of her Glock under Cam’s chin until Cam had to lift her neck to ease the pressure. “And you might be wiser to stop giving orders. You’re nothing here. You’re no one.”
Cam remained silent. Jones seemed rational, but she didn’t want to push. What she needed was to remain as unfettered as possible, and antagonizing her captors would not accomplish that. She needed to get a sense of the physical space, of how many militiamen were billeted here, and find a way to communicate with someone she trusted. And she had to keep Dunbar from becoming a casualty. “You’re calling the shots here. I just want to get her some medical help.”
Jones stood. “Take them to the infirmary. Put a guard on the door and outside the windows. I’ll be there in a minute.”
Cam got to her feet, satisfied she’d won a small victory. Dunbar needed attention, and as long as they were together, she had a better chance of keeping her alive. And she’d learned that Jones could be reasoned with.
The infirmary turned out to be a single-story building little bigger than a garage, with two narrow beds, a single window above them, and a locked cabinet against one wall that probably held supplies. Their guards ordered them to sit on the beds. Dunbar slumped down facing Cam across the narrow aisle. Dark shadows of pain and fatigue rimmed her eyes, but her gaze was remarkably clear. She was tough. The guard by the door was a woman of about thirty with short blond hair and flat green eyes. She held her weapon with easy familiarity and regarded them with cold disdain. Cam considered rushing her and estimated she’d be wounded or dead before she reached her feet.