by Dale Mayer
The three raced outside. Gem detoured and snagged up her camera. "You never know," she said with a grin.
Ten minutes later the young deputy pulled up in front of them and got out. "Are we walking or driving?"
"Walking," they cried out in unison. He nodded, grabbed his hat and stepped up beside them. "Good enough."
Mark set the pace, leading, with the deputy beside him. Reid and Gem followed. They headed back to the wall they'd climbed over the first night and re-enacted that walk Gemma had done with Misty the first time.
Ten minutes later they approached the spot where Gem took the pictures.
Gem took up the same position she had that night. "I was right here. Facing that way. Went a little closer and kept shooting." She demonstrated with her camera. "Somewhere around here Misty showed up and started bugging me and I rushed to get a few more pictures before leaving."
Gem paused, trying to remember the sequence of events. She pointed and continued, "Over there. We saw bright lights. Then the lights turned our way and we dropped to the ground. We bolted for home first chance. We'd made it to the other side of the stone wall when we heard them walking along the wall and saw their light shining in our directions. Once they passed by, we climbed in the window, with Mark's help."
She walked closer to where the men must have been standing. "We've checked this area once already. I don't see anything new."
"They obviously followed you." Mark walked toward the area. "The old well house where Misty was stashed is just over there. Easy for them to reach and it's well hidden – so even better."
"They had to have known about it before, to have been able to make use of it on the spur of the moment like that," Reid pointed out.
"There's nothing here?" Frustrated, Gem stood in the area and glared at a whole lot of nothing.
"There's no reason why there would be," Mark said, standing with his hands on his hips, looking around. "We don't even know what they were doing here."
Reid pointed out the many small breaks in the bushes that could have been made by people walking. "There's no way to know if that's how those small paths were made because we all came through here the night Misty went missing. Or they could just be deer paths."
"Going this way is the shortest route to the main road…" Deputy Barry motioned in that direction as he stood beside Reid. "And the creek is just over there."
The deputy headed through the bushes, following one of the small paths. They others fell into step behind him. They came out onto the road within a hundred feet.
"I didn't know the road was so close the creek here. You'd never know it when you stand in the trees," Gem said in wonder, looking around. Bushes, trees and tall grass had taken over. From here, the home wasn't even visible.
"So they drove the car from John's to here, not wanting to take it on the rough old road," Mark suggested. "They drugged, tied and dumped Misty off where they could grab her again easily enough, so they could go back and check on the rest of us."
That sounded reasonable to Gem. She stepped to the side of the path and looked back. Large branches overhung the shoulder of the road where she could see multiple tracks leading to the spot. "What's the chance those belong to the kidnapper's vehicles?"
The deputy stepped up beside her, then grabbed his phone and called the sheriff. Gem didn't bother listening because she was considering the tire impressions. The tracks would place the vehicles here but that still wouldn't explain why they were here.
She backtracked to the pump house and stepped inside.
The interior was dim without windows. There was no residue on the floor or even empty cans. Nothing. She chewed her bottom lip and thought on that for a bit. It only made sense that they'd have double-checked and cleaned everything up as fast as possible. "Even if we find evidence of their presence, that doesn't prove anything. Loads of people come here."
"All we can do is look more closely." Mark headed toward the creek bank and stopped to survey the area. Gem scrambled over a tree trunk to join him. Reid moved down the bank toward the road. "If they dumped something like chemicals into the water, there might not be anything left now."
"Did you see any chemicals?" The deputy walked around beside them. "Maybe chemicals to clean up that spill that was mentioned in the statements we read. From those guys picked up in Dayport."
"I didn't see much in the van when I was tied up. Mostly a bucket, a couple small jugs and shovel." Mark said. "They had some small tubes and a little kit, as if they were checking something or maybe testing something."
The deputy frowned. "Still, I'd think they should have contacted us if there was a spill of something toxic. But if they didn't, they could've just done their tests without telling anyone."
"Or maybe those men weren't government to begin with. We didn't believe them before so let's not get sidelined by their cover story now," Gem said, a frown on her face. She shrugged. "I prefer the idea of an accident spill over thinking they were using the creek as a test site for a bio-weapon or something?"
Mark stared at her in horror. "You're mind is incredibly creepy, you know that?"
Gem wrinkled her nose at him. At the look of amusement on Reid's face, Gem added, "Don't laugh. I'm no chemistry wiz. But I do watch television."
"And you're one hell of a story maker," said a voice they weren't expecting.
The sheriff, with Ian at his side, stepped out from behind some bushes, his gun in his hand. "Don't make a move, kid."
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
"Oh shit." Gem stepped backwards to butt up against Mark. Reid slipped further to the left.
"Oh no, you don't. This isn't about letting you guys run off and create havoc again, is it, Barry? You think I didn't wonder about that crack on the head you got?"
The young deputy straightened, shock on his face. "What? I didn't make it up."
"Right. Of course you didn't. You were supposed to be sitting right in plain view of their house, but instead Ian found you a block away, supposedly unconscious."
Gem blinked. Blinked again. Was the sheriff accusing Barry?
She frowned. He was young and strong. He'd been around them slightly more than the others had been.
Why had they assumed he'd been innocent of kidnapping them, and that the sheriff more likely to be guilty? Because they didn't like the sheriff. He represented law enforcement that they hated. Whereas the deputy was almost their age, and that had made it easier to connect to him, to trust him.
She didn't know who to trust now, and she didn't really like the choices. She liked the young deputy. But the sheriff had been growing on her.
The gun the sheriff aimed at Barry – who stood close to them – didn't waver. Mark backed up a step. She went with him. Reid followed.
"That's impossible. I couldn't hit myself hard enough to knock myself out," Barry snapped.
"According to Ian here, you appeared to be just waking up, as if you might not have been under very long or very deep. Or as if you were faking it."
"What's the chance that's how you've been paying for all that new gear you've got?" Ian gloated, sweat dripping off his jowls.
Gem stared at the beads of sweat with a yucky sort of fascination. It wasn't even hot.
"Hey, that's money I saved up. Just because you spend it on booze doesn't mean I do, too." Barry turned to the sheriff and tried to talk reason. "Danny, you've known me for years. This is the second summer I've worked for you."
The sheriff tipped his hat further back on his head and stared from one deputy to the other.
Barry tried again. "It would make more sense that Ian's the bad guy here. He's been around long enough to know these bad guys. Me, I'm almost a kid." He nodded to his cousin. "Ian knew about the creek too." He turned his head to glance at the kids behind him. "And how could I do any of this by myself? I couldn't even begin to lift these kids and move them around."
Gem hated the building panic on the young deputy's face.
Ian snorted. "Like I could?"
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Barry shrugged. "You'd get the family to do it for you. I'm barely even part of the family since Mom left Dad.
The sheriff frowned. "It's one of the reasons why I gave you this chance. You needed the job. At least, I assumed you did."
"I did need it. And still do. I don't know what made you start to look at me with suspicion, but whatever it was, you should be looking at Ian here."
"Your Uncle Jed has been picked up in Dayport. He was driving the SUV that tried to run John and these kids off the road."
Barry's astonishment turned to a wry shock. "You definitely need to be looking at Ian then. None of that side of the family even know who the hell I am, much less get involved with me. Uncle Jed can't stand me. Now Ian here, that's a different story…"
The sheriff turned to look at Ian. "I've worked with Ian for over a decade now."
"The fact that he's even trying to point a finger my way should make you look at him."
Ian blustered, "Now stop that. I didn't point any fingers. I just mentioned that your head wound didn't look like much of an injury and you've been buying lots of new toys."
The sheriff stopped and considered, his gun hand lowering.
Gem sighed with relief.
"Come to think of it, Uncle Jed didn't specifically say you. He said something about big money involved but that he wasn’t getting paid enough to go to jail for this. I assumed it was you because Ian had mentioned your close relationship with your uncle Jed a couple of days ago. And what about your money habits? You've been spending a lot."
"I buy one toy a month. That's what my budget allows," insisted Barry. "And I only get the bigger items after two months. You know what I earn. Besides I worked all through high school. I live at home in the basement. I tell everyone I pay Mom rent, but I don't. That's how I save so much now."
Gem and Mark exchanged looks. This could go bad at any moment and they needed to take their chance when they could.
Ian slipped his hand over his gun, not drawing or pointing it at anyone – but ready. Gem eyed it and nudged Mark.
"I don't think so, junior. You're just trying to defend yourself and throw suspicion on someone else," Ian said, belligerently. "Well, it's not going to be me."
The sheriff spoke slowly in that pondering way of his that drove Gem nuts. "Then again, if it isn't him…"
"How does Creepers come into this?" Gem interrupted.
The sheriff looked at her in confusion. "Who the hell is Creepers?"
"He's the guy from juvie running the pilot program for John's home."
"Mr. Crompton," Mark said helpfully.
Gem watch the young deputy straighten at the name, but the sheriff continued to talk on, oblivious to her comment.
"And why would he come into this?" The sheriff shook his head. "You kids and your imaginations."
"Oh, I don't know about that." Barry nodded toward Ian. "Crompton is Ian's uncle. Course, he's been trying to retire for a while now but can't afford to…"
Ian snorted. "Then he's your uncle too, cousin."
"Yes, but then you did jobs for him all the time. I remember Mom talking about it. He called you Fixer, because you were always breaking things then trying to fix them. Then you grew up and started doing contract jobs. And didn’t the guy in Dayport started to say a name and was cut off. He said Fi..."
"Fi...xer!" Gem snorted. "Wow, a whole family of losers. No surprise there. Really…either, or even better, both of you could be involved. I just want to know who burned down John and Doris's house?"
"Who the hell are you calling a loser?" Ian's complexion darkened as his attention shifted to the three teens. "You're the loser. Spent years in juvie giving sexual favors for candy bars no doubt. Lice. Vermin. The whole lot of you."
He brandished the gun and moved behind the sheriff, removing his gun and nudging him forward. "Move Danny." His voice changed, hardened, and a sneer wove into it. "Don't matter what you think now. I'm not going down to jail for this. I planned to leave town soon enough, anyway. I guess that means today."
"How much did Creepers get for his part in your scheme?" Gem took yet another step back.
"He didn't get nothing, because he didn't do nuttin'. At least nuttin' right." Resentment laced Ian's voice.
Gem studied the big deputy. "Was he pissed off because you were doing something wrong?"
Ian's face twisted.
"Not quite right?" Gem said, as a glimmer of understanding slipped in. "You kidnapped us, but never hurt us. Creepers had the means to force us to return to Stanton." Her earlier thoughts popped back into her mind. She added slowly, "I'm just not sure why you needed us out of the way though," she added with a puzzled frown.
Mark stared at Ian hard. "Only Creepers didn't take care of business, did he? We refused to go back. He couldn't make us once John was on our side."
"What? Creepers really was bad?" Reid barely hid his grin when Gem elbowed him. "Didn't see that one coming."
"Yeah, hilarious. Besides, it's not like he was really bad." Ian glared at him. "I offered him big money to take you guys back to juvie where he could keep an eye on you. He said you could all stay there in the medical center for a few days until we were sure you didn't develop any symptoms." He waved the gun around. "I accidentally dumped some chemicals I was hauling." A grin, so wrong, shone. "You might want to consider that we were trying to look out for you."
Gem sucked in a long breath, slipped her cell phone out of her pocket and around behind her. Then flipped it open and waited.
"What chemicals?" asked Gem. She had to keep him talking. "What about the fact that some chemicals don't show symptoms for years?"
"By then there'd be nothing left here to tie to the company...or me, anyway. So who cares? You're just a bunch of juvie losers."
Mark made as if to step forward. Gem grabbed his arm and held him back.
Ian was unbelievable.
"Who knows what's in those containers. And who cares." He snorted. "I don't. But we didn't know if you'd gone into the creek or touched the stuff. After the accident happened everything went to hell. I figured the only way out of this mess for me was to split."
"I was in the creek. What about me?"
"Yeah, but it was cleaned up by then."
As he continued to talk, she let her breath out quietly then hit the button preset for John's number. If he could hear this conversation, he'd know they were all in trouble.
Mark shifted closer to her. She smiled inside. He knew exactly what she was doing.
Ian carried on, oblivious to Gem's actions "When Creepers lost his chance to make money, he got pissed and started making threats."
"And what did you do to Creepers? Kill him?" Gem asked. She couldn't decide if she cared either way. But the answer would give her an idea of how committed the deputy would be about covering his ass.
Ian turned his glare on her again. "No one was supposed to get hurt. Creepers had an accident on the way back to the center last night. He's alive, but I doubt he'll feel up to making any threats when he gets out."
"Nice. Clean. Hands off," Reid said, admiration in his voice.
Ian puffed his chest up, "Thank you. And," he grinned evilly, "I took care of that one personally."
Barry looked puzzled, his gaze going from Gem to his cousin and back again. Gem hoped he had more sense than the rest of his family and stayed quiet.
"And what possessed you to kidnap and haul us to Dayport?" Mark asked, his voice hard.
The sheriff frowned and turned to Ian. "Now that's something I want to know too."
"I had to do something. So I fired my two idiot cousins for being screw-ups. Then Uncle Jed and I hauled you to Dayport where he was to call Creepers to haul you back to juvie as runaways. Next thing I knew the sheriff here says that you guys were in the Dayport Public Library.
"That pissed Uncle Jed off. He followed you home and tried to take you guys out all on his own. That SUV incident had nothing to do with me. Of course, he screwed up there, too."
Ian snorted. "You've been a pain in the ass since I first laid eyes on you."
Gem stared at him. So that's it. She thought about it. "Were we in any danger from the stuff you spilt into the creek?"
Ian rolled his eyes. "Hell if I know. I've been storing chemicals for this company for years. Got myself a nice little retirement fund. But that last time, I'd had a little too much to drink. I hit the cement barrier and crashed my old truck." He glared at Barry. "Some of the jugs went into the creek. I got the containers back out, but a couple had cracked." He shook his head. "The company came and cleaned up the mess, but they needed to have an eye kept on the place and water samples taken every day. That's when you kids interfered."