Brides of Bannack Box Set: Mail Order Bride

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Brides of Bannack Box Set: Mail Order Bride Page 66

by Natalie Dean


  However, for the case of the rich kid, he had picked them up. He would be promptly dealt with should he have been driving. Adrianna, on the other hand, knew exactly what to do. The moment she recognized the face of the main cop—the biker—she gunned it.

  The engine roared, the tires spun, and they zoomed towards the barricade. It was a sizeable blockade—several fake cop cars lined up. If they’d happened upon a small city car, Adrianna would have had literally no faith in being able to bust through. However, since they’d come across such a monster pickup, the cop cars didn’t stand a chance.

  The truck slammed into the first car as the killers scattered. The grille smashed through the car without hardly a jolt, but the second car made it stutter for a second. The truck crawled over the carcasses and they were on their way, with broken sirens screaming angrily.

  Before they were gone, Adrianna rolled down the window and gave the killers the middle finger salute. They opened fire on the back of the truck, but by that time, they were too far gone. Only a few bullets hit them, although one did shatter the back window.

  “Bye, boys!” Adrianna yelled back. She had no idea if they could actually hear her, but it made her feel hardcore to say it.

  But then she realized that they hadn’t really missed. The low tire alarm appeared on the dash. A tire must have been blown. She glanced in the mirror. The monster back left tire was flapping madly.

  “We need to stop!” the kid yelled. “That’s not good for my truck.”

  “Uh,” The Celtic said, speaking for the first time. “I don’t think that’s an option.”

  “Why not?” the kid protested, apparently more concerned about his car. “We’ve left them behind!”

  “Because those weren’t their only cars,” The Celtic said right about the time that four cars roared around the corner behind him.

  Chapter 9

  Time appeared to slow down for Adrianna. The squealing tires of the cars rounding the corner behind them, closing in. The flapping, flat tire slapping up against the rim. The kid screaming at an impressively high pitched voice.

  You know, Adrianna’s brain said as time drifted to nearly a stop, I didn’t expect this stuff to happen when I took this assignment. She hadn’t. She’d expected your typical, routine bad-guy-catching. She’d track him using her powers. Catch him. Bring him back. Get her agency in the news. Good stuff. Maybe get into the lottery for a pay raise (yeah, right).

  But then she had to get to grips with her situation. It was funny. Of all the time she’d spent on that crazy assignment, that exact moment is when everything got real clear for her. The Celtic was in the back, jumping up for something. Maybe he was trying to get a better look at their pursuers. She didn’t know. The kid was beside her, screaming unintelligible things.

  And she realized that their lives were in her hands.

  If she failed, nobody would ever now what happened to them. You’d think FBI agents were pretty hard to get rid of without anyone getting suspicious, but the most obvious contender would be none other than The Celtic. She could see it now: Runaway Killer Murders Prize FBI Agent?

  Really, there wasn’t any other option but to succeed. Luckily, Adrianna thrived under pressure.

  They wanted to kill them?

  Come. And. Get. Her.

  She gunned the engine. The truck powered through its flat tire and roared off. The cars chasing them were going to catch them. If their getaway truck hadn’t been damaged, they might have stood a chance, but slowed like they were, they weren’t going to outrun anyone anytime soon.

  “Drive!” yelled The Celtic. “Drive, drive, drive!”

  “That’s what I’m doing!” she yelled back.

  “Oh my God!” screamed the kid. “We’re gonna dieeeee!”

  “Shut up!” Adrianna said sweetly.

  One out of four cars roared up beside them. Adrianna promptly cut the wheel towards him. He didn’t see that tactic coming and swerved off the road. He plowed a fence and slammed into a tree. Although the car didn’t explode into a ball of flame like Adrianna had been hoping, the driver did sail out of the window.

  “Did you see that?” yelled Adrianna childishly. “That was awesome!”

  And then the other car, which had been sneaking up on her, shot at her. The first bullet slammed into the radio, which somehow turned it on to an ear-shattering volume playing a classic rendition of You Ain’t Nothing but A Hound Dog by Elvis Presley.

  The second bullet, however, missed the radio and shot Adrianna in the forearm.

  Getting shot really doesn’t hurt at first because the shock’s just starting to kick in. Then, after a moment, it feels like someone has jabbed a red-hot poker into your arm.

  She swerved towards him, but he had seen that already, so he slammed on the brakes and avoided being run off the road.

  “Bikes!” The Celtic yelled.

  She twisted around to see two killers jump into the pickup bed from bikes. The bikes flew away, but the two men were standing in the bed, so they didn’t need them anymore.

  Adrianna slammed on the brakes, sending one guy flying over the top of the cab. For a second, Adrianna felt pretty sure that he was going to get all the way over the front and get run over, but at the last second, his hand shot out and caught the bumper right in front of the right light. His legs were dragging along the ground, but he drew his gun and started firing away at them.

  The window splintered from the bullets. Adrianna fumbled with the controls and switched on the lights. For the first time in history, the high-powered LED lights did something helpful and blinded the guy. He fired off a couple more shots randomly, yelled, and fell off.

  They felt a brief bump as they ran him over.

  “Oh my God!” screamed the kid, who was by that time firmly in the grasp of shock.

  “You ain’t nuthin’ but a hound dog!” Elvis accused from the radio loudly.

  Meanwhile, while everyone had been distracted by the guy hanging off the bumper, the other biker jumped into the back seat from the broken window. In the flashes of his face that Adrianna got, she recognized him as the creepy biker that had tracked her at first.

  The Celtic, startled, didn’t react at first. After that split second of surprise, he tore into the biker like a mad dog. For the first time, Adrianna got to see his fighting first hand. She’d seen little clips of him as she studied the target, but that was against another professional fighter.

  The biker was a capable and tough man, but up against The Celtic, he didn’t stand much of a chance. The fight was brief but ferocious. Even hampered by his gunshots, The Celtic was fearsome. Adrianna felt just a flash of surprise, and pride in The Celtic.

  Although The Celtic was winning, the biker was much bigger of a man, so he had the upper hand strength-wise. He shoved The Celtic against the door. Adrianna couldn’t see much because of her position as the driver, but the next thing she knew, the back door was open and the biker had been tossed out.

  The last car still trailing them swerved to avoid hitting the biker, overcorrected, and ditched itself between some pines. That was the last of them, for now.

  “You ain’t nuthin’ but a hound dog,” Elvis said, and then the song cut off. The respite was tragically brief, though, as another sound came blaring on equally loudly afterwards. The kid tried to turn it off with shaking hands to no avail.

  “Hey, you’re bleeding,” said The Celtic, leaning up between Adrianna and the kid to see better.

  “Yeah, one of them shot me. I’ll be fine.” She winced, but she hid it. “Went straight through.” She caught sight of his face, which was bruised up. The biker guy hadn’t gone quietly off into the night. “Oh jeez.”

  “It looks worse than it feels,” he assured. She didn’t doubt it. He had years of experience getting his face bashed up.

  She pressed her forearm against her inner thigh. It was barely bleeding. Luckily, the guy hadn’t been too good of a shot. She’d been scared he might have gotten her badly.

>   She looked back towards the door. The truck wasn’t going to like it, but it would make it. Luckily, she was a good enough driver to make it the next ten or so miles to town. She had no doubt that they would make it. She’d known it was too easy for them to bust through the fake barricade, but she doubted that they had any more men up their sleeves… yet. Sure, The Owl would probably round up some more, but they would be relatively safe in the city.

  “You okay?” she asked the kid. Miraculously, he hadn’t been injured whatsoever. She would’ve been crushed with guilt if something had happened to him.

  He nodded silently, eyes wide.

  “We’ll get you in to the police when we get into the city,” she told him. “They’ll take care of you.”

  “W-what… what are you two g-gonna do?” he stuttered. “You taking him in?”

  Sometimes it amazed her to see how ordinary people reacted to her everyday life. Sure, it wasn’t every day that she got into an outrageously dangerous car chase, but it wasn’t rare either.

  But he’d asked a question, one that she didn’t want to answer because she didn’t know yet. She couldn’t turn The Celtic over. If anything, the last day or so had proved to her that he wasn’t safe with the general public. She had no choice but to keep him off the grid.

  “We’re going to a safe house,” she finally said.

  The Celtic’s eyes widened in surprise, but he didn’t speak. Instead, he sat back in the seat as they drove on into the city.

  Chapter 10

  Descending into the city was a bit of a culture shock for Adrianna. She went from way out in the middle of nowhere with no electricity or common conveniences whatsoever to the city, where everything that anyone could possibly want happened daily.

  At first, it was just a couple houses, their owners woefully unaware of the killers lurking in the forest mere miles away. Then there was a convenience store, and then a little while later, a bar. Soon, buildings were springing out of the ground left and right until nearly all the precious greenery had been replaced with buildings.

  As soon as she could, they ditched the truck. They parked it off the road somewhere on the outskirts of the city.

  “We can’t leave my truck,” protested the kid, who had admittedly pulled the unlucky straw that night. He’d probably been headed to a party somewhere based on his appearance and breath (he smelled drunk) and he’d had the awful luck of coming across The Celtic and Adrianna. “It’s very expensive.”

  “You can come back for it,” Adrianna said, handing him the keys. “But we can’t take it with us.”

  “Why not?” he protested. “Someone’s gonna steal it!”

  “It’s too bad if they do,” Adrianna said, “But those guys that are chasing us are looking for it.”

  “….Oh.”

  She winked. “There ya go. Don’t worry. I’ll get the agency to pay for repairs since you basically saved our lives. It’ll all be back to new once we get this all wrapped up.”

  “How long is that gonna be?”

  She hesitated. She actually had no idea how long it would take to bring down The Owl. He was obviously clever. He had avoided detection for years. Adrianna was fairly high up in the agency. There weren’t long lists of things she didn’t know, but she had never even heard of The Owl. Moreover, she wasn’t confident that Stone would believe her. More than likely he’d take a month or two to figure out whether he should take her seriously.

  “I’ll look into it,” he’d grumble when she would tell him, but she knew better. He never looked into it. She had no idea how he’d kept his position after all those years. Sure, he would eventually, but it would take him entirely too long to discover that there really was a murderous cult of thugs working for a mysterious top dog, apparently killing off professional fighters systematically.

  So they left the truck and continued on foot for a little while. Finally, after about ten minutes of walking, they were in the city. It felt good to see dozens of people around. Adrianna had never loved the city. In fact, she’d been born and raised a country girl. She’d gone to public school and had internet at her house and all that… but she wasn’t a creature of the city. It was a strange and unsettling experience for her to actually be thankful for everyone bustling around her. If anyone caught them, they would be pretty hesitant to open fire in such a crowded place. At least, that’s what Adrianna was hoping.

  They split ways after getting into the city. The Celtic and Adrianna stood from afar, watching the boy disappear into the police building.

  “Think he’s going to be okay?” The Celtic asked.

  Adrianna sighed and was reminded about her rib. The adrenaline of the last day had pumped through her enough so that she hardly had noticed. Now that she was starting to cool down, she started to feel it again. Luckily such an injury didn’t take too long to heal. A couple more days and she wouldn’t feel it at all.

  She was amazed they were still alive. Sure, in action movies all the heroes live, but in real life, it didn’t turn out that way. Humans weren’t all that tough. Take a bullet to the chest? You were probably going to die. Luckily, though, all the wounds they had endured were painful but not life-threatening.

  “Hello?” The Celtic said, waving a hand a foot or two in front of her. “You okay?”

  “Yeah,” she said. “Yeah, I’m fine.”

  She led him to the safe house. She had spare everything there: clothes, phone, food, antibiotics, you name it. More importantly, it was her safe house, not the FBI’s. If the Owl had a man on the inside, they wouldn’t know about it.

  But her biggest worry wasn’t really about The Owl. It was about the FBI. If Stone figured out that she had apprehended The Celtic and hadn’t turned him in to a ticker tape parade yet, he would not hesitate to send other agents after her. She had to be stealthy. Luckily, she knew how the FBI operated, so she felt relatively confident of her ability to fly under the radar.

  “Where are we going?” The Celtic finally asked after a good time of walking. “I thought once we got into the city, we wouldn’t have to deal with any more freakin’ walking.”

  “My safe house,” she said.

  He paused before speaking. “Why didn't you take me into the police station? We were right there.”

  “You’re right. The Owl would kill you, and I’m not interested in having that on my conscience.” She sounded professional, but maybe she was hoping that The Celtic had a plan to get out of this mess somehow. That he would manage to overpower her and escape, never to be caught by the long arm of the law. Or that he could prove his innocence. She had no doubt that he was innocent. The more she was around his aura, the more confident she was that she could trust his word. In court, though, “a hunch” or a “gut feeling” didn’t tend to fly too high.

  No, she couldn’t take him into the officials. They had to clear his name.

  She couldn’t believe she was even entertaining the idea. People had a name for what she was doing: treason. A nasty word with a nasty punishment. If she didn’t have her powers, if she wasn’t so confident that he was innocent, and if she wasn't having these feelings of attraction toward him, she would never have considered the idea of treason. She’d get to that spare phone in her apartment and dial the agency, identify herself, and turn him in.

  But she was starting to like The Celtic. She was starting to enjoy his company. The way he grinned like a big idiot. How he was strong but gentle. How he complained about stepping in some gum on the pavement worse than he did about getting shot.

  Maybe in another time they wouldn’t have been on the opposite side of the law. In that wonderful, unrealistic world… maybe Adrianna wouldn’t be averse to being more than just friends, and she had a sneaking suspicion he felt the same way.

  Oddly, though, neither one said anything the entire trip. Her house, luckily, was a short walk away. It was probably the only thing that had gone right for her the entire time. She didn’t have to fight for it. She didn’t have to put her life on the line.
It just… was. It felt nice.

  Her safe house in Calidad was her favorite. She had three or four of them all across the world, but her favorite was right there in Calidad. It was a quaint, little house; looking at it, nobody would suspect anyone but a nice, young family lived there. It was painted a crisp but not overpowering red with an affordable roof and quality windows. Finally, to top it off, it had an accent wall of brick.

  “Oh,” The Celtic said as they arrived. “That’s nice.”

  “Built it myself,” she said proudly. It wasn’t something she got to say too often. Nobody in the world knew about that safe house except for her and The Celtic, and maybe if someone was determined enough at the city. “Well, not all of it, but the pretty parts.”

  “Impressive,” he said, nodding his head in respect.

  They walked up the stone pathway, past a hippie garden gnome with his two fingers giving a peace sign. The Celtic looked at it for a second but didn’t say anything.

  They came to the door, which had an extremely specific lock on it. If anyone screwed it up, it would immediately send an alarm to the police. She’d though it was a good idea at the time—ward off any thugs trying to get in. She hadn’t, however, considered the possibility that she herself would type it in wrong. Every time she entered it (which wasn’t often), she was thinking she hoped she didn't accidentally set off the alarm, alerting the cops.

  She typed in the code and waited for one heart-pounding moment. Luckily, the numbers flashed green. She was in. The cops weren’t coming, which would have been a tragic and rather humiliating end to their adventure. Hiding away from the law with a wanted fugitive based on a gut feeling didn’t work too well when you called the cops to your door.

  The door swung open, letting in a waft of chilly air. The benefits of living in a chilly part of the world was pretty near endless to her—nice temperatures, you weren’t sweating all the time, snow was cool, all that stuff. But there were a few flaws, namely that buildings got cold without a heater.

 

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