by Kylie Brant
There was nothing to shield Paulsen now, and she fired her weapon as he headed for the shadows. Scrambled for cover when an answering shot came her way.
Drops pattered against the metal roof in an increased rhythm. The mist had changed to full-fledged rain now. Quickly she ran for the gloomy corner on the opposite side of the shed, passing through a glimmer from the light source as she ran. And felt the blood ice over in her veins.
The beetles and larvae covered the skeletal remains in the Plexiglas enclosure beneath the heat lamp. But from the size of the skeleton, she knew it was human.
There was a ninth victim.
She ducked as he shot again, and without conscious decision, aimed at the enclosure. Sprayed the glass with bullets.
Paulsen’s scream, when it came, was as agonized as Gibbs’s had been. “Nooooooo!”
Coolly she waited until he came toward the toppled enclosure, to where the beetles were pouring through the shattered Plexiglas. And this time when she fired, she aimed for him.
“Youbitchyoubitch. Oh, you fucking bitch!” His voice went strangled when her bullet caught him in the shoulder. His mewl of pain was surprisingly childlike. But he didn’t seem impaired when he fled for the door, firing behind him.
She chased him down. Away from the still-silent body of the deputy. Across the back of the property into the trees fringing it. And it wasn’t until she ran into the dense woods for several meters that she realized he’d led her into the forest.
This time she pressed Andrews’s number as she sprinted, trying to keep Paulsen in sight as he leaped over logs and dodged around stands of trees. “Gibbs is down. In the shed on Paulsen’s property. Chasing suspect through forest directly east of his shed.”
“I’ve got two cars on their way to Paulsen’s house,” the sheriff barked in her ear. “Estimated arrival time, ten minutes.”
“Send an ambulance.” She shoved the phone back in her jeans and continued running. She had a sneaking suspicion that an ambulance was too late for the deputy. But if he were alive, herding Paulsen off the property might keep him that way.
Cait wiped the rain from her face and tried to figure how far they’d gone. Spying a shadow of movement to her left, she headed toward it with renewed speed. When she wasn’t on a case, she trained at home. Ran five miles a day. The way her lungs were heaving, she’d gone nearly that far. And was totally and irrevocably lost.
She slowed, scanning the area ahead for a trace of Paulsen. If he was still there, he was hiding.
Halting behind a jumble of rocks, she hauled in a breath and tried to calm her breathing. And recognized just how easily she could be trapped here. The pines stretched overhead, an impenetrable wall of timber. Rocks and logs littered the forest floor, obstacles to the unsuspecting. The rain fell steadily from an uncaring sky to saturate the ground and slick the rocks.
And Paulsen had disappeared in the midst of it.
Squinting, she tried to get her bearings, but it was useless. In the shadows, the spot looked much like every mile she’d tromped with Zach. And as she scanned the area for signs of Jodie Paulsen, she had the fleeting thought that if she could have anyone at her side right now, it’d be Sharper.
When the bullet hit the rock beside her, a jagged piece flew up to hit her face. The next one caught her in the arm as she was diving away.
The bastard was behind her.
Circled around, most likely, waiting to ambush. Gritting her teeth against the gnawing agony tearing through flesh, she stumbled toward a large pine to take cover behind. And recognized in the course of that instant that the hunter had become the hunted.
The shots were coming faster. From a different weapon now. He had a shotgun.
She dodged from tree to tree, trying to find a good place for cover. A place to linger long enough to get a shot off.
But there was nothing but trees, many of the trunks too spindly to hide behind.
“It’s just you and me, Cait.”
Her steps faltered as she heard Paulsen’s voice. She dropped to crouch behind an outcropping of rock.
“You don’t know this forest like I do. Come out and I’ll tell you all about me and my sweetie.”
She searched the shadows crowding her from every side. Where the hell was he?
A flash of movement caught her eye and she fired. And felt an answering shot catch her in the shoulder. A curse tumbled from her lips as the flare of heat burst into pain.
“Hurts, don’t it? I won’t make you suffer when I end it, Cait. None of them suffered. It’s easy to snap a neck, did you know that? My father said he didn’t mean to snap Mother’s, but he paid for it all the same. Just like you’re going to pay for Sweetie being arrested.” That disembodied voice seemed to surround her. Hem her in. “I’ll bet you have a beautiful skull.”
There was a roaring in her ears as unconsciousness reared, was ruthlessly beaten back. And when she tried, she could hear a noise in the distance that wasn’t due to rain or ragged breathing.
The faint sound of traffic.
It was hard to summon logic through the agony. But highways ribboned through the forest. Hemmed it on a couple sides, didn’t it? And if she could lead Paulsen toward the highway, she had a better chance of summoning help.
She drew a deep breath. Then burst from her hiding place, spraying bullets in every direction. And stumbling in the direction she thought, hoped, would lead to safety.
Running made the pain grow jagged little fangs that gnashed at her flesh with merciless glee. Her only consolation was that he’d been shot, too. At least once.
But she knew she’d lose strength long before he did.
A bullet kicked up dirt only inches from her feet. With renewed energy, she weaved and dodged, fueled more by adrenaline than real strength.
If she could reach the stand of trees ahead, she’d have the cover she needed to return fire. If she could just . . .
And then the ground disappeared from beneath her feet. She felt herself falling. Landing in a graceless heap against unforgiving juts of rock. Her weapon bounced out of her hands as she lay there, stunned. Uncomprehending.
Darkness surrounded her. And the forest floor was cold, cold beneath her cheek. She tried to sit up, swayed. Understanding was slow to pierce the fog in her brain.
Ice on the floor. She inched over on her bottom, each movement requiring excruciating care until her searching hand made contact. Ice on the walls. It was a cave. What had Sharper called them? Sawyer’s Ice Caves. And she’d fallen through the keyhole of the largest one.
“Come out, come out, wherever you are.”
The ice from the walls seemed to transfer to her spine. She could hear Paulsen overhead. His whispers carrying in the darkness. She lay on her belly, spreading both arms to search the cave floor with frantic hands for her weapon.
“I’m going to feed your skull to my bugs. No time for more. Just your skull.”
With a thrill of exhilaration, she picked up what she thought was her weapon. Was only a rock. Her fingers clasped around it tightly. And then she waited. Barely daring to breathe.
“Ah.” She could here him moving on the forest floor of the roof of the cave. “Hurt yourself, didn’t you? I warned you, but you didn’t listen. They never do.”
She huddled in a ball, just inside the entrance of the cave. A few feet inside so she’d have the shadows for cover. Then he was blocking the entrance, crouched down to peer inside, the shotgun in one hand.
When he caught sight of her, he smiled. “I promise I’ll take the best of care with your skull. You’ll be my new favorite.”
She lunged. Swung the rock with all her might and struck him across the bridge of the nose. He howled, backed away frantically but slipped on the icy floor of the cave. Cait dove for the shotgun, and felt the shape of her weapon beneath her body. Reached for it.
When they fired, the two shots sounded as one.
Zach stared out at the damn rain moodily. The rain pissed him off. The mud he
’d slogged through up the drive to his house pissed him off. His mood, not the sunniest to begin with, had taken a decided downturn within minutes of entering JD’s when Joanie Barton had lasered her sites on him.
Normally the woman was too busy to toss him more than a casual hi. But despite the throng of people crowded inside the place, she’d had the time to march right up to him and read him the riot act.
About Caitlin Fleming, of all things.
Apparently his was guilt by association, and Cait’s sins, according to Joanie, were numerous. Supremely aware of the avid ears and sympathetic gazes all around him, he’d tried his best to soothe the woman, who’d been as close to hysterical as he’d ever seen her.
And when he’d figured out her outrage centered on Del being taken in for questioning, he could understand her wrath.
Barton? He was a cocky little shit, no doubt about it, but he’d rank about dead last on the suspect list in Zach’s book. He couldn’t imagine the man climbing a boulder, much less hiking up Castle Rock in the dead of night with a set of bones on his back. And since he’d been on the receiving end of one of the sheriff’s miscalculated interrogations himself recently, he’d been ready to empathize with Joanie and her husband.
Until she’d started in on Cait.
He shifted uncomfortably in the recliner. Well, hell, he could hardly stand there, could he, while the woman called Cait names he’d never heard come out of a female’s mouth before? Apparently coming to Cait’s defense made his a graver sin than hers had been.
He’d told her a few hard truths, and now he was banned from JD’s for life. Or until Joanie got over her mad, whichever came first. The way the woman could hold a grudge, he was betting on the former.
His cell rang and he considered not answering it at all. There wasn’t a person in the world he felt like talking to.
That thought was immediately revised when he checked the caller ID.
Cait.
Resisting the urge to rub his suddenly damp palms on his jeans, he answered. “Okay, I screwed up last night, but I’m guessing after the last hour I’ve had, we’re even.”
He waited for her response. “Cait?” He knew the call hadn’t been disconnected. He could hear her breathing. Thready and weak.
“Funny you were . . . the first I called. Funny, huh?” He frowned, straightening a bit in his chair. Had she been drinking? Her voice was slurred. “Should’ve . . . called Andrews. Told her. But wanted you. Should have had . . . you with me. Thought that. Before.”
“Where are you?” He was on his feet, heading for the mudroom for a rain slicker. “Are you okay?”
“Hurts. God it hurts.” Was that a laugh or a sob? Panic unleashed, galloped through him. “He’s dead, though. He’s dead. Both dead. Gibbs.”
“Gibbs is dead?” What was going on? He ran out the door. Down the slick board that served as a walkway. Yanking the hood of the slicker over his head, his boot slipped. Landed in the mud. “Where are you?”
“Sawyer’s. Ice. I ’membered.” Her voice was fading. And the fear inside him roared through his system. Thundered through his veins until it was a living breathing beast. “Fell. But I thought . . . of you. Why is that, Sharper?” He had to strain to hear the words as he turned the key in the ignition and flipped the Trailblazer into gear. “Why’s my last . . . thought of you?”
“You’re at Sawyer’s Ice Caves?” Fear made his voice rough. What the hell would she be doing there? “I’m coming to get you, baby. Just tell me. You’re at the caves?”
But there was no answer. No matter how many times he yelled her name, there was no answer.
And this time he couldn’t hear her breathing.
“You stay the hell clear of there, you hear me, Sharper?” Andrews sounded like she was issuing the order through clenched teeth.
Zach peered out into the night, between the swipe of the wipers on the windshield. “Fuck that. I’m going after her.”
“I’ve got men in the area, and I redirected them as soon as you called in. But you stay put. There’s an armed suspect in the region, and I don’t want you in the crossfire.”
“Then tell them to keep out of my way.” He clicked disconnect and dropped the phone to the seat. Clenched the steering wheel until his knuckles ached. And did the one thing he hadn’t done since coming back from Afghanistan.
Prayed.
“Cait!” The sweep of the Maglite was little help in the utter darkness of the forest. The wind blew the rain sideways, tiny needle pricks of bone-deep chill. The canopy of trees provided little protection as he went farther into the interior of the forest. “Cait!”
He checked the biggest of the caves first. And his bowels went to ice when he saw the body crumpled in the entrance. With his heart a hard knot in his chest, he pulled the figure over. Shone his light in what was left of the man’s face.
“Jesus.” He took a hasty step back. Jodie Paulsen? What the hell did Jodie have to do with this mess?
“Cait. Dammit.” Dread was trickling down his back to pool nastily at the base of his spine. Frantically he swept the area with the beam of the light. Took two steps away before comprehension slammed into him and he bounced the beam back to the small figure leaning against the base of a nearby pine.
“Cait!” Her lack of response was like having a spike drilled into his gut. He ran to kneel beside her, setting the Mag next to him so it bathed her in its beam. Her face was white. Deathly so. And her hands, when he lifted them to feel for a pulse, were frigid.
Her pulse was a mere flutter, but his relief was nearly overwhelming. That emotion dampened immediately when he noticed the blood covering her. Paulsen’s? Or her own?
His hands shook as he ran them over her, halting when she moaned. And when he saw the blood cover his palms, he felt true fear for the first time in years.
Her eyelids fluttered. “Sharper.” And miraculously she smiled a bit. “I knew . . . you’d . . . find me.”
Rapidly he shed his slicker, pulled his shirt over his head and began ripping at its seams for makeshift bandages. “That’s right, baby, I found you. I’ll always find you.”
Fear lodged in his stomach like molten lead as he pressed the cloth against her wounds to stanch the blood loss. He just hoped like hell that he hadn’t found her too late.
Epilogue
ONE MONTH LATER
“So you’ve got all the remains identified?”
Cait cocked an eyebrow at Adam Raiker, who was roaming the length of the lab, the head of his heavily carved cane clasped in one scarred hand. “All but one. I told you that on the phone yesterday.”
He turned to look at her with his lone eye, the patch over the other making him look like a modern-day pirate. “It’s been twenty-four hours since we spoke. What have you been doing?”
“Slacking off,” she said mildly. “Same thing I’ve been doing the last four weeks.”
He gave a bark of laughter, and her gaze was drawn to the jagged scar bisecting his throat. She wasn’t about to complain about a couple bullet wounds to him. Not after all he’d suffered when his last case for the Bureau had gone so wrong.
“Fired a gun yet?”
“Went to a range yesterday.” Against the express orders of her doctor. But she’d been driven to reassure herself that her shoulder injury hadn’t impaired her ability to shoot. Raiker would never allow one of his investigators into the field again who couldn’t fire a weapon.
The door to the lab pushed open and Barnes stepped in. Stopped short when he saw she wasn’t alone.
“Mitch Barnes, Adam Raiker.”
The deputy surprised her by going up to the man for a solid handshake. “It’s an honor, sir.”
“Deputy. Sorry to hear about your man.”
Barnes’s face clouded for a moment. “It’s hard to lose one.”
Cait felt a hitch in her chest at the thought of Tony Gibbs. The cruisers Andrews had sent to Paulsen’s place had arrived much too late to save the deputy. And it would
be a long time before she’d stop second-guessing herself. Wondering what she could have done differently. If there was a way that would have spared Gibbs’s life.
“Let it go.”
At Raiker’s quiet command her gaze flew to his. Saw the understanding in his expression. She appreciated the thought but wished it were as easy to comply with.
“The sheriff got word from the feds. They’ve traced the accounts Barton was bouncing the bank transfers to. They all ended in the Caymans.”
Cait felt a flicker of surprise. “The travel information found in Paulsen’s place was for Belize.”
Mitch folded his arms across his chest. “I’m betting Barton was planning to end-run Paulsen. Promise to meet up with him in one location and split the take, but head for a different country altogether and keep the whole thing for himself. And at the rate he’s going, he’ll have the whole thing pinned on Paulsen before it goes to trial.” Mitch moved back a step to lean against the counter. “According to him, it was all Jodie’s idea, which is pure BS because Paulsen just didn’t have the mental capacity to carry this thing out.”
“The forensics on the computers we can link Barton to will be incriminating. His lawyer might be able to dance around the spyware installed on the computers’ resorts, but finding the exact same software installed on those in his Internet café will be a bit more difficult to explain.” And Gavin Pounds had explained to her, in mind-numbing detail, just how the spyware he’d installed remotely to the victims’ home computers could be traced back to Barton, as well. “We don’t have him for the killings, but he isn’t going to be able to dodge the kidnapping charges. He hasn’t been able explain his absences that correspond to the days the victims disappeared. Especially when the farmer, Tim Jenkins, is willing to swear that Jodie Paulsen was doing chores twice a day for him every day for the last ten years, with the exception of a day or two.”
Barnes looked a little green at her words. She knew he was remembering her theory that after defleshing the bones, Paulsen had likely fed the remaining tissue and organs to the pigs he’d tended. They’d found the bone saw in the shed that matched the TPI measurements she’d done on the skeletal remains. Barnes had brought Kristy to the site while Cait was in the hospital to take a soil sample inside the structure.