by C. J. Miller
“Why don’t I stay here with Carey and the rest of the family can go?” Reilly asked. A night with Carey wasn’t a hardship. He could think of a number of things they could do alone.
Carey frowned. If she knew the ideas racing through his mind, she’d be smiling, agreeing to stay with him. “Then you won’t be with your family. I’ll be fine alone. I have lots of things I need to catch up on.”
“Like?” Reilly asked, knowing she’d be bored and lonely.
Carey glowered at him. “I could paint my nails. Or read a book. Or get some extra sleep.”
Reilly wasn’t leaving her alone. “I’ll stay with you. The rest can go.” It was a party. Missing it wasn’t a big deal. “Dad has the cameras hooked up and I’ll keep the alarms on. We’ll be safe.”
Doc nodded at his son. “It’s your choice.”
“We can stop in for a short while, and then we’ll come back to the ranch and spend the rest of the evening with you two,” Jane said.
Brady and Harris mumbled their agreements. The best of both worlds—time alone with Carey and time with his family. “Carey and I will have fun. Don’t worry about us.”
* * *
“Do you really not mind missing the party?” Carey asked after his family had left with promises they’d return soon.
“A couple of hours alone with you? Better than any party I can think of,” Reilly said, sitting next to her on the couch, slipping his arm around her.
The sultry hum of anticipation floated in the air. Alone in a safe place with Reilly. A sense of calm washed over her—everything was going to be okay.
The smell of hot cider drifted from their mugs and the crackling fire warmed the room. This was the best Christmas she’d had in a long while, maybe ever.
Carey brought her mug to her lips and jolted when an alarm rang, sending cider down the front of her. The shrillness of the sound petrified her. In the time she’d been with the Trumans, she’d never heard one of his father’s alarms trip.
Terror slammed into her. Mark had truly found her this time.
Reilly was on his feet in moments, setting his cup down and taking her hand. “Monitoring console’s in my dad’s office. Maybe an animal tripped one of the alarms.”
“It’s Mark. He’s found us.” Her legs shaking with fear, she followed Reilly, her hand tucked in his. The smell of smoke wafted through the house. A fire. A chilling sense of panic tore through her.
Reilly must have caught the scent of the fire, too, and raced faster, entering Doc’s office and scanning the video monitors and alarms. He flicked a red switch at the console.
Carey looked at the monitors, searching for the source of the problem. Where was the fire? Where was Mark? She didn’t see anyone else on the screens, but she knew Mark was out there, somewhere, lying in wait. How could they escape without Mark finding them? Was he inside the house? Or lurking outside in the dark?
Reilly dialed the combination lock on a wall safe and opened it, pulling out two guns. One he slid into his back pocket and the other he palmed in his hand. “I hit the panic button. I want the family back here. The alarm will notify the fire and police departments, as well. I need to get you to the safe house.”
“He’s going to kill me. He won’t leave here until I’m dead.”
Reilly shook his head. “He has to get through me first. We’re going to be okay.” Carey recognized the determination in his eyes. Reilly continued, “Mark can’t be everywhere at once. The fire’s on the west side of the house. Stay at my side until we get to the safe house under the barn. Once I secure you, do not open the door for anyone. Stay inside until I come get you.”
He was already moving and she ran to catch up with him. “Where are you going to be?”
“I’ll handle this,” Reilly said, his voice tight. “I’ll keep you safe.”
Could anyone keep her safe? After all the Trumans had done, Mark had found a way to get to her.
The smell of smoke grew thicker in the air. “What are you planning to do?” she asked, straining to speak through the smoke that had replaced oxygen in the room.
Reilly dragged her to her knees and they crawled toward the back door in the kitchen. Even the air near the floor burned her lungs as she inhaled.
“I’m going to get you somewhere safe and then I’m going to end this once and for all.” Reilly reached for the dead bolt on the door leading outside and snapped it open. His hand moved to the door handle.
Carey looked out into the dark. “It’s not safe out there. We don’t know where he is.” Did they have a few minutes to wait for the fire department to arrive? As if in response to her silent question, the roar of the fire grew louder, stronger.
Reilly pulled open the door and fresh air invaded her lungs. He helped her to her feet and they rushed to the end of the porch. “I’m doing everything I can, Carey. Please trust me. We need to run as fast as we can toward the barn. I won’t let go of your hand, okay?”
Carey nodded, fear so taut in her throat she couldn’t speak.
Snow soaked through her socks as they ran. Reilly was sure on his feet, keeping her standing when hers skidded out from under her. Cold air bit into her lungs and the smell of smoke clung to the air. A few of the outdoor lights were on and the plowed path gave them some guidance in the dark.
The barn was in sight, the light over the door burning bright, beckoning to them. Only ten yards to go. Once they were inside, she would insist Reilly wait with her. She wasn’t letting him stash her somewhere safe and then put himself at risk. She wouldn’t lose him now. He meant too much to her.
A blast shuddered through the night. The house collapsing under the weight of the fire? What if they had left seconds later? Carey looked over her shoulder and lost her balance, but this time, Reilly didn’t keep her upright. Whirling toward him in surprise, she found him kneeling on the ground clutching his shoulder.
“Reilly? What is it?” she asked, straining to see in the light projected from the barn. “We’re almost there.”
He brought his hand away from his shoulder, his fingers covered in blood. What had happened? What did she need to do to stop the bleeding? “Can you make it the rest of the way?” Could she drag him? Carry him? Did the safe house have bandages for treating injuries?
“Go, Carey. Just go. I’m right behind you.”
Hysteria billowed inside her. “No! I’m not leaving you.” She bent down at his uninjured side and hefted his arm over her shoulders. “Come on, we’re going together.”
She struggled to stand under his weight. They made it two steps and then Reilly collapsed. Terror for Reilly clawed at her chest. Where was help? He’d hit the panic button! Kneeling at his side, she pressed her hands over his shoulder to try to stop the blood. Reilly groaned but didn’t open his eyes.
“Reilly, please, stay with me. We’re going to be fine.” She had to believe that. Had to trust help would come.
A hand clamped around her midsection, yanking her to her feet and snapping her forcefully around. Carey’s eyes went to her assailant’s face, terror clutching her heart, making it impossible to breathe and impossible to scream.
Mark’s eyes blazed with rage. She had no doubt in her mind. He was going to kill her.
Chapter 13
Carey had known Mark would never let her get away from him and live. Her world collapsed around her as every nightmare came to life. Reilly was injured. The Trumans’ house was destroyed. She’d brought hurt and anguish to the people who had tried to protect her.
Foremost, terror for Reilly’s life swamped her. She had to help him. She couldn’t leave him in the snow, in the dark, alone. How long before someone found him? What could she do to help him?
Mark’s arm locked around her waist. He pressed a gun into her side, hard enough that pain shot up her still fragile ribs. “Hey there, doll. I’ve been looking for you. Don’t scream or I’ll open fire on your boyfriend. I don’t care who dies as long as you’re among them. Although it was amusing to watch
you try to help him.” Still clasping her to him, Mark reached to Reilly’s limp hand and took his gun, throwing it away into the dark.
Fear sent her heart racing and alarm bells shrieking in her mind. She couldn’t let Reilly die because of her. She clung to the hope that Reilly was unconscious, not dead, and help was on the way. He couldn’t bleed to death. Reilly had to be okay.
If she let Mark take her, would he leave Reilly alone? Reilly’s family would be there soon. They would find him and help him.
Mark dragged her away from Reilly, toward the bare fields behind the barn. Is this how it ended for her? Dying at Mark’s hands on a cold, dark field? What would keep him from killing her and then going back for Reilly and the Trumans? She closed her eyes and determination filled her chest.
She was not going down without a fight. She was Haley Leone. She was a fighter. A survivor. She’d run away and forgotten who she was—but this is where it stopped. She’d protect the Trumans and herself—or die trying.
She had so much to live for, so much she needed to do. She had to tell Reilly she loved him. She was in love with Reilly Truman. Not having said the words to him and knowing she might never get to say them struck her as deeply unfair. Categorically wrong. A lot of bad things had happened to her in the last year, but this one seemed like the worst.
She stumbled, stalling for time. Mark jerked her upright. “Don’t try it. I’ll put a bullet in your head and then I’ll kill your detective.”
Her mind screamed in protest. She wouldn’t let that happen. She would find a way out of this without getting Reilly killed.
“You’ve put me through a lot of trouble,” Mark said, dragging her to an area hidden by the Trumans’ barn. “I don’t appreciate that.”
She took several deep breaths. Trickery? Lies? How would she get away? “Mark, I’m so glad you found me. I’ve been hiding from the feds.”
He threw back his head and let out a sharp bark of laughter. “Nice. You’re still a liar. Doesn’t matter what load of bull you try to feed me. I can’t trust you.”
Her mouth was dry, the cold making her eyes water. “Yes, you can. I was trying to protect us by hiding until you got my dad’s businesses in the clear and the feds stopped poking around.”
“Cut the bull. You know too much and you could put me in prison for a long time. Did you think I would let you live after you ran away?”
She tried again. “I was running for us.”
Mark struck her across the face with the back of his hand and released her. The impact sent her reeling. She fell to the ground.
“Stop lying.”
Carey tasted blood in her mouth. “You don’t have to do this.”
“I loved you, Haley. I would have given you a life fit for a queen.”
He’d never loved her. He’d loved the things her father had given him, the lifestyle he’d been granted by being associated with her family. Mark was right about the material things he would provide, things bought with money earned from her father’s businesses, with dirty, blood money. It made her ill to think about it. She glared up at him. “Everything you do, you do for yourself. You never cared about my father or me. You cared about the money. I’ve had to give up everything to get away from you. My friends. My family. My home. You hurt me and you hurt the people around me. What about Tracy? Why did you kill her? She didn’t have anything to do with why I ran.”
Mark’s eyes glinted. “She lied to me and she paid for those lies. And now so will you.”
Carey had given up her dreams and hopes for the future. Mark didn’t deserve to take those things away from her. No one did. She wanted a future with Reilly. She wanted her life back. “You’re going to regret what you’ve done. You’re going to regret hurting me.”
Was it unreasonable hope or did she hear sirens in the distance? Someone had to find Reilly and help him. She pushed herself to her feet. She needed to protect herself and keep Mark from hurting Reilly further. Was there anything around she could use as a weapon? Why hadn’t she thought to ask for a gun when they were in Doc’s office?
Mark stepped closer to her. “Letting you live is the only regret I’d have. You brought this on yourself. Look at me, Haley.”
He used the barrel of the gun to force her to look at him. She lifted her head slowly, half expecting him to strike her again.
“I’ll remember you this way.” His hand caressed her cheek and she jerked her head away.
He tsked. “Don’t be like that. Not when I went through the trouble of arranging a surprise for you.”
The way he said the word surprise, she knew he intended to end her life. Should she scream? Even if the police had arrived, would anyone hear her over the noise of the raging fire? Would she draw someone else here, someone Mark would kill? She set her jaw. She wouldn’t scream, but given the chance, she’d defend herself. “Are your lackeys here to take care of me? You never could face anyone alone.”
Mark smirked at her. “No, this time I have a partner. Didn’t even have to hire him. He was more than happy to help me.”
The Vagabond Killer stepped from the side of the barn to stand next to Mark. “Hello, Haley. I have dreamt of this moment. I’m John, your savior.”
A cold sweat broke out over her body. She recognized his face immediately and the name... John? John Sundry? The Denver police had had the right man in custody. The Vagabond Killer knew her name—her real name. He knew who she was. Fear shook her insides, made her entire body tremble.
“I said hello. The polite thing is for you to reply,” John said, anger hot in his voice.
Her vocal chords tightened, yet she managed to force out a word. “Hi.”
“Have you missed me?” John asked.
Mark stepped away and Carey had the insane impulse to grab on to him. She knew Mark. He wouldn’t hesitate to hurt her or kill her, but he wasn’t into torture. The Vagabond Killer had done some ugly, horrifying things to his victims.
Was she next?
“I m-missed you,” she croaked out, taking a step away from him.
Mark took a ball of twine from his pocket. “Hands behind your back or I’ll shoot you.” Ice glinted in his voice. How had she ever thought she loved this man? A man who could kill without mercy?
“No!” John shouted.
Mark turned slowly, his eyebrows raised. “You said you wanted time alone with her.”
The Vagabond Killer withdrew his knife. “Don’t touch her. She belongs to me. She is the only woman worthy of me.”
Carey’s eyes darted left and right, looking for a place to run. She was stuck between them; they could catch her fleeing. She would bide her time, waiting for an opening to take off.
“Fine, John. Do whatever you want to her. I’m finished with her.” Mark shoved his gun into the waistband of his pants.
“Finished with her?” The Vagabond Killer narrowed his eyes. “You said you didn’t know her. Who is she to you?”
“No one,” Mark said. “You’re paranoid.”
“You’re lying. I can see it. I can see the devil light in your eyes.” Without further provocation, the Vagabond Killer lunged at Mark, his knife extended. Mark caught the man’s wrist and the two were locked together in a struggle.
Carey had a chance to escape. A split second later, she raced in the direction of the burning house, the smell of burnt wood and ashes carrying to her nose.
Her foot caught in a hole and she stumbled to the ground, the frozen earth biting into her hands. She heard her name shouted from behind. She looked over her shoulder at the shadow moving closer. The Vagabond Killer was coming for her.
* * *
Reilly’s shoulder felt as if it had been half-cleaved off his body. The acrid smell of smoke hung thick in the air and despite his blurred vision and foggy mind, the situation came rushing back to him. The house was on fire. He’d been shot. Someone—Mark or the Vagabond Killer—had taken Carey. A man’s voice threatening her was the last thing he remembered. How long had he been out? Wa
s he too late? It was still dark. How much time had passed?
He had to help her. Nauseated and exhausted, Reilly reached for the strength to spur his body. Save Carey. Protect her. He dragged himself to his feet. The gun he’d had in his hand was gone, but the other was tucked against his back, pressing into his spine. He drew it out and mentally thanked his father for teaching him to carry backup.
He refused to think he was too late. The path in the snow led behind the barn. Struggling to remain conscious and ignoring the black spots that dotted his vision, Reilly followed the tracks.
He’d asked Carey to trust him. He’d promised he would keep her safe. All he needed was one good shot and the man was dead. He had to protect the woman he loved.
Love. He loved Carey. Maybe he’d loved her all along, but now, the emotion was crystal clear to him. So obvious, he didn’t know why he hadn’t named it before. Reilly couldn’t lose her. Not now. Not when he had plans for a future, plans to make her happy.
He focused on Carey, feeding off energy from the warmth and joy inside him at the thought of her. Letting it propel his legs and fuel his rage, he moved along the side of the barn, bracing himself against the wood.
The footprints in the snow continued around to the back of the barn. Reilly commanded his legs to keep moving as he grappled to remain conscious. A little farther to Carey. He wasn’t too late. He would find her.
Checking the bullets in his weapon, Reilly put it in his good hand. If it was the last thing he did, he would keep Carey safe.
* * *
Carey fought to stand and run, but the Vagabond Killer was on her in moments, pulling her to her feet. He wrapped his arms around her, pressing her to his chest. Struggling, she tried to break free.
Another shadow appeared on the field, a familiar figure. Relief flooded her. He wasn’t dead. “Reilly,” she screamed. “Run, Reilly.” However he had managed to get to her, he couldn’t risk his life now. He wouldn’t have had time to get medical treatment and was losing too much blood.
Had he heard her warning over the sound of the fire? If he’d heard, he didn’t heed it. He limped in her direction and she could read pain in every step. Her heart twisted in her chest. Reilly was prepared to die to protect her.