Double Danger

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Double Danger Page 1

by Trilby Plants




  Double Danger

  Trilby Plants & Nancy Tucker

  Copyright © 2017 by Trilby Plants & Nancy Tucker

  Cover Art

  Mackinac Bridge CCO License: mvanhartesvelt0, Pixabay.com

  Nick © stokkete, 123rf.com

  Alyssa © Alexandr Sherstobitov, 123rf.com

  All rights reserved under the International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the copyright owner.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, places, characters and incidents are either the product of the authors’ imaginations or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to any actual persons, living or dead, organizations, events or locales is entirely from our imagination.

  ISBN-13: 978-0-692-82515-0

  ASIN: B06X3W3TYV

  Dedication

  Our wish to all our readers: romance and adventure.—TP

  To my partner in this writing adventure, Trilby Plants, who kept saying, “What if they did this?” And then we wrote it down. Again and again. Without you, this project would never have seen the light of day. —NT

  Acknowledgments

  We came up with the idea for this story, but so many people had a hand in this book, from its birth twenty-some years ago to its final incarnation. Authors do not create in a vacuum. It truly takes a village.

  We originally shared parts of this story with Flint Area Writers. Thank you, Martha Allard, for saying “Pants did not come off. Pants must come off.”

  Thank you, Paula Huffman, for catching lots of inconsistencies. Your suggestions have proved invaluable. Thanks to Linda Cookingham, Lynda Durant, Wina Caldwell and Richard Lutman whose input helped shape the story.

  Thank you, William L. Coale, for a final, thorough proofread. You caught the nitty-gritty.

  Contents

  Double Danger

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Epilogue

  Thank You

  About the Authors

  Prologue

  Escanaba, Michigan

  Something was wrong, very wrong. Travis Nickels knew it the moment he stepped into the mudroom of his house. Darkness and warm, stale air greeted him. His wife Caroline always left a kitchen light on and liked to sleep in a cold environment, snuggled under a down blanket, even on a warm summer night like this. The AC wasn’t running. The kitchen was dark, the only light the digital display on the stove: 1:37.

  He toed off his wet shoes and crept to the kitchen door, his senses alert. He squeezed his eyes shut for a few seconds and then opened them to help his vision adjust to the darkness. Better. The only sound was the faint drip on the tile floor of rainwater off his jacket.

  He eased the backpack and his computer case onto the floor. Silence engulfed him. His stockinged feet made no sound as he crossed the kitchen and leaned against the wall beside the doorway.

  He started to whisper his wife’s name but held back and listened. Caroline had not answered his earlier phone call or text. Maybe she’d gone out with friends. She hated to be alone when he traveled. He was supposed to be on a plane to Detroit and from there, ostensibly, to Shanghai. In reality, he was headed to a classified location in South Korea.

  His flight was cancelled after a series of heavy thunderstorms rolled across the Upper Peninsula spawning a tornado that damaged an airport hangar and uprooted a few trees in town. His neighborhood along Little Bay de Noc was spared.

  A rustling sound from the living room froze him against the wall, his senses hyper-alert. Was it just the creaks and groans of an old house? Or the wind scratching a branch against a window? Imagination? No. A strange smell. A current of air where none should be.

  Travis tiptoed to the living room doorway. Streetlights cast a dim glow through the windows. Caroline was on the couch. Shadows made odd splotches all over her. Her head rested on a throw pillow, arms akimbo. A metallic odor wafted to him.

  “Caro –” he choked and gagged.

  Caroline, his beautiful wife, lay on the couch, her eyes staring into eternity. The shadows weren’t shadows. Her blond hair was matted with blood. Blood everywhere, on her clothes, the couch, the rug, the wall ….

  The analytical part of his mind, the part that screamed to survive, kicked in, but he could not run. He touched one of her wrists. Warm, no pulse, blood ran down one arm and dripped onto the rug.

  Her throat was cut. Her face bloodless. He wanted to look away but could not.

  Loss hit him in the gut. Adrenaline flooded his system, sped his heart until it hammered in his ears. Who would do this? Why?

  He reached for the phone in his jacket pocket.

  A floorboard creaked behind him.

  Christ. His gun was in his backpack.

  Muscular arms grabbed him, pinning his arms to his sides. A blur of a face in his peripheral vision. He kicked backward, connected with a shin. A knife flashed. Pain sliced through the left side of his chest, and he went down, didn’t feel himself hit the floor.

  Travis came to, one cheek pressed to the cold ceramic tile of the kitchen floor in a puddle of blood. The acrid odor of burning wood stung his nostrils. Thick smoke snaked under the closed basement door, and flames flickered around its edges.

  He tried to rise, pushed to his elbows and knees. His chest burned. His breathing was labored, wheezy. He sank back to the floor where the smoke was thinner, sucked in a shallow breath. The rotten egg smell of propane hit him. Next to him, a portable propane tank from the backyard grill was tipped on its side, the valve broken off. Gas hissed.

  Footsteps came toward him. A booted foot crunched into his ribs, and his mind went dark. Voices penetrated the darkness.

  “What about him?” A man’s tenor voice.

  “Leave him.” Another man, his baritone voice emotionless. “If he doesn’t bleed out, the fire’ll get him. We gotta go. Now.” The footsteps receded.

  Sometime later Travis struggled to awareness. The smoke was thicker. Hard to get a breath. He fought against the cough but couldn’t hold it in. Sharp teeth gnawed into his chest and shoulder. Blood bubbled into his mouth, and he spit it out. Bright red on the white tile. His chest gurgled, but he got enough of a breath to smell propane – stronger.

  Propane sank. When it spread to the flames, it would explode. The basement door was already charring.

  He had to move. Get out. God, Caroline. She didn‘t deserve this. It was his fault. He had brought the bastards to his home. He had to get out and get the men who did this.

  Travis rolled over and kicked the propane tank toward the living room, away from him, away from the flames. Maybe it would buy a few seconds.

  He pushed himself up on one elbow. Christ, it hurt. He sank again to the floor. He pressed his left arm against the wound in his chest, and using his right arm, hitched himself toward the mudroom. Pain grated in his chest. His hand slipped in the blood, and he hit the floor, holding back a scream.

  Get out, he thought. His only chance. He dragged
himself a few more inches.

  His hand fell on a cell phone. His. It was bloody, and the screen was cracked, but the light came on, enough to show the door to the mudroom. He fought the pain, twisted and stuck the phone in his back jeans pocket. Felt his handkerchief and covered his mouth and nose with it. It helped filter out some smoke. Helped him hold in the cough. An inch at a time, he pulled himself forward, through the mudroom door and then kicked it shut behind him.

  Ignoring the burning in his chest, he sucked in a breath and directed what energy remained into one last effort. He hauled himself to his knees and opened the back door. A great whump of sound propelled him outside. He landed hard, gasping for breath. Felt wet grass beneath his cheek, a weight on his back. The mudroom door. Handkerchief still clutched in his hand. The air smelled sweet.

  His ears rang, sound muffled. Agony flared in his chest. A deep breath was impossible. He crawled, leaving the door behind, away from the house, away from the fire. Had to stop, hard to breathe. He coughed again. Blood spattered the grass beneath his face.

  What was the point of going on? Caroline was dead.

  He rolled onto his back and gazed up at the dark sky. The back of the house had blown out, and the blaze filled the night with red flames.

  This was it. This was how he would die. Not halfway around the world hacking computer systems and helping strangers defect. He would bleed out in his backyard, drowning in his own blood.

  Cold seeped into his bones, like a northern Michigan winter. Crisp snow falling on pines. Snowball fights with Caroline ….

  Hands grasped his shoulders and legs, pulled him away from the house. A hot poker shot through his chest, and he fought against the darkness.

  Voices. “Gotcha, man … we’re here to help. You’re pretty lucky. We were out because of the storm, so we got here quick.”

  Travis forced his eyes open. Faces floated above him. Several people wearing dark blue shirts. Paramedics.

  “Where the hell’s the blood coming from?” A deep, gruff voice.

  The sound of cloth being cut. His jacket and shirt.

  “Jesus.” Gruff voice. “He’s been stabbed.”

  A hand on his forehead. Another voice. “Stay with us, Travis.” Someone who knew him. “We’ll get you in the ambulance.”

  Travis tried to shake his head, wasn’t sure it moved.

  “No,” he said. Barely any sound. Blood filled his mouth. Someone leaned close to him, wiped his face and mouth.

  “We’re putting you on a gurney, Travis. Hang in there.”

  “Caroline,” Travis said, reaching toward his house.

  “What?” One of the paramedics held an IV bag above Travis. “Where is she?”

  “Inside.” Out of the corner of his eye Travis caught sight of the firefighters converging on the back of the house, hoses blasting water, as the gruff-voiced paramedic raced to tell them there was someone inside. Travis couldn’t say what he knew: Caroline was dead. He couldn’t bring the thought forward into words.

  Hands lifted him. A great weight on his chest: a paramedic pressing on his wound.

  Travis grunted. “Hurts.”

  “I know, buddy,” said the paramedic, a woman. “We got to stop this bleeding. They’re sending a chopper from Marquette.”

  “No,” Travis said, his voice barely a whisper. “No.” He tried to sit up, but hands held him down, and he had no strength to resist. “Call Will Stevens. Deputy Stevens. Get him here.”

  “He’s coming.” A new voice, clipped and brusque. Travis saw the uniform – state trooper. “I texted him. He’s on his way.”

  The paramedic at his side glared at the trooper. “There’s no time.”

  Travis gritted his teeth. “Got to talk to Will. Then I’ll go.” He turned his head. Despite the firefighters’ work, flames engulfed his house.

  Someone jostled the gurney. Travis groaned and tried to maintain his grip on consciousness. A sharp sting in his arm.

  “Got a line in,” someone said. A face close to his. “This should help the pain. Can’t give you much, but it should help.” He shot something into the IV.

  Dizziness washed over Travis. An oxygen mask covered his nose and mouth, and the pain receded a bit. The coldness in his limbs crept toward his center.

  “Okay?” A disembodied voice.

  Travis tried to nod. “Yeah,” he finally managed.

  “You’re going to feel a lot of pressure on the side of your chest,” the paramedic said. “It’ll help you breathe.”

  Strong hands held Travis’ wrists and ankles. A hot poker stabbed his side.

  “Shit.” Did he say that out loud, or only think it? He inhaled an easier breath.

  “Better?” the paramedic said.

  “Yeah.” Travis voice was stronger.

  He looked toward the house. Smoke-diffused flames silhouetted a knot of shadows – firefighters. A clump of smoldering debris landed on the lawn, and someone stomped it out.

  “Where’s Will?”

  A hand touched Travis’ bare shoulder. “Here,” he said.

  Travis flinched and groaned. “Will.” He reached up and pulled off the oxygen mask. Forced himself to remain in the moment long enough to talk to his friend.

  “Hey,” said the paramedic. “You need that to breathe.”

  Travis shook his head. “A minute.”

  “Is he … burned?” Will said.

  “No,” said the paramedic. “Smoke inhalation. Maybe some broken ribs. He got out somehow before the fire got going. He’s lost a lot of blood, and he’s not stable.”

  “His wife?” Will said.

  The paramedic shook his head slightly and nodded to the house.

  Will bent on one knee next to the gurney. “What the hell happened, Trav?”

  “Talk,” Travis said. “Private.”

  Will turned to the people who hovered nearby. “Can you all back off?”

  The paramedic holding the IV bag frowned and set the bag on Travis’ chest. “One minute,” she said. “If he nods off, he goes in the bus.”

  Will nodded as everybody moved a few feet away without taking their eyes off Travis.

  “Trav?”

  Travis opened his eyes, raised his right hand and tried to grab Will’s T-shirt, but there was no strength in his fingers. Will’s sheriff’s deputy badge was pinned to his shirt. Odd, Will not being in uniform.

  Will took his hand. “You were supposed to be on a plane.”

  “Canceled,” he said. “Caroline. She’s … she’s … You have to –” He coughed, gritted his teeth and fought to stay awake.

  “You got to let them take you, buddy,” Will said.

  “In the house. Waiting.”

  “Who?”

  “Don’t know.” Travis tried to swallow, but grief had parched his throat. “Caroline. So much blood. Get them.”

  Travis,” Will said. “Later, we’ll get them. Right now you need medical attention.” Tears filled Will’s eyes. “Let them put you in the ambulance.”

  “Call … Agency … phone in pocket ….” Had Will heard him above the insane crackling of the fire and the shouts of the firefighters? “They’ll help.” Travis faded. Wasn’t sure he had spoken aloud. “Call.”

  “All right,” Will said. He slipped the phone into his pocket.

  Travis squeezed Will’s hand and pulled him closer. “Now.”

  “I promise.”

  Travis’s thoughts fragmented. “Alas …” he started, but he could not remember the rest of it.

  “Alas, Escanaba.” Will said.

  “Yeah. I’m in deep shit, Will.” Travis tried to hold onto his friend’s hand. “Tell them,” he said. “The contact is Big Bad Wolf. BBW –”

  “Okay, buddy,” Will said. “I got it. Can they take you now?”

  “Okay, yeah.”

  The paramedics moved in, fitted the oxygen mask back on. The gurney lurched forward. Travis lost Will’s hand.

  The house collapsed with a roar. A fountain of s
parks billowed upward, taking Caroline far away from him into the darkness of the night sky. Travis closed his eyes and fell into silence where there were no dreams, no fear, and no pain.

  Chapter 1

  Flint, Michigan

  Three Years Later

  Alyssa Mallory hated driving Aunt Ellen’s twelve-year-old Suburban. The SUV was as big as a truck and drove like one. Stick shift and all.

  She was late. More traffic than usual and a flagger in a construction zone. Despite its age and flaws the old SUV’s clock still worked. Six twenty. Class started in ten minutes. She was going to be late. She hated being late for anything.

  To add to her woes, she had put off taking the last class for her professional teaching certificate, so she was stuck. If she wanted to keep her teaching job, she had to take the class. It was the only one available that would save her career. Integrating Computers into Early Childhood Education. It had sounded interesting when she signed up for it in March. Incorporating technology into her kindergarten class sounded like fun.

  She didn’t have a clue how she would get through it. Her aunt Ellen, the woman who was the only mother Alyssa remembered, had died a week ago, just at the end of the school year. Alyssa’s eyes filled with tears. She swallowed her grief. She had to if she were going to stay in teaching. She was five years into what she hoped was her life’s vocation.

  The evening was off to a bumpy start.

  She down-shifted, grinding the gears, and turned the SUV into a parking lot at the University of Michigan – Flint campus.

  She headed for the front of the lot, hoping to get lucky. Two rows from the building entrance, she saw it: her space. Between a red Mustang and a silver SUV of some sort, the space beckoned her. Perhaps it was a little narrow, but she thought she could get into it. Other latecomers searched for spaces at the far end of the lot, but there were few empty spots anywhere.

  Alyssa turned down the row, unbuckled her seat belt, ready to dash for the building once she parked.

 

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