Read Blind Faith Online

Authors: Cj Lyons

Tags: #Romance, #Suspense, #Fiction

Blind Faith (37 page)

BOOK: Blind Faith
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He zipped the body bag shut.

CHAPTER 50

Sarah followed the men into the cabin. There was no light except what came from the single Coleman lantern and the setting sun. Julia huddled in a corner, crying, but otherwise appeared unhurt.

"Are you all right?" Sarah asked, crouching down to the teenager's level. Julia nodded tearfully and threw her arms around Sarah, clutching her so hard she could barely catch her breath.

"Did you hurt her?" Sam demanded.

"Relax, we didn't touch her. Good thing it was us who found her and not the Russian," Logan answered.

Sarah looked over Julia's shoulder as Logan clamped his fingers around Sam's arm and began to muscle him out the door. Sam dug in his heels, his fists tight.

"I'm not going anywhere until you let them go. They're no threat to you. It'll take them all night to get down the mountain."

Alan moved to stand beside Sarah, patting her hair as if she were a pet. If it wasn't for Julia holding her tight, Sarah would have gladly broken his hand for him. Followed by a nice eye-gouge and a knee to the groin.

"I'm not risking any double cross," Alan said. "Go on, get out of here. If the money isn't in my account by morning, I'll kill them both."

His voice was normal, that was the amazing thing about it. They all sounded so normal, so rational as if they were discussing the day's stock quotes.

"Leave them and come with us," Sam tried one last time, his gaze locking with Sarah's. "How can you be sure Logan won't take the money and run?"

Alan laughed and Logan's face turned dark with fury. "He thought he could, but no worries. Logan isn't going to betray me. Not unless he wants to be running from Korsakov the rest of his life." He waved the two men off, pulling Sarah to her feet. Julia reluctantly let go, remaining on the floor. "Go on, Sarah and I have a lot to," he smiled at Sarah and she felt her stomach clench in disgust, "discuss. Privately."

He held Sarah in a close embrace, his body pressed against her back. Sarah drew her breath in, forced herself to remain calm. "Go on, Sam. Remember what I said."

He gave her a sad half smile. "Your lips promise me a chance at life."

The song he'd left unfinished two years ago. She opened her mouth, wanting to say more, but it was too late. He was gone.

 

 

Caitlyn struggled as Hal lifted her, but the body bag wrapped itself around her, tangling her limbs. His laughter cut through her fear and the roar of the rapids. She felt him lurch, struggle for his balance, jostling her as the sound of the river grew louder.

"Goodbye Caitlyn," he shouted as he heaved her into space.

Caitlyn's stomach lurched. She flew through the air. The impact as she hit the water jarred through her. Then she was moving, careening in all directions, the water yanking her in one direction then another. She crashed into a rock, hitting her hip so hard her breath was stolen. The vinyl bag hadn't filled with water yet, leaving her with precious little oxygen.

The rapids pounded her against the rock, wedging her in place as they battered her. But it gave her time to search for the body bag's zipper. She clawed her fingers along the unyielding material, finally finding the metal seam.

Her movement freed her from the eddy and she catapulted back out into the main current, tumbled in all directions until she wasn't sure if she was facing up or down. Another boulder slammed against her, then another.

The roar of the falls was louder now, drowning out everything, even the panicked pounding of her heart. Icy fingers of water seeped into the bag. She sucked in the last bit of oxygen.

The bag filled quickly now, pulling her down, slowing her passage down the river. Cold, it was so very cold. Her fingers fumbled, tracking the zipper down, down. Her lungs screamed for oxygen as she twisted her body within the black confines of her prison.

She snagged the zipper pull, yanked it. A small opening, only enough to allow one hand through, appeared before the small bit of metal slipped from her numb fingers. She wrenched at the material. Slowly it parted.

The current tumbled her upside down once more, tearing the fabric away from her hands, pulling her through the narrow opening. Caitlyn opened her eyes but the water was almost as dark as it had been inside the bag.

A red sheen glimmered below her—was that the surface? Or her vision dimming from lack of oxygen?

A submerged tree limb snagged her, freeing her momentarily from the current. Nowhere to go, nowhere to hide. She was overwhelmed by the impulse to exhale, to release her remaining oxygen, surrender to the water.

The idea brought with it a sensation of peace, of calm.

Caitlyn kicked away from the tree's embrace, fought to gain the darkening red gleam. Her legs could barely move as they fought against the current, her arms flailed through the churning water and her chest felt ready to explode.

The smudge of red was dimming, growing farther away. Panic seized her and she kicked harder, one last try.

Her mind grew hazy, she couldn't feel her arms or legs. She was floating, floating through space. Was this what her father had felt in that instant before his brain shut down?

Her body slammed into a rock bed, scraping her back raw. She pulled away, gasped for air, drew in water and began to choke and sputter. Heaving her chest forward, her face broke through the water and she sucked in fresh air.

After several deep breaths, she was able to focus, to look around. Her leg was caught under a rock outcropping, trapping her. Good thing, too, because she was in an eddy just above the falls. The spray from the angry water filled the air with starry sparkles caught in the moonlight.

She raised her head, looked across the river. She was on the opposite bank from where she'd begun. The red taillights of Hal's truck were vanishing in the distance. He was either following his plan to set the explosives or he was driving down to the bridge and coming back to finish her off. Either way, she had to get moving.

She blinked water from her eyes and looked into the face of the blue moon hanging so low that she was certain she could reach out and touch it.
You haven't won yet, Lily
.

 

 

JD was ready to hit someone. Or something. He was so damned tired of waiting. He squeezed his eyes shut, willing time to fly past and Julia to be there, safe and sound when he opened them. But all he saw were visions of awful things happening to her, things that made him feel sick.

He lurched to his feet and ran to the door.

"You okay?" his dad asked as JD tugged at the door handle.

"Just going to the restroom." JD frowned, pulled against the door. It rattled but didn't move more than a quarter of an inch or so. "It's stuck."

"What's the problem, son?" The Colonel asked.

"The door. It's locked or something." JD shook it to demonstrate.

"Nonsense," the Colonel's wife said. "There's no lock on that door. Fire code." She marched over, the men moving aside for her four-foot-ten frame and reached for the door handle. The door didn't open for her either. "Look through the window, can you see anything?"

JD craned his head, pressing it against the glass. "No."

"Just go out the other way," his dad said, walking to the outside door. He pushed against it. "It's locked as well."

"No. It locks from the inside," the Colonel pointed out. He added his weight and the two men heaved against the door. There was no window in the outside door, so the men joined JD and Victoria at the inside door, craning to peer through it. "Looks like a bar or something. One of those police locks that push against a door."

"Like a traffic boot?" JD asked.

The Colonel nodded. "Who the hell would want to lock us in here?"

"Stop standing there and call Hal. That's what he's paid for," his wife ordered.

JD's father was nearest the phone. He raised the receiver. "Dead." He grabbed the radio, pressed the button. "Nothing." JD noted that his words were coming fast, like they were under pressure. He sat down in Hal's seat and turned on the computer. "It's dead as well."

Then the lights went out.

"Don't panic," Victoria said. "The building has an emergency generator. It should kick in any minute."

They stood still, the only sound their breathing in the small, cave-like room. For the first time JD noticed there were no outside windows. How could Hal stand working in here?

"The generator should have kicked in," the Colonel said. JD felt him brush past as he fumbled his way across the room. "Hell," he muttered as there was a slam of flesh striking a hard object. One of the chairs skidded across the room, then a beam of light circled around the room from the flashlight he held, spotlighting their faces in a high-powered glare. "Let me have a look."

The Colonel and JD's father began to search the desk. "Anyone have a cell phone?" JD asked. He'd given his to Hal for evidence and it was locked in the safe.

Both older men looked at him like he was crazy. His father refused to carry one except in his delivery truck for emergencies. And who was the Colonel going to call when everyone in town came to him to gossip?

They turned to look at Victoria. A frown furrowed her face. "It's in my purse," she said, pressing her face against the window, staring out into the darkened post office. "Behind the counter."

"That's all right," JD's dad said, bending over the bottom desk drawer. "I think I found—"

"Get away from that!" the Colonel barked.

"What the hell is it? Those look like," JD's dad was stuttering, backing away from the desk in horror, "like, but they can't be—"

"They are. Enough C4 to blow up half the town. It's a bomb."

CHAPTER 51

Sam wanted to walk out the door without looking back. It would be easier for everyone that way. He couldn't do it. His feet tripped on the threshold and he turned his head, glanced back.

And froze in place, unable to break free of the sight of Sarah. Her eyes blazed out in defiance until she locked gazes with Sam.

His pulse beat in his throat, he would have screamed if he could have gotten a breath. The heartbreak in her eyes told him she knew as well as he did that they both wouldn't survive this day. But then, she smiled. Not one of her brighter-than-the-sun grins that had first made him fall in love with her. No, one of her twisted, "hey this is the real world, deal with it," half-smiles to let him know she had faith in him. That she knew if there was a way for him to make sure she and Julia made it out of this hell alive, then he would do it.

The blood drained from his face. How could she place her hope in him? A fucked up loser who should have been washed up on some Santa Monica beach years ago?

He gave her a tiny nod. Let her know that he understood. He stepped out the door and out of her sight.

As soon as his foot hit the hard-packed dirt of the parking area, a plan began forming. He pursed his lips, whistled a little diddy he'd called "The Idiot's Guide to Driving Drunk" and strolled towards Logan's Taurus, his plan shaping up.

It was a suicide mission, but it would buy Sarah the time she needed. From the gleam in her eye, he was certain she had her own plan cooking. That was his girl. She never stopped thinking about ways to make things better and she never, ever gave up. Not even on a hopeless beach bum like him.

He reached a hand for Logan's driver's door.

"No," Logan said, waving his gun. "We'll take the truck. You drive."

Sure thing. Sam forced himself to hang his head so that Logan wouldn't see the grin he couldn't suppress. He slumped his shoulders, his diddy still swirling through his head as he opened the truck's door and climbed up onto the seat, springs squeaking and groaning beneath his weight.

Sorry old friend, he thought to the Ford Ranger. We've had some good times together, but now those good times are about to come to an end.

For one of us at least. Logan yanked open the passenger door and tore Josh's booster seat from the truck, hurling it to the ground. "What's that?" he asked, craning a look into the small compartment behind the seats.

"My guitar. Want me to open it for you?"

BOOK: Blind Faith
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