Suspicions (The Battling McGuire Boys Book 3) (13 page)

Read Suspicions (The Battling McGuire Boys Book 3) Online

Authors: Cynthia Eden

Tags: #Contemporary, #Romance, #Fiction, #Thriller, #Crime, #Suspense, #Romantic Suspense, #Intrigue, #Psychological Suspense, #Danger, #Brothers, #Family Saga, #Drama, #Rancher, #BFF, #Safe Haven, #Trust, #Killer, #Stalking, #Secrets, #Terror, #Old Love

BOOK: Suspicions (The Battling McGuire Boys Book 3)
9.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Chapter Eleven

“Ava!” Mark caught her hands when they swung out to attack him. “Baby, what’s wrong—” But then he broke off because he’d just caught sight of those canvases.

“He’s here.” In contrast to her scream, now Ava’s voice was a low whisper. “He got past the security, and he’s here on the ranch.”

Mark swore and pulled her from the room. No one should have been able to get on the ranch. The McGuires were fanatical about the security out there. “We need to get dressed,” he told her, “and get out of here.” He wanted her safe, and then he wanted to hurt this guy. Because if he was still close by...

Then I will find you.

They hurried back to Ava’s bedroom and dressed as fast as they could, and then—

The lights went off.

He heard Ava suck in a sharp breath. “That’s the same way it was at the museum. He killed the lights there—
he’s playing with me.

Mark reached for his phone and called Davis. The line rang and rang—no answer.

“Mark?” Ava’s fingers curled around his wrist. “Are my brothers okay?”

He put the phone in his pocket. In the dark, she couldn’t see his expression, so she wouldn’t know the worry that pierced through him. “Of course,” he told her, forcing his voice to sound calm. “You know them—no one can take down the McGuire boys.”

Get her out of here. Get her to safety.

He didn’t have a weapon in the cottage, but he had one waiting in the car outside. They headed for the door, moving slowly, carefully. Mark opened the door.

And found himself staring down the barrel of a gun.

The moon was overhead, its light spilling down, so it was easy for Mark to see the weapon pointed right at him. And the man there—

“Ava,” the guy demanded, his voice gruff. “What is happening?”

The man holding the gun wasn’t an enemy. Mark recognized his voice even if most of the guy’s body was in shadows.

Ava pushed past Mark and ran to the guy, giving him a tight hug. “Mac,” she whispered.

No one can take down the McGuire boys.

And another McGuire was standing right there, holding Ava with one arm while his other hand still gripped that gun. Mac McGuire was probably the wildest—and, if the stories were true, deadliest—of the bunch. Former Delta Force, Mac seemed to enjoy looking for danger. An adrenaline junkie, some had said. Mark had always thought Mac rushed after the danger because he was running from his own demons.

“I didn’t think you were in town,” Ava said. “Davis told me that you were working a case in Atlanta.”

“Sully and I just finished up there,” Mac said, his voice gruff.

Sully—yeah, that would be the youngest McGuire. Sullivan. Ex-marine. Icy green eyes, dangerous temper.

“We came down here as soon as we could,” Mac replied. He was still holding tight to the gun—and Ava. “When the lights went off, he went to the main house to check in, and I came here.” He hesitated. “Ava, what is happening?”

“We all need to get up to the main house,” Mark said. “The jerk who has been stalking Ava has been here.”

“Then why are we just standing out in the open?” Mac demanded.

Good freaking question.

They hurried out to the cars. Mark’s gaze narrowed when he looked at his tires. “Someone slashed them.”
He was here...while I was in that cottage with Ava.
And Mark had been so lost in her that he hadn’t even been aware of the danger.

“Is the cottage clear?” Mac’s gaze had turned back to the house.

“I don’t know.” Mark slid closer to Ava. “I just wanted to get her out of there and...” His breath came out in a rush. “Davis wasn’t answering his phone. I wanted to make sure he was safe up at the main house.” That they’d all been safe.

Once again Mark pulled out his phone. This time, instead of calling Davis, he tried for Brodie. The guy answered on the second ring. “Brodie! Man, I was getting worried.” Because this was not a good scene. “We think the stalker is on the ranch. He’s been in the cottage, and he’s—”

“What?”
Brodie’s voice was a roar. “Is Ava okay?”

“Yes.” His gaze slanted toward her. “We wanted to make sure you, Jennifer and Davis were safe.”

“I’m not at the ranch.”

Mark heard Jennifer’s voice in the background.

“We’re in town, but we’ll be there as fast as possible,” Brodie continued.

Mac was heading toward the cottage’s door.

“Is Davis with you?” Mark asked. His guts were knotting. This setup wasn’t good. Every instinct he possessed was screaming
danger.

“He’s at the ranch.”

Then why isn’t he answering his phone?

“Protect my sister, Mark,” Brodie said, his words rushing out. “Keep my family safe.”

“Mac is here. We’ll find out what’s happening.” He shoved the phone back into his pocket.

Mac was about to head into the cottage. “If he’s here, he’s not getting away—”

“I smell smoke,” Ava said, her voice sharp and breaking with fear. “Don’t you smell it?”

Mark’s stables had been set on fire a few months ago, and he remembered the rush of fear he’d felt when he scented that smoke. Only the smoke had come with an explosion—one that had blasted right through the stables.

“Something is burning.” Ava hurried away from the men. “It’s coming from—
it’s coming from the main house!

The main house... Was Davis there?

Mac ran and jumped into his truck. Ava and Mark pushed in with him. It wasn’t far to the main house, and even as they drove up the lane, Mark was frantically trying to reach Davis on his phone again.

Then the truck came to a screeching halt. The ranch house was just feet away, and it was on fire.

The flames were flickering inside the house, rising in orange and red waves. Mark could see someone at the door, a man who appeared to be trying to break down the main entrance.

They all leapt from the truck and raced toward the house.

“Help me!” the man yelled. It was Sully. He was driving his shoulder into the door again and again. “It’s stuck and I think Davis is inside!” But, then, before they could run to him, he turned and hurried toward the window in the front of the house. He lifted his hand and drove his fist straight into the glass.

Smoke billowed out as the glass shattered. Mark knocked as much glass out of the way as he could. Sully crawled through the window even as the crackle of the fire grew louder.

Mac headed in after him.

And Mark remembered another fire. The fire at his stables had been a trap. The man who’d set the blaze had been trying to get Jennifer. He’d set the fire to lure her out so he could grab her.

Mark swung around. Ava was right beside him. She pushed against him. “I need to get in there!”

But he caught her arms and held her back. “Mac and Sully will get Davis out.”

Brodie’s words rang in his mind.
Protect my sister.
That was exactly what he intended to do.

She struggled in his hold. “Mark, let me go!”

The flames were growing bigger. The scent of the fire was so much stronger. Mark needed to call 9-1-1. He had to—

A gunshot rang out. The blast was so close. Mark could feel the heat of the bullet whipping by him before it plunged into the side of the house.

He yanked Ava forward, and they hit the ground.

* * *

S
OMETHING
WAS
WRONG
.

Davis tried to open his eyes, but that one small feat seemed to take way too much effort. His head was hurting, throbbing with a constant agony that had nausea rolling through him.

What happened?

He was on the floor, and he coughed because there was...smoke around him. His eyes cracked open, and he could see the tendrils of gray rising. His hands flattened on the wooden floor. Fire. That was right. He’d smelled smoke. He’d run out of his room and...

Did someone hit me?
Because things were dark after that moment. He couldn’t remember what had happened after he’d left his room.

He crawled forward, coughing more. He could hear the flames crackling and what sounded almost like laughter around him. Fire was racing up the walls, and he wanted to roar his fury. This was his home. He’d rebuilt it—he and Brodie had worked so hard to save this place.

Ava hated the ranch. She saw only pain there.

But it’s my home. My life is here.

The flames grew bigger. Hotter.

“Davis!”

His head jerked when he heard the cry of his name. Through the smoke, he saw two dark figures surging toward him.

“Davis, are you all right?”

He would know that fierce, growling voice anyplace—it was Sully’s voice. And Sully was grabbing him, trying to help Davis get to the door.

“No, he’s not all right,” another sharp voice said.
Mac
. He slid his shoulder under Davis’s right arm. “Come on, let’s go!”

They half pulled, half carried him out of the hallway. The flames were racing across the den, moving so fast, and the sight of them made Davis’s heart hurt. Not this place. It couldn’t be destroyed. They needed it too much.

I need it.

They were close to the front door.

“That’s why it wouldn’t open,” Sully said.

A table had been shoved against the door.

“Someone didn’t want you getting out,” Mac said.

Davis tried to speak but could only cough.

“Move that thing, Sully!” Mac ordered him. “Hurry!”

* * *

A
VA
STARED
UP
at Mark. He’d slammed into her and taken them both down to the ground. She knew he was trying to protect her from whoever was shooting at them.

The same man who set the house on fire.

“We have to help my brothers!” She pushed against Mark’s shoulders.

But he didn’t move. He wasn’t moving!

“No, Ava, stop!” He caught her arms and pinned them in the dirt. “If we move, he’ll have a perfect shot at us. That’s what he planned, don’t you see? This is a trap to lure us—
you—
out here. He’s waiting for his moment to attack. The first shot missed, but the second? I don’t think it will.”

They were on the side of the house, low, hidden for the moment. But her brothers were in the fire. “Let me go,” she told Mark, her voice sharp. She wasn’t going to hide while her brothers died.
“Let me go!”
She bucked against him, heaving with all of her strength.

“Ava—”

Another shot rang out. Only this one...it hadn’t been aimed at them. Mark’s hold eased on her, and Ava twisted, rolling away from him. She stayed down, out of sight, but she saw that the bullet—and another one that had just blasted—had hit the front door of the ranch. A door that had opened just a few inches.

My brothers are trying to get out of the flames.

But whoever was out there—he was shooting at them. If her brothers ran out, he’d kill them. Ava knew this with utter certainty.

“No,” she whispered as her heart splintered.

Mark’s hands closed over her shoulders. “Stay here, baby, please,” he told her, his voice so soft she barely heard his words. “I’ll get them out. Just—
stay safe
.”

Then, before she could respond, Mark was up and running away. He was heading right for the front door, and he didn’t have any weapon with him. “He’s got a gun!” Mark bellowed. “Go out the back! Go!”

And gunfire erupted again.

“No!” Ava screamed. And she didn’t stay there. She didn’t hide.

She leaped to her feet.

* * *

“S
OMEBODY
IS
SHOOTING
at us!” Sully yelled as he held tighter to Davis.

They were at the front door. Mac had yanked open that door moments before, and air—clear, sweet air—had whispered inside. Davis choked and coughed because that clear air was gone, and the smoke was rising too fast.

The fire was burning all around them.

“He’s got a gun! Go out the back! Go!”

Davis heard that frantic shout, and he looked over his shoulder. Flames were behind him. Where had all those flames come from? How had anyone gotten onto his ranch?
How?
The place should have been secure.

“We can’t go back.” Mac’s voice was low and grim.

No, they couldn’t.

“Let’s head for a window. We’ll break the glass, just like we did before,” Sully said. And then Sully started pulling Davis toward the right.

In the next instant, Mac heard the thunder of gunfire. More bullets. Then—

“Stop!”
Ava’s scream, clear even above the flames.
“Leave them alone! If you want me, I’m here!”

“No,” Mac whispered.

Then the gunfire...it came again.

* * *

A
VA
LEAPT
IN
FRONT
of Mark even as the gunfire exploded. She thought the bullets were going to slam into her. Mark was yelling and trying to push her behind him—

The bullets didn’t hit her.

They slammed into the house.

Mark froze.

“He’s not going to kill me,” Ava said, her voice breaking. “He wants me alive, don’t you see?” So he wouldn’t shoot her. But if he had a shot at Mark, she didn’t doubt for an instant that he’d take it. “If I’m here, he won’t shoot.”

And her brothers would have a chance. Because they
had
to get out of that fire. If they could just get out of the house and to the safety of Mac’s truck or Sully’s SUV, they’d make it.

“Hurry, Sully!” Ava called to her brother. The smoke was getting so thick out there. If it was bad on the narrow porch, what was it like in the house?

She risked a glance over her shoulder. Mark had finally let her go, and he’d shoved open the door to the house. He rushed inside—

And Ava stood there, her arms spread over her head, her feet braced apart. She was a target. She knew it. But more, she was a shield for her brothers and for Mark. For the men she loved so much.

Hurry.

“Come to me, Ava!” A hard, angry voice cried out from the darkness. “Come to me!”

Other books

I Hate You—Don't Leave Me by Jerold J. Kreisman
Neanderthal Man by Pbo, Svante
The Lonely by Paul Gallico
Full Release by Marshall Thornton
The Welcoming by Nora Roberts
Black Rock by John McFetridge
Chronicles of Eden - Act VI by Alexander Gordon
Scent of a White Rose by Tish Thawer
Lois Greiman by The Princess, Her Pirate