Authors: Carla Neggers
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Romance, #Adult, #Suspense, #American Light Romantic Fiction, #Fiction - Romance, #Romance: Modern, #Ex-convicts, #revenge, #Romance - Suspense, #Separated people, #Romance - General
his plan went awry, while he still had the chance?
The man operated according to a logic and standards
all his own. He’d sabotaged his damn automatic garage
The Cabin
327
door-opener, forcing Rachel to get out of the car. So he
could shoot her. Why not just trip her in the bathtub,
make it look like an accident? Because he wanted to ruin
Alice, because she was Rachel’s friend, her confidante,
because she’d know he’d killed her, no matter how it
happened. So, he swiped her change purse, tossed it into
his wife’s blood and started Alice down this path of
misery and lies, as if he’d known everything she’d do.
Australia…
Alice scooped up the SUV keys. It was all she
wanted. A new life in Australia. Now Destin Wright was
dead, Susanna Galway was out there in the snowstorm,
her daughters had been kidnapped—
Jesus, Beau, what
were you thinking?
Iris had out a cell phone, and Alice could hear her
talking to the police.
She stepped outside. She saw drops of blood in the
snow, Sam Temple on the edge of the driveway with his
weapon raised.
Beau was up by the evergreen where he’d taken
cover, marching the twins onto the snowshoe path he
and Alice had taken. He had a gun to Maggie Galway’s
head, keeping her in front of him, and he hung on to
Ellen Galway, shielding himself with her as he dragged
her along, sobbing. Maggie was completely silent.
Temple didn’t have a clean shot, and Alice knew he
wouldn’t fire unless he did. He wouldn’t risk killing one
of the girls.
She eased open the door to the SUV and slid behind
the wheel, breathing in the new car smells. She pulled
off her gloves and stuck the key in the ignition, her fin-
328
Carla Neggers
gers stiff, frozen. The engine started, and she turned on
the windshield wipers, watched them flap off the accu-
mulated snow.
Tears flowed down her frozen cheeks, searing them,
streams of hot lava.
Beau McGarrity had just shot one Texas Ranger and
taken another Texas Ranger’s daughters hostage, and
she’d been a part of it. She hadn’t stopped it.
Nothing she did ever turned out right. There wasn’t
one thing more she could do except clear the hell out of
there and not cause anymore trouble.
Beau and the Galway girls disappeared into the storm.
Before Sam could turn his SIG onto her, Alice hit the
gas and got out of there.
��
Twenty-One
Jack stepped outside his emotions and listened to Sam
Temple run down the facts, his voice steady, profes-
sional, but his eyes on fire. Blood dripped into the snow
from his wounded leg. They were in the cabin driveway,
the snow falling hard, the wind howling out on Black-
water Lake.
Beau McGarrity had Maggie and Ellen.
Susanna was missing, injured if Alice Parker was to
be believed.
Jack absorbed the situation piece by piece. Iris had
called the police. They were on the way. She sat on the
bench in the mud room, her shawl pulled over her thin
shoulders. Her lips were a bluish purple. “I told them
to send an ambulance.” She raised her vivid green eyes
to Jack. “This isn’t Sam’s fault. I never should have let
Susanna go alone. The girls—they have minds of their
own. Alice…I thought she was my friend.”
Sam was having none of it. “Screw that. I was sup-
posed to protect your family. I didn’t.” He turned to
330
Carla Neggers
Jack and handed him his SIG. “Go after McGarrity. I’ll
fill in the locals when they get here.”
Jack shoved the weapon into his waistband and
squinted out at the snow, trying to concentrate on what
he had to do right now, not the images in his head of his
daughters being dragged through the woods at gun-
point—of Susanna out on the lake alone, hurt. He
glanced at Sam, who gave no sign he was in pain from
his leg. “McGarrity went into the woods, not down to
the lake?”
Iris looked up from the bench, her lips trembling
now. “Alice said he has a car at the Herrington house.”
“I was just there,” Jack said. “I found her car, too, and
checked out the teahouse on the lake. She’d obviously
spent the night there.” He took a breath, fought to stay
focused. “Goddamn it.”
Sam hobbled into the mud room and grabbed a scarf
off a peg, tied it around his bloody thigh. “McGarrity
has an escape plan. He didn’t come all the way up here
to freeze to death in the woods.”
But Jack could see he was losing Iris, and he stepped
inside and knelt in front of her, took both her cold hands
into his. “Nothing will happen to Susanna or the girls.
I won’t let it.”
Her eyes were haunted. “That’s what I said over sixty
years ago.”
Jack stood up and shifted to Sam. “Get her inside
where it’s warm.”
But Sam’s jaw tightened as he looked behind Jack.
“Susanna. Jesus.”
Jack spun around, and Susanna fell into his arms.
The Cabin
331
“Maggie and Ellen,” she said. “Jack…he can’t hurt
them…don’t let him…” Her left arm was bloodied and
half-frozen, and she had scrapes on her face that he
doubted she even felt. Her legs were caked with snow
from the knees down. She clawed at his chest, alert, and
he could see her willing herself not to lose control.
“Destin’s dead. His body’s not far from here. I’ll show
the police.”
She wasn’t showing anyone anything. One look at
her, and they’d stick her in an ambulance. “The police
are on their way. Tell them.”
Sam appeared at her side, taking her weight. “Come
on, Susanna. You need to get warm. You won’t be good
to anyone with hypothermia.”
She gripped Jack’s arm. “Find our babies, Jack. Mag-
gie and Ellen—” Her eyes filled with tears. “My God,
they haven’t done anything…”
Iris got up from the bench, her color better as she
took her shawl and put it over her granddaughter. “You
boys go on,” she said. “I’ll take care of Susanna. Honey,
we need to get you out of these cold, wet clothes, okay?
Alice has early stage hypothermia. I don’t know how far
she’ll get before she collapses.”
“I should have shot her,” Sam said.
Iris cast him a look. “What good would that have
done? She saved your life. She was unarmed.”
“She created a diversion for McGarrity.” But he
stopped himself, glancing at Jack. “You can beat the shit
out of me later.”
Jack nodded. “Let’s go.”
332
Carla Neggers
* * *
which Gran had filled with lukewarm water and a heavy
sprinkling of baking soda. She winced at the pain. “Just
for a minute,” Susanna told her as she tried to contain
her impatience, her panic. “I don’t think we have a lot
of time before the police arrive.”
Gran nodded. “They’ll stick you on a stretcher.”
Susanna shuddered at the thought of forced immo-
bility. She’d put on dry pants and socks and was doing
all she could to absorb the reality of the situation with-
out letting it overwhelm her. If she did that, she’d be lost,
useless, no help to her daughters. But she was so tired,
her eyelids heavy and her mind sluggish as the warmth
of the cabin penetrated, making her even sleepier.
“I have to go after them,” she said. “Jack and Sam
can head him off at the Herrington place, and I can
come in from behind.” The warm water swirled over her
cuts and frostbitten skin, but the pain cut through her
fog. “In case he lied to Alice or went another direction,
or got lost. I can follow their tracks—”
Gran lifted Susanna’s arm from the sink and laid it
on a dish towel she’d opened on the counter. “If I die,”
she said, not looking at her granddaughter as she un-
wrapped gauze from the cabin’s medical kit, “I would
rather it be out here in these woods, today, searching for
Maggie and Ellen than a year or two from now at home
in my bed. I want you to know that, in case I’m not as
up to hiking these woods in a snowstorm as I think I am.”
In the distance, Susanna heard sirens and fought to
stem a fresh wave of useless, destructive panic. “Six mil-
lion acres of wilderness, Gran. They could be anywhere.”
The Cabin
333
“They won’t be,” she said. “They’re here on Black-
water Lake, and we can find them. Susanna, we can’t
wait. We don’t have much time.”
She wasn’t talking about the sirens and the impend-
ing arrival of police cars and ambulances. Susanna
wrapped the towel around her arm, foregoing the gauze
as she ran into the mud room, taking in Maggie and
Ellen’s boots, their gloves, their coats, their hats. All
their warm clothes.
They’d been in their rooms reading Jane Austen to
each other.
Susanna spun around at her grandmother. “Gran—
Gran, they’ll freeze out there—”
She picked up Maggie’s boots and thrust them at Su-
sanna. “You two wear the same size. Hers are dry.”
Gran hurried back to the kitchen, throwing water and
the medical kit into a hip pack while Susanna pulled on
her dry winter gear. The snow hadn’t let up. She grabbed
Jack’s new snowshoes and headed outside, slipping
them on easily with their spring-loaded bindings. Gran
joined her, thrusting the hip back at her granddaughter
and strapping on a pair of snowshoes.
“Gran—”
“I know these woods, Susanna. If I’m no help, I’ll
turn back. I won’t slow you down.” She tilted her wrin-
kled face to the sky. “Help us, Jared. Help us.”
Jack drove. The roads were miserable. The plows and
sanders hadn’t yet reached this isolated north end of
Blackwater Lake. He didn’t know how fast a small town
in the Adirondack wilderness could pull together local
334
Carla Neggers
and state forces in the midst of a major snowstorm. He
knew they’d do their damnedest to get it done as fast as
possible.
But he also knew it wouldn’t be fast enough.
Neither girl was wearing shoes. Sam had told him.
Ellen had on fur-lined L.L. Bean slippers she’d made her
mother buy just for this trip, and Maggie had on lime-
green sequined slippers from the 1970s.
“Socks?” Jack asked.
“Ellen. Not Maggie. She’s wearing pink satin ankle
pants and a navy-blue lumberjack shirt. Ellen’s wear-
ing a black rugby jersey and leggings.”
Jack gripped the wheel. “They’ll die of exposure if
we don’t find them soon.”
Sam stared straight ahead. “If I’d had a clean shot—”
“You’d have taken it. Sam, my family—” Jack could
feel the tension—the fear—in every muscle in his body.
“They’re not easy to protect.”
Sam said nothing, and Jack turned off the main road
onto the rutted, barely maintained dirt road that led
down to the Herrington place. It was a huge, lodge-style
house, its windows boarded up, its porches sagging, its
sprawling, sloping yard obviously overgrown, even with
the deep snow. He followed the driveway to a parking
area behind the house. Just up ahead, another narrower
road—more of a lane—veered off toward the lake.
He nodded toward the lane, ice collecting on the truck’s
windshield as the snow continued to fall. “Alice left her
car just out of sight down that way. The teahouse is about
a hundred-fifty yards through the woods, but it’s rough
going. She and Destin apparently planned to meet there.”
The Cabin
335
“Destin never made it,” Sam said, grim.
“No.” Jack shifted, pointing up toward the house.
“Beau’s driving an SUV. It’s parked up there. I decided
to check back with you instead of sitting here waiting
for him.”
“He had Alice. He must have the tape. Why take
Maggie and Ellen?”
“His ticket out of here,” Jack said. “Revenge. Des-
peration. It seemed like a good idea at the time. I don’t
know how this bastard thinks.”
“The girls are a win for him no matter what happens.
If we catch him, he’ll think he can bargain. If we don’t
catch him—”
“Jesus,” Jack said. “He’s going to dump them in the
woods.”
Sam nodded. “That’s my guess. He knows how
they’re dressed. He knows the conditions. He knows
we’re up here, hunting his ass. He’ll leave them, and
he’ll use them as a bargaining chip.”
Jack turned the truck, blocking the road as best he
could, but there was still room for an SUV to maneu-
ver around him. He got out of the truck, sinking into six
inches of fresh snow. It was still coming down, blow-
ing in their faces out in the open. He drew the SIG, push-
ing away more images of Maggie and Ellen in the
woods in their slippers.
When he met Sam in front of the truck, Jack handed
him the weapon. “Unless you think you’ll pass out,