The Prey (38 page)

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Authors: Allison Brennan

Tags: #Psychological, #Violence against, #Serial Murderers, #Psychological Fiction, #Stalking Victims, #Murder victims, #Crime, #Romance, #Suspense, #Bodyguards, #Large Type Books, #Fiction, #Women novelists, #Children

BOOK: The Prey
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“It’s not him. The car stopped. A lone driver emerged. Female.”

“Tess?” John asked, but doubted Bobby would have let her go.

“Negative.” The commander called in for a description. “The female is approximately five foot eight, wearing jeans and beige jacket. Blonde.”

Rowan. John slammed his fist on the table. “God
dammit
!”

Roger Collins called in from the far north of the field. “Eighteen hundred hours,” he said. “We’re proceeding to the exchange point.”

Agent Thorne said, “Sir, we’ve just identified a lone female on foot approximately half a mile from your location who may be Rowan Smith.”

The SWAT commander spoke. “Possible suspect vehicle coming from the southwest. SUV, tinted windows, Arizona plates. Heading straight for the exchange point.”

Silence. “Flynn?” Collins’s voice commanded.

John didn’t need to hear the question. “I’m on my way.”

 

 

It had taken a lot longer than Rowan anticipated for the drug to affect Reggie Jackman. Reggie drank coffee like water, downing two pots over the course of the night and not sleeping a wink. Finally, she added more powdered sleeping pills directly into the pot. By one that afternoon he was out. By one-fifteen she was on the road in his car, headed down to Ventura County.

She got stuck in afternoon commuter traffic in Santa Barbara and ended up a half-mile or so from the field just before six. She was cutting it close, but she didn’t dare park any closer. This was the nearest approach from her direction, but there was no way she’d make it over another irrigation ditch. She’d almost bottomed out on the last one.

She checked her guns and pulled on a lightweight beige windbreaker to better blend into the surroundings. She dreaded the weight of the jacket, however minimal. It was a hot day, and the heat radiating off the dry soil made it seem even hotter, with no breeze carrying in the nearby coolness of the Pacific Ocean. The cloying air sat in her lungs and she breathed through her mouth, tasting dirt.

On foot, she headed to the field, keeping low.

She spotted one of the SWAT teams about a hundred yards west of the field, but couldn’t see any other men. That was good. An SUV was already there—Roger. She saw him in the passenger seat. Waiting. Waiting for Bobby.

There was no way Bobby could escape. At least in theory. The whole exchange plan smelled rotten. Bobby wouldn’t come here if he thought he couldn’t get out. He had a hostage, which increased his chances, but there were likely dozens of men in the area waiting for a clear shot. Bobby had to suspect it.

He had something planned, and she feared for Tess’s life.

And John’s. She hadn’t seen him, but she sensed he was close. Tess was his sister. His responsibility. Just like Dani had been hers.

She’d failed Dani, but she wouldn’t fail Tess. John might blame himself, but Rowan knew exactly who was responsible. And she wouldn’t be able to live with herself if Tess died.

Keeping low, she scurried closer. To her right, she saw dust being kicked up by another large vehicle.

Bobby had arrived. Her stomach churned uncomfortably at the realization she would soon be face-to-face with her murderous brother, but she pushed on.

Someone had to stop him.

 

 

John spotted Rowan lying low on his left at the same time Bobby MacIntosh’s SUV came surprisingly close on his right. John hugged the ground, gun in hand, hoping for a clean shot but knowing he couldn’t take it without knowing exactly where Tess was.

He caught a glimpse of the driver, and it wasn’t Bobby. It was Tess. In the brief moment he saw his sister’s drawn face, he realized she was terrified.

Bobby had to be in the passenger seat. He called in the information to headquarters.

“Did you get a visual on the suspect?”

“Negative. Must be in the passenger seat.”

“Hold your position.”

“Like hell I will,” John muttered.

Rowan had already moved much too close to the exchange point for his comfort. He followed parallel to her path. It was difficult to stay near to the ground, but tumbleweeds and low-lying brush obscured him, as well as Rowan.

A hundred yards in front of him, Tess stopped the SUV. John sucked in his breath but felt surprisingly calm. This was an op, after all. Something he was trained for. As long as he could separate his emotions from action, he would be fine.

The passenger door of Roger’s SUV opened and the assistant director stepped out, staying behind the door. He put his cell phone to his ear. Through his ear communicator, John heard the conversation.

And broke out in a cold sweat, even in the dry heat.

“Prompt.”

It was Bobby MacIntosh on the phone.

“We’re ready.”

“So am I. I want to see Lily.”

“I want to see Tess Flynn.”

“Can’t you see her? She drove in.”

“I want to make sure she’s okay.”

Bobby sighed. “What, you don’t trust me?” His voice was mocking, overconfident.

“Let me see her.”

“Very well.” He hung up.

“MacIntosh?” Roger said into the dead receiver. “Shit, where is he?”

A minute later, the driver’s door of MacIntosh’s silver SUV opened. Tess slowly got out of the car and shut the door behind her.

“No!” John exclaimed, breaking into a run toward her.

“Goddammit,” Roger said over the mike. He punched numbers into his cell phone. “Bobby, pick up the damn phone!”

Tess stood next to the car wearing a vest wired with explosives. Even from his distance, John saw her visibly shaking. She made no move toward Roger. He had no doubt Bobby controlled her every move.

He had to get to her. He could disarm any bomb if he had the time. Just a few minutes. That was all he needed.

He scrambled as close as he dared but lost sight of Rowan. His eyes searched for her. Dammit, where was she?

Over the mike, Bobby finally picked up Roger’s frantic call. “What fucking game are you playing, Bobby?”

“My, my, losing your cool, Mr. Big Shot.” He laughed.

The SWAT commander broke in through the secure channel, where Bobby wouldn’t be able to hear. “Another car, a van, has come within the half-mile radius. Lone male driver.”

“I’m coming to get my sister,” Bobby said. “And if you try to pull a fast one on me, know that there’s enough explosive on cute little Ms. Flynn to take out her and everyone else you have hiding within a quarter-mile radius. Of course, that might have something to do with the explosives I packed into the SUV.”

“You changed the rules,” Roger said, voice low. “This wasn’t what we agreed to.”

“You’re hardly in the position to complain, Roger. Give my sister the keys to your car. Little Tess has the instructions, though I’m sure your wonderfully trained FBI agents have already figured out where I am. Tell them to hold off, or I detonate Ms. Flynn right now.”

“Bastard.”


Tsk, tsk
. You’re not in a good mood, are you, Roger? As soon as I have my sister, I’ll set the bomb. You’ll have ten minutes to disarm it. I’m sure that’ll be enough time for a brilliant FBI agent such as yourself.

“But,” Bobby continued, his voice low, “if you try to screw me, I’ll detonate it immediately. Understand?”

“Yes.” Roger’s voice was strained.

“Send Lily to me now. If I don’t see her in three minutes KA-BOOM.”

John realized that Bobby was too far away to see what was going on at the exchange site. He had a chance to get to Tess and start dismantling the bomb. Three minutes? Next to impossible. But he had to try. He didn’t believe for a moment that MacIntosh would give them the full ten minutes. He listened as Roger told the commander to clear the area of all personnel, back at least two hundred yards.

Rowan watched John sprint toward Tess, who looked like she wore several pounds of plastic explosive wired into a vest. At the same time, the decoy emerged from the rear passenger door. From a hundred feet away, she could pass for Rowan.

Bobby wouldn’t buy it when they were up close and personal. He’d blow up everyone here.

Quinn got out of the driver’s side of Roger’s car and the decoy started walking toward John and Tess.

Rowan would give anything to know what was going on.

 

 

Tess was sobbing silently when John rushed to her side.

“Go away! Go away!” she cried, her face a mask of terror. “He’s going to kill us all.”

“Shh, Tess, I know what I’m doing.” John had dismantled more complicated bombs, but this one could be detonated by remote or misstep. He had to proceed with caution.

“No, no, you can’t. Please, go away. Save yourself and everyone else. It’s my fault.” She was shaking and tears streamed down her face.

“Tess!” He didn’t want to yell at her, but if she panicked they would all end up dead. “Look at me.” He held her face in his hands.

She did, her green eyes wide with shock and fear.

“I can fix this. But you can’t move. You have to remain as still as possible, understand?”

She nodded, almost imperceptibly, but still shook in his hands.

“Th-there’s more in the truck,” she said, her teeth chattering.

“I know. One thing at a time.” He let go of her and pulled his fully loaded Swiss army knife out of his pocket. Not ideal, but it would do. It had to.

“Ms. Flynn?”

John glanced over his shoulder and did a double take. For a brief moment he thought she was Rowan. She wasn’t.

“Tess, where does Bobby want her to go?” John asked.

“It won’t work. He’ll know she’s not Rowan and you’ll die, John. We’ll all die. He’ll kill us!” Tess was shouting hysterically.

John slapped her, wincing at the sound his hand made against Tess’s cheek. Her head jerked back and her hand came up to her face. “Hey!” she said, frowning.

“Tess, I’m sorry. You have to stay with me here.” He started separating the wires so he could see how the bomb was put together.

“I’m Special Agent Francie Blake, Ms. Flynn. I need to know where to go. Now.”

Tess pulled a piece of paper out of her pocket and handed it to her. “Be careful. When he realizes you’re not Rowan, I don’t know what he’ll do, but he won’t be happy. He knew there was a decoy at her house.”

“What?” John asked, pausing briefly in his assessment of the bomb. He resumed.

“He watched the house somehow. Saw her running and he told me he knew she wasn’t Rowan. That Rowan had run away. Francie, you can’t go. He’ll kill you.”

“I’m trained, Ms. Flynn.” She was reading the note.

John had a bad feeling. He turned on the mike so he could speak to Collins and the rest of the team. “Collins? Tess said MacIntosh knows about the decoy in Malibu. Saw her running.”

“That can’t be. We had three teams covering the outside of the house, one inside.”

“Boat? The cliffs? I don’t know.” He clipped one wire, bracing himself. Good. The right one.

“How fast can you diffuse the bomb?”

“I think I can get Tess done, but not in three minutes. Correction, ninety seconds. We need that extra ten minutes.”

He snipped another wire and swore. There was a failsafe. He had to start from square one.

“He’s not going to give you ten minutes, John. He’s not,” Tess said. “Go. Please. I—I’ll be okay.”

John ignored his sister’s pleas. “Get out of here, Blake. Stall as best you can. I need at least five minutes for Tess’s vest, then we’ll run like hell.”

“I’m outta here. I’ll give you as much time as I can.” She sprinted back to Roger’s car.

John moved Tess fifty feet from the SUV, but he couldn’t work and talk at the same time, so he focused on the bomb. But a familiar voice came through on his mike.

“Roger, I have to go,” said Rowan.

“No,” Collins said.

John glanced over his shoulder. There she was.

“Dammit, Roger!” Rowan snapped. “When he sees it’s not me, he’s going to detonate the bomb.”

“Blake, go.”

A moment later, Roger’s SUV passed John, heading southwest across the dry field.

“Roger, he’s going to kill her! Call her back.”

“Francie Blake is suited up. She’s going to buy us time to dismantle the bomb, and then—”

“Get out of here, Rowan,” said Roger. “Peterson, get her out of here.”

“Let me go, Quinn!”

“Rowan,” Collins said, “there’s a bomb in that SUV over there. As soon as Ms. Flynn is in the clear, we’re all running.”

John wanted to wring Rowan’s neck for leaving the safe house, but right now he had too much to worry about. Sweat poured off his face as he unscrewed the faceplate of the timer with the tiny screwdriver in his knife. He dropped it to the ground and concentrated on the remote timer.

“John?” Tess asked, her voice high-pitched and soft.

“Two more minutes.” He hoped.

“Two minutes?” Collins repeated over the mike.

“I think so. Maybe three.”

The next minute passed too quickly, but he made some progress. Collins, Peterson, and Rowan approached and stood a few feet away. He spared a glance at Rowan. She was covered in dust, her face cold and unreadable. Except her eyes.

She was frantic.

“You should have stayed at the safe house,” John told her, his voice low and angry. He turned his attention back to the bomb.

“You shouldn’t have left me there.”

He couldn’t rush the procedure, but he worked as fast as possible. Faster than he would have liked.

A shotgun blast resonated through the still air and Tess screamed. It took John a second to realize she hadn’t been hit. The blast was too far away.

Agent Blake.

He heard the chirp of a cell phone. It wasn’t his.

Roger answered. “MacIntosh?”

“She wasn’t Lily. I want to talk to my sister. Now. Ten seconds or I blow the SUV. Nine. Eight. Seven. Six.”

Rowan wrestled the phone from Roger’s hand.

“Bobby, it’s me. Stop the bomb. You don’t want to kill me like this, do you?”

“I knew you were there. Sending another woman to die in your place.”

“That wasn’t my choice.”

“Right. We all have choices.”

“I’ll come.”

“No!” John shouted.

“Stop the bomb.”

“When I see that it’s you.”

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