Authors: Leslie Parrish
He saw the smal gravel driveway, right where Mick had said he would . . .
and it did, indeed, have a metal chain with a shiny new sign. Knowing he was
probably ending his police career for bursting onto a potential crime scene
without a warrant or any provable probable cause, Gabe gunned the engine
and drove right through the chain, tearing down the two posts that had been
holding it up.
“Guess we’re not going for the element of surprise,” Mick said.
“No time.”
There were no streetlamps, of course, and the woods overhead blocked out
much of the sky. It wasn’t ful dark out on the road, but here in the woods, he
couldn’t see any farther than the distance of his headlights. He tapped the
high beams, gaining a few extra feet, and kept fol owing the narrow road,
twisting and turning around hairpin curves and over downed limbs and brush.
Ahead, he suddenly spotted something—a glow in the woods. Some kind
of light. His foot nearly hit the floor, taking the gas pedal with it, and he heard
Julia fly around in the backseat. But he couldn’t slow down.
Olivia, please, God, please be okay
.
Suddenly, ahead of him, he saw a shocking sight and hit the brakes. A
blond woman, her hair tangled over her face, obscuring it, came staggering
out of the woods, clutching her stomach. Her hands were covered with blood,
which dripped down freely, drenching her body.
“Who the hel is that?” he asked.
Julia was already getting out of the car, reaching for the gun at her hip. Mick
joined her, and together they raced to the woman.
But Gabe didn’t get out. They’d do what they could for her, but right now, he
was focused on getting to Olivia, finding the shed Aidan had seen in his
vision, since that’s where the psychic had been sure she was being held.
Those lights ahead, probably coming from the camper, were only yards away,
he couldn’t just sit here and stare at them.
He hit the gas again once Julia and Mick reached the woman’s side. They
waved him on, silently tel ing him to do what he had to.
Rounding one more curve, he suddenly emerged into a clearing and spied
the mobile home. And the shed. He lurched to a stop, jumping out and running
toward it, cal ing Olivia’s name. But the word died on his lips when he saw that
the door was wide open and nobody was inside.
“Gabe!” a voice cried.
Olivia
.
He spun around, charging toward the sound, past the camper, into the dark
woods. He knew a predator was out here, knew he was deadly. But Gabe was
like a predator now, too. He was fil ed with rage and deadly purpose, wanting
to save the woman he’d begun to love and avenge the partner he’d lost.
His weapon in his hand, down by his side, he paused midstep, hearing
noises from two directions. A woman speaking somewhere to the right, a
child’s answering cry.
And to the left . . .
“Jack! You get back here, boy!”
“There you are,” Gabe whispered, melting back against a large live oak,
disappearing into its shadow. He waited, hearing the branches breaking as
the murderous bastard lumbered through the woods, bel owing the boy’s
name again and again.
“You’re not getting anywhere near him again,” he mumbled, meaning it.
The man suddenly stopped yel ing and stopped running, too. Gabe held his
breath, not making a sound, knowing that, like any other deadly animal, John
Traynor smel ed danger.
Gabe was no murderer; he wasn’t lying in wait to shoot the man down in
cold blood. He’d just wanted Traynor to come closer, close enough so that
there would be nowhere to run once Gabe leveled his gun on him and ordered
him to freeze.
But he was stil too far away. He could break left or right, disappear into the
woods, where Gabe didn’t dare randomly shoot for fear he’d hit Olivia or the
boy.
“You’re never going to hurt him again,” a voice said, loud and deliberate.
Olivia’s.
She was close. Not more than a few yards away, though he couldn’t see her.
But she hadn’t been talking to him; she’d been talking to Traynor. Baiting him
like a bear.
Just like a wounded bear, Traynor bel owed, then lurched out of hiding,
enraged by her voice, losing al caution. Which was obviously what she’d
intended.
Gabe counted to five, watching the man step closer, sure Olivia had already
taken cover again and was wel hidden. Traynor drew even with him and then
moved on past. Exactly two steps past.
“Freeze, you son of a bitch,” Gabe snarled as he leapt out from his hiding
place, putting the barrel of the gun against the man’s lower back. “Drop that
gun.”
He’d expected him to do it, to know he had nowhere to go, no possible
chance to get away from Gabe before he would be shot. But he was stil
operating on animal instincts. Those vicious, cornered-animal instincts must
have told him to fight. He began to swing around, the muzzle coming up as he
prepared to fire.
Somewhere out in the trees, Olivia cried out. The boy sobbed.
“Don’t,” Gabe ordered.
But it was clear the man wasn’t going to stop. He intended to kil or be
kil ed.
Knowing which of those two options he preferred, Gabe didn’t even
hesitate. He just pul ed the trigger.
Traynor dropped. Gabe stared down at him, already knowing this man
who’d kil ed so many, including the best friend he’d ever had, was never going
to get up again.
Which was just fine with him.
“Gabe?” Olivia cried, running toward him through the trees. She held a boy
in her arms, a gangly boy, not too big, but then neither was Olivia.
He jogged toward her, reaching out and taking the child from her arms. The
boy, who looked like he was in shock, came without protest, staring down at
the ground where the man who’d made his life miserable lay in a pool of
blood.
“Are you okay?” Gabe asked, reaching out to touch Olivia, stroking her
cheek, brushing his thumb across her bottom lip.
She curled her face into his palm, kissing his hand. “I’m fine. I think I real y
am fine at last.”
After she arrived home from Ty’s funeral, Olivia kicked off her black shoes and
sat down on her front porch swing. She hadn’t used it in months—nobody
used porch swings in the height of a Southern summer.
It was
still
the height of summer—stil August, stil hot, stil miserable. But for
the first time in at least two months, there was a hint of coolness on the
breeze. Like Georgia had decided to take pity on her residents and send a
tiny breath of fal a couple of months early, just as a tease.
It wouldn’t last. But she’d take it while she could.
Pushing her bare feet against the plank floor of the verandah, she set the
swing in motion, watching kids ride their bikes down the street, waving to one
of her neighbors who was emptying groceries out of her car. They were living
their lives. Normal lives. Normal families.
Normal days.
Would they ever be that way for her? Was normalcy something she could
even understand at this point in her life much less strive for?
Most important, was she living her life the way she should be, or had her
choices driven al chance of normalcy away for good?
That question had plagued her for a long time but never more so since
Monday, when Gabe had looked at her with both anger and emotion in his
eyes and told her what he thought of the job she’d been doing so far—the job
of living the life she’d been given not once but twice.
She thought of Ty, whose murderer was now where he belonged, six feet
under the ground. As was the murderer’s cousin, who’d destroyed lives out of
greed yet tried to do the right thing in the end.
She thought of John Zachary, who was final y at peace.
She thought of poor little Tucker Smith, whose parents had come to town as
soon as they’d gotten word their boy was alive. He’d probably need years of
therapy, but maybe, just maybe someday he’d be al right. He certainly
seemed to have the love of good people—a family that sick monster had told
him was dead.
She thought of Brooke, who’d broken her engagement this morning, and
cried at the funeral this afternoon, mourning something she’d caught just a
glimpse of that was now forever beyond her reach.
She thought of her parents, who’d listened to every word she’d said,
realized how badly they’d been manipulated, and had then clasped hands,
saying nothing but stil somehow communicating more than they had in at least
a decade. She knew they both blamed themselves—her mom for bringing
Sunni into their lives, her dad for keeping her there. They might never be
Sunni into their lives, her dad for keeping her there. They might never be
together again, but for now, they were united in sheer regret.
Then she did something she rarely did: Olivia thought of herself.
She considered her future, what she wanted, what she longed for, how she
intended to fil her thoughts and her days.
And none of those things included death, hers or anybody else’s.
She wanted life. She wanted it desperately. Wanted to be fil ed with laughter
every minute of the day rather than sorrow. Wanted to go to sleep and dream
happy dreams about the people she loved, not strangers living their agonizing
final moments. She wanted to feel alive, rather than like she had one foot in
the grave at any given moment. Wanted that light, giddy feeling of being young
and free and in love . . . the one she felt when she was with Gabe.
Gabe. He was the one she wanted al those things with. The man who was,
at this very minute, walking up the sidewalk, having stayed behind in the car to
finish a phone cal while she came to the porch and dropped onto the swing.
Gabe said nothing. He simply sat down beside her and draped an arm
across her shoulders, letting his fingertips brush her arm. She pushed her toes
against the floor again, setting them swinging, and they swayed together, the
silence broken by the creak of the old hooks anchored into the ceiling.
“Are you al right?” she asked him, knowing today had been beyond awful.
Burying a fel ow officer was hard for any cop. Burying a friend and a partner
was something few ever had to experience. She wished to God he hadn’t
been one of them.
“I’m okay. Ty’s parents cal ed to say they were getting ready to head to the
airport.”
“I’m glad I got the chance to meet them.”
He continued to caress her arm, sighing deeply, so much more on his mind.
She knew one thing that wasn’t worrying him—his job. She guessed that
having a U.S. senator cal your boss, the mayor, the chief, the media and
everyone else to thank a young police officer for saving his cousin’s life and
bringing a cop kil er to justice was enough to keep anybody employed. Gabe
would probably end up getting a commendation.
Ty already had. Posthumously.
“What are you thinking?” she final y asked.
“I’m thinking about you. About us,” he admitted.
She shifted so she could look up at him. “Funny, I was just thinking the same
thing.”
“Liv . . .”
She lifted a hand, putting her fingers over his lips. “Please, let me say
something.”
He nodded.
Swal owing hard, she admitted, “I gave Julia my letter of resignation.”
His eyes widened in shock. “You did?”
“Not because you wanted me to,” she was quick to point out, “even though I
know you did.”
“I didn’t necessarily want you to quit your job. Hel , I’m no caveman.”
“I know. You just wanted me to stop doing the most important part of it.”
He didn’t deny it.
“And that’s what I decided to do.” She shrugged helplessly, having to admit
the truth, even to herself. “You were right. It was breaking me. I kept tel ing
myself I was helping, doing what needed to be done. That the ends did justify
the means. But they don’t. Not if what I’m doing ends up destroying me, which
it would.”
She could never have a normal life unless she stopped. Her sanity would
slip away, along with her security and her peace of mind. It might not happen
right away, but it would happen. In the meantime, being so sure of that bleak
inevitability, she would never
allow
herself to have a normal life. She’d never
trust herself to give her heart completely or to accept his.
And she would never—ever—inflict her inner darkness on a child.
Olivia wanted children—she always had. She just hadn’t al owed herself to
think about the choices she faced, the decisions she would have to make,
before she could even dream of having them.
“I’m final y ready to put down al this baggage I’ve been carrying around,”
she told him, knowing no other way to put it. “It’s too much to haul. From now