Read Twin Threat Christmas Online
Authors: Rachelle McCalla
Dear Reader,
Eight years is a long time to hold on to hope, especially without any encouraging signs or tangible reasons to believe a situation will change. Even Vanessa and Alyssa confessed that, during their long separation, they’d given up hope of ever seeing each other again.
Have you been holding on to hope for a long time? Does it sometimes feel as though it’s been too long—that surely God would have acted by now, if indeed God was willing and able to act?
I have experienced that same doubt in my life, wondering why God hasn’t come through, or if things are ever going to turn out according to my hopes and dreams. It can be overwhelming, even faith-crushing, to endure such long waits.
But, as Vanessa and Alyssa’s story reminds us, all those long days, months, even years of waiting don’t necessarily mean God isn’t going to act on our behalf. And the length of time we have to wait can make us that much more grateful in the end—if we haven’t allowed ourselves to become embittered by waiting. My prayer for all of us today is that our trust would be as big as the God in whom we trust, and our patience sufficient to see us through to the happy ending in store for us.
Blessings,
Rachelle
Questions for Discussion
We hope you enjoyed this Harlequin Love Inspired Suspense story.
You enjoy a dash of danger.
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ONE
T
he gun came out of nowhere.
A hard kick of adrenaline stole Skyler’s breath. She raised her hands and backed away, the urge to reach for her own weapon nearly overpowering her good sense.
“Everyone on the floor now!” the bank robber screamed.
Skinny with spiked hair, his eyes were glassy, his body jittery. Fidgety. He was coming down from some drug. Not a good thing. Drugs and money were the top causes of violence, and he had both of them spurring him on. Making him unpredictable.
Add a loaded weapon and Skyler had a dangerous combination staring her down.
She needed to tread lightly. Forget about the gun in her purse for now. Do as he commanded.
She pulled in a few cleansing breaths and helped a pregnant woman settle on the cold tile floor of the Portland Community Bank, then took a seat with the other terrified customers.
She’d messed up. Big-time. Missed seeing the team dubbed by the media as a modern-day Bonnie and Clyde, but she hadn’t been paying attention.
She wasn’t on duty. She’d just stopped in to cash a check for her upcoming Christmas party for homeless families. A worthy cause, for sure, but she was a deputy sheriff and a hostage negotiator on the county’s First Response Squad, for crying out loud. She was trained to read people, and she’d failed Cop 101.
Her training officer’s voice rang in her head. Always know your surroundings. Always be alert and ready for anything. Serve and protect the innocent.
Protect, Skyler! How can you protect if you don’t know what’s going on?
Focus. Now. Before it’s too late and someone gets hurt.
She watched Bonnie, a thin woman with dead eyes, calmly herd three customers from the teller windows to sit nearby. She shot across the room to retrieve the balding bank manager. That left three tellers standing behind the counter, all gaping at Clyde, his gun trained on them.
“My baby.” The pregnant woman cradled her swollen belly as her terrified gaze flitted around the space. “I’ve got to get out of here.”
“It’s okay,” Skyler whispered. “You and your baby will be fine. Just fine.”
“You don’t know that.” Panic took her voice high.
Hoping to redirect the woman’s thoughts before one of the robbers singled them out, Skyler asked, “What’s your name?”
“Faith.”
“Well, Faith, I do know we all have a much better chance of avoiding injury if we keep calm and do everything we’re told.”
“No talking!” Clyde spun on them and locked gazes with Skyler.
For the first time since they’d drawn their weapons, Skyler doubted her abilities. Doubted she’d be able to end this situation without anyone getting hurt. Not without her team. On duty, she’d have a sniper at the ready. Medical support waiting. A trained supervisor calling the shots as he did for all crisis situations in the county.
“I’ve got to get out of here.” Faith struggled to stand. Skyler stilled her as Bonnie shot across the room toward them.
Bonnie bent low, her scraggly blond hair falling over her face. She jabbed her gun at Faith’s chest. “Are you deaf, lady? He said no talking.”
“Easy,” Skyler said, the word slipping out before she thought better of it.
Bonnie pawed her hair from her eyes and glared in reply. Skyler should be afraid, but her anger fired hotter, blotting out her fear. Faith didn’t deserve to be frightened like this. The terror would live with her—with everyone in the room—for the rest of their lives.
Skyler needed to do everything she could to minimize their trauma. That meant holding her anger in check so she was ready to act if she could do so safely.
“Man the door, Bonnie,” Clyde said, his focus returning to the tellers.
Bonnie kept narrowed eyes fixed on Faith until she reached the door and turned her back.
Perfect.
Just the distraction Skyler needed.
She shifted her body for privacy, opened the message screen on her phone and typed,
211 bank 23rd & Glisan. Bonnie and Clyde. 2 Glock 9mm.
She sent the message to squad leader, Jake Marsh, then dialed his number and lowered her in-call volume to zero to keep the robbers from hearing Jake answer.
When she saw that the call had connected and knew he was on the line, she switched to speaker so he could listen in. She palmed her phone—microphone facing out—and turned back to wait for her team to arrive.
“Put all of your cash in the bag.” Clyde unfolded a worn duffel bag and tossed it onto the counter in front of the first teller.
“Move it along, Clyde,” Bonnie yelled from her post at the front door. “All we need is for a customer to show up and call the cops.”
Clyde slid over to the next teller. “Your turn. Make it quick.”
Skyler sat quietly, praying her squad arrived soon to set up their command center and get everyone out before the situation turned ugly.
Time ticked by.
Slowly. Painfully. A minute feeling like an hour.
The soothing strains of “Silent Night” played from the speakers, but nothing was calm or bright in this room. Just the opposite.
Skyler was aware of every breath she took. Of the perspiration sliding down her back. Of her purse lying against her leg, the gun inside. The change in Faith’s breathing and the face of an elderly man wearing a tattered suit reddening like a ripe tomato.
Why did they have to have a heat wave in December of all times? The seventy-plus afternoon temps made it seem more like an Oregon summer. Mix that with the fear pulsing around them and the space felt like a muggy, breath-stealing jungle. A situation that could cause panic.
“People are hot and looking like they might pass out,” Skyler said to Clyde. “Would it be okay if they took off their coats or sweaters?”
“Not happening.” He didn’t even bother to look at the group.
“I’m really worried about them.” Skyler grabbed a brochure from a rack and fanned Faith. “Especially Faith here. Her pregnancy makes her much hotter than the rest of us.”
Bonnie spun. “Another word out of you, and I’m coming over there to shut you up,” she shouted, her face tightening in anger.
Skyler could see Bonnie was starting to lose it, so Skyler clamped her mouth shut while continuing to fan Faith. When a police siren sounded nearby, Skyler held her breath, fearing that her worst nightmare was coming true. It was protocol not to run the siren and take cover out of view when responding to a robbery. The procedure kept robbers from panicking and causing a deadly hostage situation.
Please let it be a simple traffic stop. Not a rookie flying high with adrenaline and failing to follow procedures.
The
whoop, whoop, whoop
of the siren wound closer, an eerie warning of problems to come. The wail stopped just outside.
No.
The officer
was
responding to the robbery.
“Cops!” Panic flooded Bonnie’s face as she ran across the room and tugged on Clyde’s arm. “We need to get out of here now.”
Clyde jerked his arm free and jumped onto the counter. He shoved the gun into the nearest teller’s forehead. Without a siren, Bonnie and Clyde would’ve left the bank, giving waiting officers the chance to arrest them. Now, combine their panic with drugs that were known to cause paranoid psychosis, and Skyler faced a full-blown crisis.
Clyde got in the teller’s face. “You press the panic button?”
“No.” Her terrified voice cut to Skyler’s core.
“Then who did?” He stepped along the counter, his sloppy tennis shoes slapping on the Formica as he pointed his gun at the male teller. “You?”
He shook his head, his eyes cutting around the space as if searching for a way out.
“How about you?” Clyde waved his gun at the last teller.
“N-no.”
“One of you had to or the cops wouldn’t be here this fast. I’m going to start shooting you one by one until you tell me who sounded the alarm.”
“No, Clyde,” Bonnie begged. “Let’s get out of here while we can.”
“The cops have to get organized, and this won’t take long.” Clyde lowered his finger to the trigger guard and sneered down at the tellers. “Who’s first?”
The female tellers started sobbing. The male’s face paled. Skyler couldn’t let them pay for her actions.
“Stop!” She came to her feet.
Clyde whipped around. He pointed his weapon at Skyler’s heart, but she didn’t back away.
“It was me. I texted a cop friend of mine,” she said, purposely not mentioning she, too, was a deputy. She held her breath as she waited for him to fire.
He jumped from the counter and marched across the room. She was hyperaware of every second passing while he advanced on her. His baggy jeans whispering. The
thump, thump, thump
of his shoes. His body odor and foul breath.
Inches away, he pressed the gun into her mouth and held out his hand. “Give me your phone.”
She resisted gagging on the cold steel and handed over her phone. The acrid smell of burned carbon filled her nostrils. He’d fired this gun before. Maybe it was the same gun used to kill two hostages in California.
Please, God, don’t let his finger slip.
He turned his attention to the phone and woke up the screen. She knew once he discovered her ongoing call to Jake, he’d squeeze the trigger, ending her life. In all her negotiations, she’d never been this close to death. Sweat rolled down her back and beaded above her lip.
“Clyde, c’mon,” Bonnie said. “We stay here any longer and the place will be swarming with cops.”
Yes, Clyde, run. Now. Fast. Down the street and into the arms of my team.
He stared at Skyler’s phone and didn’t respond.
Please, God, don’t let this be the end.
A sick smile spread across Clyde’s thin lips, revealing teeth rotted from a meth addiction and confirming her suspicions of drug use. She braced herself for his finger curling on the metal. The report of gunfire. The weapon jerking in her mouth. Death taking hold.
“Jake, huh,” he said, his sneer widening. “You didn’t just text him—you called him, too.” He lifted the phone to his mouth. “Well,
Jake.
” He jiggled the gun, and Skyler’s heart threatened to stop beating. “Sorry you hurried on over here. You cost this pretty little lady her life.”
His finger slid to the trigger. “Say buh-bye to Jake, missy. It’s the last thing you’ll ever do.”
* * *
Adrenaline spurring him on, FBI Agent Logan Hunter approached the police barricade outside the bank robbery in progress. He’d caught the perfect break. He’d just gotten into town, when the call came in about Bonnie and Clyde. His team was en route to the standoff, but as the case agent tasked with bringing in the robbers, Logan was in the right place at a critical moment. True, he still had to convince the local authorities to let him in on the action, but that was a piece of cake.
He paused to take in the scene and plan his approach. He’d been briefed on the unique First Response Squad—a division of the county sheriff’s department—on the way over. He spotted the man who was clearly their commander, Lieutenant Jake Marsh, standing outside their large white command truck. He was talking to the team’s sniper, who was unzipping a rifle case. Both were dressed in the team uniform of black tactical pants and polo shirts, but the sniper added a tactical vest and loaded it with extra ammo.
Marsh, feet planted wide, stood calmly, his focus intense. The sniper was jumpy, his foot tapping on the concrete. As Logan climbed over the barricade, the sniper took off across the street to get into position for a kill shot should it become necessary. Marsh stepped to another team member settling a small orange case on a small robot. Likely a negotiator—an
additional
negotiator, since Logan had heard that another one was already in the building. The man didn’t rush, but moved with purpose and double-checked each step. Obviously not his first hostage standoff.
The case held a phone connected by a long cable to the command truck and would provide direct communications to the robbers.
If
the team could get them to take the phone. That was a big if as they wouldn’t need a throw phone if the robbers had answered the bank phone or kept in touch on the inside negotiator’s cell.
As Logan approached, he searched for the bomb expert and the EMT who rounded out the team of six. He found neither and assumed they were in the truck. He headed straight for Marsh.
Marsh looked up, his eyes narrowing.
Logan flashed his badge. “I hear you have a team member inside.”
Marsh’s brows shot toward his thick black hair. “This is your concern, why?”
“Bank robbery.” Logan knew his response was lame, but the bureau’s jurisdiction over bank robberies was his only way into the action. He hoped Marsh played nice and let him participate in the negotiations.
“The investigation is all yours.” Marsh made strong eye contact. “
After
my team resolves the standoff. Until then, you stand down.”
The lieutenant’s rebuff should have angered Logan. Instead, he respected the guy for standing up to an agent. But Logan had no intention of sitting back. Of letting the locals do their thing when his future promotion at the FBI depended on him arresting Bonnie and Clyde. A promotion that should win him the first hint of respect in his demanding father’s eyes.
“I’m not asking to take charge of the standoff,” Logan said. “But our agency has been tailing this pair for months now. My information could be invaluable in your efforts here.”
“Fine,” Marsh said. “Speak only when asked and you can stay.”
Right. Real team player.
Schooling himself not to get mad, Logan followed Marsh to the mobile command center. The negotiator climbed the stairs after Marsh and Logan trailed them onboard the state-of-the-art truck.
“Everybody,” March called out as he stepped to a communications suite holding three monitors, “the suit is Special Agent Hunter. He’s heading up the bureau’s investigation into Bonnie and Clyde.”
Marsh snapped on a headset, then clamped a hand on the shoulder of a scrawny young man who sat behind a computer watching a live feed of the bank’s exterior from the truck’s rooftop camera.