Just A Little Bit Dangerous - LightNovelsOnl.com
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Pressing her hand to her stomach, tears streaming down her cheeks, Donna Sullivan began to talk.
Abby knew what a trapped animal must feel like. For twenty minutes she struggled against the nylon restraints, trying to wear them thin by twisting and rubbing them against the edge of the bench seat. She worked on the nylon until her arm muscles trembled and her wrists were sc.r.a.ped raw. But her struggles were in vain.
Oh, Jake, where are you?
She'd thought of him a hundred times in the last twenty minutes. She wondered if he was thinking about her. If he'd called the jail and knew she'd been taken. She wondered if he knew she was in danger, if he would come looking for her. The question broke her heart because she didn't know the answer.
Half an hour into the drive, the van slowed. Sliding across the unpadded bench seat in the rear, she leaned her shoulder against the woven wire of the cage and spoke to the driver. "Where are you taking me?"
"You'll find out soon enough."
She'd watched for landmarks as best she could from the rear of the van. There were no windows, but she caught glimpses of the road and landscape through the front windows. They'd entered the mountains, but they weren't on the road leading to the prison at Buena Vista. Judging from the lack of communication equipment, she wasn't even in a Department of Corrections van.
Where were they taking her?
Her question was answered a few minutes later when the van pulled onto an unpaved road. b.u.mping over ruts and stones the size of softb.a.l.l.s, the van began to climb, its headlights slas.h.i.+ng through thick pine forest. A few inches of snow covered the ground here, so she knew they'd gained some elevation. A few minutes later the road opened to a large clearing. The driver shut down the engine and both men got out.
Abby was intimately acquainted with fear. In the past year and a half she'd experienced it too many times not to recognize its jagged facets. She'd been cut by each of those facets, had the scars to prove it. Yet when the rear doors of the van swung open and the two men stood looking in at her, the terror was terrible and fresh and consumed her in a single bite. It snaked up her spine and exploded in her brain. Horrible possibilities played through her mind.
They were going to kill her. They hadn't said the words, but she knew by the way they were looking at her-as if she were a piece of litter they'd found on the street-that they were going to do away with her.
"Get out," the taller of the two men said.
Abby wasn't going to make it easy for them. She wasn't going to give up her life without a fight. When the stocky man reached for her, she leaned back and lashed out with both feet. Her right foot connected solidly with his chin. He cursed. The other man rushed forward, his lips peeled back in a snarl. She fought madly, but before she could scoot back and aim another kick, the second man had her around her ankles and pulled her from the truck.
Abby landed hard on her back in the gravel. The impact knocked the air from her, but she didn't let that stop her. She twisted away from him, and tried to get to her feet. She'd only made it to her knees when strong hands bit into her shoulders and pulled her to her feet.
Suddenly headlights blinded her. Breathing hard, she squinted, a small part of her brain praying that Jake had somehow found out where they had taken her and come for her. She drew a mental picture of him rus.h.i.+ng to her, weapon drawn, flanked by an army of deputies. And while the deputies arrested the men who'd kidnapped her, Jake would take her into his arms, kiss her gently and lovingly and tell her how wrong he'd been, how much he loved her....
The car stopped ten feet away, jerking her from her reverie. She watched, her heart hammering like a piston as a man climbed out. She squinted against the headlights, only able to make out his silhouette. A silhouette that was disturbingly familiar....
"h.e.l.lo, Abby."
Her blood ran cold at the sound of Jonathan Reed's voice.
"Jonathan...my G.o.d...."
He stepped into view. Abby gaped at him, stunned. He halted less than a foot away from her, his expression vaguely amused. It had been more than a year since she'd last seen him, but he hadn't changed. He still had the look of a wealthy doctor, an air of impatience about him. He wore perfectly creased navy slacks. An expensive leather jacket and kid-skin gloves. Cool, intelligent eyes traveled the length of her.
Without speaking he removed one of his gloves. "Ah, prison hasn't diminished your beauty. It's good to see you again."
She cringed when he reached out and gently brushed the hair from her eyes. "What do you want with me?" she asked.
"Abby, Abby, Abby." He shook his head as if she'd disappointed him. "Why couldn't you just do your time like a good little girl?"
"The police know you're behind this." Her voice shook with each word, but she didn't care.
"The police?" He arched a brow as if he found the thought amusing. "Oh, you mean that strapping young stud deputy of yours?" He clucked his mouth. "Please, Abby, you really should be more careful about who you...a.s.sociate with and why."
She launched a kick at him, but Reed managed to twist aside. The man holding her arms jerked her back. "I see prison life hasn't done much to rectify that temper of yours. I'll bet you hate having people telling you what to do twenty-four hours a day."
"Why the two goons, Reed? Afraid you can't handle me yourself?"
"You still know how to push those b.u.t.tons, don't you?"
"An insecure worm like you has a lot of b.u.t.tons to choose from."
Anger flashed in his eyes, but he covered it with a smile. "Still have that smart mouth, too. I always liked that about you." He removed his other glove one finger at a time. "A man in my position has to have some...shall we say...muscle."
"You mean someone to do your dirty work."
"The last transplant operation I performed earned me over two million dollars. That calls for a certain amount of...protection."
"The police know about your twisted operation. It won't take them long to come up with some proof. You might be smart, but you're not that smart. I mean, I figured it out."
For the first time he looked at her, equal to equal. "You're going to make killing you very easy."
"I think they're all easy for you."
"Tell me, dear Abby, what is so terribly wrong with what I do? What kind of an impact is an uneducated wino derelict going to have on the world in comparison to a genetic scientist with the IQ of a genius who is a few years from curing heart disease or cancer?"
Abby contemplated him, aghast at what she knew he was going to say next, appalled because she knew he truly believed it.
"Why shouldn't the derelict sacrifice his miserable life for the good of mankind?" Moving closer to her, he took her chin in his hand. "I don't use those organs for just anyone. I use them for people who can pay for them. We're talking millions of dollars, Abby. People who lead productive lives. People who have families and careers. People who will contribute greatly to our society."
"Nothing gives you the right to play G.o.d with people's lives."
"I've bestowed that right upon myself."
"I told the cops everything I know. They're on to your sick scam. Once they get proof, you're going down."
A cruel smile twisted his mouth. "By the time the media gets finished with your...cop, everyone in the state of Colorado will know he acted inappropriately with a female convict. Everyone will know he engaged in hot s.e.x with a prisoner while they were s...o...b..und in that cozy cabin." A cruel laugh rumbled from his chest. "The photographs should help. Well, as long as they edit out the more...graphic details for their more sensitive readers.h.i.+p."
Outrage flashed through her.
"Imagine the headlines. 'Deputy Beds Convict in Mountain Love Nest.'" He chuckled. "No, I don't believe your deputy will be a problem."
"He knows about the black market organs," she choked. "He knows everything. I told him all of it. And he believed me, Reed." Emotion wrenched at her with each word. Abby closed her eyes against a hot rush of tears. She didn't know for sure that Jake had believed any of what she'd told him. But she couldn't let Reed know that. "He's going to blow your little scam wide open."
Serious now, anger flaring in his eyes, he stepped close to her and grasped her chin roughly. "Ah, Abby, you overestimate your charms. I suspect your young stud wasn't quite as...shall we say...emotionally attached about what happened in that cabin as you are. Some men can be rather calculating when it comes to s.e.x."
"That's not the way it was."
"You're a convicted felon. You're nothing more than a smear on the bottom of someone's shoe. Maybe your stud thought he was doing you a favor. Give the poor little lifer one last thrill since she's going to be spending the rest of her days in prison."
Abby tried not to let the words hurt her, but they cut her as surely and deeply as any knife. She knew that wasn't the way it had been, but the doubt was there. The sharp edge of a blade slas.h.i.+ng her with each word.
"He's going to destroy you," she said. "He's going to make sure you spend the rest of your miserable life behind bars."
"Enough. I've grown bored with your dramatics." Stepping back, he nodded at the men holding her. "Get rid of her."
Terror burst like a bomb in her chest. For the first time she contemplated her life ending here and now. On this terrible night at the hands of a man she'd once trusted. Oh, G.o.d, why couldn't she keep her mouth shut? Why had she taunted him when she should have been trying to buy some time for herself?
"Why are you doing this?" she asked. "I was in prison. I wasn't a threat."
His eyes glinted cruelly as he contemplated her. Stepping forward, he pressed his mouth against hers in a sick imitation of a kiss. Abby endured the contact, closing her eyes against the revulsion rising inside her. When he pulled away, she spat.
Reed smiled. "I've experienced your charms firsthand. Let's just say any man who's had a taste of you might just fall hard enough to believe you. I didn't want to take that chance. Even with that country b.u.mpkin cop of yours." Stepping away from her, he spoke to the two men. "Take her out into deep water, cut through the ice, weight her body and dump her."
Jake drove like a madman through the darkness, pus.h.i.+ng the SUV to speeds that were dangerous on any highway, let alone a dirt road in the dead of night. All the while Donna Sullivan's voice rang in his ears.
Reed told me he was going to take care of her. I don't know what he meant by that, but I can only a.s.sume that meant he was going to kill her. The last thing he mentioned was the Antero reservoir....
Jake had dropped Buzz at the Chaffee County jail to work that angle and taken off to find Abby. The Antero reservoir was located off of Route 285, not far from Fairplay. Jake broke every speed limit in the book on the drive west, pus.h.i.+ng Buzz's SUV over one hundred miles an hour on the straight stretches of highway. Now, less than a mile away from the reservoir, he was terrified at what he might find. That he was too late. That Reed hadn't taken her there to begin with.
That he was wrong about everything and Abby was going to wind up dead because of him.
Fear crawled up and down his spine like a sharply honed spur. If Reed had, indeed, taken her to the reservoir, there was only one reason Jake could think of. Antero reservoir was deep and stayed frozen most of the winter. If someone were to chop a hole in the ice and drop a weighted body into the water, it wouldn't ever surface....
Abby tried not to imagine what it would be like to drown in the frigid water of the reservoir, to have her body weighted, the black water closing around her. Panic threatened to overwhelm her, but she fought it back. She couldn't afford to panic. She needed time to think. She needed a plan. A clear head. There had to be something she could do to save herself.
Reed walked away without looking back. She watched him go, aware of the two men standing on either side of her, the nylon cuffs cutting into her wrists. Her heart beat out a wild staccato, fear pumping through her veins with every hard beat.
"Let's go."
Vaguely, she was aware of one of the men taking her arm and guiding her toward the frozen sh.o.r.e of the lake. Twenty feet ahead, the other man stepped out onto the ice, an ax in one hand, a coil of rope in the other.
Abby's mind rebelled against the horror of what would happen next. Things were moving too fast. Her life couldn't end like this. She had too much to live for. She thought of Jake, of all the things she wanted to say to him, all the things they'd left unfinished. It struck her then that she'd never heard him say he loved her. The need to hear him say the words was an ache in her heart.
Closing her eyes, Abby stifled a sob. She knew he loved her. No man could make love to her the way Jake had and not love her. She'd seen it in his eyes, heard it in his voice, felt it in the gentleness of his touch.
Oh, Jake, where are you?
"How far out we gonna take her?" the stocky man asked.
"About halfway. Ice isn't too thick yet. Hole ought to be easy to chop out."
The man yanked on her arm. "Come on. We ain't got all day."
Sick with terror, Abby took another step toward the ice. Abruptly, the man holding her arm slipped. His feet went out from under him and he went down hard on his rump.
Hope burst through her. She lunged backward, breaking his grip on her arm. The other man turned, dropped the rope and ax. By the time the ghastly tools. .h.i.t the ground, she was running all-out and halfway to sh.o.r.e.
She heard a shout. Unable to keep herself from it, she looked over her shoulder. The second man had fallen. Another burst of hope sent her up the steep bank. She looked wildly around, spotted the van thirty feet away and dashed toward it.
"Stop!"
A gunshot snapped through the air. Abby didn't slow down, didn't look back. She picked up speed and ran a zigzag pattern, praying she didn't get shot in the back.
A moment later she reached the van. Hampered by the cuffs, she turned, fumbled with the door handle, jerked open the door. Fueled by terror and anger and the raw will to live, she threw herself onto the seat. She spotted the keys in the ignition, twisted her body and started the engine.
The winds.h.i.+eld shattered. Abby screamed, turned her head and saw one of the men running toward her, his gun leveled at her back. "Stop!" he shouted.
Leaning forward, she somehow got her hands on the gears.h.i.+ft and rammed the van into gear. Another gunshot rang out. Dropping sideways onto the seat, Abby stomped down hard on the gas pedal. The truck shot backward, the momentum nearly throwing her to the floor. She hit the gas again. Gravel spewed. She couldn't see from where she was on the seat, but the driver's side door was open. The ground blurred past as she put distance between her and the man. If she got lucky, she could get out and run into the woods and get away.
A tree slammed against the open door, ripping it off with the screech of metal against metal. Abby kept her foot on the gas, struggled to a sitting position. An instant later the truck crashed into something solid, stopping it cold. The engine sputtered and died. She looked through the winds.h.i.+eld and tried to get her bearings. She'd backed into the dense forest adjacent to the gravel lot.
Suddenly, headlights flashed over her, blinding her. A vehicle moving fast approached. Reed, she thought, and another wave of fear sliced her. Through the open door, she saw a man running toward her. It was difficult to maneuver with her arms cuffed behind her, but she managed to get her fingers on the keys. She turned the ignition. The engine groaned.
"Start!" she cried.
In her peripheral vision she saw a man slide to a stop at the door. He leaned in and reached for her. Screaming, Abby lashed out with her feet. "Get away from me!"
"Easy, honey, it's me!"
The voice registered slowly. She stopped fighting, turned to look at him, felt her heart turn over in her chest. "Jake?"
He uttered her name. Once. Twice. Then he was reaching for her. Pulling her out of the truck and into his arms. A sob bubbled out of her as his strong arms went around her. His words cut through the terror and despair and filled her with hope. "Easy, honey, I've got you."
Relief made her legs buckle. He caught her just in time to keep her from slinking to the ground. "Sweetheart, are you hurt?"
"Oh, G.o.d, Jake, you came. I thought-"
"I couldn't stay away. I couldn't stop thinking about you." He looked over the hood of the van, toward the reservoir. "Are you okay?"
"I'm fine."
"Where's Reed?"
The hairs at her nape stood on end. "I don't know. He was here...."
"How many of them are there?"
"Three."
"Okay." He tugged the radio from his belt. "RMSAR Homer Two, this is Coyote One, do you read me? Over."
The radio crackled, then a voice answered. "This is Homer. What's up, Jake?"
"I'm up at the Antero reservoir. Three suspects. Armed and very dangerous. I was wondering if you guys can get Colorosa's a.s.s out of bed and get him up here. I'll contact Buzz."
"Chopper is already en route. Buzz called ten minutes ago. ETA-now."
"I hope he has the night vis."
"He's got it."
"Over and out.