Targeted For Murder. Elizabeth Goddard
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу Targeted For Murder - Elizabeth Goddard страница 6
Cooper had no plans to die today, but who did? “I have every intention of making sure she’s safe. That you don’t succeed in killing her.”
“Do you even know her?”
“Never seen her before in my life.”
“A hero, then. Don’t be a martyr, too—just walk away.”
“Why are you trying to kill her?” Cooper asked, borrowing time. But the assassin was also stalling. For what purpose, Cooper couldn’t know.
“I tell you what...” He gestured behind him to the cliff’s edge. “You toss her down the cliff for me and I’ll let you live.”
The man was twisted in ways Cooper didn’t want to linger on.
But he’d given Cooper an advantage, sparking a memory that allowed anger and rage from the past to drive him, empower him. He’d watched his brother throw himself over. Commit suicide.
Cooper hadn’t been able to stop him. Now was the moment he could let go and unleash the beast.
Letting that memory fuel him, Cooper charged the man and quickly disarmed him of the knife. They rolled until they were at the cliff’s edge. Doubt crawled over Cooper. Would the assassin push him off the ledge to his death? Take Cooper with him when he fell?
Then the woman was there, pounding on the assassin entangled with Cooper, using martial arts again until the man freed himself from them—but then lost his footing. He hung on to the gnarled roots growing from the rocky ledge as he clung for his life.
Cooper reached for him. “Give me your hand. I’ll pull you up.”
Fear didn’t grip the man like Cooper would have expected. Instead anger and hate filled the man’s gaze. Determination marked his features, and he made no move to accept Cooper’s help. Cooper reached, grabbing the man’s arm. In this position, the man could take him with him if he chose to fall and drag Cooper along.
What am I doing?
But even if the man was an assassin, Cooper couldn’t stand by and watch another man die like this. And anyway, he still wanted answers.
“Why kill her? What’s she to you? Who are you?” In his peripheral vision, he could see that she stood back and away from the edge, eerily silent. She had to already know the answer.
A smirk lifted the man’s lips. “It’s just business. If I die, it’s only a matter of time before another will come.”
Then, he twisted out of Cooper’s grip and dropped, his body falling hundreds of feet toward the rocky Rogue River rapids below.
Cooper couldn’t bring himself to watch, this image melding with the other of his brother’s fall to his death.
But now was not the time to lose himself in memories or guilt. Not when the woman was still there, with possibly another killer on her trail.
* * *
Hadley pressed her hand against her midsection, trying to comprehend what had just happened. Cold laced the wind that rushed over her and rustled the trees like it was any other day. As though none of what she’d experienced had happened.
The man who’d fought with the assassin turned away from the cliff’s edge and faced her, his broad shoulders rising and falling as he caught his breath— Or maybe in disbelief.
He tugged off his ripped jacket. Sweat darkened the back of his shirt, torn at the arm.
If only she could get the assassin’s last words out of her head.
It’s just business. If I die, it’s only a matter of time before another will come.
Nausea roiled. She’d done the best she could to disappear. Now what? Where did she go?
Her eyes rose to the face of the man who’d inserted himself into her fight. It was caked with blood and dirt, as was his shaggy brown hair. His steel-blue eyes stared at her. He appeared as shocked as she was from the events of the last few moments.
But he was still alive.
She took in his sturdy six-foot form. He didn’t look much older than her. Early thirties, maybe? He was definitely well-trained. He’d somehow survived fighting with the assassin sent to kill her.
Her relief palpable, she almost cried.
“Are you okay?” His voice was gentler than she had expected.
But what must he think of her? “No.”
This wasn’t over.
I have to know.
Hadley rushed over to the edge. She had to see the body. Had to see that he was dead.
The man caught her at the waist and pulled her back from the edge.
“Whoa. What are you doing?”
She twisted in his arms. Powerful arms. “I have to see that he’s dead! To make sure he’s gone.” She sounded like a crazy person. She didn’t recognize her own voice.
“He’s dead.”
“Let me go!”
When he relinquished his hold, oddly, Hadley almost wished he hadn’t. She crept to the edge and vertigo hit her. She forced herself to look down, searching, but when she swayed on her feet, he gently gripped her arm and tugged her back.
“I don’t see him.”
“The river took him.”
“Then he could still be alive.”
“No, he couldn’t.”
“But you don’t know that.”
“Look. He’s dead, all right?”
“I don’t know.” Wouldn’t she feel safer if he was dead? Instead, she didn’t feel safe at all. “He seemed so invincible. I can’t believe the fall would kill him. Is there a chance that he could have survived, no matter how small?”
He produced a sigh as if giving up. “Yes. There’s always a chance. Of course, there is. It’s doubtful, but anything is possible.”
Okay, so there was that possibility. And another equally as terrifying.
Hadley opened her eyes. “You heard him. It doesn’t matter if he’s dead. Someone else will come.”
Deep lines creased his forehead. He studied her as if he were sifting through her insides, looking for anything good and coming up short. Now she’d done it.
Why had she blurted that out?
“Who