Cold Case Secrets. Maggie K. Black
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He aimed high and fired. The bullet flew by barely an inch from Driver’s head. The criminal froze like an animal caught in the headlights. But Grace didn’t stop for a second, almost as if she’d been expecting it. She spun back with her elbows high and struck Driver in the face. The criminal bellowed and grabbed his nose. She broke free and pelted down the rock face toward Jacob.
“Jacob!” she shouted. “He’s got a semi-automatic! He just needs to reload!”
He ran toward her, reaching the rock face just as she got to the edge. She looked down. “How do I get down from here?”
“Jump! I’ll catch you!”
Her eyes scanned the drop and then her chin rose. “Okay. I’m coming!”
He shoved his gun back in his holster. She took a deep breath and leaped. He opened his arms and she tumbled into them, just as easily and smoothly as if she’d been made to be in them. Her hands latched around his neck. He held her tightly.
Grace Finch was in his arms...
“I’m sorry I left the crevice,” she said. “I just wanted to get a better look at what was going on.”
“That’s okay,” he said.
“Thank you for catching me,” she said and pushed back against his chest. He set her down. “He’s got a modified TEC-9. Don’t ask me how because he definitely didn’t take that off a guard. All I know is I don’t want to be here when he gets it working.”
“Me neither.” A weapon like that could shred the trees and take them down a dozen times over before they even known what hit them. And a serial killer and escaped convict had somehow gotten ahold of one? “Come on.”
Impulsively, he grabbed her hand. She let him take it and together they ran along the rock face.
“Kevin!” he shouted. “We need an airlift. Now.”
“Good!” Kevin said. “Because that ten minutes is running out fast.”
“Don’t remind me,” Jacob said. “We had a second criminal sighting—Victor Driver. Somehow he’s gotten his hands on a TEC-9.”
He could’ve done without the whistle Kevin filled his ear with.
“How’d he get an illegal black market semi-automatic?” Warren barked. “He must have outside help. There’s no way he lifted that from a guard.”
“Yeah, we know.”
“Are he and Cutter working together?” Warren asked.
“No clue. Just get us out of here, and I’ll fill you both in and call in the sightings while we’re in the sky.”
As much as he’d have liked to bring both Cutter and Driver back with him, saving Grace was enough. More than enough.
“Okay, there’s a sheer stretch of rock sixty degrees southeast,” Warren said. “I can lower the ladder there. Just follow the sound of the river.”
“What about the rescue basket?” Jacob asked.
“There’s something wrong with one of the tether points,” Warren said. “Ladder is safer.”
“Got it,” Jacob said. At least he already knew Grace was comfortable climbing, although a suspended ladder wasn’t exactly the same as the rock crevice. He ran with Grace by his side and her hand tight in his.
“Watch out!” Kevin said, “There’s another heat signature coming up on your right—”
But even as he spoke, he saw the stocky figure of Cutter ahead of them, a fresh gun clutched in his hand. His heart stopped. He had one convict ahead of them, one behind them, a forest to his right, a rock wall to his left...and a woman holding his hand who he had to protect with his life. Jacob pulled his weapon and fired, but not before Cutter was able to get off a shot of his own.
“Grace, get down!” Save her, Lord! Jacob leaped, throwing himself in front of Grace just as he felt the searing hot pain of Cutter’s bullet pierce his shoulder.
* * *
He’s been shot! Fear flooded Grace’s core, even as her body hit the ground. Jacob landed beside her, his cry of pain mingled with the sound of gunfire that still seemed to echo in the air.
Detective Jacob Henry had been shot.
She rolled, sliding her body out from under him as safely as she could without jolting him. Her eyes darted around the trees. She couldn’t see Cutter anywhere, but whether he’d been shot, run off or was just biding his time, he couldn’t have gone far. Either way, they couldn’t just stay here and wait for him to fire again. A large jagged rock, at least three feet high, lay to her right. She grabbed Jacob’s uninjured arm and crawled for it, half leading and half pulling him, feeling him crawl after her. They collapsed behind it and she turned to Jacob. He was lying on his side. Blood seeped from his right shoulder. “Jacob? Are you okay?”
“No!” He groaned. “I’ve been shot.”
She almost laughed at the sheer strength of the frustration in his voice. “Yeah, I got that. Tell me you’re left-handed.”
“Nope, sorry.”
“Do you want me to check it?”
“Not right now. Thankfully it’s just a graze.” He yanked a bandanna out of his pocket and handed it to her. “Bullet’s not in the wound. Tie this down over my arm right here, like a bandage, not like a tourniquet. Hopefully this will absorb the blood and help it clot until we get somewhere we can get it properly bandaged.”
She took the bandanna and tied it over his sleeve in the place he pointed. She could tell he was trying not to wince, even through gritted teeth.
“Where are you?” Cutter’s voice came from behind the trees. “Get out here! Show yourselves!”
“Sorry, Detective, but I’m borrowing your gun,” she said and yanked the weapon from his holster. She crouched on the balls of her feet, set Cutter in her sights and fired twice. He swore and disappeared into the trees. She looked back down. Jacob was saying something in his shoulder microphone.
He looked up. “Tell me you hit him.”
“I don’t know.” She scanned the woods. “But I can’t see him or hear him. Driver either. But he can’t be far behind. Tell me your guy’s ready with that helicopter.”
As much as she wanted to