He thought of Moose, who really was a hero. “No one’s indestructible.”
“Figure of speech,” Myrtle said. “You know what I mean. Let me buy you a cup of coffee. We can talk about the vice president’s son, a dead ambassador, his best friend, his stepdaughter and assassins.”
“And Drew Cameron,” Grit said.
Reporter that she was, she pounced. “Who?”
“Coffee first.”
“Not here. We’ll take my car,” she said, eyeing the cedar tree. “I don’t do well with rats.”
Thirty-One
Staying low, Jo crept to the back window of the cabin. Elijah was checking the window on the side wall. Weapons drawn, they’d taken turns on watch overnight. It was first light, and the storm was over, leaving behind eight or ten inches of wet snow. The branches of the spruce trees surrounding the cabin drooped under the weight of the snow, but the cabin itself had remained dry. Even the worst of the winds hadn’t penetrated its weather-tight walls.
Leave it to a Cameron, Jo thought as she noticed Nora stir. Devin was already awake, just not talking. He’d slept little and had tried several different positions before he’d found one that was the least painful, propping himself against the woodstove. He hadn’t moved since.
Nora sat up, her sleeping bag twisted around her, and tried to smile. “I wish the woodstove was hooked up and we could build a fire.”
“A fire would confirm to Kyle that we’re here and you and Devin survived,” Jo said. “Are you warm enough?”
Nora nodded, then gave Devin a worried look. “You okay, Dev?”
“Yeah.” His lips barely moved as he spoke. Any movement seemed to cause him pain. He was clearly miserable, but he said, “I’m fine.”
As the storm had raged around them, Nora had quietly related how she and Devin had been conducting their own background check of her father’s fiancée. Both Jo and Elijah had forbidden the use of flashlights, and with the storm, there was no moonlight or starlight to help ease the darkness on the mountain. She’d heard the pain, grief and loneliness in Nora’s voice as she’d told her story.
“I’ve made a mess of things,” she’d said, almost tonelessly. “I’m sorry.”
Elijah had spoken up at that point. “Sorry for what?”
“For putting you all in this position.”
“Did you hit Devin? Did you chase yourself into that gully? You’re not the enemy here, Nora. You’re a kid. If you made mistakes-hell, why should you be exempt? Put them behind you. Focus on what you can do right now.”
“I can’t do anything. I’m useless.”
“You can stay warm and dry and get some rest.” When he’d paused, Jo had felt his smile as he teased. “I’ll have all I can do to carry Jo down this mountain.”
Of course she had protested, and Nora had sniffled and laughed, at least a little, Elijah’s comment providing the distraction it was meant to.
He and Jo both checked on Devin regularly through the long night.
A.J. knew his brother had hiked out to the north side of the mountain, and that Jo had followed him. When they didn’t turn up, he wouldn’t sit around for long. Neither would his family. Her paramedic sister, her firefighter brother-and her father, the former police chief. They’d all be raising hell by now.
Then there was Beth’s trooper boyfriend. Jo smiled to herself as she stayed to one side of the window and peered out at the snowy landscape. Scott Thorne would just love to rescue a Secret Service agent and Special Forces soldier.
But she knew that wasn’t exactly true, either. Scott would want what they all did-a good outcome. Kyle Rigby in custody, explaining himself. Devin and Nora safe. Jo and Elijah back on the lake.
“Everyone down!”
It was Elijah, intense. Jo dropped, even as a sharp crack shattered the silence and, simultaneously, the front window splintered and shards of glass crashed onto the cabin floor.
Another shot went through the same window as the first and struck the solid wood beam above the back wall of the cabin.
Staying low, Jo dived for Nora and Devin. Nora had already thrown herself onto Devin and was half dragging him, half rolling with him across the plywood floor around to the back of the woodstove.
She looked up, her eyes wide with terror. “What’s happening?”
“We’re getting shot at.” Jo shoved the backpacks toward them. Devin stirred, white-faced as he caught the strap of Nora’s pack and pushed it at her. “Use the packs for cover. Stay behind the woodstove. Understood?”
Devin barely reacted, the pain of his injuries evident in every breath he took. Nora nodded, recoiling as a third round hit the same window, and the report of the heavy-caliber weapon boomed and echoed on their quiet hillside.
Elijah pulled the slide on his.45. He’d already raced to the front of the cabin and was positioned in the corner by the shot-out window.
He aimed and fired one round.
Crouched down, Jo ran to him, ignoring the glass shards as Elijah fired again.
Two more shots in quick succession smacked into the sturdy wood door.
Jo knew she didn’t need to tell Elijah it was a heavy-caliber weapon firing at them: an assault rifle. And she didn’t have to tell him it was Kyle Rigby.
He probably had a thirty-round clip. A lot of bullets.
When he used them up, he’d reload.
“He’s using the trees my father cut down as cover. Right by the spruce trees.” Elijah didn’t take his eyes off the spot. “I’m going after him.”
“I’ll keep him from moving,” Jo said. “He wants us all dead, Elijah.”
“I can tell from the bullets.” He looked at her, his gaze steady. “We’re past negotiations, Jo.”
“Yeah. Go.” Her breath caught. “Stay safe.”
He winked at her. “Be good, sweet pea.”
Moving fast, he crossed to the back of the cabin. Snow blew in as he went out the back door, shutting it silently behind him.
Nora and Devin stayed quiet and still behind the woodstove, huddled among the backpacks, as protected as possible with a madman shooting at them.
Not a madman, Jo thought. Rigby had examined his options and picked the one he’d considered most likely to get the job done. He knew what he was up against. He’d counted on Nora and Devin freezing to death up here, and when he’d realized that wasn’t going to happen, he’d come up with a new plan.
The all-or-nothing approach.
She fired toward the fallen trees before he could get off another shot, ducked low and fired again from another angle. She wanted to provide cover fire and keep Rigby pinned down and guessing. He was aware he was dealing with two shooters. Let him think both she and Elijah were still in the cabin.
“Rigby, I know it’s you out there,” she yelled. “Let’s talk.”
“No talking. You’re all dead.”
“Let’s figure something out.” She moved to another spot on the window and fired again. “You’re not in a good situation. I’m armed, I’ve got food and water and I’m warm. Bet you’re frostbitten.”
Another shot.
Not frostbitten enough not to be able to shoot.
Then she heard three quick shots of a.45.
Elijah.
She waited, poised to shoot again if necessary.
But there was silence. Finally Elijah called to her. “He’s down, Jo. No sign of another shooter.”
She turned to Nora and Devin, who still hadn’t moved. “I have to go out there. I’ll be back in two minutes. Stay put.”
She raced out the front door and into the snow, wet and deep as it sparkled in the bright rising sun. She pushed through the tiny clearing in front of the cabin and slowed her pace as she ducked behind the felled trees and entered the spruce grove.