CHAPTER 37
HOLDING her broken arm tight to her chest
to immobilize it, Rachel concentrated on making a wide circle
through the woods. She was on the wrong side of the highway. She
needed to head to the lake. No one would expect her to go for the
dead end, right?
Her head spun, she wanted to stop and puke. Her
sides were on fire and vicious pain shot through her arm with every
step she took.
She blocked it all out. She pictured the lake and
how wonderful it would feel. The coolness of the water. The
soothing ripples. Escape. She had to make it to the lake.
Her feet pounded the ground. She tripped over
countless rocks and roots, but she kept her footing. If she went
down, she was a goner. That thought alone kept her on her feet and
running.
Was she even running in the right direction? She
wanted to stop to catch her breath, just for a moment, but she
didn’t dare. They could be right behind her.
No more shots had been fired, but how did she know
they weren’t stalking her, waiting for her to make a mistake?
After an hour of agonizing pain, losing one shoe
and battering her one bare foot, she plunged out of the woods and
fell over the riverbank and down into the water below.
The cold was a shock, and she barely called back
the scream of pain when her broken arm took the brunt of the
impact. Water filled her nose and mouth, and she picked her head up
from the gurgling stream.
For a moment she lay gasping for breath. Then she
heard voices over the gentle lap of water. They were close. Oh
God.
She heaved herself toward the steep bank, crawling
desperately for the shelter of the overhang. It was her only chance
to remain out of sight, and she had to pray they didn’t come down
to the water.
She huddled against the damp soil and mud and
curled herself into the tightest, most inconspicuous ball she
could. The voices came closer now, and she heard the driver shout
to the other one to spread out.
Her breath caught and held when dirt rained down
the bank just in front of her. He was here. Right above
her.
Sweat rolled down her neck. Her nose twitched
uncontrollably. Every muscle in her body ached. She needed to move,
to shift, something, anything.
“Bitch must have doubled back. She couldn’t have
made it across the water,” the driver yelled to his partner.
Still she waited, frozen in fear, her heart
pounding so hard she worried it would give her away. For an
eternity she sat there, pain washing over her in waves.
Just as she started to cautiously shift her
position, there was a slight noise and a trickle of dirt spilled
over the bank again. She stared in horror, paralyzed by the mistake
she’d almost made. He’d been waiting for her. He suspected she was
out there, he just didn’t know where. He’d laid the trap, and she’d
damn near fallen into it headfirst.
She closed her eyes, determined to outlast him. She
wouldn’t move. She wouldn’t breathe. Her life depended on it.
After an agonizing, interminable amount of time,
she stretched her legs, uncurling herself with extreme care. Her
arm was stiff and swollen, and she could barely move it.
No way did she want to go back into the woods. They
were waiting for her. They had the advantage.
The creek. All she had to do was go into the water
and follow it to the lake. Hopefully she wasn’t too far. The water
was shallow here, but she knew there were deeper pools in
places.
She crawled from beneath the protective overhang
and carefully made her way back to the water’s edge. Her instincts
screamed at her to run, to barge into the water and wade as fast as
she could downstream.
Instead she mustered all her strength and quietly
slipped into the water. She waded to the middle, where it was
deeper, and sank down, knowing it would be easier if she could let
the current carry her. She was bone tired and in so much pain, she
couldn’t walk much farther.
Rocks slapped her and cut into her knees and feet.
She bounced along the bottom and it took everything she had not to
scream every time her arm was jostled.
In places, it shallowed so much that the water was
only ankle deep, and she walked over the gravel bottom, too afraid
of leaving prints if she got onto the muddy bank.
How long had she been gone? It seemed like hours,
but the sky was still pitch-black, no sign of dawn to the east. The
water got deeper again and she sank tiredly down, only too willing
to float for a while.
She rounded a sharp corner and sucked in her breath
when she saw the inky black expanse of the lake spread out before
her.
It freaked her out, the idea of going into the lake
in the dead of night. The river channel ran quite deep, more than
thirty feet in the coves, and out in the middle of the main drag,
it reached depths of more than fifty feet.
Still, it beat the alternative. Anything beat being
shot because Castle wanted her dead. A man who nagged at her
memory but remained cloaked in shadows.
Tiredly she pushed on, rolling to her back and
kicking her feet to propel her farther into the lake.
She was fast coming off the adrenaline rush, and
shock was setting in. She needed to get to a safe place fast before
she passed out.
Turning over, she struck out with one arm, holding
the other close to her body. She kicked strongly, but she knew she
looked like a crippled tadpole moving erratically through the
water.
She focused single-mindedly on the main stretch of
lake, determined to make it, to put as much distance between her
and her pursuers as possible.
Numb to her toes, staggered by exhaustion, she made
her way out of the cove to where she could finally see down the
lake. In the distance, the lights on the bridge twinkled at her,
mocking her. She had to laugh. That damn bridge, the one that had
nearly killed her, now marked an impossible distance for her to
travel.
Sam’s house was before that bridge. His property
backed to the water’s edge. Would she recognize his dock in the
dark? How far from the bridge was his house? The bridge seemed an
interminable distance.
Two inlets? Three? For that matter, which was she
in now?
Water lapped up over her face, and she struggled to
keep her head above water. She was holding on by a whisper-thin
thread. It would be so much easier to just roll over and let the
water take her.
Insidious voices whispered in her ear. Some of them
mocked her, told her to give up like a wimp. Others told her to
buck up. Her family had gone through much worse. Ethan and all his
brothers had been shot, injured, defied impossible odds, and here
she couldn’t even manage a swim with a broken arm.
Ethan’s SEAL brothers would laugh their asses off
at her.
She needed a SEAL—or three—right now. Or at least
she needed to channel one. This would be a walk in the park to
them.
Oh God, she was getting delirious.
It bolstered her spirits to realize that while
she’d been carrying on a ridiculous dialogue with herself she’d
made good progress. At least one thing was working in her favor.
She was moving with the current.
Her first plan of action would be to find Sam’s
house. Or any house. If that failed, she’d go for the bridge and
pray she’d make it that far.
Too tired to attempt the motions of swimming, she
turned on her back again and let the current take her along.
She kept her face turned toward the bank and
scanned the shore, looking for anything that looked familiar.
Lights beckoned in the distance. A house? Houses?
Clumsily she struck out toward the shore. As she
got closer, the shape of a dock loomed in the darkness. Excitement
took a little of her pain away. There weren’t many docks because of
TVA regulations on new construction. Sam had owned his house for
years and had purchased it from someone who had been on the lake
for two decades.
Her toes dragged along the bottom and she dug them
in, straining to get closer to shore.
Two docks. Did Sam live next to someone who also
had a dock?
She shook her head. It didn’t matter if it was
Sam’s place or not. She only hoped whoever lived here was
home.
She slipped below the surface when she tripped over
a rock. Every single movement sent tears of agony coursing down her
cheeks. Finally she gave up on standing and crawled through the
shallower water toward the dock. With her good hand, she reached up
to circle her arm around one of the wooden posts supporting the
dock.
For several minutes, she leaned her forehead
against the wood and sucked in painful, sharp breaths. Her broken
arm sagged against her. It hurt with each movement, and she wanted
to scream in pain and frustration.
Using the dock for support, she edged along the
side until finally she was only ankle-deep in water. Each step took
a ridiculous amount of will. Animal sounds of pain whispered past
her lips. She hadn’t realized it until the sounds grew
louder.
She stopped at the bottom of the incline and looked
up, straining to see in the darkness. This wasn’t Sam’s house, and
there wasn’t a single light on, inside or outside, to suggest
anyone was home.
As she moved up the incline, her legs buckled and
she went to her knees. Nausea rose sharp, swelling hard in her
stomach until she gagged and heaved. Struggling to keep what little
composure she had left, she planted her fist into the dirt and
forced herself back to her feet.
She went to the back door and pounded with her
uninjured hand. After a long wait, silence still abounded. No
lights came on.
Giving up on that avenue, she trudged around the
side of the house to the front door. She rang the bell and jiggled
the handle. At this point she didn’t care if anyone was home or
not. She just needed a phone and a safe place to hide.
When the lock didn’t budge and no one came to
answer, she turned around, her eyes searching the dark. Mailbox. At
least it would tell her where she was.
As fast as she was able, she walked to the end of
the short driveway and peered at the side of the mailbox. Her heart
accelerated. If the numbers were accurate, these were Sam’s
neighbors. His house was a half mile down the road.
With renewed vigor, she nearly ran down the
shoddily paved road. Rocks and pieces of asphalt pierced the soles
of her feet, but she ignored the discomfort. Next to the agony
shooting down her arm, the rest was negligible.
When she reached Sam’s mailbox, she nearly fainted
on the spot. For a moment she leaned her hand on the metal box and
gasped for breath. Tears stung her eyelids, and she closed her eyes
as she struggled to find the strength to go on.
Lights were on in every room, it seemed. Were they
home? She hurried to the front door and nearly wept in relief when
she found it open.
“Sam! Garrett!” she yelled as she slammed the door
shut.
Silence greeted her exclamation.
She went from room to room but found them empty.
She had no idea how long it had been since she and Ethan had been
forced off the road. Sam and Garrett were probably with him. Or
looking for her.
Fear swamped her as she realized the men who’d hit
them had obviously known where she and Ethan were. They’d followed
them to Sam’s and waited for them to leave. Which meant they could
be back.
Panic billowing through her like a flash fire, she
ran from room to room, turning off every light until the entire
house was plunged into darkness.
A phone. She needed a phone.
In the kitchen she yanked the cordless phone off
the charger and headed for the basement. There were lots of places
she could hide that would buy her time if the men trying to kill
her did come back.
When she found the darkest, smallest corner in the
tiny closet that housed the hot water heater, she sank to the floor
and dialed 911.