Lonestar Sanctuary (34 page)

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Authors: Colleen Coble

Tags: #Fiction, #Christian, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Suspense

BOOK: Lonestar Sanctuary
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He jogged across the muddy yard to the house and rushed into the
office. The glass in the gun cabinet gleamed. The key was in the desk.
He fished it out and opened the cabinet. The black barrels looked
deadly. Rick touched the gunstock, so smooth and slick.

He'd sworn never to point a gun at another human being after the
accident that killed a child in Iraq. But this was his wife, his child.
Didn't he have the right to protect his family?

His hand hovered over the gunstock, then dropped. He couldn't
do it. God would have to provide another way. Grabbing up the nightstick, he wheeled and ran to save his family.

THE GUN'S BORE SEEMED TO GROW BIGGER WITH EVERY SECOND. No THAT
the rain had stopped and moisture shimmered in the air, Allie felt the
danger growing. He would do something now that they weren't
trapped here.

"What do you want me to say, Charlie? I'm sorry Mark is dead. I
never meant to hurt him. Or you. I thought we were friends."

"Friends?" He laughed. "I'm a better actor than I thought. I don't
want you to say anything, Allie. I want you to die. But first you'll
watch Betsy drown."

All the air left Allie's lungs. "What are you saying?"

He laughed. "Got your attention now, don't I?" He grabbed her
arm and dragged her toward a small opening. The hallway was so tiny,
she had to bend over to walk through it.

He forced her in front of him, the gun digging into her back. Then she stepped through into a smaller circular room about twelve feet in
diameter.

Betsy leaped to her feet. "Mommy!" She ran to Allie, but Betsy's
hands were tied behind her, and all she could do was lean against her
mother's leg and cry.

Allie's fingers tore at the rope's knot, and even before Charlie
emerged from the corridor, she had her daughter freed.

"Here, brat." Charlie grabbed at Betsy.

Allie pushed her daughter behind her and faced him down. "Leave
her alone! What kind of monster does this to a child?"

"I didn't want to," he said, a sulky pout to his lips. "You forced me.
Always around Rick, never coming out for a ride with me. I told you I
was going to strip you of everything you loved. I would have settled for
the adults if you hadn't been so smug." He sneered. "All joy and light.
You had another fish on your hook, and I couldn't take it anymore."

"Let her go, Charlie. Please. I'll go with you, do anything you
want, anything to make amends. Just don't hurt her. She's just a little
girl, and you've hurt her enough."

"I haven't done a thing to her yet."

"Didn't you wonder why she didn't talk? It was seeing the the
accident." She lowered her voice, hoping Betsy wouldn't be able to
make out her words. "For a year she didn't utter a word. Don't you
think that's enough?"

For a minute she thought maybe her plea had gotten through to
him. His gaze fell on Betsy, and his mouth softened.

"She's a cute kid," he said. His lips pressed together. "I'm sorry, but
the sins of the mother fall on the child too." He reached around her.

Allie screamed and beat at him with her fists. She leaped onto his
back and pummeled him. "Run, Bets! Run!"

Her daughter leaped past her, squeezed between Charlie's legs,
and darted into the tunnel. Charlie whirled around and around in the
chamber. He fell against the wall, slamming Allie's back against rock.
The pain made her loosen her grip, and he managed to throw her
down to the floor.

"You'll pay for that." He dragged her to her feet and forced her
into the tunnel.

Praying for God to save her daughter, Allie moved slowly. Betsy
needed as long as possible to run for help, to escape. Charlie shoved
at her with the gun, and she stumbled to her knees, then took her time
getting moving again.

All too soon, her head emerged into the high-ceilinged room. But
there was no sign of Betsy, and Allie closed her eyes with thankfulness.
All three horses were gone too.

"I'll find her," Charlie said, his teeth gritted together. "You can count
on that." He shoved her out of the mine opening onto the ledge outside.

The storm had passed, and she could see a glimmer of blue in the
clouds, smell the freshness in the air. Allie breathed in the life, knowing it would be only a few minutes until she lay broken and drowned
at the bottom of this cliff where the flood raged. Her gaze swept the
valley until she saw a small figure on horseback at the bottom of the
path, still above the water's reach. A gulf separated Betsy and Bluebird
from the safety of the other side.

Charlie had seen them too. He started toward them, but Allie
grabbed his arm. "I admit it. I wanted to hurt your brother. He was
such a nerd, and he deserved everything he got."

Charlie stopped and turned his gaze on her. It was odd, looking
death in the face. Allie had never expected to see it so clearly. Cold
and implacable, his eyes reflected no humanity that she could see.

Then he smiled. "You can't distract me that easily."

He turned toward her daughter again, but the mare and little girl
melded into one blur as the combined figure leaped the gulf and
gained the safety of the other side.

"Thank you, God," Allie whispered. With her daughter safe, she
could handle what came next. She wasn't afraid to die, though she
desperately wished she'd told Rick she forgave him.

He'd feel guilt over her death, and she regretted that.

She sagged to the ground, her legs like rubber. Charlie's fingers
tightened on the trigger, and Allie squeezed her eyes shut, expecting
a bullet to slam into her skull at any moment. When nothing happened, she opened her eyes and stared up at his smiling face. The smile
made her shudder.

She could find no pity or remorse in Charlie's set face, but she
wasn't dead yet. Maybe she was giving up too soon. He wasn't going
to shoot her, so she had hope. Slim hope, but a tiny sliver at least. The
only weapons at her disposal were rocks and her own hands.

"I want you to suffer like Mark did," Charlie said. "He climbed
that chair, put the rope around his neck, knowing he was about to
die. He kicked over the chair, but his neck didn't break and he slowly
strangled to death. It wasn't clean and easy."

He grabbed her arm and yanked her to her feet. Grabbing her
hands, he pulled them roughly behind her back. She felt rope chafe
her wrists, and he tightened it down until she groaned.

"What are you going to do?" she asked when he shoved her closer
to the edge of the cliff.

"Make the most of a storm like this." He propelled her to the very
edge of the cliff.

Rivulets of water ran down the hillside to join an ocean of rushing, tumbling water. Churning brown waves tossed up pieces of wood and
debris before sucking them under the deadly current again. The flash
flood stretched from the base of the cliff across to the next rocky outcropping, a distance of three hundred feet.

Allie caught just a glimpse of her daughter's curls on top of the
hill. Rick was standing beside her!

She turned to face Charlie. "You won't get away with my murder.
You'll be caught and tried. You'll go to prison or the electric chair,
Charlie. Stop this now before it's too late."

"It's already too late. I've killed five people. One more won't make
a difference." He smiled, a brief gleam of teeth. "But they won't know
I killed you. They'll think the flash flood caught you. It's perfectly
understandable. I'll find Betsy and dispose of her before she can tell.
All neat and tidy."

He meant to toss her into the raging water.

Lord, help me.

She struggled then, fighting his grip on her arm. "They'll know I
was murdered," she gasped. "My hands will be tied."

She spared a glance toward her daughter and found Rick atop the
horse with Betsy. They were turning this way. What was he thinking to
bring her back into danger?

Charlie turned her around and untied her wrists. "You won't be
able to fight the waves anyway." He flipped her around to face the
water again.

His hand shoved her in the small of the back, and she was standing
on the very edge of the rock. Looking down into the swirling water,
she knew Rick wouldn't get here in time.

She wasn't a strong swimmer. The waves would overpower her in
seconds. Her only chance was to not go there at all, but Charlie was prodding her. Only a few inches kept her from plummeting down the
slope to the hungry waves.

Her gaze fastened on the roots of a tree jutting out from the rock
above her head. The closest one looked strong enough to support her
weight. She might be able to reach it.

Without waiting to consider the outcome, she leaped up. Her
palms slapped onto the thick root, and her fingers closed around the
support. Drawing her knees to her chest, she snatched her legs from
Charlie's grasp as he lunged for them.

"Allie !"

She heard Rick's voice, and her head turned toward the sound. He
was dismounting from Bluebird, who had leaped the gap again. Once
he was on the ground, he smacked Bluebird's rump, and the horse
carried Betsy back to safety.

Rick's voice made Charlie falter in his lunge. His leap brought him
closer to the edge, and she kicked out, her left foot connecting with
his head. His arms pinwheeled as he tried to catch himself, but his
right boot slid out from under him.

Rick's nightstick sailed through the air. It struck Charlie on the
head, and in that instant, he lost his battle for balance. His face turned
up to her, and she saw terror in his eyes. Out of instinct, she let go of
the roots with one hand and started to reach down for him. She
couldn't let him die without at least trying.

"Allie, no!" Rick dove toward Charlie too, but it was too late. Without a sound, he pitched over the side and disappeared in the brown foam.

Allie dropped down and flung herself onto her stomach beside
Rick to peer over the side. "Charlie!"

Charlie's head bobbed up, and one arm flung toward the skies
before he disappeared again. He never came up.

THE FRESH SCENT OF RAIN WASHED AWAY THE DANK SMELL OF FEAR. IT
was truly over now. Rick held Allie as she curled onto his lap and
clutched at his shirt as if to assure herself and him that they were
both really alive. He still wasn't sure if they were alive or just in heaven.

"You're safe," he murmured in her hair.

"You're wet," she said, pulling her head away.

"I had a little swim in the river to get here." He smiled down at her.

"You swam that?" Her gaze went to the raging floodwaters below
their perch.

"I'd swim the ocean to get to you." His arms tightened around her.
"I -I love you, Allie." He wanted to say the words before he lost his
nerve. Even if she couldn't forgive him for keeping the truth from her,
he had to tell her.

She didn't answer for so long, he thought she would pull away and
tell him she was leaving. His muscles tightened for the blow.

Her fingers toyed with the buttons on his shirt, but her eyes stayed
downcast. "I hated you for all of fifteen minutes," she said. Her gaze
finally lifted to lock with his. "I wanted to dig the love up by the roots
and fling it back in your face, but the tentacles went clear to bedrock.
You're stuck with me."

"You forgive me?"

"Yes." She curled her fists into his shirt and gave him a slight shake.
"Just don't ever hide anything from me again."

"You've got a lot of room to talk," he said, his grin breaking out.
"I seem to remember all kinds of things you didn't tell me in the
beginning."

Her smile was shamefaced. "That's different." She swatted his arm.
"Okay, I was wrong too. Let's go home. I need to see Betsy. You're sure
she was okay when you saw her?"

"Riding like the wind. She'll be proud she played a part in your
rescue. I would never have been able to get across that water without
a horse to jump it."

"Why did you bring Betsy with you?"

"Bluebird wouldn't let me on without her. You know how Bets
calms animals. It was with Betsy or not at all. They're back to the
ranch by now, and this place will be crawling with cops any minute."

"We need to go. I have to hold her."

"In a minute." He gathered her closer and bent his head. There was
nothing between them now. Everything was out in the open. He loved
and was loved in return. It was too much to hold in.

His lips brushed hers. She wound her arms around his neck and
kissed him back. His. She was all his. Now and forever.

 
EPILOGUE

THE BIRDS FILLED THE MEADOW WITH SONG. THERE HAD BEEN NO NEED TO
buy flowers for the ceremony because God provided them himself.
The rains had brought the wildflowers into full bloom, and their fragrance and color flooded Allie's senses.

She glanced at her watch. Where was he? The ceremony was about
to begin, and she wanted to give Rick his surprise first. It was supposed to be bad luck to see the groom before the wedding, but it
hardly counted since they were already married.

"You're more jittery than me," the young man at her side said.

Allie smiled at her newly met brother-in-law. "Chad, don't be mad
if he doesn't recognize you, okay? It's been fifteen years. You look a
little different than you did at five."

Rick had shown her the last picture he had of his younger brother.
Chad's hair was blond then, and he had mud on his face. This quiet
young man with starched hair and clothes didn't even come close.

"I know." Chad's nervous smile chased away the picture he'd presented of a polished young yuppie. "I just barely remember him, but
he was like Superman to me."

"There he is,"Allie whispered when her husband's broad shoulders
moved through the crowd. "Stand behind me and turn around so he
only sees the back of your head."

She blocked the view to Chad as Rick spotted her. His face brightened, and he wagged a finger at her to indicate he wasn't supposed to
see her yet. She waved him to her, and his smile beamed out.

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