Laying Down The Law. Delores FossenЧитать онлайн книгу.
than she probably felt right now.
But she was right. Cord had to stay alive.
The wave of smoke came at them. It was mixed with the stench of the burning rubber, and Cord had to cover his mouth to keep from coughing.
“Y’all okay?” their attacker called out.
Cord wished he could do something about that smug tone. Like beat the guy senseless. What Cord couldn’t do was answer him. It was possible the question was meant to help the fool pinpoint their location.
“Because I’d hate to think I gave any of you more boo-boos,” the man added. Then, he laughed. He was still somewhere on the other side of the road.
That was the good news.
It meant he wasn’t sneaking up behind them.
But he could have hired guns. And probably did. It would have been hard for him to pull this off by himself unless he’d set the explosives before attacking Karina, and those hired guns could be anywhere.
“What? Cats got your tongues?” the man asked.
His taunts made Cord’s blood run cold. And made his temper run hot.
“Being quiet won’t help,” he taunted. “I’ll find you.”
“His voice,” Karina whispered.
Even though he hated to risk looking at her, Cord did, to see what the heck she was talking about. “What about his voice?”
She opened her mouth. Closed it. Shook her head. “It’s the same man who attacked me in the barn.”
Of course it was. There’d been no doubt about that. So, what exactly had Karina meant to say?
Or rather what was she trying to keep from him?
Well, whatever the heck it was, Cord would find out. As soon as they got out of this mess.
The seconds crawled by, turning into minutes. Cord forced himself to listen through the crashing of his heartbeat in his ears. Each tiny sound put him on full alert.
Until one sound caused him to pivot in that direction.
Footsteps.
“It’s me,” someone said. Jericho.
Cord didn’t ease the grip on his gun, though, until he actually spotted the sheriff. He was weaving his way through the trees, coming toward them.
“He’s over there,” Cord informed him right off, and he tipped his head in the direction where he’d last heard the guy. “Did you bring backup?”
Jericho nodded and glanced at Karina and the paramedics, before focusing on the area Cord had pointed out. “My brother Jax is somewhere nearby.” He motioned toward the area just south of the attacker. “My other brother, Levi, is on the way.”
So, maybe Jax was already close enough to stop him. Cord didn’t know Jericho’s brothers that well, but Jax had been a deputy sheriff for years. Hopefully, that was enough experience so he wouldn’t walk into a trap.
“There might be other explosives,” Cord pointed out.
Another nod from Jericho. “We got your warning and then heard the blast. Jax will be watching for anything suspicious. If Jax gets a shot, though, he’ll take it.”
Cord knew what that meant—they might not be able to take this guy alive. Part of him wanted the moron alive. Because he wanted answers. But since he was convinced this was a copycat, they could perhaps get those answers even if the man was dead. Besides, if he stayed alive and managed to get away, he’d likely just come after Karina again.
“I can’t stop the bleeding,” Karina mumbled.
Her hands were covered with blood now, and the paramedic was barely conscious. They needed an ambulance and needed one fast. It was time to try to end this stalemate and maybe distract the man so that he wouldn’t hear Jax approaching him.
“Just how long do you think you can stay out here like this?” Cord shouted.
The guy laughed. “Well, you’re alive after all. And to answer your question, I can wait as long as it takes. But I’m guessing that’s not true for you, huh? Just how bad are Karina-girl and the others hurt? I didn’t get a good enough look to know when y’all ran like rats.”
Cord had to get his teeth unclenched before he could answer. “If you’re so concerned about them, why don’t you surrender and find out for yourself how they’re doing? We can have a chat about them after they’re on the way to the hospital.”
Silence. It went on way too long. “Nope. Not in a chatting mood right now. I’m thinking it’s time for me to get myself out of here. Another time, another place, Agent Granger.”
And almost immediately Cord heard some footsteps. Not the light treading ones as Jericho’s had been. Someone was running.
Karina would have gotten to her feet if Cord hadn’t pushed her back down. “He’s getting away,” she argued.
Not if Cord had something to do about it. “Wait here with them,” Cord told the sheriff.
He was about to bolt after the man when Jericho moved in front of him. “I’ll go. My brothers and I have signals already worked out. Keep watch, though, because this could be a trick.”
True. The man could be pretending to leave so he could ambush them. With Jax already out there somewhere, Cord didn’t want him to get caught in friendly fire.
Jericho headed out, hurrying but threading his way through the trees to keep his cover. Cord figured Jericho wouldn’t cross the road until he was clear of all the debris from the burning ambulance. Or until he was sure this clown wouldn’t spot him and shoot him.
All Cord could do was wait.
The paramedic who’d been driving took off his shirt and moved closer to Karina so he could help with his bleeding partner. Cord tuned them out and listened. No more running footsteps, but he did hear something. A sort of loud pop.
Karina obviously heard it, too, because her gaze slashed in the direction of the sound. “Did he hit someone?”
Cord shook his head. Too bad he knew from a case he’d worked the sound a hammer made when hitting a human body.
The next sound was one he had no trouble recognizing.
A shot.
It cracked through the air in the same general area where their attacker had been. And it was soon followed by another bullet.
Damn. He hoped Jericho and his brother hadn’t become this snake’s next targets.
Waiting had never been Cord’s strong suit, and it didn’t help that he had a guy literally bleeding to death next to his feet and a would-be killer was out there who thought this was a sick game.
Finally, he heard another sound that wasn’t more shots. It was footsteps, and they were heading right in Cord’s direction.
“It’s me,” Jericho called out again. He wasn’t running exactly, but it was close. And the lawman was all in one piece.
The breath Karina blew out was loaded with relief. Relief that Cord shared. Jericho hadn’t been shot. But that didn’t mean all was well.
“Your brothers?” Cord asked.
“Are in pursuit of the guy in the ski mask.” Jericho looked up the road. “An ambulance will be here in just a few minutes.”
Good. That was a start.
“You can’t let that man get away,” Karina said, standing and meeting Jericho’s gaze.
“We’ll do our best. In the meantime, there’s a note for you nailed to a tree over there.”
That explained the sound of the hammer Cord had heard.