Midnight Exposure Read online

Page 26


  If he could only get her into the truck. He had plenty of tranqs left. Once they were far enough away, he’d explain everything to her. She’d understand. She loved him. Sure he’d broken her heart, but she’d forgive him eventually.

  The need to take her with him pulsed through his veins with every beat of his heart. His hands reached for her arms. She pulled away, but Nathan caught her slender wrist. “I love you. Just get in the truck.”

  “No.” Mandy stared at him, fear tainting her beautiful eyes. “What’s wrong with you, Nathan?”

  She shouldn’t be afraid of him. He loved her.

  He tugged. Mandy resisted. Nathan pulled harder, dragging her into the alley. His truck was only a few feet away. She dug her rubber-soled shoes into the asphalt and dropped her ass toward the ground. “Let me go!”

  Damn it. He was going to have to pick her up, throw her in the truck, and drive through the night.

  Good thing he wasn’t the least bit tired.

  “Nathan, what are you doing?” Her voice, sharp with apprehension, echoed down the empty street. Someone was going to hear her. She was going to ruin everything. “I said let go of me!”

  Rage at the situation and his sense of impotence boiled over. Nathan slapped her without thought. The crack of his hand across her cheek knocked her to her butt. Her eyes went from saucers to dinner plates.

  “Shut up and get in the truck.”

  Jed flew out of the diner. Two strong hands gripped Nathan’s lapels as the hunter got in his face. “Don’t you touch her!”

  The knife jumped from Nathan’s pocket into his hand. His honed blade slid into Jed’s belly like it was Jell-O.

  An agonized scream shrilled in his ear. Not Jed. His mouth was slack with shock. Nathan turned toward Mandy. He needed to shut her up—fast.

  “I can’t believe Jaynie wasn’t there. Where could she be?”

  From the backseat of a Honda Odyssey, Danny Sullivan listened to his oldest brother, Pat, bitch and moan.

  Main Street rolled by with Hallmark charm and enough wholesome Christmas decorations to make Norman Rockwell gag.

  Riding shotgun, Conor added, “I got a bad feeling about this.”

  So did Danny. Fear for his sister lay dormant in the pit of his chest like an Iraqi IED, ready to blow Danny’s precariously balanced peace of mind to shit at any second. He just couldn’t take it if anything happened to Jaynie.

  Pat continued to complain. Both his Irish temper and his concern for their sister had peaked when they’d driven up to Reed Kimball’s house to find only a supremely pissed-off Siberian husky in residence. No Jaynie. “It’s only nine o’clock and the place is a ghost town. Where the fuck is everybody?”

  Back home, the nightlife hadn’t even hit full swing yet. The bar would be filled up with the tail end of happy hour and the first wave of partiers.

  “Just park somewhere. We’ll split up,” Conor barked.

  Pat pulled over. “OK. Try to find someone, anyone who might have a clue as to what’s going on. I’m going to drive around and try to find that inn Jaynie said she stayed at. Shouldn’t take long. The whole place is only a dozen blocks each way.”

  Conor climbed from the van and pulled his cell from his pocket. “Hallelujah. I got bars.”

  Danny checked his display and grunted his assent as his boots hit the sidewalk. Pat affirmed his service had returned as well. “OK then, boys. Text with news or meet back here in twenty.”

  The brothers parted.

  Conor pointed south. “I’ll go this way. Toward that strip center. Looks like a drugstore, at least.”

  “Whatever.” Danny was already headed north. A diner sat at the main intersection, across from the burned-out shell of a building. A glance at the rubble brought a horror of a slide show to Danny’s brain. With long practice, he shut that fucker down.

  He was so not going there tonight.

  Jaynie needed him here, not tripping off into flashback land. Helped that the tiny hamlet of Huntsville, Maine, was the polar opposite of Iraq.

  Danny walked in a quiet that was simultaneously quaint and creepy.

  A woman’s scream shattered the silence. Danny sprinted toward the sound, the slapping of his shitkickers on hard pavement painfully reminiscent. A twinge shot up his left arm.

  He passed the diner. A man and woman struggled in the shadowed alley next to a midsize SUV. A third figure lay on the ground a few feet away.

  “Get in the fucking truck now.” The man pulled the resisting woman by the wrist. She shifted her weight back like a stubborn mule. He raised his free hand and cracked her across the face.

  Danny launched his body at the guy, breaking his hold on the lady. Danny and the rude dude went heads over asses. Unable to break his fall with his bum hand, Danny landed in a tangle of limbs while the woman-beating asshole sprinted for his truck. Asshole twisted and pointed at the woman. “You’re mine.”

  Danny got his legs under his body and set up for a flying tackle.

  Sobbing stopped him cold.

  He glanced sideways. The woman knelt at the prone figure’s side. “Help him, please.” The eyes that turned on him were blue as a desert sky and just as captivating.

  Shit.

  Danny gave up on grabbing the attacker and hurried to her side. Her assailant’s engine faded as fast as taillights in the dark.

  Danny ripped open the guy’s bloodstained jacket and applied pressure to a deep stab wound to the belly. Two functional hands would’ve helped.

  The stanching of blood threatened to suck him back in time. Imaginary rockets and bullets began to whistle through the silence. Keep your head in the game.

  “You have 911 service here?” He turned to the woman and was struck fucking dumb. Even with mascara running down her cheeks, swollen eyes, a hand-size slap mark, and her friend’s blood smeared all over her, she was the most beautiful thing he’d ever seen. An apparition. An angel.

  “Yes.”

  The warm liquid oozing over his fingers brought him back to the guy bleeding out on the pavement—and vivid memories he’d rather not have. “Call them. If you don’t have a phone, mine’s in my jacket pocket. Right side.”

  She dug his cell out and made the call while Danny tried to keep his grip on reality. He was in Maine, not Iraq. That was snow on the ground, not sand. “How far’s the hospital?”

  “Forty minutes.”

  Danny was no medic, but he had plenty of experience watching guys bleed to death. Which brought him back to his private horror show. The shakes started deep in his gut and radiated outward as the blood kept coming. “He doesn’t have forty minutes. Tell them you need a medevac.”

  Cold sweat broke out in the wake of the tremors. He concentrated on her voice, brave despite her terror. The sound of it washed over him like a rush of warm water. “What’s your name?”

  “Mandy.” Her voice quivered.

  Mandy.

  “Please keep talking to me, Mandy.”

  CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

  Reed raised the head of the bed. His eyelids were lead curtains, and the long set of stitches across his ribs pulled. He glanced at the next bed, where Scott slept off the stress and the residual effects of the tranquilizer Nathan had slipped him. The other two boys were down the hall. Like Scott, Brandon was out cold. John was in worse shape, malnourished, dehydrated, and traumatized, but he was alive.

  The sound of his son’s deep breathing threatened to lull Reed back to sleep. He forced his eyes open. No sleeping as long as Nathan was still on the loose.

  Footsteps scraped. Reed tensed. The man who tapped lightly on the door frame was a stranger. Though his hair was black, his eyes were the same striking shade of turquoise as Jayne’s.

  He stepped into the room and glanced at Reed’s sleeping roommate. “I’m Conor Sullivan,” he said in a low voice.

  “Jayne’s not alone, is she?” Reed held out a hand.

  Conor shook it. Jayne’s brother was tall and lanky like his sister. “Pat’
s with her. He won’t leave her alone.”

  Reed relaxed. “She’s all right?”

  “Mild concussion. They’re keeping her overnight for observation. Thanks for saving her.”

  “She saved herself. She’s amazing.” Reed hadn’t meant to blurt that out, but the emergency room doc had shot him full of something before he’d gone to work closing the wound. Plus, Reed had lost more than a few drops of blood. His eyes ached. He blinked hard.

  Conor digested Reed’s comment for a few seconds. “Why don’t you get some sleep, Reed?”

  Reed gave his head a quick shake. His eyes were pulled to his son’s sleeping form. “Not as long as Nathan is out there.”

  “Jaynie sent me to watch over you two.” Conor crossed his arms and leaned back against the wall. “Go ahead and close your eyes. You rescued my sister. You and your son are with us now, and we take care of our own.”

  Danny moved through the hospital corridors. Machines beeped. The bite of antiseptic and the stench of human misery competed for top billing in his nose—and mind. Pain radiated from his injured hand. Images of explosions and shock and blood rushed through his head. Screams echoed in his ears, the inhuman screaming of men who bodies had been blown to pieces. Or whose friends had been blown to pieces.

  Danny had been bleeding out too fast to scream, but the horror was clear as a desert day.

  The petite brunette was sitting alone in the surgical waiting room.

  Mandy.

  Danny hesitated at the threshold, just looking at her. What could he possibly do for her? She was wholesome, lovely, and perfect, while he was damaged inside and out.

  She was silent, her eyes blank and her body too still. Numb disbelief. That state when the mind cannot process the horrors presented to it.

  That Danny could understand.

  He stepped into the room. When she didn’t move, Danny lowered his body into the chair next to her. “Any word?”

  She turned to look at him. The deep blue of her eyes swam with sadness. Danny shifted on the upholstered seat.

  “Ms. Brown?” A green-scrubbed surgeon stepped into the room. “He made it out of surgery. You can see him for a few minutes.”

  Mandy rose, hesitantly, as if afraid of what she was going to see. “Is he going to be all right?”

  The doctor stopped and rubbed a hand over a weary face. “Honestly, I don’t know. Right now his chances are fifty-fifty. If he makes it till morning, we’ll reassess.”

  Danny tagged along behind the doctor and Mandy. No one challenged his presence. In the intensive care unit, Danny waited outside the glass cubicle while Mandy went inside.

  “Five minutes.” The doctor stepped out.

  At a counter along the wall, a nurse was reading machines and typing into a laptop. In the bed, Jed was fully automated. Tubes, wires, ventilator. The whole shebang. Danny had seen better color on a corpse. A monitor shrieked. Danny and Mandy both jumped.

  The nurse adjusted a dial, and the machine went quiet.

  Beep, beep, hiss.

  Mandy walked to the bedside and reached out. Her hand hovered a few inches over the sheets like she was looking for a place to touch Jed that wasn’t connected to something. A sob hitched her breath. She pressed a fist to her mouth.

  She must really love that guy.

  Danny rubbed a tight spot in the center of his chest.

  Pat would stay with Jayne. Conor could look out for Reed and his son. Someone needed to guard Mandy.

  You’re mine, the knife-wielding lunatic had said.

  Like hell, Danny thought. If there was a breath left in his body, crazy-ass Nathan Hall would never get within a mile of Mandy. From Jayne’s story, Nathan didn’t seem like the type to give himself up quietly. No, eventually, someone was going to have to hunt that crazy-ass down.

  “Are you sure you’re up to this, Jaynie?”

  “I am.” But as they walked to Reed’s room, she leaned on her brother’s huge chest. Pat wrapped a beefy arm around her and half-carried her through the doorway. He hadn’t left her side since her brothers arrived at the hospital.

  Inside the room, Conor was leaning on the wall. Scott was snoring from the bed by the window, and the state police detective was standing at Reed’s bedside. The policeman was fiftyish, with salt-and-pepper hair and a sharp face that didn’t seem to miss much. Pat went to stand with Conor. Danny had gone to check on Jed.

  “Still no luck finding Nathan Hall or his son, Evan.” Reed’s eyes shifted to Jayne.

  Nerves fluttered in Jayne’s belly.

  “Ms. Sullivan.” Detective Rossi motioned to a hospital-issue recliner next to him. “Please sit. I was giving Mr. Kimball an update.”

  Jayne had given her statement to the cop an hour ago. She collapsed into the chair and tried to focus on the state detective’s words. But frankly, she was too tired. Aaron had killed himself. Nathan had gotten away. Maybe the details would matter tomorrow, but right now she just wanted to crawl into a quiet bed with Reed and sleep for about a week.

  Not likely.

  She leaned her aching head against the vinyl. The detective droned on. “A search of the mayor’s basement turned up all sorts of books and objects related to pagan religious rituals, specifically human sacrifices. It seems like that was their intention. The collection of Celtic artifacts is extensive. Some of the stuff is museum-worthy.”

  “Any idea why they did all this?” Reed’s face was pale. His green eyes lacked their usual intensity.

  “Maybe.” The detective gestured with his pen. “An e-mail on the mayor’s laptop indicates that his uncle was suffering from an extremely rare genetic disorder called Campbell’s Insomnia. Lesions form in the thalamus of the brain, which is the area that regulates sleep. The individual loses the ability to sleep. Dementia and hallucinations develop in the first six months or so, progressing to coma and death within a year or two.”

  “So they go crazy and then die from insomnia?” Reed asked.

  “Basically, yes.” The detective nodded. “The disease is genetic, so Mayor Hall and his son may very well carry the gene. If so, they’ll both eventually develop the disease. There’s no treatment and no cure.”

  “What about the…er…” Reed glanced at the sleeping boy next to him. “Thing on the pole?”

  Jayne flinched. Did Scott know about the decapitation? He’d find out eventually. Horrific information, even though the act had been performed postmortem. As if the kid hadn’t had enough horror already.

  “Ancient Celts thought that was the source of power in a person.” The detective dropped his voice further. “Dental records confirm that it’s Zack Miller.”

  “Do you have any leads on Nathan’s whereabouts?” Reed shifted his position and winced.

  “We have some theories, but nothing is substantiated.” The detective stuck his pen in his chest pocket. “A thorough investigation is underway. We’re just as concerned as you are that Nathan is still on the loose. I assure you an extensive manhunt is being conducted throughout the New England area. We will find him.”

  What if they didn’t?

  Reed nodded. “How’s Jed?”

  Detective Rossi closed his mini notebook. “Just out of surgery. Doctor’s giving him even odds.”

  That could have been Reed. If Aaron’s knife had been two inches lower, it wouldn’t have been deflected by Reed’s ribs.

  Jayne closed her eyes. What was she going to do? She didn’t want to go home. She didn’t want to go anywhere without Reed, let alone eight hundred miles away from him. She could live in this icebox of a state. She could live without Starbucks. She could even live without her brothers. She’d miss them every day, but she’d live.

  Watching Reed bleed all over his truck had convinced her she wanted every possible minute with this man.

  But did he want her? They hadn’t spoken about the message from her editor. They’d barely exchanged two words since arriving at the hospital. His trust in her had been decimated. Could he ever forgi
ve her?

  Reed asked a couple more questions and the cop left.

  Pat cleared his throat. “You should go back to your bed, Jaynie, and get some rest.”

  “In a bit.” Jayne’s eyes found Reed’s. He met her gaze, but his mouth tightened.

  Pat’s gaze ping-ponged from Jayne to Reed and back again. “I’m going for coffee. I’ll come back for you. Please don’t go back to your room alone.” With a suggestive nod to Conor, Pat ducked out of the room.

  Conor was at Pat’s heels. “Coffee sounds good.”

  Though Scott was unconscious, Jayne lowered her voice to a whisper. “I’m so sorry, Reed. I should’ve told you that I worked for the Scoop. My editor got a lead that R. S. Morgan lived at your address and sent me to check it out. But I didn’t confirm it. I didn’t send any shots of you. The paper is running a piece on the kidnappings, though, just like all the rest. Your identity will come out. I don’t see how you can escape it.” Apparently, the only thing that paid better than celebrity humiliation was murder. The ritual Celtic angle of the killing was the cherry on her editor’s sundae. “They’re paying me for an interview, then I’m done with them. Back to travel mags. Money isn’t worth selling my soul. My brothers and I have been broke before. We’ll manage.”

  Reed’s eyes softened. “I can’t hide anymore.”

  A tear blurred Jayne’s vision. “I know. I feel like that’s all my fault. If I hadn’t come here to expose you…”

  Reed reached across the bed. His fingers beckoned. Jayne set her palm in his. Her heart swelled as his hand closed around hers. “It wouldn’t have changed anything. Aaron would’ve kidnapped someone else. Maybe someone less resilient. You foiled his plan by fighting back and escaping. If you hadn’t come here, he might’ve gotten away with multiple counts of murder. Who knows where it would’ve ended.” His voice cracked. “Without you, Scott might not be here.”

  Jayne couldn’t believe her ears. Had he really forgiven her? “Your life isn’t going to be nice and quiet the way you like it.”

  “Doesn’t matter. I’m done with hiding. R. S. Morgan is coming clean.” Reed tugged her closer. “What would you say if I put my house up for sale? I’ve been thinking of moving south, like maybe to Philadelphia.”