“Get down!” Lucas shouted to Hailey.
His first instinct was to draw his gun and take aim at the man running toward them. But Lucas didn’t want to get into a gunfight on Main Street where innocent bystanders—or Hailey—could be hurt.
Lucas wasn’t sure he believed everything she’d just told him, but it was obvious she had someone after her. Later he’d find out who that was, but for now he wanted to put some distance between this armed man and them. He hit the accelerator.
Just as the guy took aim.
And fired.
The bullet slammed into the side of the SUV, missing the window and Lucas by only a couple of inches.
“I need a gun,” Hailey said, climbing over the seat to get to the passenger side. She started to fumble around for the weapon that he’d knocked away from her.
“Stay down,” Lucas warned her, but her search took care of that. Hailey crawled onto the floor.
At least, it took care of it for a couple of seconds. Once she had the gun, she got back in the seat and took aim out the back side window.
She fired.
The sound blasted through the SUV, causing Lucas to curse. He hadn’t actually expected her to shoot. Too bad she missed, because the gunman sent another bullet their way.
Lucas sped off. The thug got off one more shot before Lucas took the first turn he reached. He wasn’t driving in the direction of the sheriff’s office, but he could double back.
Lucas tossed Hailey his phone. “Call Grayson and tell him there’s an armed man near the park at the intersection of Main and Everett Road.”
Hailey made the call, but she kept watch behind them, making sure that goon wasn’t in pursuit. The moment Grayson answered, she rattled off the information. Then she hit the end call button. No doubt because she didn’t want to answer Grayson’s questions. That was okay. For now.
But as soon as they reached the sheriff’s office, Hailey had better come clean about everything.
Lucas took another turn. Then another, meandering his way back to Main Street. That particular part of the park was only about seven blocks away from the sheriff’s office, so it wouldn’t take Grayson long to get a pair of deputies there to catch the guy.
“Do you know if that was Darrin Sandmire?” Lucas asked her.
“I have no idea. But I’m pretty sure that was the same man who came after me three months ago.”
Hell.
Lucas had to rein in the anger that sliced through him. That was the SOB who’d put Hailey—and therefore, Camden—in danger. Too bad Lucas hadn’t managed to shoot him. But then he rethought that. He didn’t want the guy dead, not until he had answers from him.
Like who hired him.
Thugs like Darrin Sandmire always worked for bigger thugs. Maybe DeSalvo’s son, Eric. Maybe that unidentified rogue agent. Soon, Lucas intended to find out who’d paid this killer to come after Hailey.
Lucas took another turn, the tires squealing against the asphalt. The moment he was on the side street, he saw something he didn’t like.
A truck.
It wasn’t right in the middle of the road, but the front end was jutting out from the parking space in front of a motorcycle repair shop.
Lucas hit his brakes.
“You think someone’s inside the truck?” Hailey asked. Her voice was shaking like the rest of her.
Lucas didn’t know, and it was next to impossible to see inside the truck’s cab. There was a streetlight and a lit sign for the motorcycle shop, but the tint was so dark on the windshield that he couldn’t tell. He pulled up a little farther though so he could get a better look at the front license plates.
“Out-of-state plates,” he mumbled under his breath.
Maybe that in itself meant nothing, but Lucas got that feeling in his gut. The feeling that told him to get the heck out of there.
He threw the SUV into Reverse.
But the second he did that, the truck door opened, and a man bolted out.
The guy had a rifle.
“Get down,” Lucas repeated to Hailey. “And this time, stay there.”
Whether she would or not was anyone’s guess, but he didn’t want to have to worry about her being shot. He hit the gas, the SUV speeding backward. But he didn’t get out of the path of that rifleman fast enough.
The bullet slammed into the windshield.
Since this wasn’t the vehicle he used for work, the glass wasn’t reinforced. The shot tore through the safety glass, the bullet exiting out the back.
Great. Just great.
Now he had two thugs after them, and Lucas had no choice but to go back in the direction he’d seen that other shooter in the park. Maybe the guy was long gone by now. Or better yet, maybe one of the deputies had managed to capture him.
When Lucas reached the side street, he spun the SUV around so he could drive forward. He definitely didn’t want to head right into the middle of an ambush, so he headed for a better lit area.
“The truck’s coming after us,” Hailey said.
And that’s when he realized she’d lifted her head and was looking out the side window.
Lucas pushed her right back down. “Don’t make it easier for them to kill you,” he snapped. Yeah, it was harsh, but Hailey was clearly the target of some very determined attackers.
Whoever was in the truck fired another shot at them, this one slamming into the rear end of the SUV. A second shot quickly followed.
Then a third.
“There must be two of them,” Hailey muttered. She hadn’t figured that out by looking at them, though. She was still on the floor.
But Lucas knew there had to be two, as well. Those shots were too well aimed for someone who was trying to negotiate the turns and dodging the cars parked along the street.
“Hang on,” Lucas told her a split second before he turned onto another side street. He was thankful he’d grown up here and knew these streets like the back of his hand.
His phone buzzed, and since Hailey still had hold of it, she answered it and put it on speaker.
“Where are you?” he heard Grayson immediately ask. “Someone just called about shots being fired near Henderson’s Motorcycle Shop.”