Оценить:
 Рейтинг: 0

Mistletoe And Murder

Автор
Год написания книги
2018
<< 1 ... 6 7 8 9 10
На страницу:
10 из 10
Настройки чтения
Размер шрифта
Высота строк
Поля

“I can’t tell you. He says he’ll kill me if I talk to anyone.”

Mallory pursed her lips. Tripp had just admitted he was holding back information about who was using him to threaten Shamus. She needed to get it out of him.

“What about your daughter, Mr. Tripp?” she asked. “Don’t you want to tell us what you know so we can save her?”

“I came here and did what the man said. He’s going to let her go. He promised.”

“You’re either incredibly naive or unfortunately stupid,” Shamus told him, rising and hauling Tripp to his feet.

As much as Tripp was irritating her, Mallory thought as she also got to her feet, she understood him. Tripp was merely hoping for the best. She understood hope, even if Shamus didn’t. For two days, she had hoped Kelly was merely lost somewhere and would come back home. There was hope—but there was also reality. Some people didn’t come back home, and right now, Tripp didn’t have the luxury of remaining silent, not when a life was at stake.

“You can’t count on the word of a kidnapper, Mr. Tripp,” she said, keeping her tone firm.

Her probationer’s face melted like a chocolate Santa held too long in a child’s hand. “I talked to Tara before I came here. She even said he promised to let her go if I just did what he asked.”

Mallory’s irritation grew. She wasn’t getting through to him. She had to. “Stop living in your fantasy world and tell me who has her, now,” she said, her voice intentionally sharp. She tried to rein in her anger, but couldn’t. “If you don’t do something, the kidnapper could kill her. You’re a father. Act like one.”

She caught sight of Shamus’s eyebrows rising in surprise, but she ignored him, focusing her gaze on Tripp.

Tripp shook his head miserably. “If I do and he finds out, he will kill her. And then he’ll kill me.”

“Fine.” She was done babying Tripp. “This other guy you’re so frightened of can kill you, but I can revoke your probation and spread the word in jail you didn’t give a hoot about your daughter’s life. Take your chances. Who are you more afraid of?”

She walked away, prepared to go immediately to her boss and put everything in motion to put Tripp back in jail. Taking deep breaths, she tried to calm down, but her heart squeezed in fear for Tara. Children should be protected, whether six or sixteen. Tripp needed to be scared. She’d done the right thing.

She hated this job right now.

“Wait!” Tripp called from behind her. She returned to where the two men stood, her back stiffened.

The words poured out of Tripp. “Friday, the kidnapper called me at my new job using my daughter’s cell phone. Didn’t give a name. He had Tara, and if I wanted her back, all I had to do was get the knapsack, gun and hat he left on my back porch, and pretend I was going to bomb the probation department building. I was to leave the knapsack, which was full of papers. I checked. I was supposed to just scare Mr. Burke. If I did that, he would let Tara go.”

Tripp shifted his gaze back and forth over the snow. “But he lied. He must have left another knapsack somewhere in the building and set it off.”

Mallory turned to Shamus. His black eyes communicated he wasn’t buying one word of it. Her? She wasn’t sure what to think.

They could hear sirens in the distance, and Tripp’s eyes widened as he looked at Mallory. “Are you going to revoke my probation? Who will take care of my daughter?”

“I’m not certain about the revocation yet.” She was inclined to believe Tripp, but she’d have to see what happened with the police first. “The detectives and the FBI will need to question you, so you’ll have to go downtown.”

Tripp’s lips tightened together and his eyes squinted. “My cell phone is in my car on the seat,” he said suddenly. “Please get it, Ms. Larsen. I don’t know if the kidnapper will let Tara go for sure, but if she gets free, she’ll try to call me, not the police. If I’m in jail I can’t help her, but you can.”

“Why wouldn’t she call the police?” Shamus asked.

“She just won’t,” Tripp said. “I know her.”

“I’ll help her. I promised.” Mallory turned and headed to Tripp’s car, purposely not looking at Shamus because he’d say the phone was evidence. Do not touch. But it was also the only number Tara Tripp knew to call, her lifeline to her father, and she needed it more than the police.

She found the phone and stashed it in her deep jacket pocket. Seconds later she headed back toward the two men and was about five feet away, when she heard a loud noise crack through the air.

She whipped around, saw nothing. Wondered if it was a car backfiring. Turned back, saw Tripp folded over in the snow, blood soaking through his jacket in the back.

Her mouth opened, and she breathed shallow, short breaths, unable to move. She didn’t understand why. She was in danger of being shot next. Tripp was in danger of being shot again. She should help him get to safety.

But the kidnapper was here….

Shamus grabbed her wrist and pulled her toward his vehicle.

“We’ve got to help Tripp,” she breathed out.

“Do you want to get shot, too?” he growled, pulling hard on her arm. “C’mon!”

Still Mallory hesitated, trying to get to Tripp. Then another shot split the air, so close she could feel it. Gathering her wits, she ran with Shamus for cover. Snow crunched under their feet, and she almost slipped, but Shamus’s strong arm went around her waist and caught her. They ducked in front of his sedan just as the police siren got louder. They’d warn the gunman off. No, wait—she’d heard the sirens before he’d shot Tripp.

The bomber wasn’t afraid of being caught.

As Shamus pulled his Glock and his cell phone out, she sucked in the cold air right down to the bottom of her lungs, praying for God to stop her fear. In four days, she could have died twice. The first time by being in denial that something terrible like a bombing could happen in the peaceful world she’d created for herself, and the second time by letting fear overcome her. She had to get a grip.

The trouble was, she didn’t want to have to. She wanted her serene life back.

She could hear Shamus talking to someone, reporting the shot fired and asking for an ambulance, and then he was off his cell phone and picking up his gun from the ground right by them.

“The police should be here any second. You watch behind us. I’ll watch in front.” He waited until she had changed position and added, “Are you all right?”

She glanced at him. “Of course I’m all right,” she said softly. “There were only two shots fired, and we know where they went. What makes you think I’m not all right?”

“You stopped talking. I figured you must be near death.”

She blinked. He wasn’t grinning, and no twinkle lit his eyes. “You made a joke.”

“I did not.”

“Yes, you did. It must be the shock from the explosion finally setting in.”

“Couldn’t be. I’m too busy saving your life to go into shock.”

“You did,” she said, finding it once again hard to breathe, staring into his eyes. She’d just stood there watching Tripp bleed, and Shamus had pulled her to safety. If he hadn’t, she could have been the next victim. “You saved my life again. Now I really owe you.”


Вы ознакомились с фрагментом книги.
Приобретайте полный текст книги у нашего партнера:
Полная версия книги
4893 форматов
<< 1 ... 6 7 8 9 10
На страницу:
10 из 10

Другие электронные книги автора Florence Case