The Lawman's Last Stand. Vickie Taylor
driver behind her was firing again, but the bullets weren’t hitting the body of the Jeep. He was probably aiming at the tires. Gigi said a silent prayer that he didn’t hit them. Not with those cliffs so close to the side of the road.
Pointing at a break in the trees, Shane said, “Turn there, up ahead. On that gravel road.”
Gigi slammed on the brakes and swung the Jeep into the narrow opening. She swung her head from side to side, not liking what she saw. Walls of trees hemmed them in, pushed them forward. They were trapped. The trees encroached so closely on the road that they had no maneuverability.
But neither did the car behind them. Even with its superior speed, the sedan couldn’t pull alongside for a clean shot.
Shane checked the progress of the car behind them. “All right, scum. You wanna play, let’s play.”
“Play?” Gigi adjusted her clammy grip on the steering wheel. “You think this is a game?”
“Just keep driving,” he ordered. “As fast as you can.”
Gigi checked the rearview. The Mercedes plowed down the trail behind them, leaving a plume of dust in its wake.
The front right tire of the Jeep dropped into a deep rut in the road and then rebounded with a vengeance, catapulting Shane out of his seat. He grabbed the roll bar with both hands.
“Faster,” he ordered.
“I’m going as fast as I can.”
Gigi looked over her shoulder. The Mercedes was right behind them. The gun hung out the window.
“Duck!” Shane shouted. Several rounds dinged off metal. She couldn’t tell where. Keeping her head as low as she could and still see over the dashboard, Gigi pressed the accelerator to the floor.
“All right, get ready,” Shane called.
She glanced up warily. “Ready for what?”
He dropped into the passenger seat and climbed across the console until he was practically sitting in the driver’s seat with her. “Ready to hit the brakes and make a hard right turn.”
“Why?”
“Because the road ends right up there.”
“What!” She raised her foot to stomp on the brake, but he quickly kicked her foot away. Then he stomped on the gas.
“Move over,” he yelled.
Move? Move where? She crushed herself against the door, giving him haphazard control of the Jeep.
He pushed the accelerator to the floor once again and locked his fingers around the steering wheel. “Hold on! Five…four…”
The road ahead disappeared into nothingness. Gigi grabbed the door handle.
“Three…”
She let go of the handle and wrapped her arms around the headrest of the seat.
“Two…”
Her heart stopped, she let go of the headrest and, in a moment of sheer desperation, coiled herself around him. She buried her cheek against his chest.
“One… Now!”
Shane stood on the brake and yanked the steering wheel viciously around to the right, sending the Jeep fishtailing into a tight curve surrounded by a choking cloud of dust and gravel hail. Gigi ground her chin into him and held on.
He jerked the wheel back to the left, pulling the Jeep out of the spin within feet of the cliff and driving parallel to the precipice.
Over his shoulder, she saw that the driver of the car had finally seen the danger ahead. He was reared back from the steering wheel, elbows locked straight as if could push himself away from the cliff by physical force. The big sedan’s brakes ground and groaned with the effort, but couldn’t stop his momentum in time. Just as it slid to a halt, the nose of the Mercedes edged over the embankment. The car tottered forward, then back, coming to an unsteady rest with the front half of the car hanging precariously over the edge. A shower of pebbles clattered down the slope, then all went quiet.
Shane stopped the Jeep. Slowly Gigi uncurled her fingers from the front of his shirt and looked up at him.
He had the audacity to grin. “Antilock brakes aren’t so nifty when stopping fast is more important than stopping straight.”
“I can’t believe we just left him there. Aren’t you going to arrest him or something?”
Gigi glanced at Shane. His once golden tanned complexion had jaundiced. He hadn’t said a word in the ten minutes since he’d ordered her to drive, leaving the man who’d ambushed them dangling off the side of a cliff. For an experienced federal agent, he wasn’t taking a little thing like a shoot-out too well.
His eyes drifted shut. “You want to cross an open field in front of a man with a gun and try to take him down, you go right ahead, honey. Me, I prefer not to go out in a blaze of glory. At least not today.”
“You could have kept him pinned down or something while I went for help.”
“Yeah, I could have. Except the nearest help is in town, better than half an hour away, and I’m out of ammo.”
“Out of ammo?”
“Well, not technically out. I’ve got one round left. In case of emergency.”
“Don’t you carry extra?”
“Sure. In the glove compartment of my Blazer.”
The same Blazer that was twenty miles back in the other direction, at the rest stop, along with his police radio and his cell phone, no doubt.
Shane’s lips curled into a weak smile. “Besides, I wasn’t sure you’d come back for me.”
Gigi didn’t know what to say to that. She was desperate to get out of this town and away from Shane, but leave him one-on-one with an armed assassin… No, she wouldn’t do that. Would she?
“I would have sent someone back, at least,” she grumbled.
Shane sighed. “Well, I guess that’s something.” His eyes pulled open slowly, as if the small act required tremendous effort. “We’ll stop at the first phone we see and call the deputy, although I doubt he’ll find anything by the time he gets out to that cliff.”
Gigi’s stomach turned. The last thing she needed was more cops involved. “Then why bother?”
He scowled. “Because he’ll want to start a search for the guy before anyone else gets shot at, so why don’t you help things along by telling me who the hell that was and what he wanted.”
Gigi steered the Jeep off the county highway and braked to a stop behind a stand of birch. With shaky hands she shoved the transmission into neutral and shut off the engine.
His head rolled toward her. “What are you doing?”
“I need to stop.” Despite her best efforts at control, her voice cracked a little on the last syllable.
“We need to keep going.”
“I said I need to stop.”
He raised his eyebrows and cranked up one corner of his mouth. “You couldn’t have gone before you left the house?”
She wouldn’t dignify that with an answer. She reached up automatically to push her curly bangs out of her face until she realized she didn’t have bangs anymore. She’d almost forgotten. She lowered her hand, yanked at the door handle on the Jeep and bounced out of the vehicle.
“Where are you going?” he called out behind her.
“For a walk.”
“Lady, there’s a man out there with a gun. And you want to take a hike in the woods?”
Everything