by Dani Pettrey
© 2012 by Dani Pettrey
Published by Bethany House Publishers
11400 Hampshire Avenue South
Bloomington, Minnesota 55438
www.bethanyhouse.com
Bethany House Publishers is a division of
Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan
www.bakerpublishinggroup.com
Ebook edition created 2012
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
ISBN 978-1-4412-7116-7
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
Scripture quotations are from the Holy Bible, New International Version®. NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, incidents, and dialogues are products of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Cover design by Koechel Peterson & Associates, Inc., Minneapolis, Minnesota/Gregory Rohm
Author represented by MacGregor Literary, Inc.
To Michael
For asking me to dance.
It’s turned out to be the dance of a lifetime.
I love you.
To Mom
For always believing.
I love you dearly.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Prologue
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30
31 32 33 34 35
36 37 38 39 40
41 42 43 44 45
46 47 48 49
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Back Ad
Back Cover
Prologue
Never wager unless you control the stakes.
And she’d thought she held such a strong hand.
Agnes Grey forced her head against the rattling seat back, clenched the armrests with such force her nails broke. Perspiration soaked her brow, seeping into her eyes, but she refused to cry. She was too old to cry.
The plane was going down into the water within sight of her home. Home—warm, safe, dry. She’d never see it again.
Her friend Henry Reid strained to look back, his white knuckles bulging on the wheel as he fought to regain control of the spiraling Cessna, but the fiery plane seemed bent on destruction. Panic flashed through his eyes. “Tighten your belts. Put your head between your knees.”
His concern was sweet, but it wouldn’t change the outcome. Their fate was set.
They were going down—hard and fast. The other passengers’ terrified expressions said they knew it too. Innocents, every one, Agnes thought, fury on their behalf trumping her own fear. She was the only one on board who knew this catastrophe was no mechanical failure. It was him. She knew it as surely as she knew she’d seen her last sunset.
A bitter cry tore from her cracked lips. Any semblance of control on her part had been an illusion.
She’d played her hand, and he’d just called her on it.
If she hadn’t been so stinking stubborn, if she’d kept her mouth shut and given him what he wanted . . . But Momma hadn’t raised her like that. She’d done the right thing. She only wished she hadn’t brought the others down with her.
Managing to crane her neck left, she took in the sight of the loving couple’s hands clasped tight, crying as they whispered frantic words to each other.
Agnes’s stomach lurched. She’d brought them on this journey, doomed them to a watery tomb.
At least now he’d be satisfied. She’d be gone. They’d be gone. No one was left to . . .
Acid burned up her throat.
Bailey.
1
OFF THE COAST OF TARIUK ISLAND, ALASKA
Cole McKenna left the chaos at the water’s surface for the chaos below. The black water quickly suffocated the floodlights directed down at him from the rescue boats above. Within seconds it was only him, the strobe attached at his waist, and the immense darkness of the sea.
His heart seemed to beat in time with the strobe’s rhythmic flash.
Thump. Thump.
It was amazing the things one heard when surrounded by darkness.
Thump. Thump.
Cole checked his depth gauge with his left hand, keeping his right fixed on the lifeline. When diving in depths without any natural light and with no distinguishing landmarks, in an ever-changing current, a few seconds off the line was all it took to get disoriented, and those seconds could mean the difference between life and death.
Thirty feet.
Thirty-five.
“Diver two in the water,” Gage instructed over the comm from topside.
He was glad he’d have Landon Grainger at his side tonight. He was going to need all the help he could get.
Sonar had indicated that what remained of Henry Reid’s floatplane tottered on the edge of Outerman’s Ridge, forty feet beneath the surface. He wished the flight manifest had arrived before deployment so they knew how many passengers had been on board. He hated going in blind.
Forty feet.
He slipped his external light from his utility belt and switched it on. The Cessna glimmered a murky white in its beam.
“I’m going off-line,” he alerted topside.
“Be safe, Cole. Diver three is in the water.”
Cole swallowed. “Roger that.” He shouldn’t worry any more about Kayden than Landon. As dive captain, he was responsible for every member on the rescue team. He couldn’t allow the fact that Kayden was his sister to affect his decisions. It wouldn’t be fair to the rest of the team or to the victims. But a brother’s innate protective nature always lingered.
He inhaled, the pressure-demand regulator automatically releasing a puff of oxygenated air into his face mask. The device made him sound like Darth Vader, each breath deliberate and punctuated. His black neoprene dry suit, gloves, and hoses only added to the image.
The glow in the fuselage had disappeared, but the fact the fire had lasted as long as it had bolstered his hope that there was still air trapped in the craft. He prayed their search tonight would end in rescue and not just recovery.
Panning his beam along the vessel, he began his inspection at the tail—torn and jagged—and moved along to the cockpit. His breath hitched at the compressed metal. He prayed Henry had been tossed free before the plane nosedived onto the ridge. At least then there was a chance Ginny would have a body to bury.
“Going off-line,” Landon announced a moment before he was at Cole’s side.
“Best access is going to be that door,” Cole said.
“I agree.” Landon pulled the crowbar from the gear bag.
Kayden joined them, her beam of light bouncing off Cole’s mask before settling on the fuselage.
“Landon, you’re with me,” he instructed. “Kayden, watch the currents and how this wreckage is moving. Be ready to help lift to the surface.”
“You got it, boss.”
Cole wedged the crowbar inside the door’s seam and, bracing against the sidewall, heaved back. Heat rippled through his fingers and up his arms with the exertion. Three minutes later, the door hung open on its hinges.
A tangle of
wires littered the opening. Cole set to work clearing a pathway.
He checked his dive watch. Five minutes closer to the Golden Hour—the limit for cold-water drowning victims to be revived. Any longer and all hope was lost.
Not tonight. Not on his watch.
He gave Landon the go signal and entered the craft behind him, wedging his body through the opening and to the right.
Landon’s auxiliary light reflected through the water ahead. “I’ve got two. Man and woman. Strapped into their seats, right side.”
Cole didn’t recognize the couple. In a town Yancey’s size, everyone was a neighbor, so he knew most residents of his town by sight. Flying debris had left the woman with a gash on her face, and the man had taken a hard blow to the temple.
He turned the torch on his dive watch. Thirty-five minutes since the crash, another fifteen to get them to the surface, another ten to get them to the hospital . . .
“We take her out first.” Cole unclipped the seat harness and cleared the woman from her seat. “Kayden, I need you at the door ready for a lift to the surface.”
“Ready, boss.”
Cole lifted the woman’s legs as Landon lifted her shoulders. He carefully walked backward, measuring the distance to the opening by the steps he took.
“Hold here.” He lowered her legs and cautiously wedged himself out of the craft. He leaned back in. “Slowly now.” He eased the woman through the doorway. “She’s out.”
Cole held her upright as Kayden secured her for transport to the surface. Giving pressurized air to an unconscious drowning victim caused more harm than good. A fast lift to the surface and waiting emergency personnel was the best option.
He watched Kayden and the woman disappear into the darkness above, then headed back into the wreckage to rejoin Landon.
“He’s almost ready to go,” Landon said, kneeling beside the unconscious man. “You want me to lift with him?”
“Yes. As soon as Kayden is back down, you head up with him.”
Something bumped into Cole’s back, and he panned his torch around. A flash of movement caught his eye. He moved toward the rear of the fuselage and got kicked.
Someone was desperately trying to hug a pocket of air in the raised tail of the craft. “I’ve got another one—conscious,” he alerted Landon.
He stepped on a plane seat, getting as high as he could. A pocket of air, no more than five inches deep, hugged the angled roof of the cabin.
An icy hand hit his face. This time he grabbed and caught it. He lifted his torch and found a pair of terrified eyes staring back at him. “I’ve got Agnes Grey!” She was standing on the headrest of the last seat, hugging an air pocket barely a hand’s width deep. He yanked his pony bottle from his vest, pulled the release to let the air flow, and wrapped her cold hand around it, guiding it to her mouth. He shoved his mask back and tilted his head to move into the air pocket so she could hear him. “Breathe slowly, and stay as still as you can. I’m going to get you out of here.”
She nodded in rapid fire as she gulped a deep breath in. Water was lapping against her face, and he wasn’t sure how long she could stay upright in the cold water. Her lips were blue, her skin pallid. She’d moved beyond the last of the seats trying to find the air. Getting her to willingly go underwater to get out of the wreckage was going to be a challenge.
“You, two other passengers, and Henry the pilot? That’s who I’m looking for? Four people?”
She reluctantly released the air to reply. “Five. Another passenger went forward to try to help Henry.” She swallowed hard. “I saw his body floating outside after we crashed.”
“Stay right here. I’ll be right back. I promise you.”
He waited until she nodded, pushed his mask back over his face, and used the seat’s headrest to propel himself back toward Landon. “Let’s get him outside. Agnes is alert enough—I’m going to try to buddy breathe her out.”
Landon nodded. They lifted the man clear of the seats and into the aisle. The plane shifted, toppling Cole forward and causing Landon to lose his balance. The pitch of the fuselage rolled another five degrees. “Move!”
Landon shimmied backward, guiding the man’s legs, while Cole supported his shoulders. A torch lit outside of the plane, its beam sliding across the windows. “Kayden’s back.”
“How’s it look?”
Landon disappeared through the door. “Tight, but it’s enough.” Cole eased the man down as Landon guided him out of the plane. “We’re clear.”
Cole didn’t wait for word they had the man ready to lift; he turned and headed back into the plane for Agnes.
There was no way to safely put her in front, so he’d have to pull her through the wreckage. And he wouldn’t be able to communicate with her once they moved out of the air pocket. He hoped she didn’t so badly panic he had to knock her out just to get her to safety.
She was submerged now, fully underwater, her eyes closed, clutching the air canister to her chest.
He turned his torchlight on her face.
Her eyes opened, panicked.
He grasped her wrist and nodded as she in turn grasped his. He motioned they were heading down.
The plane shifted again.
He didn’t give her time to react to the threat; he pushed them back through the water as quickly as he could, using the seats to judge the distance. She stayed with him, keeping a death grip on his wrist.
An ominous groan reverberated through the fuselage. Water vibrated around them. Cole’s gauges swayed with the seat backs.
“Cole.” Kayden didn’t have to say any more. Her tone said it all.
The ridge wasn’t going to hold the plane much longer.
Tugging Agnes, he bolted for the doorway.
Ten feet.
Nine.
Eight.
“Cole, get out of there!”
His heart squeezed at the terror in his sister’s voice.
The tail section lurched forward, metal scraping coral with an eerie rasping as the water-filled fuselage teetered on the brink of darkness. This time it didn’t stop.
Agnes let go of his wrist and yanked from his hold. Frantically she spun around, her eyes wild in his torchlight.
He reached for her, but she kicked off a seat, trying to propel herself to the opening. With no light and the plane shifting around them, she propelled straight into the AED storage cabinet.
Her body went limp, the air canister floating away.
Cole lunged for her, managing to seize her arm.
With a roar, the right side of the plane broke off, the outside current swirling in.
Struggling against the water’s force, he wedged his leg between the seats and used the leverage to pull Agnes back to him.
“I’m coming in.”
“Don’t you dare, Kayden. Hold position. That’s an order!”
He swam down toward the doorway, scraping his air canister on the frame. Keeping Agnes protected as best he could, he scrambled to grab a handhold on the frame.
Another hand met his. Kayden.
He wrapped Kayden’s hand around Agnes’s wrist. “She’s unconscious.”
“I’ve got her!”
Cole let his sister pull Agnes through the door, and then slid out of the fuselage behind her.
Kayden got Agnes secure for lift.
“Head up,” he instructed.
“You’re right behind us.” It wasn’t a question.
He gave the thumbs-up signal. The search for Henry and the missing passenger would have to wait until after the wreckage settled. He began his ascent, and as the plane faded from view, he saw it slide off the ridge into the darkness. A sick feeling rolled through his stomach. That had been too close for comfort.
Concentric circles spread out in ever-increasing rings above, pinpointing the helicopter’s location. At least there was plenty of help above.
He breached the surface to the whirring of rotary blades.
Three paramedics crowded the rescue bo
at’s platform, reaching to help lift Agnes carefully aboard. Cole waited until Agnes and Kayden were clear, then grabbed the ladder.
Ralph Barnes, Yancey’s fire chief, leaned over to give him a hand with the heavy tanks.
“Thanks.” Cole took a seat on the gunwale and started stripping off the weight of his gear as rain fell around him.
Gage hollered over to him, “The support boat is headed back with the other victims. Landon too. You going to call this?”
Cole nodded. “Get us to shore.”
Gage waved off the helicopter and headed to the pilothouse. They would reach shore in less time than it would take to transfer Agnes by air.
Cole watched as the rescue personnel started CPR on Agnes. With all she’d been through, he wasn’t surprised to find her heart had stopped.
“One one-thousand. Two one-thousand. Come on, Agnes.”
Kayden sat down beside him. She watched the rescue personnel work. “She’s icy cold. That’s good. She’s got more time,” she murmured, more to herself than to him.
Cole squeezed her shoulder. Kayden didn’t handle losing people very well—neither of them did. “I hope so.” He couldn’t do anything for Agnes but hope she could fight for her life one more time. Red lights swirled like beacons from the emergency vehicles on shore, growing closer as the boat neared landfall.
“You should have held position,” Cole said quietly.
“And let you go down with the plane? I don’t think so.”
“Not your call.”
“You would have done the same, and we both know it,” Kayden replied.
“Probably, but I would rather not find out.”
The boat pulled into the dock, and Landon was waiting for them, securing the boat lines as the engine was cut. Cole moved to help the EMTs lift their patient onto a transport board, and then onto land. Through the pouring rain, he watched as they shocked Agnes’s heart in the ambulance and moments later started CPR again. They slammed the ambulance doors. The sirens wailed their departure.
Cole wiped at the water snaking in rivulets down his face. He was freezing.
Cole hauled gear over to the town’s fire station, where the rescue crew had storage space.