Love Inspired Suspense September 2015 #1
Page 17
*
In her haste, Lydia had flooded the engine. After sitting for a while, the car started and she backed out of her garage, praying she still had time to save Kate.
As Lydia drove toward the warehouse, the bomber called again. He told her to toss her cell phone out the window. At the warehouse there would be a phone that couldn’t be traced. She had no intention of doing that. She could be tracked with the signal.
Her phone rang again. She didn’t answer it. After a second call, she received a text from the bomber and pulled over to the curb. I know you haven’t done what I said. Throw it out now or your sister dies.
He must be following her. She scanned her surrounding but couldn’t tell where he might be. A few cars passed her. Was he in one of them? She had no choice. She flung the cell out the window and continued her journey to the warehouse.
Lydia approached her destination and drove around back. After parking where he had told her to, she looked for the cell and found it, then sat in her car to wait.
Five minutes passed before the cell phone rang. She snatched it from her lap and said, “Where do I go now?”
“Drive down to the warehouse at the end of the row. Then I’ll let you know.”
She followed his directions and again waited. This time it was ten minutes before she received another call.
“Go to the back door of the warehouse on the left. It’ll be unlocked. Go inside and wait.”
As she headed for the building, she wondered if it was another stall tactic. Would she be sent somewhere else? If only she could remember who the bomber was and why he wanted her dead. The two cooks who survived in the bistro kitchen hadn’t been targeted. She had seen him in the dining room. But who?
Then a vision of the gray eyes filled her mind, but this time the face became clearer. It wasn’t gray eyes she saw but reflective sunglasses he put on right before he went out the bistro’s exit door at the end of the hallway to the restrooms.
Her hand shook as she opened the door to the abandoned building. Inside, she paced in a circle, afraid to go too far into the cavernous area. She looked into the dim shadows surrounding her. Was he here now—watching her? Her heartbeat raced so fast she felt lightheaded. She inhaled deeply, then exhaled to calm herself as much as possible.
The man leaving the bistro wearing the sunglasses had glanced back when she went into the bathroom and she’d looked right at him for three seconds. Then he’d hurriedly left.
A movement to the right in the warehouse caught Lydia’s attention. A man stepped out of the darkness. She gasped. “It’s you.”
*
After calling Thomas, Jesse picked the lock on the front door, then entered with gun drawn and Brutus off his leash, sniffing as he went. Jesse checked each room while he worked his way back to where the teenager was. He wouldn’t put it past the bomber to have a repeat of what happened at Sam Alexander’s place. When Sam’s body was found in a freezer, it was determined he’d been dead for weeks. Jesse prayed that Connor wasn’t dead and there wasn’t a bomb ready to explode. He had to find Kate for Lydia.
When Jesse went into the teenager’s bedroom, he hurried toward the boy while Brutus searched the area. He checked for a pulse and found one. As he called for an ambulance, he surveyed Connor, whose legs and hands were tied behind his back, to see the extent of his injuries. All he found was a head wound with matted blood around it. More had pooled on the floor. He untied Connor.
While waiting for the ambulance and Thomas, he scanned the room as Brutus went from one object to the next, sniffing. If the bomber was the one who did this, at least he left the teenager alive, but he must have taken Kate. They would have to assume that was the case and start canvassing the street for any information. They could look at traffic cams, but they needed an idea of what kind of vehicle the bomber drove. And they needed to know fast.
Connor stirred on the floor, his eyes blinking open. Obviously disoriented, he stared at Jesse for a moment, tried to move and groaned.
“An ambulance is on its way. I wouldn’t move. You were hit on the head. Do you remember what happened?”
Connor tried to sit up and collapsed back against the floor. Jesse caught him before he hit his head. “Where’s Kate?”
“He must…” Connor’s hoarse voice gave out.
“She’s not here. Who is he?” Jesse kept his voice calm as panic descended over Connor’s features, his eyes rounding as he tried to get up again and could barely lift his head. Jesse held him still.
“Did he…” Connor opened his mouth, but no words came out for a few seconds then he continued, “…take her?”
“Kate is missing. Who is he?”
“He burst in here as we…” Connor averted his gaze.
“If Kate has been kidnapped, we need to know everything now. Time is of the essence.”
“He moved so fast.” Connor paused for a few seconds, closing his eyes.
Jesse thought he might have lost consciousness again.
But Connor continued. “He had a bat…he knocked me out.”
“So you don’t know who tied you up?”
“No.” Connor opened his eyes.
“What did he look like?” Jesse asked as the sound of sirens grew louder.
“Wore a ski mask.”
“Do you remember anything about him?”
“About my size.” Connor sucked in a breath. “I heard Kate scream… He took her?”
“I’m assuming he did. She isn’t here.”
“Is he the bomber?”
“I think so. Anything you can tell me would be great.”
Connor’s eyes slid closed again. The teen might not be much help at this time, but maybe the house could tell him something.
As the paramedics came down the hall, Connor’s eyes popped open. “He wore black. Even black gloves.”
Thomas followed the paramedics into the bedroom. Jesse stood and made his way to him. “All he could tell me was the man was about his size and wore black. He had on a ski mask and used gloves so I doubt there are prints.”
“Do you know how he got in?”
“I think he picked one of the locks on an outside door. That’s how I got into the house when I saw the kid on his floor.”
“Brutus checked for a bomb?”
“First thing. None of us, including my dog, wants a repeat of the other day. My body is still healing.”
“I think the best use of our manpower right now is to go house to house and see if anyone saw something. Have you called Lydia?”
“I was going to after you all came.”
“Not a call you want to make?” Thomas’s mouth twisted in a frown.
“No. She’s going to blame herself. This wouldn’t have happened if Kate hadn’t left school. But in Lydia’s mind it will become her fault her sister is in danger. I’ll also call Connor’s parents. I’ll get the contact information from school.”
“Tell her it’s the bomber’s fault.” Thomas left to organize a door-to-door canvas of the neighbors at home.
The first task Jesse did was to inform Connor’s parents about what happened at their house and where their son was being taken. Finally he had no choice but to call Lydia. If he wasn’t needed here to help find Kate, he’d rather tell her in person, but that wasn’t an option. He let her phone ring until it went to voice mail. She hadn’t slept well last night. She must be taking a nap.
He gave Williams a call, and the officer answered on the second ring. “Is Lydia asleep?”
“Yeah.”
“How long?”
“An hour. Mary was about to wake her up.”
“We haven’t found Kate, but we know some of what happened. I need to tell her.”
“Kate is missing?”
Jesse gripped his cell phone tighter. “She called me about Kate being gone when the school called her. She was supposed to tell you.”
“She didn’t say anything to me or Mary.”
Why didn’t Lydia tell the officers
guarding her? His gut knotted. Something was wrong. “Kate went to her boyfriend’s house at lunch. It seems yesterday and today they sneaked off campus. The doors are locked to prevent people from coming into the building but not going out. I found Connor knocked out and Kate gone. A man in black came in and took her. As much as I hate it, you need to wake Lydia up.”
“I’m making my way to her bedroom now.”
Jesse heard Williams knock on the door. There was a long pause, then another knock, louder this time.
“She’s not answering. I’m going inside,” Williams said as Jesse heard a slight creaking sound as he opened the door. “The window is open. She’s gone.”
Jesse went cold. “I’m on my way. Check the whole house and let me know what you find.”
*
“Where’s Kate?” Lydia stared at the bomber dressed in black, not ten feet from her.
“Somewhere safe and alive.”
“And why should I believe you?”
“Because you don’t have a choice, if you want your sister to live. I have no issue with Kate, but I do with you. I know you were remembering. I could tell by the direction of the police investigation, but mostly from the bug I placed in Calvin’s dog collar. I didn’t think you were going to take him home with you. That was a bonus. I just hoped to get some info when the police realized the bomber brought the animal in.”
“Calvin could have died.”
He shrugged. “You could ID me. I took care of the waitress who served me. If you’d died like you were supposed to, I’d have stopped. Now I’ll have to set off another bomb just to throw the police off. They need to think it’s a lunatic who is doing this.”
He was a lunatic. Anyone who did what he had done wasn’t in his right mind. “Why are you setting off bombs?”
“Because I had to kill my girlfriend. She purposely got pregnant with my child. She actually thought I would leave my wife. She’s coming into a lot of money soon when her father’s estate is finally settled. I’ve stayed married to her for years. I’m not walking away from all that wealth now.”
What a sicko! Lydia pressed the arm with the syringe against her side. Somehow if her plan was to work, she had to get close to him. Once she tranquilized him, she could tie him up with the rope she brought from her house and call the police. Then he wouldn’t be able to set off any more bombs, and she and Kate would be safe.
“So you killed all those people to cover up one death.” She couldn’t keep the contempt from her voice.
He ignored her statement and said, “Toss the phone to me.”
She did as instructed but hit him in the chest hard, then whirled around and ran for the door. She wanted him to come after her, but she had to make it look like she was genuinely fleeing. As she raced toward the exit, she lowered the syringe so one end was cupped in her palm. Then she stumbled on purpose and went down, using the commotion to free the shot completely.
He grabbed her and jerked her to her feet. “Stupid woman. If you escape, I’ll just have to kill your sister.”
Before he had a chance to push her forward, she lunged at him and stabbed the needle into his upper arm. He backhanded her, sending her flying into the door. When she struck it, all the air whooshed from her lungs.
He took a step toward her. She’d given him enough tranquilizer to put a horse down. He kept coming toward her, but he weaved from side to side.
It had to work.
He stopped in front of her, his eyelids sliding closed. As she fumbled for the door handle, he put his hands around her neck and squeezed.
*
As Jesse drove toward his house with Brutus, he put a call in to headquarters to track her cell phone.
He was turning into his driveway when he received a call about the location of the phone. He ran to his house to get the two officers and grab something with Lydia’s scent on it. Then he headed toward the location he’d been given. The signal was stationary. He tried to think what was in that location. Not a house—it wasn’t residential. A building?
He reached the short street and pulled over to the curb. A vacant lot stood where the cell signal was emanating. Not a good sign. “We need to find the phone. Maybe there’s something on it that can help us.”
Jesse let Brutus out of the rear of the SUV and let him smell the sweater. “Find.”
When his K-9 sat and looked at him, Jesse hurried over. The cell phone was hidden in the tall weeds. He put on a pair of gloves and looked at the calls she’d received recently. When he read the text message, he figured the phone would be a dead end, but he called headquarters to see if the number of the person who called her last could be traced. While he waited, he surveyed the street. Not the best part of town.
After he received the call informing him the cell couldn’t be traced, he turned to the two patrol officers. “We need to check around here to see if anyone saw her.”
But as each minute ticked by, Jesse couldn’t forget the words, “Throw it out now or your sister dies.”
In that moment he realized he might lose the woman he loved.
*
Before Lydia had a chance to knee the pharmacist, his hands slipped from around her neck as he swayed on his feet, then crumbled to the concrete floor. She shoved him to the side, opened the door and ran to her car for the rope. When she came back to the warehouse, she retrieved his cell phone and called Jesse.
“Jesse, this is Lydia.”
“Are you okay? Where are you?”
She gave him the address and told him which warehouse she was in. “I’m tying up Phillip Keats. Hurry. He has Kate somewhere. We have to make him tell us where.”
“I’m not far away. I’m heading there now. Stay on the phone.”
“First I’m putting it down to tie him up.”
After she secured the bomber, she picked up the phone and stood. “This guy isn’t going anywhere. He’ll be out for a while. I’m searching for Kate.”
“Wait. I’m pulling up behind the row of warehouses. Brutus is with me, and I have something from school with Kate’s scent.”
Lydia moved toward the opened door, went outside and waved at Jesse. “I’m so glad to see you.”
Jesse parked, said something to Williams, then rushed toward her. He scooped her up in his arms and hugged her. “I love you. I can’t lose you again.”
“I love you, Jesse.” She gave him a quick kiss. “That hasn’t changed in all these years. But right now I have to find Kate. She’s here because of me.” She stepped away and saw Don bringing Brutus with Kate’s backpack. Mary was behind them.
“We will find her and then we’ll need to talk about why in the world you came to meet him alone and without letting us know.”
“I left a message on my nightstand.”
Jesse looked at Williams.
He shrugged. “I didn’t see it, but the window was open and the wind was blowing into the room. It’s probably on the floor by the bed or under it.”
“I only told you the general location because that’s all I knew, but I think he was following me so I had to come alone. Oh, and he had put a bug in Calvin’s collar so he knew what was going on.”
“How did you knock him out?” Mary asked as she examined the pharmacist while Don handed Jesse a flashlight.
“I gave him a tranquilizer. That’s one of the perks of being a vet. I had some lying around my house.”
Jesse held the backpack up for Brutus to smell. “Find.” He gave his Rottweiler a long leash and he and Lydia followed. He yelled back to the officers, “Call this in and guard him.”
Brutus headed for a rickety staircase and started up. Her heartbeat thundering in her head, Lydia held the light on the area in front of the dog. He entered a room, and she prayed Kate was alive and unharmed.
Jesse went in first and came to a stop. He called Brutus to his side. Lydia peered around Jesse to see her sister tied up with duct tape, some of it over her mouth. Her wide eyes, full of fear, were all Lydia could focus on.
r /> Until Jesse said, “She has a bomb strapped to her.”
FOURTEEN
Jesse handed Lydia the leash. “Leave with Brutus. I’ll stay but everyone else needs to get out.” He glanced at her. “No argument, Lydia. I have experience disarming bombs, but I can’t be distracted with you being here. Go. Now.”
“I can’t leave you.”
“Now. If there’s a timer on it, I’m wasting valuable seconds.”
Kate nodded as though indicating there was a timer. Lydia pulled Brutus toward her, took one last look at Jesse and Kate, then hurried down the stairs.
Jesse realized how much he had to live for. Lord, we’re in Your hands. Please keep us alive.
Remembering how he triggered the bomb in the house, Jesse approached Kate sitting in a chair with duct tape securing her along with the bomb. He saw the timer. In red numbers, it indicated he had four minutes, twenty-three seconds to get her out of the chair and out of the building. Or to disarm it.
With his pulse racing, he squatted next to Kate and studied the bomb, similar to one he’d handled before. “We’re going to be all right. I’m not letting anything happen to you. Lydia would never forgive me.”
He dug into his pocket and removed his Swiss Army Knife. Then holding his breath, he cut the wire he thought would stop the timer. It did at two minutes, forty-one seconds.
After swiping the sweat from his brow, he removed the tape over Kate’s mouth first.
*
Sirens blasted the air as Lydia stood at the end of the row of warehouses. She kept repeating her prayer to bring Jesse and Kate out alive.
Then she spied Jesse and Kate emerging from the building, and she raced toward them as the first responders arrived. Williams had called the bomb squad, and they were in the lead.
She threw her arms around Kate and held her tight. She pulled back, tears running down her face, the biggest smile on her face. “You are grounded for the rest of your life.”
Her sister’s eyes watered, and she hugged Lydia and sobbed. She stroked Kate’s back, telling her she would be all right. Lydia’s gaze connected with Jesse’s, and she wanted to kiss him senseless.