Jill Elizabeth Nelson

Rocky Mountain Sabotage


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plan we filed before we took off. Our current location is a little off that path, but not radically beyond reasonable range. One thing we can do is position chunks of glass on the stone chimneys of one or more of these buildings and along the cliff walls that will reflect the sunlight and hopefully draw the attention of airborne searchers. However, their search pattern will be lower than regular flight altitudes, so they are unlikely to fly through these mountains at night, which means we probably shouldn’t bother with setting and tending bonfires after dark.”

      Lauren’s mom let out a long gust of air. “At least we have a plan. Let’s keep our hopes alive, people. And another thing we should do tomorrow is search this town top to bottom for anything we can use to make our time here easier, however short or long it may be.”

      “That’s the pioneer spirit, Mom.” Lauren exchanged a fist bump with her mother.

      Kent smiled as ragged laughter erupted among most of the passengers, and the atmosphere lightened. Quite a pair of admirable women, these two.

      Dirk’s scowl barely dimmed. “The shorter the better.” He tromped away to hunker down on one of the cushions near the heat source.

      “I’m going to make one last trip out to the plane,” Kent said. “Phil? Cliff? Are you still my main men?”

      “What about me?” Dirk jumped up.

      “I didn’t think you’d want to handle luggage with a broken finger.”

      Dirk snickered. “You’re right. I don’t.” He turned his back and held out his hands toward the stove.

      Kent gritted his teeth.

      Cliff brushed past him with a sidelong look. “I’m about ready to smack the smirk off of Dirk.”

      Swallowing laughter, Kent followed him and big, lumbering Phil out the door. An hour later, as the sun closed in on the horizon, they returned with a full load of luggage and one stunning item that left all humor out in the cold.

      Kent hauled Mags’s wheelie and a bulky bundle into the makeshift hospital area. He stared down at his inert copilot, frost riming him from the inside out. Lauren took a look at his face and rose from her kneeling position.

      “What is it?” she said. “And don’t give me a slick answer.”

      Kent eyeballed the activity going on near the door where everyone was crowding around to receive their luggage. The prospect of jackets and additional clothing, as well as toiletry items, was exciting in a good way after all the excitement in a bad way. The thumping and bumping and babble of eager voices would likely cover any conversation between him and the too-insightful physician’s assistant.

      “This.” He lifted the bulky pack. “It’s a parachute.”

      Her eyes widened. “Isn’t that standard equipment aboard your aircraft?”

      He shook his head, bereft of speech as the possibilities—no, probabilities—buzzed around in his brain.

      “Someone else brought it on board?”

      “There is no tag on this item, so none of our passengers checked it in. Mags oversaw the loading of the luggage. She’s the only one who could have put it there.”

      “But why?”

      “That’s the gazillion-dollar question, isn’t it? Unfortunately, the answer stinks to the moon and back. Who would have needed an unorthodox exit from the aircraft?”

      The sharp intake of Lauren’s breath marked comprehension. “Only someone who knew an emergency was going to happen.”

      “Bingo. And the layout of my plane allows access to the luggage bay from the bathroom. Just sneak back there, don the chute and out you go. Nice and neat.”

      Color receded from her face. “So we have to conclude that the plane was sabotaged. Would Mags have had the know-how to rig whatever caused the explosion?”

      “Oh, yeah.” Kent crossed his arms. “She was the bomb expert on our flight crew in Afghanistan.”

      “She was in the air force with you? Somebody you trusted? Wow. That’s got to hurt.”

      Kent’s skin tightened. She’d said a mouthful. It was hard to explain the camaraderie that developed between soldiers in the military. Such a level of betrayal bit deep, and somehow, this woman got it without explanation.

      Lauren laid a hand on his arm. “We still don’t know why she tried to destroy the plane.”

      “That, and which one of our passengers was in on the deal.”

      “What do you mean?” Her brows knit together.

      He grimaced. “This is a tandem chute. Two people dive in it. Somebody was planning to leave with her, but got stuck in the plane with us because Mags was incapacitated.”

      Lauren’s jaw dropped, and she leaned in toward him. “Someone walking around in this room tried to kill us? Wow. And they could try again!”

      Kent delivered a single, decisive nod. “For now, let’s keep the discovery of this parachute our secret. Her accomplice doesn’t need to be alerted that his existence has been exposed.”

      “Allow him to relax, get complacent and maybe slip up somehow?”

      “Exactly. And we need to pray that Mags wakes up—at least long enough to tell us his name—or we’re all the proverbial sitting ducks. Anybody with the brains and guts to devise and carry out this sabotage plan will be quick to implement a Plan B that will glean him the same results—us dead and himself home free.”

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