mean hide?
The woman’s mouth worked but no words came out.
“Oh, God.” Gabrielle lowered her head closer to the woman’s face. Strained to make out her words. “I don’t understand. What do you want me to do?”
“Hide…the children…more bad men will come…”
Gabrielle reared back at the warning. “Your friend isn’t alone in this?”
“…many more will come…”
The woman stilled. Her eyes lost their desperate appeal.
Gabrielle’s breath caught. She stared at the wounds that still oozed blood, but the force was much less now.
“Look, lady, I don’t know—”
The woman remained completely, unnervingly still.
Gabrielle felt for a pulse. Nothing. Damn! She tried to get the woman’s heart beating again, but it was no use.
The kids.
Dammit all to hell.
Gabrielle glanced at the gate, then back at the woman.
Someone had to save those kids.
There was no one but her.
Without taking a moment to second-guess herself, she bolted toward her Jeep.
If Sloan’s residence was tied in with any kind of security monitoring system then maybe help was already on the way. It was too late for those two, but someone needed to know what had happened here.
One thing was certain, if Gabrielle was going to catch up with the son of a bitch who had the kids, she had to move fast. She jumped behind the wheel of her Jeep, wiped her bloody hands on a T-shirt lying on the passenger seat and twisted the key in the ignition.
The motor started and she released the clutch, allowing the vehicle to lurch forward. She sped out over the sandy landscape, dust flying behind her. But that was good because it was flying behind the other guy, too, and that was the only chance she had of keeping him in sight.
The sun had almost completely set, leaving only the thinnest purple hues reaching across the barren desert in front of her.
She couldn’t turn on her headlights. She needed to get close enough to shoot out this jerk’s tires before he noticed her approach.
She would figure out what to do next after that.
Chapter Four
Gabrielle slammed on the brakes.
The Jeep skidded to a halt and she bailed out.
Feet wide apart, she took aim. Her heart hammered against her sternum but she ignored it. She stared down the barrel of her 9 mm at the rear tire of the kidnapper’s vehicle. Told herself she could do this. Her forefinger instinctively curled around the trigger.
The truck abruptly swerved and slid to a halt.
Gabrielle swore, adjusted her aim. Dammit, the truck was stopped with the passenger side facing in her direction. She could make out one of the kids….
The shooter registered in the corner of her eye a split second before she dove for the ground.
A series of explosions rent the air. Bullets plowed into the sand a few inches from her head.
She rolled. Took aim again.
A smile curled the corners of her mouth.
“Gotcha.” She fired.
The man screamed and scrambled out of sight behind the vehicle.
“Dumb bastard.”
A spray of bullets pelted the sand around her. She lunged for the cover of her Jeep. She’d been able to see some part of one leg beneath the truck. She’d hit him. Probably hurt like hell, but he wasn’t dead by a long shot.
She studied the truck, except she couldn’t see anything now. No movement whatsoever. “Damn.” He had her at a distinct disadvantage. She couldn’t shoot anywhere near the cab for fear of hitting one of the kids.
Where the hell was he?
He was still behind the truck…evidently using the tires for additional cover since she couldn’t see any part of his lower anatomy beneath the vehicle chassis.
Gabrielle scanned the darkening landscape beyond the truck. Help didn’t appear to be coming. Worse, the dying woman had said others would come. Friends of the jerk currently exchanging lead with her.
She couldn’t just lay here and wait to see what happened. She had to make a move.
Screaming from inside the truck cab abruptly snagged her attention. What now?
She heard the shooter yell at the kids to shut up. Gabrielle’s nerves jangled. If he started shooting at those kids…surely he wouldn’t do that. He’d obviously had some reason for wanting to kidnap them, would likely need them alive for that purpose.
Gabrielle took a moment to find calm. Staying alive required slowing the blood roaring through her ears. It meant being aware of the other guy at all times and not letting her emotions take control.
The sound of wailing jerked her into forward motion. More arguing between the man and one of the boys. She had to try to reach the rear end of the truck while he was distracted.
Too late.
She didn’t have to see the bullets pelting the sand, the echoing sound of the weapon firing was enough. He was laying down ground fire in an attempt to hit her or to force her away from her destination. She dove for the ground.
The truck horn blared to life. The gunshots stopped. Screaming and cursing followed.
Gabrielle scrambled to her feet and reached the side of the truck, hunkered by the tire to listen. The man still ranted at the older boy. Gabrielle decided the boy had laid down on the horn to distract the bastard or to annoy him. Either way, she’d have to thank him later.
Abrupt silence warned her that her enemy had figured out her latest move.
She held her breath. Listened…leaned down to see if there was any sign of his feet and legs.
Nothing.
He had to be crouched on the other side of the rear driver’s side tire. Less than a dozen feet away.
The proverbial Mexican standoff. How ironic.
A thud had her fingers tightening on her weapon.
She listened intently.
Nothing.
She couldn’t just continue to crouch here until he came around the end of the truck after her. But then he could be waiting for her to make exactly that kind of move. Evidently was.
Still no sound. No movement.
Damn. What the hell did she do now? Her mini weapons training course hadn’t included anything like this.
She looked under the truck again. Couldn’t see a damned thing.
Hovering here and waiting for him to come after her was driving her nuts. She had to move.
She eased quietly toward the end of the truck. Stalled there to listen.
Not a sound.
She peeked beneath the truck, but couldn’t see a thing in the deepening gloom. Hell, he could be waiting for dark. The sun had already dropped behind the mountains, leaving only a faint glow reaching across the desert.
That thought propelled her into action. She moved around the end of the truck, to the far side of the tailgate. Steeled herself. Then risked a look beyond the corner…
The shooter was on the ground. Not moving.
Gabrielle frowned. She definitely hadn’t gotten in a