“You thought of everything,” said Pine. She searched through the duffel and found the first aid kit. As she worked away on Blum, she said, “Carol, you’re going to make it. You’re going to be fine.”
Blum was obviously still dazed by the flash bangs, and the blood loss had made her weak. But she managed to open her eyes and nod. She looked at the back of Spector’s head, and a small, satisfied smile crept across her face.
Pine got Blum to drink some water and then checked the wounds to make sure the bleeding had been stopped. She retaped the bandages down over the gauze, glanced at Mercy with a relieved expression, and climbed back into the front seat. She looked at the speedometer and saw they were doing eighty.
“You ladies did your part well,” said Spector.
Pine rubbed her jaw. “Maybe too well.” She glanced with pride at her sister. “I know you were holding back. If you hadn’t been, you would have knocked me out in the first minute.”
“Don’t kid yourself, Lee, you pack a wallop,” said Mercy, gingerly rubbing her left oblique.
Pine said to Spector, “Where are we going?”
“There’s a town, about a hundred and fifty miles from here. It’s the closest place. But we’re not out of the woods yet. I did my best, took out some of their vehicles, but I couldn’t get to them all. But with this head start we should be able to keep in front of them.”
“You more than did your part.”
Spector glanced at her. “I hope you remember that if we actually survive this.”
Pine looked at her for a moment and then glanced at Blum, holding the other woman’s weary gaze for a second. She turned back to Spector. “We’d all be dead but for you. I don’t care why you were there. I just care that you helped us. It was a big risk. If it hadn’t worked, they would have killed you for sure.”
“Okay,” said Spector, turning her full attention to driving. “Why don’t you and your sister change your clothes? It’s some of my stuff. You’re both taller than me, but it’ll do, for now.”
Mercy opted for sweatpants and a long-sleeved T-shirt, a lined leather jacket that was tight in the shoulders, and running shoes that were long enough but too narrow. Pine put on jeans, a wool sweater, and a sleeveless parka vest with hiking boots on her feet. She had a pistol and the AK, and Spector had brought along two other pistols, a shotgun, and a long-range sniper rifle.
“I like your choice in guns,” said Pine.
“Nothing comes between me and first-class weaponry,” quipped Spector.
Pine and Mercy settled into their seats on either side of Blum. As they rode along, Blum began to come around enough to where she sat up straighter and looked at Pine.
“We’re going to be okay, Carol.”
“I know. I will bet on you every time.” She eyed Mercy and put a hand on her broad shoulder. “And you too, Mercy.”
“I hope I don’t disappoint you then.”
“I don’t think you could ever do that.”
“Are you feeling better? Here, drink some more water, keep your fluids up,” said Pine. She helped Blum to drink some water, then recapped it and sat back.
Blum reached out and took each of the sisters’ hands in a firm grip as the SUV roared along.
Up front, Spector smiled as she looked behind her in the mirror and saw nothing except the dark. Then she glanced at the gas gauge and her jaw slackened. “We had a full tank when we left. I’m already down to half. Something’s off.”
“Shit, they must have hit the fuel tank,” said Pine. “Pop the cargo window.”
She climbed back there and peered out the rear window. Pine could see the trail of gas they were leaving behind.
“We’re never going to make that town at this point,” warned Spector.
“No repair places or gas stations along the way?” asked Mercy.
“There is nothing along the way except what you see right now.”
“Don’t you have a phone?” said Pine.
“I do, but this is one of the ‘no coverage’ spots you see on the service provider commercials. We won’t have phone service until we’re about a mile outside of the town.”
Mercy said, “Can we stop and maybe plug the hole with something?”
Pine peered behind them and saw what looked to be headlights.
“I don’t think we can stop,” she said, indicating the headlights far in back of them. “They regrouped a lot faster than I would have thought.”
Spector glanced in the mirror and said, “Well, damn.”
“Yeah,” said Pine, looking at her. “Damn.”
CHAPTER
73
PETER BUCKLEY SAT IN THE REAR SEAT of the Jeep looking grim. He eyed the gun in his hand. It had been a long time since he had personally killed anyone. Right now, he was looking forward to it.
And he intended to torture and then gut Britt Spector for betraying him. He chastised himself for not seeing the clear warning signs. She had been acting funny, distracted—no, not distracted; disillusioned was a better term. As though she were reevaluating things in her life. Well, she certainly had chosen a different path. Maybe it was because they were all women, and two of them were with the FBI. Maybe that connection ran deeper than even she knew.
They had seen evidence of the gas leak, though, and he knew they would not have enough fuel to reach help. The terrain here was rugged and unforgiving. When they ran out of gas, they would run out of heat. And at night, the temps would plunge into the teens or lower. But he expected to catch up to them long before then.
It would not be a fair fight. He had too many men, and they were four women, and one was in her sixties. He appreciated the symmetry because the fight that had nearly killed his father here had not been fair, either. Buckley had not gotten his revenge back at the cage fight. He would get it out here. And out here was where he would bury all the bodies, far, far under the dirt, and cover them with boulders.
He looked out the window at the bleak sky, and imagined how it all was going to end. This had become his single, defining moment, he could see that clearly now. All of the other things he’d done with his life—the money, the connections, the bit of fame, travel and culture—it meant nothing. It was as if he had wasted his entire life. But now he had a chance to make it up. He had never felt closer to his father than he did right now. And the elder son was finally going to avenge his father, once and for all.
*
Ten miles ahead, Spector cut into a box canyon that had been formed by raging water millions of years ago, and rode the narrow dirt strip as far back as she could. From the gauge she calculated they had about five gallons of gas left, and she noted that the fuel level had stabilized—the bullets must have pierced the tank above the remaining fuel. However, it was not enough to get to the town, particularly at the high speed she needed to maintain. That was why she had turned off into this canyon. Stopping out in the flatlands would mean they would have no chance at all.
She pulled the SUV behind a pile of collapsed rock and cut the engine.
“They might miss this turnoff, which could buy us some time.”
“Time to do what?” said Mercy. She looked out the window. “I don’t see anyone coming to the rescue.”