The Lonely Mile

Bill rose to his feet, staggered, and dropped to one knee, spitting out a curse. His head was swimming. He must have knocked it harder than he realized. He picked up his Browning off the floor where he had apparently dropped it in the violence of the collision—some hero, dropping his gun at the critical moment—and began moving in an unsteady gait toward the rest stop doors that the failed kidnapper had blasted through just moments before.

By the time Bill crossed the fifteen feet to the doors, he felt a little more like himself. He was suffering the beginnings of what he suspected was going to be a whopper of a headache, and lightning-bolts of pain radiated from his left elbow, but overall, he knew it could have been much worse. He was still alive and so was the girl.

He picked up the pace, hitting the doors at a dead run, jarring them violently backward for the second time in less than a minute, and was rewarded with a metallic screech that sounded like an accusation. The unseasonable heat and humidity descended on him like a wet blanket as he leapt the four steps from the plaza to the concrete walkway, staggering slightly upon landing and continuing forward into the parking lot. An elderly couple approaching the plaza did a double take. Bill wondered what he looked like to them and decided he was probably better off not knowing.

In a way, he supposed he must look like a freaking lunatic, chasing after a guy armed with a deadly weapon, who—if, in fact, he really was the legendary I-90 Killer—was rumored to have murdered at least ten people, probably more. And Bill had no doubt the guy would not mind adding one middle-aged fool to his tally.

By the time he had taken three running steps onto the hot pavement, Bill realized it was hopeless. There were probably over a hundred cars in the mammoth lot, and while it wasn’t even close to being full, the odds of picking the I-90 Killer’s vehicle out of all of the ones glittering in the bright May sunshine when he had no idea what it even looked like were stacked overwhelmingly against him. For all he knew, the guy had been parked in the first row and was already gone, even now speeding down the highway, anonymous and safe.

Bill slapped his hands together and screamed in frustration, and as he did, his headache spiked and the I-90 Killer roared past him, not twenty feet away, tearing along the parking lot access lane toward the on-ramp leading to the eastbound lane of the interstate. He was driving a battered, off-white box truck that trailed blue smoke as he made his escape. The vehicle had obviously been repainted, and not professionally, containing no apparent markings. Bill shuddered, thinking about what horrible fate might have awaited that young girl back inside the rest stop had the man gotten her into the back of that truck.

He peered at the rear of the vehicle in an attempt to decipher the license plate, but the heavy blue smoke pouring out of the exhaust made an effective screen. Bill could see the plate but could not make out any of the numbers or letters; he couldn’t even tell whether it was a New York or a Massachusetts tag, or maybe neither. He cursed again and wondered if the escaping kidnapper realized how lucky he was right now to be driving a vehicle that needed a ring job.

Bill began sprinting toward his vehicle to give chase. How hard could it be to catch that crappy truck?





CHAPTER 10


MARTIN STOMPED ON THE accelerator and the truck responded like, well, like what it was—a twelve-year-old box truck that had spent most of its life ferrying vegetables and produce from one location to another. It bucked and hesitated before finally getting the message and picking up steam. He roared past the building and saw the man he had grappled with staring at him in open-mouthed surprise. It would have been comical if the last few minutes hadn’t been such a debacle.

He hit the highway doing almost seventy-five, pretty close to the old vehicle’s max speed. As tempting as it was to continue at that speed—he wanted nothing more than to get as far away from the scene of the disaster as quickly as possible—Martin immediately eased off the gas and slowed the truck to a sensible, non-confrontational sixty, immediately rendering himself invisible in the process. There was no reason to draw unnecessary attention by driving too fast. By the time the police arrived at the rest stop and finished sorting out what exactly had happened, he would be home, relaxing on his couch, drinking beer, and watching porn.

Sweat poured from Martin’s body. His hands were slick with it as he tried to grasp the steering wheel, and his t-shirt was plastered uncomfortably to his back. He was rattled. He had been doing this for well over three years now, had taken over a dozen girls using this exact method, and, in all that time, had never suffered even a single close call. Until now.

Martin Krall had always lived his life by a few, hard-and-fast rules, the first of which was this reality: overestimating the stupidity of the average American traveler was nearly impossible. Finally, he had run across a traveler who actually paid attention to his surroundings, and to top it off, the guy was carrying a gun!

Martin forced himself to maintain his sedate pace. Cars passed him in the left lane in a nearly continuous stream, but he paid them no attention. He focused on slowing his breathing, reducing his heart rate. He had been shaking, adrenaline flooding through his body after the narrow escape, and now the resulting crash was making him feel logy and slow. He felt like he could sleep for twenty-four hours.

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