Fight By The Team (Team Fear Book 2) (7 page)

BOOK: Fight By The Team (Team Fear Book 2)
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Chapter Seven

B
oom
, one minute she was upright and snarky, the next she dropped to the couch like a medicine ball. Rose dislodged his elbow from Fowler’s throat and raced around the couch. “Grab my kit.” He eased Debi’s head down and lifted her feet onto the couch. “A little hydrogen peroxide will get the stain out,” he assured her.

“S’okay,” she mumbled. “Barry sat here. We could burn it. Isn’t that your specialty?”

“Incendiary devices. I prefer blowing things up.” He put a pillow behind her back to keep the wound elevated. “But I could branch out; help you start a Barry the Bastard bonfire later.”

“Sounds like a plan. We had a barn fire here last year.”

“So I heard. Maybe fires are your specialty.”

“Wasn’t me. I think Barry started it.”

The runt from campus had lit her barn on fire? That was more than a bad breakup. Rose grabbed her boots and yanked them from her feet.

“You cut off my boots and I will haunt you.”

“We don’t do that.” He let his eyes show a humor he didn’t feel. Color drained from her cheeks, leaving her skin a sickly grey. “The ER likes to cut off your clothes. I think they get kickbacks from the clothing industry.”

Fowler grabbed the medic bag and setup on the opposite end of the couch. “Field dressing or are we stitching her up?”

“How much time do we have?”

“Ryder’s on the hunt. The bastard won’t get anywhere near here. We’ve got time.”

That gave him time to assess, something he’d wanted but couldn’t do until they were secure. “Compression.” Rose warned Debi before he put a clean dressing and pressure over the wound.

Debi hissed breath between her teeth. “What happened? I thought we set a trap?”

“We did.” Fowler pulled a medicine bottle and syringe from the kit. “The guy on your tail set the bomb and hightailed it up the hill. We were right on his ass when he blew it. Took him down.”

“Then how the fuck did he get off a shot?” Rose scrubbed his hands in the kitchen sink. He glared at Fowler from across the room.

“Wasn’t him.” Fowler injected Debi with a painkiller. “What’s your pain level?”

“Fifteen.”

“One a scale of one to ten.”

She grimaced. “My answer remains the same.”

“Lucky it wasn’t me doing the shooting. You’d be dead.”

“You didn’t kill the soldier in the car behind us.”

“I had orders. We needed information.” Fowler drew liquid into the syringe. “Which is why his partner took him out.”

“There were two?” Her words started to slur.

Rose shook clean water from his hands. “We went over this once, sweetheart. Keep up. Bad guy one hightailed it up the cliff when Fowler shot him. Bad guy two shot him so we wouldn’t capture him.”

“The second guy killed the first guy.” Her eyes alternated between wide open and long blinks. “To shut him up. You think he would have talked?”

They were good at their job. “He’d have talked,” Rose said. There was no end to the pressure they’d exert to get the information they needed. Rose grabbed the Celox applicator from the kit. The blood-clotting agent stemmed blood loss.

Fowler frowned as he finished the story. “What I don’t understand is how Echo Two took out Echo One with a damn-near perfect shot, but managed to miss Rose’s big ass in the truck and hit Debi instead.”

“Distance. Rapid movement. Not everyone has your skills.” Rose frowned down. Her color hadn’t improved and her face was pinched in pain. “How’s the pain?”

“I think it’s gone down. To a fourteen.”

He rubbed her good hand so he didn’t jostle the wounded side. “We got you covered, sweetheart. You’ll be feeling no pain before we get to the end of the story.”

“Promise?”

“Oh, yeah. Saved the good stuff for you.”

“Top shelf, huh?”

Rose laughed. “Proximo 1800. Only the best.” He glanced over Debi to meet Fowler’s gaze. “We can stabilize and slow the blood loss, but she needs a surgeon. Doctor at the least. Help me get her patched up, and then we need transport.”

Fowler tossed the morphine back in the med kit. “Echo had a man on surveillance here at the ranch. They must have been communicating, because the second man was moving to intercept when the bomb went off.”

Rose prepped the Celox. The plunger distributed blood-clotting agent into gunshot wounds, which saved lives and limbs. Fowler peeled back the compress so Rose could work. The wound flooded with blood. Torn flesh on soft skin. Blood coated the entire sleeve of her cotton shirt and her black hair matted around the entry wound. A rock the size of a mountain settled in his gut. He’d never triaged a woman before. “I can’t see shit in here. Grab a light.”

Fowler flipped on the overhead, and then brought a large lamp as backup. He set it up to focus on Debi’s shoulder. The compress had soaked more blood than she could afford to lose. He needed to slow the source of the bleed, but first he needed to get as much foreign material out of the wound as possible.

“Hold this.” Rose handed over the still covered Celox. He slipped the hair band off Debi’s wrist and pulled her hair from the wound. Then he grabbed a scissor from his kit.

“Cut my hair, Rosebud, and I will kill you on the spot.”

“Relax. Your hair is safe. The shirt, not so much.” He and Fowler switched places and he cut the shoulder of her shirt to get a better look at the wound.

“I thought only the ER cut off clothes.”

“Guess they have their reasons. Going to lift you now.” He gave her two seconds to process before he lifted. “No exit wound. The bullet’s embedded.”

She cursed at him as he jostled the injury. “Maybe Fowler should take over.”

“Trust me, you don’t want this guy cutting into you.”

“Who said anything about cutting.” Debi struggled to sit up.

Fowler pressed on the compress to keep her seated. “I practiced on goats, so I’m sure it’s the same thing.”

She dropped back on the sofa. “You’re kidding?”

“Nope.” He glanced up at Rose. “Blood pressure’s dropping.”

“The meds should take the edge off in a few.” He glanced at Debi. Her eyes were open, but starting to dilate. He needed to keep her engaged, like he had while Echo had followed them. “Don’t you want to know who shot you?”

She nodded, and then groaned.

Fowler pulled out more clean compresses as he spoke. “Echo fought like a feral cat when we captured him. His eyes were fucking crazed. Next thing we know, he’s taken a shot between the eyes.” Fowler wiped at the blood spatter under his chin. “Second guy took him out. No mercy, man, that shit was cold.”

“Did you get his blood?” Debi asked.

Fowler swiped at his face again.

“Not that blood. A sample. In the syringe.”

“Oh.” Fowler tapped the Velcro pocket on his upper thigh. “Got it right here.”

“Go put it in the fridge,” she insisted.

At least she was still engaged. Actually, she was still a smart ass, which he truly appreciated. “We’re not staying, sweetheart.” Rose used a smaller needle to numb the injury site.

“Put it on ice, then.” She glanced at Fowler. “Before you and Dr. Frankenstein knock me out.”

“You’re right,” Fowler answered. “He is like the monster.”

“If Rose is a monster, what are you?”

Fowler grinned. “I’m the good-looking one.”

“Not so much. He’s built like Thor.” Her gaze slid between the two men before landing on Rose. “Neither of you are monsters.”

A moment later, Rose injected the Celox, cutting off the most severe blood loss. Debi grunted and bit back a curse. Rose squirmed away from her gaze. The woman thought he was some comic book hero, but that was the painkiller talking. Rose and the rest of the team weren’t some medical mutation that made heroes. They were more of a warning against man’s hubris. Monsters created in a lab by someone with a God complex. “Fowler, you grew up around here, didn’t you?”

Fowler grunted noncommittally. “I’m not from anywhere.”

“Don’t give me that shit. I don’t care if your hometown is fucking top secret. We need a doctor, say within a two-hour radius? If not, we’re going to have to risk the questions and take her to an ER.”

“Hold on, let me think.” Fowler moved to put the blood sample on ice. Something alerted him and he pulled his Glock and approached the kitchen door. Ryder and Craft burst in.

“Second man is down. Put himself out of his misery. These guys are crazy as fuck,” Craft said. “They keep self-eliminating, we won’t have to kill them. We got four at Ryder’s townhouse. These two today. Leaves six if they had twelve on their team.”

“Unless they’re self-duplicating.” Rose had a bad feeling about the way the men had gone out. What the hell kind of information were they trying to protect that they were willing to kill one another, kill themselves, to protect? Or had the drug cocktail finally driven them out of their minds? He thought back to the number of times he’d promised to end himself if he became a threat to others. Maybe these guys took the same vow if they became a threat to their twisted mission. “Fowler, think faster or we’re going to the ER.”

Ryder scrubbed his hands in the kitchen sink soaking his bandages in the process.

“Keep the wound clean,” Rose ordered. Ryder had taken a solid stab to the palm in the fight a few days ago. They couldn’t afford an infection.

“We had to bury them in a shallow grave, didn’t have equipment for much else. Coyotes will get ‘em before anyone else ventures up that bluff.”

“I’m more worried about their reinforcements.”

“Roger that.” Ryder dried his hands on a cloth. “We need to get gone.”

“We have time to finish this?” Rose asked. Debi’s health trumped the mission.

“We can keep guard while you stitch her up, and then we’re out.”

“Ry, I can triage, but she needs a real doctor.” He didn’t want to screw up. A soldier, no problem. He could get them back to fighting shape, but Debi deserved a legitimate doctor who could keep her stable, limit scarring, and prevent infection. “Plus she needs blood and IV antibiotics.”

“Wait.” Debi’s words started to slur. “As long as we’re here, I need clothes. And take the food. And—”

“We got it.” Rose assured her.

“Wait.” She blinked several times and struggled to lift her head off the couch. “Ryder.”

Ryder stepped closer. She pulled him down to whisper in his ear. He smiled and squeezed her hand. “Thanks.”

“What was that all about?”

Ryder stepped toward the back bedrooms. “You’ll have to ask your patient.”

Rose looked down but Debi was fully out. The hair that normally flowed down her neck was in a lopsided ponytail away from the wound and her navy blue shirt had a hole cut in the shoulder to reveal the ragged wound filled with blood clotting agent. Blood flow was down. “When I’m done here, I want you to lift her while I put her in a shoulder sling. I want to keep her unconscious until we get to an ER.” He didn’t want her to feel the pain, which was why he’d waited to finish dressing the wound.

“We’re not going to the ER,” Fowler insisted.

“The hell we’re not. You want to keep your sorry ass secure, you can hold back, Sally, but I’m—”

“Just shut up for one damn minute.” Fowler yanked out his cell phone, cursing like a Basic Training Instructor. “Craft can be your surgical assistant, Dr. Frankenstein. I’ve got some calls to make.” Fowler crashed out the front.

Craft scrubbed up at the kitchen sink like he knew what he was doing, cleaning all the way to the elbows with soap and water. Rose prepped the bandages he needed, but his gaze kept straying to Debi’s still form. He’d spent his whole life protecting women, and somehow he’d still ended up here. A complete failure with Debi’s injury on his shoulders.

“She looks so small,” Craft said, coming over to stand next to Rose. “Fragile.”

A knot the size of a walnut lodged in Rose’s throat. “Six sisters, and not once did I have to take them in for stitches or broken bones.”

“Because you’re an overprotective asshole and they now hate you.” Craft shoulder bumped him, keeping his hands clean. “Get your head in the game, brother. She needs you focused.”

Rose packed the guilt and the shame and the anger in a box. “Let’s do this.” He tapped another compress against the wound. Even in sleep she moaned against the invasion. Shit. His hands shook. He wanted to shove them in his pockets so no one noticed, but he had work to do. They covered the wound, added the sling. Before they were done, he’d had to cut her whole shirt off. Ryder came from the back carrying a duffel bag.

“Bring me a blanket we can wrap her in. Maybe some slippers or wool socks,” Rose said.

Ryder dropped the bag and headed back to the bedrooms. Craft and Rose wrapped the sling around her shoulder so movement wouldn’t aggravate the pain. The morphine and compresses must be doing the work, because she didn’t make a sound.

Fowler slammed back into the kitchen, the amount of noise he made an indication of his frustration. “Saddle up. I got us a doctor. Ryder, you and Craft finish getting supplies and anything you need from here. Rose and I will head to the doctor. We can meet up after the doctor finishes.”

“You giving the orders now?” Ryder’s voice lowered. “Because splitting up is a shit idea.”

“Wasn’t my idea for one of us to take a hit.” Fowler’s tone bordered on insubordination. “You want to leave Lauren back at the motel alone?”

Rose stepped between the two soldiers. “Debi can’t wait for us to backtrack, so unless the motel is on the way—”

“It’s not,” Fowler answered.

To Rose, that left one solution. They weren’t in the desert with the Army at their back. They didn’t have a base to fall back to and get medical attention. No reinforcements would dig them out of this mess. They had four men and zero intel to guide their movements. They’d lost all focus and cohesion in the months since they’d left the team.

“Fuck.” Ryder draped a blanket on Debi and put slippers on her feet.

Ryder’s gentleness in the midst of their anger settled Rose more than anything. The tension existed still in the tightening muscles of his shoulders and back, but anger diminished to be replaced by guilt and frustration over Debi’s injury. The bloody wound fell one hundred percent onto Team Fear and the clusterfuck of their current mission.

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