The Perfect Outsider (8 page)

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Authors: Loreth Anne White

Tags: #Suspense

BOOK: The Perfect Outsider
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“I thought you did the counseling yourself.”

“I do some of the initial work, yes, but I want you to get out of here and into a good program as soon as is feasible.”

She sniffed, wiping her nose. “Why? Because I’m more vulnerable than the others?”

“No, Lacy, it’s because you’ve been through an incredibly stressful experience in those woods, and you have your children to think of. You
all
need critical-incident stress counseling as much as you need deprogramming work. Your fear right now is your worst enemy.”

Tears filled Lacy’s eyes and June hesitated over what she was going to say next, but decided she had to press forward. “Lacy, I need you to walk me through what happened in the woods just one more time. Can you do that?”

Lacy’s mouth thinned.

“Please,” June said. “Come sit here by the fire. I know you’re tired, but this is important.”

Lacy lowered herself into a chair next to the hearth, her hands clutching the armrests. June drew up an ottoman, sat in front of Lacy and took her hands. They were ice-cold. Her face was ghost-white.

“Close your eyes,” June said gently. “Try to go back to when you first saw the two men near the rock sentinel. What did the air feel like on your face?”

Lacy was silent for a few minutes, then she inhaled deeply.

“It felt damp, full of moisture.”

“What could you smell?”

“Soil. Pine needles…” She hesitated, then smiled. “And cherry. Bekka was eating a candy. She smelled like sugar and artificial cherry flavor.”

“This is good, Lacy, really good.” June was careful to keep her voice calm, soothing. “Now you see the two men—tell me what you’re seeing.”

“I’m looking at them through bushes—berry bushes, I think. The boughs from the conifers are hanging low. I’m peering through them.”

“What’s the ground underfoot like?”

“Squishy. Quiet. No noise giving us away.”

“Are you holding the twins now?”

She shook her head. “I told them to wait a few yards back. They were so quiet in the forest, the two of them. They must’ve read my fear.” A tear slipped out from under her lashes. “I guess that’s where Abby dropped the first shoe.”

“And that’s where I found it, Lacy. I took it and planted it on the east flank of the hill so they’d think you went in that direction. That’s where Bo Fargo, his men and the other SAR volunteers are searching right now. They don’t know you’re here. You’re safe.”

Another tear slipped out from under Lacy’s lashes and tracked slowly down her pale cheek. “I saw Jason Barnes and that guy Lumpy.”

“Monica Pearl’s friend?”

She nodded. “They were standing near the tall black rock sentinel where Hannah told us to wait for you. From there you were supposedly going to lead us to the safe house. But we were early.”

June swallowed. “And Jason and Lumpy had guns?”

“Rifles and pistols in their holsters. They were pacing in front of the rock, as if waiting for someone—me—to arrive.”

“And you never told a soul you were coming here?”

“Not even Gemma Johnson, and she’s the one who helped me see the Devotees for what they really are.”

A sinister sense unfurled in June. She had to check on Hannah, see that nothing had happened, or that her cover hadn’t been blown. Glancing at the clock on the mantel above the fireplace, she said to Lacy, “And that’s when you backed away, sneaked off into the woods.”

“Yes.”

A banging resounded from down the corridor—Jesse trying to get out. Molly could be heard yelling back at him. Tension wound tighter.

“Let’s go right to where you encountered the man in the denim jacket. What was the scent in the forest like there?” June said, trying to get her to go deeper in a form of cognitive interview.

“Still wet, loamy. It was raining heavily, and it was dark, misty. He…the man, just appeared, looming out of the forest, blocking my way. I—I guess his backpack made him seem even bigger than he was.”

June’s heart kicked. “Backpack?”

“A large one. Like one of those backcountry camping things you take when you go out for a couple of days, with a tent and sleeping roll.”

June frowned. There had been no backpack near Jesse. Eager would have found it. Could Jason and Lumpy have taken it? Did it have identification in it?

Blowing out a deep breath, June asked calmly, “What was the first thing Jesse said to you when he appeared in the dark?”

“He…held up the palms of his hands, like this,” Lacy said, lifting her hands. “And he said, ‘Whoa, where are you off to in such a hurry?’ Then he looked at my twins, and he—” Lacy paused, surprised. “He appeared startled, concerned.”

“As if he didn’t expect to see you and your kids in the dark, rainy woods?”

“God, maybe.” She opened her eyes and put her hands to her face. “I…didn’t notice that at the time. I just dropped Bekka and Abby on the ground, lifted the first thing I could find, a log, and swung it at him.”

“And what did he do then, exactly?”

Lacy made a motion, arms defensively going up to her face, ducking back.

“He ducked from you?”

“I guess. I was in panic, not thinking clearly.”

“Close your eyes again, Lacy. Tell me what happened next.”

She inhaled deeply. “I yelled at him, saying, ‘No henchman of Samuel’s is going to hurt my babies.’”

“You said all those words?”

Lacy nodded. “He reeled from the blow and then went down like a rock. I heard the others coming from behind him, crashing through the woods. I dropped the log and picked up Bekka and Abby, one on each hip, my bag over my shoulder, and I just ran. He started shooting at me.”

“Did any bullets hit near you?”

“I was too busy running to notice. It was dark. I didn’t want to fall. My only instinct was to get away as fast as I could.”

June thought of the .40 caliber shell casings she’d found near the log with blood on it, not far from where Jesse appeared to have fallen down into the ravine. The 9 mm casings were a distance away from that spot.

She bent forward. “Lacy, was there
any
chance Jesse could have been shooting at the other two men and not you?
Could
he have been trying to protect you instead of hurt you? And they fired on him because of it?”

Tears ran fast down Lacy’s face now. “I—I suppose…”

“Lacy, listen to me, you did a great thing. And thank you for doing this. Now go try and get some sleep.”

Lacy’s gaze darted nervously to the passage that led to June’s room.

“I can’t sleep with him in here.”

“He might not be a bad guy, Lacy. You just told me that yourself. We have to give him the benefit of the doubt. He might be lost and in trouble, too.”

“We don’t know for sure.”

We sure as hell don’t.

“That’s why we’re going to keep him locked up with a guard outside that door until the FBI takes him away. I’ll call Agent Hawk Bledsoe when I go into town.”

“You’re
leaving?
” Panic showed in her face.

“I need to put in an appearance, cover my bases. It might take some hours, but you’ll be safe with everyone else here.”

Lacy got up from her chair. “Are you sure?”

“Hundred percent.” June forced a smile. “Trust me, everything is going to work out fine.”

June watched the young woman walk out of the living room. She wished she believed her own words.

* * *

A white polo shirt enhanced Samuel Grayson’s tan, which in turn brought out the vivid green of his eyes. His dark hair was impeccably cut—he was movie-star handsome, and he knew it as he stood in front of his office window waiting for Mayor Rufus Kittridge to arrive. He’d positioned himself so the sun coming through the window would backlight him. It gave him an edge and sent a subliminal message of superiority, godliness. He used lighting to similar effect when he gave his seminars.

A bottle of his Cold Plains Creek “tonic” water had been carefully positioned on his desk beside a clean glass. The creek was the reason Samuel had chosen Cold Plains to establish his business five years ago. Legend dating back centuries claimed water from the creek possessed rejuvenating and healing properties. It was this legend that Samuel sold.

His Devotees bottled the creek water for him out of a sense of duty to their community. And he sold the bottles back to them at $25 a pop, usually at his seminars where peer pressure helped them fork over the dollars. Samuel personally pocketed a hundred percent of the profits. He was now shipping a set quota of bottled water to other towns, too. It was a nicely growing concern.

A rap sounded at his oak door.

“Come in!”

Mayor Rufus Kittridge, in his fifties, limped into the room. His face was round, friendly, and the touch of gray at his temples bespoke experience. The limp was all that remained from injuries sustained in a car-bomb attempt on his life three months ago. Jonathan Miller, the demolitions expert responsible for the bomb, had since been taken into custody in Cheyenne.

“Rufus!” Samuel said warmly as he stepped forward and clasped the man’s hand.

The mayor had a firm grip and easy smile. Everyone in town knew him to be a keen Devotee, but few knew their congenial mayor also oversaw two groups of Samuel’s militia-style enforcers. One of the groups was headed by Lumpy Smithers, who’d taken over from Charlie Rhodes after Charlie was shot during an FBI raid on the community center. The other group was headed by the deceptively sweet Monica Pearl. Compartmentalization was key to keeping the unsavory—but necessary—deeds committed by the groups at a legal arm’s length from Samuel. If the FBI ever got evidence on any of the murders, it would be Rufus, Monica and Lumpy who went down—nothing would stick to Samuel. He was incredibly careful about that.

But he
was
worried right now.

Special Agent Hawk Bledsoe and his FBI team were closing in. On top of this, a total of eleven Devotees had disappeared without a trace in the past three months. And these were
not
“disappearances” sanctioned by him.

Samuel had begun to fear that he had a mole—possibly even a network—working on the inside to get vulnerable Devotees out of Cold Plains, and he’d heard rumors of a safe house.

Under Samuel’s orders, Rufus had engaged eighteen-year-old Molly Rigg to pose as a Devotee desperate to get out, and it seemed to have worked—Molly had vanished. But she’d made no contact with Rufus or his men, and Samuel was beginning to fear she’d been deprogrammed. The idea enraged him.

And now Lacy Matthews and her kids had gone missing. The whole town was abuzz with talk of her disappearance from the coffee shop, which was a gathering place, and Samuel needed to quell the fire, make an example of Lacy and her twins, fast.

This was why he’d summoned Rufus to his office.

Before she’d vanished, Lacy had written some words on a notepad in the coffee shop and then ripped off the page. However, the imprint of her words had remained on the pad. They’d read: “Black rock sentinel, west flank @ 7:00 p.m.”

Police Chief Bo Fargo’s men had found the notepad, and Fargo had reported the find to Samuel.

He cut right to the point. “Are you sure your men were waiting at the right location?”

The smile on Rufus’s face faded.

“It’s the only big black rock on the west flank that could be called a sentinel. Lacy never arrived. My men found her around 1:00 a.m. She was screaming at a stranger in the woods but fled as my guys approached. The stranger fired on my guys. One of his bullets hit Jason Barnes in the neck. Lumpy Smithers returned fire. He thinks he hit him because he fell down into a ravine.”


Thinks
he hit him?”

Rufus remained silent.

Samuel smiled benignly. “Did they look for him?”

“Lumpy made the decision to bring Jason into the hospital right away—he was hurt bad.”

Samuel inhaled, slowly. “I presume they got a good look at this stranger’s face?”

“No, they did not—”

“What do you mean?”

Rufus moistened his lips.

“It was dark, raining,” he said. “The situation was fluid. Lumpy returned to the site where the man had gone down the ravine, but there was no one there.”

“So the Matthews woman escaped, and so did this unidentified stranger?”

Rufus cleared his throat. “We do have his backpack—he dropped it.”

“Any ID in it?”

“No.” Rufus eyed the water on Samuel’s desk. “The pack contained food, maps, survival blanket, tent, sleeping bag—he appears to have been on an extended hike through the wilderness. But no ID.”

Samuel opened the bottle of water on his desk as he spoke, poured a glass, then sipped without offering any to Rufus. “The priority was to get the woman and her twins, not Jason Barnes,” he said calmly.

Rufus met his gaze. “Jason’s condition was critical.”

“Damn!” Samuel slammed his glass down. “Jason’s not likely going to make it out of ICU, anyway. He’s going to die,
and
the woman got away! Get back out there, find her!”

“We’re looking. One of the kids’ shoes was found on the east flank of the mountain,” said Rufus. “We have police and SAR crews combing that area.”

“The rock sentinel is on the west flank, and you said your men saw her on that west flank at 1:00 a.m. How do you explain the kid’s shoe on the east side?”

“Maybe she fled in that direction.”

“Get back out onto the west side with a search party of your own. I want that woman, and I want that stranger. Dead or alive. And keep it quiet that you’re looking on that side, understand?”

“Yes, sir.” Mayor Rufus Kittridge did not look a happy man.

“And what about Molly Rigg? What happened to our damn mole!”

Rufus smoothed his hand over his hair. “We’re still waiting for contact.”

Samuel abruptly turned his back on Rufus and stared out the window. It was the mayor’s cue to leave.

But as Rufus reached the thick oak door, Samuel said suddenly, “Who found the red shoe on the east flank?”

“June Farrow and her K9.”

He did not turn around to face the mayor. “Is she there with the search party now?”

“I would assume so.”

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