Читать книгу The Texas Lawman's Last Stand - Delores Fossen - Страница 7
Chapter Two
ОглавлениеMattie’s heart dropped to her knees.
No, no, no! This couldn’t be happening. They couldn’t have found her this fast.
Bo reacted like a cop. He whipped his gun from the shoulder holster that was concealed beneath his jacket.
“Go to the babies,” he told the nanny. “Call Garrett O’Malley at headquarters. I want a unit out here now.” Then he headed for the front door.
Mattie followed him. She eased her snub-nose .38 from her purse and braced herself for the worst. However, she hadn’t counted on the worst coming from Bo himself.
He turned around, lightning fast, and with his left hand caught on to her right wrist. Before she even knew what was happening, he tore the gun from her hand.
“What the hell are you doing with this?” he snarled getting right in her face. So close that his body brushed against hers.
Mattie pretended not to notice the contact. “I have my reasons for carrying a gun. And you might need backup if there’s danger.”
“I don’t want or need backup from you. Get in the living room and stay there.”
Mattie didn’t try to wrestle her gun away from him, not that she would have succeeded anyway. He outsized her by at least seven inches and seventy-five pounds. But despite being outsized, she disobeyed his order.
She went to the front door and looked out one of the beveled glass sidelight windows. Even through the distortion of the bevels and the dusky light outside, she had no trouble seeing that black van. What she couldn’t see was who was inside it. The heavily tinted windows prevented that.
“What do you know about this?” Bo asked, joining her. Well, actually he muscled her out of the way and looked out for himself.
“Nothing … specifically. Maybe nothing at all.”
That earned her a glare from his narrowed brown eyes. “Then you’d better get into unspecifics, even if they involve nothing at all.”
Mattie tried to keep her chin high, though it wasn’t easy. “Later. After we take care of this.”
Whatever this was.
It could be someone from Witness Protection, or her family, or maybe the men who’d been hunting her. None of these was a good option. Unfortunately, with her luck she didn’t think it would be a van of Girl Scouts selling cookies.
From the end of the hall, Mattie could hear the sounds of children playing. Happy sounds. The nanny obviously hadn’t frightened the children with her alarming news about the van. That was good. Now Mattie had to make sure it stayed that way. She didn’t want the children upset or anywhere near the possible danger.
Despite Bo’s grunt of obvious disapproval, Mattie stayed by the sidelight window. “How long before the police unit arrives?” she asked.
“Soon.” He slipped her .38 into his jacket pocket. “Once they’re here, I’ll go out and have a chat with whoever’s in that van. And then, Ms. Cooper, I’m taking you to headquarters for an interview and possibly even an arrest for carrying a concealed weapon.”
Mattie couldn’t go to headquarters, of course. She couldn’t risk being seen. If she couldn’t convince Bo otherwise, then she’d have to figure a way out of there. But she didn’t want to leave. Not with so much unfinished business.
Or with so much at stake.
Bo volleyed glances between the van and her. He had a unique way of making her feel like a criminal.
Unfortunately, that wasn’t all.
He also had a unique way of making her feel like a woman.
It probably had something to do with all that testosterone emanating from him. Yes, he was a man. As alpha as they came. Tall, dark brown hair. Oh, and dangerous, too. Not the kind and gentle soul that Nadine had described. But Mattie saw the appeal.
Or rather, she felt the appeal.
And she gave herself a good mental tongue-lashing for it. There was no room in her life for Bo Duggan or any other man.
After she had another look to make sure no one was coming out of that van, Mattie stepped back, putting some distance between her and the hot, glaring cop.
And then she saw it.
The photo on the wall.
She probably hadn’t noticed it when she first came in because Rosalie had quickly ushered her to the living room. But Mattie saw it now. It was a picture of two babies.
A boy and a girl.
Both were around a year old. Both smiling for the camera. The boy had dark brown hair and was a genetic copy of Bo Duggan, right down to his already intense eyes.
And then there was the little girl.
Brown hair, as well, but hers was shades lighter than the boy’s. Green eyes, not so much intense but filled with curiosity. She was so beautiful.
So precious.
Mattie heard the sound escape from her throat. Part moan, part gasp. A paradox of emotions flooded through her. The unconditional love mixed with the heart-wrenching pain of how much time she’d already lost.
She felt the movement next to her. It was Bo, although she had to blink back the tears just to see his face.
He was scowling.
And worse, he was puzzled and almost certainly on the verge of demanding answers. Mattie wasn’t ready to give him those answers just yet. First, she had to lay the groundwork. She had to convince him—somehow—to help her.
“The van,” she reminded him, looking back out the window. It was still there. No open doors.
Bo returned his attention to the menacing vehicle, as well, and the silence sliced right through the foyer. “Who’s out there?” he asked.
She had to clear away the lump in her throat before she could speak. “I honestly don’t know.”
“But it’s related to you?”
“Maybe. But I don’t think so. I’ve covered my tracks well. Plus, as you said, the van followed you. There shouldn’t be a connection between me and you.”
Mattie prayed that that was true. It didn’t mean it was. Someone could have put one and one together and that would have led them to Bo. And to that precious little girl in the picture.
“Have you been followed before?” Mattie asked.
“No.” He was adamant enough about it, but there was something that made her keep pushing.
“You’re sure?”
He cursed under his breath. “Someone’s been looking into my personal info. And yesterday someone tried to break into my SUV.”
“Yesterday,” she repeated. Mattie didn’t like the timing. Yesterday was when she’d called Bo’s house and asked for an appointment to see him.
She caught some movement on the street and spotted the white police cruiser. It came to a stop behind the van.
“Wait here,” Bo ordered. But he didn’t just order it. This time he snared her gaze, and there was trouble in his eyes. Trouble that dared her to defy him.
Mattie stayed put. Besides, it was possible that whoever was in that van would want to shoot her on sight. She didn’t want to die, and she didn’t want bullets coming anywhere near the children.
Much to her surprise, the driver of the van didn’t slam on the accelerator and speed away. She watched as the person inside rolled down the window. Bo approached, his gun aimed and ready. The two uniformed officers who got out of the cruiser had their weapons trained on the van, as well.
When the window was completely lowered, she spotted the man inside. Scraggly salt-and-pepper hair. Long, thin face.
He was a stranger.
That didn’t mean he wasn’t a gun hired by someone who didn’t qualify as a stranger. It wouldn’t be the first time a gunman had been paid to come after her.
“Is everything okay?” she heard someone ask.
She looked over her shoulder and spotted Rosalie. The sixty-something-year-old nanny with the sugar-white hair was in the doorway of one of the rooms down the corridor. She had the little boy in her arms, his legs straddled around her thin hip.
Mattie’s heart lurched, and she waited. Breath held. Hoping to see the other child. And then hoping that she didn’t. Not at this moment with the van out there.
“The police are here,” Mattie relayed. “Bo should be back soon.”
Rosalie nodded and disappeared into the room, where she’d hopefully be safe with the children if bullets started flying.
Mattie forced her attention back on the van. The driver was smiling. His demeanor was almost apologetic. He even laughed about something one of the officers said. Bo didn’t share the laugh, but he did lower his weapon, and then he said something to the uniformed officers before turning to walk toward the house.
Mattie opened the door for him but stood to the side so that neither the officers nor the van driver could see her.
“The guy says he’s interested in buying the house across the street,” Bo announced. “That seems to be the lie of the day, huh?”
“You think he’s lying?”
“Maybe. But even if he’s not, those are fake plates on his vehicle. He’ll need to explain that to the officers.” He re-holstered his gun. “And speaking of explaining, let me check on Rosalie, and then I can call someone to stay with her while I take you down to headquarters.”
“No.” She grabbed his arm to stop him from heading to the nursery. “If you take me there, you’ll be signing my death warrant.”
He couldn’t have possibly managed a more skeptical look. “I’m a cop, not a killer.”
“There are others, though, who would love to pull the trigger.” Mattie wished she’d rehearsed this or at least figured out the best way to approach what she had to say. Of course, maybe there was no best way.
He shook off her grip and turned, practically trapping her against the wall. “Did you have something to do with the men who took the hostages at the hospital?”
“No. I told you that I was one of the hostages.”
“Madeline Cooper,” he said as a challenge.
“Mattie,” she offered, though she knew this wasn’t going to turn into a friendly visit.
“Mattie,” he repeated. “Your name wasn’t on the list of patients who were in the ward during the hostage standoff.”
“Because I left before the police arrived.”
“Yeah. I know.” His eyes narrowed. “And why would you do something like that?”
Mattie answered his question with one of her own. “Can I trust you?”
“As much as I can trust you,” he warned, his eyes narrowing even more.
If she’d had a choice, she would have backed off then and there. But she didn’t have a choice. “I was in the Witness Protection Program.”
He hesitated only a heartbeat. “I want your case number so I can verify it.”
“The number doesn’t mean anything anymore. There was some kind of leak, and someone found out my new identity and location. Right before the hostage situation, that someone tried to kill me. I escaped and went to the hospital. The trauma must have triggered my labor. When I checked in, I used a fake name, obviously, and I said I didn’t have my insurance card with me.”
“You think the ski-mask-wearing SOBs were really after you?”
She shook her head. “No. At least I don’t think so.” From what she’d read about the case in the past thirteen months, the gunmen had been there to break into the lab and tamper with some DNA evidence. Nothing related to her.
“I couldn’t just let the cops find me there at the hospital that day,” she explained. “My former boss believes I’m dead, and if they’d learned differently—”
“Who’s your former boss?”
She decided to tell him the truth, because maybe this would help her cause. “Kendall Collier.”
Those cop’s eyes darkened. He obviously recognized the name. “You’re not Madeline Cooper. You’re Mattie Collier. And two years ago you testified against Kendall Collier.”
“Yes.” Her boss, her uncle. And also someone who’d gotten involved with an illegal arms dealer and gotten off scot-free because of a technicality. “I have reason to believe that Kendall, or someone else, will kill me if anyone learns I’m alive. That’s why I left the hospital.”
He made a sound deep within his chest to indicate he was thinking about what she’d said. Processing it. She could see the moment that the question came to him. It didn’t take long.
“On the video, you didn’t have a baby with you. You were alone. What happened to your child? ”
Mattie considered several ways she could go about this, but those ways all led to the same inevitable end. It was an end that Bo Duggan was not going to like.
She pointed to the picture on the wall. “My daughter is here with you. You’ve been raising her. But I’ve waited long enough, and I want her back.”