A Deeper Darkness - Part 37
Library

Part 37

She nearly fainted in relief.

"Fletch," she called out, voice cracking. "It's me. It's Sam. I'm inside the cabin."

And the world exploded into fragments of light.

Chapter Fifty-Seven.

Savage River

Detective Darren Fletcher

The forest service kid had driven the Jeep off the trail about a quarter of a mile down the road, so they'd had to hoof it up the hill the last bit. Fletcher had approached the house slowly, cautiously. It was dark, and he thought no one was around. Disappointment and worry crowded into his thoughts-he'd missed her. s.h.i.t, maybe he'd chosen the wrong campsite. Then he heard the distinct crackling of campfire embers. A dog's throaty bark covered the noise he made as he moved toward the house. As his eyes adjusted to the darkness, saw the outline of a man opening the front door. Surrept.i.tiously. Fletcher announced himself, heard Sam's responding shout and then all h.e.l.l broke loose.

Fletcher wasn't ready for the shots. When Sam called out he'd started to lower his weapon, and that nearly cost him everything.

The man who'd been going into the doorway began to fire. Fletcher instinctively ducked, but quickly realized the man was firing into the house, not back out toward Fletch. So he called out again, screaming this time, running as fast as he could toward the door. His Maglite showed the outline of the man, and he had a clear shot through the open door. He squeezed the trigger once, and the firing inside the house stopped. Sam was shrieking. He didn't know if she was. .h.i.t or scared, but the simple fact that she could call out was good news. She wasn't dead. Yet.

Two steps closer now, and he was at the base of the steps. A shot came from his right. Fletcher swung his weapon toward the new shooter. The two other tac team guys were bringing up the rear, they'd cleared the woods around the house as they came in. It was either them, or...

A voice called out, strong and true. "Thor, steh!" The dog whined but stopped barking. "Braver hund. Detective Fletcher, this is Alexander Whitfield. I have Colonel Culpepper in my sights. Permission to fire."

"Where are you, Whitfield?"

"Eighty degrees to your east, sir. I have a clear shot in my scope. You hit him, but he's not dead. I'd like to remedy that situation."

The man's voice had a cadence to it, a bit flat on the vowels. Not local.

"I'd like to keep him alive if we can, Sergeant. You down with that?"

"I suppose I don't have a choice, do I, sir?"

"No, you don't. Come on out. I've got him now."

"I'm just gonna hurt him a little bit then. Make sure he doesn't pull any punches. Firing."

A single shot rang out, and Fletcher flinched. He didn't like people shooting around him in the dark. Jesus. f.u.c.king yahoo.

A screaming groan emanated from the cabin, and Fletcher took the opportunity to rush inside. He sprayed the beam of his Maglite across the room. Culpepper was on the living room floor, moaning in agony. Fletcher went to him immediately, kicked his weapon away, then looked for Sam. He couldn't see her, and felt the panic slide in. But then, in the meager light, she stumbled toward him with three children in tow. Sam was trembling, shaking, and when he put his arms around her, he felt the slick stickiness of blood on her shirt.

He stepped back, holding both her arms. "Are you hit? Are you okay?"

"No. I'm okay. It's his blood." She gestured to her right. "He's been hit a couple of times. But the kids are just fine."

"Jesus, there were kids in here?"

Sam nodded. "Maggie's."

Fletcher resisted the urge to pull her into his arms.

"Thank G.o.d you're all right. That all of you are all right."

Sam smiled at him, then turned back to the kids.

"Come on, guys. We're going to go outside and find your mom. Don't look, okay?"

She guided them past Culpepper's now-still form and herded them out onto the porch.

There were steps beside him, and Whitfield appeared on the porch, night-vision goggles around his neck. He looked utterly wrecked, hair sticking up, blood on one shoulder. He nodded tersely at Fletcher.

"Son of a b.i.t.c.h slipped past me. Sam, are you okay?"

"I'm okay, Xander."

"Thank Christ."

Fletcher heard a note in Whitfield's voice, one of genuine concern, genuine...something else. Anger flared up-she was his, d.a.m.n it-though he shoved that right back down where it came from. She'd been pretty clear earlier she wasn't interested. Why in the h.e.l.l his feelings were somehow hurt by the possessiveness he heard in Whitfield's voice... He was imagining things. That was it. He was simply overtired and hearing things.

Xander took three steps to Sam and checked her over, just to make sure, then checked the kids, too.

"Where's Maggie?" Sam asked.

"I'm here. Don't shoot." A tall, fit woman stomped onto the porch. The kids crowded around her. The youngest finally started to cry. Maggie holstered her weapon and pulled her little girl into her arms.

"Thank you, Sam. Thank you for keeping them safe."

Sam swallowed hard. "I didn't do anything. It was all you."

They heard movement. Culpepper had come to and was trying to prop himself up.

Three weapons pointed at him immediately.

"You have to listen to me," Culpepper said, the pain in his voice making Sam wince. She should want to help him, to be a doctor, to follow her code. She didn't move a foot.

Fletcher went to him instead. "Shut the f.u.c.k up, Culpepper. You're lucky you aren't dead."

The colonel looked smaller when he was on the ground, bleeding. Xander had popped him in the thigh, high and right. An impressive shot. Fletcher had caught him in the shoulder of his gun hand, which effectively ended his ability to shoot. Not a bad shot, either.

"Detective, you don't understand. I'm here to protect them. You're all in danger." Culpepper wheezed out his proclamation.

"Yeah. Danger from you. You stupid son of a b.i.t.c.h." Maggie edged closer, her weapon trained on her rapist. "I wouldn't have said anything. I took your money and kept my mouth shut all these years. Why did you think I'd disgrace myself, admitting I'd been tainted by you?"

She hauled off and kicked him in the side. Fletcher grabbed her and pulled her back.

Culpepper laughed, a high, tinny squeal.

"It wasn't me. I swear it. I had no interest in seeing those boys dead."

Xander had crossed his arms on his chest, across the top of his gun, was staring down at Culpepper with loathing. Fletcher was just waiting for him to draw a knife and stab it in the man's chest. He stepped closer.

"No, you just snuck up here loaded for bear to tell us you had our backs, right?"

"I did. I wanted to make sure you were safe. Xander, I've lost so many of you. I didn't want to lose you, too. This is all my fault, but no, I didn't kill them."

"And that's why you left Susan Donovan tied up in your house? Is that why you shot and killed Gino Taranto, dumped his body in the river? Is that why you shot my partner, you piece of s.h.i.t?" Fletcher demanded.

Culpepper didn't respond.

"I'm sorry then, Mr. Culpepper, but I'm going to place you under arrest now." Fletcher read him his rights, and Culpepper lay there quietly, pathetically bleeding on Xander's kitchen floor.

When Fletcher finished, Culpepper simply said, "It wasn't me. I'd like my lawyer now."

Xander blew up. "Even now, you can't tell the truth. Even now, you're lying, covering things up. You killed King, you b.a.s.t.a.r.d. How could you do that? He was one of us."

Fletcher saw Sam step forward and take Xander's arm. Maggie signaled with her head toward the open door. Sam dragged Xander away, out the door, yelling all the while.

Well, that went well.

Fletcher waved to the forest service kid, motioned for him to come over.

"Yes, sir?"

"Call an ambulance. We need to get him to a hospital."

"Can't get an ambulance up here. We'll have to Medevac him. I already radioed. The Search and Rescue guys are sending a chopper up." He headed back down the drive to the Jeep.

People moved around slowly now that the threat was over. Fletcher felt strangely let down. He always did when a case was done. Honestly it was just beginning-there was so much that needed to be handled, so many loose ends that needed to be tied up. But for now, he could go to sleep tonight knowing he'd taken a killer off the streets.

But could his heart recover from the blow of seeing Sam and Xander standing together, talking together, so obviously connected? He didn't know.

Chapter Fifty-Eight.

Savage River

Dr. Samantha Owens

Sam walked Xander out to the hammock and sat him down. He was flushed, furious and about to cry. Sam could see the tears welling up in his eyes. She turned her back for a moment to let him compose himself. She knew what it was like to be frustrated to the point of tears. To feel betrayed.

Maggie came out then, sat next to her. She was vibrating, probably from leftover adrenaline.

"Kids are with a forest ranger, learning knots. Sam, thank you. I owe you."

"Don't worry about it, Maggie. I wasn't going to let anything hurt them."

Maggie gave her a quick hug. "I owe you," she said again. "Man, I hope he rots. Why can't we just drop him off a cliff?"

Xander half laughed. "Trust me. If that f.u.c.king cop wasn't standing over him like a hawk, I'd have done just that."

She was quiet for a minute. "I lied back there. I did tell someone everything about that night."

"About the rape? Who?"

"Perry. We had a terrible fight. He wanted me to report it, said it was high time some of these jerks get court-martialed for their actions. He didn't think it through, what that could mean for me. Not only was I raped, but if I went after a colonel for it? My career would be finished. h.e.l.l, it was finished, anyway, and that was before I found out I was pregnant. After that son of a b.i.t.c.h forced me, I went to the docs and filed a restricted report. They took a rape kit and everything. I thought that would be enough. He would be informed that an a.s.sault had happened within his unit. He'd know it was him. I thought that knowing I'd told someone would scare him into staying away from me. I had no idea that he'd go after Perry instead. Oh, G.o.d, poor Donovan. All these years, thinking he was the one who shot Perry."

"But that's good news," Sam said. "Now he can be prosecuted for your rape."

Xander shook his head. "No, he can't. Since she didn't follow through, the evidence would have been destroyed. They only hold rape kits for a year or two. It's just not something the military wants to be accountable for."

"But if we-" Sam started, but was interrupted by a flurry of activity from the road. Vehicles were pulling up, more forest rangers, it looked like.

Fletcher came out of the house. Sam watched him search the crowd until he found her. He smiled a bit, and she realized that in another world, another life, she could really like Darren Fletcher. Maybe even more than like him. But it wasn't meant to be. He knew that, too, she could tell he did. Somehow, she'd made some sort of choice. She was outside with Xander and Maggie instead of inside with him. And he knew it.

He walked over to them. "Chopper's coming."

Moments later, the whump, whump, whump of the helicopter was plainly heard. The rotors from the chopper blew all sorts of debris around, little twigs and leaves and the tarp on top of Xander's woodpile. A forest ranger had dropped glow sticks around the clearing, creating a temporary landing pad. The s.p.a.ce was just big enough for the helicopter to touch down. There were several people on board. Two men hopped off with a stretcher, went inside the house without a word. A few minutes later, they wheeled Culpepper out. He was white and gasping, obviously in pain. As he pa.s.sed by them, he caught Xander's eye.

"Son. You've got to believe me. I didn't do it. I swear." He raised his arm in an attempt to point, face ashen. His voice was filled with horror. "It was her."

Sam looked over to where Culpepper pointed.

There was a dark-haired woman five feet from them. She had almost magically appeared, though logic told Sam she must have gotten a ride on the helicopter, claimed she was family. In all the mayhem, she'd been able to slip up to the house, with no one noticing. Blood leaked down the side of her face and her arm was outstretched, holding a small silver gun.