“Moose,” she breathed. “What the hell are you doing?”
The guy stopped and looked down at himself. “I crashed the Charger. It’s somewhere in the woods. I was chasing Deandra off. And then I kept drinking.”
“No, about this.” She pointed the trailer. “What are you doing with Ripkin?”
He threw up his hands—and that was when she saw the small black box in his right palm. “What was I supposed to do? I need the money. Deandra is expensive. Was.”
“Did you kill her?”
“What—no. I kicked her out. She’s at her sister’s. We’re done.” His bloodshot eyes finally focused properly. “But now, I gotta deal with you. I’m not going to jail, Anne. I can’t.”
She took a step back and raised her gun at him. “Don’t come near me.”
“Is this where you arrest me?”
“You killed people. You put the lives of your own crew in danger. You did this all while you were in turnouts.”
“Don’t get judgy with me, Anne,” he bit out. “You’re the sister of the fucking fire chief. Your life is all worked out. I got nothing. Nothing! My own parents didn’t want me. I barely graduated from college. I couldn’t make the SWAT team. Deandra didn’t even want me, she wanted Danny!”
Her eyes flicked down to what he had in his hand. The antenna gave it away—and she did the math quick.
Moving away from the trailer, she triangulated the distance to her car. “Look, Moose, I don’t have to turn you in, okay? We can just forget—”
“No, I know you. I fought fires with you for how long? You’re lying because you think I’m going to kill you and you’re right. I’m not picking you over me. Sorry.”
The explosion was instantaneous, triggered as he initiated some button on that remote, the force of the blast throwing her off her feet and carrying her some distance through the air. When she landed on her back, the breath was knocked out her and the gun flipped out of her hand.
All she could do was stare up at the blue, cloudless sky.
Moose’s face came over her own. “You know, I liked you, I really did.” He brought up her own gun. “And I’ll do this quick and easy so you won’t hurt—”
The gray flash came out of nowhere, whatever it was moving so fast, it was just a blur.
But Soot knew what he was doing. He launched his attack at Moose’s forearm, swinging that arm away from Anne, the bullet discharging into the air. Moose let out a curse and started punching the dog in the head.
Not that Soot noticed. Growling, snarling, his muscled body was a weapon in addition to his teeth, and he would not let go as he thrashed.
“Leave my dog alone!”
Anne launched herself at Moose, going for his throat before she realized she didn’t have two working hands. But she had a great weapon.
She took the hard fingers of her prosthesis and speared Moose in the eyes.
He screamed and went onto his back.
For a moment, she was convinced they had won. But then a boot came at her head and she couldn’t duck in time. The heavy tread caught her right in the face, blood spooling out of her nose as she spun like a top.
And then there was a yelp and whimper from Soot.
Chapter 52
Danny drove up to the front of Moose’s cocksucking ranch and slammed the brakes on the truck so hard, he kicked up gravel. The bastard’s yellow Charger wasn’t around, but there were pink clothes and high-heeled shoes all over the front lawn. He knew Moose was home, however. Vic Rizzo from the 617 had texted everyone that after a drinking spell at Timeout: that muscle car had been found wrapped around a tree by two NBPD-ers and its inebriated driver had been returned to sender out here in the sticks.
Getting out, he—
The explosion was so violent, it rattled the windows on the house, and Danny ducked down to take cover as shrapnel dropped from the sky.
As a phone receiver hit him in the head, he cursed and jogged over to the front door. Going inside, he saw total chaos. Someone had taken a knife to all the oversized black and white furniture, and there was stuffing and pillows everywhere.
Every single one of the wedding pictures had been punched, bloody fist and palm prints marking the walls.
Danny ran to the back. Outside, by the garage, the box trailer was in flames, the curling smoke blowing toward the house and obscuring the view.
“Moose?” he called out.
Running toward the garage, he got smoke in his eyes and he coughed.
And then he saw something on the lawn behind the fire. People rolling around. Something else out there.
Was he killing Deandra?
“Moose, will you stop! We weren’t together, she’s lyin—”
Off at the tree line, parked at the head of a dirt lane about one hundred yards away, was Anne’s Subaru. What the hell?
He sidestepped the heat and the crackling burn, coming around the front of the garage. As the smoke got blown in another direction, he got a clear view of something that made no sense. Anne and Moose were rolling around, fighting. Soot was on the periphery, barking, snarling, limping badly like he’d been hurt.
Slow motion.
Everything went into slow motion.
Moose flipping Anne on her back. Reaching, straining to something in the grass. Soot snapping at his hand.
Something in the back of Danny’s mind put the pieces together faster than his thoughts could organize. With every ounce of power he had, he surged forward at a dead run, and on his way to the fight he picked up the first weapon he came to.
A long-handled axe.
Just as Moose found a gun in the grass, Danny skidded into place, swung the blade, and caught the would-be killer in the back of the head.
Moose stiffened in a full-body seizure, and Anne was on the split-second delay. Even though she was bleeding from the nose, she twisted and caught the nine-millimeter, snatching it out of the man’s control.
And then she shoved herself free, scrambling out from under the now-limp deadweight that lay flat on the ground.
Danny released the handle. Tripped. Fell back onto the ground and stared at the axe as it held its own against gravity, sure as if he’d buried the blade in nothing but an oak stump.
“Soot!”
Shaking himself, he glanced at Anne. She was trembling as she kept the gun pointed at Moose and pulled her dog in against her, the animal licking at her, nuzzling, whimpering.
When she finally looked at him, he put his palms up into the air like she might shoot him, too.
Silence came over the scene, his mind trying to connect with a reality he didn’t understand. Couldn’t possibly grasp. Anne seemed to be in a similar state of shock.
Why had his old roommate been trying to kill her?
“Are you okay?” he said roughly.
Her eyes, wide and glassy, locked on his face. “Danny . . . it was him. It was Moose. He lit the fires at those warehouses . . . and he was going to kill me.”
Danny slowly lowered his hands. What the hell had Moose fallen into?
“He did it for the money,” Anne mumbled. “That’s where all the money came from, for the wedding, this house, that Shelby in the garage. He was disappearing evidence in those fires, but I wasn’t able to connect him with Ripkin. I still don’t know how Ripkin is involved.”
Danny rubbed his face. “All I care about right now is that you’re okay.”
He reached out and took her hand. When she didn’t pull away, he brought her up against him and squeezed his eyes shut. Holding her tight, he looked over her shoulder at the body of his old friend.
The sadness was so deep he felt certain his heart was going to stop. He still didn’t know how a man he had lived with for all these years had turned so bad, but the one thing he was sure about was that Anne was alive.
Nothing else, even Moose, mattered more than that.
Easing back, he brushed some of the grass from her hair. “I need you to know I wasn’t with Deandra the night before the wedding. Put a bullet it in me now and send me to my twin brother, I will swear to that on my soul. She lied to Moose to make him mad, and she did it in front of the whole stationhouse, but it wasn’t true. I wouldn’t have done that to Moose.”
He let Anne looked into his eyes, for as long as she needed to, all the while praying that the truth was something she could recognize in him.