“Come on, Jillian. Just touch the gun,” Tom said.
It felt heavy on my lap, heavier than it looked. I put a hand on top of it. No big deal, I thought. Just a hunk of metal.
A few seconds later the SWAT truck rumbled by us. It came to an abrupt stop right in front of Morris.
“Thank God,” I whispered.
But then something caught my eye in the woods beyond the ditch we’d parked next to. A white cat was trying to climb a tree, its hair standing on end with fear. But it couldn’t seem to do what all cats are good at-climb that tree.
“I have to help that cat.” I opened the door and headed for the woods. The ditch was deeper than I thought, and I nearly tripped but managed to keep my footing.
Why hadn’t I realized that some of the cats that had been released probably came back here? This was where they’d been fed, after all. We weren’t close to the house, so it wasn’t like trying to help a cat in trouble was dangerous.
“Jillian,” called Tom. “Come back.”
I turned and saw that he was following me, and following lots faster than he should have been. He’d scare the cat before I could rescue it. The cat fell down after yet another attempt to climb the tree. What was wrong with it? Weak from hunger, too?
Then something happened behind me; I heard Tom swear-very loudly. I spun and saw him lying in the ditch. I looked back at the cat and figured Tom needed my help more than the frightened white fur ball did.
But when I started back toward where he was groaning in pain, an arm reached around me from behind.
Not again.
Thirty-one
But this person wasn’t Patrick Hoffman, as I’d feared. No, this person wasn’t nearly as strong. I gave my would-be attacker an elbow to the gut with all my might.
I heard a grunt as the assailant let go. I even heard him fall.
I didn’t even realize I had the gun with me. But what I did realize was that I’d dropped it when I’d elbowed the guy.
I whirled and saw Douglas Lieber scramble for the weapon. He got to it before I did. Then he stood and pointed it at me.
“You and your little police buddy have been more trouble than I ever needed. I’d shoot you right here, but I need leverage now that your friend in the ditch has seen me. You’re coming with me.”
I glanced back and saw Tom grimacing in pain and trying to crawl toward us. But those fifteen feet between us might as well have been a mile, and Tom knew that. He began shouting for Morris’s help.
Panic flitted across Lieber’s face. He said, “Come with me now.” He waved the gun back toward the thicker woods.
I didn’t move. “I’m not going anywhere.”
“Come on, idiot. Or you’re dead,” he said.
I held up my hands, stepped toward him. “You set this all up, even made it look like activists were the culprits, didn’t you? Set all those poor cats loose.”
His eyes hardened. “What if I did? You come with me, Jillian. Now.”
“No,” I said, taking another step closer. “I want you to look at me when you kill me-like you looked at the professor while he drank the strychnine. You must have slipped it into his drink. What did you do, tell him you’d come over to talk?” I took another step forward.
“I’ve killed two people, why not one more?” He squeezed the trigger at the same moment I kneed him hard between the legs. He collapsed, but he still held that gun and pointed it up at me. It didn’t seem to register with him that it wasn’t loaded, and he tried to fire it again. But the empty gun only clicked.
Two scary-looking black-clad SWAT officers were upon us all of a sudden, demanding that Lieber drop his weapon.
“It’s not even loaded,” I said.
Lieber complied, but not before giving me a venomous look.
I checked behind me, where Tom was being tended to by Morris. “Can I go to my friend?” I said as the officers laid Lieber on his stomach and pulled his hands behind him for the handcuffs.
“You’re sure you’re okay, ma’am?” one of them said.
“I’m fine.” I was beginning to understand why Candace said she loved her work. Kicking butt felt good. But I was worried about Tom.
The poor cat that started this whole thing had finally made it up to a low branch. I stopped on the way back to Tom and held my hand up. It rubbed against my fingers, and I said, “You stay there. I’m coming back for you.”
Then I hurried to where Tom lay. One of the paramedics was already at his side, and Morris was standing nearby, looking a little pasty. When I checked out Tom’s ankle, I saw why. Definitely broken, and sickening to look at.
I rested a palm against his cheek.
“You are a fool for cats,” he said, trying to laugh.
“I am so sorry.” I looked at the paramedic-I remembered meeting her once; her name was Diane. “Will he be okay?”
She was putting an air splint on Tom that resembled a boot. “He’ll be fine-after about six weeks.”
The SWAT officers were now taking Lieber to their truck. I stared up at Morris. “What about Kara and Evan?”
“As soon as that jerk in the house saw that SWAT was here, he gave up. They should be bringing him out soon,” he said.
“But the hostages? They’re okay?” I said.
“The paramedics are checking them out, too. But no shots were fired, and that’s how we like these things to end,” Morris said.
I felt so relieved that tears stung my eyes. “Thank God.”
Tom took my hand. “It’s okay now, but no thanks to me.”
“You gave me that gun. Best defense I could have had-even without bullets,” I said.
He seemed confused, and I realized he probably hadn’t seen what had gone down between Lieber and me-or he was in too much pain to remember. I said, “Tell you later.”
I heard shouts coming from the driveway and saw Candace and two more SWAT officers leading Patrick Hoffman toward a waiting squad car.
He yelled, “I never killed anyone,” a couple of times, and then I overheard him say, “Give me a deal and I’ll tell you everything Lieber did.”
Candace yelled, “You have the right to shut up, dirtbag,” and shoved Hoffman in the back.
Two terrible men were soon carted off in separate squad cars. Meanwhile, a stretcher had arrived for Tom and I had to get out of the way.
“I never thought of myself as clumsy before,” Tom said as they wheeled him toward the ambulance.
“Can I go with him?” I asked.
“You can follow, but not ride. Liability issues,” Diane said.
Tom said, “My keys are still in the car. But you should wait, talk to Kara and Evan. They need you more than I do right now.”
I hurried to his side before they put him in the ambulance and kissed his lips. “Feel better,” I said.
As they drove off with Tom, sirens blasting, a ridiculous thought flashed through my mind: How long before Lydia knows about that kiss?
After I rescued the white cat, who was declawed and thus not very good at climbing trees, Deputy Dufner said he’d take it to the sanctuary. I thanked him profusely and then waited in the Prius for a good thirty minutes. Finally