was dealing with a groupie. Go figure. “How about we take off before the bad people come?”
Did she think I went through all this trouble just to pick up a woman?
I heard, to the right of the bench and just off the path, a gun cock. “Do not move, sir.” It was a man’s voice with a hint of Mississippi.
I looked at Clara. “Too late,” I said. “They’re here.”
Chapter 15
The guy with the voice and the gun was still behind me.
“Put your hands on your head,” he ordered.
“I can’t,” I said. “You told me not to move.”
I felt the barrel of the gun up against my head. “Funny man,” he said. Maybe not Mississippi. Georgia? “Go on and do it.”
I did as I was told while still looking into Clara’s eyes. She was looking at the man behind me, and she appeared scared but not out-of-her-mind scared. This I took to mean two things. One, I had a human behind me, and two, maybe she was telling the truth about knowing how to handle herself.
“Miss, you’ll want to run off now,” the man suggested. “This is not your concern.”
“Why don’t you run off instead?” she offered. “I found him first.”
“Please, ma’am. I am not above killing a woman.”
“You would not,” she said a tad less defiantly than I think she was aiming for.
“Do not make me prove it to you,” he barked.
“Clara, listen to him,” I suggested. “He’s not kidding.”
He pressed the barrel deeper into my scalp.
“Quiet,” he whispered. “I know about what happened in Boston. Trust me when I tell you I will not make the same mistake. Now be still for a moment, please.”
I felt a sharp prick in the back of my right hand.
“Owww!” I exclaimed. “Not again with the damn shot.”
“It’s required,” he said simply. “Now sit tight.”
Fifteen seconds later he said, “Good enough. Get to your feet. You too, miss.”
“Hang on… ,” Clara protested.
“Get. Up.”
She got up. So did I, hands still behind my head. “Turn around,” he ordered, to me.
I turned. He was a skinny black man a couple of inches shorter than me. Had a scar running down the right side of his face that made him look a bit more badass, but only just a bit. I figured I could take him if he gave me a chance. Possibly aware of this he stepped back, his gun pointed at my heart. He pulled a pair of plastic handcuffs out of his jacket pocket and tossed them over my shoulder to Clara.
“If you’re going to stick around, darling, I may as well put you to work. Handcuff him.” He looked at me. “Bring your hands down behind your back, sir. I trust you’ll be less lethal once properly trussed.”
“It’s not me you have to worry about,” I said, having taken note of some telltale movement just over my captor’s shoulder.
He smiled, looking very relaxed and unconcerned. “As the lady said, do you have an army of soldiers hidden in the lake?”
“No. But I’d check the trees if I were you.”
A loud ZIP sound echoed through the night. I watched the bounty hunter’s expression change from confidence to the shock that usually transpires when one’s heart unexpectedly explodes. He collapsed forward.
“Sniper,” I said to him, lowering my hands. “Told you to check the trees.”
“Oh, Jesus,” Clara exclaimed, now officially in panic mode. “I should… we have to…”
I spun around. “Don’t move… !” but she had already turned to run. Another loud ZIP and the sod at her feet kicked up into the air. She cried out in surprise and stumbled backward, landing gracelessly on her very pretty backside.
“That’s a marksman up there,” I pointed out to her. “You’re in luck. He only misses if he feels like it, so he must like you.”
“Stay where you are!” a man at the opposite end of the clearing demanded. He emerged from a set of trees nowhere near the sniper. He was dressed in black pajamas and carried what looked like an M-4 in his hands, looking very Delta Force.
“Two of you?” I asked.
“Yes, sir,” he said fairly amicably, as he marched toward us. Suddenly everybody wanted to call me sir. “We’re here to take you into custody, sir. I trust you’ll come quietly.”
Climbing to her feet, Clara backed away from him, hands raised, until she was next to me.
“What’s going on here?” she muttered.
“Told you this was a bad place to be,” I answered.
“You weren’t just being mysterious?”
“Nope.”
“Why are they after you?”
“I don’t know,” I said. “But your MUD is what helped them track me, which is why I used it. It’s not what it seems.”
“I thought this was a trap.”
“It is, but not for them—for something else. They’re here to help me kill it. They just don’t know it yet. And you don’t want to be here when it arrives.”
“Something worse than them?”
“Oh yes.”
The soldier marching to the bench looked pretty intent on “taking me in” as he put it, except that he kept swatting around his head, like a mosquito was bothering him. It seemed out of character.
“Ma’am, this is a government matter,” he said officiously, drawing up to a stop a few feet from us. Again with the swatting.
“Like hell it is,” Clara said.
“I don’t want to get rough with you, ma’am.”
“Yeah that’s what he said.” She pointed to the recently deceased man behind us.
Close enough now, I heard the buzzing more clearly.
“Iza,” I said loudly. “It’s okay, Iza.”
He looked puzzled. “Who are you talking to?” he demanded.
“Nobody,” I said cheerily.