Chapter Eight

 

Carmen fumed as she sat beside Mac in his truck with Silver in the back of the crew cab. Dash had barely bothered to acknowledge her tonight—just as she’d figured he would. How could she have gone and fallen head over heels in love with such an ass?

A little voice in the back of her brain reminded her that she hadn’t exactly been open about their relationship in front of Leah either. Damn, she hated it when her innate honesty got in the way of a good mad.

“Can you drop me at Dash’s shack instead of at my place?” she asked Mac.

Mac laughed. “Wondered if either of you was going to cop to being involved with each other.” Then he sobered and added, “But I’m not sure it’s a good idea. You heard all the discussion about that gangbanger who’s after him.”

Carmen shrugged. “If he’s been watching Dash, he knows about my place too. I’m as safe at one as I am at the other. And I’ve got Silver with me.”

Mac sighed. “At least call Dash and let him know.”

“No,” she argued. “But if it makes you feel better, I’ll call my grandfather.”

“Fair enough.” Mac took the turn-off for the line shack rather than the one to her cabin. “Because if anything happens to you, they’ll both be standing in line to kill me—right behind Leah.”

“Nothing’s going to happen, Mac.” Except that she was going to either jump Dash’s bones or rip him a new one. She hadn’t quite decided which yet.

Line shacks weren’t usually kept locked since their purpose was to provide shelter for any of the ranch hands who needed it. Mac insisted on walking her inside and waiting while she called her grandfather, who agreed to check on the bunny and deer on his way home. Once Mac was sure she was as safe as she could get, he left, and Carmen wandered around the main room of the little cabin, going over and over possible conversations with Dash in her head.

Finally she sat down at the table and picked up his current carving, running it through her fingers to determine what it was.

“It’s an eagle,” she told Silver, tracing the spread wings of the bird in flight. It was their eagle, she knew, just as she somehow knew he’d intended it as a gift for her. Tears leaked from the corners of her eyelids. He did care about her. His love was in every line of the wooden sculpture.

She’d reluctantly set it down to wipe her eyes when Silver began to growl, running to the cabin’s back door and snarling violently.

“What is it, boy?” As if she didn’t know. She’d never heard her dog this angry. Slowly she sank down behind the table and pulled her cell phone from her pocket, glad that at least here by the road there was a signal. The first number she hit was Dash’s, but it went straight to voicemail. He was probably on the road and out of signal range.

The second number she dialed was the ranch. They were closer than the sheriff.

“Hello?” Shane’s voice answered just as the back door was flung open. Silver snarled and she heard him launch himself at the killer, heard the man scream.

“I’m at Dash’s,” she whispered.

A shot rang out and Silver’s barking ended in a soft yelp followed by a thud. A sob burst from her throat. Not Silver!

“We’re on our way, Carmen,” Shane assured her, reminding her she still held the phone to her ear. “Hold on, sweetie. Do whatever you have to in order to stay alive. Cavalry is coming.”

“It’s me,” came Leah’s voice over the phone. “I’m staying here while the menfolk come running. Dash should be home any minute—he left not long after you did. Now set the phone somewhere where he won’t see it, and tell us as much as you can without giving it away.”

Carmen slid the phone under the edge of the cupboard just as the killer rounded the table and spotted her.

“Perfect,” the bastard snarled. “Nothing like bait.”

Carmen couldn’t see his face, of course, just the blur of a man in dark clothing. Without needing to see, she knew he had a gun pointed at her—the same one he’d used to shoot her dog.

“What…what do you want?”

“Hyde’s head on a fucking plate.” The man had a Latino accent, but not the same one she was used to locally.

“You and me both,” she muttered.

There was the sound of a chair being dragged across the floor. “Now get up real slow, puta, and have a seat.”

“I can’t see,” she said. “Didn’t anybody tell you I was blind?” It was a stalling tactic—she could have felt her way around and probably found the chair—but she figured she’d use anything she could to delay him. Besides, it wouldn’t hurt if he underestimated her because of her handicap. “You shot my leader dog—you’ll have to show me where to go.”

“Nah, it’ll be more fun to watch you fumble,” he said with a nasty laugh. “Chair’s right in the middle of the room. Find it.”

Carmen stood and felt for the edge of the table. Moving as slowly as she could manage, she made her way around it. “My name is Carmen,” she told him. Wasn’t she supposed to try to make him see her as a person? She’d heard that on one cop show or another that her sister watched.

“Like I care, bitch. Now shut the fuck up and move faster before I decide to shoot you first and tie you up later.”

So much for that idea. Letting go of the table, she took cautious steps out into the center of the room, her hands out in front of her. A few seconds later, her fingers grazed the back of a wooden chair.

“Sit.”

She did.

“Hands behind your back.”

Carmen didn’t know what else to do, so she complied, still moving in slow motion. There was a dark blur beside her head, and she could smell the machine oil and gunpowder of his pistol.

A pair of handcuffs snicked closed around her wrists, cold and metallic, binding her arms behind her. The position was a strain since her arms were barely long enough to meet behind the frame of the chair. A quick tug proved he’d tucked the chain of the cuffs through one of the spindles, giving her even less possibility of movement. Thug he might be, but apparently he wasn’t stupid.

Once she was secured, she heard him open the back door and drag something inside. More footsteps followed, along with a series of sloshes and splashes. The acrid odor of gasoline filled her nostrils.

Carmen fought to keep from vomiting as she realized he meant to burn the cabin down—with her in it. That was the bait for Dash—not just her, but her on fire. She knew he still had issues with flames. She’d seen it tonight. Watching her burn would be his worst nightmare come true.

While Arroyo was distracted, she tried to scoot her chair backward, just a few inches, toward the table. If she could eventually make it to the back door, she might get out of this alive. Someone should have warned Dash by now, surely.

When the killer went into the bedroom to dump more gasoline, she scooted back another foot or so. And then she heard it—a soft, gentle whine. Silver was alive!

Before she could move any farther, Arroyo returned. “I’ll just wait out here on the porch where it smells better,” he said, laughing again. “Can’t wait ’til your boyfriend shows up so we can start the party.”

* * * * *

Dash was confused when he reached Carmen’s house and she wasn’t home. Had she gone to her grandfather’s after all? It didn’t seem like a good idea to try to call Ken and find out. Disappointed, he returned to his truck and headed for the line shack.

He was out on the main road, about halfway between his place and Carmen’s when his cell phone rang, and he knew, somehow, that something was terribly wrong.

“Arroyo is at your place,” Shane announced without preamble. “And he’s got Carmen.”

The bottom fell out of Dash’s stomach and he had to stop his truck for a minute while he heaved onto the side of the road. As soon as he was done, he reached into the back of his truck for his bullet-proof vest. He’d worn it riding out today, after hearing that Arroyo might be on the loose.

“Sheriff is maybe ten minutes out,” Shane replied. “Ken, the hands and I should be there in five.”

“Two for me,” Dash told them. “I’m the one he wants. I’ll go in and see if I can trade myself for her.”

“Don’t do anything stupid.” Ken’s voice came on the line. “Take care of my granddaughter—but take care of yourself too.”

“I’ll do my best,” Dash assured them. “That’s all I can promise.” He climbed back into the cab and floored it for home.

* * * * *

Carmen heard the truck coming up the road before her captor. Since he’d moved out onto the porch, she’d managed to inch back to the table. At the sound of his delighted roar, she jerked back, tipping her chair sideways and slamming her head into the floor as she fell. Her leg rattled the table and something fell off onto her cheek.

The carved eagle. Once again she could feel Dash’s love in every line. With renewed determination she tucked it under her chin and used her legs to push herself under the table and toward the back door. Meanwhile Silver inched toward her, whimpering as his claws scrabbled on the wood floor.

“So, pendejo, you finally show your fucking face.” Arroyo’s voice was harsh and loaded with manic violence.

Carmen heard footsteps as Dash approached. She momentarily stopped her efforts to scoot toward the back door. “Where’s my woman, motherfucker?” Even amidst all this, she couldn’t help a moment of warmth at hearing him call her his.

“In the house. Take this, asshole.” Arroyo jumped off the porch and sent his lit cigarette through the door. Carmen couldn’t see it, but she’d smelled him smoking, and she heard the whoosh as the butt ignited the gasoline poured over the floor and furniture. Her scream erupted even as she forced herself to move. She had to get out of there fast—he’d poured some on her as well. She’d burn as quickly as everything else.

Her hands found Silver and she touched his head, searching mentally for his wound. When she found it, she poured all her healing power into him, mending it as best as she could. The bullet was still lodged in his hip—Shane would have to dig that out later if they lived through this.

Silver struggled to his feet and took the wooden chair back into his powerful jaws, pulling Carmen toward the back door as the flames erupted around them.

Over it all, she heard Arroyo laugh then Dash’s beloved voice as he shouted something at their attacker. Then there was the sound of a gunshot, more laughter and the door of the truck closing as the vehicle roared off into the night.

The laughter had been Arroyo’s. Dash was shot.

Carmen was devastated, but she still wanted to live. If he wasn’t dead, maybe she could help him as she had Silver. Once she was out of the cabin, there’d at least be hope. She used her feet to help Silver move her toward the door just as she heard footsteps run up to the porch.

“Carmen!”

It was Dash’s voice she heard just as Silver pulled her out the back. Joy surged through her just before her head hit the step and she blacked out. She couldn’t even tell Dash that she was safe.

* * * * *

Dash saw the dark shadow of a man with the burning dot of a cigarette on his front porch as soon as he drove up to the line shack. There was no sign of Carmen. Please, god, let him not have already killed her. Anything but that. His hands in the air, he had his pistol tucked into the back of his belt.

“So, pendejo, you finally show your fucking face.” Arroyo’s Puerto Rican accent was stronger than it should have been considering the man had been born and reared in Chicago. Some of the gangs liked to exaggerate their speech, just to make themselves stand out.

Dash approached the porch slowly and saw the pistol in the hand that wasn’t holding the cigarette. “Where’s my woman, motherfucker?”

“In the house.” With a flick of his fingers, Arroyo sent the cigarette butt arcing through the open doorway. “Take this, asshole.”

Dash’s world about ended when he saw the flames erupt and heard Carmen’s scream. Then he heard the shot just a second before he felt the impact in his gut that sent him flying back onto his ass in the gravel drive. “Son of a bitch!”

“Watch her burn as you bleed out, cabron.” With that, Arroyo walked toward Dash’s truck, aiming a hard kick at Dash’s head as he moved past and spitting down into Dash’s face. “That was for my brother. Die slowly.” With one more kick, he stepped over Dash’s stunned figure and got in the truck, which Dash had left running. Before Dash could catch his breath, the vehicle slammed into gear and peeled out of the drive, spewing a rain of gravel into Dash’s face.

“Carmen!” he roared as soon as his breath returned. Being shot in the vest kept him from dying, but it still knocked the wind out of him, and it took him way too damn long to regain his feet.

Fire. Instinctively he cringed away from the heat of the orange and yellow flames flickering out the open front door of the shack. It was his worst nightmare come back to haunt him, only this time the nightmare was for real. Dash wanted more than anything to run as far and fast as his gimpy leg could carry him.

But Carmen was in there.

And she’d become more important to him than anything else in the world.

He staggered up into the house, looking for her. The flames licked at his clothes as he pushed through the smoke-filled room. Then he heard Silverfoot bark.

“Where is she, boy?” Dash followed the sound of the barking to the back door, beating out embers that landed on his clothing as he went.

When he reached the door, he sighed with relief as he saw that she was outside, though still far too close to the inferno that had briefly been his home. She was also cuffed to a chair and ominously still. He jumped down onto the packed dirt, ignoring the stabbing pain in his bad leg, and grabbed the chair, pulling her out into the horse paddock, well away from the house.

Just then he heard the sounds of other vehicles coming up the road. He slumped onto the grass beside Carmen and laid his head next to her face. Her breath was shallow, but nothing had ever felt better against his cheek.

He pulled her, chair and all, onto his lap and held on tight while Silver stood beside them and licked each of their faces alternately. There was something under her chin and he lifted it away, recognizing it as the eagle he’d just finished carving for her. Tears filled his eyes that she’d worked so hard to save such a simple gift. Damn, why wouldn’t she wake up? She had to be all right. She simply had to or Dash wasn’t sure he could survive.

“Dash!”

“Carmen!”

Shane and Ken yelled at once from the front of the cabin, though Dash could barely hear them over the roar of the flames.

“Around back,” he shouted, not sure whether they could hear. “We’re safe.”

Silverfoot got up and limped his way around the house, barking loudly.

A few seconds later, the sound of running footsteps heralded the arrival of Ken, Shane and Mick, followed by several of the hands.

“Everybody out?” Ken barked as Shane knelt beside them to feel Carmen’s pulse.

“Yeah,” Dash wheezed, still reeling a bit from being shot in the stomach and kicked in the head, as well as the after burn of an adrenaline rush. “Silver pulled her out. Don’t know why she’s unconscious.”

A soft moan from Carmen was one of the sweetest things he’d ever heard. “Dash? You okay?”

He buried his face in her hair while somebody went running for a pair of bolt cutters to get her out of the chair. “I’m fine, sweetheart. It’s you we’re worried about.”

“Hit my head when Silver pulled me out the door,” she muttered. “You…you ran into a fire to save me.”

“Yeah. Turned out the furball here had already gotten you out.”

“But you hate fire.”

“Not as much as I love you.”

She blinked up at him and smiled. “I love you too.”

Ken cleared his throat. “I know you’ve better things to talk about, but are either of you hurt?”

Dash shook his head, though he coughed, having inhaled just a little bit of smoke.

“Just a bump on the head,” Carmen assured them. “I think I blacked out mostly from overusing my healing ability.” Her eyes flew wider as she looked around at Silver. “Shane—check Silver’s hip. I think I healed the bullet inside it.”

“We’ll take care of our four-legged hero,” Shane assured her. “I just hope the police caught Arroyo. He zipped past us, but since we saw the flames, we were more worried about getting here than stopping him.”

“Umm, Doc, I wouldn’t worry about that,” said one of the hands, who had just trudged up to the crowd as another couple of truckloads of men arrived. By now, most of the hands were working with buckets and the sirens grew closer, but Dash knew they wouldn’t be in time to save the shack. It didn’t matter, not as long as Carmen was safe.

“Saw his truck coming toward us, like a bat outta hell.” The hand jerked his thumb toward Dash, to indicate that it was his pickup. “Was about to hit the ditch just to get out of his way when the damnedest thing happened. Big ol’ eagle swooped right down in front of the pickup and screamed louder than anything I ever heard. Bastard ran right off the road into a tree. We stopped to pull him out, but he was deader ’n a doornail.”

“But eagles don’t fly at night,” Carmen whispered.

Ken sighed. “You know that, granddaughter, and so do I. But apparently your feathered friend forgot to read the textbook.”