Killing Hour - Lisa Gardner [163]
They tore out of the swamp, coming to a screeching halt in a parking lot now filled with vehicles.
Mac jumped out first. “Medical attention, quick, over here.”
Then EMTs were working on Tina with water and cooling packs, while Quincy and Rainie were running across the parking lot toward Kimberly, and Mac was beating them both to the punch by taking her into his arms. She rested her head against his chest. He put his arms around her, and things finally felt safe.
Nora Ray appeared out of the crowd, moving toward Tina’s side.
“Betsy?” Tina murmured weakly. “Viv? Karen?”
“They’re happy that you’re alive,” Nora Ray said quietly, squatting down next to Tina’s prostrate form.
“Are they okay?”
“They’re happy that you’re alive.”
Tina understood then. She closed her eyes. “I want my mother,” she said, and then she started to cry.
“You’ll be okay,” Nora Ray said. “You have to take it from me. A bad thing happened, but you survived it. You won.”
“How do you know?”
“Because three years ago, the same man kidnapped me.”
Tina finally stopped crying. She looked at Nora Ray through bloodshot eyes. “Do you know where they’re going to take me?”
“I don’t know, but I can stay with you if you’d like.”
“Buddy system?” Tina whispered.
Nora Ray finally smiled. She squeezed Tina’s hand and said, “Always.”
EPILOGUE
Quantico, Virginia
10:13 A.M.
Temperature: 88 degrees
SHE WAS RUNNING, TEARING THROUGH THE WOODS at breakneck speed. Dangling leaves snatched at her hair, low branches tore at her face. She leapt fallen tree trunks, then threw herself full throttle at the fifteen-foot wall. Her hands found the rope, her feet scrabbled for footing. Up, up, up she went, heart pounding, lungs heaving, and throat gasping.
She crested the top, had an absolutely stellar view of the lush, green Virginia woods, then flipped herself down the other side. Tires coming up. Bing, bing, bing, she punched one foot through the center of each rubber mass. Then she was hunched over like a turtle, scrambling down a narrow metal pipe. Now out the other end, racing down the homestretch. Sun on her face. Wind in her hair.
Kimberly careened over the finish line, just as Mac clicked off the stopwatch and said, “Ah, honey, you call that a time? Hell, I know guys that go twice as fast.”
Kimberly launched herself at his chest. He saw the attack coming and tried to brace his feet. She’d learned a new move in combat training just last week, however, and had him flat on his back in no time.
She was still breathing hard, sweat glistening across her face and dampening her navy blue FBI Academy T-shirt. For a change, however, she wore a smile.
“Where’s the knife?” Mac murmured with a wicked gleam in his eyes.
“Don’t you wish.”
“Pretty please. I can insult you more, if you’d like.”
“No way can you do that course twice as fast.”
“Well, I might have been exaggerating.” His hands were now on her bare legs, tracing lines from her ankles up to the hem of her nylon shorts. “But I’m at least two seconds faster.”
“Upper body strength,” Kimberly spat out. “Men have more and it comes in handy at the wall.”
“Yep, ain’t life unfair?” He rolled with a surprise move of his own, and now she was the one on the dirt and he was the one looming above. Trapped, she did the sensible thing; she lunged up, grabbed his shoulders and nailed him with a long, lingering kiss.
“Miss me?” he gasped three seconds later.
“No. Not much.”
Other voices were coming from the woods now. More students, taking advantage of this beautiful Saturday to train. Mac got up grudgingly. Kimberly vaulted up with more energy, hastily wiping dirt and leaves from her hair. The students were almost in view now, about to top the wall. Mac and Kimberly bolted for the shelter of the neighboring woods.
“How’s it going?” Mac asked as they drifted into the lush, green shade.
“Hanging in there.”
He stopped, took her arm, and made her face him. “No, Kimberly. I mean for