“If you had mentioned the forest,” Campos said in his rearview mirror to Otis, “I would have called one of the rangers.”
“Wouldn’t be no need for that,” Otis told him.
“You been here before?” Campos asked.
“No, sir. Never been to Florida before.” He was polite and soft-spoken with a pronounced Southern drawl.
“Then how do you know where to go?”
Otis gently tapped two fingers to his temple and grinned but didn’t take his eyes away from his side window.
“When people tell me stuff, I remember. I don’t know why it is, but I get a real good picture in my mind.”
Campos shot Maggie a look but thankfully he didn’t roll his eyes. The trooper looked about forty. Old enough to have heard all kinds of stories, and Maggie could see he was also beginning to wonder about the validity of Otis’s claim.
“There’s nobody around out here,” Campos said to Maggie. “Not this time of year. Milton is canoe capital of Florida. Blackwater River runs through the forest. A bunch of other creeks and tributaries flow into it. Coldwater Creek, Juniper, Sweetwater.”
“How big is the forest?” Maggie asked.
“Over two hundred thousand acres. Stretches all the way north to the Alabama state border.”
Maggie glanced back at Otis. She had a feeling of dread. How deep into the forest would he take them? How long would he have them walking in circles before he admitted there was no dump site?
To the west through a clearing in the thick forest, she could see storm clouds gathering. It wasn’t even six months since she had spent an evening in a forest in Nebraska. She had never experienced such a sense of isolation before. She wasn’t looking forward to repeating it. Instinctively she pulled out her cell phone and checked how many bars she had. It blinked between one and two, then none.
Trooper Campos noticed. “Should be able to get reception,” he said, then quickly added, “in most spots.” He didn’t sound convincing.
“After that big-ass tree up there,” Otis said, pointing up ahead to a huge dead oak, “there’s a little narrow road afterward to the right.”
It was a landmark anyone would remember. Was that exactly what he was thinking?
Campos slowed down but still almost missed the road. It was more of a path than a road. The overgrowth hid the tire tracks and the entrance. He stopped the SUV. Made sure the one behind him had stopped and given him enough room to back up. Then he yanked the steering wheel hard to the right and drove into the forest.
The road curved, sometimes sharply. They bounced and jerked over the ruts. The road never widened. In several places branches scraped the sides of the SUV and Campos grimaced. The overhanging ones threatened to do the same. Every once in while Maggie saw splotches of color, spring blooms. As the sky continued to darken with clouds, so too did their path.
“How far are we going, buddy?” Trooper Campos asked, and Maggie thought she saw Otis grimace for the first time at the term “buddy.” “You sure this is the right way?”
“Just a little bit more,” he said.
A few seconds later, the SUV came around a curve and into a small clearing.
“Here we go,” he said.
Maggie had to admit it was the perfect isolated spot to dump bodies. Remote but with vehicle access. The only problem—there didn’t appear to be anything else. No cabin, no lean-to.
But when they got out of the SUVs, Otis told them they’d have to walk to the actual site and he pointed to a footpath.
“It’s just up the way through them trees.”
“Are you jerking us around?” It was Demarcus.
“Should be about a hundred to a hundred fifty yards up that way.”
Otis went on to ask about getting the shackles from his feet removed.
Troopers Campos and Wiley looked to Demarcus for instruction. Demarcus looked to Tully.
“We’ve already come this far. Let’s at least check it out before the thunder and lightning get here.”
Otis was right. About 100 to 150 yards through the trees they came to another clearing. This one was much bigger, wider and with tall grass and yellow wildflowers, a meadow in the middle of the forest. Trooper Wiley walked beside Otis as the prisoner, with his hands still shackled, led them to the center and stopped. Demarcus was close behind them, and Tully, Maggie, and Trooper Campos were about twenty feet back, bringing up the rear.
Again, Maggie noticed there was nothing else but thick forest surrounding the area. No shelters in sight. Although she couldn’t see beyond the dark shadows inside the forest. Somewhere in the distance she could hear the beginning rumble of the brewing storm.
In fact, the first crack Maggie heard, she thought it was thunder until she saw Trooper Wiley fall to his knees, holding his throat. In a gulp of a breath, a second gunshot followed. Right next to her, Trooper Campos’s head exploded, splattering Maggie in the face.
She ripped at her windbreaker as Campos fell against her, taking her with him to the ground. Her fingers yanked at her holster.
Then a third shot. This one hit Tully.
CHAPTER 55
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Maggie belly-crawled to where Tully lay. The tall grass offered little camouflage. But Campos’s body provided a barrier. Weapon drawn, she couldn’t see the shooter. Could he still see her? All she knew was that the shots came from the trees and they came within seconds, easy targets.
A fourth shot and she heard Demarcus scream.
She ducked her head, her cheek against the cold, damp earth. Everything had gone quiet except for her heartbeat thumping in her ears. Her body was drenched in sweat.
She twisted her neck till she could see Tully.
Blood stained his windbreaker. An entrance wound. Oh dear God. Right over his heart.
“Damn it, Tully. No!”
She said it under her breath. Angry tears threatened.
She blinked hard. Pushed up on her elbows. Her pulse raced. She tried to sneak a glimpse over Campos’s body.
No orange jumpsuit. Where the hell was Otis?
And where was his buddy Jack? Or Buzz, or whatever the hell his name was.
It was quiet now. Too quiet.
And then there was one.
The thought sent a fresh panic through her body. Tully had warned her that this guy was obsessed with her. It was her, not the scavenger hunt, that he was after. And now she was the only one left because Jack wanted it that way. He wanted her alive.
She gripped her revolver, trigger finger ready. She pulled herself up against Campos’s body. With her free hand, she rummaged through the cases attached to his three-inch gun belt. She tucked his ASR (aerosol subject restraint) spray canister into the cuff of her left sock. His Taser went into her waistband, under her jacket at the small of her back. He was lying on his holstered service revolver. She couldn’t get to it without rolling him over.
Something behind her moved. She turned around, ready to take aim.
A groan from Tully. His eyelids fluttered. He blinked, trying to focus. He looked to be in shock. And in pain.
A flicker of relief washed over her. It was quickly replaced by urgency. She needed to see how badly he was hit. She needed to stop the bleeding. But there was something else she needed to do and quickly.
She clawed at the case on Trooper Campos’s belt, yanked it open, and removed two items. One she slid into her other sock, shoving it all the way down. Then she crawled, using her elbows to pull her so she could stay down as low as possible to the ground. Just a few more inches.
She heard the crunch of footsteps. Close. Too close.
She reached out and touched Tully. She had to put her revolver down for three seconds. One second—she grabbed his wrist. Two—snapped a handcuff on. Three—snapped the other onto her wrist. Then she reached for her revolver just as a shadow came over her.