He doused the fire and turned off the lights.
He stood in the pitch blackness of the cabin and prayed that God would lead him down the mountain and to safety.
Headlights splashed across the front windows, and he knew that he needed to run. He wanted to run, but he felt weak, shaky, still disoriented, his body trying to thaw but still so cold that his teeth chattered.
Going outside to toss the jumpsuit had been risky, but he’d had to do it. For Laney’s sake. Maybe even for his own. He didn’t want there to be any link between the two of them.
He walked to the back door, his legs heavy, his mind sluggish. Another hour in the cold would probably kill him. He knew it, but he didn’t have much of a choice. Die trying to live, or give up and just die?
Footsteps pounded on the front porch, and he pulled the gun, waited as the doorknob turned and aimed as the door flew open.
Someone raced into the cabin, whirled in the darkness, hair swinging in a long pale rope.
“Logan?” Laney called, her slender figure silhouetted against the gray night revealed by the open door.
“Do you know how close you just came to dying?” Logan growled, his legs weak from what had almost happened. If he hadn’t served as a police officer for a decade, he might have pulled the trigger before he realized who was on the other end of the barrel.
“You can lecture me later. I saw lights down the mountain. We have to get out of here.” She grabbed his hand and yanked him out into the storm.
He let her because sending her alone toward whatever was coming up the mountain felt like sending a lamb into a lion’s den.
“Are you sure you saw lights?”
“Yes. I’m not sure if they were on the road or in the woods, but they shouldn’t have been there. There’s nothing between here and the highway but trees.” She opened the door of her Jeep, motioned for him to climb in then ran to the driver’s side and slid behind the wheel. “Should I head down or up? The road goes both ways.”
“How far up are we talking? Can we get to the other side of the mountain or will we hit a dead end somewhere?”
“I don’t know. William and I never walked to the end of the road. The farthest we ever went was a couple of miles.”
“I think we’d better try it. Worst-case scenario, we’ll get out and walk down the other side of the mountain.”
He hoped it wouldn’t come to that, but he’d rather ride away from certain danger than into it.
“Okay.” Laney pulled away from the cabin, the Jeep crawling along the driveway, the headlights off. Snow lightened the road they turned onto, swirling down into a valley far below. The wind had died, and the trees were still and quiet. Nothing but the snow moved, and that made Logan nervous. The Jeep shimmying from side to side as Laney inched up the road made him nervous, too. If they tumbled off the side of the mountain, they wouldn’t have to worry about running out of road or running into trouble.
He shifted in his seat, searching the area behind them, probing the woods. A light pierced the darkness, too bright to be a flashlight, too still to be headlights. The cabin? Another light appeared. Windows illuminating the darkness. His heart jerked.
“Think we can go any faster?” he asked, and Laney tensed.
“What’s wrong?” Her voice was tight, her grip white-knuckled on the steering wheel.
“It looks like there’s someone at the cabin.”
“The police?”
“No.” There’d be flashing emergency lights, more motion and action.
“How much of a head start do you think we have?”
“If they’re on foot, plenty.”
“What if they’re not?”
“How about we just keep moving forward?”
“Funny. That’s why I came to the cabin this weekend. To move forward,” she said quietly, her voice shaking.
“Yeah?” He wanted to keep her focused on the conversation rather than her fear and the threat that was following them.
“My father left me the family property when he died. I’m supposed to be in Green Bluff tomorrow night so that I can clean out the house and get it ready to go on the market.”
“You’re selling your parents’ place?” The property had been sitting vacant for twelve years. Logan had driven past it several times a week when he was on the force. Every time, he’d thanked God that the Mackeys had gotten what they’d deserved and that Laney hadn’t had to suffer for their crimes.
“Like I said, I’m trying to move forward. Strange how I finally made the decision to let go of the past and one of the biggest parts of it is suddenly in my life again.” She laughed a little, but there was more sadness than humor in the sound.
“I’m sorry, Laney.”
“For what?”
“Coming back into your life.”
“It’s not like you planned it, Logan. It happened the same way as the first time you did. God worked it out. Who are either of us to say that it’s not for the best?”
She had a point, but that didn’t change the fact that Logan had endangered her or that every minute that they were together the danger grew.
They rounded a sharp curve, the car fishtailing and sliding toward the two-hundred-foot drop to their right. Laney wrangled the vehicle back into the middle of the road, her breath coming in short quick gasps.
“You doing okay?” he asked.
“This is crazy, Logan. We could be navigating switchbacks for hours, and in this kind of weather, it’s just not safe.”
“Want me to drive?” He’d driven in worse conditions, and he wasn’t as nervous as she seemed to be. At this point, that could only play in their favor.
“Yes.” The Jeep rolled to a stop, trees pressing in on one side, a gray expanse of nothing to the other, the road barely visible ahead.
“Hold on.” Logan grabbed Laney’s wrist before she could open the door. Her pulse throbbed rapidly beneath her skin, but her face was cool and composed.
“What?”
“I’ll come around. You can just slide over. No sense in both of us going out in the cold again.” He didn’t give her time to argue, just got out of the Jeep.
Snow crunched beneath Logan’s feet as he rounded the car, the scent of pine and the crisp winter air reminding him of home. It had been eight months since he’d been back there. Eight months since he’d hiked the bluff behind his house and inhaled the cold clean air.
He wanted to go home. He wanted it so badly, he could taste it. Every cell in his body yearned for it. Home was all he’d ever dreamed of when he was a kid. He hadn’t wanted fancy clothes or toys or things. He’d just wanted that safe landing place, that soft spot where nothing mattered but just being.
He slid behind the wheel, taking one last deep lungful of air and catching a faint whiff of something sharp and bitter.
Fire!
He was back outside almost before the thought could register, scanning the forest below, searching for a spot of