I slammed the phone down in its receiver. “Why do you have to be so fucking stubborn, Taylor?” My office gave me no answers. I ground my teeth and tried to think through where Taylor would have gone. The possibilities were practically endless.
She needed to be back in time to tutor Noah, so she wouldn’t have driven more than thirty minutes away, an hour tops. I drummed my fingers against my desk and pulled out a map. I drew a large circle over the area she’d most likely stick to and then studied my options.
Taylor loved the water. Gravitated towards it as if she’d been a mermaid in a past life. That narrowed the possibilities down to three options. I picked up my desk phone again and hit the extension for dispatch. “Send officers to check the trailheads at the lake, the falls, and the Creek Line trail for Taylor Lawson’s car. It’s a navy Mercedes SUV with California plates. Thanks.”
I studied the map more closely. Was there something else I was missing? My cell buzzed in my hand. I answered without looking at the screen. “Cole.”
“Walk, it’s Tuck. What’s up?” He sounded slightly winded.
“I need your help. Taylor’s missing.”
“What?”
“She went for a hike this morning and didn’t come back when she was supposed to. I’ve narrowed it down to three likely areas. The lake, the falls, and Creek Line. Probably not the lake because there’s a lot of people there, and it’d be easy to get help if something went sideways.”
Tuck muttered a curse. “Didn’t you tell her not to go out on her own?”
I began to pace back and forth behind my desk. “What do you think?”
“Right. You definitely told her. She’s a stubborn wildcat, that one.”
I shook my head and stared up at the ceiling. “That she is. Now, we need to find her.”
“On it. I’ll put the word out with my guys, and I’m not far from Creek Line now. I’ll start searching for any signs of her.”
The tight grip on my chest loosened a bit. Tuck was the best tracker in the county. If anyone could find Taylor, it would be Tuck. I just prayed she was in the Creek Line area and not somewhere else I hadn’t even thought of. “Thanks, man. I really appreciate it.”
“Of course. Keep me in the loop.”
“Will do.” I ended the call just as my landline rang. “Cole,” I answered.
“It’s dispatch. They’ve found the vehicle belonging to Taylor Lawson at the trailhead for Creek Line trail.”
My chest loosened even further, but my gut still churned. Anything could have happened to her. “Thanks. Call in search and rescue. Let them know that Tucker is searching the area on foot and that Jensen and I will be on horseback.”
“You got it, boss.”
I hung up and shot off a text to Tuck, letting him know that Taylor was in the area. Then I dialed Jensen. She picked up on the second ring. “Find her?”
“Not her, but we did find her car. Can you meet me at Creek Line with the horses?”
“I’m on my way.”
“See you soon.” I ended the call. I just hoped we got there in time.
26
Taylor
A quick look back could cost me everything. I knew if I went down, whoever was hot on my heels would be right on top of me. I tried frantically to right myself, wind-milling my arms, attempting to find purchase on anything. I caught only air.
The overcompensation sent me careening to the left. Shit, shit, shit. I landed with a thud, and then I was sliding—over the side of the fucking ravine, I realized. Downed branches and tree roots gouged at my body as I continued in a half slide, half roll. I did my best to shield my face with one arm and grapple to slow myself with the other.
What I assumed was a rock jabbed me in the tailbone, right before I was sent into what felt like an overgrown Brillo pad. I lay frozen. I strained to hear the sounds of anyone following me down the incline. I heard only the gurgling of the creek, and a bird call overhead. At least at the bottom of the valley, I had gained some distance from the psycho hot on my trail.
Ever so slowly, I pulled my hand away from my face. Dry, thorny branches scraped against my arm, and my skin burned like a million fire ants had bitten me all over. It took a few moments for my eyes to adjust to the brightness. Apparently, I’d lost my sunglasses on the way down. And my water. Shit.
Taking in my surroundings, I realized that I had landed in the middle of a patch of some sort of briar bush. I peered through the brambles at the ridgeline above. There was no one. I ran my gaze along the rim of the ravine as far as I could see. Nothing.
My breath came in quick pants. What should I do? Stay where I was, or get out of here as fast as humanly possible? The crazy had a gun. What if he were lying in wait for me to leave my cover so he could shoot me dead?
I forced myself to slow my breathing. I counted as I inhaled for three, then when I exhaled for three until my heart began to slow, as well. “Think, Taylor,” I said quietly to myself. “Use your brain to figure a way out of this.”
I took a moment to get the best look I could through the bush’s branches. Maybe I could army-crawl towards the creek and then let it carry me downstream? That way, at least I wouldn’t be a standing target. I shivered at the thought of how cold I would be once the sun went down. Maybe that wasn’t such a good idea.
The sound of a snapping branch had my spine going ramrod straight, and my heartbeat seeming to trip over itself. Tears of fear and frustration leaked from the corners of my eyes. This was it. I was going to die. I would’ve thought I’d almost welcome death, feel relieved that maybe, just maybe, I’d be reunited with my mom.
My breathing picked up its pace again as I realized that I really didn’t want my life to end, even if dying meant seeing my mom again. I wanted to keep learning how to play bridge with Arthur and Clint. Help Noah fall in love with reading. Have too many tequila shots with Jensen. Be subjected to another of Irma’s schemes. Hear Walker call me “Short-stack” with a smile in his voice.
I wanted more of this life I was building.