Breathe

Bubba rolled his truck off to the side but before he did that and Chace followed, Chace saw it.

Two cars in the ditch. By their positions, one had forced the other off the road.

He stopped, put his SUV in park and cut the ignition.

Deck was already out, Deke and Bubba out in front of him.

Chace jogged beyond Bubba’s truck, rounded it and came to a rocking halt as a figure formed from the shadows.

Samuel Sterling. Self-made, African American multi-millionaire. Friend of Ty. Good man.

But not a local unless Aspen was considered local.

Fucking hell.

“What the fuck?” he asked, Sterling stopped four feet away and put his hands up.

“Ty knew I was in the area. He received some information. He gave me a call.”

He wasn’t in the area. The minute Ty heard Faye was in danger, he decided all hands on deck, he’d made a call and Sterling moved out.

There were unmistakable noises in the distance and Chace looked beyond him into the dark, seeing nothing.

“It’s my understanding you’re an officer of the law,” Sterling noted and Chace’s eyes cut to him.

“You got someone out there?” he asked.

“I recommend you allow me and my colleague to handle this,” Sterling returned.

“You got someone out there?” Chace repeated.

“We acquire the information you need,” Sterling said low, “and I assure you, we will acquire the information you need, you find your woman, she’ll need you clean and free.”

Chace moved toward him, starting, “I will not stand here –”

Sterling put a hand in his chest. Chace stopped, dropped his eyes to the hand in his chest then sliced them to Sterling’s face.

“For your woman, you will,” he whispered.

Fuck.

Fuck.

He would. He’d already swung his and Deck’s ass out there tonight.

He had to let this be.

Fuck.

Sterling looked in his eyes. Then he dropped his hand, turned and disappeared into the darkness.

Deck, Bubba and Deke closed ranks.

The noises came from the distance.

Chace’s hands balled into fists.

Deck looked at his watch then shouted, “As of now you got one hour and fifty-three minutes and we’re forty-five outta Carnal! Get the lead out!”

He’d memorized the time of the text too.

Chace’s phone rang. He engaged it and put it to his ear.

“Keaton.”

“Chace, Wood.” He heard. “Dewey got some names. Coupla guys who do dirty work for members of this Elite. Ty and Twyla are with me, we’re on one. Gave the info of the other to Tate who’s connecting with Max and they’re on the other. Ty’s texting you names and specifics now. You on the lead Krys and the gang got?”

“Sterling is,” Chace said into the phone.

“Good. I’ll tell Ty that connection worked. We’ll keep in touch.”

Then he was gone.

“Brief,” Deck grunted when Chace beeped his phone.

Chace gave the short brief.

Then the men stood in the night and listened to the remote sounds.

Chace looked to his watch.

One hour forty-eight minutes.

“Fuck,” he whispered, every inch of his body buzzing, everything that was him urging him to sprint into the distance and take care of business and he was using everything he had to stand where he was.

“Keep it together, brother,” Deck whispered back.

“Fuck,” Chace repeated.

“Ice, Chace,” Deck muttered.

Chace’s phone rang and he took the call.

“Keaton.”

“Chace Keaton?” a woman asked in his ear and his body jolted at the unexpected and unknown voice.

“Yes.”

“Right, this is Ally Nightingale. You know me as Serenity.”

Instantly, Chace turned on his boot and started jogging to his truck.

“Chace, what the fuck?” Deck called.

“Talk,” Chace growled into the phone.

“She’s buried in your backyard.”

Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ.

His backyard. His fucking backyard.

The woman kept talking. “She’s beyond your fence. Mid-line, seventy-five yards out. The ground will be disturbed. I got the stuff they were looking for and I handed it over to their contact two minutes ago. They gave me the details. I’m an hour out. I hope you’re closer.”

Chace angled into his truck already aiming the keys to the ignition.

“I’m forty-five minutes out,” he told her deciding he was actually thirty.

“Righteous,” she whispered. “She’ll have an hour.”

Deck angled in beside him as Chace threw the SUV in reverse, his door still open, Bubba and Deke jumping into the truck in front of him.

“See you there,” she told him.

“See you there,” Chace replied then threw his phone on the console without disconnecting.

When he shifted to drive, the forward motion of the truck slammed his door. Once he’d executed the turn, his cell careening, Deck’s hand darting out to tag it, he put the pedal to the floor.

“She’s in my backyard,” he told Deck.

Deck’s phone started beeping. He was making the calls.

Chace drove.

*

Faye

I didn’t know how much time I had.

And I didn’t want to lose my shot.

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