“Yeah. Back by Vine.”
“Good. Let’s get this done. Take the next left, and go straight past the old section of warehouses where we left the car.”
My heart pulverizes against my chest, its vicious beat flooding my ears. Curran and I are supposed to have lunch with his family tomorrow. We’re going to build a house, get married, have our first baby. How can my life be over, when it’s just begun?
“Please,” I beg, my terror splintering my voice. “I’m twelve weeks pregnant. Please don’t hurt me.”
“I said, shut up!”
My pleas earn me another jab to the head. But it’s the clicking sound that freezes me down to my bones.
“Oh, fuck,” the driver says. “Our tail’s back.”
The seat squeaks behind me and pressure eases from the base of my skull. “He alone?”
“Looks like it,” the driver answers.
“You sure?”
“Yes, asshole. There’s only one car.”
“Turn here,” the man behind me says. “Damnit, right here. We have to finish this shit now.”
“What about the tail?”
“We gotta kill him, too.”
No…please, no.
The driver pulls to the curb along a quiet street lined with crumbling buildings, stopping beneath an unlit light. Ahead of us in the cross street, cars speed along, but they’re too far and driving too fast to notice us. This is a place these men are familiar with. They’ve taken people here before.
I want to scream, run, and lash out. I don’t want anyone telling Curran I’m dead—that his baby and I are gone. I don’t want him to suffer—not after what he’s been through. But the hard metal digging into my skull reminds me that I may not be able to spare him from this.
The lights from the car behind us shine in the rearview mirror, illuminating the menacing stare of the driver and expanding as the car closes in. My hand inches toward the handle. It’s Lu—I’m sure of it. I have to warn her.
A gun rams into my ribs, keeping me in place and paralyzing me with fear.
“Don’t move—stay quiet or die quicker,” the driver mutters, pressing the barrel harder.
Terror stabs my racing heart like a dagger. I can’t breathe. I don’t want to die. Jesus Christ, I don’t want to die!
The familiar stomps of heavy boots close in before Lu appears at my passenger-side window, smiling. “Wassup, girlie? Boyfriend taking you for a joyride?”
I don’t see her raise her gun. I only see Curran, his first shot taking out the front window, and the driver.
“Get down!” he yells.
I dive forward as sprays of bullets fire from all directions. Someone grunts, falling hard as the rear side doors fly open. More shots, more glass breaking, and above it all, Lu’s pained voice, screaming our location, barely audible over the firing weapons and racing footsteps: “Officer down. Repeat, officer down.”
“No!” I hit the seatbelt release and throw the door open. Lu lies on her back against the dirty walkway, blood seeping from her shoulder.
I scramble to her on my knees. “Get back in the car, and stay down!” she hollers.
“Where’s Curran?”
Her face hardens. “He went after the other two.”
Somewhere in the distant shadows, three consecutive shots fire, followed by an agonizing scream. The blood drains from my face. I’m certain Curran’s been shot. Two against one. The odds aren’t in his favor no matter how good he is.
The blaring sirens and flashing lights tell me help is near, but it doesn’t come fast enough. Lu’s widening eyes and her lifting gun send a warning a second before I’m yanked from the ground by my hair. “Try it and she dies, bitch,” a deep voice booms in my ear.
The hot barrel of a gun digs into my scalp, singeing my skin.
Lu keeps her weapon trained forward as she forces herself to her feet, joining the other men and women in blue who are suddenly there, announcing their presence.
“Drop your weapon.”
“Hands on your head!”