Playing With Fire

“Sir, I’m going to have to ask you to step out of the ambulance for a moment,” the paramedic said, addressing Cowboy. “I need to assess her without her trying to talk any more.”


I tried to sit up, but Cowboy stopped me. “Whoa, tiger. You’re staying firmly planted in this ambulance until you get checked out at the hospital.” I shook my head back and forth and started coughing violently. “It’s okay, darlin’. Let him do his job. I’ll be outside and won’t leave your sight. You’re safe.” Cowboy brushed my cheek with his hand, then kissed me on my forehead.

As he stepped out of the ambulance, there were two sheriff deputies standing just outside the ambulance doors, as if they were guarding us. Several other deputies combed the surrounding area searching for clues, as two paramedics wheeled Dan toward a second ambulance parked next to us. He was grumbling under his breath about kicking the shit out of the “stinkin’ idiot” who tried to burn him alive.

Stinkin’? Since when did Dan refrain from using stronger words than that?

Firefighters hosed down the blaze, even though the entire barn had already caved in. I caught a glimpse of Mandy running past the ambulance in full bunker gear. I wouldn’t have known it was her if she hadn’t been shoving her helmet on her head at the time I’d spotted her.

My gaze shifted as someone stepped into my line of sight. It was the mustache-wielding sheriff who’d pulled his gun out when he arrived. “Ma’am,” the man said, tipping his hat to me. “I’m Sheriff Hunter Wells with the Liberty County Sheriff’s Office. Would it be okay if I asked you a few questions?”

I nodded, but Cowboy shook his head. “Anna’s been through enough tonight. Why don’t you go question Stuart Nelson instead?”

“Mr. Nelson answered all of our questions already,” Sheriff Wells said, his eyes zeroing in on me. “We released him ten minutes ago.”

I gasped and shot straight up on the gurney, as if someone had erected a metal spike in my back. “What? You can’t! H-he’s going to—” I coughed so hard, sputtering to get the words out, that my head hurt.

Cowboy climbed into the ambulance, took my hand and squeezed it. “Damn it. Anna, you need to settle down.”

“No, I—” I started coughing again.

His jaw tightened and he glared at the sheriff. “Want to explain why the hell you let the ex-convict go?”

“Sorry, Cowboy, but it looks like Stuart Nelson’s not our guy. We don’t have any evidence to hold him. Not only did he pull Miss Weber to safety by her own admittance, but he also was the one who made the 911 call. I had dispatch compare his cell phone number to the person who called in and it was the same…as he claimed it would be.”

“Doesn’t mean he didn’t kidnap Anna.”

Sheriff Wells shrugged. “Not sure what he’d gain by calling the cops on himself. Doesn’t seem like something anyone with half a brain would do. Stuart Nelson doesn’t seem to be the likely culprit here. He did, however, give us a lead to follow.”

“What lead?” Cowboy asked.

“Miss Weber, do you own a blue Chevy Cavalier?”

I nodded slowly, unsure as to where Sheriff Wells was going with his question.

“Your fath—I mean, Mr. Nelson—said he arrived at your house just as a blue Cavalier pulled away and followed it out here. Since it was a dead end, he pulled over up the road a little ways and waited to see what you were doing.”

“But I didn’t—”

The sheriff raised his hand to stop me from continuing. “It’s okay, we know that much already.”

Cowboy glared at him. “Stuart Nelson is lying. Anna’s car was still in her driveway when I got back from the fire call. Her vehicle wasn’t stolen.”

“He’s not saying it was stolen. More like ‘temporarily borrowed.’”

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