Red on the River – Sunrise Lake Read Online Christine Feehan

Categories Genre: Contemporary, Romance, Suspense Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 158
Estimated words: 145803 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 729(@200wpm)___ 583(@250wpm)___ 486(@300wpm)
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She shifted position slightly and instantly splinters of rock showered down on her head as he fired at her. She didn’t have tons of ammunition and no clear shot at him, so she scooted all the way back and rested against the other side of the thick rock wall rising between them. There was blood on her arms and one cheek from the splinters of granite.

“Wallin’s going to be really angry with you, isn’t he?” she asked. She needed to give the other women as big a head start as possible. Hopefully when Shabina told them to go, they did exactly what she’d said. The moment she could, she would go after the women and retrieve the rest of the ammunition she had in her backpack.

“I’m a dead man,” he agreed, his tone amicable, as if they were friends discussing the weather. “My one hope is to kill all of you and hope he’s appeased.”

“I can’t wait for you to look in Raine’s backpack. It’s the larger of the two.” She matched his tone. Just as amicable. Friends talking on a hot afternoon with a body turning the river below them red. “She’s the one you shot, in case it matters to you. It might not now, but look in her pack and tell me if it matters when you see who she is and what you’re now in possession of.”

Vienna wiped the small beads of sweat from her face and concentrated on listening. There was no way he could move back up the trail without her hearing him, even though the river sounded like thunder, as if it were yelling to the world that she had killed a man.

She heard the rustle of what she presumed was Larsen searching Raine’s backpack. Then he erupted into a string of low curses. There was some satisfaction in knowing he wasn’t quite as happy with himself as he’d been a few minutes earlier.

“What is she? A damned government agent? If I touch any of these little locked cases, I have the feeling they might explode in my face.”

“Probably. Raine is like that. As for what she is, I don’t actually know. Only that they send helicopters for her, and the moment she was shot I sent her people the message she told me to give them if anything ever happened to her. They will be coming, Larsen. And they will hunt you to the ends of the earth. It won’t matter if you get me, or every single one of my friends. It won’t matter if you get my mother. It definitely won’t matter if Wallin thinks you’re the best security man he has, because they will hunt you and never stop until you’re dead.”

“Well, you’re just painting a rosy picture of my future.”

She smiled in spite of the fear gripping her. If he had gotten angry and gone ballistic, she wouldn’t be so afraid, but he was too calm in the situation. She feared that meant he knew what he was doing. He’d faced combat. He was good in the terrain. He knew and had weapons she didn’t. Wallin had sent him along with Axel to teach him how to survive.

“Sorry, but then you painted a similar picture of mine. I’d ask how bad your wounds are—after all, I’m a nurse—but I get the feeling you’re not so bad at putting on a field dressing.”

“It isn’t my first time,” he admitted.

She glanced at her watch. If she could just keep him there a little longer, it would give the women time to get Raine to the rendezvous point with the helicopter. Search and Rescue wouldn’t risk coming in with an active shooter, but Raine’s people would. And Sam’s people would. Nothing would stop Sam from coming after Stella. Nothing. And if Larsen managed to kill Stella, he would have another powerful enemy hunting him to the ends of the earth.

She thought about whether Zale would hunt Larsen if he managed to kill her. She considered the odds. Yeah. Larsen was going to kill her. At least the odds were high in his favor.

“Are you married, Larsen?”

“No. I tried it once. Didn’t have whatever it took to keep it going.”

Vienna gave that consideration. He sounded sincere enough. He also sounded a little farther away. Not a lot. Just a little.

“Have you ever really loved someone? A woman, I mean. Someone you wanted to keep.”

“If I wanted to keep a woman, I would keep her.”

There was that same firm decisiveness in his tone that he had used when telling her he was going to kill her. The voice was also a distance away. He was on the move.

She stretched her legs out slowly, moving her injured ankle around. It was swollen, confined in her hiking boot. She hoped that would give it enough stability to support her when she took off after the other women. She wanted to ensure she could cover them as best she could when they brought in the helicopter.


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