entrance. They had seen the cop car coming to my rescue and had panicked. It made sense now.
I started toward my saviors. Jed and his followers wouldn’t kill me now. Not in front of cops who had come to rescue me. I was almost to the edge of the woods, maybe thirty yards from the cop car, when another thought entered my head.
How had the cops known where I was?
For that matter, how had the cops known I was in trouble? And why, if they were here to rescue me, had the car driven up at such an unhurried pace? Why had Jed made that comment about their being “our friends”? As I slowed down, the relief now ebbing away, a few more questions entered my head. Why was Jed walking toward the squad car with a big smile and casual wave? Why were the two cops getting out of the car waving back just as casually? Why were they all shaking hands and exchanging backslaps like old buddies?
“Hey, Jed,” one called out.
Oh damn. It was Stocky. The other cop was Thin Man Jerry. I decided to stay where I was.
“Hey, fellas,” Jed said. “How are you guys?”
“Good, man, when did you get back?”
“A couple of days ago. What’s up?”
Stocky said, “You know a guy named Jake Fisher?”
Whoa. So maybe they were here to rescue me?
“No, don’t think so,” Jed said. The others were all outside now. More handshakes and backslaps. “Guys, you know a . . . what was the name again?”
“Jacob Fisher.”
They all shook their heads and muttered their lack of knowledge.
“There’s an APB out on him,” Stocky said. “College professor. Seems he killed a man.”
My blood went cold.
Thin Man Jerry added, “The dope confessed to it even.”
“He sounds dangerous,” Jed said, “but I don’t get what that has to do with us.”
“First off, we spotted him trying to get on your land a couple days back.”
“My land?”
“Yep. But that’s not why we’re here now.”
I ducked down in the brush, not sure what to do here.
“See, we got a GPS working a trace on a cell phone,” Stocky said.
“And,” Thin Man Jerry added, “the coordinates are leading us right up here.”
“I don’t understand.”
“Simple, Jed. We can track his iPhone. Not that hard nowadays. Hell, I got a tracker on my kid’s phone, for crying out loud. It tells us that our perp is here on your property at this very moment.”
“A dangerous killer?”
“Could be, yep. Why don’t you all wait inside now?” He looked back toward his partner. “Jerry?”
Jerry reached back into the car and pulled some sort of handheld device into view. He studied it for a few moments, hit the touch screen, and then declared, “He’s within fifty yards—in that direction.”
Thin Man Jerry pointed right to where I was hiding.
Several scenarios flew through my brain. One, the most obvious: Surrender. Throw my hands up, walk out of the woods with them held high, and shout, “I give up,” as loud as I can. Once I was in police custody I was, if nothing else, safe from Jed and his group.
I was seriously considering doing that—raising my arms, calling out, surrendering—when I saw Jed take out his gun.
Uh-oh.
Stocky said, “Jed, what are you doing?”
“It’s my gun. I own it legally. And we’re on my property, right?”
“Right, so?”
“So this murderer you’re after . . . ,” Jed began.
Now I was a murderer.
“He might be armed and dangerous. We aren’t letting you guys go after him without backup.”
“We don’t need backup, Jed. Put that away.”
“This is still my property, right?”
“It is.”
“So if it’s all the same to you, I’m staying right here.”
The obvious scenario suddenly didn’t seem so obvious. Jed was intent on killing me for two reasons. One, he thought that I had something to do with Todd’s murder. That was the reason they had grabbed me in the first place. But now, two, dead men tell no tales. If I surrendered, I could tell the cops what had happened tonight, how they had kidnapped me and fired shots at me. It might be my word against theirs, but there’d be the bullet at Cookie’s house matching his gun. There’d be the phone records of Cookie calling me. It might be a tough sell, but I bet Jed didn’t want to take the risk.
But if Jed shot me now—even if he fired as I tried to surrender—it could be viewed as either self-defense or, at worst, a jumpy trigger finger. He would shoot and kill me and say