Hide away, p.1

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Hide Away


  Hide Away

  Sean Monaghan

  Copyright © 2022 Sean Monaghan

  All rights reserved.

  Published by Triple V Publishing

  * * *

  Cover illustration

  © Andreiuc88| Dreamstime

  * * *

  Discover other titles by this author at:

  www.seanmonaghan.com

  * * *

  This is a work of fiction. All characters, places and incidents described in this publication are used fictitiously, or are entirely fictional.

  * * *

  No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, except for fair use by reviewers or with written permission from the publisher. www.triplevpublishing.com

  Created with Vellum

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Chapter 64

  Chapter 65

  Chapter 66

  Chapter 67

  Chapter 68

  Chapter 69

  Chapter 70

  Chapter 71

  Chapter 72

  Chapter 73

  Chapter 74

  Chapter 75

  Chapter 76

  Chapter 77

  Chapter 78

  Chapter 79

  Chapter 80

  Chapter 81

  Chapter 82

  Chapter 83

  Thank You

  About the Author

  Acknowledgments

  Also by Sean Monaghan

  Scorpion Bait

  Hide Away

  Chapter One

  A crystalline morning brought cold sweet rain across the old mountain cabin. Joe Bridger shivered in the narrow hide thirty meters away.

  The cabin looked like it was a hundred years old. Weathered, gray-brown timbers. Plants finding their homes in the cracks on the roof. Window frames out of alignment. Could be none of them opened anymore.

  Still, weather like this, who’d want to open them?

  There were tall pines all around, and they offered some shelter for the cabin’s clearing. The pines hissed in the rain, the icy old snow they’d accumulated beginning to melt and join the influx of water.

  Night was setting.

  Joe consulted his phone. He had it set to IR so that it didn’t shine. His goggles allowed him to view the data. All just simple graphics and text.

  According to the phone, the weather front was going to chew across the state over the next few hours. The rain would only get heavier, which would make his job both easier and harder. Really, all he had to do was wait. See what happened with the cabin.

  There were icicles on the eaves, some more than a foot long. Thick things that had grown through the melt-freeze of the place. It was over eight hundred meters in altitude here. Miles from the nearest real road, and an hour’s hike up the rough 4WD track that had probably been graded once in the last thirty years.

  Bright light issued from the cabin’s left window. The living room. Joe had read through all the data and knew the cabin’s layout. Three downstairs rooms—a poky bedroom, a bathroom and an open area with kitchen, dining and living room—and a loft over the living area, reached via ladder. Maybe a squat man could stand in the middle of the loft, but the ceiling slope made the section little more than a sleeping area.

  Another bright light came from the tip of the cabin’s chimney. Heat from the fire shining through Joe’s IR goggles.

  He was envious of that heat. Lying in wait in this climate was chilling. Even with good thermal gear and the protection of the plastic tarp hide, and the thick foam ground pad, that cold still found paths through to his bones.

  Frustrating, too. She should have been back by now. That was what the data said.

  Felicity Farrell. Ex-CIA. Gone off-grid, living off the land out here in northern Montana. According to the satellite and drone information, she made regular rounds. Checked her traps, gathered some wood, used the outhouse.

  She should have been back by now. He just needed for her to step out onto the cabin’s narrow veranda.

  From the nearby trees came the cries of a bird. Settling for the night perhaps, or maybe something small now the victim of an owl or other predator. About to be dinner.

  There were mountain lions in these parts, and wolves too. Some of the wilds out here really were the wilds.

  What was the appeal for her out here? Someone who’d held a high level position, who’d headed up numerous investigations, who’d lived for years outside of the U.S. borders. She could have had anything. Executive positions with big companies. Could have started her own boutique investigative firm.

  Joe had read her dossier. The woman was smart and slick.

  There had to be a big gap in those details somewhere. Something in her background that had sent her into hiding like this.

  His bosses would know. Not his concern really. His job was just to get in and get it done and get out. Once it was over, it didn’t matter why, just that she was out of the picture.

  Joe shifted his rifle. An older Remington 700. It was practically his hobby to maintain the thing, so it stayed in good working order.

  He had to make sure that he kept his fingers warm and his heartrate steady. It was an easy shot, really, over a short distance, but complacency could lead to errors. He’d nibbled on a tasty blueberry protein bar early, but was still hungry, which helped him to keep his edge.

  A quiet sound from behind. Some critter scampering along, looking for something to eat before this rain got too heavy and cold.

  Then, something against his leg. He started to turn but felt something else pressed into his back. Hard.

  “That’s a Glock 17,” a female voice said. “In case you were wondering. Actually a 17M, very new and in very good working order. No, don’t move. Keep facing ahead. That’s good.”

  Joe cursed. He tensed. Listened for the opportunity.

  “I know who you are, Joe,” she said. “I know that right now you’re figuring how to spin over and relieve me of my weapon. But you’re cold. Your reactions will be slower. And you know that even if you’re real fast, there’s still a better than even chance I’ll get a shot off. It might not go through your spine, but it will tear out a fair chunk of your abdomen.”

  Joe lay where he was. He edged his hand along the rifle.

  “You’re an awful long way from help, Joe,” she said. “It’s late. Your chances are about zero of surviving, even a minor wound. In that area of your body. Maybe if you got shot in your arm or shoulder. But not your abdomen.”

  He should have called Suzy, which seemed a strange thing to run through his head. Should have called her just for a talk. Just to see how she was doing. See if maybe she wanted to go up to the lake in the weekend.

  That would have been nice. Maybe she could have come over for beers and a movie last night. Instead he’d put it off and now he’d never get to talk to her.

  “You know what, Joe?” Felicity said. “I’m actually going to let you live, I think. You’ll have to leave your gear behind. The rifle. And your boots. Then you can march on back to your Jeep at the trailhead. You might want to sleep in it and drive on back come morning. You’ll have to take it slow. I noticed that the vehicle has four slashed tires, which is a pity.”

  Joe swore.

  “I agree,” she said. “Now, I’m letting you live for just one reason. I need you to go talk to the people who hired you. I need for you to tell them that they don’t get to come back. Ever. Got it?”

  Joe stayed silent.

  Felicity sighed, audible even over the growing rain.

  “You’re very competent, Joe Bridger,” she said. “Well trained, though somewhat amoral, which is a pity.”

  “How do you know my name?” he said. “You’re so isolated.”

  “Isolated but not disconnected,” she said. “I keep up. I keep track. It looks like it’s just as well.



  “You have outside connections.” Joe waited. The longer he waited the better his chance. She didn’t want to kill him. Didn’t have that instinct in her. She wasn’t built like him.

  It didn’t matter that she’d found him here. It mattered what happened next.

  “Of course I do,” she said. “I like the solitude, but I’m no fool.”

  “We’ll find them,” he said. “We’ll track them down.”

  “Who’s we?”

  Joe stayed silent.

  “I see,” she said after a moment.

  Something touched his head. Her hand removed his goggles. A moment later came a quiet smack from the thin icy layer of snow between his hide and the cabin. She’d thrown them out.

  “I’ll never find my way back without those,” he said.

  She didn’t reply. The Glock moved from his back. Joe whipped around, but she was gone. No sign of her at all.

  Did she have IR glasses too? It wasn’t pitch black out, but it was getting pretty near dark.

  She’d vanished.

  Joe grabbed for his rifle.

  Gone.

  From off to his left came a call. “Take off your boots. Throw them after the goggles.”

  “I’m not walking barefoot in the dark down a mountain. In this weather.”

  “That is essentially the alternative. Stay here, but dead, or walk back down. Throw your phone too. And your belt.”

  She was serious. He was going to have walk back to the Jeep in bare feet, holding up his pants by hand.

  Joe sat. He reached for his buckle, slid his hand to the pistol he always carried. It was a little Walther P99. Convenient and reliable.

  “I would keep my hand away from that if I were you,” she called.

  Joe whipped the pistol out. Aimed for where her voice had come from.

  He never got a chance to fire. With the crack of shot, a round from his own rifle went through the fabric of his camo jacket. At his right shoulder. Grazing the skin.

  It stung. He knew the feeling. He’d been grazed before. Afghanistan, before he’d come to his senses and found much better money.

  Except now he’d been shot with his own gun. Was there greater ignominy than that?

  “Put down the pistol,” she said. “Stand up. Take off your boots and your trousers. Start walking back to your Jeep. Tell them to leave me alone.”

  There was no question that she knew how to use the rifle. No question that the next shot would go through his heart.

  Joe stood. He untied his boots and loosened the laces. He stepped out onto the cold ground. Ice crunched around his stocking feet. He took off the belt and dropped it by the boots. Slid off his trousers.

  At least he had more gear in the jeep. A change of clothes.

  Assuming he could find the Jeep.

  “Start walking,” she said. “Never come back. Got it? Not you. Not anyone.”

  “I’ve got it.” Despite the growing dark, he still had a kind of feel for the lay of the land. He would find his way. He might be cold and wet and thoroughly miserable by the time he got to the jeep, but he would get there.

  But what she was saying about never coming back? Nope. He would definitely be back. It might have just been a job, but no one tried to humiliate Joe Bridger and got away with it.

  No one.

  Chapter Two

  Scott Wright sat in a sparkling bright Route 66 themed diner in Hyde Corner, a small town outside of Great Falls, Montana. Kind of town you could walk side to side in five minutes and leave behind.

  There were checkered tiles on the walls, and framed pictures of big old Buicks and Oldsmobiles. Models of historic petrol bowsers and the Michelin Man stood on shelves, among gold disks awarded to the likes of Little Richard and Bill Haley.

  The booth tables were all Formica with aluminum trim and the bench seats were upholstered with red vinyl. The waitresses, however, just wore regular everyday clothes—jeans and tee shirts—which kind of took away a little of the nostalgia.

  Wright sat at the counter, on a stool, a plate of the diner’s special big breakfast half eaten in front of him, next to a just-refilled white ceramic coffee cup.

  He picked at the meal, though it was tasty and good. He popped another couple of mushrooms in his mouth and chewed, considering his next move.

  He liked it up this way, especially near the start of winter. Perhaps it would be worth taking a side trip into Canada for a week or two. A year or so back he’d spent a good part of the summer outside of Calgary, variously doing odd jobs on ski field maintenance and trying to sample something from every restaurant in town.

  The diner had about ten booth tables, a couple of free-standing ones on the tiled floor, and a row of stools at the counter. There were only a few other diners. Truckers, mostly. Fueling up before the long haul through North Dakota.

  Perhaps he could just hitch a lift with one of them. See how things were looking in Bismarck and Thomas Jefferson National Park. Might be nice to go there and see the buffalo.

  The diner was set back from the busy road, with some semis parked off to the side. Big windows made for a good view, though Wright was happy enough to face the back wall. Cars pulled into and out of the gas station next door, some of them loud.

  Wright sipped from his coffee and picked some more at the meal. It wasn’t like him to feel at a loose end. Having no actual abode, and no employment, didn’t mean that he didn’t know what to do with himself. Mostly he had a plan.

  The waitress came by. She was in her mid-thirties. She’d already told him she had a couple of kids, that their father had vanished but that her sister in Missoula came by to help a whole lot. One of those people with the natural exuberance to treat customers as a friend. She probably made truckloads of money in tips.

  “Hey, hon’,” she said. “Doing okay with your breakfast there? Somethin’ wrong?”

  “It’s good,” he said. “Just not that hungry right now.”

  “Things on your mind, huh?”

  “You could say that.”

  “Marriage problems?”

  Wright smiled.

  “It’s all right, hon’, you can tell me.” She stared right into him with her bright blue eyes. As if she was trying see her way into his soul.

  The door chimed and a young couple came in, both laughing. They were both in jeans and light jackets. They looked around and headed for a table.

  “I’ve never been married,” Wright said.

  “Ah, you just never met the right one,” the waitress said. “She’ll come along. Or he.”

  “Sure,” Wright said. “I just don’t think I’m the right kind of person for that. Itchy feet, never much good at settling down.”

  “Men!” she said, with a half-squeal. A couple of the truckers looked over, half-interested.

  “You’re all like that,” the waitress said. “Don’t know if you’re ready to settle down. Then you are, but it turns out you aren’t and you go running off with the first piece of tail to flash her cleavage your way. Ain’t it the truth?”

  “I suppose it could be,” he said, taking another sip of the coffee.

 
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