Sirens sounded in the distance.
âLillie, the police are coming. You donât want them to find you here.â
Reason tangled through her fear.
âIâm going to let you go. Leave the room. Take the back road. Meet me at the truck stop one exit north on the highway.â His hand eased up ever so slightly. âDo you understand?â
She nodded.
He drew away from her and stood.
Scampering to her feet, Lillie raced for the door and threw it open. Light filtered into the darkness. She turned, seeing the special agent bend down and pick up something from the rug.
Dawson Timmons was a fool to think she would meet him anywhere except at the military police headquarters on post.
âYou dropped something, Lillie.â The key dangled from his hand.
The sirens screamed in the distance. Not much time to get away.
DEBBY GIUSTI
is a medical technologist who loves working with test tubes and petri dishes almost as much as she loves to write. Growing up as an army brat, Debby met and married her husbandâthen a captain in the armyâat Fort Knox, Kentucky. Together they traveled the world, raised three wonderful army brats of their own and have now settled in Atlanta, Georgia, where Debby spins tales of suspense that touch the heart and soul. Contact Debby through her website, www.debbygiusti.com, email [email protected], or write c/o Love Inspired Suspense, 233 Broadway, Suite 1001, New York, NY 10279.
This story is dedicated to
our brave men and women in uniform. May the Lord protect them from harm.
To my wonderful husband and beautiful family.
Thank you for your love and support.
To the Seekers who make the journey so much fun.
To my critique partner Anna Adams.
To Emily Rodmell, my editor,
and Deidre Knight, my agent. Thank you!
ONE
Lillie Beaumont gasped for air and fought her way through the dream that came too often. Her heart pounded a warning as she blinked open her eyes, allowing the dark outline of her bedroom to sweep into focus. She lifted her head off the pillow and anticipated the distant thunder before the sound reached her ears.
Low. Rumbling. Menacing, like cannon fire at nearby Fort Rickman, Georgia.
Weeding her fingers through the sheets, she grasped for anything that would calm her spinning stomach and racing pulse.
Another rumble, this time closer.
Then another and another in rapid succession, each encroaching on her space, her air, her life.
The thunder escalated, its cadence steady like the giant footfalls of an evil predator, stalking an unsuspecting prey. Only Lillie wasnât oblivious to its approach. She knew the storm, felt it in her inner being, breathed it into her soul where she battled the terror and torment of a thousand deaths.
Another volley. Her airway constricted. She touched her throat, yearning to be free of the stranglehold of fear that wrapped around her neck.
Donât cower. Face your phobia. The words of reason echoed in her head.
âSomething happened before she came to us,â her foster parents had told concerned friends after taking Lillie into their home when she was a child. âOur little girl is terrified of storms.â
She wanted to laugh at the understatement. Instead, tears trickled from the corners of her eyes.
The musky scent of wet earth and damp air seeped through the partially open window and filled her nostrils, like the cloying odor of that night so long ago. Eyes wide, she stared into the darkness, anticipating the next bright burst of lightning.
A blast of thunder rocked her world, hurling her from the bed. She ran, as she always did, her footfalls echoing on the hardwood floor. No matter how much she longed to ignore the gathering storm, she had no control over the memories that made her relive the terror of that night so long ago.
In her mindâs eye, she was once again four years old.
âMama,â young Lillie had cried, longing to be swooped into her motherâs outstretched arms.
Instead, he had opened the bedroom door.