From the high position of the lights, she guessed he was driving a truck. Should she pull over and let him pass? She couldn’t see much ahead. No signs to indicate an off -ramp.
She racked her brain.
God, she hated driving at night.
She opted to pull over at the first exit. It was pitch black outside. The highway lights did little to illuminate a road or wide shoulder where it would be safe to pull over. From what she could recall last time they travelled the highway, the next main exit was a ways down the road. They were in the middle of nowhere.
She drove another five minutes. The truck stayed on her bumper. It was unnerving to have someone so close behind her. What if she had to slam on the brakes?
The thought niggled at her. Being followed like this made her think of those horror movies in which the unsuspecting friends are harassed by a trucker, then tortured and killed.
Rebecca slowed the car to under the speed limit. Hopefully the guy in the truck would give up on following her. It wasn’t as if her little Hyundai was sheltering him from the onslaught of rain.
Yes, Mr. Truck Driver had now graduated from
“Are we there yet, Mom?”
“Not quite, Colton.”
“I wish it wasn’t raining.”
“Me too, honey.”
Up ahead a highway light illuminated a gravel road. It probably led to private property, but that didn’t matter. It was a perfect place to pull over, providing there wasn’t a chain across the road.
She blew out a pent-up breath.
She signaled right and reduced her speed. The truck slowed with her, and her heart skipped a beat. “Go around us.”
She pulled onto the gravel road, the tires kicking up water. The truck pulled in right behind her. She slapped the steering wheel and muffled a curse. Of all the roads to choose, she’d picked the one belonging to the owner of the truck. Really?
She attempted to pull over on the dirt road, but it was barely wide enough for one vehicle. She had no choice but to keep moving. Somewhere ahead there must be a place where she could turn around. She hoped the truck driver wouldn’t be too annoyed that she’d turned off on his land. Some people were very protective of their property.
There was a dull thud and the car lurched.
“Mom?” Colton cried out. “What was that?”
“It’s okay, honey. The road’s a bit rough.”
It wasn’t the road that had made the sedan lurch. The bastard truck driver had hit the back bumper of her car.
Rebecca’s pulse raced with fear. She thought about all the horror movies she’d watched growing up. The ones with the psychopathic truckers who hunted down innocent victims with their big rigs.
Checking the mirror, she watched in horror as the headlights from the truck behind her grew larger. He was taking another run at her. She pressed her foot to the gas pedal, weaving along the unpaved road until they were enclosed by bushes and trees. She had the high beams on her car to guide her along the rough road, but the rain made visibility almost nil.
She was lost. There were no signs. No houses. No streetlights.
“Mommy, why are you driving so fast?” Ella asked.
“I want to get to the hotel,” she said in a faux cheerful voice.
God, how she wanted to get to a hotel. Or a gas station. Anywhere there were people. And a phone.
She thought about her cell phone. It was in her purse, which had landed on the floor of the passenger’s seat when she’d veered around the last wild corner.
“Mom, there’s someone behind us,” Colton said in a nervous voice.
“I know.”
“How come he’s so close?”
“He wants to pass us, but there’s no room.”
The truck loomed closer. With the trees and brush around them keeping away much of the rain, she could make out a row of lights on the top of the truck, the kind hunters used. With these and the truck’s headlights on high, the light converged into one eye-piercing beam.
She tilted the rearview mirror so the light wouldn’t be in her eyes.
The truck hit them again, harder this time.
In the back seat Colton let out a yelp. “Mom?”
“Sit back, honey. I’ll find a place to turn around.”
Branches whipped at the side of the car as she steered it deeper into the woods. She wanted to cry. Scream. Turn around and go home. But those weren’t options. All she could do was follow the road to God knows where and pray that there’d be help at the end.
What did the trucker want with them?
She glanced in the rearview mirror. Ella was awake now, playing with her Barbies, oblivious to the danger that was hot on their trail. Colton wore a fearful expression.
“It’s okay, honey. We’re―”