“Got it.” The boy’s teeth were chattering.
Marcus reached for his cell phone on the dash. “Here’s my phone. Call 911 and ask for Leo. Tell him you and Ella are safe, but we need an ambulance.”
Colton nodded.
Marcus ruffled the boy’s wet hair. “I’m going back for your mom now.”
Tears flowed down the boy’s cheeks. “She said you would save us.”
As he ran toward the river, Marcus hoped to God he wasn’t too late.
Chapter Twenty-Four
Rebecca felt an unusual pressure on her face. Fighting waves of dizziness, she opened her eyes and blinked twice. Her surroundings were hazy.
She reached up to wipe her eyes, but her hand floated in slow motion, then connected with something hard. Her fingers grazed the object, tracing its outline.
A mask.
That’s when her memories came rushing back.
She blew out a breath and twisted in her seat. The back of the car was empty. Fear slithered up her throat, and her heart thudded in her chest. She tamped down her horror when she noticed the back car door was open.
The interior light dimmed and was extinguished. Blackness swallowed her.
She felt the cold tank beside her. Marcus had jammed it between the seats. She ran her fingers over the straps and discovered something long and sleek attached to it. A flashlight.
Carefully, she pulled it toward her and turned it on. She groaned with relief. That transitory gloom of darkness had made her feel she’d been buried alive.
All she could do was listen to the sound of her breathing, as erratic as it was.
She’d never been so cold in all her life—not even the time Wesley had taken her skiing in Whistler, BC, and she’d landed in a snow bank at the bottom of the bunny hill. She’d told him she couldn’t ski, but he’d made it sound so damned easy. She recalled how they’d gone back to the resort afterward and she’d soaked in the hot tub for over an hour to get the chill out of her bones.
She coughed and cried out in misery. Where was Marcus?
She aimed the flashlight out the broken window. Nothing moved.
It was getting harder to breathe.
She shone the light on the tank. The meter showed a nearly full tank. So then why was it so hard to breathe? Was she having a panic attack?
Something caught her eye. A sparkle in the water.
Marcus was coming for her.
She let out a wheezy cough and tried to catch her breath. A viselike undulation wove around her chest and ribs, squeezing her as though she’d been gripped by a monstrous boa constrictor. It wrung each breath from her body and left her gasping for air and shuddering with nausea.
She dropped the flashlight.
Whipping her head around, she searched for Marcus. His light beamed closer. He was almost there. Another minute maybe. She could hold on that long. She had to.
Seconds ticked by with a merciless slowness.
Then she saw him.
Marcus swam to the window and motioned with his flashlight and a small tool toward her seat belt. She nodded and pointed to her mask, hoping he’d decipher that she was having trouble breathing. The look he gave her made her realize he knew exactly the danger she was in.
He tugged on the car door. Once it was open, he sliced through the belt and eased it from her body. He jiggled the side lever for the seat, but nothing moved. Then he reached under her legs for the lever that would push her seat back.
She closed her eyes and tried not to think about the pain. She focused on Colton and Ella instead. They were safe. Maybe in the ambulance. They’d be warmed up and cared for, and that’s all that mattered.
She felt a small
He wrestled the tank from between the seats. Sliding his arm through the strap, he anchored her tank next to his. Then he reached for her. She put her arms around his neck, clinging to him and crying as he pulled her from the car. With one arm around her waist, he dragged her through the murky water.
When they reached the surface, her eyes were drawn to multiple beams of bright light coming from the shore. Headlights. An ambulance and two police cars, lights flashing on all three, were parked next to a car. And all headlights pointed toward the river.
Treading water, Marcus removed his mask, then hers.
“The ambulance is here,” he said, his voice filled with relief.