no one showed. Convinced he was still in control of the situation, he pointed the gun straight at Johnâs chest.
âIâm warning you,â Dieter said. âGet back. All I want is the girl.â
âNot in this lifetime,â John said, and made a lunge toward the door.
Dieter fired and ducked just as the door slammed into his belly, face and shins. He was so blinded by the blood and pain he didnât see his shot hit John in the shoulder,didnât see the ensuing stain of red that began to spread across the front of Johnâs shirt.
The shot spun John around, landing him flat on his back in the dirt.
From her chair in the library, Alicia saw it all. The shock of realizing Dieter was willing to kill to get to her was confirmation of how desperate her situation was. When she saw Dieter fire and John fall back into the dirt, she ran out of the house and down the driveway, screaming Dieterâs name, begging him to stop and praying the shot wasnât a mortal one.
Dieter staggered out from behind the door with the gun in his hand and his face streaming blood. His nose was broken. His lips had been crushed against his teeth so sharply that the insides felt like raw meat. There was a cut on his cheek and another on his chin, and he was cursing at the top of his voice, nearly blind with pain.
âYou sorry bastard! You broke my face! All you had to do was back off, but you didnât!â
He pulled the trigger again, sending a shot into Johnâs leg. The wound in Johnâs shoulder was already closing, and he was halfway to his feet when the next shot dropped him again. In the distance, he thought he could hear Alicia screaming. That meant she hadnât stayed put. It also meant he needed to gain control of the situation before Dieter grabbed her and took off.
He rolled over onto his belly, grabbed a handful of dirt and then gritted his teeth as he pushed himself upright. Before Dieter could register the fact that the man heâd put two bullets in was up, John threw the dirt in his face.
Dieter ducked, but not soon enough. Dirt hit him squarein the face, filling both eyes with painful grit and sand. He clawed at his face as John grabbed him, knocked the gun out of his hand with a hard chop to his wrist, then hit him in the chin with his fist. Dieter went down like a felled oak.
Once John had the man down and out, he gave in to the pain, leaning across the hood of the assailantâs car, bent double with the suffering.
That was how Alicia found him. The horror in her voice was evident as she arrived, out of breath and screaming.
âOh my God, oh my Godâ¦Youâre shot. He shot you. You need to sit down.â She started rifling through Dieterâs car, looking for his cell phone. She found it on the console and ran back to Johnâs side. âIâll call for an ambulance. Ohâ¦waitâ¦I donât know this address. What do I say?â
The pain in Johnâs leg had subsided to a dull throb. He pushed himself up from the car, took the phone from her hand and laid it on the hood, then grabbed her by the shoulders. âStop. Look at me. Iâm okay, see?â
âYouâre not okay. Youâre bleeding.â She yanked at his shirt, pulling it back so she could see the wound more clearly.
John gritted his teeth. Now it would come. He pulled away from her grasp, but she was still staring, her mouth agape.
Alicia could see where the bullet had gone in. Although the flesh looked red and swollen, the tear was almost shut. It didnât make sense. She kept looking from the wound to Johnâs face and back to the wound again. Then he moved, and as he did, he put himself directly between her and the sun. Within seconds, Aliciaâs view of him changed. All she could see was a dark silhouette, backlit by a halo of light. The skin on the back of herneck began to crawl as the thought went through her mind that John Nightwalker wasnât
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