To her horror she saw the killer’s hand snake through the bars even further, her index finger catching the ring!
No! Olivia thought, her lungs protesting, her abdomen still cramping. No!
She surfaced at the same moment the killer did and thrust her arms through the rails, her fingers tangling in the woman’s hair and pulling her under.
Her assailant struggled, wrenching back, whipping her head around.
Olivia hung on. If she was going to drown, by God, this woman was going to drown, too! Struggling, fighting, splashing, they fought. Twisting, turning. Olivia’s lungs felt as if they would burst. Oh Lord, help me…
Again she thought she heard something.
But not the boat keening. No…it was different. Shouts?
Footsteps?
Could someone be on the boat? Oh, God, please!
The lights flickered again.
She took in another huge gulp of air mixed with salt water.
Coughing, sputtering, hanging on for dear life, she dragged the killer’s head closer to the bars and swung hard with the camera, connecting with the woman’s skull. Thud! A sickening crunch.
Blood stained the water.
More shouts from above!
“Help,” she screamed. “Help! Down here!”
Corrine grabbed her by the neck and dragged her down. Olivia, gasping, took in air and water as together they sank below the surface.
No! No! No!
Olivia thrashed wildly.
Corrine’s grip tightened. Their eyes met. Corrine was smiling beneath the water, her dark hair and a spreading plume of blood fanning around her, her eyes bright and psychotic. I’ve got you, she said without words. You and your baby are going to die right now!
Olivia’s lungs were on fire.
The world was swirling, swimming. She tried to pry Corrine’s death grip from her throat.
She couldn’t hold on. She needed air!
Feebly, Olivia struck again with the camera, connecting with Corrine’s forehead.
Then the lights went out.
Were those footsteps? Frantic voices? The sound of angels calling?
In the darkness she felt the camera slip from her fingers…felt Corrine’s hands on her throat…felt herself drifting away in the cold and the blackness…
Her abdomen ached and she thought of the baby and of Rick Bentz. I love you, she thought and saw the light, the round white light as if it were in a tunnel.
We’re dying, she thought, floating upward. My baby and I…we’re dying.
The lights went out just as Bentz and two rescuers from the Coast Guard entered the hold. He caught a glimpse of the two women struggling, separated by the horrible cage, Olivia trapped inside, Corrine on the outside. Blood diffusing in the salty water.
“No!” His voice ricocheted through the dark, cavernous hold as he raced down the stairs, his feet splashing in water covering the lower rungs.
“Hey, wait up, man,” one of the divers said, flipping on a flashlight that gave the interior of the listing bolt a weird, macabre look.
Bentz sprang, diving into the water, thrusting himself toward the cage, guided by the eerie light. He was vaguely aware of the others behind him, rescue workers with flashlights and crow bars and floatation devices.
A horrid gash cut across Corrine’s forehead, still oozing blood as she looked up at him. “Bentz,” she said with a ghastly smile. “You son of a bitch. This is all your fault…she’s going to die, her and her baby, because of you.”
“No way,” he growled and pulled her away, flinging her toward one of the divers. “Arrest her!”
“No! You can’t!” Corrine was sputtering, blood coming up with her spittle.
Bentz ignored her, reaching for Olivia, who was drifting away from him, so blue and cold…He pulled Corrine away, then reached for Olivia through the bars. “Livvie!” he cried, holding her face above water. “Olivia!”
The boat let out a long groan, like a whale in death throes. “Let’s move it!” One of the rescue workers switched on a high-intensity under water light, illuminating the hold, showing Olivia floating inside her cage, her hair a golden mane on the waters’ surface.
“We’ve got her, sir!” one of the divers said as he found the keys and unlocked the cage. The other diver had dealt with Corrine, dragging her up the stairs, bracing himself against the wall as the boat sank deeper, shuddering. “Let her go…we’ll take care of it.”
“No!”
“Sir, please!” the order was sharp but Bentz ignored it. Olivia was his wife. She was barely breathing, but alive. He carried her up the stairs and she coughed.
“Olivia?”
She coughed again, a deep, racking cough, and he held her tight while she spewed salt water all over him as the boat shuddered, a horrid cracking sound ripping through it.
“Let’s get out of here now!” The divers pushed them forward, across the steep deck.
“Hold on,” he said, feeling the seams of the vessel, giving way.
“NOW!” With the help of the rescuers, Bentz helped Olivia into the cutter, just as the Merry Anne, with a final horrifying groan, cracked apart, timbers and glass sliding into the sea.
A medic attended to her while another worker wrapped Corrine in blankets in the next berth. She was barely breathing, her eyes fixed. “She’s still got a pulse,” the medic said, though Bentz didn’t care.
He was only concerned about Olivia and the baby…isn’t that what Corrine had said, that she intended to kill both his wife and unborn child?
“Rick?” Olivia whispered as they stripped off her wet clothes and wrapped her in blankets. She was blinking against the bright lights, her hand searching for his, lying on a bunk only six feet from where Corrine lay, handcuffs surrounding her wrists.
“Right here, honey,” he said, his throat thick, his eyes hot from the threat of tears.
“I…I lost the baby.” She looked up at him and swallowed hard. “I was pregnant. I should have told you.”
“It doesn’t matter.” He clung to her hand. “You’re all right. That’s what counts.”
“But the baby…”
“There will be others, Olivia,” he said, bending down to kiss her lips. “I promise.”
EPILOGUE
Olivia opened her eyes slowly, against soft lights that seemed impossibly bright. She was in a hospital room of sorts and there was someone in the room with her, a glow near the window.
You’re going to be all right, the emanation said to her without making a sound. You and the baby, you’re going to be fine.
“Excuse me? Who are you?”
But the figure only smiled.
“Olivia?”
She blinked. Bentz’s voice jarred her back to reality.
“Did you see that?” she asked, turning to the window that was now just a view of pink sky streaked with orange and lavender as the dawn rose.
“See what?” he asked, glancing at the window.
“There was someone…something…” But when she caught the look on his face to see if she was pulling his leg, she shook her head. “I think I was dreaming.”
“How’re you feeling?”
“Like I need to get out of here.” She’d been in the hospital for two days now, under observation for the ordeal she’d been through, but the baby was still viable, and she had suffered nothing more than trauma.
“I’ll see if I can spring you.”
“Please use all of your powers of persuasion.”
“You got it.” He leaned over and kissed her on the lips, a sweet lingering kiss that promised more to come, once they were home in New Orleans again.
She couldn’t wait to get back, to plan for the baby, to put the trauma of Los Angeles behind her. “City of Angels,” she muttered sarcastically, then looked at the window again, wondering about the spirit that she could swear had been there.