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spend a few hours at a practice range so he wouldn’t choke under pressure.

      He was a professional. Hidden in the thick vegetation on the outskirts of the camp, he’d waited patiently for a chance to catch the missionary alone. With his binoculars trained on her cabin, he’d seen her and another young woman walk toward a long Quonset-like building, which he assumed to be the cafeteria. Thirty minutes later, she’d returned alone and he’d had his chance. He should have been out of there, his mark dead and no one the wiser; he’d had a silencer on the rifle and he was a genius at disappearing.

      But the sting of a mosquito had made him twitch, sending the bullet into the cabin wall. Startled, the woman stood there for a split second. Then, just as he reloaded the chamber, she’d darted toward the old Jeep parked by the door.

      Ray kicked the gun case at his feet. How was he going to explain the behavior of this crazy young woman? Why would she drive away from the other individuals in the camp? Dumbfounded, he’d knelt for precious seconds with the rifle held to his shoulder as the Jeep sped toward the main road. Arrogantly sure of his aim, he hadn’t bothered to sabotage her vehicle.

      The waitress returned with his bottled water and Ray gave her a few pesos, silently cursing himself, cursing the woman, cursing the humidity that made his shirt stick to his back. By now, he should have been in Cancún enjoying a short vacation before returning to the southwest Tennessee heat.

      Thumb on speed dial, he hesitated before dialing the number. The judge was going to go ballistic.

      He lined up defenses in his mind like toy soldiers. How could he have known there was a plane sitting on the beach less than five miles away, with a pilot getting ready to take off? Assumptions, as it turned out, had been the source of his every mistake.

      Mistakes for which he was going to pay a major price.

      His hand clenched around the phone, his thumb pressing the dial button. “Hey, boss.” What a relief to get voice mail instead of the powerful pit bull who could put a knot in his stomach with nothing more than silence. “It’s me, Briggs. I, uh, I got bad news. The girl got away. I’m not sure how much she knows, but I’m going after her. My plane leaves in an hour. Cell reception’s kinda spotty down here, so you may not be able to get me right away. I’ll call you when I hit the States. Don’t worry. She’s as good as dead.”

      Owen reviewed his options, both of which called for what his mother referred to as bowling language.

      He could turn the plane and mow down a couple of cows.

      Or he could crash into the barn. The Cessna was sturdy but not indestructible. Mission Aviation Fellowship functioned largely on donations, and it killed Owen to think about how much repairs would cost.

      So he’d just have to stop it.

      Ramming his feet down on the brake pedals, feeling the aircraft shudder, he held on to the control column for dear life. The crooked, gaping boards of the barn loomed, closer and closer, until he could almost smell the manure and hay.

      He braced himself for impact. Benny had thrown her hands over her face, but at least she had stopped screaming.

      God, I need help! Come on, come on, please help me stop this plane.

      The plane skidded for another heart-stopping second or two. They rammed into the barn, with the nose of the plane tucked into the open front door. An odd noise crunched in the right wing as it came to rest against the outside wall.

      Trembling, Owen stared into the dark recesses of the barn. “Wow. That was close.” A couple of chickens squawked.

      “We’re not dead, are we?” Benny lowered her hands.

      “I don’t think so. If this is Heaven, I’ve got issues with the management.” He took off his headphones. “Are you okay?”

      “Um, yeah.” She unfastened her seat belt and took off the life jacket. “Good thing we didn’t need these.”

      Owen grinned. “Remember when we took the de Cristos kids swimming last summer?” Benny had gotten too far away from shore and couldn’t dog-paddle back; then when he went after her, she’d nearly drowned him. For such an accomplished lady, Bernadette was a terrible swimmer.

      Who also looked great in a swimsuit, even a style pretty much in line with his grandmother’s taste.

      “I remember.” Benny scowled. “You put a fish down my back.”

      “It was a two-inch minnow, and he was more traumatized than you.”

      “Oh, so you think fish abuse is funny.” Her eyes were twinkling, though, so maybe she was getting over the shock of their forced landing.

      “So what do you say we break out of this joint? Find out who this plantation belongs to.”

      “I don’t think I can get my door open.”

      “Okay, then come this way.”

      The double-decker Cessna Combi-Bush was designed with the cockpit high above a deep freight compartment. Owen jumped to the ground, turned and reached for Benny’s waist. She put her hands on his shoulders and let him set her lightly down.

      She frowned a bit when he didn’t immediately step back. Boy, she didn’t like to be touched. He wondered if more than water panic had been behind that scene at the river last summer. She’d fought him like a wildcat, even when they were safely in shallow water.

      Suddenly, something bumped the back of his legs hard enough to buckle his knees.

      “Mba-a-aaa!”

      Owen looked down to find a small gray goat backing up to butt him again. “Hey!” He dodged, pulling Benny with him.

      She laughed. “We invaded the earthling’s territory.”

      “Looks like.” Owen danced to avoid another thrust of the underdeveloped horns.

      Benny didn’t seem concerned. Standing in a shaft of dusty sunlight, she absently reached down to pet the animal’s nappy head as she surveyed their surroundings. “How’re we gonna get out of here? The plane’s blocking the door.”

      “I’m surprised we didn’t knock the whole barn down.” Owen looked up to examine the tin roof. It was apparently sturdier than it appeared.

      “Look, there are a bunch of loose boards over here.” Bernadette walked over to the corner and started shoving at the walls.

      “Watch out! You’ll have the place falling on our heads.” Owen followed her and saw that she was right. With one good kick, he could open a space big enough for them to slip through. “Stand back, I’m gonna—”

      “¿Quién está?” demanded someone outside the barn. “¡Voy a disparar!”

      Benny’s big dark eyes widened. “Did he just say he’d shoot us?” She peered through a knothole in the wall and said in Spanish, “Please, señor, we’re Americans! We had to make an emergency landing, but we won’t hurt you. Can you get us out of here?”

      The voice growled out a series of Spanish words. Then the boards in front of them began to splinter and fall away from the outside. Owen and Benny found themselves staring into the myopic brown eyes of an elderly Mexican gentleman carrying an equally ancient shotgun. He had apparently used it to pry loose the wall.

      “You are scaring my chickens,” he said in surly Spanish, moving back so Benny could squeeze through the narrow opening. “I should charge you a hundred pesos’ compensation.”

      “Reckon he’s gonna send ’em to poultry therapy?” Owen sucked in his breath to follow Benny.

      She gave him a quelling look, then batted her long, curly lashes at the farmer. “We are so sorry for the inconvenience.” She glanced at the plane, stuck in the doorway of the barn for all the world like an alien spacecraft in an Ed Wood movie. “We’ve got a problem with the fuel tanks, and one of the wings is broken.

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