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Ridley Pearson - In Harms Way (Basic)

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Sun Valley sheriff Walt Flemings budding relationship with photographer Fiona Kenshaw hits a rough patch after Fiona is involved in a heroic river rescue. Then Walt gets a phone call that changes everything: Lou Boldt, a police sergeant from Seattle, calls to report that a recent murder may have a Sun Valley connection. Walt knows theres a link-but can he pull the pieces together in time?

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Table of Contents ALSO BY RIDLEY PEARSON Killer Summer Killer View - photo 1
Table of Contents

ALSO BY RIDLEY PEARSON
Killer Summer
Killer View
Killer Weekend
Cut and Run
The Art of Deception
The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer
(writing as Joyce Reardon)
The Pied Piper
Beyond Recognition
Undercurrents

BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS

Peter and the Starcatchers series
(with Dave Barry)
The Kingdom Keepers series
Steel Trapp series
For Louise Marsh ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Special thanks to Sheriff Walt Femling his - photo 2
For Louise Marsh
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Special thanks to Sheriff Walt Femling, his wife, Jenny, and their family. And to the residents of the Wood River Valley.
Glancing out the windshield and beyond the four-lane concrete bridge, Fiona spotted a log with flailing arms. Human arms. A childs arms, struggling up through the rivers rushing water, held down by a tangle of branches.
Fiona instinctively reached out to block her passenger from hitting the dash while simultaneously slamming on the brakes. Her Subaru skidded, drifting into the breakdown lane just past the bridge. She set the emergency brake and released her seat belt in a single motion, her feet already on the asphalt. She crossed four lanes of busy traffic amid a flurry of horns and the high-pitched cries of biting rubber.
Over it all, she heard her passenger, Kira, calling out her name and she glanced back to see Kira hoisting her camera bag high in the air. Fiona gestured her back, but Kira ignored it and pressed forward, darting through gaps in the traffic. More tire squeals. A man crudely cursed from his black pickup as he avoided Kira by inches, careening off the roadway and onto the dirt shoulder, throwing up twin rooster tails.
Fiona ignored him, scampering down the bank, and waded into the shallow, painfully cold water at the rivers edge. The fist-sized, slippery round stones of the river bottom made her look drunk as she charged into the more swiftly moving, knee-deep water. She glanced left, timing the approach of the floating logs, preparing to dive.
The limbs of the first of four logs struck her, knocking her off balance, and she fell. They scraped across her back, tearing her shirt and dragging her down under. She struggled out of the grasp of the tangled branches and gasped for air as she resurfaced. Finding her balance, she dodged the next log. And the next.
Barreling toward her came the final tree: the one with the human arms shed seen upstream. It bore down on her, a tongue of torn wood aimed like a lance.
She no longer saw the arms thrashing. For an instant, she wondered if shed seen them at all.
The approaching tree was well over a foot thick and likely weighed hundreds of pounds. Driven by the force of June runoff, it would hit her like a battering ram.
Kira, now at rivers edge, again screamed, F-i-o-n-a! No!
From the same direction, Fiona heard a splashthe driver of the pickup now thundering out toward her.
The wide spread of pine boughs seemed aimed to sweep her off her feet once again. Distracted, shed lost her chance to move out of the way. She counted down in her head...
Ten yards... five yards...
She drew a lungful of air and dove the four feet to the river bottom. Reached out and white-knuckled a mossy, large flat rock, keeping herself down. The limbs broomed over her, snagging her hair and yanking her head up and back. A chunk of hair tore loose. She screamed bubbles. Most of her shirt was torn off. She one-handed the rock, protecting her face as the remaining limbs scraped raw the flesh of her forearm.
In her blurred vision appeared a childs pale bare foot. Fiona let go of the rock, grabbed the ankle with both hands and followed up the leg to the childs waist, planting her feet in the maze of rocks on the river bottom and propelling herself up out of the water and into the snarl of tree branches. The tree limbs whipped and dug into her arms and face, demanding she release the child, but she would not let go.
At last, the tree passed and Fiona opened her eyes to see a little girls terrified eyes gazing back at her. The girl blinked and coughed and Fiona felt tears spring to her eyes. Alive! The driver of the pickup appeared, lunging through the coursing water and extending an arm to Fiona, who held on to the crying child like life itself.
A smattering of applause arose from a small gathering of onlookers, camera phones extended, all of whom had pulled to the side of the road to help. Behind them towered the greening mountains that surrounded Ketchum and Sun Valley, above them the azure sky that had helped name this place.
Fiona held the child high in an effort to screen her own face, hoping to keep herself out of sight of the cameras.
The girls crying was steady nowa joyous sound. As Fiona briefly lost her balance to the uneven river bottom, the girl clutched her with an unexpected force.
I wont let go, Fiona promised.
In the distance a siren wailed, an ambulance from St. Lukes Hospital less than a mile away. Someone had called 911. More applause as the pickup driver led her to dry ground and Fiona dropped to her knees, never relaxing her embrace of the child, who in turn pressed herself closer to her rescuer.
Youre okay. Youre okay, Fiona whispered into the matted hair, as a dozen people rushed down the embankment and the pickup driver called out to give them room.
More cameras fired off shots, including her own, currently in Kiras hands. Too many cameras to ever control. She could imagine the images already being sent over the Internet. One moment, anonymous in a sleepy Idaho town. The next... out there.
Helpless to do anything about it, she understood that this moment represented the saving of one life and quite possibly the loss of another: her own.
Walt Fleming entered St. Lukes emergency room to the stares his sheriffs uniform typically provoked. Reaction was never neutral, and it affected him, to varying degrees. People were both afraid of and impressed by police. Everyone was guilty of some infraction, no matter how minor; it came down to how much of it they wore on their sleeves.
Kenshaw! he barked at the nurse behind the registration desk, never slowing a step. Despite his concern for the well-being of the child fished from the Big Wood River, he was impatient and tense about the condition of the childs rescuer.
Observation two! the nurse called down the hall after him.
The walls were beige, the ceiling lighting intense, the complex aromamedicinal disinfectant, bitter coffeevaguely nauseating. He ran, did not walk, to Observation 2. He yanked back the privacy curtain, not waiting for permission.
Oh, damn! he barked out unintentionally upon seeing her. He stepped inside and drew the curtain closed behind him.
A nurse tending to an IV bag turned and was about to let loose on the intruder when sight of the uniform stopped her.
Leave us a minute, Walt told the nurse as he met eyes with Fiona.
Im fine, Fiona said.
Yeah, I can see that. She looked horrible.
The nurse gave Walt the once-over on her way out. She clearly had some choice words to offer, but contained herself.
Fiona wore a blue and white hospital gowna loosely woven yellow blanket covered her from the waist down. Her face and arms were badly scratched, both carrying some butterfly bandages. Her scalp had been shaved in a spot about the size of a quarter over her left ear and was dressed with a small bandage. On her upper left shoulder he saw the glow of a bruise forming.
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