Page 65 of Training Grounds


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I’m ten minutes out. Keep moving.

Wes shoved the phone back into his pocket and looked at Remington. The Doberman was already up, alert and waiting.

Good dog.

Wes reached for the handle. “Stay behind me.”

“Got it.”

Then he opened the door and stepped into the dark woods, knowing they needed to run before a bullet found them.

Rowan darted through the woods, branches clawing at her arms as darkness pressed in from every side.

Her body understood the danger before her mind caught up.

Someone was hunting them.

The thought hit hard and cold, but there was no time to process it. No time to process how different real-life danger was from the scripted danger while shooting a film.

Wes walked ahead of her, fast and certain through the trees. Every few seconds he reached back—a hand at her elbow, a sharp redirect around a fallen log, a warning she barely registered before obeying.

She stayed close.

Her lungs burned from the cold mountain air. Roots twisted beneath her feet, hidden beneath leaves and shadow. A rock shifted under her boot, and she nearly went down before catching herself against a tree trunk.

Keep moving.

That was all that mattered.

Remington ran beside Wes without a sound.

No crashing through brush. No panicked movement. No whining or barking.

A footstep echoed behind them. It was too close.

Rowan’s pulse pounded in her throat.

She risked a glance over her shoulder. She saw nothing but darkness between the trees.

Whoever was out there was hidden, like a ghost.

Then the woods went quiet again.

Too quiet.

The gunman had stopped moving, she realized.

Which meant he was listening.

Another shock of fear rushed through her.

They had to keep moving. Stopping would be a death sentence. She felt certain of it.

Drawing in a ragged breath, Rowan pushed herself forward.

Her life depended on it.

CHAPTER 22