I was out of that endless forest and running through a field. I could see the Millers’ house ahead. I’d stop there, call my dad—
Something flashed over my head. I looked up, and saw the wire. My hands shot up to block it, but it flew down, passing right through my outstretched palms and into my throat.
I couldn’t breathe. I kicked and flailed, but the wire only cut deeper. Then it changed. Not Wilkes’s wire, but a knife point, digging into my throat.
Aldrich laughed.
No! He couldn’t have followed. He’d finished with me and was busy with Amy now. I had to get help. To save her—
“Save her?” His voice whispered in my ear. “You aren’t saving her, Nadia. You’re running away. Abandoning her.”
“No!”
As the word ripped from my throat, the world dipped into black. Something whispered across my cheek. A touch, a hand, brushing back my sweaty hair. Cool skin against mine. The faint smell of soap.
“Nadia…?”
I opened my eyes. Jack sat on the edge of the sofa, his hands smoothing my hair.
I groaned. “I’m making a habit of this, aren’t I? How many partners have you had to comfort after nightmares?”
“Don’t work with partners.”
“And this is why, isn’t it?”
A small smile. He traced his fingertips down my cheek, then stopped, his gaze flicking to his hand as if surprised to see it there. He pulled back and shifted to adjust my blanket.
“Sorry,” I said. “Two nights in a row…that’s not normal for me.”
For a moment, he crouched beside the sofa, gaze averted, as if thinking. Then his eyes swung back to me. To my throat. To the ghost of a scar. I pulled the blanket higher. His face turned from mine. Then he pushed to his feet.
“Gotta get you to sleep.”
He walked toward the minibar.
“Uh-uh,” I said. “Booze isn’t—”
He took out a bottle of brown liquid and held it up. “Saw this earlier.”
“Yoo-hoo?” I said, squinting at the label. “What’s in it? Looks like chocolate milk, but…”
“Thought it was.” He looked at it and frowned. “Not sure. Huh. Ingredients…” His lips moved as he read the list. Then his frown deepened. “Still not sure.”
He put the bottle down. “Let me go downstairs. Find you some real stuff. Heat it up.”
“Ah, hot chocolate. Now I get it.” I sat up. “Here, we’ll use that. I’ll just stand back from the microwave, in case it’s explosive.”
He waved me down. “Stay.”
He poured the stuff into a coffee mug, and microwaved it for me. As he brought it over, I gestured at the cigarette pack on the table, where he’d tossed them down earlier.
“You didn’t finish them, I see. Go ahead if you want.”
“Nonsmoking room.”
“I think you’ve broken worse laws.”
“Yeah. But I’d feel bad about this one.”
He handed me my mug and sat beside me on the sofa.
“So, you talked to Quinn tonight,” he said. “He tell you? About himself ?”
“That he’s a vigilante hitman? I’d already figured that.”
He studied my expression. Then he grunted, fingers tapping against the cigarette pack. A hungry look down at it, then he stood, crossed the room and tossed it on the counter.
“What did you think would happen, Jack? That I’d hear what Quinn does and say ‘hey, sign me up’?”
“Nah. Just…” He shrugged. Didn’t finish the sentence.
“I didn’t need to hear it from Quinn to know it
was
an option, that there’s a market for that kind of thing.”
“Yeah, I know.”
He sat down. I sipped my hot Yoo-hoo, and tried not to make a face.
“Tastes like shit?” he said.
I managed a small smile. “Yes, but it gets the job done.” I took another sip. “About tomorrow. I’d really like—I know you’re not the person to talk to about it, because you have problems with the whole plan, but, well, Evelyn, Quinn…I can talk to them but I just don’t feel…”
I looked at Jack. “Whatever happened today, however much we disagree about that, I trust you and I’d really like your input. I plan to pull this off, Jack. Without getting myself killed.”
“I know.” He leaned back into the cushions. “Talk to me.”
So I did.
FORTY-EIGHT
I woke up in the bedroom I was sharing with Evelyn. Last thing I remembered, Jack and I had finished discussing the plan and moved on to talking about…I had no idea what we’d moved on to, because I think that the moment I had the plan straight in my head, I fell asleep. Jack must have carried me in to the bedroom.
I rolled over and checked the other bed. It was empty. The clock read 8:12. I shot up with a curse. Of all the days to sleep in…
I could hear Evelyn in the main room, saying something about Dubois and the contact call. Was there a problem? I scrambled up and threw open the door.
“Have we heard back—?”
I stopped. Evelyn sat on the sofa, in conversation with a man. Only that man wasn’t Jack. It was Quinn. And I was standing in the doorway, half-naked, no wig, no contacts, no makeup. Quinn’s gaze didn’t go to my face first, though. It went to my chest. Or, more accurately, to my torso, emblazoned with the Ontario Police College logo. His eyes lifted to mine. He blinked, realizing I wasn’t wearing a disguise, then looked away. I backpedaled and slammed the door as Evelyn let out an oath.
Evelyn opened the door without knocking.
“Shit, that was a stupid move,” she muttered.
I glared over my shirt collar as I pulled it on. “Yes, I’ve been making a lot of stupid moves lately, but thanks for clarifying that.”
“By ‘stupid move,’ Dee, I meant mine. I should’ve warned you Quinn was here.”
I tugged on my jeans. “Well, I should have woken up enough to think about checking before throwing open the door.”
“I don’t think he got a good look at you. He did the right thing—turned away.”
“It’s not my face I’m worried about. It’s this.” I lifted the police college shirt for her to read before I refolded it into my bag. “That he
did
see.”
“Shit.”
A soft knock at the door.
“Dee?” Quinn.
I asked him to wait while I looked around for my wig and contacts. When I had them on, I called a welcome. He slid inside. Evelyn hesitated, then left. Quinn stood there as I pulled on my socks.
“I’m sorry,” he said.
“Hey, you didn’t do anything wrong. You just glanced up when the door opened. And thanks—you know, for looking away when you realized I…”
I let the sentence fade, and picked up my toothpaste. Before I could slip into the bathroom, he grabbed my hand.
“Dee? Whatever I saw? There could be a few explanations, and I have no intention of trying to figure out which one is right.”
“Thanks.”
“How about a trade-off?” He smiled. “One question. Ask me anything.”
When I shook my head, his smile faltered.
“Sure. Okay. I mean, maybe there’s nothing you want—”
“Your eyes,” I said, managing a small smile. “What color are your eyes?”
His grin returned full wattage. “Sure. I can do that—better than that.” He dropped his head forward, reached up and took out his contacts. “There.”
He looked at me. His eyes were light green, the color of new grass.
Quinn moved closer, his head tilting, lips moving down toward mine—
The door banged open and we both jumped back.
“Evelyn told me,” Jack said, by way of introduction. He started crossing the room, then met Quinn’s eyes. A grunt, and his gaze dropped to Quinn’s hand, still cupping his contacts.
“Christ’s sake,” Jack muttered. “Show-and-tell? This isn’t kindergarten.”
“He was just—” I began.
“Leaving,” Jack said. “I need to talk to Dee.”
“It wasn’t Quinn’s—”
“Fault. Yeah. I heard.” He jerked his thumb at the door. “Go call your sources. Dubois doesn’t respond by noon? We call it off.”
Quinn put in his contacts, then squeezed my hand and left.
“There was no need to talk to him that way,” I said. “He didn’t do anything wrong.”
“Besides taking out his contacts?”
“He felt bad, and he wanted to reciprocate—”
“Yeah. He wants to reciprocate. Middle of a fucking job. Starts playing ‘I’ll show you mine.’”
“Actually, I think I showed him mine first.”
“Not on purpose.” Jack moved closer, the edge leaving his voice. “You okay? Evelyn said he saw you. Saw your shirt.”
“Which I should have never brought with me. A dumb move, but it…helps me sleep, and sometimes that’s more important than being careful.”
“I’ve seen the shirt. Had a problem with it? Would have said so. Back to the question. You okay?”
“I’m shaken, but I guess it’s a good lesson for me to be careful all the time, and not relax my guard when I’m with just you and Evelyn.”
“Yeah. Gotta be careful with Evelyn.”
A small smile. “But not you?”
“Not unless I open my mouth. Then I’m dangerous.” He paused. “About yesterday—”
The door swung open.
“Jack? Dee?” Evelyn called. “Dubois bit. He’s in.”
“Now the fun begins,” I murmured.
We’d arranged for our point person to meet Dubois at eleven thirty. Just because he’d agreed to speak to us didn’t mean he’d agree to our plan, but we couldn’t wait to find out. We had too much prep work.
“I ordered the radios yesterday,” Felix said as we ate a late breakfast in our hotel room. “I called this morning and rerouted delivery to a plaza outside town. Quinn? Would you be able to pick those up later?”
“Will do.”
“Need a safe house,” Jack said. “Motel would work. Prefer a house.”
“Easily done,” Felix said. “We’ll locate several for rent, with immediate possession, scout locations, and select one.”
“Hole up in a place for rent?” I said. “Sounds good, but there’s a risk factor, isn’t there? If someone decides to show the place—”
“We’ll rent it,” Felix said. “Cash for a month.”
“Is that—?”
“Safe?” He smiled, and switched to an upper-class British accent. “Hello, I’m Dr. Patterson, and I have a rather…odd request to make. I’m visiting your university and, well, I must admit, I loathe public housing. I believe you have a lovely little place for rent on Main Street? If it wouldn’t be too much of an inconvenience, I’d like to let it for the week. I’ll pay you for the entire month, of course, in advance.”
“Works for me,” I said.
“And it has worked for me more times than I can count.”
“Let’s get moving on that,” Jack said. “Dubois comes through? I want keys within the hour. Need time for a thorough examination. No surprises.”
Dubois
Martin Dubois stirred his coffee, tasted it, then added another sweetener. As he lifted the cup to his lips, he looked over the rim at the clock. Eleven twenty-nine. He’d wait until eleven thirty-five, no longer. Maybe eleven forty, but only if he didn’t finish his coffee before that. He drank slower.
The message had come in last night. An e-mail, sent to his personal account.
Missing a witness? We have her but I think you’d rather have the man who tried to kill her. If so, we can deliver. This is a private transaction. You’ll get your man and all the credit, and we’ll ask for very little in return.
If you wish to discuss this further, please respond to the e-mail address at the bottom with a time and place.
Attached to the e-mail was a photo of a bloodied garrote wire. No one knew that’s what the killer had tried to use. The kids thought he’d been strangling her with a rope, which hadn’t explained her bloodied hands. The wire looked like the same gauge used on the Lee woman. That made sense.
He’d tried to trace the e-mail, of course—using what resources he could without arousing suspicion—but the trail ended at a dead account. So he’d done the only thing he could: responded with a time and place. Here and now.
They’d expected him to come alone. He hadn’t, of course. He was ambitious—not crazy. But he’d told the young agent accompanying him only that he was meeting a witness in a public place and wanted backup, then positioned him across the room, where he could watch for trouble, but couldn’t overhear the conversation.
Had it been any other case, there would have been a team of agents with him, ready to take into custody whoever showed up. But this was the case of a lifetime, one that every agent dreamed of—a dream that was fast turning into a nightmare.