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Authors: Beth Kery

BOOK: Glow
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Was he worried about Dylan's note? Alice was, a little, although probably not in the way Rigo was. She was definitely mystified. Dylan had already indicated that he needed to speak to her about something important tonight. What had happened that had made him want to speak with her earlier? Or was the note about something different altogether?

Rigo paused at the perimeter of the stone terrace.

“I'll watch and make sure that you get in all right. Then I'll take the woods back to the party.”

Alice smiled and nodded in the direction of the distant music. “They'll need you down there. If anyone asks where I've gone—”

“I'll just tell them the truth. That Mr. Fall received some emergency information for you and wanted to give it to you in person. I doubt you'll be missed, though, in that swarm. Besides, the night supervisors took over responsibility for the kids a half hour ago.”

“Thanks for walking me up, Sal. Night.”

“Night. And congratulations again about today.”

“Thanks.”

She used her key. She glanced over her shoulder as she entered, giving Rigo a wave. As she closed and locked the French door, she saw him fade back into the gloom. The sun had dipped completely into the lake, and dusk was descending fast.

She quickly keyed in the memorized code into the security alarm. Silence clung thickly around her as she made her way through the dim media room. The music and sounds from the party didn't penetrate the thick walls of the castle. She flew up the three stairs that led to the kitchen level and headed toward the hallway.

She had no prescience of threat or fear. When the moment came, she was thinking of how much she was looking forward to seeing Dylan, despite whatever emergency had occurred. They'd face whatever it was together.

Addie's past crashed into Alice's present in a single jolting second via a disabling blow to the left side of her head.

TWENTY

D
ylan left the house at around nine twenty that night to meet Alice. His head was ablaze with what he'd just read in Lynn's journals. How was he going to tell Alice? It was bad enough he had to tell her that it was a matter of hours or days before the FBI appeared to question them. Now, Dylan had even more damning information to give the investigators. He'd have to contact Jim Sheridan as soon as Alice was up at the castle with him. Lynn's journals would definitely rattle some old bones in the Addie Durand kidnapping case . . . and Dylan finally grasped that elusive motive.

But Lynn's journals' effect on Alice was what worried him most.

By nine thirty-three, he was starting to get concerned when Alice didn't show up at their assigned spot in the woods. She was usually very prompt. He'd heard the music emanating from the marina beach as soon as he walked out of the house, of course. It was the traditional beach party they held on the next to the last night of camp. It was usually a pretty crazy affair, so at first, he figured that was why Alice was late. More than likely, she was celebrating the victory of her Durand job offer with the others and had lost track of time.

By nine thirty-five, he wasn't so convinced, however. He was worked up by the contents of Lynn's journals and more than a little anxious. For only the second time since Alice had arrived at
the camp, he stalked up to her cabin front door, heedless of the glowing lights in the empty common area that could easily reveal his identity to any onlooker. He knocked, the first time sedately.

The second and third times, not so politely. He was about to run down to the marina when someone spoke from behind him.

“Mr. Fall?”

He spun around at the male voice. He saw a tall dark-haired man that he'd seen hanging around Alice at castle events alongside Kuvi. They stood a few feet from the cabin stoop, the male's arm looped around Kuvi's waist. They both looked a little taken aback at seeing him there.

“Kuvi,” he said, glad to see someone close to Alice. “Where's Alice? Is she still at the party?”

“I think so. I haven't seen her for a bit, though. Have you, Dave?”

The tall man shook his head. “No, she's not at the party. She's up at the castle.”

“What?”
Dylan asked, descending the three steps.

“Yeah, she got a note with a message,” Dave said, eyeing him uneasily. “From
you
, right? I overheard Mira on the phone taking part of the message while I was getting supplies in the kitchen earlier.”

“Tell me everything. What did the note say?
Quickly
,” Dylan emphasized when Dave just looked perplexed by his request.

“I didn't read the note myself, but I gave it to Alice maybe twenty minutes ago, just before sunset. I heard enough of Mira's phone conversation to know it was from you, and that Alice was supposed to go to the castle because there was a family emergency or something like that.”

“Is Sal Rigo still at the party?” Dylan asked, barely restraining his feet from taking off down the path.

Kuvi and Dave exchanged a dubious glance. “I don't know, to be honest. It's kind of a madhouse down there.”

“Go back to the beach and look for him.” Kuvi nodded. “If you find him, tell him I never called Mira and that the note was a trick. Tell him to get up to the castle. I'll call Jim Sheridan on the way up.”

“But—”

“Just do it,” Dylan interrupted Dave.

“Mr. Fall? Is Alice all right?” Kuvi asked, her eyes wide with alarm as he moved past the couple.

“She'd better be. Just do what I asked, Kuvi.
Now
,” he insisted before he took off down the path to the castle.

*   *   *

SOMEONE
was dragging her, his hands beneath her armpits hurting her. No, it wasn't dragging. Her feet were moving—weren't they? Her legs felt loose and heavy as rocks at once, as if they were attached to her body inexpertly and malfunctioning at their task. Just as she thought it, they failed. She felt herself drop several inches.

“Stand
up
, you stupid bitch.”

“Leave me . . . alone,” she mumbled between gritted teeth. The sharp tugging on her arms and a knifing pain in her head
had
to stop. It was unbearable. Opening her eyelids took a monumental effort. Darkness and dizziness assailed her.

She retched.

“Don't you dare throw up on me,” someone snarled in disgust.

She was shoved. Instinctively, she put out her hands to break a fall, but she was too late to do much good. Her palms collided against hard stone, and almost immediately her jaw and then her cheekbone struck the unforgiving surface. She fell to the ground on her knees, whimpering as white-hot pain raged and ruled over her entire body and brain. For a moment, she couldn't tell up from down or left from right. She couldn't draw breath.

Then someone was grasping her shoulders and lifting her once
more, and her lungs unfroze. She inhaled raggedly. The new, fresh wave of pain had sliced through her vertigo some. As it remitted, she found the wherewithal to think.

This isn't a nightmare. The pain is
way
too real. I'm being
attacked.

It was the first clear thought she'd had since being struck earlier. It came back to her in a split second, walking through the hallway of the castle, looking forward to seeing Dylan . . . a flash of pain and then nothingness.

Adrenaline shot through her at the incomplete memory, making her veins seem to burn. She elbowed her attacker in the belly as hard as she could.

He grunted and shoved her again. This time, she caught herself better, but the skin on her hands had been torn on her previous fall. She cried out at the impact of striking the stone with open flesh.

“Go on, hold yourself up if you want to. You always did imagine yourself strong and
feisty
. It certainly didn't help matters, the way Lynn treated you. By the time you were three, you expected all of us to fall on our knees in worship in front of you. But you weren't
strong.
You were just a spoiled little brat.”

Alice gasped. Only star shine provided any light, and it'd been too dark to see her attacker clearly. Her dizziness wasn't helping matters. He was just a swooshing tall shadow to the right of her. Sometimes there were two of him. But she'd recognized the thick disdain in his tone just now. Tonight, it had grown exponentially from what she was used to at the camp.

“Kehoe,” she muttered.

“That's right. Let's make everything crystal clear tonight, of all nights. And you're Addie Durand. Forgive me if I don't drop to my knee in worship tonight, Addie.”

She closed her eyes, panting, trying desperately to still her vertigo and gather her wits. Kehoe had disabled her pretty badly. She
just needed to steady herself sufficiently to fight. Run, if need be. Rigo had told her she was fast, hadn't he?

She just needed to buy time to still her dizziness and for the pain to fade some.

Run, Addie. Hide.

“How did you know I was Addie?” she asked between ragged pants. Where was she? Was that the shimmer of water in the distance? Her fingers clutched at the surface where they still pressed.
It's the stonewall.
Kehoe had dragged her down to the bluff. That rushing sound wasn't just her blood pounding in her ears, but also the waves rushing the beach and crashing against the rocks.

“I didn't, at first. Then I started to get the picture, as unlikely as it all seemed. Fall was too focused on you. Of course he'd want to make sure he got his hooks in you, just like he got them into Alan Durand. At first, I couldn't believe it. But you look like her, without all the ugly makeup. Lynn, I mean. I noticed when it washed away after you swam. You're taller and rougher than her. Did you honestly think you could compare to her by wearing that fancy dress and her pearls.
Her
pearls. You couldn't hold a candle to Lynn Durand; you're nowhere near as elegant. Every bit as full of yourself as her, though. There's
something
of her in you, all right. I should know. I knew her better than anyone alive. Your mother and I were very close. As close as a man and woman could be.”

That sliced through her shock and disorientation more than anything.

“What?”

“Don't sound so incredulous,” he hissed. “We were two of a kind, Lynn and I. We had the same philanthropic dreams, the same generous bent. We created Camp Durand together. We carved out the ideals that later became the driving principles of this whole damn company, even though Alan Durand took all the credit for what we'd done.
I
gave Lynn what she needed, more so
than that defective husband of hers. She was lonely, you know. So beautiful. So sad.”

“Prime pickings for a predator like you?” Alice couldn't stop herself from saying. “Ow. No,
stop
.”

He'd grabbed the hair at the back of her head and snapped back her neck. It hurt so much.

“You're not the prized little princess anymore, do you
hear
me?” he spat near her ear. Spittle struck her skin. Despite her pain and discomfort, the sound of his voice sent pure fear through her. He was a crazy man, shouting in her ear, a man so enraged, he no longer held any fear for the consequences of his actions. “Did your lover, the great Dylan Fall, tell you how your mother died, Alice?”

His snide, taunting tone—or perhaps the question itself—sent fury and panic through her. He'd stepped closer to grab her hair. She elbowed him again, but this time she didn't hit him as squarely as before. He cursed and tightened his fingers in her hair, stretching her neck and forcing her back into an arch. His forearm pressed to her throat. She gagged at the pressure. She started clawing at his arm to free her airway, but he wouldn't budge.

“She went right off this bluff, Addie. They found her body on the rocks below, bloody and broken.”

“Did . . . you. . .” She gurgled when he pressed the bone of his forearm tighter against her trachea.

“No. I didn't throw her off, if that's what you're wondering. I'll tell you a little secret though, Addie,” he whispered in her ear, causing her shivers of fear and disgust to amplify. “I was right here when she did it. You might say I had a front-row seat. And I didn't stop her. It was her guilt that killed her, not me. She wanted a baby so bad, she
chose
to be unfaithful to her husband. She chose me. I hated seeing her suffer when we stood here together at this bluff, so I thought it would be cruel to stop her once she'd made up her mind. What else would she do, once I told her that all the rumors were true? Her precious little Addie was
definitely
dead. Or she
was
supposed
to be, anyway. That's what I paid those worthless idiots, Cunningham and Stout, good money for. But at the time, when I stood here with Lynn on this bluff, I thought they'd done their job. I felt bad, telling Lynn that Addie was dead. But your mother had it coming. She'd left
me
bleeding and broken years before by abandoning me. And then later, by telling me what she did about you. She actually believed she could go back to Alan, and the three of you were going to live out her little dream, the rich king, and the beautiful queen and the darling little princess, all of you so happy,” he mocked. “Well I couldn't let that happen, Addie. Not after Lynn had led me down the path she did. I
didn't
let it happen.”

Rage at what he was saying had made Alice's mind go blank. All she wanted to do was hurt Sebastian Kehoe in that moment, and she didn't care how she accomplished it. She pulled with all her might on her head and sunk her teeth into his forearm. Kehoe shouted in pain and surprise.

She clamped her jaw, her teeth cutting into flesh. The taste of his blood spread on her tongue.

He howled in agony, but she held as fast as a furious dog with its prey in its jaws. He clumsily struck her temple with his free fist. Sensing the break of his hold, Alice loosened her jaw and dropped to the earth. She rolled on the ground away from him.

“I'm going to kill you for that, you worthless, snot-nosed little bitch,” Kehoe seethed. “This time, I'm not going to be a spectator, either. I'll send you over the bluff myself. Maybe I'll follow you, and we can be broken and bleeding together. Would you like the company, Addie? I wouldn't mind. I'll die with the satisfaction of knowing that Dylan Fall will find you, and be as wrecked for the rest of his miserable life as Alan Durand was when he found Lynn.”

Alice scurried farther away on the lawn, wild to put distance between herself and the sound of his ranting voice. Horror filled every cell of her being. He was completely mad.

Her fall to the ground and rolling away amplified her disorientation. A distant, blaring alarm began to pulse in her ears. She sat in the grass, the darkness her only cloak, trying her mightiest to steady herself so that she could stand. It was only a matter of seconds, however, before Kehoe's shadow lurched above her. Panicked, she scuttled several yards on her hands and feet. She gave a wild, frustrated cry when he followed her with ease.

“I see you, Addie,” he laughed.

Shit
. He could see her glow-in-the-dark Camp Durand T-shirt. She cried out in anguish when his hands clamped on her shoulders and squeezed. God, she was really going to die.

“Get up, Addie. You lived twenty years longer than I planned. What have you got to complain about?”

“No!” Alice resisted, one fist punching at his neck and head as he leaned down over her, the other hand reaching for the ground, digging into the grass in desperation, seeking a firm hold that wasn't there. She would lose. He was strong, and he'd weakened her so badly. “Dylan.
Dylan!
” she screamed.

He slapped her face. Hard. She gasped in shock.

“Your suck-up knight in shining armor isn't going to save you this time. In fact”—she whimpered in shock when he hauled her roughly to her feet—“you have him to blame for all your misery, Addie. If Fall would have left well enough alone, you'd be safe and sound right now, wouldn't you? You would have never returned to Morgantown. You have him to thank for tonight, even. I knew he was getting suspicious of me, forcing me to go on that damn trip to Reno, laughing at me under his breath the whole time because he thought I was helpless. Well guess what? I don't give a damn about whether or not the mighty Dylan Fall wants to
fire
me. Fuck him and his
job
. The job was never as important as Lynn.
She
was what counted.” He shoved her in the direction of the beach, and she cried out. “Don't be a coward, Addie. Your mother wasn't, in the end. She was beautiful and brave when she went over
that bluff. I should have followed her then. I should have ended it with her, not with
you
. I would have, but I kept on living for her. I wanted to make sure her dreams came to life. Everything I've done since she died, I've done for her.”

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