Return of the Dixie Deb (18 page)

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Authors: Nina Barrett

Tags: #Contemporary, #Suspense, #Action-Suspense

BOOK: Return of the Dixie Deb
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“They wasted the money from the Titusville job throwing it out the window when they made their getaway. Look at this dump. If they had anything left, would they be living here?”

“Sounds like you did all right from the other jobs they pulled,” Maggie said.

“Not enough to pay me for all this grief.”

“It’s still going to pad your federal pension while the rest of us grow gray working our fingers to the bone,” Lily said. “Magnolia?”

“Right. You said the last two jobs. What about the one before Titusville?”

Mac stared at her. Was he trying to warn her?

“That money’s ours. After all these years working from dawn to dusk catering to a bunch of ill-mannered ingrates, I want to put up my feet and have someone wait on me,” Lily said.

“What we need to do is shut this investigation down before the feds catch on. They can’t be stupid forever. Now you say the Bureau put McKenzie and the girl up at the Major’s? Can’t you see they’re closing in? Do you think that’s just coincidence?”

Andrews moved in back of her. The gun’s muzzle tickled her hairline. Her heart skipped a beat.

“That money’s long gone. Probably blown to bits along with the car back in Titusville.”

“Not necessarily,” Mac said quietly. “Just somewhere out of sight.”

Maggie and Lily looked at him.

“He’s lying, playing for time.”

“Give him a minute. You’re mighty free and easy with other people’s money now that you’ve got yours. He might be willing to deal for his sweetie’s life here.”

“You know what I told you on your voice mail. You can take the information about the microchips to arrest the people involved. Tell the Bureau Jan provided the tip that uncovered the smuggling operation. In return the I.R.S. drops the tax fraud charges, you look like a hero and Jan keeps her mouth shut.”

“Like I care about a damned bunch of computer stuff going overseas. Come on.” Andrews waved his gun at the sisters. “He’s stalling for time. We need to get rid of them both. I figure the junkyard has served us well. Move.”

“On Sunday!”

“What the…?”

“The Lord’s Day!” Maggie objected.

“Maybe you don’t observe the Sabbath.” Lily hobbled to her feet to join her sister facing Andrews with her shotgun. “But down here, mister, we have standards.”

Killers with a conscience
? She looked at Mac who gave her a brief smile, shaking his head.

“We need to get rid of them while we have the chance. He’s F.B.I., dammit. Smarten up for once. He’s playing you.”

“Magnolia?”

“I’m thinking.” Maggie let the point of her shotgun drop. “Okay, we take the lovebirds down to the hatchery. There’s an old storage shed out back we can hold them in.”

“You’re—”

“I’m the one talking here, Andrews. I say we do a little horse-trading. Mac comes across with the missing cash, we cut Miss Jan loose. Gordo, you plant some of the missing cash in her accounts so if she ever gets the urge to be chatty, she can face some big jail time.”

“You two are crazy if you think you can trust them.”

“Yeah, well, trusting you didn’t get us real far, did it? Mac here, well, I’m afraid he just pretty much disappears.” Maggie sighed and shook her head. “And he was a real help to me, too. Seemed to have a feel for the fish.”

“But not on Sunday, Magnolia.” Lily was adamant.

“No, sister.”

“You two bit—” Andrews choked and stopped as Maggie’s shotgun swung in his direction.

“I think you need to be a little more respectful here in front of ladies, Gordon.”

Andrews bit his lip. She saw his hand tighten on the weapon.

“Sister, you go on ahead. Watch your step. Then Mac, you and Jan. Andrews, you follow them and I’ll be bringing up the rear.”

She felt Mac’s hand on the small of her back as Miss Lily lurched her way out of the cabin, supporting herself on her canes. Outside the rainstorm the night before had left everything clean and refreshed, the humidity washed away.

She could hear Andrews muttering to himself as he followed them. She stopped as Miss Lily took a misstep ahead of them and caught herself on the gnarled trunk of a red cedar. Her skin crawled.

Was it possible Andrews could just take the opportunity to shoot them right here? But then there would be two bodies needing disposal on Louis and Etta’s property. It seemed Maggie had bought them some time, but for what? Unfortunately, the Mayhew sisters didn’t seem to have moral qualms about killing on Mondays.

At the end of the path, she could see the café and parking lot. Too bad Etta and Louis observed Sunday as a day of rest, too. Andrew’s gun prodded her. Their time might be measured in moments now. How would her parents deal with their only child being found shot to death in rural Alabama, accused of a series of felonies?

Mac stumbled in her direction.

“Watch it!” Andrews growled.

“Jan.” Mac’s whisper was barely audible.

She tilted her head.

“When we get to the parking lot, move away.”

Was he going to make a run for it? Against two armed and dangerous people? She searched his face. He shook his head ever so slightly. So what was she supposed to do? A Maggie May panel truck was pulled behind the café near the dark sedan she supposed Andrew had arrived in.

Maggie went ahead to open the back of her truck.

“You know we might be able to arrange a mutually beneficial outcome for all of us here.”

“Shut your mouth.”

“No!” She gasped as Andrews swung his gun at Mac, hitting him in the jaw.

Mac winced and gave her a warning look. She bit her lip and edged away as he wiped away the blood and continued talking conversationally.

“There’s enough money left to plant it here with our fingerprints on it. Jan and I take off and you split the rest. It’s not like the two of us have the most upstanding reputations at this point. The take from the bank jobs plus reward money for turning in the microchip thieves should be enough to feather all your nests.”

Maggie and Lily regarded Mac, listening while Andrews scowled at him.

Mac was moving slowly as he talked toward the rear door of the café. Was he trying to get in? It was locked, wasn’t it?

“I’d just be our word against yours if we ever tried to talk. Fugitives on the run against local business women, two pillars of the community.”

“Can’t you see what he’s trying to do?” Andrews waved his gun in frustration. “He’s messing with your heads.”

“As well as that of a long-time federal employee nearing retirement after years of faithful service. Now whom do you think people are going to believe?”

Mac had moved toward the back steps, his leg brushing the storage container she’d seen Louis hauling something out to the other day.

“You gals had to be standing at the end of the line when God was passing out brains!” Andrews spit out, glaring at the sisters.

“Blaspheming on the Sabbath isn’t going to get you anywhere, Andrews. You may not be worried about your immortal soul…”

With the back of his knee, Mac was doing something. He was shifting his weight, rotating his leg. Moving something. The cap on the… what had Etta said it was?

“We don’t have all the time in the world here. The feds aren’t completely stupid. They know these two are in Alabama.”

“Which is a mighty big state, Gordo.”

Mac had slipped something out of his pocket. She couldn’t make it out. It looked like a book of…

“Jan!”

“Attention! This is the Fawcett County Sher—”

Someone was shouting, but she couldn’t understand their words. Mac’s body impacted hers, a fireball of smoke and flames whooshing after him as he knocked them both to the asphalt, rolling over her and covering her body with his. She lost her breath as the sky went black.

Chapter Fifteen

This was different. Waking up with Mac that morning, her body had been bruised with kisses, aching with tenderness. It had all been good.

This was not.

Everything hurt. Inhaling. The pressure of the sheet against her skin. Her hair?

She wet her lips and tried to move. Her legs didn’t want to respond. It felt like they weighed a ton. She paused and tried to wiggle her toes. Somewhere down there she could sense movement. That was something, wasn’t it? Didn’t that mean she wasn’t paralyzed? She tried the other foot.

“Waking up, are we?”

We? Even with her eyes closed, she was pretty sure she was alone in bed this time. So where was…

“Ma…” She opened her eyes and tried out her voice. A croak was the most she could manage.

“More water?” A fresh-faced, young woman with ginger curls got a cup with a straw from the bedside table. She was wearing a pink-flowered top and hospital nametag. “Here let’s try and drink a little.”

Swallowing hurt, she managed two tiny sips. Her brain fog was starting to clear.

“Mac?” she managed to say.

“Excuse me?”

“Mac. Man…with me?”

“Oh.” The young nurse held up the cup again. “I don’t know. Several of you were brought in to the E.R. together. One poor lady has several broken bones.”

She tried to say “deserved it,” but the effort seemed too much. She sucked again at the straw her nurse held.

“I’m going to elevate the head of your bed.” Her nurse put down the cup to get the hand control.

There was a whirring as the head of the bed rose.

“How’s that? Feeling more comfortable?”

“Fine.” She drew a shaky breath and shuttered.

“Take it easy. You’ve got some cracked ribs along with a mild concussion. You’ll be in here overnight, but if you do okay, the doctor may discharge you tomorrow.”

“What time is it?”

“Almost four. Let me take a look at your eyes and get some vitals from you.”

She held still as the nurse flicked on her instrument, held her lids open, and checked her pupils, and then went on to check her pulse, temperature, and blood pressure.

“Okay, Jan. I don’t see a problem. Can you tell me what day it is?”

“Sunday.”

“Good and do you know where you are?”

“The hospital in, ah, Alabama. Fawcett County?”

“Close enough. Well, you have some visitors outside. Are you ready for company?”

“Yes, please.” She tried to sit up, winced, and decided to stay put. How did she look? Like that mattered. At least she was alive. She hadn’t been so sure of that earlier in the day.

A man paused in the doorway and walked in. Warren Whittaker? She hadn’t seen him since before the mess in Titusville. Hadn’t Mac said he’d gone back to headquarters in Atlanta? He was followed by a younger man she didn’t recognize in khaki trousers and a shirt with some kind of logo.

“Visiting time is limited to fifteen minutes, gentlemen.” Her nurse tapped her watch and gave them both a look as she left.

“I understand you’re feeling better, Miss Thimmons.” Whittaker pulled a chair over beside her bed while his companion leaned against the wall and watched. He was carrying a file folder.

“How is Mac?”

“Special Agent McKenzie is recovering. He’s in another room on this floor. He had some superficial burns, cuts, and abrasions, but he should be all right. Fortunately, for him, you cushioned his fall.”

If she didn’t know better, she’d say the assistant regional director was amused.

“We didn’t blow up that car. The one that injured Jake Derossiers. Or steal the money. Well, we did steal the cars when we were making our getaway. The car and the truck actually, but we were kind of forced into it. And we took the money, but we never intended to keep it for ourselves.”

“We know. We’ve actually known for some time.”

“It was the man from the I.R.S. The one in Atlanta.”

“Gordon Andrews, yes.”

She gawked at him.

“I suspected he was dirty twenty-five years ago. There were just too many coincidences. The Deb always a step ahead of us, evading capture. Then he left the Bureau for a desk job at the I.R.S.” Whittaker’s face darkened. “It seemed obvious someone had been tipping off the Dixie Deb and her confederates, but I just couldn’t nail him with it at the time.”

“So this whole thing was to catch him?”

“Along with the others. I wanted to get him nervous enough to make mistakes. I didn’t anticipate the lengths Andrews would go to in order to shut down the operation. Unfortunately, you, McKenzie, and Derossiers paid for my underestimating him.”

“How is Jake?”

“Much better. He’s on track to begin rehabilitative therapy soon.”

“And Miss Lily and Maggie?”

“The last I checked the Mayhew sisters are still being evaluated in the E.R. The explosion knocked them off their feet. Mr. Andrews has been moved to a private room, but they will all be under guard.”

She closed her eyes. Just before Mac had careened into her, there had been the beginning of some kind of announcement.

“You were out there all the time? You and the police?”

Whittaker nodded. “We’d been monitoring Andrews’ phone messages. We heard the one McKenzie left detailing the microchip smuggling operation in Georgia. He’ll probably end up with a citation for that bit of work. We got to the site before Andrews arrived and were ready to move in when the sisters showed up.”

“Did you know about them? Azalea, the one who was the Deb back then, is dead. She died years ago in an automobile accident trying to get away with the money they’d stolen. Maggie was her driver on the jobs and Lily and her husband were involved, too.”

“Yes, Andrews has been talking, trying to spread the blame. There’s no love lost there. Andrews has been in contact with them over the past few weeks, but it wasn’t clear what was going on. Nothing we could definitely pin down. With two armed people in the cabin, we were afraid of a hostage situation developing. We decided to wait and just observe the situation for a while. We watched you all move back up to the parking lot. When the three of them started squabbling and took their guns off you, we were ready to move in. But then McKenzie preempted us and triggered the explosion.”

The younger man behind Whittaker cleared his throat. Whittaker was turning to look at him when her nurse leaned in the doorway.

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