“It’s time for you to go to sleep now,” the woman said.
“Will I see Mommy tomorrow?” Carlo asked.
Stacy let out a moan—she couldn’t help it. Patrick gripped her shoulder more tightly and she nodded.
“Maybe your mommy will come tomorrow,” the woman said. “Now close your eyes and go to sleep.”
“I want a drink of water first.”
Patrick stiffened and moved to the other side of the door. Stacy stepped farther into the shadows on her side.
Steps crossed the room, then the doorknob turned and a shaft of light fell on the hallway floor. A short, middle-aged woman with long gray hair stepped out into the hallway. Before Stacy could even blink, Patrick clamped his hand over the woman’s mouth and carried her into the bathroom across the hall. Stacy slipped into the bedroom.
“Mama!” Carlo shouted.
“Shh! Shh!” She put her fingers to her lips and rushed to him. “You have to be very quiet,” she said. “I don’t want Uncle Abel to know I’m here.”
The boy frowned. “Why not?”
“It’s a surprise.” She tucked the blanket from his bed around him and gathered him into her arms. He wore blue flannel pajamas with little fire trucks on them and she could smell toothpaste on his breath. “I’ve missed you so much,” she whispered, hugging him tightly.
“I’ve missed you, too. Where have you been?”
“Shh. We can’t talk now. Now, promise me you’ll be very, very quiet. A friend and I are going to take you snowshoeing in the woods. Won’t that be fun?”
“But it’s dark.” He looked toward the window. “And it’s cold.”
“Please, baby, it will be all right, I promise. Just be quiet and do what Mommy tells you.”
“Uncle Abel and Grandma Willa won’t like it,” he said.
She hesitated. How could she explain the danger to a three-year-old? “No, they won’t like it,” she said. “And if they catch Mommy here with you, they might hurt us both. So it’s very important that we sneak away without them knowing.”
Unfortunately, this information only confused the boy more. “But Uncle Abel told me you were coming to see me soon. And he promised to take me for a ride on one of his horses.”
“Maybe you can do that soon.” She tucked the blanket more firmly around him. “Do you have snow boots?”
“Downstairs.”
They didn’t have time to search downstairs for boots. She settled for pulling a pair of socks over his bare feet.
The bedroom door opened and Patrick stuck his head in. “We need to go,” he whispered.
“Carlo, this is my friend, Patrick,” Stacy said. “He’s going snowshoeing with us.”
Carlo’s eyes widened. “He’s big.”
“Hello, Carlo,” Patrick said. “Will you let me carry you?”
Carlo shook his head and clung to his mother.
“I’d better take him for now,” she said.
He held the door open wider and motioned for her to go ahead of him.
The kitchen was still dark and the television still blared as they made their way down the stairs. Carlo squirmed and buried his head against Stacy’s shoulder, but didn’t say a word. She pulled the blanket up over his head and stepped carefully down the stairs. Only a few more steps and they’d be out of the house, halfway to safety.
At the bottom of the stairs, Patrick moved ahead of her. He kept one hand in his pocket and she was sure he was holding his gun. She wondered what he’d done with the babysitter but would have to wait to ask him.
They crossed the kitchen, but when he pulled on the door, it refused to yield. He turned the knob back and forth, but the door wouldn’t budge.
“I remembered to lock it this time,” said a voice behind him. “Now turn around, slowly. And keep your hands where I can see them.”
Chapter Fourteen
“Uncle Abel, you weren’t supposed to see us.” Carlo’s childish voice broke the silence of the adults, reminding Patrick of all that was at stake here, far beyond his own safety.
“Your uncle Abel is smarter than some people think,” the older man said. He was clearly cut from the same mold as Sam Giardino, with the same putty nose and jowly chin, more fleshy and older looking than his brother, who had relied on plastic surgery and expensive spa treatments to maintain his youthful looks.
Abel gestured with his pistol. “Young man, take that gun out of your pocket and lay it on the counter there.”
Patrick did as he asked.
“I won’t let you take my son.” Stacy shifted Carlo to one hip and glared at the old man.
“Your son is a Giardino. He belongs with family.” The old woman moved slowly into the kitchen, pushing a walker in front of her. Her sparse gray hair was cut short like a man’s and her spine was bent thirty degrees, but her voice was strong and her eyes blazed with determination.
“He belongs with his mother,” Stacy declared.
The old woman’s mouth twisted into an expression of disgust. “Sam never should have let his son marry you. I knew as soon as I saw you at the wedding that you had no respect for the family. You were trash he never should have bothered picking up.”
Stacy drew herself up taller, eyes sparking. If not for the boy in her arms, Patrick thought she might have flown at the woman. “Your family doesn’t deserve my respect,” she said.
The old woman dismissed her with a wave and turned to her son. “Get rid of the man and we’ll deal with her later.”
“I want to know who he is first.” Abel jabbed the gun at Patrick. “Who sent you?”
“Nobody sent me,” Patrick said. “I agreed to help Stacy retrieve her son.”
“I told you, I’m not stupid.” He waved the gun threateningly. “You’re that marshal assigned to protect her. Thompson.”
Patrick didn’t allow his expression to betray his surprise. No one was supposed to know where Stacy had been since Sammy’s death—or who she was with. Though maybe he had heard the speculation in the news. “My job is to keep her and the boy safe,” he said. “I don’t care about anything else.”
“As if I’d believe that. You work for the feds. Though you’ve got more nerve than most of them, coming right into my house.”
“He’s telling the truth,” Stacy said. “He’s only here to help me. Let us go and we’ll leave you alone.”
“Shut up,” the old woman snapped. “I told you, we’ll deal with you later.”
“I have something that belongs to you,” Patrick said. “Maybe we can agree to an exchange—the boy and Stacy for what I have.”
“What do you have that belongs to me?”
“I have the fifty thousand dollars.”
The old man arched one eyebrow. “Fifty thousand dollars that belongs to me? And where did you get that?”
“The two men you sent after us in the canyon had it.”
“Those two idiots,” Willa said. “I told Abel that was a bad idea. He thought we should get you out of the way and bring Stacy here by herself. You were doing fine getting here on your own without those two interfering, and we could have dealt with you when you arrived. But he doesn’t listen to his mother.”
Stacy stared at the old woman. Patrick could read her thoughts from the expression on her face—was the old lady for real?
“You probably think fifty thousand dollars is a lot of money to a man like me,” Abel said.
“Fifty thousand dollars is a lot of money to most people,” Patrick said.
“Not to my brother. If you offered fifty thousand dollars to Sam, he’d take it as an insult.”
“I’m not offering the money to your brother,” Patrick said. “I’m offering it to you.”
“What do you think, Mother? Are those two worth fifty thousand dollars?”
“She isn’t worth fifty cents to me, but she’s not getting the boy for any price.”
“Carlo is my son,” Stacy said. “You have no claim on him.”
“Stacy,” Patrick said. He gave her a warning look. They had nothing to gain by antagonizing these people.
She bit her lip and gave a single nod to show she understood, then rested her head against Carlo’s. He whispered something to her and she replied, then smoothed her hand down his back.
“Give me the money,” Abel demanded, a new, harder edge to his voice.
“It isn’t here,” Patrick said. “You let Stacy and Carlo go and once they’re safely away, I’ll take you to the money.”
“And then what am I supposed to do with you?” Abel grinned, showing a missing incisor. “I could kill you, but then I could do that anyway.”
“Patrick, no!” Stacy said. “I won’t leave without you.”
“So that’s how it goes, is it?” Abel’s expression darkened. “My nephew not cold in his grave and you’ve taken up with a fed.”
Willa called Stacy an obscene name. Stacy cradled Carlo’s head to her breast, covering his ears.
“I think I will kill you,” Abel said.
“Not in front of the boy,” Willa admonished, as if she was warning him against drinking or swearing or some other petty sin.
“No, not in front of the boy,” Abel agreed. He motioned to Patrick again. “Take off that pack and turn and face the door, hands behind your back.”
Patrick did as the old man asked, moving as slowly as possible, but quickly enough not to provoke his captor. Stacy kept her eyes on him, anger and fear doing battle in her expression. “So you don’t care about the money?” Patrick said, when he was facing the door.
“I wondered what happened to it, but there’s plenty more where that came from. Fifty thousand is nothing compared to what I’m going to have as soon as Stacy here signs a few papers for me.”
“I won’t sign anything unless you let Carlo go,” she said.
“Carlo will be fine here with Mother and me. We’ll love him like the son and grandson we never had.” He opened a drawer and took out a roll of duct tape. “You like it here, don’t you, Carlo? You’re going to learn to ride horses and be a cowboy.”
Carlo said nothing. He stuck out his lower lip and watched his uncle wrap layer after layer of tape around Patrick’s wrists.
Patrick’s mind raced. He had to do whatever he could to stay here with Stacy, Carlo and the others. As soon as Abel got him alone, the man would most likely kill him. With his hands bound, Patrick had less chance of overpowering the older man. Years of ranch work had honed his muscles, and the weapon put the odds well in his favor. “Even if Stacy signs papers giving you control of the trust, you won’t have legal custody of Carlo,” he said.
“What, are you a lawyer, too?” Abel tore the last strip of tape, patted it into place and stepped back. “We’ve taken care of it.”
“Stacy is going to sign over custody of Carlo to us,” Willa said.
“I most certainly am not,” Stacy said.
“You will unless you want to see the boy hurt.” Willa smiled—a horrible grin, made more so by the unnaturally white false teeth that gleamed between her withered lips.
“Mommy, don’t let them hurt me.” Carlo clung tightly to Stacy, his arms around her neck.
“I won’t let them hurt you.” If looks really could kill, Willa would have been struck dead right then.
The old woman looked around. “Where’s Justine?” she asked.
No one answered.
“Where is Justine?” Willa demanded again.
“What did you do with the nanny?” Abel asked.
“She’s fine,” Patrick said. “She’s in the bathroom upstairs, tied up.”
“Well, go untie her, Abel,” Willa said.
“I’m a little busy right now, Mother.”
“Oh, just shoot him and be done with it. But outside. You don’t want to make a mess in here.”
Patrick couldn’t decide if Mother Giardino was off her rocker or playing the part to unnerve them. He suspected the latter. The old lady looked frail, but her eyes—as well as her tongue—were sharp.
Abel pressed the gun into Patrick’s lower back. The hard metal barrel drove into one kidney, reminding him of the damage a bullet at this range would do. The older man grasped the doorknob and turned. Nothing happened. “It’s locked,” Patrick said.
Abel rewarded this answer with a harder jab of the gun. He unlocked the door and opened it.
“No!” Stacy, still holding Carlo, rushed toward them.
Patrick whirled around in time to see Abel, gun in hand, turn to face her. Her eyes widened in horror and the boy began to wail. “Stacy, hit the floor!” Patrick shouted.
She dropped, throwing her body over Carlo’s at the same time Patrick aimed a mighty kick at Abel’s back. The old man went sprawling, the gun flying from his hand. A shot rang out, the bullet splintering the frame of the doorway that led into the hall as it sank into the wood. Stacy screamed, Carlo wailed and Willa shouted curses.
Patrick stepped over the old man on his way to retrieve the gun. Abel grabbed at his ankles and Willa headed toward him with surprising speed despite her walker. Stacy clambered to her feet and pulled Carlo up after her. “The gun!” Patrick called to her. “Get the gun.”
She looked around, but apparently didn’t see the gun. Patrick raced across the room, thinking he could kick the weapon toward her, but Willa intercepted him, banging him hard in the shins with her walker. Patrick leaned over to shove her aside, but a hard blow to his back knocked him off balance. He turned and Abel landed a solid punch to his chin. Patrick staggered back, trying to maintain his balance.
He heard Stacy coming before he saw her. “Nooo!” she bellowed, and ran at them. She jumped on Abel’s back, hands flailing, clawing at his eyes and nose. The old man turned in circles like a rodeo bull trying to throw off a rider. Carlo, still wrapped in the blanket, huddled against the wall and watched the spectacle wide-eyed, his thumb in his mouth.
“Carlo, run!” Stacy shouted. “Run and hide.”
The boy hesitated, then turned and raced out the open back door, the blanket trailing behind him like a cape.
Stacy drove her thumb into Abel’s eye. With a howl of rage, the old man grabbed her arm and slung her to the floor, where he began kicking her, his cowboy boots connecting with her ribs with a sickening thud.
Patrick shouted and rushed the old man. Hands still bound behind his back, he had little defense against Abel’s fists, but at least the rancher had left Stacy alone. She crawled to the side of the room and leaned against the wall, clutching her side and moaning.
“Stop this! Stop this at once!” Willa shouted. But no one paid her any attention. Abel’s fist connected with Patrick’s nose and blood spurted. He blinked, trying hard to clear his head. To think. If Abel got hold of the gun again, Patrick was done for, but with his hands tied and Stacy helpless, the old man had the odds in his favor once more.
Abel rushed at him again. Patrick dodged the punch, but the old man still landed a glancing blow. Patrick staggered back.
“Don’t let him get out the door!” Willa shouted.
Out of the corner of his eye, Patrick saw Stacy move. She was sliding sideways along the wall, still hunched over and nursing her ribs, or pretending to do so. But she was moving, ever so slowly, toward the handgun that lay in the doorway to the darkened dining room.
“Maybe we should take this outside,” Patrick said loudly. “Untie my hands and fight like a man.”
“As if insults from a fed mean anything to me.” Abel hit him again, a hard blow that snapped his head to one side and sent him staggering again.
“Quit playing with him, Abel,” Willa said. “Where is that gun?” She looked around and spotted Stacy. “What do you think you’re doing?”
Stacy froze. “I think my ribs are broken.” She looked around, as if only just now becoming aware of her surroundings. “Where’s Carlo? What have you done with my son?”
“Abel, where is the boy?” Willa asked.
“We’ll find him later,” Abel said. “When I’m done with the fed here.”
“Abel, we should find him now,” Willa said.
“He’s three years old. He can’t drive and he can’t walk far in this snow. We’ll find him.”
“If we lose that boy, we’re done for,” Willa wailed. “You know that, Abel.”
Abel shook his head, looking more annoyed than ever. Patrick leaned back against the counter, stealthily stretching his fingers in search of a knife, a bottle, a frying pan—anything he could use as a weapon.
A heavy footfall on the back steps made them all freeze and look toward the still-open door. A dark figure filled the space, then moved into the room, followed by two burly men with guns drawn.
“What’s going on here?” Senator Gary Nordley took in the two battered men, the young woman on the floor and the old one by her walker.
“We caught them trying to steal the boy away.” Abel stood up straighter and wiped a smear of blood from his cheek.
“Where is the boy now?” Nordley asked.
“He ran out the door and is hiding somewhere.” Abel motioned toward the landscape behind the senator and his bodyguards. “We’ll find him. He can’t have gone far.”
Nordley shook his head. “Abel, you told me you could handle this. Was I wrong to put my faith in you?”
Abel walked over to the dining room and retrieved his gun. “I’m handling it. You don’t have to worry.”
Nordley scowled at Patrick. Behind him, the two guards focused their weapons on the marshal. “You must be Thompson. I heard you’d been giving my men trouble.”
“Hello, Senator. My colleagues told me they suspected you were behind all of this. I had a hard time believing it at first.”
“Why wouldn’t you believe it? You don’t think I’m capable of orchestrating a project like this?”
“A kidnapping is not a project,” Stacy snapped. “Murdering people is not a project, you scum.”
Nordley turned to her, his expression affable. “Mrs. Giardino. That’s not any way to talk to someone to whom your family owes so much.”
Stacy struggled to her feet, using the wall for support. Her face was pale, and she was clearly in pain, but her eyes never lost their expression of defiance. “I don’t owe you anything.”
“If not for me, Sam Giardino would have rotted in prison for the rest of his life.”
“I wouldn’t have been sorry to see it,” Stacy said.
“Maybe not. But this way was so much better. He had a chance to settle his affairs before he died. To make a will giving everything to his only grandson, to be held in trust until the boy is old enough to appreciate the money. In the meantime, there are those of us who can advise him on how to put the funds to the best use.”