Authors: Heather Graham
but lengths of rope were strewn everywhere.
“Genevieve!” he bellowed out.
There was nothing. No sound.
“Oh, shit,” Alex swore. “There!”
Thor looked into the water. A man’s body was floating, facedown.
He dived in, Blackhawk behind him. Catching hold of the man, he flipped him; with
Blackhawk’s help, he quickly dragged him to the side of My Lady.
Bethany and Alex were there to help drag him up.
“It’s Jay. He’s not breathing,” Bethany said as Thor and Brent pulled themselves from the
water.
Alex already had Jay stretched out on his back. “Bethany, dial 911. Fast.” He ripped off
Jay’s sodden shirt, falling to his knees, ready to perform CPR.
“There’s a knot on his head the size of an emu egg,” Brent commented.
“What the hell…?” Thor murmured, hunkering down. He looked around. There was an
empty berth next to My Lady. And the lines hadn’t been untied; they had been severed.
“What boat docks there?” he demanded, taking Bethany roughly by the shoulders.
“Um…oh, Jack’s old fishing boat,” Bethany said, shivering, still in shock, staring at Jay’s
seemingly lifeless body.
“Get him on the dock!” Thor ordered. “Now!”
“Hey, I’m doing CPR,” Alex protested.
“And this is a speedboat. Get off it!” Thor ordered. He bent down and lifted Jay himself,
gritting his teeth, half hating himself.
But he needed the boat.
And for Jay, those few seconds wouldn’t make any difference.
“Tell the cops. Tell them to get a boat out on the reef fast,” Thor ordered over his
shoulder, racing for the helm. “And keep up the CPR, no matter what, until help gets
here.”
Alex lifted a hand in acknowledgment. Bethany hurried to his side at the dock, dropping
down beside him, then looked up at Thor.
“Oh, my God. Genevieve….”
He couldn’t reply.
The key was in the ignition. He turned it, praying.
Beside him, Brent turned on the lights.
“You drive, I’ll look,” he said simply.
The powerful engine roared instantly to life.
Thor blessed the cop he had suspected for keeping the boat he never used anymore in
good running order.
Genevieve was aware of the movement of the boat, the rush of the water, the heat thrown
off by the engine. She blinked desperately, trying to move.
She felt a body next to her.
Panic seized her. She was trapped in the darkness with a dead body.
Audrey!
Oh, God, Audrey was dead….
She started to scream, but it didn’t matter. She couldn’t even hear herself over the roar of the motor. She fought for calm. She was still alive, and she desperately wanted to
somehow stay that way.
But she might as well have been paralyzed.
Her wrists had been bound behind her back, and her ankles were tied, as well. Realizing
her situation, she fought a nauseating wave of panic. When she had finally gained a grip
on her sanity, she realized the body wedged next to her own was still warm.
“Audrey?” she whispered.
There was no response. She didn’t know if Audrey was alive or dead. She only knew they
were both in serious trouble.
She tried taking a deep breath, but her stomach turned at the stench of motor oil. She
coughed, her lungs ripping in agony. She bit her lip and began working at the ropes
binding her.
Jack. Good God, Jack was the killer.
It hardly seemed to matter. She was numb.
He couldn’t get away with it. Not this time. Thor would have returned to the house. He
would look for her….
He might find Victor and beat him to a pulp, but he would still keep looking for her.
Except he wouldn’t know where to look.
She couldn’t think that way. She kept struggling with the ropes, cursing the fact that Jack
was an expert seaman and knew how to tie a knot.
Despite that, she forced herself to work steadily at her bindings. As long as she worked at
them, she had a chance.
She had become so fixed on her task that she didn’t even notice at first when the motor cut off.
Then she froze.
A second later, the hatch opened. “Gen, you came to. I’m sorry. I should have hit you a
lot harder, saved you the panic, but when you think about it, it’s your own fault. You
started this. You’re the one who brought it to light. You’re the reason I’m going to have
to keep going tonight after I…well, let’s not go into that now. It’s too bad, though. I
really love Key West.”
He didn’t reach for her first, but bent down to lift Audrey from the hold. He laid her out
like a rag doll. Audrey’s hair was plastered to her head. Her clothing was drenched.
“Still warm,” Jack said cheerfully.
“Jack,” Genevieve said, finding she had no voice at first. “Jack, I don’t understand.”
“Oh, don’t take me for an idiot. Do you know what I really am? A hero.”
“A hero?”
He stood in the cabin, staring down at her, his hands on his hips and laughed. “Imagine
me with a red cape, honey. I’m an avenger. Those girls were running around with their
short skirts and bursting cleavage, taunting men—and giving the clap and crabs and
AIDS to guys the whole time. They had to be stopped.”
“Jack, the girl years ago…when I was a kid. She wasn’t a prostitute—she was a model.”
He burst into laughter before dragging her out to lie half on top of Audrey. She gritted her teeth against the painful way he twisted her arm.
“Model? That’s what she wanted people to think. That little whore was getting her room,
her food, her photographs—all of it by hopping from bed to bed. I knew her, knew her
tricks. And then, when I helped her out, did she want to pay up?”
Genevieve tried to breathe, thinking furiously that she had to keep him talking as long as
possible.
“She was the first?” she asked.
“First—and only—for many years. Then, after a while, there were a few others. That
little hussy who came down here last year, she was number eight. But I only punished
those who deserved to be punished.”
“Jack—”
“Excuse me, for a minute, Gen.” He rolled her over, reached down and lifted Audrey up.
“No, Jack, wait!” she cried.
He turned, one step up the ladder. “Hey, don’t worry. I’ll let you two go together.”
He was gone. She heard Audrey’s body land topside.
Then he was back.
“Jack, I don’t understand.”
He hunkered down by her as if truly concerned, fingering the skull and crossbones in his
ear.
“What don’t you understand, Gen?”
“Audrey isn’t a prostitute! And neither am I.”
He sighed, not looking at her. “Gen, you started everything when you thought you saw a
ghost in the water,” he told her. He actually sounded truly sorry. Her heart took flight as
she prayed she could talk him out of his intent.
“Jack, I still don’t get it.”
He shook his head. “Gen, you thought you saw a woman. Then a dead woman popped up.
I was the one who tried to scare you off with the mannequin, you know. It was Victor’s
idea, but I convinced him it was idiotic. I only meant to scare you—to make you stop.
Didn’t work, though,” he said regretfully. “And then there you were, spouting off about
different bodies. And Audrey! Her and her so-called ghost hunters. I had to shut her up.”
He grinned suddenly. “Don’t you go kidding yourself. She worked hard to stay alive this
long. Real hard. She knew how to pay up. It’s almost too bad she has to die, but that’s the
way it has to be. And you, Gen, I’m so sorry. You were always the sweetest kid. And so
pretty, too. You know, I remember when you were a kid and you used to come see me.
I’d tried to make you feel better when the boys teased you for being so tall, calling you an Amazon. Remember how I used to tell you it was going to be okay? That you were going
to be a real beauty and they’d all be sorry. By the time you were twelve, you’d proved me
right.”
“Thanks, Jack. Listen—”
“Sorry, honey. No more time. I’ve got to get moving. I’m going to the Bahamas. I know
some people there who will be thrilled to help me out. I’ve uncovered a few treasures of
my own, you know, diving this area. Hell, we didn’t need Sheridan and all his charts. I’ve
been picking up pieces from that ship for years.”
He stood, reaching for her. She shrank from his touch.
“Gen, I told you, I wouldn’t do this if I didn’t have to.”
“You don’t have to do it, Jack,” she pleaded.
She landed on the deck next to Audrey.
“Tell you what?”
“What?” she asked hopefully.
He didn’t answer at first. She realized he had two heavy canvas bags of ballast ready. He started tying one to the ropes around Audrey’s ankles.
“What, Jack?” she demanded, trying to divert him.
He kept working while he answered. “I’ll let you pick. Who goes in first, you or
Audrey?”
She stared at him. She still couldn’t believe it. Jack! He’d been like an uncle to them, a
friend, someone who had taught them, stood by them.
“Jack, if you’re running to the Bahamas, anyway, there’s no need for this,” she begged.
“I’m sorry, but there is. I have to slow your boyfriend down.” He had hunkered down
beside her and started humming as he tied the second bag to the ropes at her ankles.
“My boyfriend?”
“Thor. He’s on his way now. I reckon that’s Jay’s boat he’s coming in.”
He was staring out at the dark horizon. She could hear, above the slapping of the waves
against the hull, the rising sound of a motor.
“Jack—” she began, then broke off. Staring past him, she could see the ghost. The
woman in white.
She wasn’t alone. The pirates were aligned beside her.
Her heart sank.
Beware.
Too late.
Help me!
This time she was the one crying the words, in her mind.
“What? You seeing ghosts again, Gen? Jeez, who’d have thought you, of all people,
would be the one to go off the deep end.” He laughed. “Hell, is there a deep end in the
ocean? Okay, you won’t choose, so I will. Audrey first!”
He bent down, scooping Audrey up. He threw her overboard, then picked up the canvas
bag of ballast he’d tied to her feet and threw that overboard after her.
“Oh, God, Jack, no!”
She fought as much as she could as he reached for her. She was still dimly aware of the
ghosts. They had moved, congregating together, the woman in white giving the
directions.
They were moving toward the helm. They seemed to be…
She saw the key fall from the ignition.
Success, she thought.
But not in time to save her.
Jack picked her up, heedless of both the ghostly activity and her fierce squirming.
“Damn, you’re as slippery as an eel,” he complained. Then he laughed again. “Look at it
this way. You already think you know some of the people you’re going to be joining.
And since you’re in love, you can come back and haunt Thor until the end of his days.”
He roared with laughter at that.
He threw her over the rail.
For a minute she was dangling from the hull, kept from hitting the water by the bag of
ballast.
Then she saw him lift the bag and throw it.
The water seemed very cold and dark as it closed over her head.
They were still a distance from Jack’s boat when Thor felt his heart stop.
There was a splash, and a burst of silver as the moonlight caught the droplets of water
that rose in the wake of the sound. Another splash, another, then another.
He swore, revving the motor higher. Blackhawk stood silently at his side.
How long?
He was dimly aware that the other boat wasn’t moving. As they closed in, he could see
Jack at the helm. He should have been long gone.
But as much as he wanted to kill Jack, Thor couldn’t spare a second. He nearly capsized
Jay’s boat, bringing it to such an abrupt halt, sending it spinning.
He threw himself into the water. How long had she been down? How long could she
survive? She was a diver, in excellent condition, but how much time would that buy her?
Thor was aware that Blackhawk had followed him in. But the water was all but black at
night, barely illuminated a few feet down by the moon and the lights from the boat.
He was amazed, when, almost immediately, he came upon a body. He pulled his knife
from his pocket and groped blindly for the rope holding the still form to the weight. He
slit the rope, jackknifed his legs toward the surface. They were no more than forty feet
down, but it felt as if he were rising forever.
He broke the surface, gasping for air. “Genevieve?”
But it wasn’t Genevieve. It was Audrey, and she was blue and limp.
Blackhawk burst from the water at his side, gasping desperately for breath. He swam hard against the light chopping waves, grasping Audrey. For a split second Thor hesitated, his
heart sinking. How much time did he have left? And how the hell was Blackhawk going
to get Audrey—or her earthly remains—aboard an unanchored boat?
“Go!” Blackhawk roared.
It was all he needed.
She loved the water.
She had loved it all her life.
And, she thought, as she pitched downward, dragged by the heavy weight, she was going
to die in it.
She could see nothing. The moon didn’t penetrate this deep. Her wrists were bound
behind her back, and she was also bound to the weight.
They had moved the key, she thought. Somehow, the ghosts had moved the key. Jack’s
boat was stationary. He wasn’t going to get away.
Would she even know or care once she was dead?