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The Will Trent Series 7-Book Bundle

Page 36

by Karin Slaughter


  “What am I missing here?”

  “Lemme finish,” Leo cautioned. “This cop, Barkley, he’s pretty pissed standing around with his dick in his hand. So, he takes it out on me, tells me to get the fuck off the property.” Will heard a lighter flick open as Leo lit a cigarette. “Me, I mosey out into the street. It’s a free country, right? Barkley don’t own the street.”

  Will could imagine the scene. You didn’t tell a cop to leave unless you wanted him to hang around your neck for the rest of your natural life.

  Leo continued, “I’m poking around Mike’s car, wondering why it’s parked across the street and not in his drive, when the neighbor pulls up with her groceries. Real nosy bitch, but I ask her where Mike is, and she says—” Leo paused to take a drag on his cigarette. “She says that Mike was there about an hour ago. She was getting her mail when he pulled up. He asked her about the car parked in his driveway.”

  Will stood away from the wall. “What car?”

  “Some car in the driveway,” Leo answered. “Mike wanted to know how long it had been there. She tells him five, maybe ten minutes, then he just walks away, doesn’t even say thank you.”

  “Then what?”

  “The neighbor got inside her house, gets her grocery list and heads back out.” Leo took another drag. “Only she notices that now the car in the driveway is facing the other direction. It’s backed up to the garage now. She sees Mike standing there, closing the garage door.”

  “Shit.”

  “He throws her a wave, closes the trunk, gets in and drives off.”

  Closes the trunk, Will echoed in his head. Michael had put something in the trunk.

  Will asked, “Did she say what kind of car it was?”

  “Black. She don’t know models.”

  His heart wasn’t beating anymore. “Leo, is the cop still there?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Gina’s car is still backed into the driveway?”

  “Yeah.”

  “I need you to go into the driveway and look under the back of her car. Tell me if there’s fresh oil on the concrete.”

  “You want me to get my dick shot off?”

  “You’ve got to do this,” Will insisted, his throat hurting from the effort it took to speak. “Tell me if there are any fresh oil stains.”

  “Jesus,” Leo muttered. Will heard him blow out a stream of smoke. “All right, hold on.”

  Will squeezed his eyes closed, picturing Leo walking across the street into Michael’s driveway. There was a man’s voice, probably the cop named Barkley, then a few groans as Leo must have struggled to get down on the ground. More yelling from the local cop, Leo yelling back. Finally, he got back on the phone. “Yeah, there’s fresh oil. Can’t be from Gina’s car because she backed into the drive—”

  Will snapped the phone closed, tucking it into his pocket as he slammed into the interrogation room.

  John saw him and backed up, saying, “What the—”

  Will twisted the man’s arm around behind his back and smashed his face into the wall. He put his mouth an inch from John’s ear to make sure the bastard heard every word.

  “Tell me where he is.”

  John screamed in pain, going up on his toes.

  “Tell me where he is,” Will repeated, pushing the arm higher, feeling the shoulder start to give.

  “I don’t—”

  “He’s got Angie, you asshole.” Will twisted the arm harder. “Tell me where he is.”

  “Tennessee,” John whispered. “He’s got a place in Tennessee.”

  Will let go and John dropped to the floor.

  “Where in Tennessee?”

  John shook his head, tried to stand. “Take me with you.”

  “Tell me the address.”

  He pushed himself up, wincing from the pain in his shoulder. “Take me with you.”

  “I’m only going to ask you one more time.” When he didn’t answer, Will took a step toward him.

  “All right!” John screamed, holding up the only arm he could move. “Twenty-nine Elton Road. Ducktown, Tennessee.”

  CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX

  Angie had vomited at some point, but the gag had kept most of it in her mouth. Judging by the acrid smell in the trunk she had managed to urinate on herself as well. Her head was pounding, and her body ached so badly she couldn’t move without moaning in pain. Her hands and feet were hogtied behind her. Even if she had been able to move, she had nowhere to go, no way of helping herself. She was completely powerless.

  She tried to concentrate on breathing, keeping herself oriented so that she wasn’t sick again. This was hardly her first concussion, nor was it the worst, but the darkness in the trunk made it difficult to keep from panicking, and every time the car stopped for a traffic light or stop sign, she could not calm the fear that burned in her chest like acid.

  The car slowed again, and she tensed, listening to the tires crunching against a gravel road. They were off the pavement now. Angie had no idea how long she’d been in the trunk. She hadn’t seen who had hit her on the back of the head, but she knew it was Michael. His laughter still rang in her ears. It was the same laugh he’d given the night of Ken’s party when he’d shoved her into the backseat of her car.

  The girl.

  There had been a girl tied to the pool table. Blood and bruises had riddled her small body. Jasmine. It had to be Jasmine.

  The car rolled to a slow stop. Angie counted the seconds. At twelve, a door opened. The car shifted as weight lifted from the front seat. The door slammed. Footsteps crunched against gravel. The passenger side door opened, then closed hard as if it had been kicked shut.

  Twenty seconds. Fifty. A hundred. Angie had given up counting by the time she heard the key scrape in the lock of the trunk.

  She was blinded by sunlight. Angie squeezed her eyes tight against the pain. The fresh air was like heaven, and she opened her mouth wide around the gag, flared her nostrils, desperate to breathe it in.

  A shadow blocked the sun. Slowly, she opened her eyes. Michael was smiling down at her, the ragged scratch Jasmine had made down his cheek three days before looking like war paint.

  “Have a nice nap?”

  She strained against the ropes.

  “Settle down,” he cautioned.

  Angie barked out a “fuck you,” around the gag.

  He unsheathed a long hunting knife, warning her, “Don’t try anything,” as he sliced through the ropes behind her back.

  She moaned with relief as she stretched her legs as much as she could. Her hands were still tied behind her back, but at least she could move.

  “Get out of the car.”

  Angie struggled to sit up. Michael slid the knife back into the sheath and pulled out his service weapon. He pointed it at her head and she stopped moving.

  “Slowly,” he ordered. “Don’t think for a minute I won’t shoot you.”

  The rope bit into her wrists as she pressed her palms flat against the floor of the trunk. After several attempts, she managed to push herself up. She threw her legs over the side of the open trunk. Groaning, she forced herself out, tottering as her feet hit the ground, but somehow keeping her balance.

  She stood up straight, looking around, trying to get her bearings.

  “That was pretty impressive,” he said. “I’d forgotten how limber you are.”

  She wanted to rip his eyes out with her bare hands.

  “Look around,” he told her. She saw rolling hills and snow-capped mountains looming behind a rustic-looking cabin. “You can scream all you want, but no one is going to hear you.”

  He pulled down the gag and she gulped for air. Her nose felt broken, and when she spit on the ground, a clot of blood mixed with chunks of food from breakfast.

  She screamed like a banshee.

  Michael just stood there as she doubled over from the exertion, her lungs rattling in her chest. She yelled until there was no air left in her lungs, nothing in her mind except the sound of her own sc
reams.

  He asked, “Finished?”

  She lunged for him and he brought up his knee smack into her chest. She buckled to the ground, gravel shooting sharp pains through her legs.

  He pressed the Glock to the side of her head, put his face a few inches from hers. “Remember this, Angie: you’re second-string here.”

  Jasmine. “Where is she?”

  He yanked her up by the hair, dragging her toward the cabin. Angie struggled against him, pulling the ropes as she bumped against the stairs. “Let me go!” she screamed. “Let me go, you fucker!”

  He opened the front door and pushed her inside. “Get in there.” He grabbed her arm and threw her into the bathroom.

  She fell into the tub, her head popping against the plastic wall. Michael still had his gun in one hand. With the other, he turned on the shower. Angie tried to stand, her legs slipping out from under her as the cold water beat down on her face.

  “Take off your shorts,” Michael ordered. He squirted a glob of shampoo on her as she struggled to stand. “Get them off.”

  Even if she’d wanted to, Angie couldn’t do anything with her hands tied behind her back. Michael seemed to realize this. He reached in and ripped open the top button of the cutoffs, then pulled down the zipper.

  “Underwear, too,” he said. “Now.”

  Her fingers were numb, the circulation cut off. Still, she managed to hook her thumbs in the waistband and pull down the shorts. She kicked them away with her feet.

  “What did you do with the little girl?” she demanded, pushing down her panties. “What did you do to Jasmine?”

  “Don’t worry.” Michael smiled, like he was enjoying a private joke. “She won’t talk.”

  Angie lunged again, her head barreling into his gut. Michael fell back into the hall and the gun skipped across the wet floor. In one swift motion, he picked up Angie and threw her across the room. She landed awkwardly, reaching for the empty space behind her to break the fall. Her right hand twisted as her full weight pressed into the wrist and she heard a crack just as a lightning bolt of pain set her arm on fire.

  “Get up,” Michael ordered.

  Her hand was throbbing, needles running up and down her arm. She rolled to the side, sobbing. Oh, God, she had broken her wrist. What was she going to do? How was she going to get out of here?

  She heard noises in the next room. Michael was gone. Where was the girl? What was he doing to Jasmine?

  Angie pressed her face into the floor, forcing herself to her knees, then her feet. She leaned against the wall as her head started swimming, her vision blurring. She took a breath, braced herself, then moved away from the wall. Her wet underwear was wrapped around her ankle and she kicked it off as she limped into the outer room.

  Michael was sitting on the couch, one leg crossed over the other, foot bouncing up and down. The Glock was on the cushion beside him. He knew she couldn’t get to it in time.

  “Sit down,” he said, indicating the rocking chair by the fireplace. Carefully, she sat on the edge of the seat, trying not to fall back.

  “What were you doing in my house?”

  Angie looked around the room, which was about ten feet by twenty, a living room with a small kitchen at the back. She remembered the mountains outside, the stark isolation of the cabin. He had been right: no one would hear her scream.

  She asked, “What are you going to do?”

  He had that same smirk on his face, that smile she had seen the night of Ken’s party and taken for flirting. “What do you think I’m going to do?”

  Angie could not stop her bottom lip from trembling. Her hand was going numb, dull throbs of pain ringing around her wrist. The rope was wet from the shower, somehow made thicker and heavier by the water. The skin felt as if it had been burned away.

  She looked at the gun on the couch.

  “Don’t be stupid.”

  Angie cleared her throat, feeling like she had swallowed cotton. “John told me everything,” she said, wondering how hard she could push before Michael broke her. No one knew where she was. Will was probably still interviewing John Shelley, trying to get to the truth. If John had learned anything in prison, he was keeping his mouth closed. It would be hours, maybe days, before Will even thought to look for her, and when he finally did, there was no way he would know about this tiny cabin in the hills.

  Michael asked, “What did John tell you?”

  “About Mary Alice,” Angie said, praying she’d got the girl’s name right. “He told me what really happened.”

  Michael laughed, but he wasn’t smiling. “John doesn’t know what really happened.”

  “He figured it out.”

  “John’s too stupid to figure anything out.”

  “I told everybody.”

  “Don’t lie to me,” he warned. “I’m being nice now, but we both know what I’m capable of.”

  “Will. I told Will.”

  He was scared of Will. She could see that in his eyes.

  He asked, “Trent?”

  “He’s my boyfriend.”

  Michael kept staring at her, obviously trying to decide if she was telling the truth. Finally, he shook his head. “Uh-uh.” He didn’t believe her.

  “It’s true,” she insisted. “I’ve known him all my life.”

  He let his gaze take in her body. She was naked below the waist, her legs braced apart so that she would not fall. He told her, “You need to remember there are a lot of different ways you can die.”

  “The scar on Will’s face,” she tried. “It goes down his jaw to his neck.”

  Michael shrugged. “Anybody can see that.”

  “His hand,” she said. “He was shot with a nail gun. I took him to the hospital.”

  Anger flashed in his eyes. He stood slowly from the couch and walked over to where she was sitting. Angie tried to lean back as he put his hands on either side of her, bracing himself against the arms of the rocking chair. His voice was a low growl when he asked, “What did you tell him?”

  Fear tightened like a band around her throat. “Everything …” She heard the terror in her voice, knew he would hear it, too, but her mouth would not stop moving, the words would not stop coming. “John told me … and I told … I told Will …”

  He was gripping the arms so hard that the whole chair seemed to vibrate. “Told you what?”

  “That you knew Aleesha!”

  “Fuck!” Michael pushed himself away from the chair so violently that it almost tipped over. Angie’s legs flailed as she scrambled not to fall. “God damnit!” He lifted his foot to kick over the coffee table but stopped himself at the last minute. Slowly, his foot went back to the floor, but his fists were still clenched at his sides and he shook with fury.

  Angie stared at his back, breathless with fear. Carefully, she stilled the rocking chair, inched her way closer to the edge of the seat. The floor creaked as she shifted her weight.

  Michael turned and backhanded her so hard that she slammed onto the floor.

  Angie lay there. She couldn’t move. Her head was still echoing from the impact.

  “Get up.”

  He didn’t have to threaten her. Angie tried to sit up but couldn’t. She pressed her face to the floor and closed her eyes, waiting for the punishment.

  Nothing came.

  “My dad left me when I was ten.”

  Angie opened her eyes. She must have passed out, missed something. Michael was at the kitchen sink. He took a metal tin out of one of the cabinets.

  He said, “You know what that’s like?”

  Angie didn’t answer. She watched him open the tin, check the contents.

  “John thought he had it hard. He didn’t know what hard was.” Michael waved a bag of white powder in the air. He was back to being that guy again, that normal guy he projected out to the world so that they wouldn’t figure out what a monster he was.

  He said, “This is good stuff. You want some?”

  She tried to shake her head.

>   “You didn’t want that last drink, either.” He smiled like it was funny. “Remember that, Angie—Ken’s big party? I got you a drink.”

  She couldn’t remember, but she nodded anyway.

  “Roofies, baby.” He sat down on the couch, putting the tin on the coffee table between them. “You gulped down a mouthful of roofies.”

  Rohypnol. He had drugged her.

  Michael laughed at her expression. He took a razor blade and a small mirror out of the tin and tapped some of the powder onto the glass. Angie watched as he chopped the coke with the blade. “You ever have a kid?” he asked, not looking at her. “I bet you’ve had about sixty abortions by now.” He kept cutting the coke, businesslike. “My son has problems. You know that.”

  Angie willed her body to move. She was gasping with pain by the time she managed to sit up. At least she had managed it, though. At least she was no longer lying helpless on the floor.

  “He’s retarded,” Michael told her, cutting the powder into four lines. He took a rolled dollar bill out of the tin and inhaled one of the lines. He made an “ahh” sound, then told Angie, “This is some good shit. You sure you don’t want some?”

  She shook her head again.

  “Don’t like being out of control? That’s what you said at Ken’s party when I handed you that drink.” He chuckled. “You drank it anyway, didn’t you? Could have put it down, but you gulped it like a damn fish.” He held out the mirror, offering, “Sure?”

  “You broke my nose.”

  “Your loss.” He put the mirror back on the table.

  “Just let me go.” She was trembling so hard she could barely speak. “I won’t tell anybody.”

  “You can’t honestly think you’re getting out of here.”

  “Where’s Jasmine?”

  “You’ll find out soon enough.” He leaned his head back on the couch, studying her. “Don’t you want to know about John?”

  “What about him?”

  “Half that prison plowed John’s ass. I bet he has AIDS.”

  Angie took deep breaths, coughed from the effort. Her wrist was throbbing with every heartbeat. The rope was tightening around her skin as it dried in the heat of the cabin.

  “So, Tim, right?” He let out a short breath. “We got the diagnosis six years ago.”

 

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