by Sandra Brown
“Is this gonna be our house?”
“No, sweetheart,” Honor said with forced gaiety as she squeezed into the cabin behind Coburn. “We’re just visiting. Remember when Grandpa lived here?”
The child shook her head. “Grandpa lives in a house.”
“Not Grandpa Stan. Your other grandpa. He lived on this boat. You used to love coming here to see him.”
Emily looked at her blankly.
Coburn could tell that Emily’s lost memory of her grandfather caused Honor heartache, but she put up a brave front. “This is part of our adventure.”
The kid was perceptive enough to recognize a lie when she heard one, but she was also smart enough to stay quiet when her mother was on the verge of losing it. Seeing through Honor’s false enthusiasm, she held her bankie close and turned on Elmo, who broke into cheerful song.
Honor spoke in a whisper. “Coburn, we’ve got to get some food and water at least.”
“By we you mean me.”
She had the grace to look chagrined. “I did, yes. I’m sorry.” She raised her hands at her sides. “I haven’t been here since I buried Dad. I didn’t realize…” She ran out of things to say and looked at him with helplessness. “Please let me call Stan.”
Rather than go through that tired routine, Coburn opened a narrow closet and found a broom, which he handed to her. “Do your best. I’ll be back as soon as I can.”
When two hours had passed and he still hadn’t returned, Honor began pacing the deck of the trawler, her eyes searching the end of the road that had got them here, willing him to reappear, listening above the call of birds for the welcome sound of an approaching car.
She tried not to convey her concern to Emily, who had become increasingly cantankerous and whiny. She was hot, hungry, thirsty. Where did Coburn go? and When’s he coming back? were questions repeated about every five minutes, until Honor lost what little patience she had remaining and snapped at her. “Stop asking me that.”
She didn’t know the answers to Emily’s nagging questions, but the possible answers terrified her. Her overriding fear was that Coburn had abandoned them.
Her father had chosen to dock his boat here specifically because the surrounding forest was swampy, virtually impenetrable, and would provide some shelter from hurricanes. He’d chosen to “retire” here because he liked the isolation of the place. It was off the beaten path and hard to get to. Moreover, he didn’t have to pay rent for a slip at a marina, and here he could avoid other pesky interferences with his freedom, things like rules and regulations, laws and ordinances, fines, and taxes.
He became a virtual hermit, avoiding contact with the outside world as much as possible. To her knowledge, she and Emily were the only other persons ever to come here. Not even Eddie had visited with her.
Coburn had asked her if she knew of a good place to hide. This was an excellent choice, but now she wished she had kept it to herself. The qualities that made it a good hiding place were the same ones that might do her in. The closest connection to civilization was a two-lane state road, and it was more than five miles from here. She couldn’t walk that, not with Emily in tow, and not without water.
She was stuck here until Coburn returned or…
She didn’t allow herself to think of the or. When the sun set and it grew dark, how would she keep Emily from being afraid? How would she maintain her own courage? She was completely without resources or means of communication.
Coburn had refused to leave a cell phone with her.
“I swear I won’t use it.”
“Then why do you want me to leave it?”
“We could have an emergency. A snakebite.”
“Stay out of their way, and they won’t hurt you.”
“I’m sure there are alligators.”
“They’re not Jaws. They won’t jump into the boat.”
“You can’t just leave us here like this!”
“No, I could tie you up.”
That had silenced her. She had wanted to fly at him, but didn’t want to do so in front of Emily. A fight between them would frighten her, and Honor knew it would be futile anyway, resulting in nothing except sorer muscles and more bruises.
She absently rubbed at one on her elbow, growing even more resentful of Coburn’s desertion and her own fear. She wasn’t helpless. She’d been a single parent, living alone, in a remote place, for more than two years. She had confronted every problem bravely because she’d had no choice. Sure, Stan, the twins, other friends had been there to lend support. If she got in a pinch and asked for help, they came running.
This time was different. She was entirely alone.
But, by God, she wasn’t helpless. She—
“Coburn!” Emily cried.
She launched herself from the crate on which she’d been sitting and skipped across the deck, throwing herself against him and wrapping her arms around his knees. “Did you bring me something? Mommy said you were going to bring me some lunch.”
Honor’s heart was in her throat. He was standing on the deck only yards away from her, but she hadn’t heard a sound to signal his approach. He was wearing a baseball cap and sunglasses, which he now removed, hooking one stem on the neck of his T-shirt. Eddie’s T-shirt, she reminded herself. His boots and pants legs from midcalf down were wet, dripping water onto the filthy deck.
Seeing that she noticed, he said, “I came around along the creek bank.”
Emily was bouncing up and down on her toes. Without taking his eyes off Honor, he fished a Tootsie Pop from the pocket of his jeans and handed it down to her. She didn’t even ask Honor’s permission before ripping off the purple wrapper.
“What do you say, Emily?”
“Thank you, Coburn. I love grape. Grape’s my favorite.”
Sourly, Honor thought that any flavor Coburn had brought her would have instantly become her favorite. She didn’t even ask permission to have the candy before lunch, but stuck the lollipop into her mouth.
Honor let it pass. “Why did you come by way of the creek? Where’s the car?”
“I left it back a piece. Someone could have found you. I didn’t want to drive into a trap.” He looked at her knowingly. “You thought I’d ditched you here, didn’t you?” Without saying more, he stepped off the boat and began walking toward the road.
Emily pulled the Tootsie Pop from her mouth and wailed, “Where’s he going?”
“Good grief, Emily, he’ll be right back.” Her daughter’s blind admiration for him was beginning to grate.
In only a few minutes he returned, driving a pickup truck, whose black paint job had been scoured gray by the salty Gulf air. It was several years old and boasted an LSU Tigers bumper sticker. It looked to Honor like hundreds of other black pickups that had suffered the effects of the corrosive coastal climate, boasting an LSU Tigers bumper sticker. Which she was sure was the very reason he’d stolen it.
He brought it to a stop near the boat, got out, and lifted several bags from the bed. “Give me a hand.” He passed the bags up to Honor and went back for more. After handing them up to her, he said, “I’m gonna hide the truck.”
“Why?”
“Somebody could shoot out the tires.”
She didn’t ask how he thought the three of them could make it to the truck on foot in the event of a shootout. Obviously he was more experienced than she in these matters.
By the time he came aboard and clumped down the steps, she’d made three peanut butter and banana sandwiches. She and Emily sat on one bunk, he on the other. Happily Emily asked, “Is this a picnic?”
“Sort of.” Honor leaned down to kiss her forehead, feeling apologetic for snapping at her earlier.
The sacks Coburn had carried in contained foods that were ready to eat and didn’t require refrigeration. He’d also brought a pack of bottled water, a battery-operated lantern, an aerosol can of insect repellent, wet wipes, and a squeeze bottle of hand sanitizer.
Once she’d been fed, Emily yawned. She protested when Hon
or suggested that she lie down and rest, but she was soon asleep.
Coburn helped himself to a package of cookies. “You worked wonders on the place.”
Honor looked across at him from where she sat fanning Emily with an outdated magazine she’d found in a drawer. “Are you being sarcastic?”
“No.”
After he’d left, she’d put the broom to use, sweeping trash from off the floor and cobwebs from every surface. She’d found a couple of sheets folded up in the storage box that formed the platform for one of the bunks. She’d taken them on deck to shake them out, then had spread them over the bunks. The sheets no longer had bugs or larvae in them, although they still smelled of mildew. They were, however, less objectionable than the stained bare mattresses.
“I didn’t venture into the head,” she admitted.
“Probably wise. I saw a couple of buckets on deck. I’ll fill them with creek water. You and Emily can use those.”
She was glad that troublesome subject had been addressed, but she moved away from discussing it further. “Now that we’ve got water, I can wipe down some of the surfaces we’re forced to touch.”
“Be stingy with the water.”
“I will.” Then she asked him the questions that had been plaguing her. “Were you able to reach your man? Hamilton?”
“I tried. Same woman answered. I demanded she put him on. She insisted that I was dead.”
“What do you make of that?”
He shrugged and bit into a cookie. “Hamilton doesn’t want to talk to me yet.”
“What do you make of that?”
“Nothing.”
“You’re not worried?”
“I don’t panic unless I have to. Wastes energy.”
She stored that for later rumination or discussion. “Did you check Fred’s cell phone for stored numbers?”
“There were none, which is what I expected. And only one call in his log, that last one to his brother. This phone was a throw-down.”
“A burner,” she said, remembering the term he’d used before.
“No records. Disposable. Virtually untraceable.”
“Like yours.”
“Saved for a rainy day. Anyway, my guess is that he used this phone to stay in contact with his brother and The Bookkeeper, and that he immediately erased numbers from the call log. If I ever get it into the hands of techies, they can tear into it and see if possibly there’s any intel to be had. But for right now, Fred’s phone isn’t of much help to us. All the same, I’ll keep the battery out of it.”
“Why?”
“I haven’t kept up with the technology, but I think there are experts who can locate a phone even if it’s turned off. All they need is the phone number. As long as there’s a battery in the phone, it’s transmitting a signal.”
“Is that true?”
He shrugged. “I’ve picked up buzz.”
“How long would it take? To locate a phone, I mean.”
“No idea. That’s not my area of expertise, but I’m not going to take any chances.”
Forty-eight hours ago, she wouldn’t have imagined herself having a conversation about intel and burners and such things. Nor would she have imagined a man like Coburn, who could eat Chips Ahoy at the same time he was discussing a man he’d killed only a few hours earlier.
She didn’t know quite what to make of Lee Coburn, and it was disturbing that she wanted to make anything of him at all.
Changing the subject, she asked, “Where’d you get the truck?”
“I got lucky. I spotted a rural mailbox with lots of mail in it, a dead giveaway that the residents are away. House sits way back off the road. The truck keys were hanging on a peg inside the back door. Just like at your house. I helped myself. Hopefully the owners will stay gone for at least a few more days and the truck won’t be reported stolen.”
“I assume you switched the license plates with another vehicle.”
“S.O.P.” Reading her blank look, he said, “Standard operating procedure. Remember that if you decide to pursue a life of crime.”
“I doubt that will happen.”
“So do I.”
“I don’t think I’m cut out for living on the edge.”
He gave her a slow once-over. “You may surprise yourself.” When his gaze reconnected with hers, it was hot and intense.
Uncomfortably, she looked away from it. “Did you buy or steal the groceries?”
“Bought.”
She remembered the money he’d been carrying in the pocket of the jeans. “You weren’t afraid of being identified?”
“The cap and sunglasses were in the console of the truck.”
“I recognized you in them.”
He chuckled. “They weren’t looking at me.”
“They?”
“I stopped at a bait shop out in the middle of nowhere. Slow day. No other customers in the place. Only the bottled-water delivery truck in the parking lot.”
She cast a glance at the twenty-four bottles encased in plastic. “You stole that off the truck?”
“Piece of cake. When I went into the store, the deliveryman was behind the counter with the cashier. His hand was inside her pants and his mouth was on her nipple. They had eyes only for each other. I grabbed my stuff, paid, and got out quick. They won’t remember me at all, only the interruption.”
Honor’s cheeks burned with embarrassment over the images he’d conjured. She wondered if the story was true, and even if it was, why had he painted such a vivid picture? To fluster her? Well, she was flustered, but if Coburn cared or noticed, he gave no indication of it as he checked his wristwatch.
“I’ll try Hamilton again.”
Using his own phone, he redialed the number, and this time Honor heard a man answer. “Hamilton.”
“You son of a bitch. Why are you fucking me over?”
He replied blandly, “A man in my position can’t be too careful, Coburn. If the caller ID is blocked, I don’t answer.”
“I identified myself.”
“After I heard the news, I would have known it was you anyway. You’re in a world of hurt. Or should I say a vat of gumbo?”
“Oh, that’s real funny.”
“Not so much. Mass murder. Kidnapping. You’ve outdone yourself, Coburn.”
“Like I need you to tell me that. If I wasn’t in trouble, I wouldn’t be calling.”
Switching to a more serious tone, the man on the other end said, “Is speculation correct? Do you have the woman?”
“And her kid.”
“Are they all right?”
“Yeah, they’re fine. We’ve been picnicking.” After a weighty, sustained silence, Coburn said again, “They’re fine. You want to talk to her yourself?”
Without waiting for an answer, he passed the phone to Honor. Her hands were trembling as she raised it to her ear. “Hello?”
“Mrs. Gillette?”
“Yes.”
“My name is Clint Hamilton. I want you to listen carefully. Please, for your child’s sake as well as your own, don’t underestimate the importance of what I’m about to tell you.”
“All right.”
“You, Mrs. Gillette, are in the company of a very dangerous man.”
Chapter 21
Tori had slammed her front door hard behind Doral, flipped the deadbolt, then for half an hour had railed at herself for not slapping the fire out of Doral Hawkins over his parting remark.
But even long after he’d left her house and she’d had time to calm down somewhat, his threat echoed. It had been unsettling to say the least. She wasn’t as afraid for herself, however, as she was for Honor.
Tori was self-sufficient, independent, and accustomed to taking care of herself. But she wasn’t above asking for help if she deemed it necessary. She placed a call.
“Tori, sweetheart. I was just thinking about you.”
His voice immediately soothed her raw nerves. Matching his sexy tone, she asked, “What were you thinking?”
>
“I was just sitting here daydreaming, wondering if you’re wearing panties.”
“Of course not. I’m my horny self. Why do you think I called you?”
That pleased him. He gurgled an ex-smoker’s chuckle. He was thirty pounds overweight and had bright capillaries on his nose from imbibing oceans of bourbon over the course of his fifty-eight years. But he could afford to drink the best.
His name was Bonnell Wallace, and he had more money than God, which he kept in the New Orleans bank that had been privately held by his family since the Spanish had governed Louisiana or since the beginning of time, whichever had come first.
His beloved wife of thirty-something years had succumbed to cancer a year ago. Fearing the same fate, Bonnell had tossed the cigarettes, cut back to five or six drinks a day, and joined Tori’s health club. Which more or less had sealed his future.
He’d become husband candidate number four, and that was fine by him because he thought the sun rose and set inside the panties she claimed not to be wearing.
“Will you do something for me, Bonnell?”
“You name it, sugar.”
“A friend of mine is in danger. The life-or-death kind.”
Instantly, he dropped his bantering tone. “Jesus.”
“I may need some money on short notice.”
“How much?”
Just like that. No questions asked. Her heart swelled with affection.
“Don’t agree so fast. I’m talking serious cash. Like a million or more.” Tori was thinking in terms of a ransom, and wondered what the going rate was for the safe return of a young widow and her daughter. “I’m good for it. But I may not be able to access my accounts in time.”
“Tell me what’s going on. How else can I help?”
“Have you heard about the woman and child who were kidnapped this morning?”
He had. Tori filled in the blanks. “I can’t even think about what she and Emily might be going through. I don’t know what to do, but I can’t just sit here and do nothing. With your help, I can at least have cash on standby if her father-in-law gets a call from their abductor. Stan’s financially stable, but he won’t have that kind of money.”
“You just let me know what you need, when you need it, and it’s yours.” He paused, then said, “I’m only a phone call away, Tori. Good Christ, you must be worried sick. Do you want me to come and stay with you?”