An elderly woman sidestepped a tall, emaciated girl on Rollerblades who wore psychedelic elbow and knee pads with her cutoff jeans and halter top. Unfortunately the girl was no expert on the blades. She lost control and walloped into the woman, who dropped a basket overflowing with groceries.
Apples rolled, and oranges. Grapes splatted on the sidewalk, as did a carton of milk. A bottle of vitamins broke, scattering pills in all directions.
The girl yelled, “Watch where you’re goin’, you old hag,” righted herself, and skated away.
Celina hurried forward and went to her knees to help.
“Young people,” the woman muttered. “They got no respect no more. Sign says you can’t have them things on the sidewalk. Them skates. Do they take notice? Not them. Look at my grapes. And them vitamins cost a bundle.”
“It’s awful,” Celina said, gathering items and returning them to the basket as quickly as possible. The grapes she picked up and began to drop in a garbage can.
“Don’t do that!” the woman said. “I gotta take ‘em back. They packed ‘em in the bottom of the basket, didn’t they? Bound to get squashed. The store will have to replace them.”
“Yes, ma’am,” Celina said, only vaguely shocked. She rounded up the plastic net for the grapes and scooped them inside.
“Look at those apples.” The woman tutted and pointed to the bruised fruit. “I’ll have to make a pie with ‘em.”
“I bet it’ll be a great pie.”
“If there’s enough of them left. Where’d they all go?” Celina searched in all directions and caught sight of both apples and oranges that had rolled into an alley. Despite the darkness, she went after the fruit and began picking up pieces.
The alley was dank. Overhead the walls of the old buildings on either side bulged. Clothes flapped on lines along galleries. If they’d dried at all today, they’d already be wet again because they’d been left out too long.
She felt movement behind her and started to turn around. A blow between her shoulder blades caused her to stumble. Before she could cry out, a length of fabric was jammed into her mouth and her head was forced back against a shoulder.
Celina kicked with her heels. And she jammed her elbows backward and struggled. She tried going limp and dropping her dead weight in the other’s arms. She was promptly jerked upright with the gag. It cut into her cheeks and threatened to make her vomit.
She squirmed and tried to scream. Only a muffled squeal emitted. One arm was free, and she reached over her shoulder, scouring about for the man’s eyes. His response was to capture that hand too, and anchor it behind her back.
Celina stared down the alley toward the street. Surely the woman had seen what happened. Surely she’d go for help.
People passed the end of the alley. They laughed and jostled. They didn’t look into the darkness between the buildings.
There was no sign of the woman or her dropped groceries.
The man behind her spoke not a word. The gag was secured, and he dragged her backward, backward, backward, and against a wall. That was when she saw what she hadn’t noticed before. A van, black or some other dark color. It gleamed dully. Celina saw it from the corner of her eye, gradually saw more of it as her assailant pulled her along its side.
Once past its length, she was shoved against the back doors of the vehicle and her hands were lashed together behind her back.
She kicked out again, but the doors of the van swung open and she was pushed, facedown onto the floor inside. With several efficient movements her ankles were also secured.
The van sagged as the man leaped in behind her. Then a bag descended over her head and she saw nothing.
Screaming silently, choking on the gag, she writhed and tried to turn over, but a foot came down in the center of her back and she lay still.
Her baby. She must protect her baby.
A sharp rap sounded. The van’s engine turned over and the hard floor vibrated beneath Celina.
He could not expect her to follow his orders as if she were a child or a well-trained dog. Jack jogged through the streets. Tonight he really could describe what people meant by having one’s heart in one’s throat. Every breath was a struggle.
How had he come to this point with Celina? How could he possibly have changed his mind about her so drastically?
Why had she defied him when he’d specifically told her not to leave Chartres Street?
He shook his head. He’d already covered that. She couldn’t be expected to follow his wishes blindly. She’d do what she wanted to do.
And she could have walked directly into the hands of some of Win’s depraved hoods.
Jack broke into a run. He banged into a man, spun him around, and yelled, “Sorry,” as the other started spewing expletives. It was hot, too damned hot, and another rain squall announced its presence with fat drops that spattered Jack’s face.
He’d gone looking for Sonny Clete, but had only managed to track down one of his minor soldiers, a man known as Primrose, for no reason Jack could imagine unless it was a cruel reference to his ears. His ears had frilly lobes and popped from high on the sides of his head. Primrose hung out at a totally nude strip joint on St. Peter Street in the warehouse district. Sonny was known to spend a good deal of time there, too, but he hadn’t shown today although Primrose kept insisting he was on his way. Eventually Jack had decided this was an attempt to detain him. He should have left as soon as he discovered Sonny wasn’t around.
Sonny was neck-deep in whatever was going on, and something was definitely going on. Win’s trouble antenna had been screaming while Jack was with him. and Sonny Clete had been the one to flip the switch to on.
That was much as Jack had planned. He’d set Sonny up to rattle Win. Jack wanted a war, but he hadn’t planned for potential reprisals against him that would put Amelia and Celina at risk.
He walked at a more sane pace. According to Tilly, Celina had gone to talk to Cyrus, no doubt to explain Jack’s plans for them to marry this week.
At least there were no anxieties about sexual compatibility. Despite his anxiety, he grinned. No anxieties at all.
Skidding to a halt at the entrance to the courtyard at Errol’s place—he’d always think of the Royal Street house as Errol’s place—he felt jumpy inside again. He didn’t want Celina staying there anymore. In the morning they’d make arrangements for their wedding.
These things were important to women, the trappings of the occasion. He’d like to find a way to dress up what would otherwise seem like a formality, but wasn’t sure how to go about it.
He reached the outer staircase, and the door at the top flew open at once. Cyrus emerged onto the steps with Dwayne behind him. They both stared down at him.
Jack’s mouth forgot how to make saliva. He swallowed and swallowed, and his throat only grew more dry.
He turned his face up to the other men and said, “Where is she?”
Cyrus closed his eyes and scrubbed a hand over his mouth.
“She isn’t with you?” Dwayne said.
“No, goddammit,” Jack said, leaping up the rest of the stairs three at a time. “She should be here.”
“I was sure you would have found her by now,” Cyrus said. “She called from your place to say she was on her way. That was two hours ago. I phoned your place and a woman called Tilly said I should wait here in case she came. I was so sure you would have her with you by the time you showed up”
“We’re calling the cops,” Jack said, barging into the building. “Not a word from her? Nothing?”
“Nothing,” Dwayne said. “Even if she walked backward she’d have been here an hour and a half ago.”
“I don’t need you to tell me the obvious,” Jack snapped, tearing the receiver from a telephone in the hallway. He dialed 911 and asked for the police. “A missing person,” he said when he got an answer. “Celina Payne. Last seen? What? Oh, when? About two hours ago.”
He swiveled to see Cyrus and Dwayne. Neither of them
would meet his eyes. “I don’t give a shit about your rules. I don’t care if you don’t think two hours constitutes being missing… What? No, goddammit, we did not have an argument. I don’t argue. Fuck you, Officer. My fiancée is missing. She shouldn’t have taken longer than twenty minutes to get from
my house to hers. Ι think she’s been abducted. What makes me think that? Celina was Errol Petrie’s assistant. Does that ring a bell? No? He was murdered only days ago. I’m still not ringing any bells for you? How about there are some very nasty people in this town and I think at least one of them has it in for me. This nasty person is very likely to have decided to get at me through Celina.”
He took the phone from his ear and stared at it. The lecture about how long a person had to be missing to warrant some sort of concern on behalf of the police was being rolled out for a second time.
Jack slammed down the receiver. “They won’t do anything except tell all cars to keep a watch out for her.”
“She couldn’t have returned to your place by now, could she?” Cyrus asked. His face resembled damp chalk.
“Tilly would have called at once.” Nevertheless Jack punched in his number and waited until Tilly answered. She told him what he had feared she would, and he hung up again.
Dwayne flexed his hands at his sides. “Why would someone hurt Celina, Jack? There’s a reason, isn’t there? Otherwise you wouldn’t be so scared—you wouldn’t be so sure she didn’t just go shopping on the way.”
He thought about that. “And why wouldn’t she go shopping? That’s a normal thing for a woman to do.”
“Antoine isn’t around,” Dwayne said, eyeing Jack significantly. “I shouldn’t have had to come here to find that out. Someone should have told me”
“Things have been kind of hectic.” Jack passed the others and went to the office. He rifled through folders, looking for something on Antoine. “I now know Antoine must have found out something that frightened the wrong people. The wrong people evidently had something to do with Errol’s death. Antoine came to you to say he saw something, Dwayne.”
“But he didn’t tell me. He started, but clammed up and took off.”
“Okay. But evidently someone saw him with you and they don’t believe he changed his mind about talking to you.”
‘I’m tellin’ you—”
“You don’t need to tell me, Dwayne. I believed you the first time. These people also think Celina had a chat with Antoine. He came up to talk to her the same day he tried to get to you. What I can’t figure out is how they know that.”
Both of the other men frowned.
“I guess it doesn’t much matter how. They do. And they’re rattled. Which means they’ve got something to be afraid of. Roughly translated, we’re close to finding out who killed Errol—or the killers think we are.”
“We’ve got to find Celina,” Cyrus said abruptly. “Dear Lord, we must locate my little sister. She’s fragile enough without being exposed to this type of horror.”
“Yeah,” Jack said. His own insides were trying to fold in on themselves.
“What do you mean, yeah?” Cyrus said, grasping Jack’s arm. “Celina has suffered greatly. We both know that. And she’s pregnant, Jack. I’ve been concerned about her because she’s not as well as she should be. She’d never stand up to harsh treatment.”
“Harsh treatment?” Dwayne’s voice broke and squeaked upward. “You think someone would treat our Celina harshly? That they’d hurt her? Surely they wouldn’t do any such thing.” He tottered to one of the chairs in the office and fell into it. “She should never have been allowed to remain in this house after Errol was killed. She should have been taken somewhere absolutely safe and watched over all the time. I should have insisted she come to live with Jean-Claude and me. Oh, my God!”
“Cool it, Dwayne,” Jack said, feeling close to being sick. “We’re going to work our way logically through this. And while we do that, we’ll hope she comes walking through that door.”
“I’ll rattle her teeth till they fall out!” Dwayne cried. “How dare that girl frighten us all like this because she wants to shop for a few useless baubles.”
Jack gave way to a faint smile. “Let it out, Dwayne. It’ll help. One of us has to stay here in case she comes back. I’ve got to search for her.”
Dwayne and Cyrus chorused that they were going too. “Wait a minute,” Cyrus said. “Let’s think about the route she’d take.”
“She’d take the same route I just did,” Jack said.
“Unless she’s gone shopping somewhere.” Dwayne stared at Jack. “I need a drink.” He hurried into the parlor and poured liquor into three glasses.
Jack followed reluctantly with Cyrus trailing close behind. They both took the snifters Dwayne offered.
They drank and retreated to chairs, where they sat in silence, sipping at their brandies.
Jack got up to draw the heavy brown drapes over the windows. “There’s no point in running around this town with no idea where to look,” he said. “I’m waiting another half hour. Then I’m going to the police in person and I’m not leaving until they put out a bulletin.”
“I feel as if everything’s gone mad around us but we’re the only ones who notice,” Dwayne said. “Surely they ought to have leads on what happened to Errol by now.”
“I talked to O’Leary again,” Jack told them. “He said somethin’ garbled about wanting to avoid giving the killers any signals. But I think I understand. I did hear from Errol’s lawyers. Lowell and Maxwell. Very well thought of. Evidently they’ll read the will anytime we’re ready. I’d told them we’re not ready.
A choking sound escaped Dwayne. He made no attempt to hide the tears that welled in his eyes. “It’s all so cold. I miss him so much. He was always there for me. The least judgmental man I ever met.”
“Me too,” Jack agreed.
Cyrus said, “I never really knew him very well. What I did know, I liked. For Celina to be so fond of him, he had to be a good man.”
“I thought the two of them had something going,” Jack said, no longer concerned with holding anything back from these two. “I thought Celina had wormed her way into his affections. That she’d played on his weaknesses—at least where women and sex were concerned—to get close to him. I thought she was an opportunist.”
“Amazing how stupid an intelligent man can be sometimes,” Dwayne said, heading back to the brandy with his empty glass.
“I deserved that,” Jack said. “I never gave her a chance, but I couldn’t see beyond the beauty pageant title and all that goes with that in my mind.”
“None of that was Celina’s idea. She did it for my mother.”
“I know that now,” Jack said, somewhat sheepish. “But I didn’t then, and I came to hate her. When Errol died, I thought it was her fault somehow.”
Dwayne made a tutting sound. Cyrus remained silent.
“I think I’ve been as honest as I can be with her about that. I haven’t held anything back.” Nothing but a great chunk about his activities with Win Giavanelli, and the plans he’d set in motion long before Errol’s murder. Those matters were not for any woman to be involved with. “Oh, hell, why doesn’t she come back?”
“Could she have gone to her parents?” Dwayne asked, unable to keep a curl from his lips at the mention of the older Paynes.
Cyrus got up and made a call. He didn’t ask outright about Celina but talked around the edges. What were his folks up to this evening? Why? Because he cared about them. So did Celina. She had an odd way of showing it. Why was that? Because she refused to do as her parents told her, and cultivate the Lamars. Well, Cyrus couldn’t speak for Celina on such matters. She was a big girl who could make up her own mind. Why didn’t they speak to her about it the next time they saw her. They intended to do just that.
He hung up. “She’s not there.”
“Could she be dealing with some business?” Dwayne asked.
“Not at this time of night,” Jack told hi
m. “Why did I leave her alone?”
“You can hardly follow her around all the time.”
“Follow her, nothin’,” he said through his gritted teeth. “I’m gοin to tie that girl to me. Or maybe I’ll use handcuffs.”
“Look,” Dwayne said, “we should sit down and get good and drunk. Then, when she gets back, we can manage a real raging row. What d’you say?”
“Sounds kind of good,” Jack told him, but the words felt hollow.
Cyrus gave a forced chuckle. “I hope we’ve got enough booze. I want to be really mad at her.”
Jack refilled their glasses, and they perched on chairs, listening for the door and staring at the telephone. He locked at his watch. Nobody laughed anymore.
She smelled the waterfront.
Two men, and she was almost sure there were two, pulled her from the back of the van. They untied her ankles, then each of them held one of her arms and bundled her along roughly enough to cause her to trip repeatedly.
They had driven into a building of some sort. She thought she was right about that because the noises had changed, and when the back doors of the van had opened, she’d heard big doors sliding shut. Like hangar doors. Or warehouse doors.
Α warehouse on the waterfront, or near enough to the waterfront for her to smell it, and hear river sounds.
They walked her onward until she cracked her shins on something metal and choked on her own cry. Promptly the two men hauled her off the ground and swung her forward. Α door with a high metal threshold.
They said nothing to each other, and nothing to her. Not that she could have responded.
She was released.
The air about her changed subtly as people moved. She listened to their footfalls, and strained to hear anything else that might help when—and if—she got away from here.
Had they brought Antoine here?
She trembled inside.
Was he here now?
Would they do the kinds of things to her that they’d done to him?
Was Antoine dead? She believed he must be. And she’d done wrongly by not trying to get help for him regardless of what Rose had said.
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