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Dreamspinner Press Years One & Two Greatest Hits

Page 137

by J. M. Colail


  Megan nodded. “All right. That makes sense.” She met his eyes. “What do you want me to do?”

  “I need you to find out if Petros is working for Josey, or the brothers. Or both. I got a feelin’ he’s playin both sides a the coin on this job. Can ya snoop around and watch him?”

  “I’ll try. He’s pretty slippery.”

  “Keep an eye out fer Josey too.”

  “Naturally.”

  Everyone fell silent. There didn’t seem to be much more to say, but no one seemed to want to leave. An air of doom hovered in the air between them, for no good reason D could discern, but he felt it, and he knew Jack did too, by the way he was squeezing D’s hand.

  Finally Churchill rose. “Well, I guess…,” he began, then trailed off.

  “We’d better be going,” Megan finished, getting to her feet.

  Churchill came and shook D’s hand. “I’ll be in touch. Best of luck.”

  “You too,” D said. This feels like good-bye. Why we sayin good-bye?

  He moved on to Jack. “Call me on my cell if you need anything. I might stop by tomorrow but I’ve got a lot of paperwork to do for your new identity.”

  “Right.”

  Megan touched D’s shoulder. “I’ll call you later.” He just nodded, his arms crossed over his chest. She faced Jack. “I hope I see you again, Jack,” she said.

  He just stood there for a moment, then suddenly hugged her. “Me too,” he said. D watched as Jack let her go and she followed Churchill to the door. Jack trailed along after, closing and locking the door after them, pausing first to wave to the two marshals outside. He drifted back into the room and for a few beats of silence, they just stood there.

  “You okay?” Jack asked.

  D shrugged. “Compared ta what? Jus one more fucked-up thing ta deal with. Honest, I cain’t hardly think bout that right now. Ain’t like I can do nothin’ till Monday.”

  Jack nodded, staring at the floor, working the toes of one bare foot into the carpet. “This is it, isn’t it?” he whispered.

  “What?”

  “This weekend. This is all we’re going to have. Ever.”

  “Jack….”

  “Don’t bullshit me, D. Don’t softpedal it like I’m a little kid who can’t handle it.” He lifted his head and their gazes found each other and locked like magnets. “This is it. Monday I’m going away, and after that one of us is going to die. Maybe both. It’s too much. There’s too many people who want it and they’re too determined.” He took a step closer. “This is it for us, isn’t it?”

  The idea worked like an iron fist around D’s heart. He wanted to deny it. No, Jack. This ain’t it cause I won’t let it be. I won’t let that happen, ta you or ta me. But he couldn’t, not now when they were right up against it. “Probly,” he said, almost too low to hear.

  Jack’s eyes fell closed and he exhaled slowly. He almost looked relieved. “D?”

  “Yeah?”

  “Get those clothes off.”

  THEY STAYED in bed most of the day.

  Jack dressed to get the room service inside, then undressed again. They left the cart by the bed and grabbed whatever they touched first.

  “What would it have been like?” Jack whispered. Lying on their sides, face to face, just staring at each other for what felt like hours, drifting off and waking again.

  D sighed, tucking his hands underneath his head. “Maybe… get a house. Never had no house a my own.”

  “With a garden.”

  “Yeah. So’s you could come inside smellin’ like sunshine after weedin.”

  “Would we have had a dog?”

  “Hmm. Ain’t never had a dog.”

  “I had one in med school. A Cairn terrier. Sweet little guy who thought he was a Rottweiler.”

  “Coulda walked him at night. Round the neighborhood.” He hesitated. “You oughta get one. After.”

  Jack shook his head. “This isn’t about that.”

  “I know.”

  His eyes roamed D’s face. He knew it so well by now, he felt like he could have drawn every freckle from memory. “Would have been a sweet life,” he whispered.

  D met his eyes. “Yeah. Woulda been.”

  CHAPTER 26

  THEY SLEEP hard, long and deep, some part of them always touching. At times wrapped together like siblings in the womb, at other times just a foot grazing a leg. They stir and make love, communion silent, and drift off again still joined. They lay awake in each other’s arms, not speaking, sometimes looking toward, sometimes looking away. They let the darkness take them together and lay dead to the world as the sun rises outside their window.

  She circles the house like a cat, and just as silent. House, more of an estate. Security like the White House, but she knows a few tricks. He is inside, somewhere. She has followed his trail here, she has seen his car slink inside like a kid coming home after curfew. Petros, perhaps standing at a window and looking out, wondering who might be looking in.

  He sits at his desk long into the night in front of a computer. Social Security number gone, a new one with a new name in its place. Fingerprints, erased. Bank accounts, deleted and money transferred into a holding account. Driver’s license, deleted and a new one created. Jack Davies, welcome to the world.

  She sits in a darkened room, listening to her own thoughts. There’s no more time. She can’t put it off anymore. She must act now, or it’ll be too late. Soon she’ll have him before her again, and she won’t hesitate.

  Today. It happens today.

  MEGAN CREPT back to her car through several acres of wild brush that bordered the Dominguez estate. She needed a new plan. Petros might be in there, he might not be. Lurking on the periphery with high-powered binocs wasn’t the most efficient way to determine this.

  She’d left her car in a parking lot that served a nearby bike trail; when she returned, there were a few other cars around but no one in sight. She was unlocking the driver’s door when she realized she wasn’t alone a fraction of a second too late to do anything about it.

  His arm was across her neck, a blade at her carotid. “You are sneaky,” he whispered in her ear.

  “So are you,” she choked out.

  “I’ve been trying to follow you for days.”

  “Same here.”

  “Make a move and I’ll slit your throat.”

  She swallowed hard, jacking up her visible signs of fear. She knew he’d get off on it. “What are you going to do with me?”

  A pause. “Keep you out of the way.”

  A sliver of real fear slipped down her spine. “Something’s happening.”

  “Soon.” He leaned closer. “Get in the car.”

  JACK OPENED his eyes. D was lying on his back, his head turned to the window, but Jack could tell he was awake. He slid closer to D’s side, leaning in to kiss his neck. D’s outstretched arm came around Jack’s shoulders and his chest rose and fell in a sigh. “What are my chances of getting some morning sex?” Jack murmured in his ear.

  D chuckled, a low rumbling in his chest. “Better’n average,” he said, turning into Jack’s embrace and rolling him to his back. Jack exhaled in satisfaction as D’s weight settled over him, his hips between Jack’s legs. He’d never had a clear preference for bottom or top, but he knew that he loved the feeling of D on top of him.

  But now, D wasn’t making use of his position, he was just staring down at him; Jack’s smile slowly bled off his lips as reality came sneaking back in just when he’d thought he was rid of it. “It’s Sunday,” he said.

  D nodded. “Yeah.”

  Jack shook his head. “I hate Sunday. It’s the day before Monday.”

  “Amen ta that.”

  For a long moment Jack just stared, letting his eyes slide over every surface of D’s face. If I can just memorize every detail, maybe I’ll never lose him. “I think we ought to get out of this room. Just for a little while.”

  D frowned. “We ain’t s’posed ta leave.”

  “Chu
rchill lets me go to the restaurant inside the hotel as long as the marshals come with. Let’s get some breakfast.” He sighed. “I feel like shit, D. But I’ll feel better if I can shower and get dressed and have some waffles or something.”

  D nodded, smirking a little. “Waffles sound good.”

  “And then we can come back here and have sex all day.”

  “You jus’ fulla plans, ain’tcha?”

  “Plans for you, maybe,” Jack said, sliding one hand down to cup D’s ass. “C’mon, let me up.”

  Jack showered, making quick work of it. Without D sharing the stall with him there was little reason to delay and every reason to get it over with, even though the hot water felt soothing. D came into the bathroom as he was drying off; they shared a long, slow kiss as they swapped places. Jack dressed in clean clothes and combed his hair. He thought about calling Churchill, but decided against it. If he talked to Churchill, he’d probably tell Jack all about the preparations, and want to give him specifics for tomorrow’s itinerary, and specifics felt like Jack’s enemy just now. They’d make everything real.

  He hadn’t really realized how long he’d been sitting on the bed staring out the window until he heard D come out of the bathroom. “Whatcha doin’?” he asked. “Looks like some heavy thinkin’.”

  Jack started a bit. “Oh… no. No heavier than usual, anyway.” He watched D pull on his jeans, T-shirt, and jacket, sad to see his skin disappear beneath the layers. “Want to give the marshals a heads-up?”

  “Y’all right,” D said. He went to the door and poked his head out.

  There was a beat of silence. Jack jumped up. Later, he’d think that it was as if he’d been waiting for it, as if he knew somehow.

  “Jack, c’mere,” D said, not loudly but firmly.

  Jack was already halfway there. He stepped into the alcove outside his room, which shielded his door and the hallway nearby from casual glance. Both the marshals were slumped in their chairs, unconscious. Cups of coffee were sitting at their feet. He crouched in front of one and put two fingers to his carotid artery.

  “They dead?” D said, looking up and down the hallway.

  “No,” Jack said, lifting the man’s eyelid. “They’ve been drugged. Some kind of barbiturate.” He looked up and met D’s eyes. There was no surprise in their glance, just resignation.

  “Back inside,” D said. He seemed to have heard enough. He bolted the door and paced, one hand running through his hair. Jack watched him, anxious. D seemed uncertain, like he didn’t know what to do, and Jack had never seen him like that.

  “What now?” he asked, afraid of the answer.

  D met his eyes. “She is comin’ ta get us, Jack.”

  “That seems really insane and risky.”

  “Damn straight it is, but she don’t got no choice. Musta got wind that yer bein’ taken away tomorrow and if she wants us both, it’s now or never.”

  “Well, we can’t leave this room,” Jack said.

  “Why not?”

  “Because,” Jack snapped, surprised D wasn’t ahead of him on this, “the elevator’s to the right and the stairs are to the left, but we won’t know which one they’re using so we have a fifty-fifty chance of meeting them coming up if we try to go down!”

  D was nodding by the time Jack was halfway through his statement. He watched Jack loading his gun, the weapon’s heft reassuring in his hands. “You okay?” he asked.

  Jack glanced up at him. “Compared to what?”

  “I’m askin’ ’cause the best thing fer us ta do is wait here fer them ta come in, then take ’em out so we can leave before anyone realizes what happened.”

  Jack nodded. “Okay.”

  “That means you gonna hafta fight. Maybe kill. I don’t wanna put you in that position but tryin’ ta sneak out before they get here’s too risky, ’cause they could be on us before we can get out and this is a more defensible position here.”

  “I said I’m okay.” Jack had a sudden thought. “I have an idea,” he said, hauling his doctor’s bag out from the closet. It had traveled so far with him, it felt familiar and reassuring. It made him feel like he might still be a doctor. He drew out a small ampoule of sedative and two disposable syringes. “It’s quieter than bullets,” he said.

  D smiled grimly. “Good thinkin’, doc. Now you get on over here with me and we’ll wait fer our visitors.” Jack went across the room; he and D pressed themselves against the wall around the corner from the entryway. D had his gun held up near his jaw; Jack kept his down at his side, hoping he wouldn’t have to use it.

  “Hope they don’t take long,” he whispered.

  “They won’t. They cain’t chance leavin’ them marshals there too long.” They both heard the elevator ding from outside, then footsteps approaching. “All right,” D murmured. “Be ready.”

  Jack nodded, swallowing hard. Can I do this? This isn’t like shooting at a target on a range… but hopefully we won’t have to shoot. Jesus, is this what D’s life is like all the time? He went over in his mind what they’d have to do when the bad guys came in. Wait for them to get in the room. Step out, block the entrance. Raise gun, let D talk. He nodded to himself. Wait… we never talked about this plan of attack. Jack blinked, and realized that he was correct. He and D had not discussed what they’d actually do, but somehow he just knew.

  The footsteps had stopped at their door. A quiet pause… they’re getting the room key out of the marshal’s pocket… then an even quieter click as the door opened.

  Two dark-complexioned men in nondescript business suits stepped into the room with purpose, guns drawn, eyes scanning the suite. As if they’d rehearsed it, Jack and D stepped out of the corner and blocked the entry. A cloak of calm descended over Jack’s mind and he watched from outside himself as he raised his gun and pointed it at one of the men, D covering the other one. “Hands up,” D said, his voice low and commanding. Both men froze. “Up, now.” They raised their hands. “Guns on the bed.” They both tossed their weapons to the nearest bed. “Now turn around, slow.” They did, both of them glowering at them. “Where was you takin’ us?”

  The one on the left sneered. “I’m not telling you anything.”

  “Huh. Guess I’ll jus’ shoot you in the kneecap.” He lowered his gun.

  “All right, all right!” the man said. “Parking garage,” he choked out. “Then she’d tell us where to go.”

  “And how many’re waitin’ down there?”

  “Two more.”

  “Where?”

  “Bottom of the staircase. We were gonna take you down that way.”

  D nodded, His tongue crept into the corner of his mouth as he pondered this. He tossed a quick nod at Jack. “All right, doc.”

  Jack handed his gun to D so he could keep them both covered. He quickly withdrew a dose of sedative from the ampoule in his pocket, stepped up and injected first one, then the other in the neck, fast and painless. This is some kind of Hippocratic violation, I just know it, he thought, watching as both men collapsed to the ground, unconscious. It’s them or us.

  D was already moving. He slung his messenger bag over his shoulder, tucking his second gun into the back of his pants. “C’mon, Jack. We gotta move.”

  Jack grabbed his duffel and shoved his doctor’s bag into it. D was already heading for the door. He poked his head out, looked right, then left, and motioned Jack to follow. “We’ll take the elevator, right?” Jack asked.

  “No, stairs.”

  “But they’re waiting at the bottom of the stairs!”

  “Yeah, I know. But if we take the elevator we’re gonna hafta walk by ’em ta get ta my car anyhow, and they’ll see us comin’. We take the stairs they be expectin’ their friends ta come out with us, might not realize we’re alone long enough for us ta get the jump on ’em.”

  Jack nodded, seeing the logic but not liking the idea of the confrontation that would mean. “Can’t we just… you know. Sneak by?” Everything was moving so fast, he just needed a min
ute to catch his breath.

  D sighed. “No, Jack, we cain’t sneak by. These aren’t movie bad guys who don’t got no peripheral vision and we can just slip past while they’re lookin’ the other way. You want yer life, you gotta fuckin’ take it.”

  “Okay,” Jack said. “But… don’t kill anyone.”

  That made D pause and stare at him. “All this goin’ down and yer still worried ’bout my soul?”

  “Someone’s got to.”

  D’s face relaxed for a brief second and Jack thought he might smile, but then he was back to all-business. “C’mon, let’s go.” They slipped into the hall and were into the deserted stairway within seconds.

  D moved fast, but silently. It was all Jack could do to keep up. By the time they reached the door into the parking garage at the bottom, his thighs were screaming at him and his shoulders ached from holding the gun ready to fire. D didn’t seem affected.

  They stopped at the door into the parking garage. D motioned for Jack to be quiet, and he leaned up against the door, listening. Jack did the same; he could hear voices on the other side, muffled.

  What’s takin’ them so fuckin’ long?

  D’s probably putting up a fight.

  Better not damage them. She wants them both intact.

  You want to knock them out for the trip?

  Yeah. I got some chloroform.

  You’re so fuckin’ old-school.

  Hey, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.

  The men either turned away or moved a few paces, because their voices became difficult to hear. Jack pressed his ear closer to the door but couldn’t make out what they were saying. He looked up at D to ask if he could hear anything, but the question died in his throat.

  D was looking down at him, not paying attention to their would-be kidnappers. His expression was flayed open and laid bare with raw emotion, fear and hope and sadness and tragedy written across his features in broad, deep strokes that seemed to deepen the lines on his face and push his dark eyes back into their sockets. Jack’s breath caught and he couldn’t look away. D looked like he was already mourning Jack, eaten alive by it from the inside out until he was nothing but a hollow skin.

 

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