Watch Your Back

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Watch Your Back Page 61

by Rose, Karen


  ‘What’s Robinette’s wife saying?’ Clay asked.

  ‘Absolutely nothing. She’s planted herself on a sofa and hasn’t said one word, except to demand her attorney. Luckily they have staff that can tell a sinking ship when they’re on one. The live-in cook says she heard Lisa screaming yesterday afternoon. First at Brenda Lee, then even more after she left, mostly calling Robinette unprintable names. That’s when Lisa cleaned out his closet and dumped his toys. And she did drive over his Xbox. There are still pieces of it on the garage floor. Then the cook heard nothing and got worried. She went to Lisa’s room, found her crying on the phone with her mother, saying she was getting a divorce.’

  ‘Did the cook see him?’ Clay put his arm around Stevie’s shoulders. She was trembling.

  ‘No. She said she hadn’t seen him since Brenda Lee left.’

  Stevie took a deep breath. ‘Why did Lisa want a divorce?’

  ‘She told her mother that Robinette was having an affair.’

  Stevie frowned. ‘With Brenda Lee?’

  ‘No, with James Fletcher.’

  Stevie straightened abruptly. ‘Oh. That would explain some of her rage. No woman wants to be upstaged, especially a twenty-three-year-old debutante.’

  ‘If she didn’t know that Robinette was bisexual, that must have been a shock,’ Clay said.

  ‘It wasn’t Fletcher’s gender,’ Joseph said. ‘It was his relationship with Robinette from before Lisa’s time. She was apparently jealous of all the time Robinette spent with his team. The cook said Lisa particularly dislikes Brenda Lee because Robinette listens to everything she says. That Brenda Lee came over when Lisa brought him home from his office was the lighted match in the tinderbox.’

  ‘He’d called her, too?’ Stevie asked.

  ‘I guess that’s what Lisa assumed. Lisa lit into her, accusing her of trying to steal her husband. Brenda Lee took offense and started yelling too. Cook said she tried not to listen.’ Joseph rolled his eyes. ‘But then Brenda Lee screamed that she wasn’t the one having an affair with Robinette. That everyone knew it had been Fletcher. “For years.” Since long before Lisa was in the picture. Long before she was “even in high school”.’

  Clay winced. ‘Oh. Low blow.’

  ‘I know. The cook said it got really quiet and Brenda Lee apologized for telling Lisa that way. That it was best if she just “got used to it”. That “Fletcher wasn’t going anywhere”.’

  ‘Except,’ Stevie said, ‘he was. He would have been halfway to Paris by then. Almost makes me feel sorry for Lisa.’

  ‘Don’t reach for the tissues yet. Lisa accused Brenda Lee of stirring this up to thwart Robinette’s bid for office. Brenda Lee told her that if she really wanted to be a political wife, she needed to dump Robinette and find another man. That Robinette’s relationship with Fletcher was the least of her worries. Then the cook said Brenda Lee left.’

  ‘Wait.’ Stevie frowned. ‘She left without even talking to Robinette? He must have gone straight to her van to hide. She knew his plan and aided him.’

  ‘We’ll charge her with it,’ Joseph promised. ‘I’m going to Brenda Lee’s right now. I’ll update you when I have news.’ He hailed a young agent who came running. ‘Get a car, please.’

  Joseph started to walk away, but Stevie grabbed his arm. ‘What about the factory? Could he have gone there?’

  ‘No, but we did end up using the HazMat guys. We found gallons of sarin stored in aluminum bottles.’

  ‘Keeps it fresh and deadly even longer,’ Clay said grimly.

  Joseph frowned at him. ‘I don’t even want to know how you know this stuff. The lab techs swear they knew nothing about it and the day shift logs support that. They make vaccines during the day, but said Fletcher worked a lot of nights contract manufacturing for other companies. There were no records for those batches and the companies don’t exist, except on paper. Oh, and you’re gonna love this part. The sarin Coppola and Novak found was boxed up and ready for shipment. Guess how it was labeled?’

  ‘Not as perfume, I take it,’ Clay said.

  ‘No. As vaccines. That’s how they were getting it to their customers. All of Robinette’s philanthropy, all that providing vaccines to third-world nations at a fraction of their cost was nothing but a smokescreen. My car’s here. I’m going to have a chat with Brenda Lee. I’m leaving a crew to guard the house, in case— Hold on.’ Joseph took his cell phone from his pocket. ‘It’s Coppola. Kate,’ he answered. ‘What do you have?’

  They watched as Joseph’s body straightened, his eyes growing sharp. ‘Which one? When?’ Then, ‘You’ve alerted airport security? Excellent. I’ll meet you there in thirty.’ He hung up, gave Clay and Stevie a hard nod. ‘Cecilia Wright’s credit card was used to buy a plane ticket to Mexico City, and not for herself.’

  ‘For Robinette?’ Clay asked with a frown. ‘He wouldn’t be that foolish, would he?’

  ‘No. He knows we’re looking for him. The ticket is for Eric Johnson. I figured Robinette would have a secondary passport, just like Westmoreland did.’

  ‘Which airport?’ Stevie asked. ‘BWI, Reagan, or Dulles?’

  ‘I’ll have one of my agents escort you to the farm,’ Joseph said, ignoring her question. ‘Stay there until I call you. Please, Stevie. I need to know you’re safe. I have to go now.’

  Clay watched him go, followed by several more law enforcement vehicles and the last of the news vans, who had correctly sensed a break in the story. When all the taillights disappeared, he said quietly, ‘To the farm like he asked you? Or to the airport?’

  She let out a breath. ‘I’m not convinced he’s going to Mexico City. He had to know we’d check out Cecilia Wright. Had to know we’d find out she was Brenda Lee’s friend.’

  ‘I thought the same thing.’

  She looked up at him with a rueful smile. ‘I figured you did. I want to see Robinette dragged away in cuffs more than just about anything, but if he’s still out there . . .’ She shrugged. ‘He might be trying to get to Mexico, but if he isn’t, I don’t want Cordelia alone.’

  They slipped through the fence. With most of the other cars already gone, their black SUV looked a little lonely as they approached it. ‘Careful,’ Clay cautioned, grabbing her arm when she stumbled over a tree root. ‘Don’t f—’

  His leg abruptly crumpled, dropping him face first into the dirt. Don’t fall, he thought as white-hot pain shot through his leg, the sound of the shot registering a split second later.

  He’d been hit. Stevie.

  ‘Clay? Clay?’ Her voice was close at first, then further away. Then nothing at all.

  Fighting his panic, he struggled up on one knee to look for her. The panic won, twisting him from the inside out when he saw her cane abandoned on the grass.

  Stevie was being dragged toward the SUV, a hand over her mouth and a gun at her forehead. Her holster was empty. Robinette had her and he’d taken her gun. Clay glanced around wildly, looking for backup, but everyone had gone. Robinette had Stevie.

  ‘If you call for help, I’ll kill her,’ Robinette said softly. ‘I swear it.’

  Chapter Thirty

  Baltimore, Maryland, Wednesday, March 19, 6.05 P.M.

  Perfect, Robinette thought. Better than perfect. He’d come back planning to sneak past the one cop Lisa claimed was waiting outside, so that he could grab his backup passport and run.

  But now he had the grand prize. Stevie Mazzetti finally belongs to me.

  She was, however, a lot stronger than she looked and fought like a wildcat. He shoved the barrel of her own gun harder against her temple. ‘Settle down,’ he whispered in her ear. ‘Or my next shot takes out Loverboy.’ Who was still on the ground, but starting to stir. ‘You don’t want to watch him die, now do you?’

  She shook her head, breathing through her nose i
n short pants. She stopped thrashing, but her body was still tense. She was waiting for an opportunity to get away.

  He didn’t intend to allow that to happen. ‘You’re going to walk with me to your SUV, nice and easy.’ The SUV was an exact duplicate of the one he’d shot up in front of Culp’s house, but when he ran the plates, it made sense. The new SUV belonged to Grayson Smith, Joseph Carter’s brother. With any luck, the window glass would also be a duplicate – bullet-proof.

  He started moving, but she wasn’t cooperating, so he dragged her. Not only was she stronger than she looked, she was heavier, too. But he was weak, thanks to goddamn Fletcher.

  He’d find the bastard and Fletcher would wish he’d never been born. The thought made Robinette tired. The list of people who’d be wishing they’d never been born had mushroomed.

  He still had to deal with Lisa, but he’d get to her later.

  He’d expected his wife had been lying about meeting him at the bank, but he’d waited – until Brenda Lee called to tell him it was a setup. Cecilia had told her that he was waiting for Lisa, but now that his wife had discovered the truth about his long-term affair with Fletcher, Brenda Lee had worried that Lisa was giving him over to the police out of spite.

  Robinette hadn’t worried – until he’d driven by the factory to see the news vans and the horde of cops. And the guys in HazMat suits. And then Lisa was his last concern.

  The Feds knew what Fletcher had been making during the night. He’d been stunned. To hell with worrying about Mazzetti reopening Julie’s murder investigation. He had Homeland Security on his ass now. He needed to get out of the country. He needed his fake passport, in the safe in his home office. The fact that he drove Wright’s minivan, and that he’d so drastically altered his appearance, added to the fact that he was desperate . . . He’d decided to chance it.

  But his heart had sunk as he’d driven Wright’s minivan past the line of news vans. There were more cops at his house than there had been at the factory. There was no way he was getting to his fake passport now. The cops were probably combing his office and if they hadn’t blown his safe open already, they soon would.

  His mind had been racing, searching for another solution, when he saw the key to his escape – Stevie Mazzetti and Clay Maynard walking through his front gate. Joseph Carter would make a trade for Mazzetti’s life. One trouble-making cop for a one-way ticket to anywhere.

  How I’ll kill her later will have to be a question left for another day.

  The tons of cops searching for him suddenly didn’t worry him – they annoyed him. They wouldn’t find him in the house – because he wasn’t there. Eventually they’d give up, go elsewhere and then he’d make his move. Mazzetti would leave with them and he’d follow her. But they hadn’t gone fast enough, so he’d given them a little nudge.

  One ticket to Mexico City bought online for the non-existent Eric Johnson using Wright’s credit card, six hundred bucks. Watching the Feds scatter on a wild goose chase – priceless.

  A few steps more and he’d be out of here.

  Wednesday, March 19, 6.07 P.M.

  Above Robinette’s hand, Stevie’s dark eyes were wide with fear. Until she saw Clay moving. Then her eyes narrowed, snapping with fury. She was pissed off, not terrified.

  That’s my girl. A pissed-off Stevie was a force to be reckoned with.

  Clay looked up, found Robinette staring him down.

  ‘I want to see your hands,’ Robinette demanded. ‘Good,’ he added when Clay complied. ‘Now your gun. Two fingers. You know the drill. Make one wrong move and I’ll splatter her brains. Goddammit,’ Robinette barked. Stevie had begun thrashing like a wild animal, taking all of Robinette’s strength just to keep her overpowered.

  Giving me time to get my shit together.

  Robinette tightened his grip, lifting her off the ground so that her feet dangled. She kicked, twisting to position her feet where they’d do the worst damage. Robinette shook her hard and Clay could see her blinking rapidly.

  The bastard had shaken her so hard she’d seen stars. Her kicks slowed until her feet went still. ‘Good. Now, Maynard, take your gun by the barrel and toss it over here, slow and easy.’

  Gritting his teeth, Clay again obeyed, tossing the gun so that it hit the grass and slid, coming to rest a few inches from the SUV.

  Stevie grabbed for Robinette’s arm, pulling her body up so that she could breathe. Then her wild fighting began again.

  ‘Tell her to stop struggling and she can live.’

  ‘Save your strength, Stevie.’

  Robinette’s lips curved. ‘Not what I had in mind, but it will do for now.’

  ‘Glad . . . you approve.’ God. It hurt. Clay hadn’t hurt this badly since . . . well, since the last time he’d been shot in the leg. An unexpected jolt of humor shocked him, shook him loose from the grip of pain.

  It was the adrenaline, he knew. But it had served its purpose. Now he could think.

  The barrel of Robinette’s gun was at an awkward angle to Stevie’s forehead, thanks to the helmets they both wore. That they wore flak jackets, too, was the only reason he wasn’t dead. The only reason Robinette had aimed for his leg, the only part of his body left unprotected.

  Clay looked over his shoulder. A few agents remained, but they were in the house with Lisa Robinette. No one was close enough to see. He could only hope someone had heard the shot.

  His pants were already wet with blood from the knee up. He was lucky – the bullet had missed his femoral artery, hitting his thigh a few inches below his groin.

  Thank God for that, too, he thought grimly. He’d be needing that part of his body when they got out of here. Because they would. Clay would entertain no other outcome.

  ‘Throw me your car keys,’ Robinette demanded. ‘Now.’

  No fucking way that was going to happen. There was no way Robinette would let her live.

  Clay made a quick, calculated move, letting Robinette believe that he was going for the gun that he’d tossed away, grunting when a second bullet hit his right arm. He wore Kevlar under his shirt, but Robinette couldn’t see it. Clay moaned, grabbing his arm and rolling as if he’d been hit, curling up in the fetal position.

  Robinette’s growl of fury was Clay’s reward. During the seconds Robinette had fired, his gun had no longer pointed at Stevie’s head and she’d used those seconds the best way possible.

  Throwing herself into him like a tornado, she punched and kicked. Robinette checked her a moment before she kneed him in the nuts, slapping her so hard that she flew against the SUV.

  You are so gonna die.

  Still hunched in a fetal position, Clay went first for his backup revolver, concealed in his left pants pocket. He shifted then, grimacing as he went for his phone in his right pocket which was too damn close to the bullet in his leg. He silently cursed when his phone failed to turn on. It was soaked with his own blood. Useless.

  He straightened, coming up on one knee just as Robinette grabbed Stevie by the fasteners on her flak jacket with one hand, lifting her in the air again, his gun shoved under her chin as he pulled her against him. She still looked dazed.

  ‘Keys, Maynard. I want your damn keys!’

  ‘Okay, okay,’ Clay panted, leaving his arm against his side, hoping Robinette wouldn’t see his revolver. He didn’t dare shoot now – the bastard was using Stevie as a shield. ‘Just don’t hurt her. Please don’t hurt her.’ Holding on to his sanity by a thread, he dug his keys from his pocket and hesitated, trying to think of something to do. Anything to do.

  Then he realized that Robinette held his gun awkwardly, like he’d never held one before. With his left hand.

  Was Robinette right handed? Why didn’t he just switch hands? Why was . . .

  Oh. Understanding came in a rush. Robinette only had one arm powerful enough
to hold Stevie – his right. Because a certain kid had shot him in the left arm. Alec, I love you. The kid must have injured Robinette worse than they’d assumed.

  Clay tossed the keys, letting them fall so that they were inches out of Robinette’s reach.

  ‘Fuck you, Maynard,’ Robinette snarled.

  ‘My right hand’s all bloody.’ Which was true. The hole in his leg was bleeding faster after his theatric roll across the ground. ‘I can’t throw left-handed. The keys slipped.’ Which was a complete lie. He wanted Stevie to pay attention to Robinette’s left hand.

  He wanted Robinette to come closer. The bastard would either have to release Stevie or force her to move. He wouldn’t do the first. The second buys me time.

  Robinette shot Clay a killing glare. ‘You’re a fucking liar. I should shoot her right now.’

  ‘But you won’t, because you need her to get away,’ Clay said, forcing steel into his tone. Robinette spun Stevie so that she faced him, marching her backward until he could cover the keys with his shoe. ‘Kneel.’

  Stevie was still blinking rapidly. ‘I’ll fall.’

  Robinette shoved the gun into her windpipe, making her choke. ‘Then you’ll die. Kneel.’

  Wednesday, March 19, 6.10 P.M.

  Stevie put all her weight on her right leg, lifting the left as she knelt. This is just yoga, she thought. She’d seen Izzy do this hundreds of times. Too bad I never actually attended class.

  Tomorrow, she thought. Tomorrow I’ll start yoga.

  Today she had better things to do. Like get her goddamn gun back. She’d heard the shot, seen Clay go down and immediately had drawn her weapon. But Robinette had grabbed her from behind, taking her gun and her phone. He’d thrown her phone into the trees, dammit.

  He’d kept her gun. Robinette knelt with her, keeping pace. Keeping her own gun shoved against her throat. Dammit.

  Robinette slid his foot off the keys Clay had thrown . . . thrown with his left hand. Oh.

 

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