“Don’t play innocent. You know. You’ve been there. And I heard you talking about the land to that guy.”
Land? What guy? She searched her memory for who Nicole could have overheard her speaking with about property. There was only one possibility. Rick.
If possible, her blood ran even colder as Nicole’s meaning sank in. Tim, or rather TNM Ventures, owned land upstream from Big Flats. The land where Marcy had probably been shot. She cleared the enormous lump in her throat. “Actually, I haven’t been to your property on the Snake River. That is where you want to go, right?”
“They own property on the Snake?” JC’s voice.
The three-sided conversation made her feel as though she had too many voices in her own head.
His calm voice continued. “Help me narrow it d—”
Silence.
The weird silence of dead air.
Her heart stopped.
She’d lost JC.
Chapter Forty-eight
JC was gone.
Holly had been dreading the inevitable call drop, praying it wouldn’t happen. Coverage was spotty away from town and the Interstate. But the finality of the silent, dead air in her ear pressed a constricting band around her chest that made it almost impossible to breathe.
She was on her own.
“That’s where you went with my husband. When you were sneaking around behind my back.”
She snapped her attention back to her kidnapper. “How many times do I have to tell you I am not having an affair with Tim?”
Nicole’s voice rose, shrill with agitation. “I know what you’re doing.”
“Calm down, Nicole. It’ll be okay.”
“Don’t tell me what to do.”
Holly shifted her gaze from the delusional woman to the business end of the pistol and back. She finally understood courage wasn’t about not being scared. It was about not letting fear stop her from doing what needed to be done. Her hands clenched the steering wheel.
But what was the right thing to do when a crazy woman locked her in a car and pointed a gun?
She had to think clearly, keep her wits, and talk her way past Nicole.
Past her gun.
Past her insanity.
Only after she survived could she give in to the need to tremble and cry.
She had too much to live for. JC’s words—You’re necessary to me—came back to her. She wanted to find out what that was all about. She wanted a chance to finish what they’d started at her front door. A chance with a man who wasn’t afraid to tell her up front what he wanted.
Her.
In his life.
“Turn here.” Nicole pointed at a dirt road that looked just like the dozen other dirt roads they’d passed.
No! Holly’s instincts shrieked. Keep going!
As long as she kept driving, there would still be time. Time for the police to catch up. Time to figure out a plan. Time for JC to find her.
Nicole raised the pistol.
Holly turned onto the dirt road.
A long plume of dust followed them down the rutted lane. She hoped it would hang in the air long enough to show the police which road they’d taken. A few minutes later, the car jolted into an open area in front of a metal farm building.
She peered through the windshield. A vineyard marched down the slope to the river. Wires strung in an intricate pattern supported drooping leaves and grape clusters. Orchards climbed the hills behind the vineyard. How could any of it help her get out of this alive?
She cast a longing look at the building. The sliding doors of the barn were closed, probably locked tight.
For a nanosecond she thought about the action sequence from Witness—lure Nicole into the outbuilding and dump a silo’s worth of grapes on her head—but she didn’t think they stored grapes in silos, and Nicole wasn’t dumb enough to follow her into one.
Several vehicles were parked under the attached lean-to. She ignored the tractor and focused on the white Kia. Any chance the keys were tucked above the visor? Under the floor mat?
Wait.
Marcy drove a Kia.
“Turn off the car.”
End of the road. She stopped the car and turned off the engine.
Now what?
Nicole grabbed the keys. The pistol never wavered.
Holly released the seatbelt and watched it retract. For a second she thought about lunging for the gun. Then reality overrode the movie moment as she visualized Nicole’s finger tightening on the trigger when she fought for control of the weapon. There wasn’t much doubt where the bullet would end up.
“Get out.” Nicole opened the passenger door and waved the pistol at her.
Out of the car would be better than in the car. Distance from Nicole—and her gun— improved the odds.
Nicole backed out of the car.
Should she try to reason with her? Jump out and run for it? And go where?
Nicole stood by the open car door, pistol at the ready. “I’m waiting.”
She sounded halfway rational, but the whole scenario was insane.
Think of something, anything to distract her.
“This is a beautiful spot. I can see why you like it.” On shaking legs, Holly strolled around the hood of the car, narrowing the distance to the vineyard and orchard. If she could keep the woman talking, she could buy some time until JC figured out where she was.
“I hate it. It’s where Tim brings his whores. But you already know that.”
“I’m sorry if Tim had a relationship with Marcy, but he’s just a client to me.” Ouch, poor word choice. “An accounting client,” she amended.
Nicole laughed, a mirthless chuckle that matched the emptiness in her eyes. “At least Marcy admitted it.”
“What happened with Marcy, anyway?”
“Tim’s had affairs before—most men do. But Marcy actually thought she could take my husband. I couldn’t let that happen. I refuse to be poor again.” Nicole waved the pistol. “Move. Down to the river.”
Holly stared at the gun. She didn’t have to ask if the woman knew how to use it. She’d seen the results up close and personal.
How long could she stall her? Arguing with a sociopath holding a lethal weapon seemed like a bad move.
Holly’s knees shook even harder. She really, really did not want to die. “Think about your baby. If you kill me, you’ll go to jail. Who’ll be around to raise it?”
“You think I want this kid? I only kept it this long because Tim was screwing around. The baby’s my insurance policy. He’ll never leave if he knows I’m knocked up.”
“Then why were you buying Plan B?” she blurted out.
“Just in case.” Nicole shrugged. “I’m already spotting. Tim will buy me a new Mercedes when I miscarry this one.” Her face shifted to her fragile female mode. “I’ll be so sad.”
Holly took a step closer to the rows of grapevines, wondering how Nicole could be so cold and heartless. “You really don’t want the baby?”
“Oh, please. Babies ruin your figure. All they do is scream and crap.”
“But…Tim said—”
Nicole snorted. “He heard what he wanted to hear. The doctors say I probably can’t carry one to term, but it’s a useful way to keep Tim in line. As long as it doesn’t go too far.”
Holly edged closer to the vineyard. “You might want to rethink that decision.” If she could really rattle her, maybe…
“Why?” Her tone carried derision rather than curiosity.
“Remember that day at the restaurant? When I met with Walt?”
Skin twitched around Nicole’s eyes as the memory of the lunch meeting with the attorney registered. “So what?”
“Walt told me Tim filed divorce papers.”
Nicole’s porcelain skin flamed with fury. She shook the pistol at Holly. “You’re such a liar. How can you stand yourself? You make up shit about everyone.”
“Get out your cell phone. Call him. Ask him.”
Nicole glanced
at her purse, as if she were actually thinking about it.
Holly didn’t need a second invitation. She turned on her heels and ran. She bypassed the grapevines. The long rows were a death trap. The narrow aisles would make her an easy target.
She’d almost made it to the orchard when a pistol blast shattered the silence. A tree limb exploded above her head. She dove under the sheltering branches of an apple tree. On hands and knees, she scrambled to get away. Another bullet tore the bark off a nearby tree.
She jumped to her feet and ran.
Nicole screamed at her, but the words made no sense.
Holly circled through the orchard, peering desperately through the trees as she went. Where was Nicole? She didn’t hear any yells or gunfire, only a steady thump in the distance.
Back pressed against an apple tree, she whipped her cell from her pocket. Damn. No bars. No JC. No calling in the cops to rescue her.
If the cops weren’t coming to her, she’d go to them. If she found the road, she could flag down one of the police cars that surely were prowling around out there, searching for them.
Where in the hell was the road?
The unmistakable crunch and ding of rocks pinging against a car’s undercarriage came from her left.
JC! The police!
She sprinted toward the approaching vehicle and burst from the screening trees right in front of a beige Tahoe.
The SUV slid to a halt in a cloud of dust. Tim rolled down the window. Loud rock and roll poured out to greet her.
She ran toward it. “Thank God, you’re here.”
He turned off the ignition, killing the music, opened the door, and stepped out. “Holly? What are you doing here?”
“You have to stop her.” A desperate glance revealed an empty clearing, but she heard a shout in the distance.
“What are you talking about? Stop who from doing what?”
“You honestly don’t know?” She collapsed against the side of the Tahoe, trying to catch her breath. She pressed a hand to her chest, as if that would keep her heart from bursting through. “Then why are you here?”
“I came up to test the grapes. I need to check the sugar level. Why? What’s going on?”
“Your wife has lost it. She thinks we’re having an affair.”
His jaw dropped. “What?”
“She knows about Marcy. And now she’s using me for target practice.”
Nicole’s shouts grew louder. A bullet ricocheted off the hood of Tim’s car. He flinched and spun around. “What the hell?”
He ducked behind the Tahoe, pulling Holly with him. “Where’d Nicole get a pistol?”
“How should I know? Talk to her. She won’t shoot you.”
He peered around the back fender, then turned back to her. “Wait. Are you saying—”
She watched emotions flicker as he fought to catch up.
“Oh, my God.” Blood drained from his face.
“Yeah,” she said. “Nicole probably shot Marcy. And that black SUV you’re missing? Your wife probably borrowed it. Look, I don’t care if you were having an affair. Nicole obviously had a problem with that, but you have to convince her there is nothing going on between you and me.”
He stared at her. “Let me think about this.”
“Are you kidding me?”
Turning, he jammed his fingers through his hair. “Nicole killed Marcy?”
“It sure looks that way.”
“Oh, fuck.” He paced the length of the car.
She risked a glance around the corner of the car. Nicole stood at the far side of the clearing, apparently consulting the committee in her head about her next move.
“You realize what this means.” Tim was suddenly right behind Holly, his voice an octave higher than normal.
“Yeah. It means we need to climb in your car and get the hell out of here.”
Nicole pointed the pistol at the Tahoe and fired. Window glass exploded.
“Shit,” Tim yelped. They ducked, pressing in close to the rear tire.
“Come on. Let’s go while we still can.” Holly reached for the passenger door handle.
“Not a chance. You’ll ruin everything.” Tim’s voice screeched in her ear.
“What’s that supposed to mean?” She cut him an incredulous look.
“I know you know about the loans. First thing Monday morning, you’re probably going to call the banks and tell them about the extra companies.”
Well, yeah, but she certainly wasn’t going to admit it right now. “What are you talking about?”
“It wasn’t my fault. The banks made it too easy. Everything was fine until credit just dried up. I’ll figure it out, but if you walk out of here alive, I’m screwed. You’ll send my wife to prison for murder and me to jail for a couple of bad business decisions.”
Holly scrambled backward. The dirt lane suddenly looked a lot safer than the Tahoe’s shadow. “You can’t be serious.”
He stalked after her. “You realize this isn’t personal, right?”
Chapter Forty-nine
“Tim.” Holly backed away from the Tahoe. “You’re talking about murder. The premeditated kind.”
“You don’t give me much choice.”
The man was as nuts as his wife. “Of course you have a choice. Do it and you’ll fry.” She sprinted up the dirt road.
Tim lunged and caught her wrist. He dragged her backward, then shoved.
She skidded across the driveway, adding a new layer of scrapes and bruises. Sprawled on the ground beside the SUV, she lay directly in Nicole’s line of sight.
Oh, crap.
Nicole pointed, yelled, and a bullet pinged off the Tahoe’s fender.
Holly scrambled to her feet and dove behind the metal barrier.
“Everything was going great. Why couldn’t you just go along?” Tim locked onto her arm again.
“Who me? With what?” Holly ping-ponged her attention between Nicole and Tim. “Wait a minute. Are you talking about Alex?”
“You’re divorcing me?” Nicole yelled, redirecting her rage at Tim.
“Was Alex part of it?” If she was going to die, she wanted a few answers first.
“What the hell has Alex got to do with anything?” Tim peeked over the fender at his wife. “Of course I’m not divorcing you, honey. I love you.”
“With the fraud. Your stealing.” Holly jerked against Tim’s hold. Where could she go if she broke free? “Did you use Alex to flush money back into the system? Was that why you pushed so hard to get us together?”
Tim scowled. “You screwed up things with Alex all by yourself. That boy’s going places and you dumped him for some two-bit cop.”
“Money isn’t everything.”
“Since when?”
The rhythmic thump Holly had noticed earlier grew louder, and a helicopter buzzed over the tree line. An amplified voice called, “This is the police. Drop your weapon.”
That command only works on sane people, competed with, Thank you, God.
Her relief was short-lived. Tim shoved her again. She grabbed the fender and hung on.
“Let go.” He jerked at her arms.
Hell no. She kicked him, but her sneakers didn’t make a dent in his determination. His fingers tightened around her wrist and wrestled her injured hand from the fender. She shrieked in pain and slammed her shoe into his groin.
He yelped and staggered back, hunched around his pain, but he didn’t release her wrist. “Goddamn you.”
The chopper swooped lower, raising a cloud of dirt and fine pebbles. A man shouted through the loudspeaker. “Drop it now!”
“You bastard.” Nicole’s shrill voice cut through the bedlam.
Tim halted warily, one hand still clutching the family jewels.
“She’s yelling at you, asshole,” Holly said. “Maybe you should rethink your throw-me-to-the-wolves plan.”
“Me?” His head turned toward Nicole. “Why’s she yelling at me?”
“You’d leave me for that
whore?” Nicole was already halfway across the clearing. She squeezed off another round. More parts of the Tahoe shattered.
Tim dropped to the ground, jerking Holly with him.
“Do something! Say something,” she urged.
Tim looked like a deer caught in the headlights. Finally, he rose to his knees and peeked through the mangled rear window. “Honey?”
“Why?” Nicole stood less than ten feet away. Tears streamed down her face.
The plaintive question tore at Holly’s heart, but she wasn’t waiting around for the next act. She took a step toward the orchard but Tim whipped out a hand and grabbed her again. He locked an arm around her waist.
“We had a good life—a perfect life. I made it perfect for you.” Anguish twisted Nicole’s features.
Tim dragged Holly back to the car and held her clamped against his chest, a human shield. “Sweetheart, I know that.”
“You coward.” Holly writhed in his grip, a helpless hostage. “Be a man for once in your life.”
The cops in the helicopter were still yelling over the loudspeaker, but no one paid any attention to them.
Tim’s wife advanced on him. Judging from the expression on Nicole’s face, Holly didn’t even exist anymore.
Tim had her arms pinned. She stomped on his foot again, but her sneakers didn’t stand a chance against his work boots. In desperation, she tucked her chin and slammed her head backward into his face.
“Goddammit.”
She heard his roar through a haze of stars and pain. He clamped down on her body until she could barely breathe.
Nicole braced a hand against the Tahoe’s hood, the pistol pointing at Tim. The only problem with that arrangement was Holly was in front of him, right in the line of fire.
The helicopter changed position and hovered behind Tim and her. “Drop your weapon now,” a male voice thundered.
Like that worked the first time?
A rifle blast split the air.
A pistol shot echoed it.
Holly screamed. Tim dodged away from the flying bullets, dragging her down with him. When she opened her eyes, Nicole no longer stood on the other side of the car.
“Nicole.” Tim threw Holly aside and raced around the Tahoe.
So About the Money Page 32