“Then get your ass out of there and come up north to the great outdoors. I need your help.” He gave him the directions. “You want your ledger, come and get it.”
“That’s where Gallo and Duncan are?” Queen asked with barely contained eagerness.
“Yes, somewhere in this five hundred or so acres I’m gazing at right now. We may have to go hunting unless you can draw them into a trap. Are you good at hunting, Queen?”
“No, I hire people like you for jobs like that.”
“Me, and men like Gallo. It’s rather like the hand of fate that you hired both of us so long ago, and now we’re all meeting here.” He smiled. “I won’t object to postponing my hunt if you can think of a way to lure Gallo and Duncan to me. After all, I’m going to have a spirited hunt and chase later. Think very hard on the way here and come up with something brilliant.”
“I won’t have to think hard. Gallo wants you to die. I just have to offer you to him in a way that he’ll think moderately safe. I’m on my way, Black.”
“Good-bye, Queen. Safe trip.” He hung up.
The first rabbit hurrying toward the trap, he thought in amusement. Queen would be trying his best to screw Black all the while he tried to snatch the ledger. But he didn’t have the expertise to deal with Black and Gallo. They would be out of his league.
He looked down at Cara Clark. She looked pale, even more fragile than she had hours ago when he’d left Milwaukee. It was disappointing. He hoped in the final stages that fear would make her more interesting. “That was a boring conversation. Nothing new. Nothing interesting. But I guess I shouldn’t expect it. Do you know who I just talked to?”
She shook her head. “You said … Queen.”
“That was his name, but not his state of being.” He took the rope and started down the trail. “I just talked to a dead man, little Cara. He didn’t know it, but he’s a dead man.”
* * *
“I’M BECOMING ATTACHED TO your little paradise, Gallo. It has everything that I require,” Black said, when Gallo answered the phone. “I believe this place will do quite well.”
Black was here!
Eve came out of the shallow cave where Gallo had set up camp, her gaze instinctively flying to the bank of trees surrounding them. Stupid. Just because he was on the property was no sign that he was hovering this close to them. But it might be just what Black would do. He seemed to have no fear.
“I checked out the cabin,” Black said. “Have I driven you into the wilds? You’re a hardy specimen, but what about your Eve Duncan? It’s not kind to expose a lady to such rough country. Tell her to come to me. I’ll take care that she doesn’t suffer.”
“Where should I come, Black?” Eve asked.
“So eager?” Black said. “Maybe she’s a fitting mate for you after all, Gallo.”
“Tell us how we can get Cara Clark,” Gallo said.
“For a start, you have to keep to the proper order. As soon as Queen arrives, I’m going to send him to you to get the ledger. You’ll give it to him and send him back to me.”
“The hell I will. Once you have the ledger, you’ll kill the child.”
“You think you’ll have no bargaining power? But you will, you know. I’d much rather have you to gut than that ledger. That will be step two. Believe me, I wouldn’t risk not being able to draw you to me. Of course, I’ll insist you be accompanied by your Eve. After all, she has a vested interest. I can’t wait to have a discussion with her. No, I have plans for the little girl that involve you. The only way I would change them is if you get stubborn and don’t give Queen the ledger. Then I’d have to do a reversal and kill Cara first. I will do that if you spoil the splendid scenario I’ve developed for Cara’s end.”
And Eve had no doubt he meant every word he said.
Gallo glanced at Eve and shrugged. “It seems we have no choice at present.”
“Where are you now?” Black asked.
“I’m not a fool, Black. Send Queen down the south path around the lake. I’ll come to him somewhere along that stretch. If I see you following him, then Queen will have a long walk for nothing.”
“He’ll be alone. I’m saving my energy for the big push. But don’t make the mistake of trying to follow him back to me. I’ll let you know when he arrives here.” He hung up.
“Is he lying about keeping Cara alive?” Eve asked.
John shook his head. “There’s no way to be sure, but it’s consistent with what we know about Black. He wants it all. She’d still be valuable to him if he thought he could use her as bait for a trap.”
But John had been right. The choice had been too slim to take a chance on refusing Black.
“He made me feel helpless.” She took out her phone. “But we’re not helpless. He doesn’t know about Catherine. That’s an ace in the hole. There has to be a way of getting around this. I’m calling Catherine.” She dialed quickly. “She said she might be able to find him with that gadget. Let’s give her an opportunity.”
Catherine answered almost immediately. “I’m about four miles from the property. Trouble?”
“Black just contacted us. He’s sending Queen to pick up the ledger, then he’ll have plans later that include John and me. We can’t do anything about Queen, but Cara Clark should be safe for a while even after he picks up the ledger. He has plans for her, and they’re probably as diabolical as he is. Lord, I hope she’ll be safe. But we have to know where Black is on the property fast.”
“I’ll find him. Don’t do anything until I do.”
“No promises. Judy’s little girl won’t stand a chance unless we play this right. Just line up that high-tech phone gadget and locate Black. We’ll take it from there.”
“I’ll call you when I know something.” She hung up.
Eve turned to John. “It will give us an edge if she’s able to track him. I’m just praying that she can.”
John shrugged. “Gadgets can be fluky. I’d rather trust old-fashioned scouting.”
“Catherine is smart. We’ve got to give her a chance.”
“If she blows it, and Black catches her, then the kid is dead.”
Eve knew that was true, but the actual voicing of it sent panic soaring through her. “She won’t blow it. She’s a professional. And she cares about that kid, dammit.”
John didn’t answer as he turned away. “I’m going to scout around the immediate perimeter and make sure we’re secure. Stay here and keep your hand on your weapon.” He disappeared into the shrubbery.
Eve leaned back against the huge oak tree and stared after him into the darkness. She couldn’t blame him for being doubtful. Catherine was only one person, and even the most skilled professional would have difficulty in the situation in which Eve had tossed her. Eve just had to trust her.
But she had problems with trust, and Catherine had only appeared in her life recently.
Before Catherine, she had let only Joe come close to her.
Joe.
A pang of aching loneliness swept through her. She had tried to push thoughts of him away, but they were suddenly all around her. She wanted desperately to see him, touch him. She wouldn’t feel such panic if Joe were here. He was a rock, a north star to guide her.
God knows she needed that steady north star in these woods.
Don’t be selfish, she thought in disgust. What she needed didn’t matter. It was right that she had made sure Joe wouldn’t be involved in the madness Black was weaving around them.
But that didn’t stop the loneliness.
* * *
“DID YOU PULL UP THE MAP, Joe?” Catherine asked.
“Yep, I’ve got it.” Joe was squinting at the map he’d accessed on his computer from the county records. “The deed had to be redone when the property was sold a few years ago to Gallo. It should be accurate.”
“Print it out. You can hook up the computer to my portable printer on the backseat.”
“Right.”
“We’re about a mile from the pr
operty now. I think we’d better ditch the car and start hiking.” Catherine pulled onto a side road and drove a mile or so until she found a turnout that would completely hide the car and pulled deep into the brush.
Joe pulled out the map from the printer. “Let’s go.”
She flicked off the headlights. “And where are we going?”
“I’m checking terrain. There are three areas where Black would be unlikely to set up camp. There’s a marsh to the east, high hills on the north tip of the lake, and a stretch to the southwest that was cleared of timber and would be very exposed.” He was circling the areas as he spoke. “Anywhere else is a possibility.”
“That still leaves a hell of a lot of territory for us to cover.” She looked away from him. “We could try to follow Queen back after Gallo hands over the ledger.”
“You’ve been working with Venable too long. Are you willing to risk Cara Clark’s life if Black finds out that someone is tagging Queen?”
“Not unless there’s no other option.” She shrugged. “You’re right, my mind-set is different from yours. Let’s get going.”
She took the Celltec device out of the car and pressed the access button. No light. No red button. “Dammit, I can’t get any response. But Eve says he’s here somewhere. Maybe we’re out of cell-tower range.”
“Whatever.” Joe was moving quickly through the brush. “I’m not going to wait for your gadget to kick in while he could be killing Eve and the kid.”
And neither was Catherine. She jammed the Celltec in her pocket and followed him.
* * *
“QUEEN IS ON HIS WAY,” BLACK told Gallo. “Don’t keep him waiting. The poor man isn’t really equipped anymore for the rough life. He’s gotten soft since his early years in the military. Hiring people like us to do his dirty work has sapped his strength.”
“But not his greed.”
“No, that goes on forever. I’ll see you shortly, Gallo.” He hung up.
John turned to Eve. “Stay here.” He got the ledger from his duffel. “And look sharp.”
“I’m going with you.” She held up her hand as he opened his lips. “I won’t get in your way, but I won’t be left behind.”
“Have it your way.” He turned and moved toward the lake. “But if I go down, you don’t stay around and try to save my neck. You take off and do any rescue attempt from long distance.”
She didn’t answer.
“I mean it, Eve.”
“If you go down, you’re out of it, and I make my own decisions.” She added grimly, “So if you want your way, you’d better not go down, John. Where are we going to intercept Queen?”
“The path winds a good three miles through heavy brush that starts about a half mile from here.” He was walking fast, almost trotting. “I’ll reconnoiter the area on both sides of the trail to make sure Black hasn’t staged an ambush, then wait for Queen to show.” He frowned. “And you will get in my way. I’ll have to worry about you.”
“Then park me somewhere close to the path and come back for me after you make sure the area’s clear.” She kept pace with him. “That’s as far as I’ll go, John.”
He gave her an exasperated glance but didn’t reply.
Five minutes later, they entered into the thick shrubbery that John had mentioned. There was bright moonlight, but the lake path was barely discernible given the overhanging foliage and twisting turns.
John nudged her deeper into the shrubbery. “Don’t move.”
Then he was gone.
Could she trust him to come back for her? He was being too damn protective.
But John appeared beside her several minutes later. “Come on.” He took her arm and was half pushing her down the path. “Queen will be coming around that second curve up ahead in a few minutes. I want to be there ahead of him.”
She pulled her arm away and reached in her jacket for her gun. “Then stop protecting me and go get him. I’ll be right behind you.”
John moved rapidly ahead of her and around the turn.
Her heart was beating hard as she ran after him. Queen might not be as deadly as Black, but he was totally without conscience, and that itself was dangerous.
She stopped short as she came around the turn.
Queen was standing in the center of the path staring warily at John Gallo.
Queen glanced at her as she came into view. “Eve Duncan? I don’t believe we’ve formally met, but I feel as if I know you intimately. You must think she’s expendable, or you wouldn’t have brought her along, Gallo. Black will kill her, you know. Probably in front of you if he thinks you have a passion for her.”
“I know he’ll try.”
Queen smiled. “I’ll bet on him. He’s remarkable in his field. Of course, he has one glaring fault. He’s unpredictable. His bloodlust is so extreme that it sometimes dominates his reasoning. I’ve had a few problems with him on that level lately, but I’ve worked them out.”
“Congratulations,” Eve said dryly. “Maybe because you’re two of a kind.”
He shook his head. “He’s only a tool. We’re nothing alike.” He turned back to Gallo. “The ledger.”
John reached into his pocket and pulled out the ledger. “Catch.” He threw it to Queen. “For all the good it may do you.”
“Sour grapes? You mustn’t be bitter that I’ve finally won the prize.” Queen pulled out a small pen flashlight and was shining it on the first pages of the ledger. “Okay, no tricks. Not that I’d ever suspect you of trying to cheat me.” He tucked the ledger in his jacket. “Now I’d better get back to Black. We wouldn’t want him to get nervous. He meant it when he told you he’d kill the kid.”
“And will still kill her if no one stops him,” Eve said.
“You may try. Black is looking forward to it. He’s planned something special.” Queen added viciously, “I wish I could be here for the show. I’d like to see you taken down, Gallo. But it’s safer for me to take the ledger and ride off into the sunset.” He turned and started back down the path. “May you both rot in hell. Good night and good-bye.”
He disappeared around the curve of the path.
“It’s so tempting,” John murmured. “It would only take me thirty seconds to reach him and break his neck.”
“Judy’s daughter,” Eve reminded him.
He reluctantly tore his gaze away and turned on his heel. “It was only a thought.” He headed back in the direction of the cave. “We’ve got to hope that Queen isn’t as adept as he thinks about handling Black. Come on, let’s go back and wait for Black’s next call.”
* * *
NO SIGN OF EITHER A CAMPFIRE or a lantern.
Joe shinnied down the pine tree to where Catherine waited on the ground. “Nothing.”
She nodded. “I didn’t think we’d get lucky.” She glanced down at the Celltec. “And this thing is giving us zilch.” She punched the cell-tower locator button. “It indicates there’s possible tower access in the south and east. Maybe we’ll get lucky.” She started striding through the brush. “I guess we strike out to the south and try there.”
Joe moved ahead of her. “Dammit, it took us over an hour to search this quadrant.”
She was as bitter and discouraged as he. Time must be running out. She had hoped that they’d be able to get on Black’s track right away. “Maybe we can split up and each take—” Her phone rang.
Eve.
“We’ve just turned over the ledger to Queen. Tell me that you’ve got Black pinpointed.”
“I wish I could,” Catherine said. “We’re moving south now. Let me know if Black calls you.”
“There’s no ‘if’ about it. He’ll call,” Eve said. “But we can’t control the when. I hope it’s not right before he kills Cara. He’d probably enjoy having us on the line when he did it.” She paused, then added shakily, “Find him, Catherine. He killed Bonnie and so many others. We can’t let him kill anyone else.”
“I’ll call you as soon as we spot him. Take care, Eve.”
“And how is she supposed to take care of herself tonight?” Joe asked savagely, as Catherine hung up the phone. “She’ll be so busy trying to save that kid that she won’t think of herself. And I’m not there to do it for her.”
“John Gallo is there,” Catherine said quietly. “She’s not alone, Joe.”
“No, she’s with a man who will bring Black down on her without a second thought. Hell, Gallo may be worse than Black for all we know. Why couldn’t we convince her of that?”
There would be no sense in arguing with Joe right now. He wouldn’t be able to think logically until he had Eve safe. And Catherine wasn’t sure she wanted to argue. There were moments she was as scared as he was at Eve’s situation.
She shoved her phone in her pocket and moved forward through the brush. “South, Joe.”
* * *
“I’VE GOT IT,” QUEEN SAID jubilantly as he strode into the camp. He pulled the ledger out of his pocket and waved it. “No trouble at all. He forked it over without batting an eye. Gallo was meek as a church mouse.”
“I’m glad you were pleased. I know he gave you a bad time on occasion. It’s always good to get your own back, isn’t it?” He glanced at Cara sitting a few yards away. “Aren’t we happy Mr. Queen got what he wanted?”
Cara was staring at Queen, her eyes wide. “But you said he was—”
“Soon.” Black turned back to Queen. “I’m trying to teach our little friend the connection between cause and effect. But she’s a bit confused. I believe I’m going to have to demonstrate.”
Queen’s smile faded. “Well, I’ll leave you to your … lesson. Now that I’ve got the ledger, I’ve no need to stay here any longer. I’d just be in your way.”
“That’s correct. It’s true I don’t need you any longer.”
“And the remainder of your fee will be deposited in your usual Grand Cayman account. I’ll be in touch when I need you again.”
Black smiled. “I believe you’re taking me for granted. I really don’t appreciate your doing that. I’ve decided I’ll do a little freelancing on my own.”
Queen stiffened. “As long as you don’t get yourself in a situation that I’ll have to pull you out of. I can’t allow you to be arrested.”
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