Danger Deception Devotion The Firsts

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Danger Deception Devotion The Firsts Page 94

by Lorhainne Eckhart


  “The grow-op in the basement of that, piece of shit, house you burned down, and the marijuana plants in the shed Marcie looked after, how can you have no part of that if it’s happening right under your nose?” Jesse asked, tit for tat. He gestured his hand in the air, a man who questioned everything.

  Richard ground his teeth. His icy, blue eyes sought out Marcie. His tone was sharp and overtired. “He just did it. I wasn’t consulted. I found out after it was up and running. Yes, he had a grow-op in that basement. I told him to get rid of it, and the one in the shed, too. I looked away for quite a while when I thought he was growing for just friends. But, suddenly, he had too many plants. He was getting greedy, and that made him dangerous. Right after that, the house burned. Marcie, I ignored what you were doing with that weed, because I like you. Since Maggie and I met you, we’ve felt protective of you. Why did you do it for him?” Richard kicked his empty chair.

  “Because I was so in love with him, I thought I could change him.” Their eyes met and held. She knew Richard understood what she was trying to say by the way his eyes filled with pity. She’d been a fool in love.

  “So what happens now? Dan wants the marijuana you grew for him. He’s involved my wife, who has no business being part of this. Is he going to make good on his threat?” Richard shrugged and scrubbed the top of his head a little too hard.

  Sam cleared his throat. “Richard, I think it’s time to call Dan.”

  Chapter Thirty-four

  Marcie changed into a pair of Maggie’s light gray sweat pants and a bright red sweatshirt. She was bone tired, and when she tried to lie down on the leather sofa in the large, open front room, her mind raced—her adrenaline pounded. So she lay there, allowing the knots to build in her stomach until the dinner bell rang. It was four large pizzas, delivered to the back door.

  Six adults and two children crowded around a large, country oak table, crammed in like sardines. Everyone minded their Ps and Qs, especially around the children, and because Ryley continued to cast wary glances between his dad and Sam.

  After dinner, Diane helped Maggie wash the dishes in the large, open brick and marble kitchen. They chatted warmly about family, friends, and her children as Marcie watched them over the long, creamy counter dividing the eating area from the main cooking part of the kitchen.

  Richard put the kids to bed and then whistled while he sauntered his six-foot frame, complete with solid pecs and tight, narrow hips, back into the kitchen. He was a definite catch, but he only had eyes for Maggie. He walked up behind his wife and pulled her against him as he nuzzled her ear. Their fingers intertwined briefly before he pulled away, but not before their eyes connected in their own private moment. He was head over heels in love with her and had been ever since she had served him in a bar as a twenty-two-year-old waitress. He had asked her out within five minutes and married her three months later. After ten years, the chemistry still sizzled between them.

  Jesse was on the phone in Richard’s study, talking to his wife.

  Sam sat at the table across from Marcie, his eyes glued to her, sipping his coffee from a pink flowered mug. Marcie could feel his heat and fought to look anywhere but at him.

  Richard crossed his arms and rested his hip against the tiled counter by the sink. “Dan’s going to meet me tonight for a beer.”

  “No, Richard, don’t.” Maggie pulled her hands out of the soapy water she’d just dunked them into and spun around. “Stay away from him. Hasn’t he caused enough trouble?”

  “It was my idea, Maggie.” Sam got up and claimed the seat beside Marcie, resting his arm around the back of her chair. He didn’t notice how still she went.

  “I’ve got to meet him,” Richard said. “Besides, nothing’s going to happen. Remember, we’re friends.” He said it with a hint of sarcasm, which brought Marcie’s head around. What she saw on Richard’s face was sheer male fear.

  “You hate him.” Marcie didn’t realize she had spoken aloud. Everyone focused on Richard, but they didn’t see the confusion that she did. “He messed with Maggie, and you won’t forgive him for that, will you?”

  Richard glared at Marcie. His pale skin was tinged a hint of pink, and his long, narrow nose flared when he spoke. “You’re fucking right, I hate him. Who the hell does he think he is, showing up at my door, talking to my wife, forcing her into something…” He held his hands up in the air, shaking his head as his firmed lips trembled and formed a fine white line. “If she was caught, she’d spend how many years locked away in prison?”

  “This guy’s either a confident fool, extremely cocky, or brilliant,” Jesse said as he entered the room. “He has no loyalty to friends and is desperate enough to use underhanded tactics to get what he wants. I haven’t met the guy, but looking at you, Richard; I’d be wary about pissing you off.” Jesse wandered over to the corner wood stove behind the table, shoving his hands in his pockets before turning around. “I’d say he’s not done yet. So what’s he going to do next to get the rest of the marijuana? You had how many gardens yet to do?” He leaned forward enough to pin his bullshit-free eyes on Marcie.

  This was no time to be embarrassed, but she was. “Nineteen.”

  Jesse nodded as if satisfied. The way his eyes worked, he had obviously devised some plan.

  “What happens when he gets cornered or in a jam? How does he react?” Jesse glanced first at Richard and then at Marcie.

  Marcie met Richard’s reluctant gaze, then dropped her eyes to a piece of nail hanging from her thumb.

  “He’s complex, something like this; he’ll scheme, but he could also throw a temper tantrum like a little boy,” Richard answered. “He’s almost two different people. At night, he hangs around with a pretty bad crowd. During the day, he seeks out respectable folks, puts on a mask. One thing about Dan, he’s afraid of getting in a fight, because he knows he’ll lose. So he creates a mess, points the finger at someone else, and runs away.” Richard gestured his finger toward the door. “You’d think it would teach him to wise up, but he keeps doing it. He drinks heavily, screws women and doesn’t stop to ask their names, always getting women to clean up his messes. How does he do it, Marcie? Why are you so willing to do anything for him?”

  Her face flamed red. “The side he shows me is cavalier, dashing, radiant, and charming. There’s something about him that was addicting, the way he focused all of his attention and caring on me.” She dropped her eyes again to that irritating piece of nail. “He knows all the right things to say, as if he can read you. I think he does. There are many parts to his personality. He’s intriguing and fun to be around. I’ve never experienced it with anyone else. I’m sure you’ve noticed his special link with children. He appears to care deeply for their welfare. I’ve watched him around Ryley and Lily. Ryley worships him. And Lily, he was quite concerned with how to help her, how he should best approach her, what you’re doing for her therapy, what he could do to help. Richard, I know he’s asked you, too. Whatever motivated him to do that…?” She stopped, held her hands up, and shrugged.

  “He talked to you about how to help my kid?” Richard snapped.

  Marcie saw the instant a black haze of fury took hold of his senses. He pushed away from the counter and stalked around the kitchen island, squeezing his fists.

  “Richard, it was a year ago. What I’m trying to get at is that he’s unpredictable. He throws you off by making you think he cares. These many sides of him are like different personalities stuffed inside one body. It’s in his makeup—what he is. He’s my father’s son.”

  Chapter Thirty-five

  “Dan’s your brother?” Sam scooted his chair back and hovered over Marcie. She was forced to look up.

  “No, he’s not my brother. He’s my stepfather’s son, but he wasn’t raised by him.”

  Richard leaned on the table, on the other side of Marcie, and raised the flat of his hand. “Where are you getting this from, Marcie? Dan’s mom lives in Port Angeles. He has five brothers and sisters. His dad walked
out on them when he was a little boy. I don’t think he’s seen him since. So was this your stepdad?”

  “No, Dan’s mom was another victim of my dad, Scotty Renard. He liked unwilling prey—mostly young girls.” That got everyone’s attention. The Renard property was forty acres at the front of Gardiner, filled with a history of criminal shenanigans. She noticed everyone’s eyes were agog; they obviously hadn’t known he was also a sexual predator. She knew Sam remembered the name scribbled at the bottom of the journal she showed him last night. Many coincidences, but were they?

  Diane abandoned the dishes she had loaded into the dishwasher and moved in her stocking feet closer to Marcie. “Isn’t he doing time for heroin trafficking?”

  “Yeah, that’s what they eventually got him on.”

  “Jesus, Marcie, I thought you were raised by your granny on Las Seta. I didn’t know you were a Renard.” Richard backed away and leaned in the doorway.

  “I was twelve, living with Mom in a second house on Scotty’s huge property. My brother, Simon, lived with dad. Dad was a substance abuser, just like Mom, drunk by noon and took whatever choice drug was available.”

  Sam and Diane glanced at each other but said nothing.

  “Scotty’s a convicted heroin and gun dealer, but his hand was always in some pot—anything he could steal and sell. When I was twelve, a heroin junkie shot my brother in the face. That was when Granny came and took me. I was lucky. Scotty Renard was a predator. I’ve never told anyone this, but he’d begun to show an inappropriate interest in me. I was the age he preferred.”

  Diane reached down and squeezed her hand. “Don’t, Marcie. We all know where you’re going with this.”

  She just nodded. “I’m cold.”

  Maggie hurried to the back door and lifted an earth-brown sweater off a hook. She draped the thick wool knit around Marcie’s shoulders. Her nurturing hands squeezing in a supportive way.

  “Dan is Scotty’s son. He carries the same gifts and is nothing but a predator of greed, destruction, and power. The only difference? Dan’s a dangerous coward, and, another thing, he’s not the middle guy. There’s a ship coming up from South America, and it’s filled with cocaine. Dan arranged it. Richard, you’re also involved more than you let on.”

  Every eye focused in on Richard. Jesse took a step toward him.

  “What the fuck do you know?” Richard slammed his fist on the kitchen table. Sam’s mug bounced, spilling coffee onto the shiny oak. Marcie jerked back, horrified by what she’d said and terrified of falling victim to Richard’s wrath. Could it really be true?

  Sam moved around Marcie, her shining knight, and shoved Richard. “Back off, now.”

  “Richard, what’ve you done?” Maggie spoke with anguish as tears glistened in her silky brown eyes.

  “Where did you get this information from, Marcie, and how did you know about this ship?” Diane asked. Seeing no other choice, she gripped Richard’s solid forearm and hauled him back, stepping between both him and Sam. Diane was the only one who didn’t appear surprised by this news. In fact, by the way she looked over Richard’s shoulder and then over to the back door, it was clear she wanted to change the subject.

  “Well, this is interesting, Diane. It seems you already know, but I just found out. Jerome told me,” Marcie said.

  The fire crackled in the wood stove in the kitchen, cutting through the silence and the chilly fall air.

  “No more secrets,” Sam said. Everyone stared at him.

  Richard walked around Diane and placed both hands on the table, facing Marcie. “So who’s Jerome, and how does he know about me?”

  Marcie watched Sam closely while she spoke. “Jerome appeared in my dreams. He’s my guide, but he’s also much more.”

  Sam pursed his lips, and, to his credit, said nothing.

  “Are you telling me some guy from a dream told you this?”

  “Yes, Richard, I am,” she answered. She knew by the way his eyes widened that he had to be wondering whether she was sane.

  Richard threw his hands up in the air and then combed them through his short, dark hair. Sam was probably the only one who didn’t know anything. Or did he?

  “I know Dan expanded his operation,” Richard finally said. “Whatever he’s doing on the side, I’m not part of it. He put up a huge chunk of cash to bring some coke up. All I know is that he’s in it with someone else, and I don’t know who for sure.” Richard scooted past Diane and paced the kitchen. “There’s a guy named Graham. He owns a large piece of real estate in Port Townsend. He’s met with Dan several times on our property. I was asked to front some cash and was assured of a big return on my investment.”

  “Oh my God, Richard, you didn’t.” Maggie hurried to the long counter where Richard paced and pressed her shaky hand to her mouth.

  Richard walked around the counter until he hovered over his wife. “No, Maggie, I didn’t. There are some lines I’m not going to cross. These are dangerous players he’s involved with, and they don’t care who they hurt.”

  Diane cleared her throat. “We’ve been tracking a boat coming up from South America that, we suspect, is carrying cocaine. We also know the boat’s owned by Dan’s brother, Greg McKenzie.”

  If everyone was shocked by Marcie’s revelation; it had nothing on Diane’s little secret.

  “Diane, how long have you known about this, and why didn’t you tell me?” Sam ran his hand over his unshaven face.

  “We found out the day you left to go back to New Orleans.” Diane gestured defensively with both hands.

  “So, who’s monitoring it?” Sam asked.

  “DEA, Coast Guard, Interpol—it’s a joint effort. We suspect there’s also going to be some trade of high-grade marijuana, and that’s where Marcie and Maggie come in.”

  Marcie glanced at Maggie. Her mouth hung open. Obviously, she also realized they were pawns in a bigger plan.

  “So let me get this straight: What I grew and cut, and what Maggie delivered to Sandra, is going toward this deal?” Marcie spoke directly to Diane.

  “It sure looks that way, Marcie.”

  “Diane, who’s pulling the strings behind this deal?” Jesse leaned against the brick wall beside the wood stove.

  “Lance Silver,” she answered.

  Chapter Thirty-six

  Maggie, Diane, and Marcie stayed behind while Sam, Jesse, and Richard went to the Island Seekers bar; a quiet pub overlooking the ocean in downtown Gardiner. Richard would meet Dan for a beer, and Jesse and Sam would linger in a dark corner, out of sight, to watch.

  Maggie paced the open kitchen. She fed another log into the wood stove and closed the damper. She pulled out the mop and washed the creamy golden tiled floor until it gleamed. Marcie brooded in silence, watching the wall clock tick by at a snail’s pace. It was after eleven, and the men had been gone for nearly two hours. Maggie, now ass deep in the refrigerator, was pulling out food, spraying down the shelves, and giving them a good scrub.

  Diane retreated to the living room. Marcie could hear her rummaging in her briefcase, the one she’d retrieved from home, along with Marcie’s own duffle bag, after the men left for the bar.

  Marcie pushed her chair back and grabbed a single crutch, hobbling into the bright living room. It featured a twenty-foot ceiling and a spindled fir stairwell that led up to the second floor, where four bedrooms overlooked this spacious room. The leather furniture surrounded a river rock fireplace, and there sat Marcie’s duffle bag, dumped on a rich mahogany loveseat. She unzipped the side pocket and pulled out her silk-wrapped tarot cards.

  With her stocking feet resting on the square coffee table, Diane peered over her open file, her reading glasses perched on the end of her nose. “What’s that?”

  “My tarot cards. I play with tarot cards. There, I said it.” Marcie waved the bundle. Maybe because she was so tired, drugged, battered, and bruised, she didn’t care to hide it.

  Diane closed her file and slid off the leather sofa, dumping her glasses on
the coffee table. Marcie hobbled back to the kitchen, with Diane dogging her heels.

  “Wow, Marcie, pretty cool,” she said.

  Marcie stopped and really looked at Diane, then continued back to her chair, placing her cards in front of her and resting her crutch against the wall. Diane pulled out a chair, sat down, and tucked in closer to Marcie.

  “These were my granny’s cards.” Marcie shuffled, which brought Maggie’s head out of the fridge.

  “I didn’t know you read tarot cards.” Maggie stood up, a spray bottle and sponge dangling from her hands.

  “I guess it’s not something I share with just anyone. I pick up on people’s feelings, even see things in my dreams sometimes. My granny taught me how to stay close to nature and ground myself in the natural world. The tarot’s a tool I use for clarity to help when I’m seeking answers. As you know, our paths aren’t set, but if we can see what obstacles lie before us, we know what we need to do to overcome and change that path.” Marcie continued to shuffle as Maggie tossed all the food back in the fridge and then pulled out a chair.

  “Do you mind if I ask you something?” Diane clasped her hands on the table in front of her.

  “No, go ahead.”

  “If you can see all this, and have the answers; why did you get involved with Dan?”

  Marcie stopped shuffling and met the honest curiosity in Diane’s big eyes. The words should have hurt, but there was no cruel intent in her question.

  “I was so in love with Dan. The signs were all around me, but I chose not to see. When he cornered me at Granny’s yesterday, I realized then that my obsession with him was partly his doing. He’s a wizard. He found my weakness, my pain, and he used it to make me want him. This is nothing but a game to him. He’s dangerous.”

 

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