Authors: Chelsea Cain
Jack lifted his eyes to Archie. There was something new in his face. Something hungry. “She's really down there?” Jack asked him.
Archie resisted the urge to scream,
Yes, that's what I've been saying,
and instead simply said, “Yes.”
Jack seemed to contemplate that. He and Leo had the same pale penetrating eyes. His fondness for whiskey had left tiny red capillaries visible on his nose and cheeks. His mouth tightened. His nostrils flared. He was nodding to himself. Pumping himself up. His face looked hot to the touch. He grinned at Archie, like they shared a secret.
Archie had a terrible feeling that he knew what Jack was thinking. “She's dangerous,” he said quickly. “You can't go after her. Let me call for a SWAT team.”
But Jack was already up, already moving around his desk. “She's an intruder on my property,” he said. He reached back and pulled open a desk drawer and lifted out a semiautomatic handgun. “I'm going to do what you should have done a long time ago, my friend.” He pointed the gun at Archie. It was a SIG P226. No safety. A big gun. “I'm going to shoot her.”
Jack laughed and lowered the SIG and then started going through more drawers. This was going very wrong. Archie looked around at Karim, Cooper, and Razor Burn. They had to know this was nuts, but none of them said anything. Susan looked over at Archie, eyes wide. Archie searched for something to say to Jack, some way to defuse this. “I'll go with you,” he said, starting to stand.
Archie felt a hand on his shoulder before he'd even made it to his feet, and then was shoved hard back into his chair. Pain radiated through Archie's abdomen and he winced and brought his hand to his wound.
“Sorry,” Cooper said softly from behind him.
Archie shifted his weight in his seat, and concentrated on Jack. “She's armed,” he told Jack. “She's got a scalpel.”
Jack slid a box of ammo out of the drawer and put it in the pocket of his sweatpants. It bulged awkwardly from his hip as he came back around the desk. He stopped in front of Archie.
Cooper's hand seemed to get heavier on Archie's shoulder.
“Don't worry,” Jack said with a lascivious smile. He nudged Archie with the barrel of his gun and the smile turned into a sneer. “You can fuck her dead body when I'm done with her.”
“Don't do this, Jack,” Archie said.
“Who cares?” Susan asked loudly. There was a pink spot on each of her cheeks. “Let them kill her,” she said, and the viciousness in her voice made Archie cold. Her eyes dared him to disagree, to challenge her. “Unless you don't want her dead,” she added accusingly.
There was nothing Archie could say that she wanted to hear. He didn't have time to explain that right now he was far more worried about Jack's prospects than Gretchen's. “Give me a gun,” Archie urged Jack.
Jack rocked back and forth on the balls of his feet, delighted. “See?” he crowed to Susan. “He just wants to be the one to do it.” He slapped Archie hard on the shoulder, and Archie winced in pain again. “Not a chance,” Jack said.
“She'll kill you,” Archie said quietly. Blood oozed from the wound under his palm.
“That's why I hire commandos,” Jack said brightly. “For just this kind of thing.” Jack jabbed a finger at Razor Burn. “Collins,” he said. “You're with me. Get Ronin and the others up. I'll meet you all at the elevator.”
Razor Burn responded with a clipped nod, executed a military turn, and headed for the door, already unholstering his Glock.
“Shoot her in the head,” Susan called as the door closed behind him.
Jack was pulling on a windbreaker with a yacht race emblem on the chest.
Karim had picked up the
Town & Country
again and was paging through it.
Outside the window behind the desk, it was still dark. It would be an hour before dawn. “Don't go down there,” Archie said. “I'm not going to warn you again.”
“She killed my Isabel,” Jack said, and for a moment Archie saw a trace of the man he'd visited more than a dozen years ago, the man who'd fallen to his knees after Archie told him that his daughter was dead. Maybe that man was always in there, under the surface.
Archie hesitated. “What if I told you she didn't?” he asked.
A shadow fell across Jack's face. “That would be a riot, coming from you. I heard about you this summer. Trying to convince everyone that she didn't kill all her victims.”
“You know,” Archie said, leaning back in his chair. “Do what you want.”
Cooper's hand lifted from Archie's shoulder. “You want company?” Cooper asked Jack.
“I need you two to stay here,” Jack said with a glance at Karim. Karim was engrossed in his magazine and barely seemed to hear. “Stay with them,” Jack told Cooper. “Make sure they don't call anyone until I get back.” He cocked his head at Susan. But she refused to meet his gaze. Jack's tongue flickered. He didn't like being ignored, which Archie knew was exactly why Susan was doing it. Jack moved directly in front of her, took her by her chin, and forced her to look at him. He smiled, satisfied, and released her. “If they're uncooperative, kill them,” he instructed Cooper. Susan's chin had a mark where Jack had grabbed her. Archie kept his hands tight around the ends of the arms of his chair.
Jack started for the door.
“Good luck,” Archie said darkly.
Jack hesitated and turned back around. “Give me your extra gun,” he said to Cooper.
Cooper hesitated and then bent over and lifted a pant leg to reveal an ankle holster. He unholstered the weapon and handed it to Jack.
Jack put a gun in each pocket of his yachting jacket and then glanced back at Archie. “No one knows you're here, my friend,” he said to Archie. “Don't test me.”
Then Jack grinned madly. He drew each of the guns out of his pockets and, two-fisted, headed for the door to the hall. Halfway out, he caught Archie's eye one last time. Eyes bright, face ruddy, a spring in his step, he looked like a kid about to enter Disneyland. He looked happy.
For an instant, Archie was jealous.
“Help yourselves to a drink,” Jack called merrily. And then the door closed and he was gone.
For a moment, no one said anything. Then Cooper reached into his pocket and tossed Susan a deck of cards. “Stay busy,” he said. “It might be a while.”
Â
CHAPTER
42
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Archie poured himself
a double shot of Jack's forty-one-year-old single-malt scotch. There was a mirror in front of him at the bar, and he could see Cooper watching him, his gun still drawn. Susan had moved to the gold-striped settee, where she now sat playing hearts with Karim. She was staring at her cards intently. Karim's gaze was fixed on her, clearly waiting for her to make some sort of move.
“I can't do this with you glaring at me like that,” Susan said.
Karim leaned forward on the settee and set his cards delicately on the table next to his gun. “Do you want me to refresh you on the rules?” he asked.
Susan narrowed her eyes at him over her cards.
Archie replaced the cap on the whiskey bottle and pushed it back in line with the other expensive liquor bottles. He'd blotted the scalpel wound with all the cocktail napkins on the bar and it appeared to have stopped bleeding. He could have thrown away the bloody napkinsâeach napkin was square with a drawing of a sailboat in one cornerâbut Archie left them in a stack next to the Tanqueray instead. He checked the reflection in the mirror again. Cooper was still watching him. Archie could see the silver glinting in his mouth. Anyone with teeth like that had done some hard living at some point.
“Do you want a drink?” Archie asked him.
“No,” Cooper said.
“AA?” Archie asked.
“Ten years,” Cooper said.
Archie lifted his glass and toasted Cooper in the mirror. “Congratulations,” he said. The whiskey was bright and smooth in his throat and he savored it for a moment before he turned around to face the room. The house was quiet. They hadn't heard anything since Jack had left. No voices. No footsteps.
Cooper cracked his neck.
The clock ticked.
Susan pulled three cards from her hand and then made a face and picked one back up. “One more second,” she said to Karim.
Karim hooked a finger under his yellow bow tie and loosened it slightly.
Archie walked over to where they were playing and sat down in one of the two black leather club chairs that faced the settee.
Cooper followed him, and sat down in the chair next to Archie's.
“He does that,” Susan said, indicating Cooper as she glanced up from her cards. “He followed me around during the whole party. You get used to it after a while. It's like when a stray follows you on a walk. You know it's not your dog, but it's kind of nice to have him along.”
“Clever T-shirt,” Cooper said to Susan.
“Thanks,” she said, looking down at her orange Halloween T-shirt. “Goodwill. Two-ninety-nine.”
A distant thud echoed through the house. Archie and Susan jumped, and Cooper stood, gun raised toward the door.
Karim was the only one who hadn't flinched. He arched an eyebrow over his cards at Cooper. “A bit on edge, are we?” he asked.
A long moment passed and then Cooper exhaled slowly, lowered his weapon, and sat down again, resting his gun on his knee.
Archie listened, but didn't hear the noise again.
Susan settled on a third card and laid it down with the other two she had discarded, and Karim picked them up and added them to his hand. “You don't believe this business about Gretchen Lowell, do you?” Karim asked Cooper, as he looked at his cards.
Cooper was still eyeballing the door.
“It's rubbish,” Karim continued, laying down a card. “Creative. But total rubbish.”
Susan laid down a card on top of Karim's. “You guys should get a cat,” she said. “You know, a pet to ease up the tension around here.”
“The bloody pythons would eat it,” Karim said.
Susan made a little strangled sound of fright.
“Told you,” Cooper said to her.
“There are no pythons on this island,” Archie said.
Susan gave him a dubious look.
“Listen,” Karim said to Archie. “Jack's not here. Why don't you tell us why you were really down there?” He played another card, and then Susan followed, and they traded like that back and forth until Susan smiled smugly and transferred the entire pile in front of Karim on the settee.
“I told you why we were down there,” Archie said. He set his drink down on the
Town & Country
magazine. “Why were
you
down there?” Gretchen had said that the tunnels they were in weren't used anymore. They certainly appeared abandoned. Now the obvious question occurred to Archie. What reason would Jack's men have to search them?
Karim's expression didn't change. He brushed something off the knee of his gray slacks.
He was stalling.
Cooper cleared his throat and sat forward. “We monitor the traffic near the house,” he said. “We're aware of the FBI surveillance, so we pay attention to unfamiliar cars. We noticed a black Audi parked near some undeveloped property Jack owns. As that property happens to be the location of one of the old tunnel entrances, we checked it out, and discovered that the area around the entrance had been disturbed. It appeared that someone had entered the property. So we put a team together to patrol the tunnels. We hadn't been down there long before we saw the light go on under the door of the room you were in.”
Archie lifted his glass and took another sip of whiskey. His glass had left a wet ring on Christie Brinkley's forehead. “We?” he asked Cooper.
Cooper was quiet.
Archie looked at Susan, to see if she was listening, but she appeared to be studying her cards.
“That's rightâ
we,
” Karim said, sounding a little agitated. He pointed a finger at Cooper. “Trust me, mate. Jack's not going to find Gretchen Lowell in the tunnels.”
“You're right,” Archie said. “I don't think she's in the tunnels, either.”
Cooper's shoulders heaved and he sat back heavily in his chair. “You think she's off the island by now?” he asked Archie.
“I didn't say that,” Archie said softly.
Cooper's eyes moved from Archie to Karim. “What's he talking about?” he asked Karim.
Karim's face was impenetrable. “He's trying to fuck with you,” he said.
Cooper hesitated and then turned to Archie. “Where do you think she is?” he asked.
Susan was still looking at her cards but a small frown line had appeared between her eyebrows.
Archie picked up his glass and turned it slowly in his hand, making them wait. He kept his eyes on Karim. “She has a funny idea that she can catch the man who killed that girl they found on the dock yesterday,” Archie said.
“I thought she killed that girl herself,” Cooper said.
“She says she didn't,” Archie said. Karim had diverted his attention to the game now, his fingers pinching his cards. He reached a hand up and straightened his tie.
“She says she saw a man in a mask lead the girl from the party into the tunnels and then bring a corpse up a few hours later,” Archie said.
Archie watched as Karim studied the carefully fanned cards in his hand, his eyes roaming from one to the next, as if seeing each one for the first time. The back of the cards had been embossed with gold crests.
“She's curious who this man might be,” Archie said.
Susan inhaled quickly and laid down a black queen.
“Fuck,” Karim said, flinching at the sight of the card. He swept the pile of cards toward him, as Susan smiled.
“Fancy cards,” Archie said to Cooper.
Cooper smirked. “Gift from the boss last Christmas,” he said. “We all got them. Generous motherfuâ”