Love is Murder (41 page)

Read Love is Murder Online

Authors: Sandra Brown

“Yes, but I’m exhausted. I need sleep.” She rubbed her hand along his thigh. “And sex. New brides need lots of sex.”

He was tempted, no denying that. But the thought of getting out of Texas and closer to their honeymoon was even more tempting.

“Nap now, have wake-up sex in the morning. Or Van Horn sex in an hour. I promise I’ll be up for it.”

“Tom…”

“Come on, sweetheart. The whole point of driving to Disneyland was so that we could watch America roll by outside. And trust me when I say that this part of Texas is better in the dark. My dad used to take me hunting in West Texas. It’s a whole lot of nothing.”

“Hunting?”

“Hey, Texas boy here. Handguns and rifles and an oil well in the backyard.”

She laughed. “You’re so typical.”

“Nah, just lucky. Anyway, if we make it to Van Horn, then most of tomorrow is New Mexico and Arizona. And those deserts are much prettier.”

“I’m a Texan now, too, remember?” Her fingers brushed his hair, and when he looked over her irritated expression was gone, replaced by that sweet, vulnerable face he fell in love with. “That means I love every part of your state, even the dusty, dry parts.”

“I’m very glad to hear it.” He smiled at her, still not quite able to believe she was his wife.
Wife
. Man, his parents were going to shit bricks when they found out. “Let me see it.”

She cocked her head. “Tom.”

“Please?”

She shook her head, then released an indulgent sigh as she held up her left hand and wiggled her ring finger.

“My mother’s going to want a big wedding, you know,” he said.

“Seems silly since we’re already married.”

“Married by a judge in Austin doesn’t cut it for her.”

“Hey, it’s your family’s money. If she wants to spend it on a big wedding, then more power to her.” She shifted in her seat and frowned.

“What?”

“What if we can’t find a room in Van Horn?” she asked, as he gritted his teeth and told himself this was the “for better or for worse” part of the vows.

“Do you really want me to turn around?”

She let out a long sigh, then shifted in her seat, looking out at the stretch of highway lit by their headlights in front and the wall of black behind them. “I guess not. We’re already a million miles from the turnoff and we’d have to find someplace to double back.”

“On we go, then. Tunes?” He had some classic Lyle Lovett in the CD player and cranked the volume. “Why don’t you go online and see if you can book us a room,” he suggested, as Lyle crooned about
M.O.N.E.Y.
“You can do that, right? Wasn’t that the point of buying that thing?”

She smirked and pulled her new iPad out of her bag. She’d bought it before they set out on the road, her first purchase as his wife. “I guess I don’t have to say thanks anymore, do I? I mean, now it’s community property.”

“Yours, mine and ours. For richer or for poorer, so don’t buy too many of those toys or we’ll be hitting the poorer side of that equation.” Not exactly true. He had his trust-fund money plus the cash he’d got when he’d sold his stock options at the height of the tech boom. He was barely past thirty, had a beautiful wife and never had to work a day again. Life was good.

“Let’s see what I can find, then.” She tapped on the iPad and the screen illuminated the interior of the car in a glowing blue. A light flashed in his rearview mirror, and he flinched.

“Tom?”

“Sorry. I—” He rubbed his eyes.

“What?”

“I thought I saw a car behind us.”

She shifted in her seat. “It’s pitch-black back there. Doesn’t Texas have the money for a few lights on their highways?”

“Like I said—middle of nowhere. And it must have just been a trick of the light. Any luck with the room?”

“There’s no signal. It’s a great toy, but it’s not connecting to the internet, and we’re not making phone calls. So don’t get a flat, because there’s no way we’re getting through to Triple A.”

“The car’s fine. Don’t be paranoid. People drove across the country long before cell phones were invented.”

“And iPads and CDs. Can you imagine? Eight-track tapes? I mean, what kind of world was that?”

“My dad had an old eight-track player in the garage,” he said. “I used to—
Fuck!”

Lights flashed on behind him—
right
behind him. Filling his rearview mirror and getting bigger by the second.

Beside him, Elizabeth yelled, reaching out to steady herself with a hand on the door. “What the—
Oh, my god.
He’s crazy. He’s right on your ass!”

“I know! I know!” His heart was pounding in his chest. He told himself this was no big deal. The guy was drunk. He was being an ass. But all they had to do was let him get by and they’d have the road to themselves again.

He lifted his foot off the accelerator.

“What are you doing?” Her voice was high, terrified.

“I’m slowing down. Letting him pass.”

“I don’t think—”

Wham!

They both jolted forward as the car behind them—no, it was a truck—tapped the rear bumper.

“Jesus, Jesus,” Elizabeth said. “Do you have a gun? A weapon?”

“I don’t have shit.” He had his knife, like always. A folding blade that was spring-loaded and pretty much lived in his pocket. But that wasn’t much good against a crazy pickup truck. “
Fuck
. Call 911.”

“There’s no cell service! I just told you!”

Wham!
Tapped again, and this time from an angle, so that his sweet little Mercedes shifted a bit to the right. “Just fucking try again!”

“All right, all right! You don’t have to scream at me!”

“Babe, I’m sorry. I’m freaked is all. Okay, look. I’m going to floor it.” He did as he was talking. “We’re small and fast, and see? We’re already pulling away. So just watch the phone and the second you get a signal, you call. Okay?”

She nodded, and he kept his hands tight on the wheel and his foot flat on the floor.

And for a second—one beautiful, wonderful, fabulous second—he thought it was going to work. And then the gap started closing. Those lights started growing bigger. And soon the truck’s headlights consumed the small back window of the Mercedes.

Tom tensed. Waiting to feel another smack against the bumper. But none came. The truck just tailed him. Ten, maybe fifteen inches away from the back of his car, tracking him as they whipped down the highway.

The minutes sagged by.

“Signal?”

Beside him, Elizabeth shook her head, her eyes wide and terrified.

“Restart the phone. Sometimes it finds a network when you restart.”

She nodded and rebooted the phone.

“Do you think it’s over? He’s just going to tail us all the way to Van Horn?”

“It’s at least half an hour away,” Tom said, which technically didn’t answer her question. “But he’s stopped hitting us. Maybe he’s just drunk.”

“I bet he’s drunk as a fucking snake.
Bastard
.”

“So, we just drive, and we breathe in and out, and we will be fine.”

The lights behind them snapped off, leaving a gaping black chasm behind them.

“Is it— Did he—?”

Tom reached over and grabbed her hand. “I don’t know.”

That’s when he heard the sharp
crack
. And at the same time the car skidded.

“What was that?” Elizabeth asked.

“I don’t know.”

Another crack, and that time Tom figured it out, because the car started to fishtail. He tried to steer into it, which was easier said than done, but they just kept skidding in a circle, right off the road until the car tumbled sideways into a ditch.

His right arm was thrust sideways across Elizabeth’s chest, a protective cage. She was breathing hard, her fear filling the car along with his.

“He shot out the tires,” he whispered. “The crazy son of a bitch shot out the tires.”

“What do we do?”

“Stay here. Maybe he’s had his fun. Maybe he’ll just go. Is there a signal yet?”

“Oh, God.” Panic made her voice rise. “I dropped it. Oh, shit.” She bent over and scrabbled on the floorboard. He could hear her murmured, “Please, please, please.” Then, “Shit. No signal.”

“This is what we’re going to do. We’re going to stay in the car. Simple. Straightforward.”

“Do you see him?”

He twisted in his seat, scouring the darkness behind them. “No, I—

And there he was.

Not some drugged-out kid, or some bearded, wild-eyed desert survivalist. Just a dude. In a white button-down under a denim jacket and jeans. He had a crooked grin and he didn’t look the least bit psychotic.

Tom didn’t move a muscle.

“Hey!” the Dude called. “Are you okay? Shit! That fucker blew your back tires right out!”

Tom glanced sideways at Elizabeth, who was staring past him at the Dude, her mouth open as if she couldn’t quite believe this.

“You—you saw it?”

“Shit, yeah.”

Tom swiveled in his seat, trying to see through the oily darkness. “How?”

“My car,” the Dude said, pointing vaguely behind them. “I was sleeping—too much driving, you know—and I saw the crazy bastard rail down on you.”

Tom rolled the window down—but only about half an inch.

“You—you saw him? Where—”

“Floored it right on by while you were spinning. Man, he’s probably in New Mexico by now.”

“Do you have cell service? Can you call a cop? A tow truck?”

“Signal picks up in about five miles. Right now, it’s like the Wild, Wild West.”

“Could you—I mean, would you drive ahead? Call someone?”

“Sure thing.” He took a step back, then stopped. “Or, you know, I could help you change the tires. This ditch ain’t so deep, and this car’s not even as heavy as my sister.”

“I don’t know…”

Beside him, Elizabeth shifted. “I don’t want to wait here, Tom. What if that freak comes back?”

“Lady’s got a point. He lit up my car playing chicken with you two. Wouldn’t surprise me at all if he comes back to see if I’ve done just that—gone off to get help for you guys.”

“I only have one spare.”

“And I got one. Won’t be a perfect fit, but I got tools. We get it on, and it’ll hold you to a gas station.”

He glanced at Elizabeth, who eyed the Dude with a frown, then nodded. “Yeah. I want to get out of here.”

“Right. Okay.” He felt the weight of the knife in his pocket as he shifted to turn off the car. He had the keys in his hands, keeping them tight between his fingers. Neither the keys nor the knife would do much good if the gun-toting maniac came back, but it made him feel a little safer.

He shifted the keys to his left hand and grabbed Elizabeth’s hand. Her side of the car was sitting at an odd angle, and if she opened that door, she’d tumble out. “Just slide over. I’ve got you.”

He opened the door, and the Dude stepped back, then moved forward again as Elizabeth scrambled to get free. The Dude took her elbow. “Here ya go, ma’am. I got you.”

She flashed him one of her rare smiles, almost flirtatious, and Tom swallowed, feeling like an idiot because what the hell was he jealous about? He wasn’t. He was just on edge, was all.

“We’re newlyweds,” he said, showing the Dude his hand and his ring.

“Hell of a thing to happen on your honeymoon,” the Dude said. “Come on. My car’s a few yards back. We can get my spare and a jack.”

They started walking that way, Elizabeth using her phone as a flashlight. It barely cut through the inky black, but Tom could tell they were easing off the shoulder and onto the Texas rock and scrubby bushes. “You’re off the road?”

“Shit, yeah. Park on the shoulder and some sleepy-ass truck driver will rear-end you before you know it. There she is,” he said as Elizabeth’s beam caught the front edge of a truck, its bumper scraped with red paint.

Tom grabbed her hand and took a step backward.

“Aw, dammit. You found me out.” The Dude pulled a Rossi revolver from under his jacket. “What a fucking inconvenience.”

“Look, just—just let us go. I have money. What do you want? A thousand? Ten thousand?”

“Sounds like a start. But maybe I want the girl.”

Tom squeezed her fingers even as an invisible hand clutched at his heart. “You leave her the fuck alone.”

The Dude stepped closer. “Yeah? You’re telling me what to do? Who’s the one with the gun here?”

Tom swallowed. “That would be you.”

“And don’t you fucking forget it. Walk.” He waved the gun toward the darkness farther off the highway.

“No.” Tom clutched tight to Elizabeth.

“No?” The Dude thrust the gun out and down. Then
blam!
Rocks and sand went flying at Tom’s feet before he even had time to think about it.

“Are you fucking crazy?” Elizabeth screamed.

“Me? Crazy? Hell, no.”
Blam!
Another shot.

“Goddammit!” she screamed again.

“Hush.” Tom kept his voice low, calm. “Don’t provoke him.”

“That’s right, Liz. Don’t provoke me.”

A chill shot down Tom’s spine. “How do you know her name?”

“I think the more relevant question is what the fuck are you doing married to my girl.”

“Your gir—” But that was all he got out. He heard the crack of the gun, felt the push as the bullet hit him in the chest. He stumbled back. And in the soft glow of the light from Elizabeth’s phone, he saw her release his hand and pull her fingers free.

He landed on the ground and as he looked up at Elizabeth’s scowling face, he parted his lips to ask a question.

But the question didn’t come.

* * *

“Are you
insane?
” Liz snapped. “How long have we planned this? How much time did we spend working out every fucking little detail?”

“He pissed me off,” Eric said.

God save her from idiot lovers
. “He’s fucking dead, you moron. How am I supposed to pull anything from his bank accounts when we don’t have his goddamn account numbers and access codes?”

The plan had been to get Tom in a hotel, get him tied up, get the information and
then
kill him. Eric would pistol-whip her, fuck her hard and then get himself gone while she called 911. After that, she could draw from the account without having to wait for all the probate bullshit, bullshit that would undoubtedly leave some of
her
money with
his
pedantic, pain-in-the-butt relatives.

Other books

Calculated Risk by Zoe M. McCarthy
Donkey-Vous by Michael Pearce
Vegas Vengeance by Randy Wayne White
The Reluctant Earl by C.J. Chase
Speed Freak by Fleur Beale
SUMMATION by Daniel Syverson