Read Abandoned: A Thriller Online
Authors: Cody McFadyen
“You deserve to die,” I whisper, the gun trembling in my hand.
“No one deserves to die,” Mercy says. “It just happens.”
A wide wind blows through me, pushing me toward a chasm with no bottom, an ocean with no shore. My senses have sharpened to an excruciating point. I can smell gun oil and the scent of shampoo. I hear Tommy’s foot shift on the floor and feel his eyes upon me like touching hands.
Don’t do this, Mother. I don’t want to be born in death.
I don’t know who this voice belongs to. Is it Alexa? Is it the baby? Is it just me?
My finger tightens on the trigger, feeling the resistance that is both too much and not enough, a march toward destruction that can’t be reversed once the final step is taken.
“What are you waiting for?” Mercy asks.
A phrase rolls through my mind. It sounds like a gull’s cry, echoing above the wind.
The lighthouse! Swim out too far and the light goes out forever!
My finger moves back on the trigger, pulling it toward me.
I want to kill you so bad. I want to look into your eyes and pull the trigger and watch as the hole opens up and your life pours out. I want to know that you died because of me, because of what you did to Leo, because no one gets to touch my family like that and live.
I lower the weapon. Small rivulets of sweat run down my cheeks, dancing across my scars on one side. I feel as though I’ve run a mile and then boxed ten rounds.
I want to kill you, but I can’t.
“You’re under arrest, Mercy.” My voice quavers.
She shakes her head, a gesture of pity. “You’re weak.”
Tommy says nothing. He places a hand on my shoulder and squeezes it once, gently. He is with me.
“What an anticlimax,” Kirby murmurs.
But there’s a quality to her tone that tells me maybe, somewhere down inside her, she is relieved that I did not do what she would have done so easily.
I wade back in from the big, dark deep and collapse on my shore, while the lighthouse burns and the foghorn blows.
AD Jones sits in the living room, watching me. I called; he came. Mercy Lane remains shackled and silent. Tommy is tense. Kirby is bored. “Sir?” I venture.
I can’t decipher the look he’s giving me. It seems weary and angry and rage-filled and sad. There is no confusion. It’s as though he’s been expecting to find himself in this place. He is not surprised, but he longs for all the moments that came before.
“I’m going to do something here,” he says to me, finally speaking. “Just this once.” He surveys Dali/Mercy, who is unperturbed. “Because she took your finger and your hair. Mostly, because you didn’t pull the trigger, which means you’re still a person to me.”
I swallow and nod. I’m unable to speak. My throat is choking suddenly with the force of unshed tears. Grief has replaced my desire to kill. My finger and my hair, he says out loud, but those just stand for all the other things, the things he means but has left unsaid.
“This is it, Smoky,” he continues. “This is what you get in return for what you’ve lost. This one pass.
Just this once.
You understand me?”
My eyes tell him that I do.
“Okay,” he says. “Here’s what’s going to happen.”
It was a simple lie, the best kind. I’d gone to AD Jones with my suspicions about the identity of Dali. He’d given me permission to poke around on my own. Everything else followed on the heels of that. The reverse GPS. The trip to Vegas. The confrontation based on manufactured probable cause.
Mercy Lane will be taken into custody by the AD and flown back to Los Angeles on the jet. Kirby will fade into the background, never here. Tommy and I will drive home while the AD flies in Callie and others to oversee evidence collection.
It’s a rickety story, full of holes, ready to leak, but it’ll be enough. We know how to break the law. It’s something you do quietly, with few witnesses, and only ever with those you trust.
“Your involvement has to be at a minimum from this point on,” he says to me. “I’ll handle everything else.”
“Thank you, sir.”
He sighs. The rage is gone; just the sadness remains. Watching him be sad is like watching rain fall against a mountain. Something solitary. He folds the sadness away after a time, back inside himself, and the rain ends. Just the mountain remains, eroded by such moments.
Mercy Lane clears her throat, attracting our attention. “Let’s bargain.”
AD Jones frowns at her. “What the fuck do you have to bargain with?”
“I’ve been weighing all the variables, and you haven’t left me with any options. You’re going to find evidence of the GPS tracker here, as well as other things. I could try to tell a story about kidnapping and attempted murder by the FBI, but I wouldn’t be believed. The only thing left for me to control is the comfort of my incarceration and whether or not I live or die.”
“It’ll be hell and then you’ll die,” Kirby chirps. “Count on it.”
Mercy ignores her. “The easiest way to lie is to not have to lie at all. If you’ll concede to certain comforts and agree not to pursue the death penalty, I’ll confess freely and accept whatever prison time you want to impose. Our stories will match and no one will ever be the wiser.”
She’s calm, reasonable, cold. AD Jones gapes. I touch his arm with a hand.
“You confess here, now, on video,” I say. “It has to be bulletproof. And you go to jail forever.”
She inclines her head. “Agreed.”
This is Dali, this is Mercy Lane. The face of pragmatism. Survival is the only prize worth having.
“I don’t know,” AD Jones mutters. “We’ll have to get approval from the attorney general’s office first.”
“We can get it,” I say to him. “Tell someone who’s interested that I’ll owe them a favor. They want me, remember?”
He is quiet for a time. “Yeah. I guess that’s true.” He waves a hand, dismissing us. “Get out of here. I’ll go sell your soul for you.”
Tommy drives us home, as silent and inscrutable on the return as he was on the approach. I have no sense of him right now. Kirby seems untroubled but empathetic, content to keep quiet as long as the radio is on.
We pull into our driveway as the sun is coming up.
“Hop on out and turn over the keys,” Kirby says, fresh-scrubbed and bright, a blond and guiltless Pontius Pilate. “I’ll get rid of this vehicle and the guns and that’ll be that.” She winks. “What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas right?”
Tommy sits on the edge of the bed, examining his hands. I sit next to him. His silence has become a solidity, something pervasive, like a wall of smoke or a bank of fog.
“Tommy,” I venture. “Can I ask you something?”
“Sure.” He continues to look at his hands. His voice sounds far away.
“Are we okay?” I ask.
His eyes focus on me now, but he seems confused, as if I just shook him awake.
“Of course we’re okay. We’re fine.”
“Then what’s wrong? You’re a quiet guy, but never for this long.”
He goes silent again. Watches the wall. “We almost killed a human being, Smoky,” he murmurs. “We hunted her down and we were prepared to execute her, to bury her body in the desert. That deserves some thought. That deserves my
attention.
Don’t get me wrong, I knew that’s
what we were going to do. I played my part with both eyes open. But we almost took a life, cold-bloodedly. I would have done it too. You pulled us back from the brink, but I would have done it if you hadn’t. I don’t want to hold that under or push it aside or ignore it in any way. I want to feel it.”
I swallow my grief and my pain and my faint self-loathing.
“How does it feel?” I ask him.
He doesn’t answer right away. I watch him struggle. I observe evidence of sadness and strength, a mixture of love and loss, and, above these things, endurance. Tommy, I realize, is what my dad called “a laster.”
A laster
, Dad told me,
is someone who can endure everything without losing who they are. Like this woman I read about recently. She and her family were sent to the concentration camps in World War Two. She was twenty-five, married to her childhood sweetheart, had three children. She was the only one who made it out alive. She healed and went on to find new love and have another two sons. She died surrounded by her children and her grandchildren. A laster. Your mom is one.
What about you?
Me? No. I’m not a laster.
Dreamer though he was, Dad always judged himself honestly. I think that’s one of the reasons Mom let herself love him.
“It feels bad,” Tommy answers. He flexes his hands into fists, releases them. “But it’ll pass.”
I come into his arms, a sign of assent, but in my heart of hearts, that place where we’re always alone, I am less certain.
What does that make me?
Am I a laster?
We nap through the morning. It is a fitful sleep, filled with dreams I forget the minute I jolt awake. Just one image I am allowed to keep: my mother, silent. She watches me, not judging, not sad, warning me even as she understands.
Don’t forget the lighthouse
, her eyes seem to say.
Swim out too far and you’re too far out. Don’t forget, honey, because that ocean is always dark and always bottomless and when you sink, you sink forever.
I snuggle into my husband and search for whatever peace he can give me.
“What was your father’s name?”
“Thomas Richard Lane.
Corporal
Thomas Richard Lane.”
Here we are again, I think. Back to the center of the circle.
I am sitting across from Mercy Lane in a cold, concrete interview room. We are alone. The walls soak up all the sound, and this gives me goose bumps, reminding me of the dark and the meadow behind my eyes.
But I hide my discomfort.
“Your father was in the army?”
“He fought in Korea.” She pauses, mulling something. “He was really made for it.”
“For what?”
“Surviving.”
I had reached out to Mercy with the offer of a standard interview, the kind I’d done for the BAU ten or more times before. She’d accepted, whether out of boredom or because she was, in the end, no different from all the rest of them, I don’t know.
It’s an opportunity to try to understand this person who almost turned me into a murderer. It’s also a chance to get the answers to some questions. There are some loose ends. They’ve been gnawing on the soft parts of me at night and interrupting my sleep.
“Why was survival so important to him?”
“Because survival is the only thing that
is
important. Everything else is a bonus, not a necessity.”
She’s impatient with my question, even a little hostile. I consider her reaction and change gears. “Fair enough,” I say, keeping my voice agreeable. “But your father seemed especially attuned to that truth. Why do you think he was able to recognize it so clearly?”
She relaxes. I’ve told her that her father was not just right but a visionary. This is comfortable ground for her. It doesn’t matter that he hacked off her breasts and twisted her spirit. She’s a cripple who thinks she can run.