Dark Waters (2013) (38 page)

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Authors: Toni Anderson

Tags: #Romantic/Suspense

BOOK: Dark Waters (2013)
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“Didn’t see that on the plans,” Finn murmured.

“Plenty of stuff not on the plans,” Brent whispered back. “There’s also a trapdoor in the utility room, through to the crawl space. There’s a panel that comes away on this side of the house, left of the chimney.”

“One thing,” Finn said quickly. “They might have stashed Anna on the boat. That would make sense if they wanted to make a quick getaway. If we stake out the house and they take off in the boat, we’re back to square one.”

“I don’t think they are planning on taking Anna with them.”

“Unless she doesn’t tell them what they need to know.”

True, but Finn hadn’t met the guys they were dealing with. Or gone hand-to-hand with the man who’d slaughtered Anna’s ex-boyfriend in her pretty little kitchen. That guy could turn Anna into a living breathing zombie if they didn’t hurry. He might have already done it, but Finn was right. They couldn’t afford to give them an easy escape route.

“How long would it take you to check out the boat?” Brent asked.

“Five minutes. I can make sure it isn’t going very far if any of these fuckwits try to escape.
Wait
for me.”

Brent couldn’t see his brother’s features, but he could hear him thinking.

“We don’t know how many people are in there or where Anna is—or if she’s even here. We need to stick close and see what information we can find out by covert observation.” His hand gripped Brent’s shoulder. “That means you don’t rush in there like a fool if you see someone manhandling Anna.” Those fingers bit deep. “You won’t save her life if we give our position away. It means that unless she’s in an immediate life-or-death situation you have to keep your cool.”

He nodded. “I’ll try.” It was the best he could do, and he wasn’t making any more worthless promises. Brent and Finn both chambered rounds, the noise sounding loud in the night, but hopefully they were far enough away not to be heard over the surf pounding the beach with a little Pacific fury. If the boat was the bad guys’ escape plan, they’d better have packed survival suits.

Finn picked up the rifle and some bullets. Neither of the brothers had been great students in school, but both had been naturals when it came to sports of all varieties. In the army, Finn had taken shooting to a whole new level.

They crept forward and then Finn told Brent to stay put while he went off and dealt with the boat. Brent didn’t want to stay still, but he’d more or less promised. So he hunkered in the bushes,
thick with summer berries. He scanned the windows of his house and was rewarded with a glimpse of the sonofabitch who’d attacked them in Minneapolis. Relief filled him. They were in the right place. He made his heart calm down. Until the guy pulled someone to their feet and slapped them.

Holy fuck, that was Anna! He looked around frantically, but Finn wasn’t back yet. OK. He held his ground, even though it went against every instinct. Then the fucker ran his knife along Anna’s jaw and she flinched. Brent couldn’t wait any longer.

Anna jerked away from the knife but kept her chin high. The man who killed Peter—Rand, she’d heard him called—turned away from her at the command of an older, distinguished-looking man with military-short gray hair and a barrel chest. She assumed he was the boss of this whole nightmare.

She looked around Brent’s beautiful house, unable to believe these people had chosen this place to do their dirty work. And yet, as Brent had told her that first night she’d arrived—just a week ago—it was remote, and no one would hear you scream. Two men hunched over two laptops set up on the kitchen counter and another was on guard duty, watching the road. Baldy had gone upstairs for a quick nap. Apparently he’d borne the brunt of kidnap duty and was all tuckered out. Poor soul. Her mother sagged on the couch. Anna gave her a grim smile.

“I’m sorry, Anna,” her mother whispered.

“This isn’t your fault, Mom.”

“I mean about before…about everything…”

The feelings of resentment that had clung to Anna for years drifted away. Maybe she hadn’t been aware of it, but she’d blamed both her parents for abandoning her during her hour of need. She’d been filled with bitterness and secret loathing no one had been able to penetrate. “It was my fault too,” she admitted, though emotion wanted to squeeze her throat closed. This might be her last chance
to tell her mother anything. “I shut you out. I pushed you away. I regret that more than I regret anything else since Dad was arrested.”

Her mother opened her mouth to say more, but Rand shot them a glance and they both froze.
Christ
. He was scary as hell.

Her mom looked pretty good, considering—she was uncomfortable from being bound for hours and possibly days, she had a bruise on her cheek, and her hair was a mess, but there was no real damage. Yet.

Anna didn’t mention Ed. Not the oddly gentle “pop” of the gun as it took his life. Not the horror of watching him crumple slowly to the ground. Katherine wasn’t the strongest person in the world. Anna needed her not to fall apart.

“Let her go and I’ll tell you everything you want to know,” she called out.

“So you found it, did you?” asked Rand. “The envelope?” The way his eyes moved over her made her skin recoil. She made herself not think about the envelope pressed against her bikini line.

“Where was it?”

“He sent it to a friend of mine in Minneapolis. We went there after we…saw you at my house.” She swallowed but didn’t look away.

“I owe you for that.” He rubbed a spot on the back of his head. “Peter said you were frigid and didn’t like sex.”

She tried to block out the words and the images that bombarded her, but he was right there and she knew her survival depended on paying attention. “You killed him. You killed a man who was half your size.”

He shrugged. “If you hadn’t run, I wouldn’t have had to kill him, now would I?”

“You’re saying this is my fault?”

He leaned down until they were eye to eye. She could smell his skin. “Actually, it’s your father’s fault, stealing our money.”

“You were trying to set him up—”

“No, we weren’t. We just used his access codes to cover our backs. If he’d left it alone and kept his nose out of it, nothing would have changed. Petrie would have erased the activity records and none of this would have ever happened. The money was ours, earned fair and square.”

She didn’t believe him. “If that money was legit, you’d have gone to the cops when it went missing.”

“Legit? We risked our lives for that money. Just because today’s government didn’t sanction it didn’t mean the last one wouldn’t have—or the next one for that matter.” He touched a finger to her hair and curled it around her ear. Revulsion sifted through her. “I
served
my country. You live in your pretty little house surrounded by pretty things like it’s a God-given right, not something men like me have to pay for with blood.”

She associated blood with her home all too keenly. But he truly saw himself as some valiant soldier getting what he deserved.

She looked at her mother, helpless against such brute force. “Now you’re just a coward, only serving yourself.”

He took a sharp step back as if she’d spat on him, then raised his hand as if to slap her.

“Enough bickering. Give us whatever Davis sent you and we’ll let you both live,” the older boss man snapped.

“Let my mom go and I’ll do everything you want. As fast as you want.”

The gray-haired guy exchanged a look with his hired killer and she couldn’t contain a shiver. Rand took her T-shirt in one hand and drew the knife up. She flinched away as it tore through the neckline and narrowly missed her chin.

“Is this how you get off?” she asked him calmly. “Forcing yourself on women who don’t want you?”

That cold smile again. It wrapped its way up her spine and tied a knot in her bravado. “Sometimes.”

Her mom tried to stand, but was struggling with her bindings.

Rand took a step and shoved her mother facedown on the couch. “Don’t be in such a rush. Momma, you’ll get your turn next.”

“Rand,” his boss said impatiently.

Anna noticed the way the monster’s lips tightened. “Do as your boss tells you or you might get in trouble,” she goaded, hoping that if she could get them fighting among themselves maybe she and her mother could find a way to escape.

The pulse in his neck throbbed visibly for a couple of beats, but the chill in his gaze never wavered.

“I’m going to search you, Anna. Very thoroughly.” He walked around her slowly. “Make sure Vic didn’t miss anything.” Vic was Baldy, she’d found out. She didn’t think it was a good thing that they were using their real names in front of them. Mr. White and Mr. Black would have been fine with her.

He flicked his knife between her breasts and nicked her skin before he slit the fabric of her bra. Deliberate. She stood there with her breasts exposed and blood trickling down her front, and realized she didn’t care. She thought about Brent. His smile. His eyes. His warm solid support. Whatever happened to her body wouldn’t break her. Not this time. She just needed to figure a way out of here. Because as soon as they found that envelope, she was surplus to requirements.

“You kissed my photograph at my mom’s house.”

His eyes flickered in surprise.

“The cops have your DNA from there and in my house in Minneapolis. They know who you are. You’re not going to get away with this.”

“It only matters if they catch me. They aren’t going to catch me.” His lips curved cruelly. “Take off your pants.”

Anna licked her lips, fear getting to her despite herself. But her hand went to the button of her jeans. She didn’t fight or argue. She didn’t want him to do this himself because he’d not only enjoy it, he’d also find the package. She undid the zipper and pushed the envelope down into the pile of denim at her feet. She was in her
panties and socks. Her shoes had been taken from her on the boat. Rand put his knife back in the sheath on his belt but her relief was short-lived as he pulled his gun. He seemed distracted by her legs, and she stood there trembling, praying, he wouldn’t notice the small corner of beige peeking out of the blue.

He stood in front of her, ran his hands through her hair, over her ears, neck. He pulled her tight against him and ran both hands over her back, his gun scratching her skin as it went. She could feel his arousal and avoided his gaze even though he stared straight into her eyes. He started to spread the cheeks of her buttocks and she braced herself when the old man said, “For fuck’s sake, Rand. That’s not how I want you to get the information—”

Rand swirled and nailed the guy between the eyes. The bullet barely made a sound with its professional-looking suppressor, and there wasn’t much blood.

“About goddamn time.” The guy wearing thick glasses didn’t even look up from the computer. But then he did, and his eyes traveled down her body with appreciation but no real heat, and then landed in her pile of clothes. His slow grin made her flesh go cold. “I think you missed something.” He pointed at her jeans and Anna closed her eyes.
No
.

Rand’s jaw was tight and then he glanced at the denim and pulled out the folded envelope she’d tried so hard to conceal. “Fucking schoolteacher.” And then he slammed the butt of the gun into her temple and she dropped like a stone.

Brent found hand- and footholds in the massive logs and pulled himself up the side of his house with more brute force than skill. The roof was metal, so he slid carefully across it and went to open the hatch. A firm hand stopped him.

“Let me check it isn’t wired, first.” Finn. Quiet and calm, without recrimination. The guy moved like a goddamned ghost and almost gave him a heart attack.

Brent nodded. They eased the hatch open a fraction, Finn using a small penlight to sweep the rim. “Clear,” he said.

They dropped silently into the tight attic space, which was empty of everything except insulation.

They sat unmoving for a moment, ears strained as they listened to the silence. They slowly lifted the flap, which opened into a spare room that housed a bed and nothing else. Brent didn’t exactly get a lot of visitors. He didn’t even know why he’d built a house this big except that it was the opposite of prison.

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