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Authors: Jan Burke

BOOK: Disturbance
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“What!”

“He’s over by the bank. Trying not to be too obvious, but …” He shrugged.

I casually looked toward the Bank of Las Piernas building. Sure as hell, Roderick was pretending to be waiting in the ATM line.

“Do you want to call the police? I have a feeling he’s hoping for a rematch with me, but I’m not worried about that. I am concerned about your safety, though.”

“If he tries to fight you, maybe I should call the police.”

“Don’t do it on my account,” he said. He glanced back at me and said, “Why do I get the feeling you don’t want to call them on your own behalf?”

“I’ve only recently won a little breathing space,” I admitted. “The whole Nick Parrish thing. I’m sure you’ve heard. If I start setting off alarms, I’m going to be hemmed in again.”

“Hmm. I can understand that, I suppose.”

“Do you really think he’s dangerous?”

He watched Roderick for a while and said, “I’m inclined to say not really, but he strikes me as unpredictable. He definitely needs an anger management class, and I don’t like that he invaded your personal space.”

I sighed.

“Tell you what. I’ll have a little talk with him. If I can’t get him to leave when I do, then call the police, okay? And no matter what, promise me you’ll get someone to walk you to your car tonight after work.”

“I promise,” I said and bid him good-bye as I went inside.

I didn’t have a very clear view of the bank from the lobby of our building, but I did have the reassuring presence of a security guard standing at his post near the reception desk. Within a few minutes Roderick came tramping down the sidewalk, hands in pockets, casting resentful glances over his shoulder.

Donovan followed a few feet behind him. He didn’t so much as glance my way—he was totally focused on Roderick, who flipped him the bird as he got into a battered pickup truck. Donovan ignored him, getting into his own vehicle, a brown Ford Escape. He waited until Roderick started his truck and pulled into traffic before he started the SUV. Only then did he glance toward me. He gave me a quick thumbs-up and drove away.

Back at my desk, I found myself inclined not to make a big deal out of Roderick. I would be careful, but I probably wouldn’t mention what had happened to my usual set of keepers. I’d say I dropped the phone, or Frank would be issuing an all-points bulletin for Roderick, who now that I was safely in
my office, appeared to me to have been no more than a typical self-involved nut with a story.

So when I ran into
Donovan again a few days later, just as I was leaving work, Lydia saw me greet him warmly and heard him jokingly ask if I had figured out why the universe was expanding and not contracting.

She thought I might have met him while working on the physics story Ethan had put me on to and felt sympathy for him when he asked if I had time to talk to him about the missing person case he had mentioned to me. He invited her to join us. Nothing made her feel uneasy about him. When I assured her that he would see me safely to my car, she saw nothing wrong with me walking off alone with him to a nearby restaurant to have a quiet talk about the case.

TWENTY-SEVEN

K
ai sat in the darkness in a corner of his mother’s room. She was awake. He knew this because she was not breathing the way she breathed when she was asleep. And she was restless, making the small amount of movement she could. He hoped she wouldn’t try talking to him. She knew better than to make those awful, meaningless sounds when he was near. He had her so well trained, he could do what he needed to do without really thinking about her. He had bigger problems on his mind.

The lights in the room were out, but a soft glow came from the display of what looked like a clock radio. He had plugged earphones into a jack on the instrument’s side and was now listening to a conversation being held downstairs. Donovan may have scorned Quinn’s surveillance system, but Kai thought Donovan might have been more impressed if he had known about Kai’s own little system. Of course, he wasn’t going to tell Donovan about it. Or any of the others. But he was especially glad that his two-faced, backstabbing, know-it-all half brother Quinn had no idea about it. His dad should have entrusted a real electronics expert—Kai—to set up security. Quinn didn’t know everything there was to know.

For example, Quinn didn’t know that Kai had placed listening devices in every room of this place.

He had been uneasy when Quinn showed up again so soon after his last visit, and just before their next big event. Quinn was supposed to be in Las Piernas, making sure Donovan was obeying orders. Kai thought that was ridiculous. Who was Quinn to ensure Donovan was obedient? Quinn was the one who was disobedient, or he wouldn’t be here right now.

In contrast, when their father had whispered to Kai, asking for some time alone with Quinn, Kai had immediately left the room, saying, “I have to take care of Mom. Just call me if you need me.”

Before he’d reached the top of the stairs, he could hear Quinn making a remark he doubtless intended Kai to hear.

“I don’t know why you don’t just kill that crippled-up bitch.”

“No,” Parrish had said coldly, “you don’t.”

Kai had smiled to himself and continued on to her room. He knew Quinn’s repulsion would keep him away from Violet Loudon’s room, and Kai’s setup would be safe from at least one pair of prying eyes.

Listening on the earphones now, he could hear Quinn talking to their father.

Urging Parrish to abandon Kai.

“… I’m telling you, he’s going to be the ruin of everything! Look, I’ve got the money you need to go anywhere in the world. Let’s leave Kai and that hideous woman here and take off. I can keep you safe.”

“Don’t you think Kai might say something to the authorities if he was left here to fend for himself?”

With hardly a moment’s pause, Quinn said, “You’re right. So we kill them both.”

There was a silence, then Parrish said, “Quinn, what do you suppose is happening in Las Piernas right now?”

“You mean, our plan?”

“No. The mood of the town.”

“On edge. Terrified, many of them.” There was a pause before Quinn added, “I see what you mean.”

“I was certain you would. You wouldn’t really want to question my judgment, I’m sure.”

“Of course not.”

“The legend of Nicholas Parrish and sons can only be enhanced by that fear. While I could have wished for Kai to have more time to exercise his talents in Las Piernas, and for our plans to have proceeded at the pace we had hoped for, I am nevertheless proud of my sons. There is nothing to lead the police from Las Piernas to this place. Nothing at all.”

“You’re right.”

“You didn’t think this out, Quinn. That’s unlike you. But I suppose you were only concerned for my safety.”

“Yes,” Quinn said. “You understand perfectly.”

“Now, I’m going to ask Kai to join us again, and I hope you will be able to control yourself when he returns.”

Kai didn’t wait to hear Quinn’s response. He disconnected the headset and turned off the receiver. He quickly checked on his mother, smiled at her panicked expression, and reached beneath her bed. He retrieved the automatic he had hidden there, assured himself that it was fully loaded and ready to be used, and replaced it as he heard his father call to him. It was one of several weapons he had cached around the house, and he was more certain than ever that he would be making use of at least one of them.

“Coming!” he called back and hurried from the room.

He reached the bottom of the stairs just as Nicholas Parrish’s cell phone rang. As far as Kai knew, only three people had that number, and two of them were staring at each other in dislike.

Parrish listened, hung up without speaking to the caller, then turned to his sons. “Your older brother is efficient,” he said. “We’re about to have company.”

TWENTY-EIGHT

I
remember this much:

It was about four o’clock. We sat in the bar of the Fireside, a nearby restaurant, quiet in the downtime between lunch and dinner. The place was empty, but that suited us—missing persons stories aren’t exactly best told while competing with happy hour in the background. Donovan seemed a little nervous, so I wasn’t surprised when he offered to buy me a drink—figuring he needed one more than I did, I accepted. He went to the bar, answered a cell phone call while he was waiting for the drinks, then came back to the table with a tray holding a pitcher of margaritas, two glasses already filled from it, and a little dish that contained a few slices of lime.

“A pitcher?” I said, as he handed one of the glasses to me.

“A friend called. She’s going to try to join us a little later—if that’s okay?”

“No problem, but I do need to get home—”

“If she’s not here by the time you need to leave, I’ll still walk you to your car. I’ll just text her and let her know what happened.”

He picked up his own drink and began to tell me of Denise, his first wife, whom he had married at eighteen. Although he
had done well in high school, he didn’t have the money for college and, after a couple of years of trying to get by on low-paying jobs, decided to go into the service. He joined the army and was soon sent overseas. Denise filed for divorce less than a month after he left the States.

“Sorry.”

“No need to be,” he assured me. “We had already started to have trouble getting along—about what you’d expect from a couple of immature idiots—and I think, somewhere in the back of mind, I knew I’d be getting a Dear John letter. I’m not really sure how we managed to stay married as long as we did, except that I wasn’t home much during training.” He paused. “It wasn’t a nasty divorce. For reasons I didn’t really understand at the time, she didn’t ask for alimony or stake a claim on my pension—which apparently made her attorney crazy—and we were renting, so there wasn’t a lot of property to be divided. She took a few personal things, put my stuff in storage for me, and went back to living with her mother.”

He fell silent. I sipped at my drink, wondering if he expected me to help him find his ex. If so, I was probably going to have to disappoint him. I was concerned about missing persons cases, and if I could determine that she really was involuntarily gone, I’d do what I could. But so many adult missing persons are hiding of their own volition. Some are avoiding responsibilities, some trying to escape arrest. Plenty of others are trying to survive, to stay safe from someone—especially if their situation is one in which law enforcement can’t effectively provide protection. It was entirely possible that Denise was afraid of him. Although I felt relaxed sitting in that quiet restaurant with Donovan, I didn’t know what he was like at home—for all I knew, she had good reasons to hide from him.

“Not long after the divorce was final,” he said, “I got a letter
from her mother, telling me that Denise had died in a car accident.”

“Oh—sorry,” I said again, thrown completely off stride.

“I probably shouldn’t say this, but to be honest, it didn’t affect me much. Although I thought it was a shame she had died so young, I was more surprised than sad.”

He fell silent again, so I drank and waited.

After a time, he said, “The biggest surprise was yet to come.” He reached inside his jacket, brought out a photo, and pushed it across the small table. I picked it up.

A beautiful, golden-haired child smiled back from the photo. A little girl, four or five years old, I’d guess.

I looked up at Donovan.

“My daughter. I’m told her name is Miranda,” he said. “She’s ten now.”

“I don’t understand …”

“At first, I didn’t, either. A year ago, someone sent me an anonymous letter with that photo in it. Said the girl was my daughter, that Denise was pregnant when she divorced me, that she had convinced another man the child was his. I started to do some investigating but didn’t need to make much of an effort, because the ‘other man’ called me himself—his name is Charles Chasten. The letter had been sent by his wife. As it turns out, Mr. Chasten had started an affair with my wife about two days after I left the States.”

“Jesus. Denise didn’t wait long, did she?”

He shrugged. “I was disappointed that she chose a married man with children—he had two boys and wouldn’t leave his wife. I don’t think much of him. I have to admit, though, he was generous when it came to giving money for the care of the child to Denise—and, after she died, to Denise’s mom. Secretly, of course—until one day his wife, who had long thought he was too stingy, saw a browser window he’d left open after doing some online banking.”

“And discovered he had a second bank account she never knew about?”

“Exactly. A joint account with Denise’s mom. He’d put money in it for Miranda’s needs.”

“And how did the wife take this news?”

“Madder than hell. Understandably. Chasten found out that she had sent me the photo and the letter. But I’m getting ahead of myself.” He lifted the pitcher, gestured to my half-full glass, but I shook my head. He poured another margarita for himself then said, “After she discovered the account, and after some … very heated discussion, let’s say … Chasten’s wife insisted on a DNA paternity test. He was confident of the outcome, but he got a kit and took a cheek swab from Miranda on a visit. Later she told her grandmother, who gave him some additional heat, but he’d already sent the test swabs off by then.”

He paused and took a drink.

“Since you’ve told me she’s your daughter,” I said, “I can see what’s coming.”

“Right. He learned he wasn’t the father—his turn to be outraged. Although he told me that he had mixed feelings—he says he’s attached to Miranda, but he felt like he’d been duped. He was in for yet another surprise—when he called to talk about the test results, the number was disconnected. He went over to the house, but Miranda and her grandmother had disappeared. Along with everything in the bank account.”

“Disappeared? It’s actually not that easy to disappear, especially not with a child in tow.”

“That’s what I thought, at first. Even though I was coming in on all of this a little late—they had been gone two weeks when Mrs. Chasten sent that letter—I thought I could use my skills and contacts to find them.” He saw my brows rise and added, “I—I can’t give you details, but some of my experience in the military would, I thought, be useful.”

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