“Thanks.” Luke was slowing to instruct the backup when he heard the shot. “That came from the house.”
Susannah.
He jammed the gas and flew into the driveway, screeching to a stop next to Germanio’s car, his heart in his throat. He started running, Pete right behind him.
Dutton, Monday, February 5, 1:50 p.m.
G
et away.
Frantically Susannah scrambled up the stairs as Bobby scrabbled for the gun. The carpet was slick and her cuffed hands couldn’t hang on. A hand clamped on to her ankle and the sound of Bobby’s pleased laughter chilled her blood.
“Got it,” Bobby crowed. “You’re dead, Vartanian.”
A shot split the air and Susannah froze, waiting for the pain. But there was none.
She twisted around, and for a second only blinked, stunned at what she saw. Bobby lay on the stairs, her chin propped on one of the stairs so that she stared up at Susannah, blue eyes wide, a surprised look on her face. A blood stain was spreading on the back of her shirt. Frozen, Susannah watched Bobby lift her gun once again. A second shot rang out and Bobby’s body jolted, then slumped, her blue eyes now blank.
Nearly hyperventilating, her gaze locked with Bobby’s dead stare, Susannah crawled up a few more steps before looking up. Luke stood in the doorway, pale, breathing hard, the gun he clutched hanging limply at his side. Behind him Pete knelt next to Hank’s body. Stiffly, mechanically, Luke walked over to the stairs, reached over Bobby, and took the gun from her hand. He checked her pulse, then looked up to meet Susannah’s eyes, his dark and seething with fear and fury. “She’s dead.”
Relief stripped the air from her lungs, rendered her boneless, and Susannah slumped against the stairs, shaking uncontrollably. Then Luke was lifting her up, wrapping his arms around her, his hold desperate, his whisper fierce. “Did she hurt you?”
“I don’t know.” She burrowed into him, needing him, so scared, shaken. “I don’t think so.” The wave of terror ebbed enough so that she could draw a breath. She pulled back to see his face. “Hank is dead. She killed him. I saw him die.”
“I know. I heard the shot. I thought it was you. I thought you were dead.” Luke’s dark eyes flashed, fury and grief combined. “Hank was supposed to wait for me.”
“No, no. Bobby lured him in. I tried to warn him but it was too late. He was trying to save my life and now he’s dead.” She looked at Pete, who still knelt next to Germanio, his expression stricken. “Bobby shot Talia. She’s under the stairs.”
Pete was heaving his shoulder into the door in the staircase when two uniformed police cautiously approached the open front door.
“Agent Papadopoulos?” one asked, and Luke gently let Susannah go, lowering her to sit on the stair. Beneath them, wood splintered as Pete broke the door free.
“She’s alive,” Pete said, breathless from the effort. “Shit, Talia, you’re a mess.”
Pete leaned into the crawlspace while Luke unlocked Susannah’s handcuffs and rubbed her wrists gently. He let out a slow breath before turning to the officers. “We’re clear,” Luke said, his voice steady again. “We’ll call the crime lab and the ME. Can you call that ambulance up to the house? We need to get Agent Scott to a hospital.”
“No!” Talia’s refusal burst from inside the closet. Susannah heard angry whispers, then Pete crawled out holding the strip of duct tape that had covered Talia’s mouth.
“We’re okay here,” he said to the officers. “Thank you.” When the officers were gone, he pulled Talia from the crawlspace. Her hands and feet were still cuffed. She was still hog-tied. Her slacks were covered in blood, her eyes filled with mortified rage.
“Just get the damn cuffs off,” she gritted. “Please.”
Pete unlocked the cuffs and rolled her to her back. “The medics are coming.”
“No.” Talia pushed herself up to a sitting position. “Bad enough she got me. I’ll walk out on my own two feet.” Luke and Pete each took one of her arms and lifted her. She grimaced, her cheeks red. “This is humiliating,” she muttered.
“What happened?” Luke asked carefully.
Talia’s glare was defiant. “Bitch got the drop on me. Tasered me.”
“How did she get the drop on you?” Pete asked.
Talia lifted her chin, daring them to push her further. “I had something in my eye.”
Tears, Susannah thought, remembering the hitch in Talia’s voice as she’d offered comfort. “Now the bitch is dead,” Susannah murmured. “So is Germanio.”
Talia’s glare faded abruptly. “I heard. I also heard you on the phone with Luke. That was fast thinking. Luke, get Arthur’s journals out of the study. They explain everything. Pete, get me out of here, please, and make me look like I’m walking on my own.”
Pete helped her out, hesitating before he lifted her over Germanio’s body. “Damn it, Hank,” he murmured. “I’ll update Chase, and get a location on the others.”
“What others?” Susannah asked. “Does he mean Charles Grant? I know about him. It’s all in Arthur’s journals. You didn’t find him?”
“Not yet. Can you walk?” Luke asked Susannah.
“Yeah.” Hanging on to the banister, Susannah eased her way past Bobby’s body, resisting the urge to kick her. Luke helped her down the final step, then dragged her close again, arms hard around her. “I’m okay,” she whispered.
“I know.” A shudder shook him. “I just keep seeing her pointing a gun at you, again and again. Susannah, we found some things you need to read.”
“Later,” she said wearily. “I’ve read enough for one day.”
“I’ll take you back to my place. You can have some peace and quiet.”
“I don’t want quiet.” She looked over at Germanio’s body, then quickly looked away. “I don’t want to think. I want . . . I need supergluing.”
He frowned, puzzled. “What?”
She looked up at him. “Can you take me to your mother’s house, please?”
This made him smile, although his eyes remained worried. “That I can do. Stay here. I’ll get Arthur’s journals, then I’m getting you out of here.” He walked down the hall into the study. “Holy shit,” he exclaimed. “Susannah, there’s thousands of dollars in this safe.”
“The journals are worth more,” she said. “They’re worth justice,” she added in a murmur, just before her body went rigid, a scream froze in her throat, and a hand clamped over her mouth. A gun was shoved against her temple.
Again
.
Goddammit.
“Which is why those journals will never leave this house.” The words were whispered silkily into her ear.
Mr. Grant
. “Which is why
you’ll
never leave this house, my dear.”
Luke went down on one knee to gather the journals from Arthur’s study floor and let his shoulders sag.
Oh God.
His stomach was rolling. He didn’t know if he’d ever be able to wipe from his mind the picture of Susannah clawing up those stairs, Bobby’s gun aimed at her head.
She’s safe.
He heard the words, but his heart was still thumping to beat all hell.
She’s safe.
Maybe in a million years, he’d be able to believe it.
Drawing a deep breath, he stood, arms filled with journals and ledgers, then frowned when the sharp smell of gasoline filled his nose. He turned and froze, raw fury rapidly replacing the shock of seeing one more gun pointed at Susannah.
Charles Grant stood in the doorway, his gun to Susannah’s temple. At his side was a gas can. Over his shoulder was a backpack, and Luke could see the outline of sharp corners through the canvas. The bag held a box that appeared to have some weight. Hooked through a strap on the backpack was Grant’s walking stick. A glance down at his feet revealed the same shoes Luke had seen in Mansfield’s grainy photo.
“Agent Papadopoulos,” he said mildly. “I’m sorry I wasn’t home to welcome you this afternoon. Your visit was rudely unannounced.”
Luke’s mind raced.
Use what you know.
He didn’t look at Susannah. One look at her would leave him shaken with fear. He had to stay focused on Grant. “We didn’t need a guided tour. We found what we were looking for. We know it all, Mr. Grant.”
Charles smiled. “I’m sure you think you do.”
Luke regarded him carefully. “Maybe you’re right. Maybe I don’t know everything. Like, how the hell you got in here. We have cars guarding the entrance.”
“There’s a road that comes in from the back of the property,” Susannah said quietly.
“It’s how Judge Vartanian would welcome his midnight callers,” Charles said.
“Is that how you intend to get out of here?” Luke asked. “Sneak out the back way like all the other criminals?”
“Not exactly. Drop the journals and place your weapon on the floor.”
He’s waiting for Paul Houston
, Luke thought, and hoped to hell Chase still knew where Houston was. “No, I don’t think I will.”
“Then she dies.”
“You’re going to kill her anyway. It’s what you’ve always wanted to do.”
“You have no idea what I’ve always wanted to do,” Charles said with contempt.
“I think I do. Because I know a great deal more about you than you think I do.” He paused, lifted a brow. “Ray, isn’t it? Ray Kraemer.”
Charles stiffened, eyes flashing in anger. “Now she’ll die pain- fully.”
“I know you know how to do that. I found Judge Borenson. You’re a sick bastard.”
“Then I have nothing to lose, do I?” Charles asked. “You’ll charge me with murder.”
The man’s voice was mild but the hand that clutched Susannah’s shoulder was white-knuckled. “Multiple murders, Ray,” Luke said. “We found your journals.”
Again Charles’s eyes flashed, but his voice remained calm. “So what’s one more?”
“
You
kept journals?” Susannah asked. “You and Arthur were both that arrogant?”
“Perhaps,” Charles said, amused. “Your father was a lawyer. He kept impeccable records. And I
am
an English teacher, my dear. Journals are kind of my thing.”
“Arthur was not my father and you are a cold-blooded killer,” Susannah said stonily.
“You say that like it’s a bad thing,” Charles drawled. “Killing is an art. A passion. When done well, it’s extremely satisfying.”
“And when you can manipulate others to do your killing for you?” she asked.
“Ahh, now that’s the cherry on top. Agent Papadopoulos. Your weapon.” Charles jabbed the gun harder and Susannah winced, her jaw squaring with pain. “Now.”
Luke knelt, carefully putting the books on the floor. He chanced a glance at Susannah and saw her gray eyes narrowed, watching every move he made. He moved slowly, betting that Grant wouldn’t shoot Susannah, that he planned to use her as a hostage once Paul Houston arrived to take him away.
“You’re stalling, Mr. Grant,” she said. “Or Mr. Kraemer, or whatever your name is. What are you waiting for? You’ve got a gun to my head. Why not just kill me?”
Luke knew she was baiting Charles on purpose. She’d understood Luke’s plan to push the man and was helping. Still her words left his mouth bone dry.
“You want to die, Susannah?” Charles asked smoothly.
“No. But I’m wondering why you seem like you’re . . . killing time. Instead of me.”
Charles chuckled. “You were as smart as Daniel and much saner than Simon.”
“Speaking of Simon,” she said grimly, “did you know he was alive all those years?”
He laughed softly. “Who do you think taught him to play the role of an old man so well?” Luke’s stomach turned over. Simon Vartanian had lured his victims dressed as an old man. Simon had also stalked Susannah in the same guise.
“You?” Susannah breathed. “You taught him?”
“Oh, yes. Simon thought it was all his idea to stalk you in the park in New York. It was always easiest to allow Simon to believe things were his idea, but it was indeed me. You, on the other hand . . . I could have done great things with you, my dear.” His smile disappeared. “But you didn’t want to play with me. You avoided me.”
“I was a rape victim.” Her voice shook with outrage. “And you
knew
that.”
“I have to say I was surprised you confessed the whole Darcy affair. That couldn’t have been easy for you, admitting to everyone how depraved you are. How hard the mighty have fallen. It didn’t take Darcy more than a few months to turn you.”
Her hands tightened into fists. “You recruited Marcy Linton, used her to extort rich men who liked sex with underage girls.”
“It beat waiting tables as a way for her to pay for college,” Charles said blandly.
“She never got to college. You killed her. Why? Why did you have to kill her?”
Charles’s bland façade was replaced with cold fury. “Because of you. You ruined her. Made her soft.”
“Darcy changed her mind, didn’t she? I remember that last night. She tried to talk me out of going, but it was a special date, the anniversary of the day I became a rape victim,” she said bitterly. “I was going to show myself and the world that I had control. I never had control. You did. You orchestrated the whole damn thing, you sonofabitch. All of it. You put Simon and Toby Granville up to raping me.
You fucking coward
.”
Luke saw the minute movement, the slackening of the hand on Susannah’s shoulder just as Susannah jerked away. But Charles wasn’t that off guard. He grabbed her with a snarl, jabbing the gun into her head so hard she cried out. His forearm closed over her throat. Her hands clawed at his arm so that she could breathe. Luke took an involuntary step forward, still on one knee.
“Little bitch,” Charles muttered. “Papadopoulos,
now
. Gun on the floor
now
or I’ll break her goddamn neck. She’ll still look alive and I’ll still have my human shield.”
Luke placed his gun on the floor, then held his hands out. “There. I’m unarmed.”
“Your backup, too.”
“Don’t have one,” Luke lied. “I’m wearing boots, not shoes like you. I like your shoes, Ray Kraemer. They’re what helped us identify you.” He was talking fast, not allowing Charles to calm down. “Mansfield took some pictures in the bunker, for insurance. Maybe even revenge. Got one of a man with a walking stick, whose left shoe has a higher heel. It’s because Michael Ellis shot you in ’Nam. Shot you in the leg and
left
you to die like a dog. It messed up your leg and that’s why you walk with the stick.” Luke hoped Susannah was paying attention.
“Shut up,” Charles said through clenched teeth.