Daniel had been in Will's backyard when he'd heard the shots, and he'd run down the woods path to reach the farmhouse. He arrived in time to hear the sound of Grace's retreating motor, but not to see what direction she'd taken.
As Daniel lifted Will's head, the older man groaned and opened his eyes. “Daniel,” he gasped.
“Who shot you?” Daniel asked, although he was certain he knew the answer as surely as he knew that Bailey was already dead or dying.
“Grace.” The word came out so softly that it sounded like a death sigh. “Bailey . . . Did you . . .”
“Were they together? Is Bailey hurt?”
“Alive when Grace . . . shot . . . me. She's not . . . outside?”
“No. I heard Grace's Whaler, but got here too late to see who was in the boat.”
“Send out . . . alarm,” Will managed. Blood seeped from a hole in his chest, another from his shoulder, and a third from his midsection. “No time . . . Ring the bell. Watermen . . .” He grasped Daniel's hand with surprising strength. “Save Bailey for . . . me.” Will choked and spit blood. “Save her . . . Daniel. Grace means to . . . to kill her.”
Daniel pressed the palm of his hand against Will's chest in an effort to stop the bleeding, but Will shoved him away. “To hell with me. No time. Bailey. She's all I've got. . . .” His eyes rolled back in his head and he went limp.
Daniel shook him. “Will! Where would Grace take her?”
Will's breath rasped in and out, but he didn't open his eyes. Daniel took precious minutes to call the coast guard, gave his location, identified himself as retired agency personnel, and told them that Will needed immediate medical assistance for multiple gunshot wounds. He asked the dispatcher to notify the state police about Bailey's kidnapping, gave them a description of his sister-in-law, and told them that she was armed and dangerous.
When Daniel could turn his full attention to Will
again, he realized that he was still bleeding badly. Daniel looked around the room, ripped down a pair of white tieback curtains, folded half into a pad, and tied the other half to bandage the worst of Will's injuries.
Images of the carnage the bomb had wrought in the coffeehouse in Kabul flooded Daniel's mind and he pushed them back. If Bailey was still alive, there was hope he could get to her in time. And if Grace had blackmailed Joe Marshallâif she, rather than Lucas, had shot at them yesterdayâthen this was a different game altogether.
“Grace . . .” Will tossed his head and whispered urgently, “Grace told me . . . said . . . she killed . . . Beth. And Emma.” His artist's fingers dug into Daniel's wrist. “Grace. It was always Grace.”
“I know. I just came from Matt's. Grace has been blackmailing Marshall, and she may have murdered him too. But why?” Blood seeped through the pad, and Daniel tightened the makeshift bandage. “Don't die on me. Help's on the way.”
“Go. Find Bailey. Emma's dead. You've got to stop . . .” He clutched at Daniel's wrist. “Ring the bell.”
Daniel smelled smoke. Rising, he walked to the nearest window and saw that Elizabeth's boat and dock were in flames. Grace must have set them afire to keep anyone from following her. He returned to kneel beside Will. “I've got to go back and get your boatâit's the fastestâbut help will be here soon.”
“My pocket. Key. To the skiff.” He drew in a long, rasping breath. “Never mind me. I've had my run. Find Bailey.”
“A medevac helicopter is on the way. I hate to leave you, butâ”
“Get the hell . . . out of . . . here. Wait. Get me Elizabeth's
ship-to-shore radio. Under stairs. I can send . . . send out . . . distress call. Watermen.”
Daniel ran to the closet and ripped open the door. Elizabeth's radio had been smashed. “Grace must have destroyed it. You hang on, Will.” Daniel squeezed his friend's hand a last time. “Hang on until help arrives.”
“The bell,” Will insisted. “Don't . . . forget . . . bell.”
Outside, Daniel paused long enough to pull the rope a dozen times. The two-hundred-year-old bronze bell rang out a distress signal, sending the wordless message across the island that there was dire trouble at Elizabeth's farm. Even in the sparsely populated countryside, the chances were that the sound of the great bell would alert neighbors. Daniel only hoped medical help would arrive in time to keep Will from bleeding to death.
Before the tolling of the bell had ceased to echo across the water and fields, Daniel was off and running back down the lane to Will's landing. He was halfway through the woods when he heard Will's dogs barking.
Gasping for breath, Daniel stopped and cut through the thick underbrush, cautiously coming out of the trees at a point just south of the house. To his surprise he saw someone on Will's skiff, bent over the ignition. Pulling the pistol from his belt, Daniel leaned low and approached the dock, taking advantage of whatever cover he could find until he recognized the crouching figure in the boat.
“Emma? Is that you?” Daniel exclaimed. “Will told me you were dead!”
She turned toward him. Her clothing was torn and bloodstained, her face a haggard mask. “Daniel?”
“Down! Down! Go on! Get back!” Daniel shouted at the dogs as he hurried toward the boat. “What the hell happened to you?”
Emma gasped and leaned against the gunnel. “I am dead,” she said. “Gut-shot. Yesterday . . . last night. I thought it was Will come to finish me off,” she managed as Daniel climbed into the boat. “But it was Grace. She shot me and set my boat adrift.” She pointed toward the bay. “Out there. The shot knocked me into the water. I tried to get back . . . to the boat, but the tide caught it. I found a crab line float to hold on to and swam to shore.”
“Grace has Bailey.”
“Where's Will?” Emma sank down onto a seat and leaned against the headrest.
“Back at Elizabeth's. Grace shot him as well.”
“What did he tell you? About what happened to Beth?”
“I guess that's what this is all about somehow. Will's hurt bad. He may already be dead.”
Emma clutched at Daniel's shoulder. “Then you need to know that it was Grace who . . . who testified against Will . . . convinced the jury he was guilty. In the trial thirty-five years ago. She went to court and said that Beth was afraid of her uncle. Hinted that he fathered her child.” Emma shook her head. Her damp hair hung in tangles, and she was shaking with cold or fever. “Grace's fault. Her part of it was all hushed up, hidden from the news, because of her age.”
“Don't try to talk. The coast guard helicopter is already in the air. They'll get you and Will to the hospital andâ”
“I don't need a damned doctor. I'm dying, Daniel. I told youâI took a bullet in the gut. I need you to listen . . . to listen good. There's nobody left but youâto set things right. To tell Bailey the truth. Beth came to a
party with your brother, and she had too much to drink.”
“Did she and Matthew have sex?”
Emma shrugged. “I don't know. If I was to be hanged, I couldn't say one way or another. Matt was pretty wasted, and they were in the cabin alone together.” She gritted her teeth as pain etched grooves across her brows. “But afterward Joe and Creed took turns with her. Beth said no, but they did it anyway. I heard her crying.”
“Why now, Emma? Why didn't you say something then? Why after all these years?”
She gripped her stomach. “I was tired of dreaming about it every night. Tired of hearing Will standing outside my window whistling.”
“You heard it, knew it was Will.”
“You heard it too, had to.”
“I thought it might be him. I'd heard him whistling when I was a kid.”
“He used to whistle like that for Beth, when she was little. It was a game between them. She always liked it. I hadn't heard it for years, not until after Bailey came to Tawes.”
“Then it was his way of letting you know he was there, watching over Beth's girl.”
“Me and anybody else who might want to hurt her?”
Daniel nodded. “Maybe, or maybe he thought Bailey's coming would make you crack, tell what he was certain you knew about what happened to Beth.”
“It worked. I was scared he'd come to kill me. Or maybe I was just sick of waking up every morning and staring into the face of a coward.”
“And you told Will that?”
“Some of it. He didn't kill me, but he came close. Beat the shit out of me and went for his gun.”
“And you? Did you rape her too?”
Emma shook her head. “No. I didn't. I swear to you, I didn't. But I didn't have the balls to put a stop to it either. Joe and Creed were both older and bigger than me. Joe always had a mean streak in him. And Creed . . . Creed did just about anything Joe told him to do.”
“And you just watched?”
“I told them to stop. They dared me to do something about it. I didn't. But I should've tried.” Emma shook her head. “Afterward, Joe threatened to kill me if I told. God help me, I believed him.”
“What about Matt? Beth was his responsibility. Why didn't he protect her?”
“He would have been just as scared of Joe and Creed as me. But by then he'd passed out dead drunk on the floor. I don't how much he knew about what they did. He never moved until morning.”
Anger made it hard for Daniel to fit the key in the boat ignition. He and Matt had been too far apart in age and too different to be close when they were growing up. All these years, he'd considered his brother to be weak, but he'd never guessed Matt could stand back and let Will pay such a price for that weakness. “Stupid bastard,” he muttered as he fired up the engine and pulled away from the dock.
He glanced at Emma. It was evident that the movement of the boat put her in agony, and in spite of himself he felt sorry for her. “Can you walk?” He couldn't look her in the face. Didn't want to. In a way, what Emma had done was every bit as bad as his brother's actions.
“Grace egged them on,” Emma continued as if she hadn't heard him. “Thought it was funny. Lied about Beth. Told Joe that Beth done it with her uncle and with Forest McCready. But it wasn't true. Not about Will. Not about Forest. I saw blood on Beth's legs and on her clothes. She'd been a virgin until that night, Daniel. We killed her. Killed her as surely as if we'd put a gun to her head.”
“Can you walk?” Daniel repeated.
“I made it this far, didn't I?” Emma rocked back and forth, holding her belly. “Burns like fire. Like crabs tearing at my gut.”
“Let me see.” Daniel pushed aside the ripped tee shirt that Emma had wrapped around her middle. “It's bad, but if you didn't die yet, you may survive. You should be in a hospital.”
“Too late for doctors and hospitals. More important that Bailey know the truth. I think now that Grace might have been the one who beat Beth. She always wanted Matt, and she got him, didn't she? Once Beth was dead.”
Daniel pushed the throttle forward, heading toward Elizabeth's dock again. Where the hell was that helicopter with the medics?
“I'm leaving you at the farm. If you can walk, you get up to the house. Do what you can for Will. Keep him awake. Keep him talking. And when help arrives, they canâ”
Emma laughed. “Dead or alive, he'll strangle me with his bare hands.”
Daniel shrugged. “So what have you got to lose?”
“True enough, boy.”
He slowed the engine as he neared Elizabeth's beach. What was left of the dock poured black smoke
and flames. “You'll have to jump out and wade ashore. Can you do it?”
“Didn't you hear what I said? I swam half the night to get back. I guess I can get twenty yards to shore if I have to do it on my hands and knees.” Emma's voice cracked. “Matthew? Grace didn't . . .”
“Back at the house,” Daniel answered. “Put something in his coffee. He's sick as a dog, but nothing he won't recover from.”
“Probably those sleeping pills she takes.” Emma took hold of the gunnel, pulled herself to her feet, and swung one leg over the side.
He put the engine into neutral. “Think, Emma. Where would Grace go?”
“Only one spot.” She gave him a long, hard look. Her lips were cracked, her eyes bloodshot and red. “Black Oak Island. That old cabin. You know it?”
“Will used to take me duck hunting there.”
“You go and get that girl. She's worth risking your life over. But you take care. Grace will kill you as quick as she did me. She's a crack shot with that .22. But I'd bet my mother's soul she'll be at that old cabin. It's where it all happened. And God damn me to a fiery hell, where my life should have ended a long time ago.” With a groan, she eased over the side and splashed into the bay.
“You're no deader than I am, you mean son of a bitch,” Emma said minutes later as she slipped a pillow under Will's head. “Just trying to heap more worry on that boy's head.”
Will swore. “Shut up and get away from me, you damned hermaphrodite.”
“No wonder nobody goes near you. You're nasty as a
constipated polecat. Can you drink water if I bring you some?”
“Are you deaf? Get out of this house. I'd die of thirst before I'd take a drop from your hands.”
“That's what . . . what I figured you'd say.” Emma dragged a tablecloth over Will. He was cold, too cold, and he'd lost more blood than Emma thought a man could lose and still draw breath. “But if you're bound on dying, you may as well listen to the rest of what I wanted to tell you yesterday.”
Will raised his hand to strike at her, but he was too weak to move it more than a few inches. “Damn Grace always was a good shot.”
“Shut up and listen to me.”
“Find me a gun. Better yet, a butcher knife, so I can finish you off, you swivin' freak.”
“Say what you want. No worse than I've said to myself all these years. But chances are, we'll both end up on the same rock in hell, so you may as well listen to what I've got to say.”