Lethal Legacy: A Novel (Guardians of Justice) (22 page)

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Authors: Irene Hannon

Tags: #Fathers and daughters—Fiction, #Fathers—Crimes against—Fiction, #Law enforcement—Fiction, #FIC042060, #FIC042040, #FIC027110

BOOK: Lethal Legacy: A Novel (Guardians of Justice)
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Like a dead body lying in a pool of blood.

Funny. For all the violence in his world, he’d never witnessed a hit. His dirty work had been delegated to others, allowing him to keep his hands clean while rivals or disloyal men died.

But he’d never ordered a hit on a woman. The very thought sickened him.

A coil of rage snaked through his stomach. Carlson had blown this job. Leaving for an ill-timed vacation had been bad enough, but targeting a woman was—

“Mr. Rossi?”

At Teresa’s prompt, he blinked. Stifled his anger as best he could. Nodded. “Yes. Another cappuccino would be nice.”

With a dip of her head, she entered the room, picked up the cup and saucer, and disappeared.

Left alone once more, Vincentio pushed himself to his feet. The simple move taxed him, and he rested both palms on the desk, trying to shake off a weariness fueled by worry and a pulsing anger that had started with the call from the police and ratcheted up in the past fifteen minutes after he’d learned about the murder attempt on Walsh’s daughter.

He couldn’t do anything to contain the worry, though it wasn’t prompted by the investigation into Walsh’s death. The police would find no evidence linking him to that. The worry that kept him awake at night had far more to do with whether this glitch could somehow affect his chances of getting to know his grandson.

As for the anger—that would be assuaged. Carlson would pay for his mistakes.

That was one outcome Vincentio
could
control.

“So what’s your take?” As Cole guided the car toward the nearest fast-food restaurant, he spared Mitch a quick look.

“He’s guilty as sin. But we’re never going to be able to prove it unless we track down the go-between—or go-betweens—who set up the job. There’s a strong chance the perpetrator doesn’t even know who hired him. Or didn’t at the time. So I don’t think we’ll find any incriminating evidence there.”

“Yeah.” Cole drummed his fingers on the wheel. “I think he was telling the truth when he said he didn’t know about the attempt on Kelly’s life.”

“I do too.”

“But he didn’t like my questions about his son. They seemed to unsettle him. I wonder why, if they’ve been estranged for years?”

“Interesting question.”

Cole braked behind an SUV as he approached a red light. “You want to pay the son a visit? We have a couple of hours to kill before we have to head back to the airport.”

“It couldn’t hurt.”

“I need some food first, though.” He motioned out the window. “I see some golden arches up ahead.”

“I wouldn’t mind a breakfast sandwich and some more coffee. We can plan our strategy while we eat. In the meantime, I think I’ll call Alison.”

Cole rolled his eyes. “I’ll be glad when you guys get married. Maybe some of the infatuation will wear off.”

“Not a chance, buddy.” Mitch grinned at him as he pulled out his phone. “You’re just jealous. But look on the bright side. Kelly will be waiting in the wings once this is over.”

As Mitch shifted away and tapped in Alison’s number, Cole swung into the parking lot and joined the line at the drive-up window to wait his turn. Just as he’d been waiting his turn to find the right woman. His experience with Sara had been a detour on that journey, but now he was back on track. Thanks to Kelly.

And if his instincts were correct, one day in the not-too-distant future a beautiful redhead would be coming
out
of the wings to play a starring role in his life. Just as Mitch had predicted.

Giving him a huge incentive to wrap this case up as quickly as possible.

The cramps in her arms had long passed the mere painful stage. Her mouth felt as parched as the Arizona desert she and her mom and dad had visited once on a family vacation. And she had to go to the bathroom. Urgently.

Those were the only reasons Kelly was glad to hear the sudden beeping of her father’s security system, announcing Carlson’s return. She had no idea how much time had passed since he’d left, but faint glimmers of sun had been peeking through the shutters on the basement windows for what seemed like hours. The storm must have moved on.

A few minutes ticked by. Then the basement door opened, admitting a shaft of light into the dingy cellar. Feet appeared, followed by legs, a torso, and a head.

For a fleeting instant, Kelly thought she’d been rescued. The geeky-looking guy with the sideburns, glasses, and salt-and-pepper hair wore a beige shirt, blue jeans, and a white hard hat like the ones the phone company service people used.

But when he approached and dropped down on one knee in front of her, she saw the latex gloves. It was Carlson. In another disguise.

She tried to say “bathroom,” but the word came out garbled.

She made another attempt.

He must have picked up her desperation. Reaching behind her, he loosened the gag and tugged it out of her mouth.

“Bathroom.” The words didn’t sound a whole lot clearer, with her dehydrated tongue sticking to the roof of her mouth and her puffy jaw, but he got the idea.

He pulled out a pocketknife, flipped it open, and cut through the rope around her ankles and wrists. After closing the knife, he stood and pulled a pistol from a concealed holster on his belt.

Kelly froze.

“Get up.”

She tried to follow his instruction, never taking her gaze off the pistol. But her legs and arms were numb, and it was a struggle to rise. Once she made it to her feet, she clung to the edge of the shelving.

“Move.” He gestured toward the steps.

She hobbled toward them, praying she wouldn’t fall, trying to get a handle on his mood. When he’d left, he’d been confident, cool, in control. Now he seemed on edge.

Perhaps the magnitude—and risk—of whatever he was planning to do with her was finally hitting home.

Maybe that would work to her advantage.

She half walked, half crawled up the steps. After she reached the top, she hurried as quickly as she could toward the hall bathroom. But he grabbed her arm and jerked her back as she rushed inside.

“Not so fast.”

Carlson edged past her, the gun inches away from her face. “Stand against the wall. Over there.” He gestured a few feet down the hall.

She complied.

He did a rapid survey of the bathroom and motioned her in. “You have three minutes.”

Sidling past him, she started to shut the door, but he stuck his foot inside the frame. “Forget it. I don’t want to have to break down a locked door to get you out.”

She eyed the toilet. It wasn’t visible from the crack in the door. Besides, there was no time to argue.

When she finished, she braced herself on the sink. A quick check in the mirror confirmed her jaw had turned purple. But at the moment, her parched mouth was a bigger concern. She twisted the tap and leaned down, slurping thirstily.

“Time’s up.” He pushed the door open. The edge of it hit her in the hip, but she kept drinking until he pulled her away from the sink and shut off the water.

Taking hold of her arm, he propelled her back to the kitchen. Back toward the basement door.

Now was the time to put the plan she’d developed into action.

“Wait.” She pulled back.

“What’s wrong?” He frowned at her over his shoulder.

She glanced at the clock on the wall beside the stove. Eleven-thirty. She went with the lunch plan instead of the coffee plan. “A friend of mine is supposed to swing by and pick me up for lunch at one. She has a key, and if I don’t answer, she’ll come in. I—I don’t want to put her in danger.”

The furrows on his brow deepened. “What friend?”

“Lauren. The woman I had coffee with the day you spiked my drink with peanuts.”

As Carlson studied her, she prayed he’d buy her story . . . and take steps to protect his own hide.

Without speaking, he suddenly changed direction. After dragging her into the living room, he indicated her purse on the couch. “Get out your cell. And while you’re at it, give me the keys to your house.”

“Why?”

He shoved her toward the sofa. “Just do it.”

Her fingers closed over the phone and she dug deeper for the keys. When she withdrew them, he held out his hand.

“Toss them to me.”

She complied.

“Now call your friend—and put it on speaker so I can listen in.”

Uh-oh.

If Lauren answered, she was sunk. Her friend would immediately question Kelly’s weird message. Better to call her home number instead of her cell. Lauren would check it by the end of the day; her type A personality compelled her to keep on top of things.

Trouble was, that was hours away.

And Kelly didn’t know if she had that much time.

“Tell your friend you took a hike to do some research, and you’ve been delayed.”

The man had done some serious surveillance if he knew about her hiking. That creeped her out even more. But he’d missed one very important detail.

She never hiked in cold weather.

Lauren knew that.

So did Cole.

Thank you, God!

As she started to enter the number, he took her arm. Pressed the cold barrel of the pistol against her neck. “Make it sound convincing.”

Finger shaking, she continued to tap in the digits. The answering machine kicked in, and her pulse accelerated as she listened to the greeting. This might be her one shot, and she didn’t want to blow it. She’d already planned to raise as many red flags as she could, and Carlson had given her another one. All she could do was pray Lauren got suspicious enough to call the police.

At the sound of the tone, she tightened her grip on the phone. “Hi, Lauren. I’m going to have to cancel lunch. I decided to take one of my research hikes this morning, and I got delayed. Maybe we can catch up at Hacienda for some Mexican food next week. In the meantime, don’t overindulge on turkey tomorrow, no matter how tasty it is.” He pressed the gun harder against her neck. “Gotta run. If you want to try for coffee Friday instead of lunch next week, give me a call.” She pushed the end button.

“Okay.” Carlson backed away and waved the gun toward the basement door. “Downstairs.”

“Are you leaving again?”

“Shut up and move.”

She followed his instruction slowly, her mind racing. She had no idea when Lauren would get her message, and right now, her hands and legs were free. There might not be many more opportunities like this. Was there any chance she could knock Carlson over somehow? Make him drop the gun? Grab it herself? He’d said he didn’t want to leave any marks on her body that would indicate foul play. So he wouldn’t shoot her. Or strangle her. Or smother her.

But there was no question in her mind that he was planning to kill her. Most likely in a violent way, since the bruise on her jaw didn’t seem to concern him. And she couldn’t count on Lauren getting her message in time.

As she approached the top of the stairs, an idea came to her. Maybe she could turn suddenly halfway down and lunge at his legs. He might topple forward. Drop the gun. She could dodge him, scramble up the stairs, and lock the door. She didn’t doubt he could kick it down, but she’d have a head start. If she ran outside screaming at the top of her lungs,
someone
would hear her. Sheila Waters, next door. Or a passing car. Or another neighbor. It was her best shot.

She started to descend. Three steps down, she looked over her shoulder. He was just two steps behind her.

This was her chance.

Whirling around, she ducked and lunged for his legs.

She heard his muttered oath. Even better, she heard his gun hit the concrete floor of the basement below. When she felt him totter and grab for the railing, she slipped past him and scrambled to the top. Once in the kitchen, she turned to slam the door and slide the lock in place.

But he’d recovered faster than she’d expected. As she pushed the door closed, it slammed back against her, sending her sprawling on the floor.

He was on her before she could catch her breath, sitting on her legs, pinning her wrists to the floor, his face inches from hers. The fury in his eyes sent a cold chill straight to her core.

“That wasn’t very smart.”

Chest heaving, she licked her dehydrated lips and watched him. Wondering if he’d change his mind about where to kill her. If this would be where she died after all, just as her father had.

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