“Quiche?” I asked him.
“Gesundheit,” he said.
“Shepherd’s pie it is.”
I put Justin in charge of making mashed potatoes from a box mix, while I dumped the stew meat into a skillet with olive oil and the drained pearl onions. It looked like dog food and smelled about as good. I reminded myself of the cold Hormel raviolis my mother and I used to eat from cans all those years ago. Of our elderly neighbor who did eat canned cat food because it was cheaper than tuna and she had to save as much money as she could in order to buy more vodka.
After Ashlyn had drained the vegetables, I had her add them to the stew meat. In the pantry, I found garlic powder and Worcestershire sauce. I added both liberally, while Ashlyn and Mick continued to wrinkle their noses.
Next I found a lasagna pan. Vegetables and stew meat on the bottom. Instant mashed potatoes, dotted with butter, spread on top. The pan went into the oven and I set about making rolls while Justin did the dishes and Ashlyn set the table.
“Seriously?” Mick asked me.
“Seriously what?”
“That…food.”
I shrugged. “Fresh hamburger and potatoes would be better, but you work with what you got.”
“That’s disgusting.”
“Don’t eat it.”
“Hey, I’ve lived on MREs. I can eat that slop.”
“Then don’t complain.”
“What is this, housewife warfare?”
“Sure. Now, be nice, or next time, I’ll dust you.”
Mick laughed. Which might have made me feel better, except his eyes were too bright and the laugh too long and in the end, Ashlyn moved closer to her father while I switched to the other side of the prep table to roll out the dough.
Compared with the morning’s cinnamon roll fest, my makeshift shepherd’s pie was greeted with considerably less enthusiasm. But as Mick had said, soldiers were used to low standards.
Mick filled half his plate with a look that said he’d eat it all just to spite me. Z inspected the layers with a scientist’s cool-eyed study, then shrugged and dug in. A plate was set aside for Radar, then my family had their turn. Justin took easily as much as Mick. Ashlyn sighed heavily and delicately scooped out just enough to feed a bird.
“Spinach.” She shuddered.
“Iron,” I corrected my daughter, who’d started her day with massive blood loss.
“Spinach,” she insisted.
I ignored her, tended to myself for a change. It really wasn’t too bad. Four hundred times our recommended daily allowance of sodium, not to mention the vegetables were mushy and tasteless, while the meat was stringy and gray, but other than that…
I really could’ve used a pill. A glass of wine. Something.
“You entertain much?” Z asked abruptly. He was staring at Justin. Z had taken seconds. Mick as well.
“What?”
“In that town house of yours. You own a business that depends
on landing big contracts. Probably doesn’t hurt to have the right people over, wine and dine.”
“On occasion,” Justin allowed. My husband was sitting tightly, his beaten face wary.
“She cook?” Z stabbed a fork in my direction.
“My wife is an excellent cook. You’ve had enough opportunities to evaluate that for yourself.”
“What’s her favorite food?”
“Excuse me?”
“What’s her favorite food? Bet she knows yours.” Z turned, stared at me.
“Beef Wellington,” I provided quietly.
Z turned back to Justin. “So?”
My husband kept his gaze on Z. “Fresh oranges,” he said slowly. “We had them on our honeymoon. Picked them ourselves straight off the tree. You can’t get anything like that from the grocery store.”
He was right. I had loved them then. Memories of a past life. The current taste of my pain.
I found myself looking down at my plate, wishing both men would stop talking about me.
“You plant an orange tree for her?” Z asked Justin.
“In Boston?”
“Build her a greenhouse. Or don’t you know how?”
Justin’s jaw tightened. Clearly he was being baited, but even I didn’t know why.
Z suddenly swung toward me. “Gonna leave him?”
I glanced up. All eyes were on me, including Ashlyn’s.
“When you return. Tomorrow night,” Z prodded. “Decision time.”
I forced my chin up. “None of your business,” I said clearly.
“Leopard never changes its spots.”
“Don’t you have someone else to go kidnap?”
He smiled, but it wasn’t warm. I swear the cobra tattoo was coiling and uncoiling restlessly around his head. “Don’t know. You’re going to be a tough family to top. Most people just cry a lot. You guys are much more…eventful.”
He contemplated Ashlyn next: “Boyfriend, or are you just a slut?”
She went with my approach. “None of your business.”
Which was a shame, because Justin and I had really wanted to know her answer. Probably, she had felt the same about us.
“Pretty girl like you should have higher standards.”
My daughter gave Z her best flat-eyed stare. “Really? What’s this, advice from a professional fuckup? I mean, first you kidnap us, now you’re a life coach?”
Z smiled. If Mick’s laugh scared me, Z’s smile terrified me. He leaned back, placed his fork across his plate.
“Family,” he said at last, “is a terrible thing to waste.”
Then, he looked at me, and in his eyes, I saw it all. Resolution and regret.
We were dead.
Tomorrow, 3:00 P.M., they would receive the payoff, and then, they would kill us. Business. Plain and simple. Especially when dealing with a man with a fanged cobra tattooed around his head.
No one spoke again.
Z left. We cleaned up the kitchen. Radar arrived for his dinner, slipping two pills under his napkin, which I whisked away when bringing him fresh rolls. I returned the leftover shepherd’s pie to the walk-in fridge, dry swallowing the tablets the second I was out of sight and wishing bitterly they were hydrocodone instead.
Finally, Mick escorted us back to our cells, still no hand restraints, still the illusion of freedom.
Dead family walking.
When the cell door finally clanked shut behind us, I turned to find
him grinning broadly. He winked, waggled his tongue and mouthed,
Soon
.
Last glance at the ever-present camera, then he disappeared.
ASHLYN WAS ASLEEP inside a matter of minutes. She climbed up to the top bunk and collapsed. She needed the rest. Justin and I needed to talk.
“They’re not going to let us go,” I said without preamble, perching restlessly on the lower bunk. “Tomorrow, three P.M., they’re going to take the money, then kill us.”
“Nonsense.” Justin was lying on his back across from me, hands tucked behind his head, staring up. “They’re professionals. No way they’re going to mess up a chance at nine mil.”
“None of this makes any sense. This huge sum of money is wired to their account, then they magically leave us alone? I mean, the second they have the money, what’s to stop them from harming us? We’re still in a prison. We’re still at their mercy.”
“We’ll be in the control room, safe from them. That’s what I set up with Z: Tomorrow, come deadline, we’ll use Radar’s phone to call my cell. Some federal agent in Boston will most likely answer. We’ll see him, he’ll see us. Visual confirmation. Then you, me and Ashlyn will move into the control room, locking it down and ensuring our own safety while the funds are being wired. The minute ransom has been received, Z and his team will exit stage right. While we await local law enforcement, who will return us to Boston and allow us to get on with our normal lives.”
“What if the authorities won’t pay the ransom? There’s no way to renegotiate or confirm…”
“Z’s terms. He wanted to keep things simple. And actually, I agreed. Better to make it all or none. Puts more pressure on the insurance company.”
“But if the company won’t pay—”
“The company will pay, Libby. They have to. We delivered the proof they requested, the policy is up to date and frankly, the feds will probably make them. It’s in everyone’s best interest for tomorrow to go as planned. Trust me, in another twenty-four hours, we’ll be able to put all of this behind us.”
I studied my husband, still not convinced. My hands were shaking. I’d taken the methadone, which was supposed to reduce my withdrawal symptoms, but my sense of doom and gloom still wouldn’t go away.
“We don’t even know why they kidnapped us,” I muttered next.
“Does it matter?”
“They beat you!”
“I’m doing okay.”
“They terrorized Ashlyn.”
“She’s a strong girl.”
“How can you be so calm—”
Justin sat up so abruptly, he nearly hit his head on the upper bunk as he swung around to glare at me. “Still don’t trust me, Libby?”
I opened my mouth, but no words came out.
“We’re going home. That’s what matters here. One way or another, tomorrow, three P.M., you and Ashlyn will be on your way to Boston. My family will be safe.”
Then I got it, the source of my unease. There was a set to my husband’s shoulders I recognized. An edge to his voice. He’d made a decision, one that clearly put the safety of Ashlyn and me above his own.
“You’re not going to do anything stupid,” I heard myself say. “We all need to go home, Justin. We’re a family.”
He smiled, but it wasn’t a nice twist of his lips. “Family? I cheated on my wife. Hell, I never even suspected what was going on with my
teenage daughter. You tell me, Libby. How terrible would it be if I never made it back?”
“Don’t even talk like that. Your daughter needs you!”
“And you, Libby? What do you need?”
I wanted to tell him I needed us. I wanted to tell him if we could just get home, everything would be all right. But mostly, heaven help me, I saw in my future a lovely orange prescription bottle filled to the top with fresh white pills…
Z had been right. Family was a terrible thing to waste and that’s exactly what we’d done. We’d battled one another, we’d betrayed one another, and in the end, for what?
We’d return home, except instead of finding solace, we’d have to confront the wreckage of our lives.
And still my eyes welled up. I gazed at my husband. A man who’d hurt me. A man I’d lied to in return. And I found myself crying. For the home we used to have. For the marriage I’d thought we’d built together. For the future I’d always hoped to give my daughter.
Justin got off his bunk. He put his arms around me, and though I was stinky and smelly and awful, he tucked me against his chest.
“Shhh,” he murmured. “I’m going to fix this, Libby. Trust me, just trust me. Tomorrow I’ll make everything all right.”
I let my husband hold me. I focused on the reassuring strength of his arms, the sound of his heartbeat. Then I pressed my head into the curve of his shoulder because, once upon a time, I had loved this man so much and I knew, one way or another, I’d never get to feel that way again.
Three P.M. Monday.
Dead family walking.
Chapter 33
TESSA AND WYATT FOUND RUTH CHAN in the baggage claim of Terminal E. The petite CFO sported large sunglasses, a dark tan and a bad case of nerves. When she spotted Wyatt, approaching in his sheriff’s uniform, she visibly flinched.
Then, she squared her shoulders, adjusted her grip on her lone suitcase and marched toward them.
“Any word on Justin or his family?” she asked.
Tessa pegged the woman at late forties, early fifties. Obviously Asian in descent, but something else as well. An exotic woman, beautiful even in simple black yoga pants and a cream-colored wrap top. Though oversize sunglasses covered half her face, it was obvious she’d been crying. Tear tracks stained her cheeks, while a hoarse rasp thickened her voice.
“We have some questions,” Tessa began.
“I don’t want to go to the office,” the CFO stated immediately. “Someplace neutral, that would be best.”
Ruth had yet to eat. They settled on Legal Sea Foods, even though it meant switching terminals, as the restaurant had booths suitable for a private place to talk. Wyatt offered to carry the woman’s suitcase, but Ruth declined, marching resiliently forward, as if keeping moving was the secret to keeping composed.
Fifteen minutes later, they were ensconced in a back booth of the
dimly lit restaurant. Ruth had parked her suitcase after removing a slender laptop, which she was now firing to life.
She had yet to speak to them, appearing to be on a mission. For now, Tessa and Wyatt were content to wait. They ordered clam chowder. Ruth ordered grilled salmon and a glass of white wine.
Then, the CFO took a deep breath and finally faced them. She had removed her sunglasses. Up close, she was a wreck. Wan skin, bruised eyes, haggard expression. A woman who’d either had the world’s worst vacation, or was taking the news of her boss’s disappearance very hard.
Ruth spoke first: “Anita said they were taken Friday night.”
“Justin Denbe and his family have been missing since Friday night,” Tessa supplied.
“Any word? Contact? Leads?”
“We have received a ransom demand. Nine million dollars, due tomorrow, three P.M.”
Ruth flinched. “Denbe Construction doesn’t have that kind of money.”
“Justin contacted the life insurance company. He’s invoking the risk-of-imminent-death clause.”
“Of course,” Ruth murmured. “Half the life insurance, plus the kidnapping insurance…that makes sense. Will the company pay it?”
“Not our call.”
“They’ll pay it,” Ruth said, almost as if speaking to herself. “They have to pay it. If something happened to Justin…the public fallout, let alone potential legal liability… They’ll pay it.”
Tessa and Wyatt didn’t say anything, just continued to study her.
“So.” The CFO released a pent-up breath, her shoulders coming down. “This is really a kidnapping-for-ransom case. Justin is an obviously wealthy man. Unfortunately, that made him and his family a target.”
Again, Tessa and Wyatt didn’t say anything, just continued to study her.
“It’s just… When I first heard the news, when Anita called… I thought for sure… I mean.” Ruth took another deep breath, then, when that wasn’t enough, a fortifying sip of wine. “I was so scared something worse had happened. That Justin…that maybe, someone had felt a need to hurt him. And I worried… I worried it was my fault.”