Under Cover of Darkness (50 page)

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Authors: James Grippando

Tags: #Lawyers, #Serial murders, #Legal, #Fiction, #Suspense, #Thrillers, #Missing Persons

BOOK: Under Cover of Darkness
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The kitchen door flew open. "Willow!" Tom shouted. "Get your ass down in the cellar."

She didn't answer.

"I'm giving you five seconds to come out."

She counted off in her mind but didn't make a sound. Exactly on the count of five, Tom popped the spent ammunition clip from his rifle and attached a new one. "Have it your way, baby," he said loudly, then started across the kitchen.

They were in the large dressing area of the closet. Beth's clothing was on shelves and hangers all around them. Gus lay flat on his stomach on the floor, as Carla had directed. She stood over him with the gun aimed at his back. Sh
e w
as tugging at a robe, trying to remove the belt so she could tie his hands.

Gus looked up at her. "You're the one who got Beth into the cult, aren't you?"

"Brilliant, Gus. How many years did it take you to figure that one out?"

"You and your buddy Meredith . She's dead. Doyou know that?"

She smiled thinly, as if her brother were stupid. "Of course I know. Meredith hasn't been my buddy. since she turned against us and pulled her daughter off the farm."

"Is that why Shirley tried to kill her?"

"It wasn't Shirley by her lonesome. She. just took the fall, and like a good kid she didn't name names. She was loyal to the group. Until you waved a quarter million dollars under her nose."

"You're the one who got Shirley killed. You told Blechman she was talking to me."

"Careful. Don't go figuring it all out. You were much safer as the workaholic attorney married to his job."

"That was my ticket to safety, huh? Just stay busy and happily oblivious while you indoctrinate my wife into some cult."

"If it makes you feel better, she never really joined. Our teacher has been working on her since the day I brought her by the farm. He's still working on her. He likes her look."

"If this teacher," he said angrily, "so much as lays a hand on her---"

A scream broke the tension. It had come from somewhere in the house. In that same instant Gus vaulted toward Carla and knocked her backward into the hanging clothes, legs and arms flailing. She tried to gouge his eyes with her nails as they wrestled for the gun. When the tumbling stopped, Gus was on top with the gun in her face.

"What was that scream?" He spoke sharply but quietly.

"I don't know."

"Where's Morgan?"

"She's okay, I swear. I locked her in the basement until . . ."

"Until you got rid of me?" he said with disbelief.

There was another scream. It seemed to have come from the basement. With the gun to her head he lifted her up and pushed her toward the door. "Come on. You're going with me."

Andie barely breathed as she waited beneath the stairs. The darkness was her only real shield. It wasn't totally black but dark enough to conceal her. Tom crossed cautiously. One step. Stop. Another step. Stop. Each step a little closer, a little louder than the next. Finally, she could see him in the shadows, his image slowly gaining definition. The entire house seemed to be brightening, and it wasn't just her eyes adjusting to the darkness. The fire outside was intensifying, blazing more light through the kitchen window. She heard a rumble outside, like the barn collapsing. The sudden burst of flames was like a flare in the hallway.

Their eyes met, and she knew she was toast.

She made a dash for the living room. Tom fired and missed. Andie fired back. A hit to his right hand sent his gun flying. Andie vaulted toward him and knocked him to his back. She tried to pin him. He squirmed beneath her.

"Freeze!" she shouted.

He swung wildly in defense, but his shattered hand was useless. She brought a knee to his groin and shoved her pistol in his face. "I said, freeze!"

Tom groaned and went limp.

"Take me to Beth Wheatley."

"Who?" he said, breathless.

She cocked the hammer and pressed the barrel into his eye socket. "Take me to Beth Wheatley or I'll blow your eyeball out the back of your head."

Andie wasn't sure Beth was there. She wasn't even sure if Beth had been taken against her will. She hoped the bluff would work.

"She's in the attic."

It had worked. She rose slowly and kept the gun on him. "You make just one move I don't like, you're dead. Now let's go," she said as she directed him toward the stairs.

They climbed the main staircase to the second floor, then a smaller staircase to the third floor. At the top of the stairs was a semiprivate sitting area that led to an
. O
utdoor widow's walk. The rear half of the sitting area had been enclosed in an ugly fashion. It was clearly built for security, not aesthetics. The door had a deadbolt that locked with a key from the outside.

"She's in there," said Tom.

If she really was in there, it was clear she was a prisoner. "Unlock it."

"I don't have a key."

"Lie down on the floor, facedown."

He got down. Andie called out, "Beth Wheatley, are you in there?" No one answered. "If you're in there, stand away from the door."

With one quick shot Andie blew the lock off. A woman screamed inside. "Beth, you're safe. It's the FBI!"

Tom shouted, "It's a trap, Flora!"

Andie turned the gun on him. "Shut up!"

"She's the enemy, Flora! They're killing all of us!" Andie said, "Beth, come out now!"

"Stay down, Flora!"

Andie yanked him up by one arm. "Come on, we're going in."

She kicked the door open. Beth screamed even louder. She was huddled in the far corner beneath a boarded-up window. "Leave me alone!"

Gunshots suddenly pelted the metal shutters outside. Just as Beth screamed, Tom whirled and flung Andie ove
r h
is shoulder. She hit the floor hard. Her pistol slid across the room. Beth sprang from the corner and grabbed it. "Stop!" she shouted.

Andie and Tom froze, both on their knees. Beth was shaking and confused, moving the gun back and forth from Andie to Tom erratically. She wasn't treating Tom like a friend, but Andie still had to convince her she wasn't the enemy.

"I'm Agent Andie Henning with the FBI. Please, I'm here to help you."

"She's no FBI agent, Flora. She's leading the revolt. They've come to kill us all."

Beth aimed unsteadily at Andie. "If you're with the FBI, then show me your badge."

"I don't have one. I'm working undercover."

"She's one of the rebels," said Tom. "Kill her before she kills us both."

"Keep away from me!"

"Shoot her, Flora! You've already killed for us. Kill one more."

"I never killed anyone!" She looked at Andie, pleading, but still not convinced she was an FBI agent. "He's lying. He's trying to box me in."

"I believe you," said Andie. "Now just let me stand up, and give me the gun."

"No!" Beth shouted. "Both of you, just stay where you are!"

Tom rose and started toward her slowly. "Come on, Flora. You're one of us."

"No, I'm not!"

"Give me the gun."

"Stop! Don't come any closer."

He kept coming slowly. "It's time to break with the past. Join the inner circle."

"Not another step! I'll shoot!"

"That wouldn't make. Steve very happy, now would it?"

Her face flushed with anger at the mere mention of his name. It was clear he'd played the wrong card. He leaped toward her and reached for the gun. A shot erupted, then another. Andie ducked. Tom fell. Beth tried to speak, but her voice merely quaked. A pool of blood oozed from beneath Tom's twisted body. He didn't move.

Beth dropped the gun, almost threw it down. Andie slid across the floor and grabbed it. Beth cowered against the bed, sobbing. Andie checked Tom's pulse and got nothing. Cautiously, she approached Beth and gently touched her arm.

"It's all right. It's over."

Beth was crying as she struggled to regain control. "Are you sure?"

"Yes. I'm sure."

"Where's Blechman?"

Andie felt a chill. She didn't know. "Everything is under control," she said, doing her best to mask her own concerns.

Chapter
Sixty-Seven.

The basement door squeaked on its hinge as it slowly swung open. Gus wanted to rush down and get Morgan, but he feared a trap. He stood at the top of the stairs with Carla in front of him like a human shield, the gun pressed to the back of her skull.

"Morgan, are you down here?"

The silence confirmed his fears. She wasn't alone.

He switched on the light. The single low-watt bulb barely illuminated the top half of the steep and narrow wooden staircase. Beyond the tenth step was total darkness, the bowels of an unfinished basement that smelled of mildew and gave up not a sound. There was only one way in or out--through this door.

"If there's somebody down there, I called the police?" said Gus. "They're on their way."

Gus waited, the seconds ticking in his mind. He actually had called the police. But the earlier screams had told him there was no time to wait. With a firm grip on Carla he called out, "Who's down there?"

A light suddenly switched on from below. A man was standing at the base of the stairs, the same attacker from Meredith's house. "We are."

Blechman, Gus presumed, the handsome young leader Meredith had told him about. He was using Morgan th
e s
ame way Gus was using Carla, as a human shield with a gun to her head. Morgan would have been too small to protect his whole body, except that she was standing on the higher step and he was kneeling behind her on the lower one.

"Morgan!" Gus cried.

"Don't waste your breath," said Blechman. "She can't hear or see you."

A set of headphones filled her ears with music. Duct tape covered her eyes. A blessing, thought Gus. He noticed her hands and feet were tied as well. He pressed the gun more firmly to Carla's head. "Let go of my daughter, or Carla's dead."

"And where does that leave you?" Blechman said coolly. "Let her go!"

"You can't win this, Gus. Isn't it obvious? I'm holding someone you would die for. You're holding someone who would die for me. Tell him, Rosa."

"Rosa?" said Gus, confused.

"The woman who used to be your sister," said Carla. Blechman smiled. "Tell him you'd die for me."

"I would gladly die for you."

"See, Gus? Now hand over the gun and save your daughter."

"You think I'm an idiot?"

"We don't like to kill children," said Blechman. "Give us your gun, and we kill only you. Morgan goes free. Keep your gun, I blow your daughter's brains out right before your eyes."

Gus trembled. "You'll kill us both anyway!"

"Your daughter doesn't know anything. No need to kil
l h
er."

Carla said, "I won't kill my own niece, Gus."

"Oh, but you'll kill your brother?"

"You made us do it. I tried to warn you. You wouldn'
t l
isten."

Blechman shouted, "That's enough, Rosa."

Gus could barely think. "Just let Morgan go. The police are on their way. I wasn't bluffing. I called them."

"Is that true, Rosa?"

"Yes. He called again from the bedroom after he got my gun."

His eyes blazed. He tightened his grip on Morgan. "You shouldn't have done that. And you," he said to Carla, "shouldn't have let that happen."

"Take your hands off my daughter. I'll pull the trigger, I swear."

"That's Rosa's gun:' said Blechman. "It isn't even loaded. Is it, Rosa?"

She struggled nervously. "That's right. It's not even loaded."

Blechman said, "Go ahead. Pull the trigger."

Gus could see Morgan was beginning to lose consciousness. Blechman had been restraining her with his right arm around her torso, but the hand was now up around her throat. "Let go of my daughter!"

Blechman's eyes locked on Carla, as if they controlled her. "Tell him. Tell him to go ahead and squeeze the trigger."

Her voice shook, but she didn't dare disobey him. "Go right ahead, Gus. The gun isn't loaded."

He could tell she was lying. If he didn't somehow keep them talking, he'd have to shoot his own sister. "What did you do with my wife?" Gus shouted.

"She's been a grave disappointment to me," said Blechman. "I put up with her disobedience for a very long time. She had a special look. She could have gone far. But Morgan looks an awful lot like her. In due time, she may go further."

His perverse intentions were suddenly laid bare. On impulse, Gus shoved Carla down the stairs, just far enough to force Blechman to drop his guard in self-defense. It wa
s o
nly for an instant, and it would call upon every bit of experience he'd ever had with. but Gus had an opening. He fired a shot that snapped Blechman's head back in a crimson explosion.

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