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Authors: Karen Rose

Alone in the Dark (62 page)

BOOK: Alone in the Dark
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‘Every goddamn day.’ She exhaled quietly. ‘Tell me why you keep it. Please.’

‘I’ll put it away,’ he promised. ‘I’d already planned to.’

‘You’re evading the subject again.’

He stared at the ceiling, his heart beginning to pound. ‘Only because it’s hard to talk about. The truth is, I don’t know what would happen if it went through Ballistics. Have I ever fired this gun at anyone? Yes. A few times as a warning. Have I ever fired it
into
anyone? No. But I can’t promise that my father didn’t because I simply don’t know.’

‘Not Jeremy,’ she said softly. ‘You mean your real father.’

‘Jeremy
is
my real father as far as I’m concerned. I mean my biological father. The man with the sperm. And not much else,’ he added in a disgusted mutter.

‘He wasn’t a good man?’

He laughed bitterly, remembering his father so very clearly. ‘No.’

‘Yet you carry his gun.’

‘No. It’s not his. It belonged to my grandfather.’

‘Okay,’ she said reasonably. ‘You loved your grandfather, so it has sentimental value.’

He shook his head. ‘No, that’s not really it either.’ It was hard to talk about because he didn’t like to even think about it. ‘My grandfather never carried the gun. He kept it in a gun safe. My father . . . took it from time to time, mostly to show off. He probably never killed anyone.’

‘“Probably” is not very reassuring,’ she said. ‘I can test it myself, if you want. Off the books. You’ll at least know for sure if it ties to any crimes.’

No way in hell
. ‘That’s okay. I’ll put it away and carry one of my other guns.’

‘That’s fine, but I still want to know why you’re so attached to it.’

He sighed. ‘I thought you wanted to get some sleep.’

She sat up abruptly, frowning at him. ‘
Marcus
.’

He stared up at the ceiling, then met her eyes in the light of the moon coming through the window. ‘Can you come back down here? It’s . . . hard to talk about.’

Her frown changed from angry to concerned. ‘That’s the second time you’ve said that,’ she said, but slid back down beside him, her head on his chest.

‘Because it is.’

She splayed her hand over his heart. ‘Your pulse just skyrocketed.’

‘Yeah.’ He focused on bringing it under control, then gave up when he couldn’t concentrate enough to begin. ‘Did you Google what I told you to?’

‘Yes. I read a few of the articles that came up. I’m sorry, Marcus. You endured what no child should ever go through.’

‘Stone had it worse. I only heard it. He saw it.’

‘You mean your little brother being killed?’

He nodded, his throat constricting. He was having trouble breathing. Goddammit. ‘Yeah.’ He forced the word out. Gritted his teeth and beat back the panic. ‘Afterward, even after we were safe, I couldn’t sleep. Weeks and weeks went by and I still couldn’t sleep. I can remember staring at the ceiling for hours on end.’

She was stroking his chest, trying to calm him. ‘Understandable.’

‘I . . . got my grandfather’s gun and I . . . slept with it. Under my pillow.’ The stutter he’d suffered for years after the attack tried to come back, shaming him.

‘You were only eight years old,’ she whispered, pained.

‘Old enough to fire a gun if I needed to.’

‘Did having the gun keep the nightmares at bay?’

‘S-some. Not all.’

‘So the gun is a talisman.’

‘Yes,’ he said, relieved. That much was true. Everything else he’d said was also true, just not complete.

‘Thank you,’ she murmured. ‘Thank you for trusting me. I won’t betray your trust.’

He winced internally every time she said ‘trust’, but it wasn’t enough to make him say more.
Not now.
Not when she was in his arms. Not when she was believing him. He’d have to tell her. She deserved to know and he knew she would understand. But he wasn’t going there tonight.

She leaned up and pressed kisses to his jaw, his chin, his mouth. ‘Sleep now.’

If it were only that easy
, he thought bitterly. He pulled her a little closer, stroking her hair, and she cuddled up to him. Within minutes she was asleep.

But he wasn’t. His heart continued to race as he stared up at the ceiling, wondering how he was going to find the words to tell her the truth.

Cincinnati, Ohio
Wednesday 5 August, 2.30
A.M.

 

Ken could hear Burton’s furious shouts the moment he opened his basement door.

‘Sweeney! Goddammit, Sweeney, you little fucker! What the fuck is this?
Sweeney!

Ken strolled down the stairs, tugging at the cuffs of his shirt. The nap hadn’t been enough to completely recharge him, but it would be enough to get what he needed out of Burton.

His basement was tidy again, no sign of the blood that had pooled on the floor after he’d slit the throats of Chip and Marlene Anders. Stephanie Anders sat on the floor in her cage, her arms hugging the knees she’d pulled to her chest. She wore a plain black shirt now. Pity. She’d been so pretty when he’d ripped off her top. Her eyes were shrewd as she watched him approach Burton, who had been tied to a chair. Hog-tied, actually, in a way that if he struggled, the rope would tighten around his throat like a noose. His jaw was bruised, his eye already black.

The noose and the shiner were both Alice’s work, Ken thought, and felt a spurt of pride. His daughter could take care of herself.

He walked up to Burton. Folded his arms across his chest. ‘You bellowed, Mr Burton?’

Burton looked up at him, hate in his eyes. ‘Why am I here?’ he growled.

‘Miriam Blackwell is alive.’

Burton blinked in shock, color flooding his face. A very good performance. ‘How?’

‘That’s what I’d like to know. She was found unconscious in her motel room. Anonymous 911 tip. The way I figure it, the only way that would be possible is if someone helped her throw up what I’d just given her.’

‘I didn’t.’

‘Did you care for Reuben’s wife, Burton?’

‘Yes,’ he said levelly. ‘But not like you’re thinking. I loved her like a sister.’

Again, a good performance. ‘What else have you lied about?’

‘I haven’t.’

Ken backhanded him, sending the chair flying over. The ropes around Burton’s neck stopped the chair mid-fall, suspending it at an angle, tightening the noose around Burton’s throat. To his credit, Burton held perfectly still. Ken let him hang like that for ten seconds, then twenty, then shoved his foot between the rungs and snapped the chair upright.

Burton drew a ragged, wheezing breath. ‘You motherfucker,’ he snarled. ‘You’re insane.’

‘We’re going to try this again,’ Ken said calmly. ‘What else have you lied about?’

Burton clenched his teeth. ‘Nothing.’

Ken backhanded him again, waited a few seconds longer before righting the chair. ‘Where is Reuben?’

‘I. Don’t. Know.’

Ken hit him again and left him dangling for a full minute while he unlocked the closet where he stored his tool cart. By the time he’d pushed the cart close to Burton, the man had begun to thrash, his skin mottling a dark, ugly red. Ken righted the chair and loosened the rope from behind Burton’s back, not intending to become a victim of the man’s teeth.

Burton was gasping desperately when Ken returned to his cart and began inspecting his knives. ‘You ex-cops are tough, but I’ve never had one that didn’t break. Eventually.’

He chose a scalpel and turned back to see Burton’s eyes narrow with promised retaliation. When Burton remained mute, Ken tightened the noose again, leaving only enough slack so that the man could breathe if he was perfectly still.

Then, standing behind him, he briskly sliced away the top of Burton’s ear. Burton’s shocked cry of pain echoed in the basement. Ken returned to his cart, laying the strip of ear where Burton could see it. ‘Where is Reuben, Mr Burton?’

‘Go to fucking hell,’ Burton hissed, his body trembling, blood running down the side of his neck, soaking the rope. But he didn’t move, didn’t give the rope a chance to do any more damage.

‘Fucking hell actually sounds pleasant,’ Ken said with an easy smile. ‘Celibate hell would suck. Once again, where is Reuben?’

One half-hour and a full ear later, Ken had to admit he was impressed. Either Burton really didn’t know where Reuben was, or he was one tough sonofabitch. He’d sliced away the man’s ear a little at a time, recreating it like a puzzle on the tray of his cart, and still Burton admitted to nothing. Not to rescuing Reuben’s wife or to knowing Reuben’s plan.

It was time to take a break before Burton passed out from blood loss. That would be counterproductive to getting the information Ken really wanted. He’d washed the scalpel and packed his knives into a toolbox so that he could use them upstairs on Demetrius when the door opened at the top of the stairs.

‘He’s awake, sir,’ Decker called down.

‘Perfect timing. I was just taking a break here. Can you come down, Decker?’ He watched the man’s reaction as he came down the stairs and saw Burton tied up in the chair.

Decker took in the blood, the noose, and the reconstructed ear on the cart, all without a flinch or a flicker in his steely eyes. ‘Do you want me to bandage him up for you?’ he asked.

‘Sure, why not. Wouldn’t want that cut to get infected.’

A brief twitch of Decker’s lips was the only hint of an emotional response. ‘No, sir.’

Ken closed the toolbox. ‘Is Demetrius restrained?’

‘Just like you asked, sir.’

‘Good.’

‘Why?’ Burton growled. ‘If Demetrius is a fuckup, just kill him. Quick and clean. What’s with the Dr Mengele act?’

‘It’s not an act. Didn’t Reuben ever tell you about my . . . hobbies? Finance and corporate management are only part of my skill set.’ Ken smiled. ‘Demetrius is an intimidator. Fists like concrete. Reuben is all tactical, planning, keeping people in line. Me? I’m the monster that hides in your closet, the one your mother always told you didn’t exist. I’ll get out of you what I want to know. One way or the other. Everyone talks eventually.’

With that he left Burton to Decker and climbed the stairs to Demetrius. He found him in one of the extra upstairs bedrooms, the one he kept just for times like this. His oldest friend was awake and completely immobilized. Decker had shackled Demetrius’s feet and the wrist of his uninjured arm to the bed frame, while his injured arm and his body were restrained with three leather belts that wrapped under the bed and over his torso, groin and thighs.

Alice had been in here too. Demetrius wore a noose around his neck identical to Burton’s. So Ken wouldn’t have to worry about him thrashing too much.

Demetrius’s nostrils flared when Ken entered the room, his eyes widening at the sight of the toolbox. ‘What. The. Fuck?’

Ken sighed. ‘I’d say this is going to hurt me more than you, but I’d be lying, obviously. But it will hurt me a lot. Just so you know.’

‘You are crazy, man.’

Ken put the toolbox on the nightstand. ‘And you’re a cokehead who’s put my entire company in jeopardy. You could make this easier on all of us by telling me where you’ve put that iPad you’re always using. Decker and I couldn’t find it in your car and Sean says you don’t appear to have an account on the cloud. Whatever the hell that means. Where are your records?’

Demetrius’s body sagged on the bed, the picture of exhaustion. ‘Go to hell,
buddy
.’

One benefit of being old friends was knowing your buddy’s secret moves. This was Demetrius’s. He’d pretend to be too tired to fight and would then lash out with an attack that more often than not took his prey by surprise. Ken wondered what kind of attack he was planning, trussed up like he was.

He wasn’t curious enough to let Demetrius try anything. His friend could break his neck while he was choking himself to death and then he wouldn’t get anything out of him. Ken chose a pair of pliers and walked around the bed, then – staying well out of Demetrius’s reach – latched the pliers onto his pinky finger and twisted.

Demetrius’s body jerked, then froze when the noose tightened. ‘What are you doing, Kenny?’ he whispered.

‘Finding out what I need to know so that this company can continue to be profitable after we’re both gone. I need your records. Your suppliers. Contacts. Con
tracts
.’

‘Where are you going?’

‘I’m going to retire. After I get what I need from you, I’m done. Taking my booty and leaving the daily grind to the next generation. Think of this as ensuring that DJ has job security.’

‘And if I give you what you need?’ His lips twisted bitterly. ‘You’ll let me go, right?’

‘Right.’ Ken rolled his eyes. ‘Absolutely.’

‘I’m not a cokehead. Don’t know who told you that.’

‘Alice. She says you’ve been snorting some of the merchandise.’

‘Lie.’

BOOK: Alone in the Dark
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