Irreparable Harm (31 page)

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Authors: Melissa F. Miller

Tags: #Mystery & Crime

BOOK: Irreparable Harm
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“I understand.”

Connelly hung up the phone and dropped it in his pocket. “You don’t mind if I keep this for a few days, right?”

Gregor understood this wasn’t really a question. “I don’t mind,” he said, eyes downcast.

 Connelly eyed the restraints.

“You think we can get him out of the chair with his arms still tied up?”

Sasha tilted her head and looked around to the back of the chair. His arms weren’t bound to the chair, just stretched across its back and trussed together.

“Sure. It’s not going to feel good.”

“Gregor doesn’t mind,” Connelly replied.

Gregor’s face darkened, as if he’d reached his limit of cooperation, but he said nothing.

“Okay.” Sasha handed the gun back to Connelly, glad to be rid of it, and picked up Gregor’s hunting knife. She removed it from its sheath, knelt by Gregor’s legs, and sliced through the lines tying his feet to the chair’s legs.

The climbing ropes were thick and she expected to have to saw at them, but it was easy work. Sasha turned the knife in her hand. The blade was at least four inches long and sharp. She thought for a minute about what Gregor might have had planned for her. When she looked up, he smiled at her.

“Stand up,” she said, ignoring the growing urge to crack a few more of his ribs.

Gregor tried to hoist himself to standing. He lifted his bottom off the chair about six inches and then collapsed back into.

“I can’t do it. I need my arms free.”

“No chance,” Sasha told him.

She moved around to the back of the chair. Shook her head.

“He’s going to have to stand or we’ll never get his arms over the back of the chair,” she said to Connelly.

Connelly appraised Gregor and the chair for a long minute. Then he picked the club chair up and heaved it on to its side on the floor.

Gregor’s legs were splayed out to either side of him. The weight from the chair put pressure on his injured ribs, and his face turned purple from the pain.

Connelly grabbed the bottom of the chair and pulled it toward him. The motion jolted Gregor, and he yelped. Once the chair had cleared Gregor, Connelly righted the chair and placed it back in the precise spot it had occupied by the window. He dusted it off, paying  no attention to the man writhing on the floor at his feet.

“Well, that’ll work, too.” Sasha said.

She put the knife back into its leather sheath and handed it to Connelly, along with Gregor’s wallet and car keys.

“Thanks. I’ll be back as soon as I can. You’re going to have to stay put for the night. They’ll send a unit for the Camry, but it’ll be several hours before they complete all of their testing and move it.”

“You’re coming back here?”

“I think I should. We don’t know if this partner of Irwin’s is also after you or if you’re the business Irwin has to attend to here.”

It made sense. Sasha nodded.

“See you later.”

Connelly picked Gregor up from the floor by the paracord, hauled him to his feet, and marched him to the door.

Sasha engaged the lock behind them and went in search of that bottle of wine.

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 36

 

She was asleep when Connelly let himself back into the apartment. From the bedroom just steps above the door, she heard him ease the lock into place. He was trying to be quiet. She rolled over and eyed the illuminated display on the alarm clock.
1:47.

After she had finished reviewing the temporary restraining order papers, she’d made up the pullout bed in the living area. Around midnight, she’d gotten ready for bed. But even though she hadn’t slept in forty-three hours, sleep was a long time coming. The two glasses of wine she’d drunk didn’t quiet her mind as she’d hoped, and it had taken her an hour or so to fall asleep.

Connelly was walking up the steps to the loft. She heard the soft pat of socks on stairs.

He hesitated in the doorway.

She sat up. “Connelly?”

He whispered back. “I didn’t mean to wake you.”

“Is everything okay? Do you need something?” She reached over and flipped on the lamp on the bedside table. She strained to make out his face in the weak light but couldn’t. She could see that he had changed into sweats and was carrying a small duffle bag.

He walked into the room and stood at the foot of the bed.

“Everything’s fine. Gregor and Anton are both in custody; they’re spilling every detail they can think of about Irwin. They gave us his address in Potomac and a team’s been mobilized to search his home.”

“Okay, good. I made up the guest bed. It’s actually not terribly uncomfortable. For a pullout.”

He cleared his throat. “Actually, I think it’s better if I sleep right here.”

Sasha was fully awake now.

“Connelly, I don’t think …”

“Relax. I mean
right
here.” Connelly unzippered his bag and took out his gun. Then he laid down on his back across the bottom of her bed, where a dog would sleep, and closed his eyes.

“Good night, Sasha.”

She watched him. His eyes didn’t open and he didn’t move. His ankles and feet dangled off the side of the bed. He also hadn’t slept in almost two days, she thought.

She sighed.

“You can sleep in the bed like a normal person, Connelly. I trust you not to do anything inappropriate. We both know I can kick your ass if you do.”

His eyes stayed closed but he let a smile play across his lips. “I’m fine here.”

“Suit yourself.”

She tossed a pillow down to the end of the bed and he crammed it under his head.

“Want a blanket?”

“Nope.”

She reached over and snapped off the light.

“Good night, then.”

Sasha closed her eyes and waited for sleep.

“Sasha?”

“What?”

“What happened to your brother?”

Sasha was silent.

“Are you awake?”

Sasha opened her eyes and stared at the ceiling. The street lights threw a scattered web of shadows across the left half of the room.

“Patrick was my oldest brother. He was married to a girl named Karyn. For his thirtieth birthday, he and some of his old college buddies went to Atlantic City for the weekend. The second night there, they came out of a casino at around four in the morning, looking for a place to get breakfast on the boardwalk. T
hey ran into a group of teenagers, acting rowdy. Someone bumped someone and words were exchanged. Patrick’s friend, Cole, thought one of the kids had a gun. So, Cole pulled
his
gun.”

She closed her eyes again. “Cole’d been drinking—they all had—and he was waving the gun around. Patrick caught his arm, and Cole wheeled around. The gun discharged. Patrick was shot in the head. Close range. He was in a coma, he had brain swelling. My parents are devout Catholics, so he was like that for months. Not dead, not alive. He never woke up, was never responsive. One night, he just stroked out. And that was the end.”

Connelly was quiet for a long time. She wondered if he’d fallen asleep.

Then, from the end of the bed, he asked, so softly she had to strain to hear him, “The kid didn’t have a gun, did he?”

“It was a cell phone.”

Silent tears streamed down Sasha’s cheeks. Twelve years later, her memories of rock climbing with Patrick were beginning to fade, but the night he died was as fresh as ever. She took a series of ragged breaths.

“I’m so sorry, Sasha. Try to get some sleep. We need to be ready for tomorrow.”

“I know.”

The room was quiet. After a while, she heard Connelly’s breathing turn rhythmic.

She turned toward the window and stared out, seeing nothing. Her eyes burned with fatigue and tears. She slept fitfully until the dark sky turned gray and the first pink streaks of light filtered through the blinds.

5:45 a.m.

The smell of strong coffee filled the room. She eased herself out of the bed, careful not to wake Connelly, and went through the steps of her morning routine like a robot.

She was tying the laces on her running shoes when Connelly padded down the stairs. A red crease from the pillow crossed his check. He headed straight for the coffee.

“Morning.”

“Good morning. I’m going for a short run. I’ll be back in 20.”

Connelly frowned. “Not alone.”

“Yes, alone. I called my Krav Maga instructor. He’s going to jump me at some point along the way. I need a refresher. And, I don’t need any help.”

Connelly put his mug down.

“Sasha, you can’t …”

“I
need
to, okay, Connelly? I need to clear my head, I need to feel competent and secure before I walk into court today and I can’t do that with a bodyguard.”

She fixed her tired eyes on his, unblinking.

Connelly looked away first. He shook his head but picked up his cup of coffee and drank from it. He wouldn’t argue with her.

She held her cell phone out for him to take. “In case Naya or Mickey calls.”

“At six in the morning?”

“Just in case.”

He reached for the phone and, as he did, he clasped a hand around her wrist lightly.

“Are you sure about this?” he asked with worry in his eyes.

“I’m sure.”

“Okay.” He released her hand.

She headed for the door.

“Have a nice run,” he said to her back as the door closed behind her.

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 37

 

A fine, icy rain greeted Sasha when she hit the sidewalk outside her building. She turned up her jacket collar and started to jog. She blocked out the wet and the cold and settled into a stride, taking care to dodge the piles of slick leaves that dotted the sidewalk under the old maple trees.

She tried to focus only on the brisk air filling her lungs and the rhythm of her feet pounding on the pavement, but her attention was split between being present in her environment and trying to predict where Daniel would lie in wait for her.

If she were doing the takedown, she’d get in position behind the shrubs where Connelly had hidden the night before and ambush her as she returned to the building at the end of her run.

That location held two advantages. One, she’d be at her most tired as she finished out the run; she’d be looking to cool down and stretch. Two, it was human nature to let one’s guard down close to home. Daniel wouldn’t really count on that second factor. A large part of her training was intended to prevent her from doing just that. Still, the hedgerow was the logical place to hide.

She quickened her pace as the rain began to fall harder.

What had been a cold mist turned to a steady drizzle that bounced off her head and ran into her eyes.

She turned the corner at the private elementary school that sat across from her building. As she passed by the wooden fun fort at the school playground, she wiped the water from her brow. With her arm raised to dry her eyes, her vision was obscured for a moment.

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