Let Me Go (10 page)

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Authors: Chelsea Cain

BOOK: Let Me Go
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“Can I buy you a drink?” Archie asked.

“The drinks here are free,” Star said.

“Even better,” said Archie.

“Well, come on, then,” she said, and Archie followed her toward the front door.

Star's legs were bare and her dress showed them off. She was wearing black strappy high-heeled sandals, which didn't slow her down at all. Her polypropylene bag was secured under her arm like a top-secret diplomatic pouch.

“Good luck with your prostate,” Razor Burn called after Archie.

Archie ignored him, but did glance back one more time at the Russian as they left the house. He had recrossed his arms and was looking straight ahead, where Razor Burn had settled back against the wall, directly in the Russian's field of vision. The broken glass was still at his feet.

Then Archie followed Star through the door and out into the night.

She was several feet ahead, and Archie had to hurry to catch up with her. She navigated the grounds easily—she had clearly spent some time here. They passed other guests, but everyone was drunk and no one seemed to notice them as they went by, moving off the main path to a smaller one and then around the left side of the house along the border of one of the waist-high hedge mazes that Jack had installed throughout the grounds. Archie wondered how many decomposing bodies of lost guests turned up in those things. Star led him around the back side of the hedge. The path was gravel and their steps made a grinding noise as they walked. Tiny rocks spit out from under Star's heels, but it didn't slow her down. There wasn't a bar on this side of the house, and it wasn't well lit. Archie couldn't see any other guests now. The electronic music still pounded but they were far away enough from any speakers that it was background din.

Star stopped, hugging her arms for warmth as late evening set in. A lone torch flickered nearby, casting her face in a jittery tangerine glow. It was the first time Archie realized that she didn't have a mask. Her glittery black dress winked and sparkled. Something glinted in her hair. At first Archie thought it was a barrette.

“Thanks for the graceful exit,” Star said.

It was a kiss-off. Archie had served his purpose. She was in a rush. And it had something to do with whatever was in the bag.

“What are you doing here?” Archie asked her. He was trying to stall her. It wasn't a barrette; it was something wet. Archie peered at Star's hairline, attempting to puzzle out what had briefly caught the torchlight.

“Look,” she said. “You're sweet. But I have to go.”

Archie reached his hand up and touched her hair. She didn't pull away. She didn't even look surprised. She was used to men hitting on her. She took it like a pro.

Archie moved his fingers away from her head and showed them to her. The torchlight bathed them both in uncertain dark shadows that quivered with the flame. Archie could smell the citronella torch oil burning, a pungent chemical lemon mixed with sulfur. He held his hand nearer to the torch so she could see the stain of red on his fingertip.

“It's blood,” he said. “It's called transfer splatter. That means that someone touched blood and then touched you.”

She was trembling. Her hand shot up to the spot where Archie had touched her hair and she started to claw at it, pulling the hair loose.

“It's okay,” Archie said. “I got it.” He could feel the wet on his fingertips, a coolness on his skin.

She had allowed a crack in her façade and now the wall was crumbling. Her hands tightened into fists. Her face tensed with fear. The skin of her neck and chest was rough with goose bumps. It's what happened to people after car accidents, after the adrenaline surge dropped and the body indulged in all that repressed panic.

Archie had to refocus her, keep her calm. “I can help you,” Archie said. Leo had talked to Archie freely with Star in the room. Archie didn't know how much she knew, but Leo clearly trusted her with his life. Whatever their relationship was, Leo relied on her. If he was in trouble, he'd go to her for help. Archie tilted his head at the bag. “Is that for Leo?”

She nodded, swallowing hard.

“Where is he?” Archie asked.

“In the guesthouse,” she said in a voice barely above a whisper.

“Can you get me in there?” he asked.

She seemed to consider it, taking several long breaths. She was gathering herself, rebuilding the emotional wall. He watched it happen. Her bearing changed. She set her shoulders back. She lifted her chin. Her expression settled into a mask of pretty/neutrality. Finally she gave him a nod. “Maybe. If they think I'm taking you there for a party.”

“A party?”

Her eyes were hard now, her irises reflecting the orange flame. “I'm not here as a guest,” she said. “I'm working.”

Archie digested this. So Star did more than dance. It made sense considering their introduction. But he had hoped, for her sake, that their interaction had been an anomaly. He measured his response, searching for the right level of nonchalance. “Oh,” he said. “Right.”

Archie heard voices approaching. Star leaned forward and swiftly pulled the shirttails from Archie's pants and then reached up to pull his tie loose. She fumbled with it for a moment and then Archie whispered, “It's a clip-on.”

He thought he saw her roll her eyes. But she unclipped it and opened his shirt collar.

The voices were closer and Archie looked over Star's shoulder to see two of Jack Reynolds's security detail rounding the corner. Star pressed against him, the black bag between them, touching but not touching. Whatever was inside the bag, it was soft.

The men looked at Archie and sniggered, but kept walking, and soon disappeared around the house.

“All clear,” Archie said.

Star stepped back, creating space between them. “If we run into anyone else, I may kiss you, so try not to freak out or cry or anything,” she said.

“Sure,” Archie said, wondering what it was about him that made her think he'd cry if he was kissed. She took his hand and they continued along the hedge maze away from the light of the torch and back into the darkness.

Her hand was cold, and as it warmed in his, Archie searched for something to say. He barely knew this woman, but they had shared an intimate moment. He had seen her barely clothed. He'd been turned on by her. But then, it probably hadn't seemed intimate to her at all. She'd just been working. She'd figured him for a prude. If only she knew. “So is Star your real name?” he asked, the question sounding stupid even as it left his mouth.

“Star's my stripper name,” she said. The dark side yard opened up to a brightly lit gravel driveway filled with catering vehicles. Across the driveway was a vine-covered Tudor cottage straight out of a fairy tale.

“My real name is Destiny.”

Archie thought he saw Star wink when she said it, but he couldn't be sure.

 

CHAPTER

13

 

The door to
the guesthouse was unlocked. But Archie noticed that Star opened it slowly, peering cautiously inside before she quickly stepped over the threshold, and pulled him in behind her, past the stone gargoyles that stood sentry on either side of the front door. No one had questioned them. Two men in catering uniforms with masks around their necks were leaning against a van smoking cigarettes, but they had barely glanced up as Star and Archie had walked by. Archie didn't spot any of Jack's security detail stationed at the back of the house, but that didn't mean they weren't there.

“There are cameras,” Star said, closing the door. “All over the island.”

Archie didn't know if she knew that for a fact, or if she was just being paranoid. But if she was being paranoid, it was contagious, and he found himself scanning the corners for telltale red lights.

Inside, the house looked bigger than it did on the outside. The Tudor architecture carried over, with dark exposed wood beams and arched doorways, and stucco walls that had been expensively and laboriously distressed for authenticity. The lights in the room were on a dimmer switch and had been dialed down to the perfectly calibrated ambient glow of a high-end restaurant—barely light enough to see your food, but not light enough to read the menu.

There was a selection of gowns spread out in the living room, and what looked like a makeup kit on a table, as if someone had used the space as a makeshift dressing room. Archie noted a red hooded sweatshirt cast over the back of a sofa, and a pair of black sneakers kicked under a chair. Susan had a sweatshirt like that. But so did half the people on the east side.

“Upstairs,” Star whispered.

Archie nodded and followed her out of the living room and up a flight of carpeted stairs. Their footsteps were soundless on the carpet and the house felt still and empty. But as they headed down the second-story hall, Archie could make out the faint sound of water running. Star stopped at a closed door and put her ear to it and listened. The water sounded like it was coming from the other side. “It's me,” Star said. She turned the doorknob and pushed the door in.

Archie followed her inside to a large guest bedroom suite.

The door to the private bath was open, and Leo Reynolds stood in front of the sink, with the faucet running. He was wearing a tuxedo, but the jacket and tie were gone. His shirt was unbuttoned and open, and his sleeves were rolled up. The white fabric of the shirt was soaked with blood—arterial spray, low-velocity. The water in the sink was pink. He was cleaning up.

Leo froze when he saw Archie. His eyes were bloodshot. His hands shook. Whatever had happened, it had been bad.

“Are you okay?” Archie asked.

Leo exhaled roughly and stared at Archie with dismay. Then his eyes went to Star. “What have you done?” he asked. “Bringing him here?”

“He can help,” Star said.

“We were worried about you,” Archie said. “What's going on? Tell me what happened.”

“They'll be back any minute,” Leo said. “Jesus Christ.” He looked fixedly at Archie. “We have a problem,” he said. He walked toward Archie and put his arm around Archie's shoulder. Archie could smell the soap Leo had used, an astringent, eye-watering odor; he'd known to use something strong, something that would obliterate any trace of blood that Luminol might pick up. “Listen to me,” Leo said. “We don't have much time. Susan is on the island.” Archie felt something deep inside him go cold. “They're using her to control me,” Leo said. “You have to find her and get her out of here.”

“Susan?” Archie said. His mind went back to the red hooded sweatshirt downstairs. “What?”

Archie felt Leo's arm tighten around his shoulder. “I'm sorry,” Leo said, as he stepped behind Archie. Leo's elbow hooked under Archie's chin and the hand of his opposite arm palmed the back of Archie's head. Archie tried to step away, but Leo pressed against him, his thigh secured against the back of Archie's leg. Leo's grip on Archie's neck was firm and Archie struggled to get a breath. He could already feel the black fog of unconsciousness closing in on him as his brain screamed for oxygen. The carotid artery traveled up the side of the neck. When blood flow was interrupted, you had maybe a minute before you blacked out.

Archie clawed at Leo's arm, but he was already losing strength.

“I don't know how to do this very well, so don't fight me,” Leo whispered into Archie's ear. “I don't want to break your neck.”

Archie's hands were tingling. His lips and tongue were going numb. He felt his hands drop to his sides and his body relax as Leo lowered him to the floor. Leo's arm was still tight around Archie's neck, his hand still pressing hard against Archie's skull. Archie saw his feet out in front of him, twitching on the floor, his stupid rented shoes. And he saw Star inching forward into his vision. Her hand was over her mouth. Her dress shimmered. And then she blurred, and when she came into focus again, she was gone, and Gretchen was there.

Gretchen didn't look like she had the last time he'd seen her, when she'd freshly escaped from the mental hospital and her hair was dark, her body still showing signs of the medication they'd pumped into her. She looked like she had before, in all her homicidal glory. Her thick blond hair fell in glossy waves to her shoulders. Her features—those famous blue eyes, her regal nose, that beauty queen smile—were almost blindingly attractive. She was just a hallucination. The mind did funny things when it thought it might be dying. But Archie was still aware enough to find it interesting that of all the people his brain decided to conjure at this moment, it chose her.

She smiled at him and took his hand in hers and lifted it to her cheek. He felt her imaginary touch all the way to his groin.

“There, there, darling,” she whispered. “You didn't think I'd let you celebrate your birthday without me?”

 

CHAPTER

14

 

The bedroom window
is open and a cool breeze blows through, tickling Archie's chest and arms. In the heat of sex he hadn't noticed it, but now he is cold. He pulls the sheets up to his waist. Gretchen is lying on her side next to him, but he doesn't cover her. Her cheeks are still flushed and she doesn't look chilly. Also, Archie likes to see her naked.

“What did you tell Henry?” she asks.

She has one arm supporting her head and the other draped along her side, her elbow resting in the deep dip of her waist, her forearm curved along her hips, her hand on her bare thigh. Her hair is tousled, and her skin glows with perspiration. He can look at her body all day long—the fullness of her breasts, her smooth thighs, every angle and curve.

“I might have mentioned that I had a counseling appointment,” Archie says. Gretchen's relationship with the task force has made coming up with excuses easy. She had offered them her services free of charge. Archie had been one of the first to sign up for sessions. He told himself at the time that he was leading by example, but in retrospect his intentions might have been baser.

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