Vanish (20 page)

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Authors: Tess Gerritsen

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BOOK: Vanish
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where we had been sitting, obscuring all traces of our presence. Then she clambers up beside

me, onto the peak above the attic window. There we perch, like shivering gargoyles.

Suddenly I remember. “The chair,” I whisper. “We left the chair under the trap door!”

“It’s too late.”

“If they see it, they’ll know we’re up here.”

She grabs my hand and squeezes so hard that I think she will snap the bones. The attic light has

just come on.

We cringe against the roof, not daring to move. One creak, one skitter of falling snow, and the

intruder will know where we are. I feel my heart thumping against the shingles, and think that

surely he can hear it through the ceiling.

The window slides open. A moment passes. What does he see, gazing out? A fragment of a

footprint on the ledge? A telltale trail that Olena’s frantic swipes with the blanket did not

obliterate? Then the window slides shut again. I give a soft sob of relief, but Olena’s fingers

again dig into my hand. A warning.

He may still be there. He may still be listening.

We hear a sharp thump, followed by a scream that even closed windows cannot muffle. A

shriek of such excruciating pain that I break out sweating, shaking. A man is shouting in

English.
Where are they? There should be six! Six whores.

They are looking for the missing girls.

Now the Mother sobs, pleads. Truly she does not know.

Another thud.

The Mother’s scream pierces straight to my marrow. I cover my ears and press my face to the

icy shingles. I cannot listen to this, but I have no choice. It does not stop. The blows, the

shrieks, go on and on so long that I think they will find us here at sunrise, still clinging with

frozen hands to this roof. I close my eyes, fighting nausea.
See no evil, hear no evil.
That’s

what I chant to myself a thousand times over, to drown out the sounds of the Mother’s

torment.
See no evil, hear no evil.

When the screams finally fall silent, my hands have gone numb and my teeth are chattering

from the cold. I lift my head, and feel icy tears on my face.

“They’re leaving,” Olena whispers.

We hear the front door creak open, hear footsteps on the porch. From our perch on the roof, we

can see them walk across the driveway. This time they are more than just indistinct silhouettes;

they have left the house lights on, and by the glow spilling through the windows, we can see

the two men are dressed in dark clothes. One of them pauses, and his short blond hair catches

the reflection of the porch lights. He looks back at the house, his gaze lifting to the roof. For a

few terrifying heartbeats I think he can see us. But the light is in his eyes, and we remain

hidden in shadow.

They climb into the car and drive away.

For a long time, we do not move. The moonlight shines down with icy radiance. The night is

so still I can hear the rush of my own pulse, the chatter of my teeth. At last, Olena stirs.

“No,” I whisper. “What if they’re still out there? What if they’re watching?”

“We can’t stay on the roof all night. We’ll freeze.”

“Wait just a little longer. Olena, please!”

But she is already easing her way down the shingles, moving back toward the attic window.

I’m terrified of being left behind; I have no choice but to follow her. By the time I crawl back

inside, she is already through the trap door and climbing down the ladder.

I want to scream:
Please wait for me!
but I’m too afraid to make a sound. I scramble down the

ladder, too, and follow Olena into the hallway.

She has come to a standstill at the top of the stairs, gazing downward. Only when I move

beside her do I see what has made her freeze in horror.

Katya lies dead on the stairs. Her blood has streamed down the steps like a dark waterfall, and

she is a swimmer, diving toward the glistening pool at the bottom.

“Don’t look in the bedroom,” Olena says. “They are all dead.” Her voice is flat. Not human,

but a machine’s, cold and matter-of-fact. I do not know this Olena, and she scares me. She

moves down the stairs, avoiding the blood, avoiding the body. As I follow her, I cannot stop

staring at Katya. I see where the bullet has torn through the back of her T-shirt, the same shirt

she wears every night. It has yellow daisies and the words BE HAPPY. Oh Katya, I think;

now you will never be happy. At the bottom of the stairs, where a pool of blood has collected, I

see the imprints of large shoes that have tracked through it on their way to the front door.

Only then do I notice that the door is ajar.

I think:
Run!
Out of the house and down the porch steps, into the woods. This is our escape,

this is our chance at freedom.

But Olena does not immediately flee the house. Instead she circles right, into the dining room.

“Where are you going?” I whisper.

She does not answer me, but continues into the kitchen.

“Olena!” I plead, trailing after her. “Let’s go
now,
before—” I stop in the doorway and clap my

hand over my mouth, because I think I am going to throw up. There are splatters of blood on

the walls, on the refrigerator. The Mother’s blood. She sits at the kitchen table, and the bloody

remnants of her hands are stretched out before her. Her eyes are open, and for a moment, I

think that maybe she can see us, but of course she cannot.

Olena moves past her, through the kitchen, to the back bedroom.

So desperate am I to escape that I think I should just leave now, without Olena. Leave her to

whatever insane reason keeps her in this house. But she is moving with such purpose that I

follow her to the Mother’s bedroom, which has always before been locked.

This is the first time I have ever seen the room, and I gape at the large bed with satin sheets, at a

dresser that has a lace runner and a row of silver hairbrushes. Olena goes straight to the

dresser, yanks open drawers, and rifles through the contents.

“What are you looking for?” I ask.

“We need money. We can’t survive out there without it. She must keep it here somewhere.”

She pulls out a woolen hat from the drawer and tosses it to me. “Here. You’ll need warm

clothes.”

I’m loath to even touch the hat, because it was the Mother’s, and I can see her ugly brown hairs

still clinging to the wool.

Olena whisks across to the nightstand, pulls open the drawer, and finds a cell phone and a

small wad of cash. “This can’t be everything,” she says. “There has to be more.”

I only want to flee, but I know she’s right; we need money. I cross to the closet, which hangs

open; the killers have searched it, and several hangers have been knocked to the floor. But they

were hunting for frightened girls, not money, and the shelf above has not been disturbed. I pull

down a shoe box, and old photographs spill out. I see pictures of Moscow and smiling faces

and a young woman whose eyes are disconcertingly familiar. And I think: Even the Mother

was young once. Here is the proof.

I pull down a large tote bag. Inside is a heavy jewelry pouch and a videotape and a dozen

passports. And money. A thick bundle of American cash, tied with a rubber band.

“Olena! I found it.”

She crosses to me and glances in the bag. “Take it all,” she says. “We’ll go through the bag

later.” She throws in the cell phone as well. Then she snatches a sweater from the closet and

thrusts it at me.

I don’t want to put on the Mother’s clothes; I can smell her scent on them, like sour yeast. I

pull them on anyway, quelling my disgust. A turtleneck, a sweater, and a scarf all layered over

my own blouse. We dress quickly and in silence, donning the clothes of the woman who sits

dead in the next room.

At the front door we hesitate, staring out at the woods. Are the men waiting for us? Sitting in

their dark car farther down the road, knowing that eventually we will show ourselves?

“Not that way,” Olena says, reading my thoughts. “Not the road.”

We slip out, circle around to the rear of the house, and plunge into the woods.

EIGHTEEN

Gabriel charged into the throng of reporters, his gaze fixed on the well-coiffed blond woman

who was the focus of klieg lights twenty yards away. As he pushed closer, he saw that Zoe

Fossey was, at that moment, talking into the camera. She spotted him and she froze, clutching

the microphone to her silent lips.

“Turn it off,” said Gabriel.

“Quiet,” said the cameraman. “We’re live—”

“Turn off the fucking microphone!”

“Hey! What the hell do you think you’re—”

Gabriel shoved the camera aside and yanked on electrical cords, killing the klieg lights.

“Get this man out of here!” Zoe yelled.

“Do you know what you’ve done?” Gabriel said. “Do you have
any
idea?”

“I’m doing my job,” she retorted.

He advanced on her, and something she saw in his eyes made her shrink away, until she

bumped up against a news van and could back away no farther.

“You may have just executed my wife.”

“Me?” She shook her head, and said with a note of defiance: “I’m not the one holding the gun.”

“You just told them she’s a cop.”

“I only report the facts.”

“Whatever the consequences?”

“It’s news, isn’t it?”

“You know what you are?” He moved closer, and found he could barely control the urge to

throttle her. “You’re a whore. No, I take that back. You’re worse than a whore. You don’t just

sell out yourself. You’d sell out anyone else.”

“Bob!” she yelled at her cameraman. “Get this guy outta my face!”

“Back off, mister!” The cameraman’s heavy hand landed on Gabriel’s shoulder. Gabriel shook

it away, his gaze still fixed on Zoe. “If anything happens to Jane, I swear—”

“I said, back
away
!” The cameraman again grasped Gabriel by the shoulder.

Suddenly all Gabriel’s fears, his despair, ignited in a blinding moment of fury. He twisted

around and charged straight at the barrel chest. Heard air whoosh out of the man’s lungs, and

caught a glimpse of a startled face as the man staggered backward and fell to the ground,

landing on a viper’s nest of tangled electrical cords. In an instant, Gabriel was crouched above

him, his fist raised, every muscle primed to deliver the blow. Then his vision abruptly came

back into focus, and he registered the man cowering beneath him. Realized that a circle of

bystanders had gathered to watch the spectacle. Everyone loved a spectacle.

Chest heaving, Gabriel rose to his feet. He saw Zoe standing a few yards away, her face alight

with excitement.

“Did you get that?” she called to another cameraman. “Shit, did
anyone
get that on tape?”

In disgust, Gabriel turned and walked away. He kept walking until he was well away from the

crowd, away from the glare of klieg lights. Two blocks from the hospital, he found himself

standing alone on a corner. Even on this dark street, there was no relief from the summer heat,

which still radiated from sidewalks that had baked all day in the sun. His feet suddenly felt

rooted to the pavement, melded there by grief, by dread.

I don’t know how to save you. It’s my job to keep people out of harm’s way, but I cannot

protect the one person I love most.

His cell phone rang. He recognized the number on the digital display, and did not answer it. It

was Jane’s parents. They had already called him while he was in the car, right after Zoe’s

newscast had aired. He’d quietly endured Angela Rizzoli’s hysterical sobs, Frank’s demands

for action. I can’t deal with them now, he thought. Maybe in five minutes, or ten. But not now.

He stood alone in the night, struggling to regain his composure. He was not a man who easily

lost control, yet moments ago, he’d almost slammed his fist into a man’s face. Jane would be

shocked, he thought. And probably amused, too, to see her husband finally lose it.
Mr. Gray

Suit,
she’d once called him in a fit of irritation because he was so unflappable, while her temper

flared hot. You’d be proud of me, Jane, he thought. I’ve finally revealed I’m human.

But you aren’t here to see it. You don’t know that it’s all about you.

“Gabriel?”

He straightened. Turned to see Maura, who had approached so silently that he had not even

noticed she was there.

“I had to get the hell away from that circus,” he said. “Or I swear, I would have wrung that

woman’s neck. It’s bad enough I took it out on her cameraman.”

“So I heard.” She paused. “Jane’s parents just got here. I saw them in the parking lot.”

“They called me, right after they saw the newscast.”

“They’re looking for you. You’d better go to them.”

“I can’t handle them right now.”

“I’m afraid you also have another problem.”

“What?”

“Detective Korsak is here. He’s none too pleased that
he
didn’t get notified at all.”

“Oh, Christ. He’s the last person I want to see.”

“Korsak is her friend. He’s known her as long as you have. You may not get along with him,

but he cares a lot about Jane.”

“Yeah, I know.” He sighed. “I know.”

“These are all people who love her. You’re not the only one, Gabriel. Barry Frost has been

hanging around here all evening. Even Detective Crowe dropped by. We’re all worried sick,

we’re all scared for her.” She stopped. Added: “I know I’m scared.”

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