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Taking his time, forcing himself to be calm, Whit let his fingers explore the tools. A tape measure. A hammer, which would be great to swing at Alex’s face. A Baggie, with what felt like an assortment of screws, nails, and lug nuts inside. A small ball of twine. Pliers. His fingers found a bar in the space above the tools. A handle. The tool box had a lift-out tray, with another compartment beneath.

He eased the top compartment out. His fingers fumbled inside the deeper well of the box. More Baggies with nails or hooks. Screwdrivers with hard plastic handles, two or three. A ball peen hammer, the better to break Alex’s teeth with if he got a chance. Masking tape, a roll thinned from use. Electrical wire. He pricked his finger on a long V of sharp metal, with wicked little teeth on each side, a carved wooden handle. He gently explored the tool with his fingertips. A wallboard saw, the kind used to slice through Sheetrock, to make cutouts for light switches and electrical outlets. But with that nice pointed blade for plunge cuts into walls.

All it takes is one mistake, Whit thought, and, you murdering bastard, you just made it.

‘You’re gonna sit here real quiet,’ Gooch said. ‘You mess this up so that Whit or Lucy gets hurt, you’re the mess.’

‘And I thought we’d gotten to be friends,’ Stoney said.

‘Yeah, I’m going to be godfather to your kids.’

‘So what, I sit here and you negotiate with Alex?’

‘No. You sit here and I get rid of him if I have to,’ Gooch said. ‘Then I give you to the judge and he figures out what to do with you.’

Talking to him like he was a kid. ‘Be nice, Gooch. Or I’ll press charges and you’ll go to prison.’

‘Are you quite so eager to get more in the public eye that way, Stoney? Sit your ass down,’ Gooch said, and Stoney said nothing. He eased down into the chair behind the desk and Gooch turned to douse out the lights.

Now, Stoney thought. He grabbed the handle of the desk drawer, gave it a heavy yank.

The drawer slid out, fast, and Stoney swung it as he bolted around the desk, connecting with Gooch’s skull as he turned. Gooch went down. Stoney brought the drawer down again.

Gooch’s eyes went white. ‘Fuuu-’

Stoney took the heavy end of the drawer and smacked it down hard on Gooch’s head again, twice. Gooch sprawled across the concrete floor.

My God, that was fast, Stoney thought. He picked up the gun, groped Gooch’s thick neck for a pulse. After a moment he found it. But Gooch seemed to be out cold. Stoney considered whether or not to shoot him. Easier than shooting Danny. At least he wasn’t looking at him with a wet face and a horrible, blubbering pleading look. He pressed the gun against the back of Gooch’s head.

But then headlights gleamed against the shuttered warehouse windows, a car turning in, and Stoney Vaughn threw a tarp over Gooch, took the gun, doused the last light, and stepped back into the shadows, into the maze of unopened crates and equipment in the clutter.

Stoney knelt down by a section of crates in the back. He checked Gooch’s gun by flashlight, a full clip. He sat back, raised the flashlight, its little circle of light spilling along the crates five feet in front of him.

He froze. ‘That bastard,’ he whispered.

38

Whit felt the car come to a stop, heard the engine turn off. He had reloaded the toolbox, closed it, tucked the wallboard saw into the waist of his khakis, tightened his belt. He hoped he could pull the blade out fast without slicing himself open. He closed his eyes, thought of Lucy.

Her asking, I’m safe with you, aren’t I? And him saying, Always, babe. Jesus, she’d wanted reassurance – she’d wanted to know he loved her no matter what.

He was crouched, shoulders against the trunk’s lid.

C’mon, c’mon, he thought. I want you.

The driver’s door slammed; he heard footsteps against concrete.

‘Judge?’ Alex’s voice called, low, quiet. Even gentle.

‘Yes?’

‘I want you to lay facedown, hands laced on your head. You yell for help, you kick the trunk or me, you fart too loud, I empty this clip into you. You understand me?’

‘Yeah,’ Whit said. He lay down as Alex ordered, the little wicked saw sharp against his hip.

A key slid into the lock, the trunk door opened. The muzzle of a gun pressed into the back of Whit’s neck.

‘Up. Slowly. Not a sound.’

‘You’ll be in hell in less than ten minutes,’ Whit said. ‘You don’t have a prayer against Gooch.’ He got up, felt the saw hold in its place against his leg.

‘You got in over your head, Your Honor. I don’t hold greed against you. But you took on too much.’

He didn’t want Gooch to kill Alex. He wanted to do it himself.

He stepped out of the trunk, the gun still firmly at the back of his head, and the two men walked to the warehouse door. An electronic keypad was by the door and Alex entered in a code. The electronic locks on the door clicked open.

‘You first, Judge,’ Alex said.

Whit stepped inside the darkness.

‘Guchinski?’ Alex called. ‘Put the lights on. Now. Or the judge dies.’

‘Chill, Alex. It’s all right.’ Stoney Vaughn, a little rasp of voice in the blackness.

‘Where’s your new buddy?’ Alex called.

‘Barely breathing on the concrete floor. I bashed his head in.’

Alex waited. ‘I don’t believe you.’

‘Come in and see.’ Stoney’s voice shook.

Fear? Anger? Whit wondered.

‘What are you pissed about? Jesus, he kidnaps you. I try to save you-’ Alex said.

‘You’re quite the hero,’ Stoney said from the dark. ‘You coming in or not?’

‘Do you have the Eye, Stoney?’ Alex said.

‘Right here in my pocket.’

‘Okay, we’re cool, right? I’m coming in now.’ And Alex did, pushing Whit along in front of him, not closing the door after him in case he had to barrel out fast. No light on in the warehouse, just the smell of dust and machinery, and oddly enough, the reek of greasy Chinese food.

‘Alex,’ Stoney’s voice called. ‘Shut the door.’

‘Turn on the lights. What’s with this fucking darkness act?’ Alex’s hands fumbled for the switches, couldn’t find them.

The lights clanged on, Stoney standing ten feet away, a gleaming pistol in his hand.

‘Nice gun,’ Alex said.

‘It’s a Shootyadickov,’ Stoney said. ‘I got it from Gooch. Hello, Judge. Sorry about this. Jesus, Alex, you beat the crap out of him.’

Whit’s heart sank. The wallboard saw was a stupid, stupid idea. Gooch down. Him stuck between these two assholes, each with a gun. He kept his hands down by his untucked shirt. ‘He shot Lucy,’ he said.

Stoney’s lips – clenched together in a tough-guy sneer – parted. ‘What?’

‘She’s dead,’ Alex said. ‘I didn’t want to bring them both.’

‘That… wasn’t necessary. I…’ Stoney said.

‘You what?’ Alex said. ‘You need her land to rebury the gold so you can discover it and, what, get your picture on the fucking cover of National Geographic? Man, give it up.’

‘I liked Lucy,’ Stoney said.

‘Yeah, she seemed real nice. A shame. I hate what I have to do sometimes. Where’s the Eye?’

Whit kept waiting for Alex to say, Well, Gooch is out of the game – don’t need you and shoot him dead. But instead Alex kept Whit in front of him, still a shield.

‘Don’t worry about the Eye,’ Stoney said. ‘I promised you could keep most of the coins. I’d get thirty percent and the Eye. That’s more than fair. Let’s just settle our accounts now, Alex.’

‘I can get the coins for you tomorrow. Jesus, I kind of had my hands full tonight.’

‘You’ll get them tonight.’ Stoney’s face reddened.

‘I can’t,’ Alex said.

‘Sure you can. They’re just about thirty feet away, in crates over there,’ Stoney said. ‘What I want to know, Alex buddy, is how the hell you got the treasure into my own warehouse.’

‘Don’t know what you mean.’

‘The coins. They are all over there in that corner, crated, just as we left them in the storage unit,’ Stoney said.