“You have to!”
“No, I don’t!”
“Lorraine — ” He swung away, head swiveling left and right. His brain could hardly focus. “Where are your car keys?”
“Martin, I’m not — ”
He grabbed her arms. “Where are your car keys?”
“Get off me!” She flung him away. The hairbrush fell to the floor.
“Mommy!” Tammy’s voice cut through Martin’s senses. He jerked his head toward the hallway. She stood outside her door, teddy bear trailing in her hand.
“Tammy, go back to bed!” he snapped. Instant tears welled in her eyes.
“Don’t you yell at her.” Lorraine turned and bent down, putting her hands on her knees. “Tammy, honey, go back to bed.”
“But Daddy’s — ”
Lorraine scooted down the hall toward her. “Go on now. I’ll be with you in a sec.” She nudged Tammy back into her room.
Martin’s eyes raked to the clock. Less than five minutes. He slapped both hands to his head. Too late, this wouldn’t work. He’d go outside, wait for Nico in the parking lot —
And watch the man drive right on by. One thing Nico had insisted on from day one: follow instructions perfectly or all bets are off.
Surely Nico would come back and hand him the money later. He’d have to pay up or Martin might give him over to the cops.
Right, and give himself up in the process? Nico knew he wouldn’t do that. Besides, if he did, he wouldn’t live to see nightfall. And what about Lorraine and Tammy?
“Don’t cross me, Martin. ” If he didn’t do this right, they could all be killed.
Lorraine closed Tammy’s door and stalked back to him, arms folded. “You better talk to me.”
Martin’s wild gaze fell to the kitchen table by the window — and Lorraine’s purse. He yanked it up and thrust it into her arms, crazy words spilling from his mouth. “Listen to me. Grab Tammy and drive away from here right now. Stay gone for half an hour. A man’s coming over, and if he finds you here we’re going to lose a lot of money. Go!”
She gawked at him. “What money?”
“Leave.” Martin pushed her hard. Lorraine stumbled sideways two steps, shock creasing her forehead, then righted herself. She twisted back to stare at Martin.
“Is this about the bank robbery?”
Martin felt his face crumble. “Please, Lorraine.”
Her eyes widened. “It isn’t, right? Tell me it isn’t.”
“It isn’t.”
“Then why don’t I believe you?”
He licked his lips. “I . . . I just want Tammy to get well.”
Lorraine processed the words. She looked at him from the corner of her eye, as if afraid to hear what was coming next. “I want her to get well too, Martin.”
Desperation flooded his veins. “Lorraine, go. This man’s part of the mob. If he finds you here, he’ll kill us all.”
“The mob? As in Mafia?” Color drained from Lorraine’s cheeks. Martin could read her thoughts. The Mafia were in movies, not real life. Not their life. “What have you done?”
“Just get Tammy out of here!”
Mouth open, she ogled Martin, fear and confusion wrenching her expression. He knew she’d never leave him alone in trouble. But the thought of Tammy being hurt . . .
She snatched up Tammy’s hairbrush and ran down the hall.
Martin dropped his head in his hands. A second . . . two ticked by. He was going to explode. Suddenly he remembered Nico’s instruction about the door. He hurried over and unlocked it.
From outside drifted the sound of a car. Heart in his throat, Martin jumped to a window and peered through the curtains.
Nico had arrived.
SIXTEEN
At the sight of the horrific picture, Kaycee rocked back in her chair. The coffee mug smacked against her mouth, sloshing hot liquid across her lips. “Aah!” She dropped the mug and shoved her rolling chair away from the desk. The mug landed with a crack, spewing coffee on the hardwood floor.
Robotlike, she bent over and righted it.
Kaycee stared at the monitor, lips throbbing.
Same dead man. But this shot wasn’t a close-up. It showed the body down to the chest, the man’s arms splayed out. In bold letters across the bottom of the picture ran one word.
Exposure.
A strangled sound seeped from Kaycee’s throat. That dark yellow floor. It was the same one from her dream. And the spilled blood looked just the same.
How did they know her dream?
We see you. Exposure.
On her desktop the dead man flashed away. The crimson-yellow sunset reappeared.
Kaycee’s heartbeat sounded in her ears.
A loud bang burst from the street. Kaycee yelped. She jerked to her right, peered through the den and out a front window.
A truck. Just an old truck. Backfiring. Kaycee pressed a hand to her racing heart. She was about to throw up.
Her mouth and chin burned. Leaving the spilled coffee, she jumped up and ran to the kitchen. She yanked open the freezer door and grabbed three ice cubes. With fumbling fingers she threw them into a plastic zip bag and pressed the coldness against her skin.
Kaycee leaned weakly against the counter. Her mind couldn’t process what had just happened. How could somebody do that to her computer? Why? Who were these people? What did they want?
Exposure. Like the title of her column about the woman afraid of cameras . . .
The phone rang.
Hannah.
Kaycee threw the ice bag in the sink and snatched up the receiver, not stopping to check the incoming ID. “Hello?”
“Kaycee, this is Chief Davis.”
The police chief — a kind and patient man in his mid-fifties, with little hair left and a lean, angular face. “Did you find Hannah?”
“No. We went through her house. No sign of forced entry. Her parents report no strange phone calls. And Hannah doesn’t have access to Internet that they don’t know about. Has she ever been on the Internet at your house?”
His words were clipped, but he sounded so calm. Kaycee knew that was part of his job, but how could he sound so calm?
“No. She’s never been on my computer at all. Hannah doesn’t even talk about MySpace or anything like that.”
“Okay, good. I’m calling to give you a heads-up. In searching her room we found a note beneath her pillow. Her father says it’s Hannah’s handwriting.”
“What did it say?”
“Let me read it to you. I’ve got it bagged up here.”
Kaycee’s lips throbbed.
“ ‘I’ve run away. Don’t look for me. I’ll come back when I’m ready. Dad, why did you marry Gail? You act like you’ve forgotten Mom. And me. I asked Kaycee if I could live with her, but she said no. So I’m leaving.’ ”
She said no. Heat shot through Kaycee’s limbs. She couldn’t bear to imagine it — Hannah walking out into the night because of her. If she’d just let the girl stay with her for a few days . . .
“Kaycee?”
“I — yeah.” She could hardly breathe. What had happened to Hannah? She apparently hadn’t tried to come here after all. So where did she go? They should have found her by now. A beautiful little girl out alone after dark.
“Listen to me, Kaycee, this is not your fault.”
“Uh-huh.”
“It isn’t. Don’t go there. Believe me, Ryan Parksley is feeling enough guilt for the both of you. I’ve left an officer to stay with them and help them get through this.” Kaycee heard muted voices in the background. “But guilt won’t help Hannah right now. We need everyone involved to focus on any possibilities of where she might have gone.”