“What the hell?” the woman yelled. “What’s that banging? What’s going on down there?”
Damn!
Suddenly the footsteps were ringing down the steps.
No!
Olivia wasn’t ready.
She threw another blow at the tripod, hitting hard as her attacker descended. Wearing a wet suit, she dropped to the floor of the hold, splashing water.
The camera teetered.
Olivia gave the tripod a final whack!
The legs gave way and the camera flopped off its base and fell into the water.
“Noooo! What the hell is this?” her attacker demanded, an expression of sheer horror on her face. “You miserable bitch, stop it!” She was sloshing through the salt water, trying to reach the camera as it sank.
Olivia fell to her knees, her hands scrabbling outside the cage, trying to reach the camera, water splashing around her face. She held her breath. Scrabbled frantically. Her finger grazed the side of the camera. It floated off. She tried again, sweeping it with a paddling motion toward the bars.
“Hey!” the woman screeched. “No! Stop! What do you think you’re doing?” She lunged through the water to the cage.
Olivia’s fingers curved over the handle and she pulled. The camera hit the bars and she nearly dropped it.
Her attacker sprang forward.
Gulping salt water, Olivia adjusted the camera so that it slipped through the bars to the inside of the cage.
Freezing, she was coughing and choking on the briny seawater, but she didn’t care as she turned the lens on the woman who’d abducted her, the woman glaring at her and standing knee-deep in water.
“Give it back.”
Olivia, seeing the red light was still glowing, kept filming.
“I said, give it back to me right now, you little bitch!”
“Come and get it.” Even if she pulled out a gun, or the Taser again, Olivia wouldn’t give up her prize.
The woman was freaking. “I said…” Her gaze swept the interior of the cage where her pictures were floating in the water. “What? You tore up my album!” Her eyes rounded in pure horror. “No! You couldn’t.” As pages reached the edge of the cage, she reached through, plucking them up. “No…no, this isn’t right! This isn’t how it’s supposed to go.” She picked up each page and held it high overhead, shaking them off. “Oh God, what’s wrong with you? You can’t…” She spied more of the pages inside the cage, far from her, the pictures scattered, the bloody plastic sheaths cast aside.
“No!” She was fumbling with her keys, desperate to retrieve the album. “No, this is all wrong.”
Olivia just kept on filming.
“Look what you’ve done!” She was frantic, desperate to retrieve what was left of the soggy, disintegrating album. “You screwed everything up! You’re ruining everything!” Her frustration and paranoia mounted and for the first time, it seemed, she realized her actions were being caught on camera.
“Give that back to me now!”
Olivia wasn’t in the mood. Shivering, keeping her tormentor in her viewfinder, she said, “You want it, bitch? Then come and get it.”
“There she is!” the skipper yelled over the cutter’s engines and the rush of wind. They were jetting through the dark water, leaving a white wake behind.
“Oh, shit, she’s listing.”
Bentz squinted into the night, saw the Merry Anne in the powerful beam of the search light.
His heart fell to the floor as he saw the skipper was right; the vessel was leaning hard to one side, sinking fast.
“No,” he whispered, disbelieving. “Oh, God, no!” Against everyone’s protests, he’d donned a wet suit with the intent of boarding, but now the captain was pulling up short. “Get closer!”
“No. We’d better leave this to the Guard,” he said. Already rescuers were trying to board the smaller craft. “Just wait.”
Not a chance.
“Pull up closer,” Bentz insisted.
He thought Montoya would argue. Instead, he turned to Hayes and ordered: “Do it.”
The cutter drew alongside the listing boat. “Really Bentz, you should leave this to the professionals,” Hayes warned. They were less than twenty feet from the sinking Merry Anne. “You’ll only get in the way.”
“I am a professional,” Bentz reminded him as he climbed onto the railing. “And it’s my damned wife.”
From the corner of his eye, he saw Hayes lunge, ready to restrain him, but Montoya caught the L.A. detective’s arm. “Let him go.”
Bentz focused on the boat, looming larger as they closed in. Twelve feet away…eight feet…five…At that second, Bentz jumped.
The killer’s plan was falling apart.
As her precious photos swirled on the surface of the rising water, she gathered them, one by one. “No, no, no!” she whined, temporarily forgetting her prisoner. “All my work…years…oh, God, this can’t be happening…my photographs!” She seemed near the brink of tears as water sloshed around her waist and Olivia, fighting cramps and freezing, caught her paranoia on film. Plastic pages floated past, photos curled as they became saturated with water. Olivia’s back was pressed against the bars, the boat tilting at a frightening angle. In a few minutes it would be over. She had to get the damned keys!
Plastic pages floated past.
Olivia thought she heard a noise, a thud. Oh, Jesus, was the boat breaking apart?
The woman heard it as well and she seemed to snap back to reality, noticed again that she was being caught on film.
“Give me back the camera!”
“I said come and get it.” Olivia stood firm, propped by the steel bars, the camera trained on the bitch’s face. Water was splashing above her waist now, weighing her down.
“Damn it!” the woman held the wet photos against her with one hand and struggled with her keys in the other.
“Who are you?” Olivia said. “You might want to tell the viewers your name so you get all the credit that’s due you. Let’s see, is your name…Dawn?” Olivia guessed, remembering that Bentz had once been involved with a cop by that name.
“Stop it.”
“Or are you Bonita…was that it?”
“That bitch? No way!” She snorted in disgust. “Bentz must have mentioned me.”
“I don’t think so.”
Another thud…oh, God, the boat was going down!
“Sure he did. Corrine. Right?”
Olivia shook her head. This woman was Corrine O’Donnell? Of course she’d heard the name before, but she wasn’t going to give this twisted killer the satisfaction. The boat groaned menacingly.
“Corrine. I worked with him. Dated him. Jesus, we slept together and…he loved me. We…we dated twice, almost lived together but then he left me. Both times for Jennifer…” Her voice trailed off. “They all leave, you know. Every one of them but Bentz…I was fool enough to have trusted him twice and he left me alone…all alone…” She shuddered, then, as if realizing she was letting on too much, focused on Olivia again. “I should have used the stun gun on you again!” Another picture passed by, this one of her with Bentz.
She let out a little squeak of denial, then snatched it up. She nearly lost the keys, trying to unlock the gate, “But I wanted you to fight. I wanted ‘RJ’ to see you straining to breathe your last pathetic breath, and now…” She gasped as the keys fell from her fingers, drifting through the bars to the inside of the cage.
Panicked, she tried to stretch her hand into the cage to take hold of them.
Olivia, seeing her chance, shoved the woman back. If she could snatch the keys and unlock the gate, maybe make it to the stairs…
The boat let out a long, low moan and the lights flickered. Olivia’s heart sank. It was now or never!
Taking in a gulp of air, Olivia spotted the fallen keys, then dove down. Her hair and clothes floated around her. On the floor of the cage, the keys glistened enticingly as she reached for them.