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Mom parked in Jackson’s driveway, and we ran to the front door. We knocked; then I used my key to open the door and we walked inside.

“It’s Brooklyn,” I called, as we headed into the living area.

“What the hell are you doing here?” Max shouted from above us.

I flinched, then looked up. He stood gazing down at us from the office loft above the living room. In his hands was the high-powered rifle he’d brought from home.

“You’ve got to stop aiming that thing at me,” I said calmly, although my heart was thumping a thousand beats a minute. “Put it down. There’s someone here to see you.”

Mom moved out into the living room and looked up. “Hello, Max.”

Max stared for a long beat; then his shoulders slumped. He lowered the rifle and disappeared from the railing. A few seconds later, I heard his footsteps on the stairs. Then he was in the room and hugging Mom as if he were her own long-lost child.

Mom had tears streaming down her cheeks when she stepped back. I could see Max’s eyes glistening a little, too.

“Well, it’s good to see you’re alive and well,” Mom said, sniffling between words.

“It’s good to see you, too, Becky.” He hugged her again, then found us all some tissues to dry our tears.

“Robson was here earlier,” he said.

“I thought he might come by to see you,” Mom said, smiling.

“Did anyone see you drive up here?” he asked.

Mom waved off his worry. “I drive up here several times a week to see Jackson.”

“Well, Jackson isn’t home,” he said, pacing in front of the windows.

“Nobody knows that,” Mom said. “And even when he’s home, I come up to water his plants. Lord knows he won’t remember to do it.”

Max sighed. “I don’t want to put you in danger.”

“Oh, Max,” Mom said softly. She walked up to the man, who towered over her, and patted his chest. “Don’t you know there’s nothing we wouldn’t do for you? Everyone in Dharma feels the same way. I just wish you’d trusted us more with your problems all those years ago. We could’ve helped.”

He glanced at me sideways. “I’ve heard that a few times now. Believe me, as soon as this nightmare is over, you’re stuck with me. I’m never leaving again.”

“Good.” Mom smiled. Then, without warning, she punched him in the stomach. “Make sure you don’t.”

“For God’s sake,” he said, doubling over. “What’s with you Wainwright women?”

“You pissed us off,” I said, grinning. “Don’t do it again.”

“Jeez, I won’t,” he muttered, rubbing his stomach. He looked at me and jerked his chin toward Mom. “She’s got a stronger right hook than you.”

“Don’t I know it?” I said, smiling fondly at my mom.

Chapter 15

“Emily has to be kept safe,” Max said. “That’s the first priority.” The four of us-Derek, Gabriel, Max, and I-had regrouped at Jackson’s house that night. We’d driven in a roundabout route up the hill in one car, Gabriel’s BMW, and now we were seated at the dining table, eating pizza and salad, drinking wine, and plotting our next moves.

Derek hadn’t found anything criminal in Solomon’s or Angelica’s backgrounds. “Yet,” he emphasized. He had two people in his office looking through their finances. They were also looking into any questionable activities involving the Art Institute over the past few years. I hadn’t considered that connection, but Derek thought it was worth investigating because Solomon was such an important member of the faculty and the art community in general.

Once Derek finished talking, Max moved on to the subject of Emily.

“Her safety was the only reason I disappeared all those years ago,” he said. “I won’t let her be hurt again.”

“I agree with Max that we have to track her down,” I said. Unfortunately, I hadn’t heard back from Emily yet and I was more than a little concerned. Derek, my hero, had returned to Dharma an hour earlier with my battery charger. As soon as my phone began to charge, I checked my messages. There was still nothing from Emily.

There could be any number of reasons why she hadn’t returned my call. Maybe I’d called the wrong Emily. Or maybe I’d called the right one and she just didn’t want to talk to me. Or maybe she was out of town and forgot her charger like I had, or she hadn’t checked her messages yet. Or, worst-case scenario, she had been kidnapped by those two homicidal art professors and was tied up with duct tape in some closet somewhere. I preferred not to go with that possibility. Whichever way you looked at it, it couldn’t be a good sign that we hadn’t heard from Emily.

“One of us needs to track her down,” I said.

“Me,” Max said. “I’ll have to borrow a car. If I go tonight, I’ll be able to-”

“Max…” I just looked at him. “You said you didn’t want to risk her safety, but you want to be the one to go see her?”

“I can be careful,” Max argued.

I felt for him. I knew he was dying to see Emily-the problem was, we didn’t want Emily dying because she’d seen Max.

“I’ll go,” Gabriel said. “First thing in the morning.”

Max scowled. “You’ll scare her.”

“No, I won’t,” Gabriel said easily. “I’m a very charming guy. But that doesn’t matter, since she won’t even know I was there.”

“She won’t,” I assured Max. “He’s kinda scary that way.”

“And now you’re scaring me,” Max muttered, and chomped into another piece of pizza.

“I know it’s hard,” I said, reaching over to squeeze his arm. “But you need to sit tight for another day or so. Besides, you would completely freak her out if you just popped up out of nowhere. She thinks you’re dead. Remember?”

“Why should I sit tight?” he demanded. “I’m asking seriously. Why? I’m tired of hiding. Let’s push this thing wide-open.”

“Not until we know who’s running the show,” Derek said. “You want Emily safe, so we must go slowly. Until we have answers, you cannot be seen outside this house.”

“Nobody’s going to see me if I walk outside. There aren’t any neighbors for a thousand yards in any direction.” Max flopped back in his chair, clutching his wineglass. “And I can see from upstairs if any cars come up or down the hill. I think I’m pretty safe up here.”

“Maybe for a while,” I said. “But Solomon and Angelica both know me. They know my sister Savannah. They know you were friends with my brothers. So there’s a clear connection from my family to you. If they follow any of us, they’ll eventually wind up here. And God only knows what they’ll do to you when they find you.”

“Now who’s being paranoid?” Max said.

“It’s not paranoid if they’re really after you.” I laughed without humor. “I don’t want to be shot at again, and I don’t want you to get hurt.”

“All right, all right,” he said, waving his hands in surrender.

“Thank you.” I smiled briefly. “So Gabriel will go check on Emily tomorrow. And Mom and I made some progress with Crystal Byers and her sister today. We’ll find out tomorrow if Bennie Styles can give us some answers on ammo loading.”

“Sounds like a long shot,” Max said.

“It’s just a way of getting Bennie to talk about the people he knows in the gun community. The Ogunite church has some connections to the Art Institute. He might know someone who knows someone. You know how that works.”

“Yeah, yeah.” Max shook his head stubbornly. “I just have a hard time believing Solomon and Angie are still sitting around thinking about me. It’s been three years. Maybe they’ve moved on.”

“You know they haven’t.” I leaned forward with my elbows on the table and stared hard at Max. “Joe Taylor was killed four days ago. And yesterday someone took a shot at us. They haven’t moved on.”