“Let me get your cane and your sunglasses,” the guy said, heading out of the garage.
Left to his own devices, Matthias was determined not to keep sitting next to the rear tire of the unmarked like something that had dropped off a mud flap. Reaching up, he planted a hand on the bumper, and with a groan, got himself vertical.
Palming his way around, he leaned in through the driver’s-side door and popped the trunk.
He was staring into the empty space when the roomate came back. Taking the cane, he put the Ray-Bans in place and shook his head. “There isn’t going to be anything on or in the car. We’re thorough like that.” He went around to stand over the body. “I say we put it all in the Hudson at nightfall.”
Shit, he had dinner plans.
“Make that midnight,” he amended as he shut the trunk. Then, “No, two a.m.”
“You have something on tonight?”
As the roommate hairy-eyeballed him, he clammed up; he wasn’t talking about Mels. Trouble was, though, he couldn’t assign this disposal to anybody else, mostly because he had to see the sedan sink into a watery grave with his own eyes: Until his memory was back in its entirety and he was on his way—whatever that meant—he couldn’t risk any third-party complications.
Nothing like a dead body to get the CPD riled, and XOps? They claimed their men.
Adrian stroked his square jaw. “What if I told you we could do it now.”
“How.”
“Trust me.”
“Who do you think you are, Houdini?”
“Nah. Don’t have a straitjacket big enough for this POS. But I do know where to go with it.”
As Adrian stood there in neutral, his eyes were steady, his breathing calm, his vibe one of total confidence.
Matthias didn’t give a shit about people’s words. But he was willing to bet on affect, which was oh so hard to fake.
Unless, of course, the SOB was delusional.
Matthias thought back to that fight in the woods—most guys who handled themselves like this one did were the product of years of training and experience in the business of mortal-stakes risk management.
“So what’s your plan?” Matthias said.
“Dump the damn thing now.”
“In the river? It’s broad daylight.”
“Won’t matter where I’m thinking of.”
Matthias glanced over at the stiff and thought fondly of the way things bottomed out in water. “Let’s get him into the trunk.”
Adrian went over to the body as Matthias hit the release and popped the rear compartment open again. Rigor mortis was in effect, which was good for carrying, not so hot for cramming something in a relatively tight space: Both of them had to throw muscle into getting those knees bent up and pretzeling the torso, the effort proving that a golf bag was so much easier to deal with—especially given that shit made by Callaway always came with handles.
“I’ll drive,” Matthias said.
“You like to be in control, don’t you.”
“You’d better believe it.”
The two of them piled in, and he hot-wired the engine again.
K-turn. Out the drive. Past the farmhouse.
“Where we doing this?” he asked.
“Hang a left. We’re heading north.”
They’d gone about five miles when the roommate looked over. “So you like that reporter, huh.”
“I don’t remember.”
“Liar.”
“I have amnesia, you know.”
“You like her.”
Matthias glanced across the seat. “Please don’t tell me that you’re trying on a career change as a yenta?”
“We’re going to be driving for a while. Just making conversation.”
“Silence is a virtue.” There was a pause. “Besides, I don’t know why you’re interested.”
“I fucked a chick last night.”
Matthias’s brows went up behind Mels’s Ray-Bans. “Well, good for you. You want a cookie? Or a commemorative stamp?”
“It was like…you know when you sneeze?”
“Are you kidding me.”
“I’m serious. When you sneeze, like, it’s a relief of an irritation.”
Matthias gave the guy a long, hard one—as in stare. And then decided, yeah, he kinda knew what the bastard was talking about. “But that’s because you can afford to be blasé.”
“You with that reporter got me thinking is all.”
Don’t ask. Don’t ask— “Why.”
“Take a left up here. Time to cut down to the river’s edge.”
Matthias did as he was told, thinking it was probably a good thing that the conversation dried up.
“Take a right here.”
He hit the brakes and eyeballed the break in the tree line—and the sharp rise. “That’s a footpath.”
“Unless you drive on it with a car. Then it’s a road.”
Matthias eased the Taurus off the asphalt and onto the twin tire grooves carved out through the rugged undergrowth. Talk about taking your time. Between the puddle holes and the steep ascent and the occasional downed branch that was the size of a body, it was not a road less traveled, but a road no-traveled.
Or should have been.
And yet they made it to the end—which was a modest cliff, as it turned out. And twenty feet down? There was a whole lot of lake.
As Matthias put the engine in park, he glanced over at the roomate. “This is perfect.”
“Duh.”
The water below looked like an offshoot of the river, a supplier that channeled the rainfall from the mountains to the Hudson when the level got high enough—which it was now, thanks to the spring rains. The site was also perfectly isolated—evergreen everything all over, with no houses, no other roads, no people.
There was only one problem. “We don’t have a ride home. And I can’t walk that far—”
Adrian pointed across the seats.
In the trees, hidden just out of sight, was the Harley that the guy had used before.
Matthias cranked his head back around. “When the hell did you have time to get your bike out here?”
Jim’s roommate leaned in. “Considering what you and I fought this afternoon, are you really asking me to explain shit.”
Matthias blinked, the rational part of his brain cramping up briefly—and then releasing. “Good point.”
As Adrian got out and started to clear the way to the lip of the cliff, throwing big branches off to the side like they weighed no more than paper clips, Matthias put the sedan in reverse to give them a little bit of a runway; then he got busy finding a heavy rock and dragging it over to the open driver’s-side door. All they needed to do was put the weight on the accelerator, flip the engine into gear, and get the hell back.
Adrian was going to have to do that part.
“You humans always take the hard road,” the roommate muttered as he came over and got the gist.
Matthias glanced across his shoulder. “Humans?”
“Whatever.”
Three minutes later, Adrian jumped out from behind the wheel as that sedan roared forward in a straight line, did a swan dive off the cliff, and plowed into the lake with a massive splash.
Matthias went to the edge and watched the bubbles rise to the surface. “And it’s deep enough.”
The roar of an engine brought his head back around. Adrian had mounted up and was combat-booting that big-ass bike out from the tree cover.
Not exactly the most discreet way of getting them away from the scene. But with his limp, he was hardly in a position to argue for quiet.
As he mounted up behind the roommate, he knew there was a GPS on the sedan—so XOps was going to come and take that body out of the trunk at some point. But at least he was making them work for it. And as for the proximity to Jim’s? It wasn’t as if they didn’t know where the guy lived.
Besides, Jim wasn’t the target.
As Mels lay on her back and stared at the boathouse’s rafters, she tried to get her bearings while water dripped off her hair and her clothes.
Cold was the big one. Gratitude was the second. Third was a big WTF….
Held under the water. Choking. On the verge of death. And then just before her strength left her completely, whatever had pulled her under released its hold: Her arms had suddenly found traction against the river, pulled her up to the surface, gotten her to the air.