“You’re still screwed.” She exhaled. “I’m sorry you got so close and couldn’t clear the final hurdle.”
He shrugged, pretending it didn’t matter. “As long as I’m alive, there’s hope. For now, the important thing is seeing you safe. Once you’re settled, I can always circle back under a new name. I can do some more digging. It’s not the end, just a delay, and I am a patient man.”
“You say that like you think I’m going to let you stash me in a storage locker and go back to doing God-knows-what on your own.”
“You have no idea what you’re talking about, what the consequences could be. This isn’t a game.”
“Sure I do. If we get caught, they’ll kill me. Maybe I wind up looking like the woman in the morgue. Noreen.” She didn’t sound frightened anymore, and her eyes were steady on his. “Maybe I end up like Kelly. But if I don’t try, I have to live with my own cowardice, and that would be worse.”
“Nobody expects you to be a hero, goddammit. You don’t have the cape.”
“Or any superpowers,” she said. “I know. But I won’t walk away from this. If I do, I’m just as bad as the people who see the pain in the world and turn their faces away. If I’m not part of the solution, then I’m the problem.”
Oh, Jesus Christ. Such idealism would get her killed. No. Not as long as I’m around.
At length, Søren said, “Very well. But we have to play this right.”
“I’m listening.”
CHAPTER 19
Once they made their plans, they went boldly out the front door of the condo.
Mia had misgivings, but Søren swore he could shake the guy. Or kill him, if need be. The latter went unspoken, but she saw an avid light in his gray eyes.
Sure enough, a dark sedan pulled onto the road after them.
“This asshole’s not even trying to be subtle,” Søren said in disgust. “He’ll make his move when we hit that long, dark stretch of road between here and the city limits.”
Mia knew exactly the section he was talking about. Nerves coiled taut, she watched the rearview mirror. Søren drove as if he didn’t want to lose their tail, which she thought was bizarre, but at this point, she’d cast in her lot with him and had to hope for the best.
“You’re sure you can handle him?”
His brows arched. “Do you doubt me?”
“Of course not.”
“If it makes you feel better, I know what he’ll do. He’ll come up on our left and try to force us into the field. That’s where he intends to kill us and dump the bodies.”
Shit. Hearing the facts stated so baldly shook her. After taking a deep breath, Mia checked her seat belt. However she might’ve quietly envied Kyra her adventuresome life, she wasn’t cut from the same cloth. She felt like she might barf.
It happened as he’d predicted. In the straightaway, the other car accelerated, bearing down on them. Søren let it come up alongside them, but when the killer slammed left, he stomped the brakes. The other car nicked their vehicle, and the momentum carried it across the road. When the tires hit the dirt shoulder, they lost traction. Søren sped up and slammed into the car on the right, driving the sedan into the field.
“If you weren’t with me, I would stop and finish him.” He was actually smiling when he shot through the straightaway and into town. “He’ll have a hell of a time catching up with us now.”
As they hit the highway, Mia had to agree. She leaned her head against the window, intending to rest for a minute only, and then she slept.
It seemed like they’d been on the road forever, but it couldn’t have been more than four hours. After waking, Mia left a message on the elderly couple’s voice mail saying that she had a family emergency, and they needed to contact someone to take care of Peaches. Søren seemed amused at her concern over a cat that didn’t like her much.
The night spread like a black rose before them, split petals of the sky parted to show glimmers of distant light. Dreamily, she watched the moon-kissed clouds whip by. Søren had cracked the window to keep the air fresh; he said driving after dark made him sleepy.
“You’re good at this,” she said, breaking the long silence.
“Practice. But I haven’t had to take off in the middle of the night in a long time.”
“What are you going to do about Lexie? And your mom?”
Headlights from a passing car highlighted his wry smile. “Beulah’s not my mother.”
Mia blinked. “She’s not?”
“No. I kind of… adopted her. Eventually, I decided to make use of my weirdness. I wanted to test it. I was working on my ability to emulate voices, which is a mundane skill. Almost any actor can do it.”
“So you picked some old lady at random and pretended to be her son? To see if you could fool her?”
His hands tightened on the wheel, as if her scorn mattered to him. “She’s blind. Her son had left her in a hellhole of a state facility before going down for statutory.”
She got it now. “And thanks to you, Beulah thinks her son has straightened out and earns enough money to keep her in style. You go see her every week, the nurse said.”
“It’s not a big deal.”
“Yes, it is.”
His annoyance was palpable. “As to what I’ll do, they’re safe enough where they are. Unfortunately, the visits will be interrupted. Lexie won’t mind. Beulah will. But she’s old and accustomed to disappointment.”
“Quit it. I know you’re not that cold, so stop pretending. It only pisses me off.”
“I wouldn’t want to do that,” he muttered.
Despite her melancholy, Mia smiled. “No, you wouldn’t. You still don’t know who you’re dealing with.”
Søren cut her a sharp look. “Then why don’t you tell me? I intend to drive all night before I find us somewhere to regroup.”
She considered. “All right. It’s fair for you to know what you’re getting into.”
“You say that like you’re hiding something.”
“Aren’t we all?”
“Point. Go on, then.”
“I’m a thief.” With those words, she told him something nobody knew about her, not even Kyra.
“You’re joking.”
Mia’s smile widened. “I’m not. You know when I told you my father sent money for college, but I invested it?”
“Mm-hm.”
“I was lying. My dad’s been dead since I was a kid.” Not long after she had visited him, in fact. “The money I used to start my business came from money I skimmed via electronic transfers. I’ve been doing it for years.”
She didn’t know what she expected from him: certainly not judgment or absolution. Mia gazed out the windshield at the red lights of the car in front of them. The dash clock read three forty-five. The sky would be lightening soon, and she didn’t know where the hell they were.
Of course he asked the most important question. “Why?”
“Before I settled on accounting as my security net, I was very into computers.” Jesus, what an understatement. “They seemed like the ultimate escape, allowing me to touch other people’s lives.”
“And you learned to hack.”
“The first time I did it, I got into a Minnesota county library system. Big deal, right?” She studied her clasped hands. “But that gave me a taste for more.”
“Your methods grew more sophisticated and your acts more daring,” he guessed.
“How did you know?”
“It’s kind of like being a superhero, isn’t it? Here you can do this amazing thing-and get away with it-and nobody passing on the street will ever know by looking at you.” With those words, Søren pared her down to the bone.
Yeah, that was exactly it.
“It made me feel special,” she admitted.
“I’d imagine that’s a hard thrill to leave behind.”
“Tell me about it.”
“Do you skim from clients?”
“Generally, no. Not unless they’re real douche bags. Mostly, I just pad my bill.”