‘Right.’ Ken rolled his eyes. ‘Absolutely.’
‘I’m not a cokehead. Don’t know who told you that.’
‘Alice. She says you’ve been snorting some of the merchandise.’
‘Lie.’
‘Inventory is missing. And money. Did you and Reuben really think you could embezzle funds that easily?’
Demetrius’s brows lowered. ‘I have no idea what you’re talking about.’
Ken drew a pair of collapsible bolt cutters from the bottom of his toolbox and snapped the arms out to their full length. He eyed Demetrius’s body objectively. ‘Let’s start simply. Where is your iPad?’
‘In my car.’
He ran the bolt cutters over one of Demetrius’s toes. ‘Wrong. We searched the car.’
‘It’s there.’
He snipped off the top of Demetrius’s big toe, waited for the resulting scream to quiet. ‘I forgot how high you can scream,’ he said. ‘Damn, D.’ He rubbed his finger in his ear. ‘You could break glass with that. Let’s try again. Where is the iPad?’
‘In the car. Look in the trunk,’ Demetrius added, crushing his words together in his haste to get them out. ‘Under the carpet.’
‘Now we’re getting somewhere.’ He’d had Burton tow Demetrius’s car here so that the bloody seats could be destroyed before they had the vehicle smashed down to scrap. Sean and Alice had been waiting for Burton when he arrived, so the car was still in the garage.
He called Alice, told her to get the iPad and take it to Sean, who’d set up a cot in his office downtown. It would have been easier for Sean to come to the house, but his son was a bit of an eccentric introvert and rarely left his office. Ken had once tried to push him out of his comfort zone, but Sean had a mini-breakdown, and since nobody understood the computer networks he’d set up, Ken now let him stay where he was happiest.
Sean and Alice would have the bulk of Demetrius’s knowledge in the iPad, but Ken knew his old friend still kept a lot of information stored in his brain.
He ran the tip of the bolt cutter up the inside of Demetrius’s thigh, stopping a fraction of an inch from the family jewels he knew his friend was so proud of.
He smiled down at Demetrius, who was quivering, his nostrils flaring like a bull ready to charge. ‘Let’s talk passwords.’
Twenty-seven
Cincinnati, Ohio
Wednesday 5 August, 6.00 A.M.
Scarlett smacked the alarm clock on her nightstand, but it kept ringing. ‘Fuck,’ she muttered, then realized it was her phone. She blinked hard, remembering in an instant.
Marcus. Grabbing the phone, she rolled over to find herself alone in her bed. A frisson of dread raced down her back. She remembered how upset he’d been just before she fell asleep. I shouldn’t have pushed him so hard to tell me about that damn gun.
Getting out of bed, she threw on shorts and a T-shirt as she answered the phone without looking at the caller ID. This early it could only be Isenberg or Deacon. Or her mother if somebody had died. ‘Hello?’
‘Scarlett, it’s Uncle Trace.’
She stopped short. ‘Good morning. I’m sorry I wasn’t there for the search last night. I got called to a crime scene.’
‘Your lieutenant told me. She said you accompanied the victim to the hospital.’
‘We had two, actually. Both are still in ICU. But I don’t think you’re calling about the two victims, are you?’
‘No. I found your missing women.’
She sucked in a startled breath. ‘What? Where? When? My boss said the dogs lost the trail, that she thought they’d gotten a ride. She said you’d gone home.’
‘That’s all true. But then I thought that if they were frightened of deportation – and Catholic – they might ask whoever picked them up to drop them off at a church.’
‘For sanctuary,’ she murmured. She tossed the shorts aside and went to her closet for trousers, blouse and a jacket. Clearly it was time to start her day. ‘Where did you find them?’
‘Saint Barbara’s. It’s just outside of Georgetown, Kentucky.’
‘Good grief, that’s an hour south of here. Somebody took them all the way down there?’
‘A trucker. He dropped them off at his old parish.’
‘That was nice of him. I wish his parish had been closer.’ She’d found clean underwear and one shoe. She wasn’t sure where the other had landed when she’d kicked it off last night. ‘Are you there now, or did you call them?’
‘I’m here. I called first, told the priest to keep them there, then I drove down. I didn’t want to call you until I’d confirmed I had the right people, but they are Mila and Erica Bautista.’
She got down on her knees to look under the bed for her errant shoe. No Zat, she thought. Her dog must have overcome his fear of the boisterous sex she and Marcus had had. Unfortunately no shoe either.
‘Did you call the local cops?’
‘No. They said they’ll only talk to Marcus.’
Scarlett pushed herself to her feet. ‘How do they know his name?’
‘Tabby Anders showed them the newspaper article. She told them that he was the man that Tala had met in the park, who’d offered to help. They said that if I called the police they would run. So don’t dress like a cop, okay?’
‘Okay. I’ll find Marcus and we’ll get down there as fast as we can. Tell them he’s on his way. Did they say anything?’
‘Just that they wanted to see Malaya and Tabby. I assured them that Malaya was safe and being cared for. I called the hospital for an update on Miss Anders. No change.’
‘I figured. Nobody’s contacted me. Thank you, Uncle Trace. I owe you.’
‘Don’t say that, Scarlett,’ he warned. ‘You might not like the marker I call in.’
She sighed. He’d ask her to come back to the Church. She knew it. Right now, she was so grateful to him for finding the women that she felt it was the least she could do. ‘I’ll get to Saint Barbara’s as soon as I can.’
She threw the cop clothes on her bed and picked out a pretty sundress and flats. She got dressed, brushed her teeth, grabbed her hairbrush and went in search of Marcus.
‘Marcus?’ she called, going down the stairs, but there was no answer. She checked her garage, but her car was there. She’d seen from her bedroom window that the Tank was in the driveway, so unless he’d taken a cab or called someone to get him, he was still here somewhere.
‘Zat? Here, boy. Wanna go outside?’ But there was no staccato sound of her three-legged dog running to go for a walk. When she got to the kitchen, she saw the remnants of a sandwich, so at least Marcus wasn’t hungry, wherever he’d gone.
The only place she hadn’t looked was the basement, and sure enough, the hook-and-eye latch was open. She’d installed it the day she’d gotten Zat, worried that she’d accidentally leave the door open and he’d tumble down the steep steps. The house was so old that none of the staircases were built to code, and the staircase to the basement was the worst.
She started down the stairs, relieved to see Zat curled up on the rug at the bottom. She’d started to call Marcus’s name, when she heard a sound that silenced her. Hard thuds, interspersed with the vilest curses she’d ever heard, uttered by the most beautiful voice she’d ever known. She got to the bottom of the stairs and watched him, not sure how to approach him.
Marcus was shirtless and shoeless, wearing only a pair of gym shorts that were soaked with sweat and her brother Phin’s boxing gloves. Sweat poured off his body as he pounded the ever-living hell out of Phin’s old punching bag. He must have found the hook that had come with it, and screwed it into the ceiling beam.
She winced at the sight of his broad back. A big bruise covered a quarter of his skin, the result of the bullet that had been stopped by his Kevlar vest the morning before. He didn’t seem to be letting that hold him back, though. She had to admire the athleticism it took to keep the punching bag at a constant angle, but worried that he’d hurt his hands, even while wearing the gloves.