“Stacy?”
I nodded. “I’m going to ask you a huge favor. I need you to go to New York and watch over her. Don’t let her know you’re there, or she’ll find ways to avoid you.”
“I know.”
“Make sure no one touches her, Killian.” I grabbed his arm as he turned to go. “Don’t let anything happen to her.”
“I won’t, Pops.”
I turned back to the message as Killian’s footsteps receded through the building. I couldn’t let it stay there. If Jack saw this…I had to get rid of it.
I searched through the warehouse, tugging my cell phone out of my pocket to call Cassidy. She didn’t answer the first time, so I dialed again, mumbling to myself as I searched through some junk left behind in the warehouse. I found a scraping knife that I thought would work. When Cassidy didn’t answer on the third call, I began to worry.
“Ian, go to the house and make sure Cassidy’s okay.”
“Pops—”
“Don’t argue with me, Ian. I’ll explain later.”
I worked quickly. The paint was thick and fresh, so it peeled off fairly easily. By the time I was done, there were marks left, but you couldn’t tell what it once said. I was sitting in my car, wiping drywall dust and paint chips off my fingers when Ian called.
“She’s not here.”
“What do you mean she’s not there?”
“She’s gone, Pops. I searched the entire house. Twice.”
“You looked in the bedroom? The bathroom?”
“Of course.” There was a slight hesitation. “It looks like she took a shower and then left in a hurry. Her clothes are just piled on the floor and there’s a wet towel…”
“Does it look like there was a struggle?”
“No. Just that she left in a hurry.”
“I’m on my way.”
I couldn’t think of anything but getting to Cassidy as I rushed through the busy Boston streets. Why did it always have to take so long to get from one place to the other? I gripped the steering wheel so hard I might have broken it if I’d been there a moment longer. But I finally pulled into the driveway and slid to a stop. I jumped out before the car was braked for more than a few seconds.
Ian was waiting at the front door.
“Are you sure…?”
“She’s gone, Pops.”
“Have you tried her phone?”
Ian held it up, the small, blue iPhone I’d bought for Cassidy just a day ago.
She’d left it behind.
“There’s a text message.”
Ian pulled it up and held it up for me.
“She’s on her way to California.”
“I checked the airlines. There was a flight that left ten minutes ago from Logan.”
“Call the pilot.”
I spun on my heel, but Ian caught my arm.
“You shouldn’t go, Pops. Let me go.”
I shook my head. “I need to do this.”
“But this is what they want. Don’t you see? They want you to come running to her rescue so that they can trap you.”
“No, they want me to watch the people I care about die, one by one. They won’t hurt me.”
Ian studied my face, his eyes narrowed. “At least let me come with you.”
I nodded grudgingly. He followed me out to the car and we spun out, rushing back across town to the private airstrip where the plane was kept. Killian had already called and arranged a flight to New York, so the pilots had to quickly refile their flight plan. But everyone was willing and ready by the time we arrived.
I explained to Ian what we’d found at the warehouse on the way.
“It is personal.”
“Looks like it.”
“But who would want to hurt you?”
I glanced at him, a chuckle almost leaving my lips. “You’re joking, right? I’ve hurt a lot of people over the years.”
“But most of that’s over now. Do you think it has something to do with the Italians?”
My thoughts moved back to the rival group that’d been causing Jack so much grief over the past year. “No. They have no reason to mess with me personally. They might go after Jack, but not me.”
“Then who?”
I shrugged. “One of the old guards. Someone related to one of the men I’ve killed over the years. Someone hurt by one of the robberies I committed years ago.”
“But that’s just the thing. Those things were years ago. Most of your criminal acts are decades old.”
“We aren’t saints. I shot that guy last month.”
“Because he was breaking into one of the warehouses.”
“There might appear to be a code among criminals, but we are all criminals at the end of the day.”
Ian stared out the window for a long moment. Then he sighed.
“Whoever it is, he’s good. I haven’t been able to find anything on Cassidy’s phone that could tell us where this guy is. He used burner phones and a computer program to force the call to bounce off of so many cell towers that it’s impossible to tell where the calls originated. And the videos? He used some sort of software to dull the background noises and remove anything that might give us a hint about where they were filmed.”
“Then we’re still pretty much at zero?”
“Pretty much. The only thing I can tell you is that I think she’s being held in Los Angeles simply because it wouldn’t make sense to try to travel far with her. And the videos came almost immediately. They couldn’t have filmed while on the move, nor are they in motel rooms when they filmed them. There would have been indications.”
“Where do you think they are?”
“A house? Maybe an apartment, but I doubt it. I would guess they rented a house not far from her condo.”
“Then we have a search area.”
Ian shrugged. “I suppose.”
“Once we find Cassidy, we’ll begin searching.”
“But Pops—”
“She’s your sister, Ian, like it or not. Just because I did something unforgiveable doesn’t mean you can take it out on her. She deserves better than that.”
A muscle popped in Ian’s jaw as he crossed his arms tight over his chest.
“Abigail would have accepted her with open arms. You know that.”
“But you cheated on her.”
“I did. Brianna didn’t do anything wrong.” I slowed the car as we pulled into the airport. “If you’re going to be mad at anyone, be mad at me.”
“How much did Mom know?”
“Don’t you think that’s between her and me?”
Ian glanced at me. “Did she know?”
“She knew about Cassidy. Even met her once. But you knew that already.”
“Did she know you were in love with her?”
I stopped the car and threw it into park, shifting to look at my son. “Is that what it is? That I love her?”
Ian didn’t say anything at first. Despite the fact that he was a grown man, nearly thirty just like Killian, he looked like a petulant child as he stared out the windshield at the jet just a few yards in front of us. Killian was there with the pilot, watching us. But he didn’t approach. Killian had this third sense for tense situations. He always knew when to back off and let people deal with their own baggage their own way.
He was his mother’s child that way.
“Abigail knew who I was. She accepted that I wasn’t the best man in the world. But she also embraced the fact that I was there, that I was the best husband I could be. She loved me enough for both of us, and I will forever be grateful to her for that.”
“She deserved better.”
“She did. And I told her that. But for better or for worse, Abigail chose me.”
Ian glanced at me. “It just feels like an insult to her memory, you with this woman.”
“Abigail would want me to be happy. And Cassidy makes me happy.”
Ian couldn’t argue with that, but he still wasn’t ready to accept it, either.
&n
bsp; We boarded the plane, both of us lost in our thoughts. Killian didn’t ask and that was appreciated. I stared out the window and thought about the last time I was on this plane. Cassidy sat beside me, her hand tucked into mine. Before everything became so crazy, before I knew I had a daughter, before I knew there was danger lying in wait for my entire family.
Before I was rushing to save the one thing that was most precious to me.
Chapter 21
Cassidy
The plane was crowded, some man with heavy thighs beside me, his body pressed tighter against mine than Brian’s had been hours ago. I shifted, staring out the window at the clouds, willing the plane to move faster. I wondered if Brian had found the phone, if he knew where I was headed by now. I hadn’t wanted to leave the phone. I’d wanted to call Brian, to tell him, to ask him what I should do. But the kidnapper had been clear in his instructions.
Leave the phone. Let him follow. I want him to see.
Was I leading Brian into a trap? What about Brianna? Was she really…no, I couldn’t let my thoughts go there. She was going to be okay. I had to believe that, or all this was for nothing.
I closed my eyes and willed the fear burning in my throat to die down. I couldn’t believe this was happening. I needed it not to be happening. I needed my daughter to be safe. I needed to be in Brian’s arms, safe from the dangers in the world. Why couldn’t I have that?
The plane suddenly dropped as we hit a pocket of turbulence. I cried out.
“It’s alright,” the guy beside me said. “Plane crashes are so rare that our chances of going down are one in a million.”
“Thanks.”
Thanks for that image. For that thought. For another thing to be worried about.
I opened my eyes and stared out the window again.
There was a burner phone in my pocket. The kidnapper had informed me that I would find it in my purse. How or when he put it there, I didn’t know. But the idea that Brianna’s kidnappers had someone close enough to me to put a phone in my purse took away any sense of security I might have had.
Ian was right. Someone was watching me.
The phone buzzed almost the second the plane landed. I tugged it out of my pocket and read the text message as I quickly followed the other passengers off the plane.
There’s a car waiting for you out front. Green sedan.
Was I about to be kidnapped, too? Why would these people want Brianna and me, too?
I followed the signs, walked quickly, wondering if maybe Brianna would be in the car. But that would be asking too much, wouldn’t it?
The sedan was at the curb. Empty. There was no one else in sight, just other passengers talking excitedly with their family members, rushing to get to wherever it was they were going. I climbed into the car, searching for the keys. They were in the console, under a GPS device.
I turned the device on, and it quickly lit up, showing a menu that indicated it had pre-saved destinations. I touched that button and discovered that the kidnappers had programmed the machine to take me to a specific place on the other side of the city. With a deep breath, I started the car.
I hate driving in the city. I hate the aggressiveness of the other drivers. I was nervous enough as it was, but the traffic—rush hour traffic—was making it even worse. The last time I’d been here, I’d taken a cab. I told Brianna that I couldn’t rent a car because I would never survive driving on the interstate. She’d laughed and reassured me that once I was moved in, I wouldn’t have to drive. There were buses and taxis. Not only that, but the businesses I would want to frequent were within walking distance of our condos. It’d be okay.
It wasn’t okay. But I’d do anything for her.
The GPS took me to a deserted area not far from the Los Angeles Zoo. There was a little park surrounded by trees. Beautiful, really. But I didn’t understand why I was there.
Wait by the green bench.
I got out and went to sit on the only green bench in the little park. My hands were shaking.
I’d only been there a minute when a hand wrapped itself around my mouth. Whoever it was pulled me back and pressed the cold blade of a knife against my throat.
I closed my eyes and prepared to die.
Chapter 22
Brian
We landed in Los Angeles before Cassidy’s plane was due to land, but we were too far to get to LAX before she could leave. I’d called Kevin and instructed him to wait for her, but he couldn’t find her.
“There were just too many people, Pops. And she could have left the airport through any number of avenues. I couldn’t get past security…”
Excuses. The boy was my favorite, but he wasn’t always the brightest in the damn bunch.
“You should have bought a ticket. You should have been waiting at the gate when she got off the plane.”
“I’m sorry, Pops. I thought—”
“That’s the problem, Kevin.”
Ian shot me a look and Killian took the phone. “Meet us at the condo,” he said.
We climbed into an SUV that was waiting for us, rushing across town to the condo that Brianna owned. I found myself idly wondering which one was the condo Cassidy was due to move into before Brianna’s kidnapping.
Kevin unlocked the door when he arrived nearly a half an hour after us. There was no sign of Cassidy.
“Is she a neat freak, or something?” Ian asked as we walked through the door. The place did, indeed, look very clean. Everything in its place. And there was no dust. Not even on the bookshelves that were near the windows. I walked slowly around, running my finger over the shelves. There should have at least been a little dust. Brianna had been missing for over a month.
“Someone’s been staying here,” I said.
I went into the kitchen and opened the refrigerator. There was milk, condiments, but nothing else there. And the milk was still fresh.
“Check the bedrooms.”
Killian pulled his gun as he headed up the stairs. Kevin—he’d never been part of our illegal activities—stood back and watched, his eyes wide. Ian followed his brother, his own gun—a small caliber pistol—in his hands. We could hear their footsteps above us. I waited, holding my breath, wondering what the fuck was going on here.
Killian came back downstairs, a wet towel dangling from his fingers.
“You’re right.”
“Does she have a boyfriend? A girlfriend?” Ian asked.
“Not that I know of.” I focused on Kevin. “Have you talked to the management here at the complex? Cassidy had a condo here, too. Maybe that’s where they’re holding her. Maybe they were using this place and holding her there.”
“That’s brilliant,” Ian said, almost admiringly. “It would be perfect. No one would wonder about people going in and out of a condo they’d just sold. And that wall…” Ian walked back into the living room and pointed at the wall where Brianna had hung her flat screen television between an array of pictures of her mother and her. “If the condos are all similar, that wall could be the one they filmed the videos in front of. Without the pictures and stuff, it would be the right dimensions.”
I turned to Kevin. “Call the property manager.” I pointed to Killian and Ian. “Go out and look for anything unusual. Cassidy’s condo would be close, but not too close. Maybe across the parking lot.”
They headed out, stowing their guns so they wouldn’t attract attention.
I watched Kevin make the call, his expression tight as he did.
“Number seventeen,” he said when he hung up.
Chapter 23
Cassidy
My heart was pounding. The pain that rushed through me was more emotional than the physical pain of the blade against my throat. However, it was enough to make my heart skip a beat and cause my stomach to clench.
Whoever was standing behind me didn’t say a word. He simply held me there, unable to speak, afraid to move. I closed my eyes, sending up a silent prayer to anyone who might be listening.
Plea
se, let my daughter be okay.
That was all I cared about. They could kill me if they had to. But I needed my little girl to be okay.
Other hands were suddenly there, wrapping something around my eyes. Then they were lifting me off my feet. They tossed me into the back of some sort of vehicle, someone slipped cable ties over my wrists and ankles. I was bound, blindfolded, and a gag followed, lying on the metallic bottom of some sort of vehicle, a utility van most likely. We were moving before I was completely secured, rushing through the city streets. I heard the horn honk multiple times and felt the van turn wildly right and then left, then right several times more. I lost track after a while.
They hadn’t killed me. Maybe they were taking me to Brianna.
Maybe they were going to kill us together.
My heart should have been pounding out of my chest, but it wasn’t. I was surprisingly calm. I was still alive, and that meant that they had a plan for me. What that plan entailed, I didn’t know. But I was still alive.
I heard voices, but I couldn’t understand what they were saying.
I tugged at the hard, plastic ties around my wrists, trying to work my hands out of them. But they were too tight. The ones on my ankles were looser, but it would be too obvious if I tried to work my way out of them. I wondered if Brianna had been tied up this way. Was she still tied up? Had she spent the last month tied up on the floor of some room? Was she hurt? Did they do things…again, I couldn’t let my mind go there. It was okay whatever they wanted to do to me. But if they’d hurt her, there was nothing on Earth that could protect them. I would kill them myself.
I was not a violent woman, but she was my only child.
The van stopped. I waited. Listened. But nothing happened. They didn’t come for me. They didn’t get out. They were waiting for something, but I had no way of knowing for what.
Was I about to die? Or was I about to be reunited with my child?
Chapter 24
Brian
I rushed out the door and headed across the parking lot to the building marked with the appropriate number. Seventeen was within sight of Brianna’s condo, but far enough away that both ladies would have a sense of privacy. Killian was standing on the corner, watching, when I came running out. He intercepted me and led the way, his gun drawn discreetly.
COLE (Dragon Security Book 1) Page 43