by Julie Hyzy
“What about the intruder?”
“Come again?”
“Here at Marshfield. A security guy called a little while ago to make sure I stayed in my office until the intruder was apprehended. You don’t know anything about that?”
“Can’t say that I do. But I’ll be sure to check on it right away. You have yourself a good night.” He hung up.
“Thanks a bunch,” I said to the dead phone.
Thus dismissed, I resumed pacing, stopping long enough at the wide window to stare out into the pitch-black night.
I wanted to be home. Right now. I didn’t want to bother with the twenty-minute drive, but just be there. Frustrated, I blew out a breath and thought about how I might get in touch with Rodriguez tonight. I opened my Web browser and called up the local white pages, hoping to find his number.
Unlisted.
Ronny Tooney seemed to have everyone’s phone numbers on speed dial. Maybe I should call him. Yeah, right. A half hour ago, I was sure he was the killer, now I was considering asking for his help? No way.
Pushing myself away from the window, I started for the phone intending to call security for an escort to my car, when I heard the unmistakable sound of a key turning in the outer lock. Panic kicked in, freezing me in place. Logic told me it had to be Bo, come to release me. Fear told me that Bo would have phoned first.
Should I call out? Hide?
Immediate, profound terror immobilized me. My feet absolutely could not move. I opened my mouth, but nothing came out. It didn’t matter—in the short second it took for my mind to process all this, the outer door creaked open. The intruder was inside the room.
“Ms. Wheaton?”
I recognized Bo’s soft drawl, and let out the breath I was holding. “In here, Bo,” I said, making my way to Frances’s office. So intense was my relief, I nearly laughed out loud. “For a minute there I thought—”
Bo wasn’t alone.
“Melissa?” I said, looking from her to Bo and back again. “What’s going on?”
Standing a couple of steps behind Bo, she bit her lip. My brain took its sweet time processing the situation, but my gut had gotten the message loud and clear. “You’re not Bo,” I said.
The lanky blond man smirked. “You’re right, ma’am, I am not.”
He looked just like a Marshfield security guard. Wearing the dark pants and pale shirt with insignia. And a holster, with a gun. Even a nameplate that read Bo.
He pointed to my office. “Why don’t we all go in there and have ourselves a nice discussion?” Turning, he barked an order. “Mel, shut that damn door.”
Meekly, she complied.
I called upon what little courage I could. “Get out of here now, before I call security.”
“Your security’s useless. They’re all busy right now anyway.” Samuel Jepson winked. I wanted to slap the smug look off his face. “And, ’sides, I got my own security, right here.”
He pulled up a sleek semiautomatic, waving it casually. “I’m going to make this real easy for you, darlin’.”
Somehow I didn’t believe that.
“You’re going to pick up that phone right now and call Mister Moneybags. Tell him it’s important that he come down here to see you right now.”
“The hell I will.”
“Tell him you know who killed Abe.”
Scared as I was, I folded my arms. “I refuse.”
“You gonna argue with me?” He waved the gun. “Pick up the damn phone.”
“Why do you want him down here?”
“You really have to ask?” Pointing the gun at the phone, he raised his eyebrows. “Now.”
I lifted the receiver and dialed, praying Bennett’s refusal to speak to me would hold out just a little longer. Jepson brought his ear close to mine to listen along. A mouth breather, Jepson’s breath nearly knocked me over. This close, I was tempted to try to wrestle the gun from his hand. But my chances of overpowering the guy were nil. He might be lanky, but he had muscles. I wouldn’t last a minute.
“It’s still ringing,” I said unnecessarily. “He must not be there.”
“He’ll answer.”
As we stood there listening, my mind repeated a mantra completely opposite than that of just a few hours earlier: Don’t answer. Don’t answer.
Five rings. Six. “Still nothing,” I said, absurdly hoping that Jepson would just give up and go away. Melissa, near the doorway, was no help at all.
He muttered under his breath. “Old man probably goes to bed early. Hang up.” He walked away from me making angry noises. “How am I supposed to get him down here?”
Melissa spoke. “Maybe we should all go up there.”
Jepson’s gaze snapped up. “Don’t be stupid. We have to do it here.” He pointed to the ground. “We planned this out. We can’t change it now.”
A man on the verge of a breakdown, he paced like a wild animal in a too small cage. In movies and books, the hero always gets the bad guy to talk. But those characters probably weren’t shaking the way I was. They could probably even think straight. I was having no such luck. My mouth was sandpaper and I thought I might pass out. Summoning as much strength as I could, I cleared my throat. “Where did the money come from? The money you lost with Taft?”
He spun, and pulled the gun up. “Do not interrupt me while I’m thinking.”
“We won a lottery,” Melissa whispered. “Not a real big one. But a lot for us.”
Jepson didn’t seem to notice that she was talking.
She watched him as he walked back and forth, and continued whispering. “Sam thought we could be millionaires. That Mr. Taft said it was a sure thing . . .”
“Shut up!”
Melissa flinched and backed closer to the doorway. No wonder she always wore a haunted look: Her husband was a controlling lunatic. Melissa, I knew, was my only chance at freedom. I inched toward her.
“Do not move.” Jepson’s voice was a growl. In his eyes I could discern no hint of kindness, no measure of compassion. He was going kill me right where I stood, if it suited him. I just had to make sure it didn’t.
His lips were thin, his skin pasty. Holding up the set of keys he’d used to open the outer door, he turned to Melissa. “Will any of these work upstairs?”
She shook her head. “Rosa and Beth have the only sets. They never lend them out.”
“Damn,” he said again. “I don’t want to have to go all the way down to the basement to get up there.”
I turned to Melissa. “You’re the one who told him about that secret room and staircase, aren’t you? Who told you?”
She opened her mouth to answer, but stopped when Jepson glared. To me he said, “I bet you got keys to the old man’s rooms, don’t you? Give ’em to me.”
“I don’t.”
He shot me a look of impatience. “Mel, they gotta be in the desk. Go find the keys, will ya?”
Melissa scooted past, not meeting my eyes. Although I was so panicked I could barely stand upright, I thought maybe if I could get her to look at me, I could make her understand how wrong all this was. She rooted around in my desk. “I can’t find them,” she said.
Jepson spoke through clenched teeth. “Look harder.”
She tried. She went through every drawer. I remained as still as possible, glaring at Jepson. What I most wanted was to avoid broadcasting the fact that my keys were in my purse on the shelf below the desktop. I tried to think of bunnies, flowers, and marshmallow men—anything that would prevent my face from giving the location away.
“I can’t find them,” Melissa said again.
Looking ready to explode, Jepson brought both hands up to massage his head. The gun pointed skyward and I considered my chances at overpowering him while the lethal weapon was directed away.
Too late. “Okay, you . . .” He lowered the gun at me. “Sit in that chair.”
I took the seat behind my desk, wishing it had been outfitted with a silent alarm button. My walkie-talkie—my only chance now—sat just
to the left of my blotter. I averted my eyes, but Jepson caught me. He grabbed the radio and shoved it into his pocket. “Don’t even think about it,” he said. “And while I’m at it . . .” He yanked the phone, pulling the cord out from the jack with a pop, leaving the little connector still in the wall. He strode into Frances’s room and I heard him render that phone inoperable as well.
“What now, Sam?” Melissa asked when he returned.
He spun. “I’m thinking, okay?”
With his shoulders pulled back, his breath came in short pants, and he looked ready to shoot either of us if we so much as blinked. His Adam’s apple bobbed, and he ran his free hand through his cropped hair. After the briefest of moments, he turned. “Here’s what’s going to happen,” he said to Melissa. “I have to go all the way down to the basement to get into that stairway. There shouldn’t be anybody around. And with this uniform, I’m cool. It’s going to take longer than I planned, but there’s no help for that.” He seemed to be convincing himself as he spoke. “While I go upstairs to get the old man, you stay here and guard her.”
“Can’t we just all go with you? Can’t we—”
“Are you an idiot? Three of us roaming around this place at night? You don’t think she’ll start making noise? What do you think’s going to happen then?”
She backed away at his rebuke. “But I don’t want to stay here alone.”
Lowering his voice, he ran his free hand along her shoulder and down her arm. “Listen to me, honey. You’re doing an important job by staying here.”
“But—”
He placed his index finger on her lips, then used the same hand to reach under his pant leg. Pulling out a second gun, he handed it to her. This one was a revolver. “You remember how to do this, right?”
“No, Sam.” She backed up. “I can’t.”
I could see by the look in his eyes he wasn’t hearing her. Still holding two guns, he asked me, “What do you have in here I can use to tie you up?”
Like I would tell him. I shook my head—my best effort at looking helpless. Given the circumstances, it wasn’t all that hard.
“Damn,” he said again. “Look in the drawers, Mel. Hurry up.”
She hadn’t gotten through the first drawer when his expression brightened. “You,” he said to me again. “Take off your panty hose. We’ll use that.”
I held up my hands. “Not wearing any.”
“Nobody under forty wears panty hose anymore,” Melissa said helpfully.
“Shut up.”
He scanned the room. I watched indecision work across his face. Again I worked hard not to broadcast my thoughts. He pointed the gun at me. “Get in front of the desk. On the floor.”
I did as told and sat, afraid to do anything but agree.
“And you, Mel, you stay across the room. All the way across. She can’t move without you seeing her.” He handed her the weapon. “You point the gun at her the whole time. If she tries to get up, don’t think twice. You just shoot. Got it?”
Melissa nodded.
He took her elbow and led her to the corner opposite mine. “You’ve got a clear line of sight here, Mel. Shouldn’t be any problem for a crack shot like you.”
As he said this he stared at her, as though daring her to disagree. But I caught the alarm in her eyes.
“I asked if you got it,” he said. “You got it?”
She looked around his shoulder at me then back up at him. “Yeah, I do.”
“Give me ten minutes. Less than that. Shouldn’t take me long to get up there, and bring the old guy down.” Before he left, he spoke softly. “I’m counting on you.” She gazed up at him with such a look of total trust and adoration, I felt my stomach lurch. “You’re my girl, aren’t you?”
She nodded.
“I won’t be long at all,” he said. “And when we’re done here, honey, we’re getting away from all this. Nothing will touch us ever again. We’ll be safe, together. You want that, don’t you?”
This time a more vigorous nod and a tiny smile.
He held up a finger. “You’re going to do this. For me.” He leaned in and they kissed. “So sweet.”
I wanted to retch.
Right before he left, he pointed the gun at me yet again. “Don’t try anything.”
He shut the outer office door and I heard him fumbling with keys. When the lock turned, Melissa flinched, then faced me. “Please don’t move, okay? I don’t want to shoot you.”
I didn’t have time to waste. Scared as I was, I stood up. “You can’t shoot me,” I said, trying to talk to her like I might a frightened child.
“I have to,” she said, shaking. “He told me to.”
Jepson was probably halfway down the hall, maybe even at the staircase. Why had Bennett dismissed his guards? Right now their presence could mean the difference between life and death. Terrence had beefed up the other patrols, and I prayed that one of our crack guards would recognize Jepson as an intruder: Shoot first and ask questions later.
But I couldn’t count on that.
Melissa’s eyes teared up. “I can’t let Sam down. Not again,” she said.
“Again?”
“I’m the one who gave him the idea. I made him talk to Mr. Taft about our money.”
Her lips set in a tight line, she squeezed her eyes shut against the memory.
The moment she closed her eyes I rushed her, knocking her sideways with a whoof that might have come from either of us. The gun clattered across the floor and she clawed at me, reaching for it. With her back against the wall and me trying my best to wrestle her arms down, we had to be a crazy sight. The girl might have been mealy-mouthed and timid around Jepson, but in hand-to-hand combat she was a vicious mountain lion. Wedging her hand under my chin, she shoved my face upward, grunting when I managed to grab a handful of hair and yank. I couldn’t hold out much longer and we both knew it. I was taller and heavier, but this chick was all muscle.
“Melissa, stop,” I said. My throat extended, my voice came out as a rasp. “You don’t want to do this. I know you don’t.”
Her arm slacked for less than a second. Just long enough for me to knock her sideways to the floor. I scrambled away, grabbed the gun, and pointed.
“Please, Melissa. Just please . . .”
She held up her hands and started to cry. “Don’t let him get hurt,” she said. “He’s all I have.”
I doubted that, but this was no time for philosophical arguments. “You’re worried about him?” I ran to the desk, dove for my purse, and came up with my keys. I hated to use the gun as a threat, but I had no choice. I forced Melissa into Frances’s office. “Figure out a way to call security,” I said. “And then the police. Right now. Tell them what’s going on.”
“I can’t.”
“Melissa, it’s your only chance.”
Without waiting for her answer, I slammed the door in her face and locked it.
She banged on the heavy oak, calling to me from the other side. “What are you doing?”
I ran to the room’s far side and crouched by the fireplace. Concentrating on working the lever the way Bennett had shown me, I didn’t answer her. It took a minute until the lever finally clicked. One down. Standing, I twisted the mantel edge until it was perpendicular to the floor and I felt something give.
Blowing out a breath of relief, I pushed open the hidden side door while Melissa sobbed from the other office, begging me to keep Sam safe. “Call security,” I shouted to her. “Hurry.”
This was my only chance.
Terrified, but determined, I started up the curved stone stairway.
Chapter 28
I WISHED I’D HAD THE CHANCE TO TRY OUT these stairs before. Maybe then I would have some idea of where I was going. Right now I was literally fumbling in the dark. The gun in my right hand was heavy but I had nowhere to put it. Keeping my finger off the trigger—anything that startled me could cause me to accidentally shoot—I ran my free hand on the cool wall and hoped my feet would
n’t trip me up. With no illumination and the stone steps each about half again as tall as a regular riser, I moved as fast as I could. The thought of Jepson racing up to Bennett’s room made every step feel like I was moving in slow motion.
At the top of the stairs was nothing. Nothing at all. Just three solid walls. I reached the pitch-black summit and felt around, realizing this was a tiny area, about two foot square. Running my hands along the three sides of the enclosure, I pushed, hoping for something to give. Why had I never thought to ask if there was a lever I needed at the top?
Breathing hard, I closed my eyes, willing them to adapt to the dark. When I opened them again moments later, my heart raced. A faint outline to my left, just a little lighter than the surrounding gloom, provided the answer I needed. I ran my hands along the perimeter, and nearly cheered aloud when my left index finger encountered an indentation with a tiny nub inside.
I pushed. It didn’t give.
“Come on,” I whispered. Pushed again.
Still nothing.
I did another sweep of the outline, wanting to rush but forcing myself to take my time and do it right. And that’s when my right hand found a similar smooth indentation along the top of the outline.
Taking a deep breath, I pushed both nubs at the same time. When nothing happened I wanted to scream. Instead, I remembered Hillary and Bennett showing me mechanisms that had required two steps. “Okay,” I said. I used my left hand to press the nub on the edge and my right hand to press the nub on the top.
The click was soft, but solid. I placed my hand on the wall and it gave. I eased through the opening, grimacing when the hinges creaked but there was nothing I could do about that.
The room was dark and I didn’t have any idea where I was. I glanced around quickly, not recognizing anything. Taking a tentative step forward, I tried desperately to get my bearings. I knew I must be on the south side of the residence, the same side of the corridor as the study. The stale scent of old cigars and the grouping of chairs around a small table made me believe this was a game room or . . . yes. I bumped into the corner of a billiard table. Game room. Got it. Turning to my left, I made my way to the double doors.