The Beautiful and the Wicked

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The Beautiful and the Wicked Page 30

by Liv Spector


  Nothing seemed to make sense. Then she wondered if she’d been wrong all along. It suddenly dawned on her. What if Ben murdered Jack? Her spinning mind quickly sifted through all the facts. That night, she’d found Ben naked in bed with Elise. Less than an hour later, Jack was dead. How could he have done it? Wouldn’t Lila have seen Ben up there with Ava and Jack? And could he have managed to extricate himself from Elise fast enough to get to Jack? It didn’t scan.

  Still, something kept tugging at her. Seeing Ben and Asher together was enough to make Lila believe that there was more to the story. She kept her eyes on the TV, watching as Ben’s handsome face and easy smile worked their charms on the blond TV reporter. Then it came to her. “Of course!” she exclaimed out loud to an empty room. What if Ben and Asher had been working together? What if Ben smuggled Asher back on the boat without anyone realizing it? They both knew the yacht well enough to keep Asher hidden. Then, while Ben made sure Elise was distracted, Asher could’ve stabbed Jack and then gone back into hiding, leaving Ava stunned and standing on the deck by a pool of blood while Jack fell into the water, dead.

  There were plenty of reasons why either man would want Jack dead. He’d been a controlling, cruel, and abusive boss to both of them. And after Asher’s plans to get to the Warren fortune through Josie backfired twice, he could have decided to take matters into his own hands. Perhaps Ben, knowing he was close to losing his plum position as helmsman on Jack’s racing yacht, knew he had to get rid of Jack before Jack got rid of him. Had he been sleeping with Elise to make sure that she’d put him in charge of the America’s Cup boat once he and Asher had murdered her husband?

  The voice in Lila’s head that had been beating herself up just minutes ago was now frantically trying to answer all these questions. But more than anything, she was thrilled that there was a flicker of possibility, no matter how small, that Ava might be innocent.

  Feeling invigorated, Lila grabbed her laptop and searched Ben’s name. Slowly, by visiting a few different sites, she began piecing it all together. It seemed that upon Jack Warren’s death, Elise had given the racing yacht to Ben, just as Lila had suspected. Then, she read in an interview with Sailing World magazine, Ben declared that every day he worked to honor “the amazing legacy of all that Jack Warren did to innovate this most regal and gentlemanly of sports, yacht racing, and make it what it is today.” If he was really honoring Jack’s legacy, why did he include Asher on the team, the very man who seduced and abandoned Jack’s only daughter?

  She’d seen enough. She booked a nonstop flight from Miami to San Francisco for the next morning. She’d be in the Bay Area by ten, giving her plenty of time to watch the final race of the America’s Cup.

  Teddy had told her it was over. But she couldn’t let it go, not now, not when there was a fresh lead. A thought popped into her mind: What if this was just one more way to hold on to Ava’s innocence? What if she was only grasping at straws, seeing a pattern where there wasn’t one?

  But she pushed these ideas out of her mind. As long as she had a doubt, it wasn’t over. Not yet.

  CHAPTER 29

  BY THE TIME Lila arrived at San Francisco Bay, securing a spot under the shadow of the Golden Gate Bridge by the finish line was close to impossible. She had to squeeze past the thousands of ­people who were already packing the walkways. The crowd was humming as ­people talked excitedly about the race, leaning over the railings to get closer to the action on the water, waving small American flags, jockeying for a good vantage point to watch the last leg of this high-­stakes contest. Everyone wanted to be the first to see who would claim the America’s Cup, this oldest trophy in sporting history.

  With a pair of binoculars hanging around her neck, Lila pushed her way to an ideal spot by the finish line. It was a spectacular day, sunny and clear, which was a rarity for summertime in San Francisco. While she waited for the yachts to come into view, she scanned the scene . . . for what, she didn’t know.

  After an hour or so pressed up against the railing, searching both the crowds and the vast expanse of deep blue water, she heard someone in the crowd exclaim, “Here they come!” She trained her binoculars on the horizon, where, sure enough, two exquisite yachts suddenly came into view. Both had solid carbon sails that stretched up over two hundred feet into the sky. The Team USA boat had a red sail and a blue-­and-­white twin-­hulled catamaran racer. About forty feet of meshlike fabric was stretched between the two hulls, and a dozen or so sailors, all wearing helmets and sunglasses, rushed from one side of the boat to the other. Even with her binoculars, Lila couldn’t identify Ben or Asher in the group scurrying frantically around the boat.

  Team USA’s closest competitor was Team New Zealand, which was just a ­couple dozen feet behind. The crowd began to cheer. Then the chant “USA! USA!” began to build and build. The throng of ­people standing behind Lila began to surge forward, pushing her, somewhat painfully, into the railing. She jabbed a ­couple of ­people with her elbows, trying to take up as much room as possible.

  Lila watched both boats soar through the water. But they weren’t like any boats she’d ever seen. They were more like magical flying machines. Team USA miraculously glided through the air at fifty miles per hour as its catamaran hovered an incredible five feet above water with only three small hydrofoils, which looked like upside-­down shark’s fins, skimming along the surface of San Francisco Bay. Lila now understood why Ben was so excited by what the shipbuilder was cooking up that day he took her to visit Kingston S. Duxbury.

  Team USA turned around a giant orange cone in the middle of the bay and then headed straight toward the now-­frenzied crowd. The New Zealand boat lost some speed on the same turn and fell farther behind. It was clear to everyone that Team USA had won the America’s Cup. As this good news slowly dawned on all the spectators, the cheering of the crowd grew even louder. Everyone had their smartphones out, to record the moment of victory.

  As the catamaran got closer, Lila was finally able to see Ben through her binoculars, at the helm of the large, red steering wheel. Despite his colorful helmet and his dark sunglasses, she knew it was him from the toothy smile overtaking his face. Victory was his.

  The moment the boat crossed the finish line, the entire team began to whoop and wail, jumping up and down, throwing their arms wildly around one another. When they all stripped off their helmets, Lila was able to see both Asher and Ben more clearly. They embraced each other, and then, with their arms resting on each other’s shoulders, they turned to the joyous crowd of spectators celebrating their monumental triumph.

  Lila watched them carefully through the binoculars. She saw them searching the vicinity, clearly looking for something. Then they seemed to spot it. Both men looked directly at something, or someone. Her eyes pressed into the binoculars, Lila followed their gazes and found what they were looking at—­Kingston S. Duxbury, the West Indian shipbuilder Lila had met in the Turks and Caicos. He was conspicuous in his powder-­blue shirt and Panama hat. Then Lila noticed Kingston turn to shake a man’s hand. From where Kingston was standing, Lila couldn’t see who was next to him. All she could make out was that the stranger had a Team USA baseball hat pulled low over his face. The two men held each other’s hands and laughed, in what Lila thought looked like pure delight. Kingston bent slightly back, allowing Lila to see the other man’s face. He was wearing oversize aviator sunglasses and had a large, bushy beard. But there was something there . . .

  Lila shifted her focus back to the boat, where Ben and Asher were jumping around triumphantly. She saw Ben give a thumbs-­up. Then Asher joined him. Again, they were both looking at a fixed point in the crowd. She whipped her gaze back to Kingston, only to see that he and the bearded man were returning the gesture in kind. She kept watching Kingston, wondering if he had played a role in Ben and Asher’s bloody deeds. But something distracted her. The man with the beard had thrown his arm around Kingston—­and there was something about i
t that itched at Lila’s brain.

  She thought of the pictures she’d seen in Kingston’s shop, the framed photos of him posing triumphantly in front of his boats. And in every picture, a man had his arm flung around Kingston’s shoulders. That man was Jack Warren.

  She moved her binoculars away from Kingston to look for the bearded man, but he had left Kingston’s side and disappeared into the crowd. Lila scanned the vast throng of ­people. She had lost him.

  But then she spotted him once more. He was moving through the crowd, pushing to get out to the street while the crowd surged in the opposite direction, hoping to get a better look at the boats. His head was mostly turned away from Lila, so she couldn’t see his face. But, in one moment, she saw his profile. And with one glance at that long, aquiline nose, she was shocked by recognition. The man in the baseball hat was Jack Warren.

  He was alive—­wearing a hat, beard, and glasses, hoping to remain unnoticed in the city that he’d once ruled.

  Adrenaline flooded Lila’s body as her focus became razor sharp. If Jack slipped out of her grasp, she was certain that she’d never locate him again. This was her one and only chance.

  She took off like a shot, only to hit a brick wall of celebrating spectators. She ducked around them. A chorus of “Hey!” and “Watch it!” was left in her frantic, clawing wake. But Lila didn’t hear them. She could only think of one thing, and that was finding Jack Warren, and getting an explanation for what the hell was going on.

  She finally pushed her way through the massive crowd, but by the time she broke free, she’d lost sight of Jack. Her heart pounding in her chest, she ran around the perimeter of the crowd, searching for him.

  Suddenly, in her peripheral vision, she saw him—­climbing up a steep flight of stairs that cut up a verdant hillside. He was about two hundred feet ahead of her. Then he stopped and turned once more to the water. He gazed out over the cheering crowds and watched as the Team USA boat made its way to the dock. She could tell he was relishing this victory. And in that moment, Lila hated him more than ever.

  She sprinted after him, wishing she had a gun or handcuffs. But all she had was her wits and her strength. By the time she got to the long stairway, Jack was almost at the top. Lila raced to catch him, but he was too far away. Her only advantage was that he didn’t realize she was after him. And that was an advantage she’d now have to give up.

  As a last resort, she decided to call his name. It was risky. She knew it would definitely spook him and alert him to her presence, but it might slow him down for the split second she needed to gain on him. “Jack Warren!” she screamed as she pushed herself to climb the stairs faster.

  Jack stopped dead in his tracks and turned around. She saw him look at her with total confusion. Then, suddenly, the shock of recognition came across his face.

  “Remember me?” Lila shouted.

  He took off, running faster than before. Her lungs began to burn in her chest. But she was gaining on him, taking the stairs two at a time. He was slower than her, now a man in his sixties struggling to escape, but not so slow that he didn’t reach the top before her, disappearing out of sight.

  The instant Lila reached the final step, she had to make a split-­second decision whether to go left or right. But before she could pick one or the other, she heard a loud crack, followed by a hissing whistle through the air. The stone step inches away from her shattered. She heard the terrified scream of a female bystander.

  Jack Warren was shooting at her.

  Lila reacted immediately, having no time to think. She threw her body to the ground just as another bullet ricocheted off the metal handrail. The shots were coming from behind a cement wall about twenty feet away. Looking around for some kind of shelter, she saw there was nothing but open green space. But then she spotted, about five feet away, a steel garbage bin. She kept flush to the ground, moving toward the bin in an army crawl. Another crack came from behind the wall. The last bullet was so close that she could pratically feel the sound.

  She stopped dead for an instant, waiting for the searing pain of a gunshot wound to register. But she hadn’t been hit. Before Jack fired another shot, she ducked behind the steel bin, gulping down air as she tried to catch her breath. Police sirens sounded, getting closer.

  She waited a few seconds, then, with her pulse racing, leaped up and began running for the wall. No shots were fired. Jack, probably spooked by the sirens, had left his post, getting a head start on her once again. Then she spotted him, sprinting along the dirt path to a busy street just a hundred feet away.

  Lila sprang over the hip-­level wall and kept racing after him. He looked back at her, causing him to lose his footing. He tripped forward and hurtled down to the ground, sending his gun flying across the grass. He scrambled up and kept charging ahead.

  She was getting closer.

  Then he hit the pavement. It was a major city street, with four lanes of busy traffic. Jack dashed out into the middle of the street, waving his hands. Lila realized he was trying to flag down a car so he could jump into it and make a final getaway. But his plan went horribly wrong. The car that he lunged in front of was slow to brake. Lila watched as the vehicle’s wheels screeched and the driver swerved, in an attempt to avoid hitting anything, but ended up spinning out of control, sideswiping Jack as it did a three-­sixty in the middle of the road. Jack went flying through the air and fell to the pavement with a heavy thud.

  Lila ran toward his splayed-­out body as ­people began to jump out of their cars, rushing to the ailing man’s side. In the panic and horror of that moment, as she rushed toward Jack, all Lila could hear was her own voice saying over and over again, “Don’t you dare die. Don’t you dare die.”

  If she was going to get the justice she so badly needed, Jack Warren had to be very much alive.

  Lucky for her, he was.

  CHAPTER 30

  IT WASN’T UNTIL Teddy joined Lila at the St. Francis Memorial Hospital and smoothed things over with the local police that Lila was finally able to see Jack Warren.

  “You got banned from interrogating the man you caught? You must’ve really showed them the classic Lila charm, huh?” Teddy said to her with a tired smile. They were both exhausted. It had been a full twenty-­four hours since that car had sent Jack sailing through the air, but in that brief time, Lila felt as if her whole world had changed. The despair and doubt she felt had been eradicated. And she had been vindicated. She finally knew she was right about her sister and, most importantly, she had the best proof imaginable to show that Ava had been falsely accused of murder. She had Jack Warren, alive, breathing, and in handcuffs.

  Finally, she could clear her sister’s name.

  She had only phoned Teddy with the news once she finally convinced the cops on the scene that this bleeding man on the pavement was indeed Jack Warren, the billionaire who the whole world believed was murdered eleven years ago. Teddy, in total shock, had hopped on his private plane within the hour, desperate to be with Lila as fast as he could. “I can’t believe it,” was all he could manage to say on the phone. “I just can’t believe it.”

  He arrived in San Francisco before midnight, joining Lila outside Jack’s hospital room, which was flanked by two police officers. Both Lila and Teddy looked down at the scrum of journalists gathering in the parking lot outside. Each was jockeying to get the scoop on the story of the year: Jack Warren had been resurrected from the dead.

  Teddy reached for her hand. “Lila, listen,” he said softly. “I know you may not want to hear it, but I feel terrible about what I said to you the last time we spoke. I had no right. You would do anything to protect the ­people you care about. And that’s what you did for Ava. I should’ve been more understanding. I was wrong.”

  Lila kept her eyes on the news cameras. She squeezed his hand. “I was wrong, too.” Lila paused and turned to look at Teddy. She brushed his dark blond hair out of hi
s face with her fingertips, only realizing at that very moment how happy she was that he was once again by her side. “I know I pushed too hard.”

  “True. But if you hadn’t, you’d never have been able to prove Ava’s innocence. I should know by now to listen to you.”

  “I don’t know. This whole case has been so complicated and confusing that at the end, I didn’t think I could even listen to myself. I stopped trusting myself.” She felt a palpable feeling of sadness about the whole thing. “But now all the confusion will be put to rest, once we get in there to talk to Jack.”

  Traveling in time couldn’t erase the decade that her sister had spent on the run. It made Lila hate Jack even more than she already did. His actions had cost Ava so much. Now she wanted him to lose everything.

  “Well, you got him, Lila. No one else could have done it but you.”

  Lila started to say something, but fell silent for a few seconds. “But, about visiting you in the past—­”

  Teddy held up his hand to stop her. His face was stern. “I was going to mention that, too. Yes, that was dumb. With everything I told you, you should’ve known better.” Then his face broke into a devilish smile. “But with great risks come great rewards.”

  Lila gave him a confused look. He continued, “Spending time with that nasty bit of software that you brought into my office was one of the most important moments of my life. Reading source code that Jack Warren wrote was like taking a master class in the power of technology. I learned more in that afternoon than in all my years at MIT. Without it, I wouldn’t be where I am today.”

  “Wait,” she said. “Are you telling me that you owe all your success to my bullheadedness?”

  “I wouldn’t go that far. From now on you still have to stick to my rules.”

 

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