Getaway
Noah pressed one hand against Kinsey’s chest, just above his heart. Blood oozed between his fingers and had already soaked Kinsey’s shirt. The older man continued to drive—ignoring us or spaced out from blood loss—intent on the road. From bits of scenery, I guessed we were on I-101 heading south. Traffic was heavier going the other way and sparse in our lanes, which wasn’t surprising given the neighborhoods we were heading toward.
I climbed around Noah, getting into the small space between the two front chairs and the dash. Noah shifted to the rear, his hand still pressing against the wound. I grabbed the wheel with one hand, glad we were on a pretty straight section and not boxed in with cars.
“Keep your foot on the gas, Dr. Kinsey,” I said, easing his hands off the wheel. “I’ll steer, just don’t stop pressing the gas pedal.”
“ ’Kay,” he said. His eyes were glassy, unfocused.
“Okay,” I said. “Noah, when I say, I need you to pull him out of the driver’s seat. We’re going to switch places.” I didn’t wait for confirmation of the plan. Instead, I slipped across Kinsey’s lap, keeping all my weight on the balls of my feet, practically straddling the steering wheel. My hand slipped and the wheel jerked. Someone in the next lane honked long and loud.
I got us going straight again, then situated my right foot near Kinsey’s leg. Took a deep breath and, “Now, Noah, pull.”
Noah grunted. Kinsey shouted. The body below me moved, brushed, nudged me forward over the wheel. More grunting from beside me was followed by a heavy thud. The instant the seat was empty, I sat down and put my foot on the gas. So far, so good. I inched into the next lane, hoping for a halfway-decent exit ramp in the next few minutes.
On the floor between the front seats, Noah cradled Kinsey in his lap, still pressing hard against the bleeding bullet hole in his father’s chest.
“He needs a hospital,” Noah said.
“No, no hospital.” Kinsey waved one hand in the air, too weak to do little more than verbally protest. “Not too bad, just need rest.”
“What about my house?” I asked. “We have medical facilities, he can get attention there.”
Kinsey growled. “No, back to the hideout. They’re waiting for our call. Aaron. The third favor.”
They still hadn’t clued me in on the second favor, but now wasn’t the time to ask. Once we were safe and Kinsey was out of immediate danger, I’d poke into that viper’s nest.
“No matter where you want to go, we can’t stay in this truck,” I said. “Every cop in the city will be looking for it.” A bright red import careened into my lane from the left. I hit the brake to avoid rear-ending it, then mashed my hand down on the horn. It bleated like a dying cow. The driver flipped me off and zoomed sideways into the exit ramp.
“What was that?” Noah asked.
“Road rage.” I sped back up, alert for the next exit. We were smack in the middle of one of the worst neighborhoods in Los Angeles, heading toward the big East L.A. Interchange. South toward Huntington Park and Compton was our best bet. Even the city police stayed out of those ravaged neighborhoods.
We needed a car. Finding one was easy. The hard part was getting it to run. “I don’t suppose either of you knows how to hot-wire a car?” I asked.
“King can,” Noah said.
“Not helpful.”
“He can?” Kinsey asked. Pink flecked his lips, making them stand out brightly from his ashen face. His eyes blinked rapidly. Every pavement crack I hit put him in more pain, and I couldn’t do anything to stop it.
A peeling billboard, half covered with graffiti and paint, advertised Used Cars, Cheap! at the next exit. Not helpful—wait. A plan formulated. It was a little out of my usual repertoire, and I wasn’t much of an actress, but then Kinsey made an awful sound, something between a cough and a wheeze, and I made up my mind.
I pulled onto the next exit ramp, mindful of every single bump and shimmy. The truck had bad brakes, and they squealed and rattled when I slammed my foot down—the stoplight at the bottom of the ramp seemed to come out of nowhere. I peeled my aching fingers off the steering wheel. Panic attack was so not on the day’s docket.
“What are you doing?” Noah asked.
“Improvising,” I said.
No traffic, right or left. Nearly a full minute passed; the light did not change. I checked again, then made the left turn, anyway. Half a mile down, I made a right onto a slightly busier street. Foot traffic and beat-up cars, many with rusted roofs and doors, mismatched hubcaps, and dented exteriors. Multifamily homes and the occasional convenience store lined the street.
A few residents waved at the truck, probably hoping for a hot, cheap meal. I kept going, ignoring their taunts and swears as I passed. Houses turned into apartments, apartments into businesses—adult-video stores, groceries, cheap and resale clothing shops, a bowling alley. Farther up, another billboard: Used Cars, Cheap! Bingo.
Kinsey had closed his eyes and seemed to be sleeping in Noah’s arms. The dutiful son just held him, his chin resting on the unwounded shoulder, whispering things over and over into the older man’s ear. I ached for both of them, and for their intense bond. I had loved my mother that way, but she was gone. I wanted to love someone like that again—in an all-consuming way.
I drove past the car lot. It took up half a city block, sandwiched between a Korean deli and a used bookstore. Red and yellow plastic flags adorned every streetlight, strung between them like a party banner. The word sale was printed on every available surface. Another block down, I turned into a narrow alley, barely able to fit the girth of the food truck.
A dozen yards down, a pile of metal trash cans blocked half the alley. I stopped, shifted into park, and turned off the engine. Noah looked up, curious but silent. Fear for his father was his entire existence.
“I’ll be back in less than ten minutes, I promise,” I said. “I have an idea to get us another car.”
His lips parted as if to protest, but he didn’t. He nodded. I winked and then climbed out, slamming the door shut behind me.
Jeans pulled down lower on my hips and shirt rolled up above my navel, I strolled onto the lot showing midriff and swinging my hips, mimicking Renee’s sexual ease and camping it up. I had let part of my hair down, careful to keep the orange streak beneath the bandana, while still showing enough blond to catch interest.
Sure enough, five feet onto the lot, a man was beelining toward me. His gray hair glinted in the sunlight and sweat patches darkened both armpits of his blue shirt. The sleeves were rolled up, and he hastily fixed his tie as he walked. Perspiration rolled down the sides of his face. He made no attempt to hide his open appraisal of me.
I twisted my lips into a teasing smirk. “Hot day, isn’t it?”
“One of the hottest so far.” His voice was high and reedy, mismatched with his bulk. Not overweight, just big without being muscular. “Anything I can show you today?”
“Depends on what you’re offering.” I ran my hand over the hood of the nearest car, no idea of its make or model. Just that it was light green and rusty. “Got anything with good air-conditioning?”
“Working air costs a little more,” he said to my breasts. “We have cars that come with it. Some of the others ran out of freon, and you know how hard it can be to get around here.”
“Oh, yeah, you learn quick to sweat it out.” I toyed with my hair, lifting it up away from my neck and letting it tumble back down in yellow waves. He watched, already squirming on the hook. Too easy.
“You looking to buy today or shopping around?” he asked.
I grinned, pretending to be shy. “I was hoping for a long, cool test drive.”
His eyes glistened. “I see. I’ve got just the car in mind for your test drive, Miss—?”
“Wright,” I said, grabbing a name from the air. Miss Wright? Good grief.
“I’m Bill.” He indicated the cars ahead of us, and I started walking. His hand found its way to the small of my back. I managed not to twist his roaming hand off his wrist like a New Year’s party cracker. “I’ve got just the car for your test drive. Good air, wide backseats.”
My stomach twisted at the very notion of being in a backseat with him. Apparently the sleazy salesmen around here had no problem sharing their precious air-conditioned cars with willing females who needed out of the blazing heat for just a little while. Not a bad way to go to work and get your whoring done all in the same eight hours.
He stopped in front of a tan station wagon. The paint was decent, the interior clean. I would have preferred something with tinted windows, but this would do.
“I’ll be right back,” he said, shuffling off toward the office to get a key.
I lounged on the hood, playing my part and fanning myself with one hand. Less than a block away, Noah and Kinsey were waiting for me to come back. I prayed no one had noticed the bullet-riddled truck illegally parked down the alley. They had no weapons to protect themselves, except for Noah’s telekinesis.
A door slammed. Laughter followed Bill out of the office. I couldn’t drum up any annoyance at what he’d probably bragged about to his pals. He would pay for it with a nice, fat headache in just a few minutes. He approached, walking fast, obviously excited about his prospects to get a good lay for a free test drive. I tried not to roll my eyes.
He unlocked the driver’s door and held it open like a gentleman. I slid inside. The interior reeked of disinfectant, the heavy air hotter than Hades. I put the key into the ignition and turned the battery on enough to lower every single window. Warm, fresher air blasted inside. Bill climbed into the passenger seat, and the entire car rocked.
“Ever driven one of these babies?” he asked.
I grinned, batting my baby blues. “Never one quite so big.” My gaze flickered to his lap. He twitched.
I cranked the engine while he fiddled with the air-conditioning controls. Sweat rolled down his cheeks in torrents and dampened the front of his shirt. The salty-sweet odor tested my gag reflex. Once satisfied that cool air would blast us soon, he let his hand drift down to my right knee. I managed to not cringe, vomit, or crash the car on the way out of the lot. Pervert.
Tease.
I turned left.
“I haven’t seen you around town before,” he said, hand squeezing a bit.
“I just moved into the area.” The alley was fast approaching. “And I like to make an impression when I can.”
“You’d be hard to miss in a crowd.” Nice compliment coming from a guy trading a car ride for sex. I couldn’t help noticing the gold band on his wedding finger. I hoped she was screwing around on him, since he obviously screwed around on her. “Hey, where are we going?”
“It’s a surprise,” I said, negotiating the turn into the alley. The truck was still ahead, its back doors closed. The bullet holes and impact dents were more obvious in this light.
“This isn’t very private,” he said.
“I wouldn’t worry about it.” I parked behind the truck, left the engine idling. “Because you aren’t having sex with me.”
“Huh?” His face shaded scarlet.
Calling on a move Teresa taught me, I hit his throat with the tendon between my thumb and forefinger, right below the Adam’s apple. He croaked and clutched at his throat, eyes bugging out. I punched him in the temple. His forehead hit the dash. He didn’t move. Fist aching, I threw open my door and bolted to the front of the food truck.
Something by the trash cans caught my eye. Moved. Stood. A man in grimy clothes, hair so greasy I couldn’t decipher the color, inched out from behind the haphazard stack of cans. Brown fingers betrayed years of street life. Pockmarks on his face and nose painted a life of poverty. He watched me with rheumy eyes, no sign of hostile intent.
Considering the wallet hastily stuffed into my back pocket that morning, I asked, “You want to make fifty bucks?” He nodded. “There’s a guy in the car back there. Can you get him out and put him in the back of this truck?”
Another nod. I left him to his task—hoping he actually did what I asked, because moving the hefty car salesman on my own was a near-impossible task—and yanked open the driver’s door. Noah blinked over the edge of the seat, sweating. Shit. The interior blazed like a furnace.
“I have a car.” I climbed up, the faux leather seat hot through the knees of my jeans. “Can you wake him? We have to move.”
Gentle prodding roused Kinsey to semiwakefulness. Enough to get him up and across the seat. He groaned, trying to fold his long body over and tuck his legs beneath the steering wheel. I got an arm under his shoulder, earning a sharp yelp from him. I pulled. He stumbled on the landing, and we crashed to the slick pavement. My bare elbow smeared something damp and yellow, scraping skin across rough stone.
Noah jumped out of the cab with a startling preternatural ease, hitting the pavement without making a sound. A Changeling ability, perhaps? The truck rattled. Noah sprinted to the rear.
“Hey!” he said.
“It’s okay, he’s helping.” At least, I hoped so. Witnesses weren’t ideal, but we didn’t have much choice.
Noah hesitated, then came back to assist me. Kinsey couldn’t stand on his own (pain delirium or blood loss, take your pick) so we supported him, one of us on either side. I got the wounded side and did my best to hold both Kinsey and the wound. The blood flow had slowed, but not completely stopped. At the back of the wagon, I grunted. The keys were in the ignition.
Noah raised his free hand, palm out toward the wagon. The back hatch popped open. Telekinesis. Duh. Noah pulled down the tailgate and climbed in first. He sat down facing me. We gently turned Kinsey around and helped him sit. With arms hooked around Kinsey’s chest, Noah crawled backward inch by inch, pulling the weight. Once their feet were in the car, I pushed it shut. I turned around and yelped.
Hired Helper stood directly behind me. The food truck doors shut, hopefully with the car salesman inside. I fished into my pocket and retrieved a wad of bills. My sweaty, trembling hands couldn’t count properly, so I shoved most of the money at the stranger.
“Help yourself to what’s inside the truck,” I said, hoping he’d find more food than just spilled condiment packets.
He nodded, pocketed the money without counting, and shambled to the truck. I got in the station wagon, shifted into reverse, and then started backing up. Out of the hot, stinking alley.
“What did you do?” Noah asked.
Assault and grand theft auto. “Taught a guy a lesson in why it’s bad business to assume a pretty girl wants more than a literal test drive.”
Checking traffic in both directions, I backed out into the main avenue, and off we went. I fiddled with the dials and then rolled the windows up. Chilly air blasted through the vents, cooling my sweaty skin. I directed the passenger vents toward the back, hoping the air reached them quickly.
“Now what, Noah?” I asked. “You don’t want to go to Hill House, so I hope you have a place.”
“We do. Can you get back to I-5 from here?”
Still pretty familiar with the area, I nodded, only to realize he was facing backward and couldn’t see me. “Yeah, I can.”
“Good, do that.”
“Fine.” I slowed for a traffic light, applying pressure to the overly sensitive brakes. We were sitting targets, even in our borrowed—stolen!—car. Every passing moment seemed like a blessing, and also an opportunity for a random cop to get suspicious. Or decide we were part of his daily quota and pull us over for no good reason.
Stop being so paranoid.
Easier said than done. My attention divided itself between the road in front of me and the rearview-mirror angle I had of Noah’s head. I started to speak several times, to ask random questions just to kill the utter silence in the car. Radio seemed like bad form, almost rude given our dire situation, but I needed a distraction.
Silence came with too much time to think. Time to ponder my current situation and how in blazes I ended up driving a stolen car across town, hoping to avoid police capture. I had climbed into the truck on my own, but the police—and my own people, for that matter—had every reason to think I was being held against my will.
I had done the right thing. Noah and Kinsey had placed their trust in me by setting up the meeting in the parking garage. Someone else had betrayed us and called the police. I hated pondering the implications—would much rather ponder a root canal—but could not avoid them forever.
Sooner or later, I had to call home.