Chapter 6

Scooping Jonathan into his arms, Jack shut the TV off and headed for the back door. Where could they go? Callie’s detached garage? Victor might look in there to see if her car was here. He slipped out the back, locking the door. Into the woods behind Callie’s house might be safe.

Callie’s yard was about an acre but she abutted town conservation land. There was another fifty acres of forest in which he could hide until Victor left. It was where he’d stashed his motorcycle. Could he use the bike to escape? Not likely with a two-year-old in tow. There was no way he could safely drive his bike with his son. They’d have to wait it out in the woods.

Jack dashed to the tree line before Victor could see him. Maybe the mobster would stay in the car and send his driver to get his cufflink. When he’d been the Cabrini chauffeur, he’d done all sorts of mundane tasks for the man.

No such luck. As Jack slipped between a cluster of trees, Victor walked around to the back door and knocked. Callie rarely used the front door and Victor must have known that. He waited for maybe ten seconds, knocked again then wiggled the knob. Good thing he’d locked the door. He didn’t need Victor going inside and snooping around Callie’s things when she wasn’t there.

“Dah dee? Dampa?” Jonathan wiggled in his arms and Jack ducked behind a larger tree as Victor glanced around the backyard. Had he heard Jonathan’s voice? Taking a few steps backwards, he kept his eyes on the house.

Jack held Jonathan close to him and whispered, “Yeah, it’s your grandpa but we’re going to play a game of Hide-and-Seek. So we need to be quiet. We can’t let Grandpa find us. Can you stay quiet while we hide?”

Jonathan’s eyes widened and a smile lit up his face. He raised his pointer finger to his mouth and said, “Shhh,” then began to giggle.

Moving even farther into the woods, he tried to keep it so he had a view of Victor. When the man walked to the garage and peeked inside, he was glad he had decided not to hide in there. Images of Victor shooting him dead, while his son watched, made cold chills run down his back like he was leaning against an iceberg.

Victor walked back around the house, hopefully leaving. No, damn. Part of the limo was visible as it sat parked in front of the house and it didn’t move. Victor was settling in for the duration. Apparently, wherever he needed to go, he wasn’t in a hurry to get there.

Jonathan wiggled in his arms again and whimpered, “Do pee pee.”

“Now?” There was no way he could go back to the house with Victor sitting outside. Plus, he’d locked the door and he didn’t have a key. Callie did keep a spare key, but it was under a fake rock in the side yard. There was no way he could get it without being seen. Maybe it was time for him to teach his son the conveniences of being a guy.

“Sure, pal, you can do pee pee, but I’m going to show you how you can do it when you aren’t near a bathroom. This is a really cool thing only boys can do.”

He continued to move farther into the woods then lowered Jonathan to a small flat stone. “See that little plant over there?” He pointed to a fern next to the rock. “See if you can water it.”

He helped the boy lower his pants and adjust himself. When Jonathan started urinating on the plant, he giggled. Looking up at his father with excited eyes, he squealed, “I pee pee, Dah dee.”

“Yes, you did. Are you all done now?”

“Yup,” the boy chirped. “You pee pee, Dah dee?” He pointed to the plant.

Jack groaned, wondering if he had done the right thing but he could hardly bring the child back in. And all boys needed to learn how to go outdoors. It was part of growing up. Now that he thought of it, he did need to relieve himself too. Might as well do it now. Who knew when Victor would give up and leave?

When he copied his son, Jonathan giggled again. Jack looked back nervously, but they were far enough in the woods he didn’t think anyone could hear them. Victor was more than likely sitting back in his climate-controlled vehicle. He never was the type for hanging out in the elements.

He picked up Jonathan once he was done and moved quietly back through the woods. Callie wouldn’t be much longer, and he hated the idea of her dealing with Victor by herself. Stupid, she obviously did it all the time. It wasn’t like he was around to run interference or even had the option to.

Callie. He hated to think of how much she had to deal with Victor. It shouldn’t have happened. But he’d taken one look at her and been lost. He’d hidden it well for a while but once he started driving her back and forth to work, it had become impossible to ignore her.

Most of the women he’d known were tough and street smart. Callie was sweet and innocent, shy and demure. But she’d had more strength than many women he’d known. She hadn’t thought so and had confided in him she hated any kind of adventure or danger and sought out peace and harmony. Until she had found Angelo’s incriminating documents.

He’d reminded her how brave she was to go to the police when she could have walked away without saying a word. She had an inner strength she wasn’t even aware of. Her claim was he gave her strength and she couldn’t do it without him.

Callie’s car pulling up a few minutes later brought his thoughts back to the present. He watched as Victor came up behind her and they spoke. Jonathan took that minute to start rambling in his toddler speech. Backing up into the woods again, he tried to shush the boy. But he had seen his mother and was starting to get louder.

Bouncing the child higher in his arms, he trotted deeper into the trees. Can’t let Victor hear Jonathan. Callie would get rid of the man, he had to trust that. No doubt, she’d be fine. On her own since her parents had died, she was a survivor. As he moved farther away from the house, he kept whispering in his son’s ear to stay silent. Callie opened the back door and allowed Victor to enter. Everything would be fine, but he said a prayer anyway.

* * * *

Callie drove down the street, almost choking at the sight of the limousine in front of her house. Victor. What was he doing here? He’d been here at the party yesterday. She rarely saw him more than once a month. Why had he come back? Had he seen Jack with Jonathan? Oh, God. A flock of geese soared through her stomach at the thought of what she’d find inside the house.

After pulling into the driveway, she shot out of the car. Victor strolled up behind her and she breathed a sigh of relief. He didn’t look like he’d killed anyone recently. His face was calm and pleasant. But what did he want?

“Callina, I called a little while ago but you didn’t answer.”

“Victor, is everything all right?” Her voice was a bit breathless and she hoped he couldn’t hear how fast her heart was beating. At least it was beating. When she’d first seen his car, she thought it had stopped.

“Everything is fine, my dear. I just wanted to check if I dropped my cuff link here yesterday. It’s one of the diamond ones my lovely Angelina gave me before she left this world. Do you mind?”

She swallowed hard. Was Jack still inside with Jonathan? Had he seen Victor pull up? He could hardly miss the long, luxury vehicle but if they were playing noisily they might not have heard it? “Did you knock on the door, Victor, or did you see my car wasn’t here?”

“Yes, I knocked a few times then checked the garage. I assumed you must have gone out and hoped it wouldn’t be too long. I’ve been here for about twenty minutes. I’m on my way to Boston for some business meetings next week and figured it was easy enough to stop on my way.”

She grabbed the back doorknob and twisted. Locked. Had she done that on her way out or had Jack done it when he’d seen Victor? Taking a deep breath and exhaling shakily, she took her key and inserted it in the lock. Her hand trembled. Could Victor see how nervous she was? Think back to when you visited him while spying on Angelo. Remain calm and use the tricks Jack taught you for staying in control. She called on all of them now.

“Where is Jonathan, dear? Is he still in the car?”

“Jonathan?” Her voice cracked at her son’s name. Yes, where was Jonathan? If she said he was still in the car, Victor would want to see him. She could hardly say she’d left him alone in the house.

“He’s with a friend this morning, at the church playgroup. I try and take him myself but I wanted to clean up a bit from yesterday’s party so his friend’s mom volunteered to bring him with her son.”

She walked through the back door, Victor following behind. “So he won’t be back soon? I was hoping to see him again.”

“No, Victor, sorry,” she answered, louder than necessary. If Jack hadn’t already known Victor was here, then maybe he would now and get out of the living room. “I think she was planning on taking the boys out for donuts after.”

Callie’s eyes darted around the kitchen then through the archway into the living room. She didn’t hear anything so they might be safe. Victor started looking around the kitchen and she helped him search. When nothing was found in that room he moved toward the living room.

Victor frowned then looked her way. “Where is the picture of you and Angelo? It was on the end table here yesterday.”

Damn. She had stuck it back up on the shelf like she did every time Victor left. Her mind went into survival mode. “It’s right behind you, on the shelf. Jonathan was bouncing around the room last night with all the sugar from the cake. I didn’t want him to break it. It’s the only good one I have of Angelo.”

“You know if you lived closer to me, dear, you could see all the pictures of Angelo I have in my house and I would be able to see my grandson more often. Once or twice a month is not satisfactory for me. Won’t you consider coming back to New Jersey?”

She stopped in her tracks, not at the question but at the sight of the cereal box tipped over in the chair, spilling its contents all over the floor around the recliner. Jack must have left in a hurry. He knew she hated messes and he was fairly neat himself. Leaving the floor like this must mean he had no choice. But where was he? And where was their son?

She remembered Victor had asked her a question. Although it may have been rhetorical. If she kept talking maybe he wouldn’t notice the spilled mess. She moved to the opposite side of the room from the recliner and said, “You know my job is here and how much I love it. Two hours isn’t that long of a drive especially since you have a chauffeur. And you’re welcome to come visit any time.”

Those last words she didn’t mean but she had to add them anyway. Victor could never suspect she knew what he did for a living or that she wanted nothing to do with him. So far he trusted her implicitly.

He looked around the room and she thought he was going to say something about the cereal on the floor but he merely reached in between the cushions of the couch and pulled up a small piece of gold, smiling victoriously. “Ah, here it is. I wondered if it had fallen off when I was sitting here watching Jonathan open his gifts. Thank you, Callina, for allowing me to search. I would have been heartbroken if I had lost this permanently.”

“It’s not a problem,” she lied, and started for the kitchen door hoping he would follow. He did. Opening the door, she smiled. “I hope you have a good business trip this week. Make sure you take some time to have fun, too.”

Victor patted her shoulder as he passed and she was thankful he’d never been one for hugs and kisses. If she’d had to give him those every time they got together, she might have been physically ill. He turned as he walked through the door and his eyes narrowed at something behind her. Callie looked over her shoulder. Jack’s denim jacket hung on one of the kitchen chairs. A moment of panic encompassed her but Victor merely shrugged and nodded at her.

“If the time is convenient, I may try and stop in on my way back next week. I’ll make sure to call and give you some notice first, dear. I know you have quite a busy schedule.”

She forced another smile onto her face. As she watched Victor walk down her back steps and turn the corner to go down the driveway, she thought of all the things she could be doing when he drove back this way. He had no idea half of the excuses she gave him for not getting together were all made up. Aside from work and playgroup, she and her son didn’t travel all that far from home. After the life of adventure her parents had craved, she wanted nothing more than to spend as much time as she could with her child, enjoying every second of his life and watching him grow up. She didn’t want to miss anything because she was too busy exploring. It suited her perfectly.

The limo started up and she raced through the house to the front window to watch it drive away. Once it was gone, she ran up the stairs yelling, “Jack, Jonathan? Are you here? Where are you?”

She checked Jonathan’s room, the bathroom and her bedroom, even looked inside the closets. Nothing. Running back downstairs, she checked that bathroom then flew to the cellar, wondering if Jack had taken Jonathan there. It was damp and musty and mostly stored off-season clothes in large bins and her Christmas decorations, but when she went down, nothing was amiss. She even looked behind the oil tank, washer and dryer.

Her breath came out in a heavy sigh as she climbed back up the stairs. Grabbing her purse from the kitchen, she got her cell phone and dialed the number labeled ‘Aunt Agatha’. The soulful notes of an old love song floated from the direction of the living room. It was a song from the first movie she and Jack had watched together. Her heart pounded harder. What did it mean that he had it as his ringtone? She moved toward it and found his cell phone under the mess of cereal on the recliner. It must have slipped out of Jack’s pocket when he left. Now how was she going to find them?

Callie pushed the curls from her face, wishing she had taken the time to secure her hair in a ponytail earlier. Now she simply wanted to know where her son was. And where Jack was. They must be together but the thought didn’t make her feel any better. Then she remembered Jack saying he didn’t think she trusted him with Jonathan. She did trust him. She trusted him more than he knew. So now she needed to trust him to take care of their son and bring him back.

With those thoughts, she began to clean up the mess on the recliner and floor. When that was done, she went out and got the bags of groceries that had been sitting in the car for a while. She put everything away in its proper location, pulled out a frying pan then cut open the package of bacon to begin layering it in the pan. Maybe if she cooked this, her two bacon lovers would return. It was a silly thought but it helped her not to be so anxious that they weren’t here.

When the bacon was cooked and set aside on a paper towel to soak up the grease, Callie cracked a few eggs in a bowl and began to stir them with a fork. Jack liked his eggs over easy but Jonathan liked them scrambled. Over easy was how she preferred them too, but parents usually sacrificed what they liked for their children’s desires. Well, at least that was the type of parent she would be. Her parents had never taken what she wanted into consideration. If they had, they’d still be alive right now.

Closing her eyes, she recalled the day when she’d found out her parents had been killed in the rockslide. Writing articles for an international travel journal had made them famous in their field and fairly well off. The money hadn’t helped them survive. They’d been on one of their climbing expeditions and a huge rainstorm had come up, causing the conditions to become unstable on the mountain. Both of them, along with four other people, had perished. But they hadn’t been the only ones to suffer. She had been left without parents. The nanny, who always took care of her when they were out on one of their jaunts, had made quick arrangements and shuffled her off to Aunt Agatha’s. Her aunt loved her but the woman had no idea what to do with children. She thought providing money to other people to take care of her was the right thing to do. Maybe in Aunt Agatha’s case it had been.

She would never do anything like that to Jonathan. He already didn’t have a stable father figure in his life; she would never risk his losing his mother too. It was one of the reasons she had become an accountant. The job was safe, the money was good and she didn’t have to worry about living dangerously. Well, she hadn’t until Jack had come along. But having Jack in her life hadn’t been all that dangerous. They mostly communicated using technology and he was never around long enough to cause any waves. Until today.

She leaned against the counter, thinking how much she’d missed having Jack around. But maybe it wasn’t such a good idea to have him here in the flesh. The gorgeous, lean-muscled flesh. Maybe keeping in touch through the use of technology was better in the long run. It kept the danger aspect out of it with using Aunt Agatha’s profile.

“Be nice and quiet and maybe she won’t notice if we snitch a few pieces of bacon.”

Callie turned, her heart hammering, at the whispered voices, to see Jack and Jonathan sneaking in the back door. Jonathan’s bare feet were covered in dirt and Jack was smudged in a few spots too. She didn’t care. They were the most beautiful sight she’d ever seen.

“Oh, God, where have you been? I’ve been worried sick. You saw Victor was here.” She rushed and scooped her son from the floor to hold him tight. Kissing his precious face, she checked to make sure there was nothing more than dirt on him.

“Luckily he left a message on your machine before he showed up. It gave me enough time to get out. Barely, but we made it.” Jack’s face held a wry, cautious smile. Did he think she was mad at him? Victor showing up was hardly his fault. Although the danger aspect of Victor’s visit certainly was.

Jonathan leaned out of her arms trying to reach for the plate of bacon she had cooked. She allowed him to grab a few pieces then deposited him on the floor. “Sit in a chair, Jonathan, and you can eat that. I’m making some scrambled eggs to go with it.”

Moving to where she had left the bowl on the counter, she began to stir again. But relief at their returning safely caused her hands to shake and she dropped the fork. Jack moved up behind her, settling his hands on her shoulders.

“Are you okay, Calico? We were fine. I took Jonathan into the woods behind the house. He was chattering like a little magpie and I thought Victor might hear him so I kept moving farther away. I checked back a few times but Victor was still here so we had to stay there.”

She nodded her head but she wasn’t okay. The reality of what could have happened if Victor had seen Jack here began to set in and her whole body shook. Jack turned her around and she immediately fell against him. When he pulled her close to his chest she absorbed the strength and warmth that had been missing from her life for so long. His arms wrapped around her trembling form and she relished their support.

“Shh, it’s all right, Calico, we’re good. Everything is fine.”

But it wasn’t fine. As long as they had to live like this, it wasn’t fine. But for now, she would absorb as much comfort as she could from Jack. She wasn’t sure when she would be able to get it again.