Chuck Whitehead pulled to a stop at the wide spot in the deserted road, not far from the Childress Ridge Lookout. He kept focusing on irrelevant things, like the colored plastic ribbons that the Forest Service tied around the trees. His hands were clammy. He felt the constant urge to pee. The last ten hours kept running through his mind like an endless video loop, ever since he’d gotten home from his job at the DNA lab. He’d said good-bye to the hospice home health aide who looked after his wife Mariah while he was at work, headed upstairs to check on her—and found a gun shoved up beneath his chin.
The man who held the gun had told him what to do, and he had done it. Every last detail. He had the proof inside his jacket. He could show them. He was cooperating.
He flipped off the headlights so as not to run down the battery, and was horrified by the near-absolute darkness. The hills hunched over him were black, the sky barely lighter. It was overcast tonight.
The man had told him that this was where they would give Mariah back to him, but how could they have transported someone as fragile as Mariah to such a deserted place? She’d been on oxygen support with a morphine drip for over two weeks now.
But the man had told him to come here, so here he was.
No police, the man had said. One word to the police, and Mariah would die.
Time crawled by, marked by his thudding heart, by his labored breathing, by the digital clock blinking on the dash. Someone knocked on the back window. He jumped and screamed.
He had done what was asked of him, he reminded himself. No one could fault him. He opened the door, forced himself to stand. The dim light shed by the interior car light blinded him and revealed nothing.
“Shut the door, please,” said a soft, cultured voice. An older man. Upper crust, Englishy-sounding foreign accent. It was the same guy who had come to his house. South African, maybe. He shut the door. He had dated a South African girl once, his brain offered, hysterically irrelevant. Her name had been Angela. Same accent. Nice girl. His life was flashing before his eyes. Not a good sign.
His eyes were beginning to adjust. He made out a tall, thin figure in black. He appeared to be wearing a device that covered his eyes.
“Are you South African?” The words popped out, and he cursed himself. He might have just killed them both, asking useless questions.
The man was silent. “No, Mr. Whitehead,” he said finally. “I am not. Because I do not exist. Do you understand?”
“Yes,” he said quickly. “Of course.”
The man came closer, reached for him. Chuck flinched, and then realized he was being patted down for weapons. What a ludicrous idea. Him, and weapons. The man satisfied himself as to Chuck’s unarmed state, and headed off into the darkness. “Come with me,” he said.
“Is Mariah here?”
The man did not answer. The gate creaked as he pushed it open. His feet crunched in the gravel. Chuck stumbled after him. If he lost the sound of those footsteps, he would lose Mariah forever. He was losing her anyway, but not so horribly, so inconclusively. Not like this.
“Excuse me? Uh, sir? Please wait up. I can’t see anything. Excuse me! Sir? I don’t know your name—” Chuck tripped and fell, scraped his hands bloody, and got up. The steady, crunching footsteps were getting further away. He forced himself to a lurching run.
“You may call me Mr. Dobbs,” the voice said gently.
Chuck followed the voice through the dark, ahead and to the right. Mr. Dobbs. His nightmare had a name. The lookout tower loomed above him. The trees made the darkness even denser. He stumbled into a pole, bashed his face, and whimpered. He would never find the road out again without help.
“Mr. Whitehead?”
The voice came from ahead of him, to his left. Dobbs must have night vision goggles to negotiate this pitch darkness.
“Hold out your left hand. You will find a wooden plank. Follow it toward my voice.”
Dobbs’s voice was helpful, encouraging. He caught himself feeling grateful, like a whipped dog that licked its tormentor’s foot. He groped around, knocked his knuckles against a plank, and stumbled forward.
An eternity of splinters and shuffling.
“Stop, now. Put your hands in front of you,” Dobbs commanded. “You will feel the rungs of a ladder. Climb it.”
Panic weakened his knees. He was getting further, not closer, to any sort of place that his wife might conceivably be. “Is Mariah here?” He felt like a sheep, bleating out his plaintive, repetitive question.
“Climb, Mr. Whitehead.” Dobbs’s voice was gentle and pitiless.
He climbed, straining toward darkness, with darkness pulling him from below. His aching muscles struggled against it.
He hated himself for how easily he had been unmanned, almost more than he hated Dobbs for doing this to him. Higher, impossibly high. The air felt thinner. It moved around him, cold against his neck.
“You have reached a platform. Put your foot out, at two o’clock from your body.”
Dobbs was below him, on the ladder. If he let go, he might knock him off and kill him. And himself, too, not that it mattered.
And then he would never know what had happened to Mariah.
He groped with his foot, found the platform, and flung himself onto what he hoped was a surface that could take his weight. He landed like a sack of rocks and huddled there, weeping silently.
Dobbs climbed the rest of the ladder. “Do you have the documentation for the work you were requested to do, Mr. Whitehead?”
Requested. What a way to put it. Chuck struggled to his feet and rummaged in his jacket. “I did the extraction from the blood sample,” he said. “Just like you told me. I ran the probes, and it looked fine, the DNA wasn’t degraded. I switched the cell pellets in the freezer. Just like you said. I’ve got the old cell pellet here for you.”
“Put the cell pellet and the documentation down on the platform,” Dobbs said. “Then walk ten paces straight ahead.”
He paced. Wind whistled by his ears. He felt a sense of huge, empty space before him. “I printed out the test run results,” he said desperately. “I modified all the computer records for Kurt Novak’s ID file. I can show you how I—”
“Never say that name out loud again. Did anyone see you?”
“There’s always a couple of grad students in the lab at night doing rush specimens, but they pretty much leave me alone,” he babbled. “Everybody does, these days. I’m kind of a downer lately, what with—”
“Shut up, Mr. Whitehead.”
He had to ask, one more time. “Is Mariah here?”
Dobbs clucked his tongue. “Do you think I am completely heartless, to bring such an ill woman to a place like this? Poor Mariah can barely speak, let alone climb a vertical ladder. Use your head.”
“But I…but you said—”
“Shut up. I wish to examine these. Keep your back turned.”
He waited. An owl hooted. Mariah had loved owls. She had big, round, owl-like eyes. Now huge in her wasted face.
“Very good, Mr. Whitehead, the man said approvingly. Papers rustled. “This is exactly what we needed. You’ve done well. Thank you.”
“You’re welcome,” he said automatically. “And…Mariah?” Hope was stone dead, but the cold zombie of curiosity still shambled on.
“Ah. Mariah. Well, she is back in her bed, in your house. I deposited her there immediately after your car left the lab. I replaced her morphine drip, much to her relief. And then I took pity on her, and gave her what you were too weak to bestow.”
The dark was scarcely darker with his burning eyes squeezed shut. He shook his head. “No,” he whispered.
“Mercy,” the voice continued. “The morphine, turned up while she watched. Her breathing getting slower. And finally, peace.”
“No.” He trembled under the lash of irrational guilt. “She didn’t want that. She told me. She told me she would never ask that of me.”
“Who cares what she wanted? None of us get to choose.”
Hope had gone, and fear had gone with it. Chuck only listened now because he could not stop his ears.
“It will be clear to everyone what happened,” the man said gently. “The message on the computer, a brief note stating your intention of joining your beloved wife in death, farewell, cruel world, et cetera. And now I offer you the luxury of choice, Mr. Whitehead. If you wish to die quickly, take two paces straight ahead. But if you would prefer to die slowly and painfully, that can be arranged. Easily.”
Chuck laughed out loud. Dobbs had no idea what it meant to die slowly and painfully. He stared into the void beyond the edge.
He felt as light as air. An empty husk. If he took the two paces, he would drift away like a dandelion seed.
Perhaps if he were braver, luckier, smarter, he would have seen some way out of this trap. Apparently everything hung on his carefully arranged suicide. Nothing would hold up if he were found tortured and murdered, after all.
There was no coin left to bargain with this devil. His resources were tapped out. All his bravery, all his luck, all his wits he had given up to these last few months of tending Mariah.
Dobbs had probably figured that into the calculations when he’d handpicked him out of all the DNA lab personnel. Smart of him to choose the man with nothing left to lose.
In his mind, he was already falling, toward a huge dark owl’s eye. It regarded him with calm, merciful detachment.
He took the two paces. The world tipped, air rushed past his face. He fell into the owl’s eye, and hurtled toward Mariah’s waiting arms.
Connor shot Erin a wary glance when they passed the sign for her exit. “I’d rather take you to my house than your apartment,” he said. “The doors are better, the locks are better. The bed is bigger.”
“I have to go home,” she said.
He sighed. “Erin, I—”
“No, Connor.” She gathered all her energy and made her voice resolute. “Cindy could call me there. My mom could call me there. My friend Tonia is bringing my cat back there. The clothes I need for work tomorrow are there. My employee ID, my bus pass, everything. Just take me home. Now. No arguments, please.”
He flipped on the turn signal. She let out a silent sigh of relief. He drove aimlessly around, passing up several good parking spaces.
“Looking for a black SUV?” she asked.
He braked so sharply that she jerked forward against the seat belt. He parked the car without saying a word.
Connor rattled the broken lock on the front door of the building with a grunt of disgust. “Someone should sue the landlord.”
“He turns off your hot water if you give him any trouble,” she said. “I’ve learned to leave him alone.”
The elevator was still broken. She was grateful for his company as they ascended through the echoing stairwell. The decaying building was depressing at the best of times, but at this time of night, with her life the way it currently was, it would be unbearably creepy alone.
She dug the keys out of her purse. Connor took them from her, pushed her gently back against the wall and pulled out his gun.
She sighed. Cops tended to be paranoid. She should know, having been raised by one. They had reason to be, and Connor more than most. She waited patiently while he unlocked the door, flipped on the light, stepped in. A moment later he gestured her in. “All clear.”
“Thank goodness,” she murmured.
His face hardened at the faint sarcasm in her voice, but she was too tired and wired to care. Let him be huffy if he pleased. She felt restless and tingling and strange tonight. She didn’t feel like placating anyone.
Connor locked and bolted the door. “Erin,” he said.
She slid her suit jacket off and flung it over a chair. “Yes?”
“I can’t leave you here alone. I just can’t do it.”
She stretched her arms over her head, rolling her stiff neck. Connor’s eyes wandered down and fastened on her breasts. She rolled her shoulders, arched her back. “You can’t?” she said.
His eyes followed her every move with grim fascination. “No,” he said. “Not after what I saw on the highway. Not with that worthless lock and piece of shit door. Not even if your locks were good.”
She ran her fingers slowly through her hair, and tossed it. “Not even if I lived in a bank vault? Guarded by a platoon of Marines?”
“You’re starting to get the picture.”
She kicked her shoes off. One bounced off the wall and skittered to the middle of the floor, the other landed on top of a pile of archeology magazines. “So don’t leave,” she said.
His eyes narrowed. “I thought you hated my guts.”
The uncertainty in his voice gave her an exhilarating rush of feminine power. He was vulnerable to her, too. She glanced at her watch, and unclasped it, tossing it on top of the dresser. “It’s three in the morning, Connor,” she said. “I’m too tired to hate your guts.”
She went into the bathroom and let him puzzle over that while she washed her face and brushed her teeth.
When she came out, he was still rooted to the same spot, wary incredulity stamped all over his face. “You’re sure?”
She laughed as she hooked her thumbs into her panty hose and shimmied them down. “Didn’t you just tell me that I had absolutely no choice in the matter?” she complained. “I can’t keep this straight anymore! Who is the boss around here, anyway?”
“Stop jerking me around,” he said. “You know that if I stay here, we’re going to have sex again.”
Her eyes widened. “Oh, my. Don’t be shy, Connor. Tell it like it is.” She stepped out of the skirt, clipped it to the hanger, and hung it in the tiny closet, stretching up so that the blouse would ride up over her bottom. “The bed really is incredibly small,” she said. “If you’d rather go home and get a good night’s sleep, please feel free to—”
“Don’t tease me. I’m not in the mood.”
The harshness of his tone froze her into place for a second. She exhaled, and resumed unbuttoning her blouse. She tried to act nonchalant as she shrugged off the blouse, hung it up.
“Your energy is strange tonight,” he said. “I can’t tell whether you want to jump my bones or rip my head off. It’s got me off balance.”
She reached behind herself and unhooked the bra. She tossed it away and shook her hair back. “If you’re so off balance, Connor, maybe you’d be better off lying down.”
He stared at her bare breasts, bright streaks of color in his cheeks. “You’re pissed at me, and you’re coming onto me at the same time. What’s that all about, Erin? What’s the catch?”
She smiled at him, merciless. “It’s a mystery,” she said. “You’ve got to take your chances.” She shucked her panties and walked naked in the burning spotlight of his gaze to the bed. She slid between the sheets. Looked at him. Lifted a questioning eyebrow.
He shook his head. “I don’t know what to do next,” he said. “I can’t figure you out.”
“So why don’t you stop trying, and get your clothes off?”
His shoulders jerked in silent laughter. He opened up his duffel, which she had not even noticed him bring in with him. He pulled out one of his squealers and mounted it swiftly onto the door.
He sauntered over to the bed. He stared at her as he placed his gun on the bedside table and started yanking off his clothes. Seconds later he stood before her naked, smoothing a condom over his jutting erection. She scooted over to make room for him.
He shook his head. “This thing is even narrower than a twin bed. Do you want to be on top, or on the bottom?”
He loomed over her. She stared at the shadows that limned every curve and cut of his muscular, powerful body. He emanated a blast of fierce, macho energy that infuriated and excited her at the same time.
“Oh, go ahead. You be on top, Connor. Why fool ourselves?”
He wrenched the quilt down and shoved her flat on her back. “Where the hell did that crack come from?” he demanded.
Oops. Very smooth move. Now he was furious again. She placed her hands against his scorching chest, her breath quickening. “I don’t know. It just comes to me. I can’t help it.”
He put his thigh between her legs and shoved them open. She was already wet, and he hadn’t even touched her. She had transformed in the last thirty-six hours, and Connor was the catalyst. He was so volatile and bossy and sexually insatiable. He didn’t politely disappear when she climaxed, like her fantasy Connor had. He stayed with her, his arms jealously tight. Taking up space, demanding attention.
She almost wanted him to shove himself inside her with crude force so her restless, prickly anger could be justified. She was hungry for his strength, his heat. Breathless with anticipation. Maddened.
“What?” she snapped. “Come on, Connor. Aren’t you going to show me who’s lord and master?”
He cupped her face in his hands. “Is that what you want?”
She wiggled against him. “Since when has what I wanted mattered to you?”
“That’s not fair. I may have pushed you around about your millionaire, but I never forced you in bed. You came to me, remember?”
Did she ever. It was maddening, how much she wanted him, and how much power he wielded over her because of it. “What are you waiting for, Connor? Now who’s being the tease?” she demanded.
“You’re too angry,” he said calmly. “You’re setting me up.”
She thrashed beneath him. “Oh, please. For God’s sake,” she flared. “I’m not that treacherous!”
“You don’t even know how treacherous you are. This is wilderness territory. For both of us.”
“Connor—”
“Tell me exactly what you want, Erin,” he said. “Don’t set me up to be the asshole, because it’s not fair. If you want me to be rough, I’ll be rough.”
That did it. His arrogant, self-righteous tone infuriated her. She shoved at him. “Oh, don’t do me any goddamn favors!”
He seized her wrists and wrenched them up over her head. “OK. I think I’ve nailed the vibe you want tonight, sweetheart. No favors. That can be arranged.” He let out his breath in a sharp sigh when he slid his fingers between her legs and found her wet. “God, look at you. You are such a wild thing, Erin Riggs. You just can’t wait, can you?”
“No!” she snapped. “So hurry.”
He was still laughing when he kissed her, his tongue thrusting deep into her mouth. She could barely move. She was stretched out, every muscle straining beneath his weight, arms yanked up high.
He took himself in hand, pressed himself against her, and slid just the tip of himself inside her. He teased her with tiny, teasing thrusts, bathing himself with her slick moisture, and then drove inside her. She clenched around him with a muffled cry. He let her move just enough to find her body’s answer to his sensual invasion, the tight, clinging demands of her secret flesh upon his thick shaft.
Finally he gave her what she wanted, grinding his hips against her. Each deep, heavy thrust pushed her closer to the resolution of the enigma burning in her mind. She needed all his strength for ballast to drive her toward the answer to all this aching, screaming tension. She struggled closer, straining up, almost there—
“No.”
Her eyes popped open. He shifted, and lifted the pressure away from where she so desperately needed it. She clenched her legs around him to draw him deeper. “Connor, I need this! What—”
“No favors.”
She almost screamed with rage. “Are you punishing me?”
“No favors, Erin. You’ll come when I let you come. Not before.”
“Why are you doing this?” She thrashed wildly beneath him.
He subdued her effortlessly. “Because I can.”
“I hate you,” she hissed. “You evil, controlling bastard. This isn’t fair. I give you an inch and you take a mile. Every damn time.”
He shook his head. “No. Give me an inch, and I take everything.”
There was absolutely nothing she could do. She was spread so helplessly open beneath him that there was no way to clench herself around him and work herself to climax of her own volition. She was at his mercy.
Three more times, he brought her to the brink and then drew back. When he began again the fourth time, she was too exhausted to thrash and writhe. She just squeezed her eyes shut and trembled. He leaned down and kissed her. “Beg me,” he said.
“Forget it,” she murmured. “Bastard. I’d rather die.”
“Just beg me, and I’ll give it to you,” he coaxed. “It’s worth it.”
She opened her eyes, stared into the pure, hypnotic green depths of his eyes, and he pulled her in. “Please,” she whispered.
He released her arms and surged against her so deep and strong it almost hurt. But the pain was just a glowing delineation around a deeper, hotter pleasure that grew and swelled until it broke, sending all the tension he had wrought with such cruel skill crashing down on her.
Violent spasms of pleasure jerked and shuddered through her.
She didn’t open her eyes for a long time afterwards. It was the only privacy she could maintain, with her body so penetrated, his eyes so intent upon her face. He waited patiently, curved over her body.
The ripples widened, spread, softened to her chest, her throat, her eyes, and suddenly she was weeping, a soothing rush like a summer rainstorm. The enigma had been solved, but the solving of it had uncovered an even bigger mystery, one that mere love games could not resolve. She draped her arms around his neck, pulling his face to hers. “That’s enough of that,” she whispered. “Be gentle with me now.”
He stiffened, and hid his face against her neck. “Oh, no,” he muttered. “Erin, I thought this was what you wanted. I thought—”
“I did. I did want it,” she reassured him. She grabbed a hank of his hair and pulled him up so she could pet the anxious furrow between his brows with her fingertip. “And you gave it to me. And now I want something different, that’s all. No big deal. Just ease off.”
“Did I hurt you? Do you want me to stop?”
She kissed him. “Would you relax? There is no hidden message here. No code to decipher. I do not want to stop. Read my lips, OK?”
He jerked his head away, but she wound the hair around her fingers, trapping him. “You are so fucking complicated,” he snapped.
She sighed. “Just keep making love to me. Gently. And stop being ridiculous and anxious. What’s complicated about that?”
He pried her fingers out of his hair and pressed his face against her neck, burrowing closer. “I just want to please you.”
She was moved by the ragged tremor in his voice. “Oh, but you do,” she soothed him. “Didn’t you feel what happened? What you did to me? It was intense, but it worked. Just like you knew that it would.”
“I thought I went too far,” he admitted. “With that stupid lord and master crap. I thought I’d screwed up.”
“No. You didn’t. I trust you, Connor.” Her words softened to a senseless croon as she covered his hot face with kisses. She moved beneath him, caressing his shaft with every delicate, clinging muscle inside her sheath. It was a lazy, licking, tender kiss between their sexes. Their lips joined to match it, hungry for sweet reassurance.
Their power games had transformed into something infinitely more beautiful and treacherous. His dominating energy was rendered down to desperate, shaking need. Now she was the strong one who clasped and held, with the power to give or to withhold. But there was no question of withholding. He was inside her mind, he was everywhere. Her heart glowed for him. Every part of her was liquid and soft, merging with him, surging and heaving like the sea.
Much later, he murmured and lifted himself off her body, and stumbled away into the dark to dispose of the condom. She didn’t have the strength to turn her head and tell him where she kept the trash basket. He lifted the quilt, slid into bed again, rolling her on top of him.
“I’ll squish you,” she protested, without much force.
“Nah. This is another one of my classic Erin fantasies. Sleeping with your naked body on top of me. Your hair draped all over me, your hand against my chest, your breath mixing with mine. Your skin…”
The rest of his whispered words blended into her dreams like a swirl of melting honey.
Kurt Novak and Georg Luksch were not worth this pain and humiliation. They had used him, and thrown him away. He could feel it.
The police flung Martin into the holding cell, and the gate clanged shut. He fell heavily to his knees, retching.
Just his luck, that he should get rough, brutal types for his interrogation, but he had been prepared. He had been very strong. He had told the police exactly what his employers had ordered him to say. He had made the police torture it out of him, as instructed. He had held back as long as he could before finally gasping out where he had last seen Novak and Luksch, and when. He had been desperate, very convincing.
Then he had repeated the same story, no matter how hard they hit him. He had been strong, but there was no one to bear witness to his loyalty. Novak and Luksch would never know or care how brave he had been for them. No one would ever know. He was sure of this.
He was disposable, and they had thrown him away.
His bosses had told him that if he did this for them, that his parents and his uncle would be spared, and that two million euro would be transferred to a private numbered account for him in a bank in Zurich upon his release. His very rapid release. We own the judges, they had told him. It will be arranged quickly, more quickly than the last time. We need you, Martin. That was why we arranged your escape with Luksch and Novak in America. Only you are strong enough for this task. Do not fear. Be strong, Martin. You will be rewarded.
Rewarded. He laughed, but the pain of his cracked ribs stopped him. He huddled in the fetal position on the frigid concrete and wiggled his teeth, one by one. He would lose some of them. The left front, and the incisor. His mouth was full of blood. His tongue ran over the smooth capsule they had soldered to a filling in his back molar.
A microchip, they had told him. So that we can always find you, always rescue you. Just a precaution. It will do you no harm. It is for your protection, Martin. Trust us.
He suppressed another laugh, wiggling the loose molar with his tongue. Two million euro could replace lost teeth, he told himself. Two million euro could make up for a great many things.
But not all, something whispered. Six months in an American prison, and now this. He was shrinking, curled up on a floor that smelled of urine and vomit. Smaller and smaller until he was the size of a child’s doll, with tiny balls like shriveled raisins.
Too small to be seen by the bank personnel in Zurich.
He pressed his tongue against the smooth capsule and wondered if they could listen to him through it, if there could be a microphone so small. He started, hysterically, to laugh again, even though every jolt of his diaphragm hurt like knives stabbing.
“Fuck you,” he muttered, just in case they could hear him. And then, for good measure. “Fuck you both. Fuck Kurt Novak. Fuck Georg Luksch. Fuck your mothers, your grandmothers. Fuck you all.”
It happened immediately, as if in answer to his words. A pop inside his mouth, a burning. A sharp, bitter taste, and his heart froze in his chest. Arrested, in midbeat.
The pain was huge, but he felt no surprise. He understood a million things in that timeless moment that his heart ceased to beat. The choices that had led him to this stinking concrete floor. The boredom and greed and restless anger that had gotten him mixed up with that murderous scum. The many cruel things that he had done with them, for them. It raced through his mind, together with all the choices that he could have made, and had not.
He could have married Sophie, joined his uncle’s wine business. Sunday mornings strolling in the village square, he with their young son on his shoulders, she with the baby carriage, their infant daughter asleep beneath her pink blanket. A splendid lunch, and then lazy afternoon sex with his wife while the children napped. A game of cards at the club, a beer with the friends watching soccer on TV Weddings, baptisms, funerals.
The ordinary seasons of a blameless life.
He watched it spin by, until real time caught up with him. The iron fist closed, and crushed his heart out of existence, and what could have been and what truly was were both extinguished.