Rumors. That's my plan for the evening. Country music, cheap beer, and secondhand smoke. What a glittering life I lead.'
'Great. Carry on. And thanks. I owe you one, Sean.'
'You're gonna pay up, too. When we get this business straightened out, you're gonna make me some of your special chili, like you used to. Maybe not just once. This counts for three times.'
Connor hesitated. 'Uh, it's been two years. I don't even know if I remember how.'
'Tough shit. Start practicing, because that's my fee. You do the chili, I bring the beer, the chips, and the pepper jack cheese.'
Connor grinned into the dark. 'Deal. I'll dig out my chili recipe. And Sean? You know what? You're a good guy.'
Sean snorted. 'Tell that to some of my ex-girlfriends. Oh, and speaking of which. Did you get laid last night?'
Connor let several seconds tick by. 'You cannot even imagine how off-limits that is as a conversational topic,' he said softly.
Sean gasped. 'Really? Hot damn! So this is serious, huh?'
'Serious as death,' Connor replied. 'Don't touch it.'
'Oh boy. I've got the shivers,' Sean moaned. 'What did she do to you, man? Did she—'
'I'll call you tomorrow, Sean.'
He clicked the phone shut, dropped it into his pocket, and glanced over to make sure Erin was still asleep. Her eyelashes were dark fans against her cheek. Twilight had leached all the color out of the car, but he had already memorized her colors, the soft golden tints and faint blushes and glossy deep hues of eyes and hair. Her blouse had come untucked. Buttons gaped over her sweet, sexy tits, showing a tantalizing glimpse of the white cotton bra. He wanted to buy her expensive lingerie made out of sheer, fluttering silks and laces. Things that hung together with delicate straps and hooks and snaps. He wanted to watch her put them all on, scrap by diaphanous scrap.
Then he wanted to immediately rip them off her again.
A shiny black Ford Explorer passed him, not for the first time. A cold, tingling thrill of recognition raced through him. That Explorer had been one of the cars he had taken note of when they'd pulled into the restaurant parking lot, but he'd been so focused on Erin when they came out that he had forgotten to monitor the cars again.
They'd been in that restaurant for a half an hour. They'd sat in the parking lot for an hour and twenty minutes more. Any car that had been there when they arrived should have damn well moved on long before they left. His gut was cold, and his neck was prickling. He stepped on the gas, pulled up closer to the Explorer, and checked the plate.
Sure enough, it was the very one. Brand new, black and shiny as if it had just been licked clean. Just the driver, no passengers. He eased off the gas, let it pull ahead. There was an exit in a couple of miles. He put on his turn signal and got into the exit lane, to see how it behaved.
The Explorer swerved abruptly into the exit lane ahead of him. It slowed down until he was riding its bumper, then slowed down even more. Fifty-five… fifty… forty-five… thirty-eight… Jesus.
The Explorer swerved suddenly back to the other lane. Connor pulled up alongside, and glanced at it.
Georg Luksh was grinning in the passenger seat, like some death's-head jack-in-the-box. His long hair was cut off, but it was definitely him, still missing the four teeth that Connor had knocked out of his head last November. The window rolled down. He leveled a rifle at Connor, and fluttered his fingers in an effeminate wave.
The Cadillac shuddered as Connor jammed on the brakes. The Explorer surged ahead, picking up speed.
Erin jolted awake. 'What? What happened? Connor?'
'I thought I saw—' He stopped when he heard the panic in his own voice. He could've sworn he had seen no one in that passenger seat at first.
'I can't believe it,' he muttered.
'What can't you believe?'
His mind was too busy churning out possible explanations to answer her. Georg could have been crouched down, waiting for a chance to pop up and scare the shit out of him. But it sounded so improbable. So… paranoid.
'What? Please, Connor, what did you see?' Erin pleaded.
He pulled up closer to the Explorer. The passenger seat was empty. His stomach sank down to cold, new depths.
He took a deep breath. 'I thought I saw Georg,' he admitted.
Erin put her hand over her mouth. 'Where?'
'In that black SUV ahead of us.'
She studied the SUV 'That's not Georg driving. That guy's too tall, and his head is too narrow.'
'Not driving,' he said. He already knew just how this was going to look and sound to her. His stomach was already clenching. A vague, sick feeling, like shame.
Erin stared at the SUV 'There's nobody in that passenger seat.'
'I see that,' he said tightly. 'Believe me. I noticed that weird, wacky detail already with no help from you.'
'Connor?' Her voice was timid and small. 'Maybe it's just… are you tired? I'd be happy to drive, if you need to rest, and I could—'
'No,' he snarled. 'I'm
She turned her face away, so that all he could see was the graceful sweep of her hair.
'Shit,' he muttered. 'I'm sorry.'
'It's OK,' she whispered.
Oh Christ, the exit. He swerved at the last moment and pulled off the highway. He did not want to share that dark, empty road with a phantom nightmare SUV Not unless he could go after the bastards full out, run them to the ground, and grind them into paste.
Which was not an option tonight. Not with Erin in the car. He pulled out his cell phone and dialed Davy on the scrambled line.
Davy picked up instantly. 'What's up? You in trouble?'
Davy could always smell the trouble his little brothers got into, even when he was oceans away. 'You talked to Sean?' Connor asked.
'Yeah. He told me all about the quest to rescue Erin's little sister from the evil fuckhead. I'm working on it, too. You need something?'
'Run me a license plate number, please.' He rattled it off.
'Got it. What's wrong, Con? What's special about the car?'
His stomach rolled. 'Don't ask,' he said. 'I'll tell you later.'
Davy waited, hoping for more, and grunted in annoyance when no more was forthcoming. 'Take it easy,' he said. The connection broke.
'Um, Connor? Where are we going?' Erin asked.
He hated her low, guarded tone. He'd used it himself while trying to reason with crazy people. 'We're finding another road,' he said. 'I don't want to share the highway with that thing.'
'It'll take us all night to get back to Seattle if we don't use I-5.'
'Get the map out of the glove box,' he ordered.
He'd forgotten shoving all the Mueller printouts into the glove box at the airport. They exploded out over her feet, a blizzard of paper. She gathered them up and peered at them in the dim dashboard light. 'Are these the results of the check your brother ran on Mueller?'
'Yeah.' He felt almost guilty, as if she'd discovered a dirty secret. 'Get out the map.'
She sounded as if she were going to say something else, but then thought better of it. Probably didn't want to push an unpredictable head case like him over the edge. Poor Erin, stuck in the middle of nowhere in the dark with a guy who saw things that weren't there.
His misery deepened and spread. Like a pool of blood, widening inexorably on cold concrete. She studied the map. It was terribly quiet.