Pelican Key and Steve was running, running…

Falling.

The dirt path tore the tender skin of his palms as he sprawled on hands and knees. Pain shocked him back to reality.

His mind had drifted off again, anchorless, rudderless. Drifted into fantasy and hallucination.

A new wave of the sedative was spreading through him. The capsules were the time-release variety; some of the granules had been absorbed immediately into his bloodstream, but others were still in his digestive tract, where they would be broken down in successive phases over the next several hours.

If he could prevent any further absorption of the sedative, the dose he’d already assimilated would wear off quickly enough.

He looked around him. Jack was nowhere in sight. For the moment, then, he was safe.

With a final effort he lurched to his feet and staggered down the trail, toward the beach.

He knew what he was looking for. He only hoped he could find it in a world of darkness and fog.

Steve was gone by the time Jack reopened his eyes and blinked away the blue retinal afterimages spotting his vision.

Must have left via the French doors in the dining room. No time to hunt him down now. Without the gun, he was no longer a serious threat or an urgent priority.

Kirstie was Jack’s main concern at the moment.

She would almost certainly be making her way around the house, toward the dock. When she reached it, she could take the motorboat to Islamorada.

Fortunately, the dense brush would slow her progress. Jack still had time to intercept her.

Still, she would be wary about approaching the dock. Somehow he would have to get close enough to squeeze off a clean shot.

Or perhaps-he smiled with the beginning of a thought-perhaps he could make her come to him.

35

Kirstie’s arms were red with scratches, her legs peppered with insect bites. She had no idea how long she’d been thrashing through the brush or how near she might be to the dock.

Jack hadn’t come after her. She was quite sure of that. And twice she’d heard what had sounded like a gunshot from the direction of the house.

Had Steve shot Jack? Was it possible?

She was hardly planning to go back and ask.

The night was hot and wet, the moonless sky bright with stars. Around her stretched a tangled waste of wildflowers, creepers, and sporadic eruptions of slash pines, their glossy needles gleaming like bundled knives. Birds screeched and hooted in the dark.

Mud soaked her sandaled feet. Several times she had stumbled into small water holes concealed by a scrim of plant life. Mosquitoes were a constant presence; she no longer bothered to wave them away.

The house was somewhere off to her left, invisible now, masked by trees and scrub. To her right must be the island’s western shore, a beachless skirt of mangroves. And ahead, perhaps a hundred feet or a thousand miles, lay the dock.

If she reached it, she could steal one of the two boats moored there and escape. After that, the police could handle things.

They would arrive, make arrests. Steve would go to prison as Jack’s accomplice. He deserved it, of course; yet she couldn’t suppress a surge of sadness at the thought.

She had loved him. Still did. Or at least she’d loved the man she’d thought he was. The man who had driven her out to the Connecticut coast one summer night and, under a sky striped with Perseid meteors, slipped an engagement ring on her finger. The man who had stayed by her hospital bed every day throughout her two-week battle with blood poisoning, when more than once she’d been certain she would die. The man who had waded, fully clothed, into a pond in Rocky Hill to rescue Anastasia when the pup appeared to be in danger of drowning.

The same man who had watched unmoving as Anastasia was knifed to death a few hours ago.

You never really know anybody, she thought as she struggled through stiff patches of broomsedge choked by the strangling stems of morning glories. You think you do, but what you see is mostly what they’re willing to show. And then the real person comes out, and it’s

… horrible.

If she survived this, she would never trust another human being, never leave herself vulnerable, never take any kind of risk. For the rest of her life she would be wary and lonely and safe.

“God damn you, Steve,” she said again, the words her mantra now.

A thicket of waxmyrtle materialized before her. She blundered through it, and then miraculously the underbrush began to thin out, and the breeze freshened with a sharper accent of the sea.

She’d made it. Having circled around the house, she’d arrived at the southern tip of Pelican Key, where she would find the dock.

Of course, the men might be waiting. Her plan was her most obvious course of action; they were likely to anticipate it. And maybe those distant percussive cracks she’d heard earlier hadn’t been shots.

She could assume nothing. One mistake, and it was over.

A slow shiver caressed her. If someone had asked yesterday, she would have said she didn’t particularly fear death. It was natural, inevitable, and college had left her too deeply secularized to fear punishment in an afterlife.

But now dying scared her. She had watched Ana die, had seen the bewildered panic in her face, had heard her whimpering moans as death shook her in its cold, fierce grip.

She didn’t want to go like that. She felt the imperative of survival as an animal must feel it, not in her mind but in her blood, in the racing energy that contracted muscles and electrified nerves.

Elbowing her way through the last of the ground cover, she emerged on the lip of the coral beach.

A few casuarinas grew here, their trunks throwing long shadows across the sand in the starlight. She crouched behind the nearest tree and peered out.

From her vantage point, the dock was a thin, comblike projection in silhouette against the glittery shallows. The shadows of the pilings wavered on the water like a web of wind-stirred gossamer. A single boat drifted at the end of a slack mooring line, hull creaking secretively.

Jack’s runabout was gone. Odd.

She remembered hearing a brief motor noise shortly after the men had left the house, while she was still a prisoner. At the time she’d assumed it to be a passing boat, cruising near the island on the way to blue water.

She’d been wrong. What she had heard was the runabout. Steve and Jack had moved it.

If she’d been thinking more clearly, she could have guessed as much already. The men had left via the front door, yet she’d encountered them on the path at the rear of the house. The only logical explanation was that they’d transferred the boat to a new location, then walked back.

None of which mattered anyway, because the other boat, the motorboat provided by Pelican Key’s owners, was still here.

In less than two minutes she would be on her way out of Wait.

Movement on the dock. The shadowy figure of a man.

His dark outline blended with the masses of tropical foliage at his back, and only his restless pacing revealed his presence. His pacing-and a glint of starshine, faint but perceptible, winking fitfully as he moved.

Eyeglasses. Catching the chancy light with each turn of his head.

Squinting, she dimly made out the nylon jacket Steve had worn for most of the day.

A sigh eased out of her. The dock was off limits as long as Steve was guarding it. She couldn’t reach the boat.

Still, there was the runabout. Possibly she would find it at the cove, where Jack had beached it

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