changing it, wiring it to do strange things...
His house, goddammit! The first home he'd ever truly been able to call his own, and these pathetic lowlifes had invaded it, defiled it, made parts of it theirs instead of his.
It made him crazy, made him look long and hard at the carving knives in the kitchen, made him open their car trunk and stare at the nickel-plated pistol they'd fired at him.
But as much as he could think of murder, he knew he couldn't do it. No killer in his heart.
Yet God, how he'd love to scare the shit out of these two. Grab them by their scrawny necks and drag them through the rooms, holding their own piece to their heads, threatening to start busting caps on them if they didn't tell him what they'd done to his house, then stand over them and make them undo it, jab and poke them with the barrel when they didn't move as fast as he wanted.
But Jack had said the Fosters mustn't know where they were, mustn't connect their abduction to Lyle and Charlie Kenton. Lyle had never been one to take orders blindly, but this Jack guy... Lyle had to make an exception for him. You pay a man that kind of bread, you'd better listen to him. Besides, the man got things done.
The phone rang. Lyle checked the caller ID and picked up when he recognized Charlie's cell number.
'We through, bro,' Charlie said. 'We done our business and we headin' home.'
'What'd you do?'
'Tell you when I get there, but lemme tell you, dawg, it fine! This Jack is righteous! Now, we took care of our end, you take care of yours. See ya.'
Lyle hung up and took a deep breath. My end... Jack had laid it out before leaving with Charlie. Sounded easy then, but seemed risky now.
He took a deep breath and headed for the garage.
12
Lyle stopped the Fosters' car in the shadow of a construction Dumpster. With all the rebuilding still going on in the financial district, these things were on every other block; this one seemed particularly large and isolated. He killed the lights and checked the street: nothing moving. This part of Manhattan was just about the quietest spot in town on a Saturday night.
He checked his watch. He'd made good time. The BQE had been light so he'd followed it all the way down to the Brooklyn Bridge and across into lower Manhattan. He'd driven like a timid Sunday school teacher, sticking to the speed limit all the way, signaling every lane change, spending as much time looking in his rearview mirror as through the windshield. The last thing he needed was to get stopped for some minor violation and have to explain what was under the blanket in the rear.
Lyle picked up the carving knife from the seat beside him and thumbed the edge. He noticed the blade quivering in the faint light.
I've got the shakes, he thought. He cast an angry glance over his shoulder. They should have the shakes.
But he'd never done anything like this before.
Let's get this over with.
He pulled the blanket off Madame Pomerol's flabby body, turned her over, gripped her under the arms, and started dragging her from the car. She struggled and he could hear whimpers of fear through her gag, her breath whistling in and out her nose. She'd just spent hours stripped naked, bound, gagged, and blindfolded. Both of them had to be terrified beyond anything they ever could have imagined.
Too bad, Lyle thought as he laid her out on the pavement. Just too goddamn bad.
Next he dragged her husband from the car and rolled him over, face down like his wife. As soon as the man's belly flattened out on the asphalt, a puddle began to form around his mid-section.
What's the matter? Lyle wanted to shout. Think you're gonna die? Think what you planned for me is coming down on you?
He lowered the knife toward the woman and cut three quarters of the way through the tape binding her wrists, then did the same with the man. They'd be able to rip the rest of the way through without too much difficulty.
He hopped back into their car and roared away, looking around, looking over his shoulder, wondering if anyone had spotted him. Lyle was beginning to believe they might get away with this.
He drove to Chambers Street and parked by a fire hydrant. He left the windows down, the doors unlocked, and the trunk open; he left their cut-up clothes on the front seat but folded the blanket and took that along. He dropped the keys through a sewer grate on his way to the subway station on the corner. He'd chosen this spot because the W train stopped here. It also stopped in Astoria, six blocks from his house.
While he was waiting for the train, as per Jack's instructions, he found a pay phone and dialed 911. He noticed his fingers trembling as they dropped the coins into the slot.
Damn! He was still juiced.
He told the operator he'd heard something that sounded like gunshots up on Chambers Street... said he thought it had something to do with a yellow Corolla parked by a hydrant.
The first thing the cops would do would be to check the glove compartment where they'd find the car registration. Next they'd check the trunk and find the .32. Jack had said he'd give high odds that the gun was unregistered.
When the Fosters reported the car stolen, they'd have to explain the unregistered pistol found in their trunk, most likely with their prints on it. If it could be linked to a crime, so much the better. If not, Jack said he had further plans for Madame Pomerol.
Lyle was dying to know what he'd cook up next.
13
Jack let himself into Gia's house through the front door. He punched a code twice into the alarm keypad-first to disarm, then to rearm it. He glided upstairs and spoke a soft hello into the dark bedroom. Receiving a muffled mumble in reply, he ducked into the bathroom for a quick shower, then slipped under the covers and snuggled against Gia.
'You awake?' he said, nuzzling her neck.
She was wearing a short T-shirt and panties, and he was in the mood. He was definitely in the mood.
'How was your night?' she muttered through barely mobile lips.
'Great. How was yours?'
'Lonely.'
Jack slipped a hand under her shirt and cupped a breast. It fit perfectly in his hand.
'Just hold me, Jack, okay? Just hold me.'
'Not in the mood?'
'Sometimes a girl just likes to be held.'
Concerned, he released her breast and folded his arms around her. Couldn't remember the last time Gia had referred to herself as a 'girl.'
'Anything wrong?'
'Just lying here thinking.'
'About what?'
'Possibilities.'
'Oh? Got to be about a million of them out there for you. All good.'
'I wish I were so sure.'
'You're worried about something,' he said, pulling her closer. 'I sensed it this afternoon. What's up?'
'Like I said, just thinking about possibilities... and the big changes they might bring.'
'Good changes or bad?'
'Depends on how you look at them.'
'You're losing me here.'
Gia sighed. 'I know. I'm not trying to be mysterious. It's just... sometimes you worry.'
'About what?'
She turned and kissed him. 'Nothing. Everything.'
'If something's bothering you, shouldn't I know?'
'You should. And when there's-when it's something real-you'll be the first to know.'