matter.
Stratton’s men backed off. Flashing the badge seemed to work, because after some jostling, they got back in their car. They drove the Mercedes close to the other car, then sped away. He took his hand off his gun. He was glad he’d decided to wait. This could get even bigger.
Maybe he
He watched the FBI gal get back in her car and drive away. “Not shrewd,” he said to himself again, tucking away his camera. He ?icked a matchbook between his ?ngers.
But a shitload of spunk.
Chapter 74
ABOUT 3:30 that afternoon, Ellie met us back at Champ’s garage.
I was happy to see that she was okay and gave her a hug. I could tell by the way she held on to me, she’d been worried about me, too. We told her about the motorcycle chase.
“You’re crazy.” Ellie shook her head at Geoff.
“I don’t know,” he said with a shrug, as if re?ecting on it. “I’ve often found the line between crazy and physically irresponsible to be quite blurred. Anyway, I thought it was a far cry better than having to party up with those guys in the Hummer. Given the circumstances, I actually thought things went pretty well.”
I shot a glance to the clock on Champ’s garage wall. It was getting to be that time. A lot could play out for us in the next hour or so. We could ?nd out who stole Stratton’s art. I could be cleared of the murders. “You ready to go to Liz’s? Ready to nail Dennis Stratton?” I asked. Ellie seemed nervous, though – for her, anyway.
“Yeah,” she said. She caught my arm, her expression tight. “Just so you understand, that’s not the only thing that’s going to happen at Stratton’s today.”
She opened her jacket. A set of handcuffs dangled from her waist.
I felt my stomach shift. I’d felt strangely free for the past few days, following up on the crimes, maybe getting closer to catching a killer. I’d almost forgotten she was an FBI agent.
“If it all goes like we hope in there,” she said, that law-enforcement look back in her eye, “you’re going to turn yourself in. You remember the deal?”
“Sure.” I looked at her and nodded, but inside I was dying. “I remember the deal.”
Chapter 75
WE CROSSED OVER the middle bridge to Palm Beach mostly in silence. My stomach was twisting inside. Whatever happened at Stratton’s, I knew my freedom was about to end.
The town was eerily quiet for a Thursday in mid-April. There were only a few tourists and shoppers on or around Worth Avenue seeking out the late-season sales. A white-haired doyenne crossed in front of us at a light, in a fur wrap despite the April heat, her poodle in tow. I looked at Ellie and we smiled. I was holding on to anything I could right now.
We turned onto Stratton’s private street, just off the ocean. That’s when I realized something was wrong.
Two police cars were blocking the road, their lights ?ashing. Others were parked all around Stratton’s gate.
At ?rst I thought that the reception was for me, and I was scared. That Liz had set me up.
“Get down,” Ellie said to me, turning around. I sank down in the backseat, my face tucked under my cap. Ellie lowered her window and ?ashed her shield to a policeman blocking traf?c. “What’s happened?” she asked.
The cop took a quick glance at her ID. “There are a couple of bodies in the house. Two people shot. Never seen anything like what’s been happening lately.”
“Stratton?” Ellie asked.
“No,” the of?cer said, shaking his head. “One’s a bodyguard, they’re telling me. The other’s Mr. Stratton’s wife.”
He waved us through, but I felt my blood drain, and a feeling of panic grip me from head to toe.
“Oh, Jesus, Ellie, we got her killed,” I said, feeling as if it were Dave all over again.
Ellie turned in through the gates into the long pebbled driveway. Three more patrol cars were parked in front of the house, as well as a second EMS van, its doors open.
“You wait here,” Ellie said, pulling up in front. “Promise me, Ned, you won’t run.”
“I promise,” I said. “I’m not going anywhere.” Ellie slammed the door and ran inside. I felt as though something inevitable was about to happen. I knew it, in fact.
“I promise, Ellie,” I said, reaching for the door, “I’m not running anymore.”
Chapter 76
STRATTON WAS IN THERE.
Ellie spotted him in the foyer. Sitting in a chair, rubbing his ashen face, mirroring shock. Carl Breen, the detective Ellie had met in Tess’s suite, was sitting with him. And Ponytail, the pockmarked asshole who’d taken off after Ned and Champ, was standing smugly by.
“I can’t believe she would do this,” Stratton muttered. “They were having an affair. She told me. She’d been angry with me. I’d been working too hard. Ignoring her…
Ellie looked ahead into the sunroom. Her stomach sank. She immediately recognized one of the muscular bodyguards she’d seen at Stratton’s party lying face up on the ?oor. There were two bullet holes in his chest. But worse, so much worse, was the sight of Liz Stratton, lying back on the ?oral love seat across from him, still dressed in the same white pantsuit as she had on that afternoon. A trickle of blood ran down one side of her forehead. Vern Lawson was kneeling beside her.
Ellie had heard a cop talking on the way in. It was supposed to be a murder-suicide.
Like hell. Ellie felt her blood grow hot. She looked at Lawson, then Stratton, then back at Liz.
“I knew she was upset,” Stratton continued to Detective Breen. “She ?nally told me about the affair. That she was going to end it. Maybe Paul wouldn’t let her go.
Ellie couldn’t hold back. “I know you killed her,” she said to Stratton bluntly.
“What?” He looked up, startled.
“You set this up,” Ellie went on, teeming with anger. “There was no affair. The only affair was
“
“I was with her,” Ellie said, looking at Breen, “only a couple of hours ago. She told me everything. How she arranged an affair to discredit her husband and he found out. How he was implicated in stealing his own art. Check at the Brazilian Court. Run the photos. You’ll see. Stratton was with Tess McAuliffe. Ask him what Liz meant, that only
There was thick silence in the room. Breen peered at Stratton. Stratton looked around edgily.