Three shots came in rapid fire. Two hit the door and one spiderwebbed the driver’s side window, leaving little question that he was the target.

“Damn it!” Max scrambled inside and shut the door, cursing when the dome light took a few precious seconds to shut off. He’d left the keys in the ignition, and muttered to himself in the half second before the engine turned over and roared to life.

There was no use returning fire. It was dark on dark. He was the visible target. Better to get the hell out of there and live to fight another day.

Live to see what was on the disk Charlie had given him.

The disk someone was willing to kill for.

Max stomped on the gas, twisted the wheel and sent the SUV hurtling across the overpass, slaloming in a crazy path that would hopefully foil his attacker’s aim.

Maybe there were more bullets, he didn’t know. He passed the place where Charlie had gone over, and accelerated when he hit the on-ramp that dumped him onto I-84 headed south.

Heart pounding, he turned on his headlights. The road was clear, with traffic snarled behind him where Charlie’s bike and body had landed.

He kept his eyes on the rearview mirror, but no car followed him down the ramp.

The speedometer edged toward eighty miles per hour. “Damn it, Charlie. What the hell did you get yourself into?”

What did I get you into?

And how would he get the rest of them out unscathed?

Chapter Eight

Raine dozed lightly in the hotel room, kept awake by the chatter of Ike’s computer keyboard as the other woman typed a few lines, paused to stare at the screen, then typed again. Sometimes she talked to the machine, low crooning words interspersed with the occasional mild curse and the click of her cordless mouse.

She didn’t talk to Raine, but that was just fine. Raine didn’t want to talk to her, either. Their earlier conversation lay too heavy on her heart.

Though she wasn’t responsible for Max’s actions, she was responsible for her own. She’d been selfish when she’d left Boston, and she was starting to realize a simple apology wasn’t sufficient. She’d done damage on her way out.

How could she fix it?

“Your friend Jeff has a heck of a checkered past,” Ike announced unexpectedly.

Raine opened her eyes and found the other woman staring at her. “Are you talking to me or your computer this time?”

“Ha, ha. That line and five bucks’ll get you a spot at the nearest comedy hour.” But Ike’s words lacked venom, as though she was content to call a truce after their earlier conversation. She turned back to the computer and said, “He did a little time in juvie for petty theft and what looks like racketeering, though they don’t call it that when you’re thirteen.”

Raine levered herself up on the bed, surprised that the bedside clock read 4:00 a.m. Apparently she’d dozed longer than she’d thought. She yawned and rolled her neck to ease the kinks. “I thought juvie records were supposed to be sealed?”

“Please.” Ike cracked her knuckles. “Piece of cake. He was nearly kicked out of both colleges three months before graduation on suspicion of cheating and hacking test scores, but the charges mysteriously disappeared right about the time you contacted him about working for Rainey Days.”

A chill sneaked through Raine’s lingering sleep warmth. “I didn’t contact Jeff. He came looking for me. Said he was interested in Thriller, and he wanted to get in on the ground floor of a major breakthrough.” She’d been flattered, and more than a little relieved to hand daily operations over to a genius with a hell of a head for business.

“Of course he did.” Ike rolled her eyes. “And you know that sick brother of his? He’s all better.”

Raine hated where this was going. Not Jeff, she thought. Please not Jeff. “That’s impossible. Joey needs a transplant, and he’s got some sort of wonky HLA factor that’s almost impossible to match.”

“They matched it. The surgery was done in Maryland last month. Private benefactor.”

“Oh.” Oh, Jeff. Raine swallowed hard against the betrayal, trying not to show how much it hurt. “Any idea who paid?”

That earned her a raised eyebrow. “Hmm. Quicker than you look, aren’t you?” Ike pulled up two new windows on the computer screen, tapped a few keystrokes and frowned. “Nothing yet. It’s buried pretty good, but I’ll keep at it.”

“Not as quick as you’d like us to believe, are you?” Raine snapped back.

“I’d be quicker if you told us everything you know.”

“I have, damn it!” Raine’s voice bounced off the walls, loud in the night-quiet hotel. “And what’s your problem, you-”

“Get down!” Ike erupted from her chair and yanked a gun seemingly from nowhere. She crossed to the bed, grabbed a fistful of Raine’s shirt and shoved her to the floor between the beds. She mouthed, “Stay down and shut up.”

For a heart-pounding second, Raine thought the other woman was going to shoot her. Then she heard it.

The sound of a footstep outside their door. At four in the morning.

It might be Max, returning from his meeting.

But what if it wasn’t?

Raine peered around the edge of the bed and watched as Ike positioned herself beside the door, weapon at the ready. She checked the peephole, contorting her body so it wasn’t directly in the line of fire.

Then she cursed and holstered her weapon. “Vasek, you idiot.” Muttering under her breath, she unlatched the security chain and bolt, and yanked open the door. “Next time, call first. I almost put a hole in you.”

As Ike relocked the door behind him, Raine got a good look at Max’s expression, which was dark and brooding, and lined with tension.

She stood. “What’s wrong?”

He took a step toward her and lifted a hand, then let it fall to his side. “Grab your stuff and let’s go. We’ve got to get out of here. They killed my informant.”

Killed? Raine stood frozen for a second, unable to believe that this was happening. That it was still happening. She kept waiting for the violence to stop.

Instead, it seemed to be accelerating.

“Get your stuff or you’re leaving without it,” Max snapped as he passed her on his way to the adjoining room.

Broken from her paralysis, Raine loaded the shopping bag with her few items of clothing while Ike packed her computer with practiced efficiency.

Voice calm, as though she dealt with murder every day, Ike said, “Where are we headed?”

Max reappeared in the doorway, duffel slung over his shoulder. “You’re going back to Boston, and you’re going to pretend you were never here.”

“Like hell I am. Try again, Vasek.” Then Ike stopped, faint humor draining from her face. “You’re serious.”

“Deadly.” He looked down at her and his expression softened a hint. “I know you’re tough, Ike. I know you can take care of yourself. Do this for me, please. Just go home and forget you know me.”

Ike reached up and touched his cheek. “Poor Max. Still trying to protect me, aren’t you? It never worked before and it won’t work this time. I’ll go home, but I’m not off the case. Call me when you can, and I’ll update you on the database and Jeff Wells.” Ike jerked her head in Raine’s direction. “That one can brief you on what I’ve found so far.”

Max stood for a moment, staring down at her, indecision written on his face. Then he muttered a curse,

Вы читаете Under the Microscope
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату