I wondered what Martin had thought when he’d heard the truck, near the house. He’d probably thought help had come quicker than he’d expected. He’d have felt proud of me…
Instead, I’d been tricked, and I hadn’t gotten help.
Shame broke over me in a wave of blackness.
It was followed by a rage so overwhelming that I had trouble seeing the road ahead of me. I seldom lose my temper, and this was far beyond that, light years beyond. I knew I had blocked from my complete awareness, until this moment, just how bad Martin had looked, just how much he too needed a doctor.
Now this woman was keeping me from getting help for him, and Karl, too. I remembered Rory’s empty eyes and the pool of blood around his head; but Rory was beyond human assistance, and I had no more grief for him. My sense of urgency vied with my terrible rage for supremacy in the limited emotional room I had to spare.
I tugged at my ear on my left side, away from Margaret. My earring slid out, the back rolling down my collar and into my shirt. The small earring, just a little gold knot design, went down in the deep crack of the seat. Some policeman would find it and nail Margaret Granberry, I hoped most devoutly.
Aurora Was Here.
I pressed my fingers to the wheel, the steering column, the seat adjustor, the window, as unobtrusively as possible, hoping she’d overlook a print when she wiped down the truck. Maybe I’d seen too many movies and too many episodes
Margaret told me to turn into her driveway. It was the first time I’d seen the Granberry’s house. It was a farmhouse with extras added, in keeping with what Cindy had told me about their lifestyle. Gleaming white, with spanking green shutters and a hot tub in a sunroom to the south, it was farming deluxe.
Luke came running out the front door as we lurched to a stop, his face twisted with anxiety. There was a rifle in his hands.
“What happened?” he cried.
“Look, honey!” Margaret called, holding up the baby so he could see it.
Luke’s face went slack with horror.
“What have you done, sweetheart?” he asked.
“Don’t worry, she was heading to town in Karl’s truck. He was parked down at the copse,” Margaret explained. “But she was taking the baby with her, and I figured this might be our last chance.”
“But…”
“And sweetie, she says you hit Karl too,” Margaret interrupted.
“I only fired once,” he said, protesting.
“The bullet went through Rory,” I told them, hardly able to choke out the words through the rage.
“He’s dead,” Margaret said, relief clear in her voice. “So we don’t have to worry about that anymore.”
Luke’s shoulders slumped with the same relief. “Let’s get you all inside the house,” he said briskly.
“I can show Lucas his nursery,” Margaret said, delight coursing through her voice.
“Hayden,” I said.
“No, that’s the nasty name
“You have to call an ambulance and send it to the farm,” I said, sounding as reasonable as I could, considering I was in a frenzy.
“Why? Rory’s dead!”
“I realize he’s beyond consideration,” I said, hardly knowing what words were issuing from my mouth. “But Karl is very badly hurt and Martin is not well. I’m afraid he’s… I’m afraid he’s… really sick.” I was making a superhuman effort to sound calm and matter-of-fact.
The couple looked at each other, communing silently.
“Don’t think we can risk it,” Luke said.
Margaret started into the house. “No,” she threw over her shoulder, “I don’t see how we can.”
“You have to,” I said. I stood in the snow, looking up at Luke, whose brown eyes were clear and blank. “You can’t let my husband die. You can’t.”
“Margaret? Maybe we could send an ambulance?” he called to her, though he kept his guard on me.
“I’ll bet they can trace a nine-one-one call,” she said doubtfully. “Let’s get inside and think about it. I bet our baby is hungry.”
They weren’t going to help.
That was the final straw.
I jumped him, rifle and all.
I woke up on a floor, a cold concrete floor. It was in a windowless room lit by a bulb hanging from a cord in the middle of the ceiling.
My mouth was dry as cotton and my head hurt like hell. I tried to lift it, and the effort left me shaken and nauseated. I satisfied myself with just shifting my eyes around. I thought of all the books I’d read, all the mysteries. Spenser wouldn’t have ended up this way. Neither would Kinsey Milhone. Or Henry O. Or Stephanie Plum. Well, yeah, maybe Stephanie Plum.
“Hey.”
I found the source of the voice. A young woman, dark haired, was sitting on a straight-backed chair against the wall.
“Aunt Roe, are you all right?”
I hadn’t realized I’d been sure Regina was dead until I saw her sitting there alive and well. But it wasn’t possible for me to feel more shocked than I already did; I just accepted our niece’s presence with no more than dull surprise. “Regina,” I whispered.
“Yeah, it’s me!” she said cheerfully. “Hey, how are you feeling? And how’s the baby? I’ve been going nuts down here.”
“Where is here?”
Regina thought that one over for a second. “Oh, you mean, where are we right now?”
“Yes,” I said, without the energy to be exasperated.
“We’re in the Granberrys’ basement.”
I’d never had a basement. Not that many houses in Georgia do. I’d only opened the door to the basement in Martin’s old farmhouse, shuddered at the dark cold that rolled up the stairs, and shut the door with alacrity. Now here I was in a basement, a windowless, below-ground prison.
“How long have you been here?”
“Since that night at your place. Well, minus the trip back to Ohio, but I don’t remember much of that. Margaret gave me a bunch of sleeping pills.”
I knew anguish was waiting just around the corner. When Luke Granberry had knocked me out, he’d done me a favor. I tried to stave off the misery for a few minutes. “Tell me what happened,” I croaked.
“Oh, well, the Granberrys showed up,” Regina said, making a face as if Margaret and Luke were particularly undesirable party crashers.
“Why?”
“Well… you know… to get the baby. But Craig beat them there.”
“Why?”
“Well… to get the baby.”
I felt a tear roll down my cheek sideways on its way to the floor. Martin, alone with the dying Karl Bagosian, waiting for the ambulance I was supposed to send, the help I was supposed to bring… “Tell me from the beginning,” I said, in a voice I didn’t recognize as my own.
“When I got pregnant, it was like, a big disaster. You can imagine!”
No, I couldn’t.
“I’d just married Craig. Well, it happened before we got married, if you can count you can figure that out, and you better believe the old ladies around here can count! Especially after my mother had that baby, you know, the