to get to you.”
“Question is: how to make sure he finds me?”
“I have an idea for that, but Jack will absolutely hate it.”
“At this point, not a concern.”
She looked at me, and her mouth opened, as if she wanted to say something, then she gave a sharp shake of her head.
“He’s a big boy,” she murmured. “Okay then, here’s what I’m thinking…”
By the time Jack returned to the car, fifteen minutes later, we’d hammered out the skeleton of a plan. When it was time to tell him, I let Evelyn do the honors. As he listened, his face darkened. He let Evelyn get into it, then interrupted.
“Involving the Feds is stupid.” He looked at me. “That your idea?”
I smiled. “But of course. If it’s stupid, it must be my idea.”
“I didn’t say-”
“We can’t just make Wilkes disappear. You saw the scene in that Vegas diner. People need to see a body, to know this is really over. They need resolution.
“And no, it wasn’t Dee ’s idea,” Evelyn said. “It was mine. If this agent in charge is as ambitious as Quinn says, he’ll make the trade. He gets the glory of the arrest, and in return, plays down Wilkes’s past, doesn’t portray him as a psycho hitman. Things go back to normal. Sure, the cops still want us gone, but they won’t be seeing us all as potential serial killers. That’s what we’ve been trying to do all along, isn’t it? Get back to business as usual?”
“Pulling Feds in-”
“One Fed. Maybe two if he needs someone to hold his hand. As for exactly how he’ll manage it without involving his team and his superiors, that’s his problem.”
“This okay with you?” Jack said, twisting to look at me, eyes unreadable. “Taking Wilkes down by yourself?”
“Sure, Jack. Why not? A chance to catch a killer and redeem my sorry life, and if I fail, well, it’s not like anyone will give a damn if I turn up in a Dumpster somewhere.”
Evelyn looked at him. “What the hell did you say to her?” When neither of us answered, she leaned back into her seat. “Oh, boy. This will be fun.”
Next we had errands to run. Jack phoned Quinn to summon him and Felix to West Virginia. Then we drove out of town to dispose of my things and pick up supplies. By the time we got to our hotel, it was evening, and my mood had lifted. We had a plan, and I was an integral part of that plan, so there was no time for sulking.
As for Jack, well, he was quiet, maybe still simmering, or maybe just gone back to his normal self. Either way, I wasn’t dwelling on it.
I walked through the door joining the two hotel suites Evelyn had checked us into.
“Better digs than
“We had a nice place in Ohio,” I said. “Real flowers, Jacuzzi tub…”
Evelyn sniffed. “And a heart-shaped vibrating bed? Classy, Jacko.”
“Do you want this room?” I asked, moving into the bedroom doorway. “Or I guess if the other has two beds, you and I should take that-”
“This one’s yours. You took on Wilkes today, you deserve something special, and this hotel is my way of saying ‘good job.’” She glanced at Jack. “You can take the sofa.”
I shook my head. “We all need a good rest tonight. There are four beds-”
Evelyn cut me off with a sigh. “Fine, share my room with me. You don’t snore, do you?”
I thought about the nightmares, but Jack said, “She’s fine.” He paused. “Or she will be. Gotta get those hands fixed.”
I picked up the drugstore bag he’d laid on the table. “I’ll do that now.”
“Can’t bandage your own hands.” He took the bag from me. “Sit down.”
“I’ll be unpacking,” Evelyn said, and left.
Jack was still cleaning my wounds when Felix rapped at the door. Jack opened it. Quinn walked in and stopped dead, staring at my hands.
“Shit, are you okay?” he said.
I nodded.
“How did you-?”
“Garrote wire.”
Felix stepped up beside me and frowned down at my wounds. “A garrote wire can be tricky to use. The instinct is to wrap it around your own hands, but if it’s sharp enough, then you see the damage you can inflict.”
“This isn’t-I wasn’t using it on someone; he was using it on me.”
“And you managed to get your hands under it? Excellent reflexes. However, it does beg the question…”
“Who the hell tried to garrote you?” Quinn said as he crouched and took my hand.
Jack waved him aside and took his place, then unrolled the bandage.
“Wilkes,” he said when I was slow to answer.
“Wilkes attacked you?” Felix said as he sat in a chair. “So he knows we’re in pursuit? That could lead to some difficulty-”
“Doesn’t know,” Jack said. “Picked Dee as a victim. She-” A hard look my way. “Lured him in.”
Before anyone could comment, Evelyn walked from the other room. As Felix and Quinn greeted her, Jack inspected the cleaned wounds.
“So you decided to join the hunt,” Quinn said, flashed a smile at Evelyn. “Getting a little too exciting to ignore? I bet-Ah, wait. The anonymous ‘concerned party’ who’s paying our wages. Guess I should say thank you.”
Evelyn said nothing, but from the look that crossed her face, she had no idea what Quinn was talking about. I’d never suspected Evelyn was the person funding the job-she wouldn’t hire a group of hitmen for a nonprofit expedition. But if it wasn’t her…
“Stop squirming,” Jack said. “Gotta get this fastened.”
Quinn sat on the sofa. “So Dee lured Wilkes into a showdown?” He grinned my way. “Way to go.”
Jack shot him a look, but Quinn continued, “You went mano a mano with the infamous Helter Skelter killer. The first victim who fought back. Did he say anything? Too busy getting his heart out of his throat, I bet.”
Jack scooped up the bloodied cloths, wrapped them in the empty bag for later disposal and took them back to his room. I crouched to clean up the first-aid supplies. Quinn slid down beside me to help. As he leaned over for the scissors he whispered, “I’m jealous.” I laughed. We both reached for the spare tape roll. I got to it first, but he pretended not to notice and grabbed for it, ending up with my wrist instead. A quick grin and quicker squeeze, and he released me.
“You’ll have to tell me all about it later,” he said.
I smiled. “We’ll see.”
As I straightened, I caught Evelyn watching us.
“When Jack called us in, he said you have a plan,” Felix said. “Care to share?”
Felix liked the plan. Quinn wasn’t so sure. I understood his reticence. What he and I knew, and the others didn’t, was that we were expecting a federal agent to do something no agent should ever consider. However often one might see movie cops playing lone cowboys, it didn’t work that way in real life. You’re trained to be a team player, and there are plenty of checks and balances to make sure you stay that way-like Quinn having to provide a hotel name and phone number while on vacation.
But, as Quinn conceded, if there was a guy who might go for this, it was Martin Dubois. He amended the plan somewhat, building in protections that might sway Dubois, make him feel safer. Even then he warned that we were taking a chance-that Dubois wouldn’t agree, would double-cross us, would back out at the last moment. But