Chapter 37

37

brAIDEN

I t’s late by the time I finally head upstairs for bed. I checked the news after Fairfax’s talking to. There was an article on The Enquirer’s site, a story that won’t be in print until tomorrow.

The Department of Corrections is moving forward with its Paragon plan, the project to renovate one of the state’s oldest prisons. Ray Krakower held a press conference, expressing his enthusiasm for one of the city’s newest business partners: East Falls Contracting Company.

Russo has finally leveraged the information Samantha gave him. Krakower has ducked public disclosure of his career in film. Kelly Construction has lost a fifty-million-dollar project that was virtually guaranteed.

I could hire lawyers. I could sue the DOC, demanding they re-compete the job. I could drag things out for years, maybe even a decade, and in the end, I might tear Paragon back from Russo.

But I won’t.

No matter how heated things get with Russo’s crew, I’ll let him keep Krakower. I made a promise to Samantha, and I won’t go back on that.

Once I get into bed, I can’t fall asleep. Even with the air conditioner pumping out its frozen air, the bedroom is too warm. I turn on the ceiling fan. Tap the remote to make it spin faster. Tap again for the maximum speed. Turn the whole thing off, because it feels like I’m trapped in a wind tunnel.

I throw back the covers and stalk to the window, automatically taking shelter behind the curtains, so no one can see me from outside. Best’s men are at their stations, two men each in two cars, one on either side of the street.

Still restless, I pull on the trousers I set aside when I got ready for bed. I slip into my dress shirt as well, but I don’t bother doing up the buttons. I consider putting on my shoes and socks, but I’ll be quieter in bare feet.

Something is off. Something is wrong. I prowl to the closet, stopping in front of the gun safe built into the wall. Setting my fingertips on the reader, I listen for the muffled click of the lock releasing.

Walther in hand, I make my way down the hallway. Aiofe’s asleep in her bed, clutching her stuffed rabbit like it’s a shield against bad dreams. My office is empty. Samantha’s too.

The staircase at Thornfield creaked like a cheap mattress, but my feet are silent on the new steps here. The living room is just as I left it, my newspapers stacked beside my recliner. The dining room is empty, the kitchen too.

I ease the door open to the basement. I can hear Fairfax’s snores from the top of the stairs. That doesn’t mean an intruder’s not lurking down there.

I’m quiet enough not to wake Fairfax, which is a good thing, because he’d somehow manage to make this about Samantha, if I gave him half a chance.

Back on ground level, I open the front door and step onto the front porch. I can hear wind in the trees. Cars on the cross street, four houses down. A dog barks somewhere in the next block, maybe farther away.

A shadow glides up the driveway. “Everything okay, Mr. Kelly?”

It’s one of Best’s men. His hair is cut military short, and he’s poured into his tight black T-shirt with matching denim jeans. He’s got one hand on his sidearm as he waits for my response.

“It’s fine,” I tell him. “I just couldn’t sleep.”

“I can move one of my men to the porch here. If you’d like, sir.”

I nod. “Do that. And put someone in the back.”

“Yes, sir.”

He speaks into his radio—fast, efficient, trustworthy.

“Anything else, sir?”

“No.” I shake my head. “Have a good night.”

Back in my bedroom, I put the Walther on my nightstand. I tell myself to stop being an eejit, to trust the men I’ve hired, to get some sleep, because the Krakower news is sure to keep me busy tomorrow.

I pick up my phone before I shrug out of my clothes. My fingers move in the new habit I’ve set over the past four days.

I look for messages—none.

I check email—none.

I open the tracker app, confirming that Samantha’s pin is centered in Dover.

It isn’t.

Samantha’s pin is winding through a tangle of Philadelphia streets. For just a moment, my shoulders rise. She’s driving to Ardmore. She’s finally coming home.

But I see my mistake almost instantly.

Samantha isn’t driving to Ardmore. She’s driving to East Falls. At this time of night, in that part of town, I have absolutely no doubt about her destination.

She’s heading to Russo’s compound.

I grab the Walther and shove it into the waistband of my trousers. I pull on the shoes and socks I skipped before, when I wanted to be quiet. I throw on a jacket and snag my keys from the dresser and I’m halfway down the stairs before I realize my mistake.

Back in the bedroom, I ransack the nightstand, reaching all the way to the back. The key fob that waits there is heavy but slim. Clutching it like a lifeline, I whirl back to the stairs.

Best’s man jumps to attention as I throw open the door. I shout something at him, tell him to keep an eye on the house, on Aiofe, on Fairfax. And then I rip the tarp from Madden’s McLaren and race toward the city.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.