Panic and terror ripped through him. He lay on his cot, his hands clenched into fists and pressed into his belly, his body curled around them like a shield, while the voice called him a long string of ugly, obscene names in Spanish.
But the curses weren’t quite right, not quite what you’d hear on the streets of San Ignacio or even Madrid.
He replayed them in his mind now, parsing the vocabulary and grammatical structures. Definitely not a native Spanish speaker.
He opened the eyes he hadn’t realized he’d shut and blew out a long breath. He’d discovered something.
Suddenly, he felt the warmth of Quinn’s hand covering the fist he had unconsciously made on the car seat. He turned to meet her eyes.
“Just returning the favor from the plane ride,” she said, giving his hand a gentle squeeze so he could feel the imprint of her fingers on his skin.
“Gracias.”
“I know this is hard.” She kept her hand cupped over his, the warmth of her palm meant as a comfort but causing a different reaction in his body. “Let me know if you want to talk anything through.”
What he wanted was to pull her onto his lap and touch her until they both forgot the reason they were there. Opening his hand, he spread his fingers so they were interlaced with hers, a faint imitation of the way he wanted to intertwine their bodies.
“I’m trying to remember voices,” he said. “That’s my best chance of recognizing anyone.”
She nodded, her ponytail shifting with the motion. “I understand.”
She knew everything he’d told Mikel, so she understood far more than he might want her to. But it was a relief not to need to explain.
Looking at the earpiece in Quinn’s ear, he wondered if Mikel had deliberately ensured he was the only person in the car without the ability to hear what was going on. That way, he would be almost forced to think about the abduction. The man was an arch manipulator. Thank God he was on Gabriel’s side.
“Is anything happening?” he asked.
“We’re all driving around in circles until the plane lands.” Quinn glanced at her phone. “Which should be in ten minutes or so.”
“I figured something out,” he said. “The loudspeaker voice wasn’t a native Spanish speaker.”
“What makes you think that?”
“I remembered the way the voice cursed me after they found out that I wasn’t Raul. The obscenities were slightly off. It’s hard to explain.” He waved his free hand in frustration.
“You don’t have to. I believe you. I’ll tell Mikel.” Quinn spoke softly into her radio before she smiled. “He says, ‘Good job.’”
“All I did was eliminate a few hundred million people out of billions. Does that really help?” Gabriel grimaced.
“You eliminated about half our list of potential suspects, so yeah, that was pretty darned significant.”
So he would crawl back into the terror to see what more he could excavate. He curled his fingers inward to lock Quinn’s hand into his grasp.
After the voice had cursed at him, he’d been left alone and in silence. He’d never been that isolated before in his life. Living in the palace or on his parents’ estate, there was always someone nearby, whether family or staff. The only time he became oblivious to any human presence was when he practiced the guitar, the music wrapping him in a cocoon of sound and concentration.
In the tent, all sound was gone, and he found it hard to bear, so he hummed the music he loved. When the pain meds wore off, his wound began to throb with such agony that he couldn’t think about anything else.
He guessed they had punished him for about a day. There must have been windows in the room where his tent was pitched because he could track cycles of brighter and dimmer light, despite the constant artificial illumination inside his prison.
Now a new fear ate at his mind: Had the kidnappers decided he wasn’t worth the risk of ransoming? Had they left him there to die, possibly of an infected wound?
He had begun to explore the seams of the tent when the voice from the loudspeaker laughed, making him jump. “Planning to leave us?”
“I thought you’d left me.” He hated how pathetic that sounded.
“Just a reminder that it’s a bad idea to lie to me.” The slight hum behind the voice cut off, indicating that its owner had turned off the microphone. He had to stop himself from begging the voice to keep talking.
When a masked man finally entered the tent with a bottle of water and a packaged MRE, Gabriel nearly sobbed in relief. Of course, the MRE was also a punishment since he had no way to heat it or utensils to eat it with. Nor was there any more medicated applesauce. He had to wait while the man rebandaged his ear with a roughness that made Gabriel bite back groans. Then he tore into the cold lasagna like a starving dog.