“I did.”
“So give me the password,” she said.
“No,” Nick said.
“I let them go,” Breecher said. She was panting hard, and Nick could see the little girl in her for the first time. The child who had grown up under a star-spangled military father. The one who was an adult now, fearing the disgrace that would follow: the discharge, the prison time, the disownment. “Give. Me. The. Password.”
“The moment I do that, you’ll call those men back in here,” Nick said, glancing toward the door. “And I’m as good as dead. You need to walk me out of this house alive. Then I’ll—”
He had no time to finish. Breecher walked off, disappearing through the foyer to the dining room. He should have run, but, drawn by curiosity or simply by fear, he followed her instead. Driver’s two men were in the room; one ripping books off a shelf in the back living area, the other crouched and poring over a pile of debris under a window. Nick could hear footsteps on the old boards overhead. It sounded like Driver was upstairs.
In three seconds, maybe less, Breecher had walked into theroom and shot both of Driver’s men in the head. One in the back of the skull, the other in the temple as he turned toward the noise. Before Nick could react, bodily or emotionally, Breecher was with him again, the gun in his ribs as she shoved him toward the front door of the house.
“Go,” she said again.
CHAPTER SIXTY
CLAYTON SPEARS WONDERED quietly if the little old woman he’d just put in the back of his cruiser was the oldest person he’d ever had back there. There wasn’t much crime after a person hit seventy—either because they were dead, too dumb to stay out of jail, or too smart not to go legit by then. Sure, he’d had people of a certain vintage in the vehicle. Only a month earlier, he’d been cruising around town on a hellishly rainy day and had spotted an older man getting drowned on his way back from the supermarket. He’d given him a ride, but in the front passenger seat. The back was for the perps. He watched Shauna Bulger in the rearview mirror as he radioed in for updates. She seemed to be panting softly like an exhausted bird. He assumed this was her first ever arrest. Guilt clawed at his insides.
“Sheriff Spears back on the line,” he sighed into the radio. “Dispatch, what’s the lay of the land? Over.”
“It’s really kicking off here tonight, Sheriff!” the radiocrackled. “Boss, we got a possible drag race in Dogtown, minor assault in a hotel on Washington Street, couple of reports of prowlers over the north district.”
“I’ll be right in,” Clay said. He tossed the mic back at the receiver. “OK, Mrs. Bulger. I’m gonna need you to get your mind around what’s gonna happen over the next few hours. Seems like we got some dramas in town. The last couple of days have been madness all over Gloucester.”
He started the engine and pulled out, taking the curved road around the marina toward where she had said she’d parked Bill’s car.
“We’re gonna get this box of evidence you’ve been toting around, and then I’m gonna have to drop you and it at the station,” Clay said. He straightened in his seat, making the leather groan unflatteringly. “I would have liked to come in and process you. Get you into a nice comfy holding cell of your own. Maybe see if I could rustle up a cup of tea. But it’s not that kind of night, ma’am. So you’ll be stuck in the bullpen, I’m afraid, with the riffraff.”
Only a cough sounded from the back seat in response. He glanced in the mirror. Shauna Bulger was red faced, still panting.
“Are you feeling all right?” Clay asked.
“Have you got any water up there?” she rasped. Clay started to get a sinking feeling in his belly.
“Uh, sure. Yeah. Let me…” He spotted Bill’s car up ahead. “Let me just pull over here.”
By the time Clay had pulled over and slipped out of the driver’s seat, Mrs. Bulger was on her side, curled on up on thefaded leather bench seat like she’d been sucker punched. Her rattling coughing filled the car as he tore open the door.
“Oh man,” Clay said and lifted her out of the car like a doll and set her on the roadside. “Oh Jesus! What’s goin’ on?”
“My chest hurts.” She sucked in shallow sips of air.
Clay had the cuffs off her wrists faster than he’d ever released a suspect in his life. The guilt was now thumping in his eardrums like a sonic beat.
He was bending over her tiny body, trying to roll her into the recovery position, when Mrs. Bulger’s arm whipped around, her hand mashing a palm full of dirt into his wide, concerned eyes. Clay grabbed at his face, his yelp of surprise morphing into a yelp of pain as he felt her drive her knee into his crotch.
Clay hit the gravel at the side of the road like a bag of bricks. He gripped her ankle briefly as Shauna Bulger slipped away. He was only just clearing the dirt from his eyes when he was blinded again by the dust her tires threw up as she sped off in Bill’s car.
CHAPTER SIXTY-ONE
I RECOGNIZED THE distinct headlights of Effie’s Mustang zooming through the night as we drove back toward the inn in Susan’s car. Susan must have seen her too, because she swiveled fast in her seat as I did, catching a mere glimpse of our friend in the other car. My heart lurched as my phone buzzed in my pocket. I pulled it out and read the message, every typed letter sending zings of terror over my skin.
BG x 4 @ inn w N
When I looked up, Susan’s eyes were full of dread.
“Bad guys at the inn with Nick,” I deciphered. “Four of them.”