He stopped cold. “Shit,” he said.
“What?” I said. “What now?”
“I just had an ugly thought. It’s the way my mind works.”
“Tell me.”
“I hate even thinking this,” he said, “but are you sure that Alex is planning to kill justyou?”
“Oh my God. What are you saying?”
“Maggie, you just told me the father of your children went off the deep end. He’s homicidal, and he can’t think rationally. Two words come to mind when I hear that. Arnold Sinclair.”
As soon as he said it, I yanked open the car door, leaned over, and puked my guts out on the Dunkin’ Donuts parking lot.
SIXTY-SEVEN
The mere mention of Misty’s father was the reality punch in the face that I needed. I had to stop thinking of Alex as the young medical student I fell in love with, the devoted father of my children, my soulmate for life.
One day Arnold Sinclair had also been that perfect package—the smiling would-you-like-starch-in-those-shirts neighborhood shopkeeper, surprising his daughter with a new car on her sixteenth birthday, and taking his family to Aspen for Christmas. And the next day he was a feral beast planning their execution.
Johnny drove me to the Heartstone train station parking lot. “Here’s your assignment,” he said, pulling his car alongside mine. “There are four things I want you to do. One—tell Alex you’re almost ready to go public with your blood disease, and pick a day about three weeks out.”
“What will that do?”
“He’s smart enough to know that your death will go smoother for him if he holds off until after everyone is braced for it,” he said. “If you set a reasonable date, he’ll wait. That will buy us time to figure out what the hell we’re doing next.”
“Did anyone ever tell you that you think like a criminal?”
“Thanks, Counselor. I was breastfed by a woman who did three years at the Albion Correctional Facility. It definitely gave me the edge over the kids whose moms didn’t rob, steal, or stab their boyfriends.”
“She sounds enchanting.”
“Here’s the second thing I want you to do,” he said. “We need rock-solid proof that Alex is the person pumping you full of vitamin D—something I can take to a lab. Can you do that?”
“It sounds easy enough.”
“Great. Three—find out how Alex knows about you and the chief.”
“Not so easy, but I’ll do my best. What’s the fourth one?”
“Don’t die.”
“That’s what my shrink said, but did you have to put itlaston your list?”
He grinned. “You’re right. I probably should have said ‘not necessarily in that order.’”
I drove home, and I entered the house a completely different person than when I’d left that morning. I was now sleeping with the enemy.
That night I told Alex I’d decided to tell friends, coworkers, and family about my illness on September 11. He didn’t ask me to hurry up and do it sooner, so I figured he’d be willing to keep me around for a few more weeks.
The next morning Alex came bounding into the bedroom grinning like a kid who spent the night locked in a candy store. He had my morning cup of chai tea in his hand. “Room service,” he chirped.
The tea! The fucking tea! How could I have been so stupid? It was all I could do to keep from screaming. But one of the things I learned from working with undercover cops when I was at the DA’s office is how to preempt suspicion. If I had balked at the tea—even for a moment—Alex would go on alert.
I grabbed it like a junkie copping an eight ball. “Oh God, you’re a lifesaver,” I said. I took a big gulp, hoping it wouldn’t be the one that killed me.
Satisfied that I was enjoying his early morning offering, he kissed me goodbye and left for work.