Page 5 of The Fix

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And these men knew. How, though? How did they know? Had they staked out their family beforehand? Had they watched them come and go? Made note of their schedules?

Oh, Daddy. Please God, let him sense something is wrong. Don’t let these men ambush him.

“AJ?” she heard the man call from the hall where he’d just walked Elle. “Come on up here and tie this little one up.”

“Hold on, Trig,” she heard from below. “I just found a safe down here in the office.”

“Forget the safe for now. We’ll get the code. We only have twenty minutes to get these women secured. Bring the second roll of tape up here.”

She heard the sound of the man named AJ’s footsteps on the stairs and then he and the man named Trig murmured a few words to each other and then Trig came back in the room. “You,” he said, jerking his head toward Cami, “come on now.”

Cami met her mother’s terrified eyes, and she gave her another small nod and then raised her shoulders high as she pulled in a breaththrough her nostrils and let it out slowly.Breathe, Mom. Hyperventilating will not help us.

Cami stood and Trig trailed her out of the room, leaving enough distance that he could shoot her if she tried to turn and attack him. “Go on in your room,” he said, and she did, leading him down the hall to her bedroom.

The sight of it made her want to weep again. Her safe space. The room where she’d slept all her life. The place she came to dream and dance and cry cleansing tears. The bed where her mom and dad had tucked her in when she was a child, and the walls that her mom had lovingly wallpapered ...

How dare he be here?The anger suffocated the desire to cry, and she was grateful because the anger renewed her strength.

Brown whiskers with a sprinkling of red mixed in.

A round chicken pox scar at his hairline, small and only noticeable in certain lights, like right now, when the sunshine from the window is hitting his face.

“Lie down,” he commanded, waving the gun toward her bed. Her eyes darted there and then to him, fear scalding her nerve endings. He smiled, and though she couldn’t see his mouth, she could tell it was slow and leering. But then he shook his head. “We’re not here for that,” he said, and something inside told her he was lying, but what could she do? She had no options other than to let him shoot her.

She sat down on her bed, her emotions in free fall again. She wanted to dive beneath the blankets, like she did when she was little whenever a monster showed up in the corner. It would always be gone when she emerged, transformed into a coatrack or vanished like a shadow.

But even in her hyperemotional state, she was too rational to believethismonster would disappear so easily, if at all.

Cami lay back, and he made quick work of securing her wrists to the bedposts with multiple layers of duct tape. He didn’t bind her feet, but he kept the tape stretched over her mouth and pressed down tightly to her cheeks.

She pulled in a breath, and then another. He left the room, and Cami listened as he helped AJ secure Elle and then presumably their mother, though the only clues she had to go by were the soft bangs and bumps and the squeak of bedsprings from down the hall as both women were tied up to their own beds just like she had been.

The men clomped back down the stairs, and a few minutes later, she heard her dad’s car pull up in the driveway.

Chapter Four

It had taken Rex three hours to make the trek home from Hollis Barclay’s mansion nearly fifteen miles away in the opulent neighborhood of Palisades Park. He’d known going to the party meant missing his bus, but it was the first one he’d ever been invited to, and so he’d planned on ordering an Uber once he’d walked a mile or two in the direction of his house on the other side of town. But he’d had thisenergyflowing through him, and he’d wanted tomove, to stay lost in his own head. And so he’d walked, and three hours had felt more like thirty minutes, Cami Cortlandt’s smile keeping him company the whole way home.

You’re Rex, right?God, the way those three words had made him feel like the king of the world.

So ridiculous.

Stupid.

Pathetic.

And true.

He’d felt more than that—as they’d talked, he’d felt this ... connection. Something he’d never experienced before, even if he had no frame of reference to describe what it was.

There was a good chance, however, that it was all in his mind.

A guy could still dream.

But Rex was no stranger to dreaming about Cami. He’d been doing that since he’d first transferred to the middle school she attended and then on to Westridge Academy, thanks to a government-run programthat sought to give poor kids with a minority heritage and good test scores a chance to take the AP classes not available at their district schools. He’d first caught sight of Cami across the classroom when he was a gawky preteen. That was it, that was all it took, one glance of her side profile as she’d gazed out the window at the sprinkler on the south lawn, which was making rainbows dance in the morning air.

He’d seen her daydreaming so many times since that first day. Sometimes—though he’d never tell a soul—he fantasized that she was thinking about him.