She chirped the door open, jumped inside, and turned on the ignition and windshield wipers. Ice clung to the windshield in patches, but she wasn’t waiting for it to thaw. She cranked the defrost, backed out of the space, and reached into her purse for her BlackBerry. She pulled it from her purse and pressed speed dial for Connie as she pounded the gas. The car zoomed down the dark street, and the call connected.
“Connie? You hanging in?” Ellen asked, trying to keep the nervousness from her tone. She didn’t even know what she was nervous about. She just knew she had to get home.
“Sure. I’m watching TV. You said you might be late.”
“Not this late.” Ellen felt a twinge of guilt, but tried to pay attention to her driving. She switched lanes to pass a truck, took a right, then a left in slow traffic, everybody cautious in the snowstorm. Her windshield wipers flapped madly, a frantic beating that reminded her of her own heart.
“Take your time, El. Chuck had to work late, too.”
“How’s my boy?”
“He’s out like a light.”
“Good.” Ellen waited for the familiar easing in her chest when she heard that everything was fine, but there was no easing tonight. She steered around a sluggish Toyota and switched lanes, heading for the cross street to the expressway.
“Oh yeah, the cat’s throwing up, so I had to put him out back for a while.”
“Okay. I’ll be home in less than an hour.”
“Drive safe. It’s really coming down out here. We already have six inches.”
“I hear you, ’bye.” Ellen pressed End, tossed the BlackBerry aside, and flew around a pickup truck pulling into a parking space. She fed the car gas to the intersection, where the traffic light was turning red, then blasted through the intersection, heading home.
By the time she reached the highway, she knew exactly what he was going to do.
Chapter Seventy-two
Ellen hurried to her front porch in a full-fledged snowstorm, keeping her head down and barreling into the wind, her heels punching footfalls into the freezing, wet snow. She’d thought about calling the cops but didn’t want to blow her cover. She was on her own.
She ran up the snowy porch steps and willed herself to get calm, arranging her face into a mask of normalcy. She plunged her key into the lock and twisted, opening the door onto a comforting scene that brought her no comfort.
Connie greeted her from the couch, with a big grin. “It’s Nanook of the North!”
“Cold out there.” Ellen fake-smiled and slid out of her coat. The lamps lent the living room a homey glow, the toys had been put away, and the TV played on mute, a plastic-surgery show. She grabbed Connie’s coat and handed it to her, barely able to hide her urgency. “You’ll be safe going home, right? You have four-wheel drive?”
“Sure, it’s no problem.” Connie put on her coat, flipping her ponytail over her collar, then got her tote and purse from the windowseat. “No way he’s having school tomorrow.”
“Then it’s good I’m home, huh?” Ellen opened the door to let Connie out. “We’ll just hibernate and make some cookies.”
“I vote for chocolate chip.”
“You got it.” Ellen managed another smile as Connie picked up her stuff and crossed to the door. “Seriously, be careful out there.”
“No worries, I’m invincible.” Connie flashed her a final smile and headed outside, and Ellen shut the door, locked it, and threw the deadbolt.
Go go go.
Ellen didn’t know how or why, but she knew what she felt inside. If Rob Moore was killing people who knew about Timothy, then she and Will had to get out of there immediately, tonight. She hurried up the stairs, hustled into Will’s room, and hurried to the bed.
“Will, wake up, honey.” Will slept on his back, his arms open and askew, stirring. Oreo Figaro didn’t move, a black-and-white ball at the foot of the bed. She lifted Will up, hoisted him to her shoulder in his Elmo thermal pajamas, and he made a snuffling noise.
“Mommy?”
“Hi, honey.” Ellen rubbed his back. “You can just stay asleep, I want to put you into something warmer.”
Will put his arms around her neck, and Ellen moved quickly to the bureau, dipped sideways to yank open the bottom drawer, and grabbed one of his snowsuits. She crossed back to the bed, unfolded the snowsuit with a quick snap, and fumbled to stuff Will’s feet into the legs. “Mommy, what?”
“Everything’s fine, sweetie. We’re just going out for a little bit.” Ellen pulled the snowsuit up and unwrapped his arms from her neck, then stuck on his sneakers. “Hold on around my neck. We’re going for a ride.”
“Okay,” Will said sleepily, holding tighter as she picked him up again, left the room, and hurried down the stairs, keeping a steadying hand on his back. She reached the bottom and glanced at the clock on the entertainment center—10:15. She had to get going. She grabbed her purse from the windowseat, then remembered she needed cash. She kept two hundred bucks in the kitchen drawer for emergencies and she was pretty sure this qualified.
She hurried through the living room, noting that the Coffmans’ station wagon wasn’t in the driveway and their windows were dark. It was a lucky break that they weren’t home, because if they spotted her going out this late in a snowstorm, they might have a question or two. She hurried with Will through the dining room and turned the corner into the dark kitchen.
She went to flick on the light switch, but all of a sudden there was a shadowy blur and the back of her head exploded in pain.
Her arms released their grip. Will slipped through her fingers. Everything went dark, and the last thing she heard was Will’s scream.
“Mommy!”
Chapter Seventy-three
Ellen regained consciousness, lying on her side on the kitchen floor. Her head thundered and she tried to scream. Tape covered her lips. She tried to move her hands but they were wrenched behind her back, stuck together. Pain arced through her shoulder joints. Her ankles were bound. She was facing the dining room, her back to the kitchen.
Will.
Ellen felt a bolt of terror rattle through her very bones. Her BlackBerry rang in the living room, the sound of another place and time. She heard a noise behind her, a harsh ripping sound. She rolled herself over on the floor, in horror at the sight.
Will lay on his side facing her, a strip of duct tape over his mouth. He was crying hard, his small body shaking with sobs. A man bent over him, wrapping duct tape around his ankles in his blue snowsuit.
“Good morning,” the man said, looking up with a sly grin.
It was the man from the beach. Rob Moore. He had a droopy brown mustache and he looked older and craggier than he had in the photo with Amy, but it was the same man. Shaggy brown hair curled over the collar of an old black coat he had on with jeans and snowy Timberlands. A red plastic jug with a long spout sat next to him on the floor. It had to be gasoline. The kitchen reeked of it. Ellen screamed in her throat, a mother’s howl of outrage and dread.
“I second that emotion,” Moore said, chuckling again as he tore off the duct tape with the side of a crooked incisor.
Tears poured from Will’s eyes, and they widened in fear. Ellen shimmied closer to him, making noises.
Moore straightened, a smile twisting his lips. Suddenly he lifted his foot in the heavy boot and put it down hard on Will’s head. “Move and I’ll squash him like a bug.”
Ellen felt paralyzed by fear. Will burst into new tears, his cheeks turning a violent red. Moore leaned forward and stepped harder on his head.
Will squeezed his eyes shut, his small forehead buckling with pain. Dirt and snow from the boots dumped onto his little face. Moore was crushing his skull.
Ellen screamed and screamed, shaking her head frantically.
“Lady, get back and shut the hell up.”
Ellen scrambled backwards, writhing this way and that, finally bumping the back of her head on the stove. She looked up at Moore, begging him to stop.
 
; “Is that the look of love you’re givin’ me?” Moore kept his boot on Will’s head but eased backwards slightly. The redness ebbed from Will’s cheeks. He was choking under the duct tape.
Ellen prayed to God he could breathe. That his skull wasn’t injured. That his heart could withstand the pressure.
Moore said, “I woulda thought you got your fill with your boyfriend.”
Ellen struggled to think through her panic. Moore must have been following her. Had he been to the funeral? What was he going to do with the gasoline? She refused to go to the obvious answer. Her throat emitted primal noises.
“Oh, shut up.” Moore took his foot from Will’s head, leaving him crying hysterically, his tears mixing with the mud on his face.
Ellen silenced herself, making eye contact with Will, trying to tell him that everything would be all right. She had to figure out what to do. Her thoughts raced. Nobody was coming for help. The Coffmans weren’t home. Her neighbors on the other side were never home. Everyone else was hunkered in their beds for the snowstorm.
Moore picked up the plastic jug and twisted off the lid, releasing the unmistakable odor. He tipped the container over on top of Will, and gasoline spewed from the spout, splashing onto Will’s legs in the snowsuit, the solvent darkening the material from blue to black.
Stark cold horror paralyzed Ellen’s thoughts. Moore was going to set them on fire. He was going to kill them both. She started screaming behind the duct tape.
Bing Bong!
Suddenly, the doorbell rang in the living room.
Ellen screamed louder behind the tape, even though she knew it was useless.
“Shut up!” Moore set down the gasoline jug and stepped hard on Will’s head.
Ellen shook her head back and forth like a madwoman. She prayed frantically that Moore would stop hurting Will. She didn’t know who was at the door. It was too late at night for a visitor, unless it was Martha Coffman. Maybe they’d come home in the meantime and needed to borrow something. Maybe one of her boys was sick.
Bing Bong!
Moore grimaced, angry. Will’s face turned blue-red before her eyes. A silent scream contorted his features. Tears poured from his eyes. Snot streamed from his nose over the duct tape.
Bing Bong!
“Give it up!” Moore whirled around, finally taking his foot off Will.
Ellen willed herself to think. If it was Martha Coffman, maybe she had seen something from her kitchen. She would call 911 if Ellen didn’t answer the door.
Bing Bong!
“Shit!” Moore flew into a rage, his eyes wild and out of control. He plunged his hand into his coat pocket, and when he withdrew it, he was holding a large revolver with a steel barrel.
Ellen froze.
Chapter Seventy-four
“You see your kid?” Moore bent down and drilled the barrel of the gun into Will’s temple. “I’ll blow his head clean off.”
Ellen was too terrified to cry, her emotion strangling the sounds in her throat.
“I’m gonna cut you loose, only because they’re not goin’ away. You answer the door and tell whoever’s there to go. Do one thing wrong, just one, and I blow this kid’s head offa his shoulders.”
Ellen nodded frantically. This could be her only chance. She had to make something happen. Could she risk it? Could she not?
“I’ll kill him. You understand?”
Ellen pumped her head, yesyesyes.
Bing Bong!
“All right then.” Moore raised the revolver, sprang over to Ellen, and reached behind her back. He yanked her into the air by her wrists, hissing into her ear. “Up to you, bitch. One word and I shoot the kid.”
Ellen shook her head, desperate to reassure him. In the next second, her hands were cut free and she fell like a broken doll to the hardwood floor.
Moore cut loose her ankles, flipped her over, and tore the duct tape from her mouth. It stung until he drilled the gun between her eyes.
“Don’t hurt him, don’t hurt him,” Ellen heard herself whisper over and over, like a prayer.
“No tricks.” Moore’s face was six inches from hers, a close-up of bloodshot eyes, greasy mustache, and breath foul with beer.
Ellen scrambled to get her feet under her, her knees jelly. Her thoughts clicked ahead, running the possibilities. “What if it’s my neighbor? What if she won’t go?”
“Make her.” Moore shoved her from the kitchen, and she half walked, half stumbled through the dining room, glancing quickly out the windows. The lights still were off at the Coffmans’. Connie would have let herself in. So who was ringing the bell?
Marcelo!
He was the only possibility. He would help her. Together they’d get Will out of this. She hurried through the dining room. Her heart thundered, and she crossed the living room toward the door.
Bing Bong!
Ellen couldn’t see the face at the door, but a shadow stood silhouetted in the yellowish porch light. She opened the door and stood stricken against a blast of frigid wind.
At her front door was the last person in the world she ever expected to see.
Chapter Seventy-five
It was Carol Braverman, standing in a long black coat, a quilted purse slung over an arm. Her hair was slicked back in a chignon, her eyes glittered with emotion, and her mouth made a glossy line. She asked, “Ellen Gleeson?”
Ellen nodded, stunned as Carol entered the house and began looking around the living room.
“I’m Carol Braverman, but you knew that already.” Carol turned on her heel, the coat making a chic swish. She looked at Ellen with determined blue eyes. “You adopted my son.”
“What? I’m sorry?” Ellen struggled to react. A million thoughts flooded her head. She couldn’t process any of them fast enough.
“I came as soon as I had it verified. He’s my son Timothy. He was kidnapped in Miami right after his first birthday.”
“I don’t know what you mean,” Ellen said, beginning to think clearly. Will was in the kitchen under a gun. Moore could hear every word through the other entrance to the kitchen, over the landing. She had to get Carol out of here. One distraught mother was enough. Carol was a variable she couldn’t predict right now.
“Sorry, but I think you do.” Carol’s eyes softened slightly. “I can only imagine what you must be going through, and I feel sorry for you, I really do. But we both know the truth. You have my baby, and I want him back.”
“No, I don’t.” Ellen stepped toward her, leaving the front door open, filling the room with frigid air. “Please, leave my house.”
“You have my son, don’t pretend you don’t know. You were in Miami two days ago.”
“No, you’re wrong.” Ellen’s mouth went dry. How did Carol know? No matter, a plan was coming together in her mind. She wasn’t tied up anymore. As soon as she got Carol out of the house, she’d be free to move. She said, “I don’t know what you’re talking about. Leave my house, right now.”
“Let me explain.” Carol put up a hand. “A reporter who works with you called me at home and told me everything. Sarah Liu is her name. She told me about you and the boy you call Will.”
Ellen felt it like an electric shock. Sarah had called the Bravermans? How? Why?
“She caught you on our website, printing out my son’s picture. She called your house and verified that you were out of town. She figured out you’d come to Miami.” Carol paused, cocking her head. “Why did you? Did you want to check us out?”
Ellen’s mind reeled, then she fought to recover. She had to save Will. Moore would be waiting, the gun to her son’s head.
“Sarah claimed the reward, of course.” Carol smiled in gentle triumph, her diamond earrings flashing. “It’s a million dollars, life-changing money. That’s why we set it so high. We knew that sooner or later it would bring somebody out of the woodwork, and it did.”
“This is insane. Get out.”
“I Googled you online, I found the articles you wrote about him. I kn
ow you didn’t know he was kidnapped, but that’s not my problem. He’s mine, and I want him.” Carol’s tone turned indignant. “My husband’s on the way. His plane was delayed in the snow, and I didn’t want to wait.”
Ellen almost spiraled into an emotional stall. She used to think this was her worst nightmare, but now she knew better. Her worst nightmare was in her own kitchen. She had to get Carol out of here. Suddenly a noise came from the stairwell, and they both turned. Oreo Figaro appeared on the stair landing, where he stopped and sat down with a yawn, curling his inky tail around him.
“Where is Timothy?” Carol demanded. “I demand to see him.”
“He’s not Timothy, he’s my son, and he’s at a sleepover.”
“A three-year-old, at a sleepover?” Carol moved toward the stairway, but Ellen shifted over and blocked her way.
“Stop right there. You have no right to walk around my house.” She raised her voice to regain some authority. If Carol took one step closer to the stairway, she’d be able to see the kitchen from its other entrance. She’d smell the gasoline, and they’d all end up dead. Ellen put a firm hand on Carol’s coat sleeve. “Get out, right now!”
“I thought we could do this without the police, but maybe not. You have my son, and I won’t leave here without him.” Carol tried to wrench her arm free, but Ellen held on to it with all her might. She was trying to save Carol’s life, but the woman was endangering the son they both loved.
“I don’t know who you are. I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“You know he’s mine, and I’m appealing to you, mother to mother.” Carol’s eyes filled with sudden wetness. “I held out hope, all this time, I knew he’d turn up. I knew he was alive. I could feel him.”
“Get the hell out!” Ellen fought a rising panic. She could imagine Moore listening. They were running out of time. She could stand losing Will to Carol, but she couldn’t stand Will leaving this earth, not while she drew breath.