Now faint sounds of salsa leapt from the cracks, as if even the music was desperate to escape the dreariness. Smoke wafted out, ghostly tendrils curling up to the sky.
A flickering red neon sign pronounced the joint MANNY’S. Just Manny’s.
Tired. Dusty. Forgotten.
Marion thought it was perfect.
Her sleek blue rental car looked out of place, but then, so did she. She pushed open the door without apology, entering the joint like the proverbial new gun in town. The music didn’t stop for her, but the patrons did. Two men to her left, hunched over a threadbare pool table, looked up from their game. Behind the bar, a short, bald man in a sleeveless denim vest that showed off his serpent tattoos stopped pouring beer from the tap. To her right, small clusters of men and a few women glanced up once, then did a double take.
Marion pushed her way to the bar. “I want a whiskey. Straight up.”
Serpent man stared at her. She stared back. He still didn’t move. “You got a problem with dollars?” she asked coolly.
“No.”
“Then I think we can be friends.” She pulled out a crisp twenty and slapped it on the counter.
The bartender fetched a bottle of whiskey. As if it had been a signal, the crowd returned to its business.
Marion didn’t turn. She didn’t look. She sat alone at the bar, listening to the murmurs. She couldn’t speak Spanish, but she understood it well enough.
When the bartender gave her her drink, she thanked him with a mocking toast. She raised the glass. She parted her pink lips. And she tossed back the whiskey in one gulp.
She slammed the glass down. She swallowed through the pain in her gut. Then delicately she touched the corner of her mouth with a single French-manicured nail.
“Give me another.”
“Sí, señorita.”
“Exactly.”
NINETEEN
I WANT THE Apple Jacks.” “Okay, okay,” Difford muttered, pushing open the door with his foot and balancing four grocery bags with his arms, fingers, and hips. Samantha went barreling in, unmindful of his precarious juggling act. Decked out in her pink winter coat with the hood pulled tightly around her face, she looked like a strawberry version of Frosty the Snowman. Her blond hair peered out around the white furry trim of her hood. Her cheeks were a healthy, happy red. It was probably still too warm for full winter gear, but Difford had never dressed a kid before, so he liked to err on the side of caution.
“Apple Jacks, Apple Jacks,” Samantha sang at the top of her lungs.
Difford grunted, wondered how mothers ever learned how to cope with children, and managed to kick the door shut with his foot. A bit more juggling, and he made it all the way to the tiny brown kitchen, dropping only two oranges.
Samantha chased the fruit down the hall, then came trotting back with the oranges clutched in her mittened hands like trophies. She beamed at him triumphantly. At that moment, despite his best intentions, his chest tightened and he did understand exactly why mothers coped with children.
“Thank you,” he said with somber politeness, and accepted the oranges.
“Okay, the cereal now!” Her smile grew. She was perfectly delighted with herself and her persistent efforts that had finally yielded the sugar-coated cereal. He’d been so careful to buy only healthy things. Tess had given him a list of appropriate grocery items and he’d been plugging Samantha with bowl after bowl of Raisin Bran. But today at the store she’d noticed the Apple Jacks on special display at the end of the aisle and that had been that. She wanted Apple Jacks! Difford discovered he could command a whole police department but not one determined four-year-old. They bought the Apple Jacks. Two boxes. Buy one get one free. He was such a sucker.
“Lunch first,” he insisted. Her face fell, her lower lip jutting out suspiciously. He suffered an immediate burst of panic. “Oh, no, you don’t,” he said, shaking his head. “Nutrition is important. We have turkey or ham.”
Samantha looked at him, her bright blue eyes keenly intelligent. Her head cocked to the side, and by now he could read the signs. She was determining how hard to push him. This was his own fault; the first few days, he’d given her heaven and earth every time she cried. Samantha had quickly internalized that lesson and become hell on wheels.
He forced himself to stand firm. Think of her as a new recruit, he reminded himself. A cadet who needed a strong guiding hand.
After a minute he won the battle of wills. “Turkey,” she decided.
Difford grinned, feeling ridiculously proud of himself. He didn’t win often. Tess hadn’t warned him of a small child’s capacity for deviousness.
“Okay,” he said, and put away the groceries. He then laid out the bread, mustard, and mayonnaise. Samantha was in charge of adding the turkey, which she did with true flourish. They sat at the simple wood table and ate in silence.
He figured they’d play dominoes afterward. The kid still kicked his butt, but he was getting better.
He sent her to go get the game while he finished cleaning up. Minutes later he wandered into the living room, where they generally played, sitting cross-legged on the floor. His knees were getting sore.
He was about to push back his reclining chair, when he noticed the pillows. Yesterday he’d tucked them behind his back for comfort as he’d leaned against the sofa. He wasn’t much of a pick-up guy. He’d thought he’d left them on the floor.
Now one sat neatly in each corner of the couch.
Samantha walked into the room, carrying the box of dominoes.
Difford said in as calm a voice as he could manage, “Sam, I want you to go to your room.”
“But I didn’t do anything wrong!”
“I know, sweetheart.” His eyes darted around the room as he reached beneath his jacket for his gun. “We’re playing a new game, honey. I just want you to go to your room for a few minutes, okay? I’m . . . I’m preparing a surprise for you in the living room.”
She looked troubled. “I don’t like this game!” she cried, dropped the dominoes on the floor, and ran sniffling for her room.
Difford didn’t waste any time. Looking across the street, he could see an old green car parked at the corner. He raised his hand. Both of the officers waved back. Okay, his cover car was still present and it was broad daylight. If someone had tried to approach the safe house, the officers would have noticed.
He searched the house anyway, gun drawn and eyes sharp as he went from room to room. Living room was clear. Bathroom, including the shower, was clear. He entered his bedroom slowly, sweeping the space with a steady, level arm, pointing his gun in all corners. Then he pressed himself against a wall and slid the closet door open with his foot. Quick step and pivot, and he faced off against his clothes. Nothing moved, nothing stirred. He brushed his gun through the hangers. Empty.
He started to breathe a little easier. Nerves, he told himself, just nerves. The news of Shelly Zane’s murder had gotten to him. The knowledge that Beckett was out there somewhere, gunning for Theresa, was definitely keeping him up at night.
But Beckett was just a man. Tess had stood up to him before. Lieutenant Houlihan and Special Agent Quincy were doing their best to make sure she would never have to again. A lot of good people were working this case. Sooner or later they’d get Beckett.
He finished the sweep of the house, telling Sam it was part of the game as he checked her room, her closet, beneath her bed. He could tell she didn’t believe him.
But the house was clear. All was still well. Maybe he’d just forgotten about picking up the pillows. Maybe Sam had done it.
He replaced his gun in his holster. He offered Samantha his hand. She took it without question.
“Dominoes?” he tried.
“I want my mommy.”
“I . . . I know.”
“Do you know where my mommy is?” Her lower lip had begun to tremble.
“Yeah, honey, I do.”
“Make her come home.”
Difford squatted do
wn. “She wants to come home, Sam, she really does. No one loves you like your mommy does. But she has to take care of some things first. She’s, uh, making everything safe, you know? And once it’s all safe, she’ll come get you and you’ll always be together.”
“I want her now,” Sam whispered.
“I know, Sam. I know. Come on, kid, let’s play dominoes.” He led her into the living room, not knowing what else to do.
Samantha didn’t sit across from him as she usually did. Instead, she sat right beside him, her little shoulder against his side. After a moment he put his big arm around her and patted her awkwardly.
She braved a tremulous smile and opened the domino box.
“My mommy will come home soon?”
“Right.”
“And then we’ll always be together?”
“Yeah, honey. Everything will be all right.”
“Can we watch Jurassic Park again tonight?”
“Okay,” he said, but couldn’t quite stop the sinking feeling in his chest. He patted her shoulder again.
“Okay.”
TESS WENT TO find J.T. The patio was empty, the pool flat. She felt the pinprick of unease.
Gravel crunched. She whirled toward the sound with her hands already fisted.
J.T. emerged from the side of the house, buck naked and wielding his gun. He didn’t even glance in her direction. He disappeared around the left side, his gun leading him forward.
She was still standing there stupidly.
J.T. rematerialized on the patio, his gun down by his naked thigh.
“I thought I heard somethin’,” he muttered.
“I—I didn’t see anything.”
“Yeah, well, you were staring at my butt.”
Her cheeks flushed crimson. “Just admiring the view.”
“Huh.”
He took two steps forward, one step back, and finally stood still. “Guess I’m just edgy.”
She contemplated him silently for a moment. “Did you really drink last night?”
“Yeah. One shot. Tequila. Lord have mercy on my soul.”
“I think it’s a little late for that.” She contemplated berating him. She contemplated calling him a fool. She decided in the end that neither was necessary. No one had ever been harder on J. T. Dillon than J. T. Dillon.
She said, “I need you.”
“Don’t.”
“Too late. You know what I’m up against, J.T. Marion’s told you enough about Jim. He’s going to come after me, and I have to be ready. We’ve done so well this last week. I can swim farther, I have some muscle tone. I can shoot a gun—”
“Barely.”
“Exactly! I need to learn more. I need you to teach me more. Be there for me, dammit. It’s only a few more weeks.”
“I can handle it,” he said stiffly.
“Are you sure? It’s not weak to call AA, J.T. It’s not weak to admit that you need help.”
“I’m fine! Don’t you have any hay bales to shoot?”
“None of them are as much fun as hounding you.” She walked right up to him. She could feel the heat and tension radiating from him, and it made her hot.
“Greedy,” he whispered.
“I learned it from you.”
He was growing hard. She could get him to want her again, get him to take her again. Here on the patio, or maybe beneath the mesquite tree, or maybe on a glass table. Maybe all three.
And then what?
She pushed herself away. His breath exhaled with a hiss.
“Get back on the wagon—”
“I stopped with one,” he interrupted tightly.
“Good. Don’t take it any further. Now go after Marion.”
His eyes widened incredulously. “What?”
“She needs you, J.T.”
He held up his forearm and pointed to the red welt. “Tess, open your eyes.”
“I have. And I’m telling you she needs you. Why do you think she ran away, J.T.? So that you would follow. So that finally someone would follow.”
“Marion could chew up an armored tank for breakfast, then spit out perfectly formed nails the rest of the day. End of story.”
He strode toward the sliding glass door. “You still want a teacher, right?”
“Yes.”
“Then stop standing there, yapping at me. This isn’t Club Med; get in your damn swim clothes. We’ll begin with weights, end in the pool. You got five minutes.”
“She’s scared,” Tess whispered behind him.
He said to them both, “Stop kidding yourself.”
“CAN I BUY you a drink?”
“I’m not stopping you.” Marion leaned over the pool table, where she was slowly and methodically annihilating all the men in the bar. The sun had gone down. The interior was darker and smokier than before. Her eyes had adjusted hours before, and now she didn’t notice the changes.
“Eight ball, left corner pocket,” she called. She lined up the shot, pulled back the stick, and slammed it forward with more force than necessary. The cue ball nailed the eight ball, slamming it into the faded green lip of the edge and forcing it to rocket into the corner pocket with a sharp clatter.
She straightened and raised her cigarette to her lips. Inhale. Exhale. “I believe you owe me twenty bucks.”
The man grumbled. She hadn’t caught his name. She didn’t care. He’d been better than the others, but still no match. He coughed up the money. She added it to her stack.
She turned and scanned the bar. She had the tickling in the back of her neck, that sensation of being watched. Of course, the whole damn bar was staring at her. She turned back to the pool table.
Fresh meat arrived with her drink. He smiled at her, trying to be charming, but she wasn’t so drunk she couldn’t see the predatory intent behind his smile. She accepted the glass, leaning her slim hip negligently against the table and blatantly eyeing him since he was blatantly eyeing her.
He was tall, over six feet. Beneath his red baseball cap, tufts of dishwater-blond hair stuck out like straw. He had a mustache and stubbly beard, and the broad shoulders and muscled arms of a workingman. His stomach wasn’t flat anymore though. He’d been a stud once. Now he was going to seed.
“So what’s your game?” he asked with a wink.
“Eight ball,” she said coolly, “I’ll give you three-to-one odds. Betting starts at twenty.”
He crossed his arms so that his biceps bulged.
“You really that into pool?”
“You really think you can pick me up with one drink?”
His face reddened. She kept staring at him. Men couldn’t stand up to that stare. They all fled like dogs with their tails tucked between their legs. Then they called her a bitch.
“All right,” he said, surprising her. “I’ll play. But I’ll warn you now, I’m better than what you’re used to.”
“I’ll be the judge of that.” She slammed back her whiskey and picked up the cue stick. Her gun was nestled beneath her arm, hidden by her jacket. She liked the feel of it there, comforting and cold.
They got down to business.
Do you miss me, Roger, do you think of me at all? Or am I just a cold bitch to you, one you married for Daddy’s connections? How can a cocktail waitress make you so damn happy?
She bent low and broke the balls with a fury. Two solids went in. She inhaled another cleansing gulp of tobacco and contemplated her next shot.
And you, Daddy? Why don’t you ever call my name? Wasn’t I a good daughter? Didn’t I do whatever you asked?
She sank three more, then scratched.
Her opponent took over with a swagger. She was unimpressed.
Then there’s you, J.T. Running off and ruining the family name. You’re nothing but a drunken loser and then you say I’m like you. I am nothing like you. I am strong.
Her opponent cleared the table. She looked at him, mildly shocked.
“Told you I knew what I was doing.”
“I suppose you did.
”
He set down his cue stick while she counted out three twenties and handed them over. He shook his head.
“Haven’t you had enough foreplay? Aren’t you ready to get down to the real business?”
She contemplated acting outraged. She contemplated feigning ignorance. She set down the money and with a shrug of her shoulders said, “All right. What did you have in mind?”
“Come with me, darling. I’ll fuck your problems right out of your head.”
She stared at him. He was past his prime, but his arms were still lean and hard. He knew how to play pool and was more man than anything else that had walked into the room.
She should tell him no. She was the good daughter who’d only ever slept with Roger. She was the good agent who knew better than to leave with a strange man.
She said, “All right.”
She picked up her purse and accepted his heavy grip as he led her to the door.
“And you froze up every time I touched you, Marion!”
She still couldn’t shake the feeling that someone was watching her, that if she turned around now, she’d find one pair of eyes a bit too sharp, a bit too knowing.
She didn’t turn around.
Outside, the air was cool and crisp and her nostrils flared, almost offended by the sweetness after the reeking bar. The sky was pitch black, good for midnight doings.
Her stud led her to his truck. No one was around in the parking lot, but she wasn’t worried.
He held open the passenger door for her. She wasn’t sure if that was a positive sign or not. She didn’t ask where they were going, she didn’t contemplate the events at hand. She lit another cigarette and rolled down the window to smoke.
He drove to the middle of nowhere. Had he taken other women there before? Was he married and that’s why they didn’t go to his apartment? She didn’t care. None of it was her business. She was just along for the ride.
“No one comes out here,” he said, looking at her for the first time. “But it’s nice on nights like tonight. You can smell the creosote, look at the stars. Thought you might like it better than some trailer that stinks of beer and socks. I don’t clean much.”