Linda? says Ashley, her voice tinged with real concern. Are you going to puke again?
Janice grabs the trash can from behind the register, but Linda ignores it and walks back toward the ladies room. The girls say something behind her, but she doesn't catch the meaning. She passes the door of the restroom and walks to the thick glass door that leads to the observation deck. The October wind hits her face-on, and shes glad for the chill. Looking upriver, she sees the lights of the houses on Clifton Avenue, then Weymouth Hall. Somewhere up there, Tim is supposed to be meeting Penn Cage tonight. She doesn't
let her mind go any further than that. Tim is there, she says silently. Right now, hes handing over whatever he got tonight. With this article of faith set in her heart, she slips her personal cell phone from her pocket and flicks it through the rail, toward the river three decks below. She doesn't hear the splash, but she sees a spurt of silver rise in the moonlight as the phone goes under. She knows her body was between her hand and the surveillance camera when she threw the phone, because shes rehearsed this move a dozen times in her mind, just as Tim instructed.
Keep moving, she mouths to herself, walking to the companionway used by the service staff to get to the main deck. Dont stop long enough to let fear paralyze you.
Shes quoting Tim now, like a heroine echoing her mentor in her mind. She slips through the gift shop, then past the foot of the escalators. This is the hardest part of her journey. Every atom of instinct is screaming for her to march down the big aisle between the slots, through the main entrance, and right across the broad exit rampbut she cant.
She doesn't have her car keys.
For one wild moment she considers leaving anyway, breaking into a sprint and racing out to freedom. But if she did that, shed be cutting herself off from Tim. The TracFone from Wal-Mart is under her car seat, and thats her only sure link to him now. To reach it, she has to have her keys.
Why didn't you tell me to keep my ignition key in my pocket?
she asks Tim silently.
Why didn't I think of it?
For the first time a blade of raw terror slices through her, cold and true. If Tim didn't think of this contingency, what else did he forget?
Linda grits her teeth and forces herself to breeze past the center aisle without looking at the exit.
Point of no return,
she thinks, spying the service door that leads belowdecks to the restricted area of the boat. Operations, Security, the physical plant of the barge.
She has to show her badge to the security officer at the top of the stairs. He gives it a bored look, then lets her walk down the steps. She can feel his eyes on her backside as she reaches the lower deck.
The smell changes in the lower holds. Its like entering the service elevator in a hotel by mistake. The illusion of cleanliness and luxury falls away, leaving the sticky floor of reality. The air down here reeks
of bad cafeteria food and other things she cant quite recognize. Employee resentment
paranoia. Linda quails at the idea of going near the security control area, but she has no choice. The lockers and changing room are aft of the security suite.
Because everyone is still on shift, shes alone on the lower deck. If the security guys poke their heads out, shell tell them shes puking nonstop and has to get to the emergency room.
A long corridor runs past the door of the security suite, then the off-limits room they call the Devils Punchbowl. She makes the length of the passageway on a single held-in breath. Halfway home now. Through the hatch that leads to the changing rooms, past the clock where she punches in, around the corner
and
there.
The employee lockers.
Linda licks her lips, takes a breath, then dials the combination on her locker. The lock clicks. In her mind she sees the yellow Dooney & Bourke purse she bought at Dillards in New Orleans, a birthday splurge. And inside the purse, her car keys.
She opens the door and reaches into the locker, but her purse is gone. Withdrawing her hand, she leans back so that more light can get into the space. Its a mistake, she thinks, feeling the way she does when she somehow loses the milk carton in the refrigerator.
Lying where she left her purse is the black TracFone Tim bought her at Wal-Martthe phone she last saw before shoving it under the front seat of her Corolla.
You fucking slag, growls a male voice filled with rage.
Seamus Quinn.
Do you have any idea what youre in for?
Linda closes her eyes and grips the cold metal edge of the locker door. Without it, she would have fainted to the deck.
Quinn starts to speak again, but the air in the room changes suddenly, and his words become a mute exhalation. Linda hears rapid, shallow breathing that sets her nerves thrumming.
Close the locker, Linda, says Jonathan Sands. Were a bit pressed for time.
Tim is dead,
says a voice inside her, the voice that has known it all along. Hot tears slide down her cheeks as she closes the locker door.
That's it, darlin, says Sands. Now turn around.
Linda wipes her face on her sleeve and turns slowly. Quinn is
leaning against the wall behind her, his shoulder wedged against a flyer that reads NEED HELP MANAGING YOUR 401(K)? Sands stands in the corridor that leads past the security suite, arms folded across his chest, dressed as perfectly as if he were attending a wedding or a funeral in fifteen minutes. His hyperobservant eyes glide over her face and clothing, missing nothing. Beside him sits the huge white dog that sometimes accompanies him on the boat. Sands told her the dog was bred in Pakistan, for fighting and for war. She has never heard the dog make a sound.
Poor Tim,
she thinks in a rush of despair that almost drops her to the floor.
Cant trust a fucking cunt, Quinn mutters. All the same.
Lindas heart flutters like a panicked bird trying to beat its way up through her throat.
Move,
she tells herself.
Run
Dont be a fool, Sands says. Theres nowhere to go.
The wild urge to flight twists inside her.
Come to me, Sands says, beckoning her toward the hallway. We need to ask you some questions about Timothy.
The last ember of hope dies in her soul.
They know.
CHAPTER
14
The second my father walks into my bathroom with his black bag, I put my finger to my lips and shove a piece of paper into his hands. On it are printed the words:
I'm not sick. Annie is in danger. We all are. House may be bugged. Act like I'm having a panic attack. Follow my lead. Were going to type messages on the computer on the counter. I'll turn on the bath taps to cover the noise of the keyboard.
Dad looks up after reading for only two seconds, but I shake my head and point at the paper, and he goes back to reading. My father is seventy-three years old, and hes practiced medicine in Natchez for more than forty of those years. Hes the same height I aman inch over six feetbut the arthritis thats slowly curling his hands into claws has bowed his spine so that I am taller now. His hair and beard have gone white, his skin is cracked and spotted from psoriasis, and he has to take insulin shots every day, yet the primary impression he radiates is one of strength. Thirty years past triple-bypass surgery, hes sicker than most of his patients, but they think of him as I do: an oak tree twisted by age and battered by storms, but still indomitable at the core. He licks his lips, looks up slowly from the paper, and says, Is your heart still racing?
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