“Girls! I’m going to the basement for a few minutes. You stay up there, okay? I don’t want to be bothered.”
A faint voice shouted down, “Okay.”
Guy turned toward Nash. Nash let the knife slide across his back and come to rest at his belly. Guy did not flinch or step back. “Did you kill my wife?”
Nash smiled. “I thought she was your ex.”
“What do you want?”
“Where are your computers?”
“My laptop is in my bag next to the chair. My desktop is in the kitchen.”
“Any others?”
“No. Just take them and get out.”
“We need to talk first, Guy.”
“I’ll tell you whatever you want to know. I have money too. It’s yours. Just don’t hurt the girls.”
Nash looked at this man. He had to know that there was a good chance he would die today. Nothing in his life had ever suggested heroism, yet now it was as though he had enough and was making some sort of final stand.
“I won’t touch them if you cooperate,” Nash said.
Guy checked Nash’s eyes as though searching for the lie. Nash opened the basement door. They both headed down. Nash closed it behind him and flipped on the light. The basement was unfinished. The floor was cold concrete. Water gurgled through pipes. A water-color canvas leaned against a storage chest. There were old hats and posters and cardboard boxes scattered everywhere.
Nash had everything he needed in a gym bag he’d kept over his shoulder. He reached for the duct tape, and Guy Novak made a big mistake.
He threw a punch and shouted, “Run, girls!”
Nash threw a hard elbow to Guy’s throat, choking off his words. He followed up with a palm strike to the forehead. Guy crashed to the floor, grabbing his throat.
“If you so much as breathe,” Nash said, “I will bring your daughter down here and make you watch. Do you understand?”
Guy froze. Fatherhood could even make a gutless worm like Guy Novak turn valiant. Nash wondered if he and Cassandra would have had children by now. Almost definitely. Cassandra had come from a big family. She had wanted a lot of kids. He wasn’t so sure—his outlook on the world was considerably dimmer than hers—but he would never deny her.
Nash looked down. He considered stabbing Novak in the leg or maybe slicing off a finger, but there was no need. Guy had made his move and learned from it. There would be no more.
“Roll onto your stomach and put your hands behind your back.”
Guy cooperated. Nash wrapped the duct tape around his wrists and forearms. Then he did the same with the legs. He attached the wrists to the ankles, pulling the arms back and making the legs bend at the knee. Classic hog-tie. The last thing he did was cover Guy’s mouth by wrapping tape around his head five times.
Once that was done Nash made his way to the basement door.
Guy started bucking, but there was no need. Nash just wanted to make sure that the girls hadn’t heard Guy’s stupid scream. He opened the door. In the distance he could still hear the TV. The girls were nowhere in sight. He closed the door and moved back down.
“Your ex-wife made a video. I want you to tell me where it is.”
The duct tape was still wrapped around Guy’s mouth. The confusion on his face was obvious—how was he supposed to answer the question when his mouth was taped? Nash smiled down at him and showed him the blade.
“You’ll tell me in a few minutes, okay?”
Nash’s phone vibrated again. Lewiston, he figured, but when he checked the caller ID, he knew the news was not good.
“What’s wrong?” he asked.
“The police are here,” Pietra said.
Nash was barely surprised. One prop goes, it all starts to cave in on itself. Time was tight now. He couldn’t stand here and hurt Guy at leisure. He needed to move fast.
So what would make Guy talk fast?
Nash shook his head. That which makes us brave—that which is worth dying for—also makes us weak.
“I’m going to pay your daughter a little visit,” he told Guy. “And then you’ll talk, right?”
Guy’s eyes bulged. Still hog-tied he squirmed and tried to signal what Nash already knew. He would talk. He would tell him everything that he wanted to know if only he’d leave his daughter alone. But Nash knew it would be easier to get the information with his daughter in front of him. Some would say that the threat was enough. They might be right.
But Nash wanted the daughter down here for other reasons.
He took a deep breath. The end was coming now. He could see that. Yes, he wanted to survive and get out of here, but the crazy had not only seeped in but taken over. The crazy lit up his veins, made him feel tingly and alive.
He started up the basement stairs. Behind him, he could hear Guy going nuts in his bindings. For a moment the crazy let up and Nash considered going back. Guy would say anything now. But then again, maybe not. Maybe then it would look like just a threat.
No, he needed to carry through.
He opened the basement door and stepped into the front foyer. He looked at the stairs. The TV was still on. He took one more step.
He stopped when he heard the doorbell ring.
TIA pulled into the Novak driveway. She left her phone and purse in the car and hurried to the front door. She tried to process what Betsy Hill had told her. Her son was okay. That was what was most important. He might have some minor injuries, but he was alive and could stand upright and even dash away. There were other things Adam had told Betsy—about feeling guilty over Spencer, stuff like that. But that could all be handled. You need to survive first. Get him home. After that, you can worry about the other things.
Still lost in these thoughts, Tia rang the Novaks’ doorbell.
She swallowed and remembered that this family had just suffered a devastating loss. It was important to reach out, she guessed, but all she really wanted to do was grab her daughter, find her son and husband, get them all back in the house and lock the doors forever.
No one answered the door.
Tia tried to peek through the little window, but there was too much reflection. She cupped her hands around her eyes and peered into the foyer. A figure seemed to jump back. Might have just been a shadow. She pressed the doorbell again. This time there was plenty of noise. The girls made a ruckus stampeding down the stairs.
They charged the door. Yasmin opened it. Jill stood a few feet behind her.
“Hi, Mrs. Baye.”
“Hi, Yasmin.”
She could see from the girl’s face that Guy hadn’t told her yet, but that wasn’t a surprise. He was waiting for Jill to leave so he could be alone with Yasmin.