Fool Me Once(90)
So now what?
Even if Isabella was hiding there, it wasn’t as though she could just go to the address and start knocking on doors. She needed to be more proactive. It was coming down to it now. She had most of the answers. She needed to find out the rest and put an end to it once and for all.
Her mobile rang. She saw on the caller ID that it was Shane.
“Hello?”
“What have you done?”
His tone chilled her blood.
“What are you talking about?”
“Detective Kierce.”
“What about him?”
“He knows, Maya.”
She said nothing. The walls were starting to close in on her now.
“He knows I tested that bullet for you.”
“Shane . . .”
“The same gun killed Claire and Joe, Maya. How the hell can that be?”
“Shane, listen to me. You have to trust me, okay?”
“You keep saying that. ‘Trust me.’ Like it’s some kind of mantra.”
“I shouldn’t need to say it.” Pointless, she thought. There was no way she could explain it to him right now. “I gotta run.”
“Maya?”
She hung up the phone and closed her eyes.
Let it go, she told herself.
She started down the quiet road, distracted by Shane’s call, by what Christopher Swain had told her, by all the emotions and thoughts swirling through her head.
Maybe that explained what happened next.
A van started coming toward her from the opposite direction. The tree-lined road was narrow, so she slowly shifted her vehicle a little to the right to give the van room to pass her. But as the van got close, it suddenly swung to its left, cutting in front of her.
Maya slammed on the brakes to avoid hitting the van. Her body jutted forward, restrained by the straps, even as the lizard-instinct part of the brain came to a realization: She was being attacked.
The van had cut off any forward motion, so she was reaching for the gear to put the car in reverse when she heard the knocking on her window. She looked and saw the gun facing her head. In her peripheral vision, she saw someone else at the window on the passenger side.
“It’s okay.” The man’s voice was hard to hear through the window. “We aren’t here to hurt you.”
How had the man gotten to the side of her car so fast? He couldn’t have gotten out of the van. There wasn’t that kind of time. This had been carefully orchestrated. Someone had realized that she would be at the Solemani Recovery Center. The road was quiet. Very little traffic. So these two men had probably been hiding behind a tree. The van cuts her off. They step out.
Maya just sat very still and considered her options.
“Please step out of the car and come with us.”
Option One: Reach for the gear and shift the car in reverse.
Option Two: Go for the gun in the hip holster.
The problem with both options was simple. The man had his gun at her head. Maybe his friend by the other window did too. She wasn’t Wyatt Earp and this wasn’t the O.K. Corral. If the man wanted to shoot her, she would have no chance of reaching either the gun or the gearshift in time.
Which left Option Three: Get out of the car—
That was when the man with the gun said, “Come on. Joe is waiting.”
The side door of the van began to slide open. Sitting in her car, both hands on the wheel, Maya could feel her heart pounding against her rib cage. The van door stopped halfway. Maya squinted, but she couldn’t see inside. She turned to the man with the gun.
“Joe . . . ?” she said.
“Yeah,” the man said, his voice suddenly tender. “Come on. You want to see him, right?”
She looked at the man’s face for the first time. Then she looked at the other man. He didn’t have a gun in his hand.
Option Three . . .
Maya started to cry.
“Mrs. Burkett?”
Through the tears, she said, “Joe . . .”
“Yes.” The man’s voice grew insistent. “Unlock the door, Mrs. Burkett.”
Still crying, Maya weakly fumbled for the unlock button. She pressed it and pulled the door handle. The man stepped back to let the door swing. He still had the gun on her. Maya half fell out of the car. The gunman started to reach for her arm, but Maya, still with the tears, shook her head and said, “No need.”
She straightened up and then stumbled toward the van. The gunman let her go. And that told Maya everything.
The van door slid open a little more.
Four men, Maya calculated. The driver, the van-door opener, the passenger-side guy, the gunman.
As she got closer to the van, all her training, all those hours in the simulator and at the shoot house, started to kick in. She felt an odd calm now, a moment of near Zen, that feeling when you are in the eye of the hurricane. It was all about to happen now, and one way or the other, if she came out of it alive or dead, she was being proactive. She wasn’t controlling her own destiny—that sort of thinking was nonsense—but when you’ve trained and when you’re prepared, you can act with a sort of comforting confidence.
Still stumbling, Maya turned her head just a little, just the slightest bit, because what she saw now would decide everything. The gunman had not grabbed hold of her when she got out of the car. That was the reason she had poured on the fake tears and semihysterics. To see how he would react. He had fallen for it. He had let her go.