Alex Kava Bundle - Alex Kava [773]
“Don’t make any funny moves, Mr. Farmer,” Jared told him. “We just need your car keys. We need to borrow your car.”
“Sure. No problem.” The man started to point, but stopped when Jared shoved the knife up under his chin. “Keys are hanging by the door. The ones with the Saint Christopher’s medallion.”
“Melanie.” Her brother’s voice took on that soothing tone. “Mel, get the keys and bring me that extension cord.”
It felt like a dream. A bad dream. Melanie stared at the trickle of blood that stained the farmer’s yellow collar. Her stomach started to churn. She tried to keep her mind focused. She tried to stay here, in this sunny kitchen instead of slipping back to that small, dingy kitchen from her past. So much blood—she could see it seeping into the cracks of the linoleum, cockroaches skittering through it.
“Melanie, the keys.”
She did what she was told, walking with spongy knees. They’d tie him up. They’d take the keys. She could do this step by step. She could get through this. She had done it before, she could do again. She’d focus and concentrate on what needed to be taken care of. And then she’d leave this warm, cozy kitchen and step back into her nightmare.
CHAPTER 42
11:12 a.m.
Andrew watched Charlie in the rearview mirror. He couldn’t help thinking the kid looked like a puppy dog waiting and watching for his master’s return. The gun stayed on the seat next to his thigh, exactly where Jared had left it. Charlie’s hand, palm flat against the leather seat, was beside it as if he didn’t want to touch the gun but wanted to be ready if he needed to.
Andrew tried to size him up, almost like a character profile for one of his books. He was streetwise but otherwise not so smart. There was an innocence, a sort of childlike quality about him that didn’t jive with being street-smart. At first Andrew had thought it might be a ploy, a manipulation, part of an act the kid did to get what he wanted. He was a good-looking kid in a geeky sort of way, with an easy, carefree manner, as if he didn’t think any of this was wrong. Almost as if he thought it was a game. Or maybe it was all an act.
Charlie met Andrew’s gaze in the mirror, but Andrew didn’t flinch. Charlie looked away first.
“You and Jared been friends for a long time?” Andrew asked as if making polite conversation.
“Friends?” Charlie looked as if the question required thought. “Jared’s my uncle.”
So that was the tie. Andrew had wondered if there was a romantic connection between Jared and Melanie, but this made more sense. Now he knew.
He checked the door to the house and then the garage. Nothing. Somewhere in the back of his mind he remembered a tidbit about kidnappers having a difficult time hurting their hostages if they started to think of them as real people. Hopefully that’s what was going on inside, but the longer it took Jared to get the keys from the farmer, the more Andrew got nervous about him agreeing to let Andrew just drive off and be his decoy. Whatever Jared ended up doing inside that house could determine Andrew’s fate.
“He seems like a nice guy if I had a chance to know him,” he said, glancing at Charlie in the mirror again.
“Oh, yeah, Jared’s cool.” He nodded. “He knows a lot,” he added as an afterthought.
“He’s kind of hard on your mom sometimes, isn’t he?” Andrew tested the water. Where exactly did this kid’s loyalty lie?
“Whadya mean?” But the topic wasn’t enough to draw his attention away from his vigil out the window.
“I don’t know,” Andrew said, keeping it casual, as though it were only an observation. “He yells at her a lot.”
“Oh, that.” Charlie snickered under his breath.
Andrew waited for an explanation, but none came. Evidently, it wasn’t something Charlie thought deserved a response.
Suddenly the garage door opened and a blue Chevy Impala backed out. Andrew saw Charlie grab the gun, but his hold loosened when he recognized Jared behind the wheel, Melanie beside him in