Look Again - Lisa Scottoline [94]
Connie greeted her from the couch, with a big grin. “It’s Nanook of the North!”
“Cold out there.” Ellen fake-smiled and slid out of her coat. The lamps lent the living room a homey glow, the toys had been put away, and the TV played on mute, a plastic-surgery show. She grabbed Connie’s coat and handed it to her, barely able to hide her urgency. “You’ll be safe going home, right? You have four-wheel drive?”
“Sure, it’s no problem.” Connie put on her coat, flipping her ponytail over her collar, then got her tote and purse from the windowseat. “No way he’s having school tomorrow.”
“Then it’s good I’m home, huh?” Ellen opened the door to let Connie out. “We’ll just hibernate and make some cookies.”
“I vote for chocolate chip.”
“You got it.” Ellen managed another smile as Connie picked up her stuff and crossed to the door. “Seriously, be careful out there.”
“No worries, I’m invincible.” Connie flashed her a final smile and headed outside, and Ellen shut the door, locked it, and threw the deadbolt.
Go go go.
Ellen didn’t know how or why, but she knew what she felt inside. If Rob Moore was killing people who knew about Timothy, then she and Will had to get out of there immediately, tonight. She hurried up the stairs, hustled into Will’s room, and hurried to the bed.
“Will, wake up, honey.” Will slept on his back, his arms open and askew, stirring. Oreo Figaro didn’t move, a black-and-white ball at the foot of the bed. She lifted Will up, hoisted him to her shoulder in his Elmo thermal pajamas, and he made a snuffling noise.
“Mommy?”
“Hi, honey.” Ellen rubbed his back. “You can just stay asleep, I want to put you into something warmer.”
Will put his arms around her neck, and Ellen moved quickly to the bureau, dipped sideways to yank open the bottom drawer, and grabbed one of his snowsuits. She crossed back to the bed, unfolded the snowsuit with a quick snap, and fumbled to stuff Will’s feet into the legs. “Mommy, what?”
“Everything’s fine, sweetie. We’re just going out for a little bit.” Ellen pulled the snowsuit up and unwrapped his arms from her neck, then stuck on his sneakers. “Hold on around my neck. We’re going for a ride.”
“Okay,” Will said sleepily, holding tighter as she picked him up again, left the room, and hurried down the stairs, keeping a steadying hand on his back. She reached the bottom and glanced at the clock on the entertainment center—10:15. She had to get going. She grabbed her purse from the windowseat, then remembered she needed cash. She kept two hundred bucks in the kitchen drawer for emergencies and she was pretty sure this qualified.
She hurried through the living room, noting that the Coffmans’ station wagon wasn’t in the driveway and their windows were dark. It was a lucky break that they weren’t home, because if they spotted her going out this late in a snowstorm, they might have a question or two. She hurried with Will through the dining room and turned the corner into the dark kitchen.
She went to flick on the light switch, but all of a sudden there was a shadowy blur and the back of her head exploded in pain.
Her arms released their grip. Will slipped through her fingers. Everything went dark, and the last thing she heard was Will’s scream.
“Mommy!”
Chapter Seventy-three
Ellen regained consciousness, lying on her side on the kitchen floor. Her head thundered and she tried to scream. Tape covered her lips. She tried to move her hands but they were wrenched behind her back, stuck together. Pain arced through her shoulder joints. Her ankles were bound. She was facing the dining room, her back to the kitchen.
Will.
Ellen felt a bolt of terror rattle through her very bones. Her BlackBerry rang in the living room, the sound of another place and time. She heard a noise behind her, a harsh ripping sound. She rolled herself over on the floor, in horror at the sight.
Will lay on his side facing her, a strip of duct tape over his mouth. He was crying hard, his small body shaking with sobs. A man bent over him, wrapping duct tape around