Andrew Gross 3-Book Thriller Collection 2: 15 Seconds, Killing Hour, The Blue Zone. Andrew Gross

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Andrew Gross 3-Book Thriller Collection 2: 15 Seconds, Killing Hour, The Blue Zone - Andrew  Gross

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      “What is there to say?” Her mother smiled and wiped the tears from Kate’s cheek. “I have something for you, darling.” She took out a small brown jewelry box from her blazer and pressed it into Kate’s hand.

      Kate opened the lid. There was a delicate gold chain inside with a pendant on it. It was a half sun made of hammered gold with a diamond set in. The edges were jagged, as if someone had split it in two. It seemed Aztec—or Incan, maybe.

      “It holds secrets, Kate.” Sharon smiled and placed it around Kate’s neck. “There’s a story behind it. One day I’ll tell it to you. One day you’ll fit the pieces together, okay?”

      Kate nodded, fighting back tears.

      Then suddenly she turned and faced her dad.

      “I transferred some money into your account,” he said stiffly. “Mel will handle it. It ought to hold you for a while.”

      “I’ll be okay.” Kate nodded. She wasn’t sure quite what to feel.

      “I know you’ll be okay, Kate.” Then he pulled her into his arms. He squeezed her, and Kate didn’t fight it. She didn’t want to. Her head came to rest against his shoulder. “You’re still my daughter,” he told her. “No matter what you may feel. That doesn’t change.”

      “I know, Daddy.” Kate sniffed, and hugged him back.

      They pulled apart. Kate’s cheeks were wet with tears. She looked into his hooded brown eyes one last time.

      “You be good, pumpkin. Watch your blood levels. I know you’re twenty-three. But, hey, if I’m not here to remind you, who will?”

      Kate nodded and smiled. “You be good, too, Daddy.”

      A federal agent took him by the arm. They led him outside toward a black Jeep with a light on the top. He kissed Sharon. He hugged Justin and Em. Then he and the agent climbed into the car. A misty drizzle started to fall.

      Suddenly the pressure in Kate felt like it was about to burst. “I could still come.” She turned to her mother. “Just until Dad gets out …”

      “No.” Margaret Seymour shook her head. “There’s no halfway here, Kate. You come, you come for good. You don’t get to leave.”

      Sharon took hold of her daughter and smiled, ever so slightly. “Live your life, Kate. That’s what I want for you. Please …”

      Kate haltingly nodded back. Then it all started to fall apart, the composure she’d struggled to hold on to.

      The agents took them out to a U.S. Marshals Explorer that had quietly appeared. Their bags were already in the back. They got in. Kate ran up and placed her palm on the wet window. “I love you all.…”

      “I love you, too,” her mother mouthed, spreading her hand over Kate’s on the opposite side of the glass.

      The Explorer started to pull away. Kate watched, frozen, the tears flowing freely now. It was taking everything she had not to lunge and rip the door open and throw herself inside. She couldn’t help the thought that maybe she was seeing them all for the last time.

      “We’ll see each other soon!” she called after them.

      Everybody spun around through the darkened glass and waved. The Explorer came to a stop at the end of the driveway. Then it turned at the stone pillars. The brake lights flashed—and they were gone.

      Kate stood there with her hand raised in the deepening rain.

      Then two agents climbed into the front seats of the Jeep. The engine started up. Kate could see her father’s face through the gray-tinted glass. Suddenly a stab of panic sliced through her ribs.

      The government vehicle began to pull away.

      Kate took a few steps after it. “Dad!

      Her heart was pounding now. She couldn’t let him leave like this. Whatever he’d done. She wanted him to know. He needed to know. She did love him. She did. She started running after the vehicle.

      “Daddy, stop, please …!

      The Jeep came to a halt near the end of the driveway. Kate took one or two more steps. The rear window slowly rolled down.

      She saw his face. They looked at each other, the rain intensifying. He winked. There was a sadness on his face—a wordless resignation. She felt like there was something she had to say.

      Then the vehicle started to move again.

      Kate did the one thing she could think of, as the window began to roll up and only his eyes were visible. The one thing she knew he would understand as the vehicle pulled away.

      She gave him a one-fingered wave.

       CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

      Greg pulled his car up in front of the stone pillars on Beach Shore Road. An unmarked car from the U.S. Marshals office sat blocking the driveway. It was three days since Kate’s family had been taken into protective custody.

      A young agent stepped out of the car and checked their IDs, looking at Kate closely. Then, with a friendly nod, he waved them through.

      Kate stared at the quiet, closed-up house as they approached down the long, pebbled drive. “This is totally weird, Greg,” she said. “This is my home.”

      “I know.” Greg nodded, reaching across the seat and squeezing her hand.

      Kate had no idea where her family was. Only that they were safe and okay and thinking of her very much, Margaret Seymour had told her.

      The five-car garage was empty now. Her father’s Ferrari had already been impounded. So had the Chagall, the Dalí prints, and the contents of the wine cellar, she was told. Her mother’s Range Rover was parked outside in the turnabout. It would find its way to them soon.

      That was all that was left.

      There was a notice taped to the door. The house had been impounded. Just walking through the doors, into the two-story vestibule, elicited the eeriest, loneliest sensation Kate had ever felt.

      Their things were boxed and left in the front hall. Ready to go to some unknown destination.

      Their possessions were there—but her family was gone.

      Kate flashed back to how the place had looked the day they first moved in. “It’s so big,” her mother had said, gasping. “We’ll fill it,” her dad had said, smiling. Justin found a room with a loft on the third floor and put his dibs on it. They all went out back and peered at the water. “It’s like a castle, Dad,” Em had said, amazed. “It’s really ours?”

      Now it was just filled with this stark, brooding emptiness. As though everyone had died.

      “You okay?” Greg squeezed her hand again as they stood

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