One Tough Marine. Пола Грейвс
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Assuming there’d be a future in which to reference.
“Are you going to tell me what you want?” She tried not to give in to the panic buzzing like wasps in her brain. Her muscles were already beginning to ache from tension. If someone didn’t start talking, she might just snap in half.
The freckled man took the grocery bag from her trembling arms and set it on the floor. “Your husband took something that didn’t belong to him. We’re here to retrieve it.”
The man behind her pushed something cold and hard against the back of her neck. It took no imagination to guess it was the barrel of a pistol.
“My husband’s been dead for three years. Most of his stuff has been sold or given away.” Her answer had the benefit of being the truth. Matt hadn’t collected much in the way of personal belongings during his foreshortened life. Most of what he possessed had been government issue, from uniforms to gear to weapons. “If you’ve been through the trunk at the foot of my bed, you’ve seen all I have left of him.”
The Brahmin, as she thought of him, made a low tsk-tsk sound. “Perhaps you are mistaken. Did your husband have a safe-deposit box? A storage unit located elsewhere?”
“I don’t know,” she answered, and again it was the truth. “He was a soldier. There was a lot about his life I don’t know. Can you at least tell me what this is about? Maybe I could help you find what you’re looking for if you told me what it was.”
The Brahmin hesitated a moment. She caught a slight flicker in his eyes and realized he wasn’t sure how to answer.
Oh, God, they don’t even know what they’re looking for.
“We’re not at liberty to reveal that to you if you don’t already know what we’re talking about,” the man behind her said, and she almost laughed at the absurdity. They’d broken in and trashed her apartment on a hunch that maybe, possibly, her husband had hidden—what? A million dollars? A stash of gold?
“We’re looking for files.” The Brahmin’s accent slipped, she noticed. He might be playing the role of the upper-crust Bostonian, but for just a moment he sounded more like a South Boston street punk. His Brahmin accent clicked back into place almost immediately. “Of a sensitive nature. Your husband took them from an associate of ours who wants them back immediately.”
“Paper files? Digital?” The growing discomfort of her captors had begun to ease her own sense of terror. If they didn’t know what, precisely, they were looking for, maybe she could buy time to get herself out of this mess. “My husband’s personal notebook computer is in the closet. It stopped booting up a year ago, but maybe you could get something off of it.”
“We have it. We’ll certainly examine it,” the Brahmin said. “But what we’re looking for won’t be on a computer. Your husband was too smart to keep it in such an obvious place.”
He was right, of course. Matt had been the king of secret-keepers. It had come with his career in Marine Corps Intelligence. God knew, she’d had to get used to being out of the loop when it came to the biggest part of his life.
“If you knew my husband at all, you’d know he didn’t share his work with me.” By the end, there’d been little they’d shared besides a house and a few good memories.
“That’s unfortunate,” the Brahmin said. Behind her, the man with the gun pushed the barrel more firmly against her neck.
The unnatural calm that had briefly settled over her shattered. When she spoke again, her voice shook. “I don’t know what you want from me.”
“I suggest you find out,” the Brahmin said. “Assuming you enjoy your life with your adorable little boy.”
The mention of Stevie made her heart skip. “What do you mean by that?”
“Mrs. Tamburello is getting along in years, wouldn’t you say? Accidents can happen so easily.”
“Where’s Stevie?” Ignoring the man with the gun behind her, she rushed forward and grabbed the Brahmin’s arm. “If you’ve done anything to him, I’ll—”
“Rage impotently?” the Brahmin said dismissively.
“You son of a bitch!”
“Your son is well. Mrs. Tamburello is well.” The Brahmin motioned with his head, and the man behind her grabbed her arm.
She wheeled around to face him and found another masked man, slightly shorter than the Brahmin. African-American, judging by the café au lait skin visible through the eyeholes, along with intelligent brown eyes that met hers with surprising gentleness. Nevertheless, he held her gaze unflinchingly, slowly lifting the pistol he held in his right hand as if to remind her who was in charge. A Colt M1991, stainless with a black grip, .45 caliber. Nasty piece of work.
She ought to be panicking instead of noticing the details of a pistol, but the fact that she was still alive after this much time alone with two masked men suggested she might not be dying today. It was in her best interest to remember as much about these two men as she could.
The Brahmin tapped her shoulder, making her jump. She whipped around to face him. “Here is what we’re going to do, Mrs. Chandler. You are going to go into your bedroom and close the door behind you. My associate and I will take the items we’ve collected and leave. When you hear the door close behind us, you may come out of the room.”
“Then what?” she asked, knowing it couldn’t be that simple.
“Then you will collect your thoughts and memories until you come up with an answer to a very important question. Where would your husband hide sensitive material to keep it out of the hands of his employers as well as any other interested parties?”
Her heart dropped. “And if I come up empty-handed?”
“You will lose your son in a dreadful accident.”
She clenched her fists so hard her fingernails bit into her palms. “If you think I’m going to let anyone hurt my son—”
The Brahmin took a leisurely step toward her. “Do you not understand you really have no choices here? A call to the police, an attempt to leave San Diego—any of those things will be met with punishment. You have one simple task. Find what your husband hid. Deliver it to us by the end of the week and we will leave you and your son alone.”
“Liar.”
“On the contrary. I’ve spoken only the truth today.” The Brahmin reached out and touched a strand of hair that had slipped from her ponytail. “If you trust nothing else, trust that. I will do what I promised, either way. The outcome is entirely up to you.”
Behind her, the man with the Colt nudged her neck with the barrel. “Get into the bedroom.”
Swallowing the anger rising in her throat, she walked slowly through the upended living room and entered her tiny bedroom, dismay settling over her like a cloud as she took