Part 33 (1/2)
”Then we'll watch her,” Jane said.
”See you in the morning,” Adam said to Diego.
”In the morning,” he agreed, then left.
He was ready to reach for his Glock as he walked toward the museum.
He looked over at the stables. The drapes were open, and he could see Angus sitting in his chair, probably watching television. His shotgun was at his side.
Diego reached the museum and was ready to key in the alarm code as soon as he opened the door, but he didn't need to. The door opened and Scarlet was there, with Brett and Lara right behind her.
Scarlet blushed slightly. ”We just wanted to make sure you got in safely,” she said.
Behind her, Brett shrugged. Diego knew his partner well. The shrug meant, What was I supposed to do? She was worried about you, and I wasn't about to let her come down here alone-or leave Lara upstairs alone.
”Thanks. I'm safe, I promise. Now we're locking up, going through the whole place and getting some sleep,” he told her, then looked at Brett.
”I've checked, but it never hurts to check again.”
”Nathan was here,” Scarlet said, following close behind him as the four of them walked through the museum.
Diego stopped short and turned to face her. ”What did he say?”
”He didn't move the statue of himself upstairs, but we knew that. He did knock it over, though. And, Diego, he did find gold, and that's why his killer was torturing. He wanted to know where it was. Nathan would have given it to him, too, but he didn't know where it was himself. He would have done anything to protect Jillian, except that he'd given her the gold to hide for the future, for their son. Oh! And his killer wore a burlap bag over his head, just like our killer. I told him I thought it was Rollo, and why-did Matt and Meg explain when they got up to the house?”
Diego nodded. ”They did.”
”Good. Anyway, I think Nathan agrees with me about Rollo, even though he never saw his killer's face and didn't recognize his voice.”
”We're tight as a drum down here,” Brett said.
”Good. Let's try to get some sleep,” Diego said.
They headed upstairs, where, by rote, he and Brett went through the apartment, even though someone had been there all night.
In the hallway, they said their good-nights and went to their separate rooms.
The minute the door was closed behind them, Scarlet turned into his arms. There was a sweet rush of urgency about her. They didn't speak as they struggled out of their clothing, and when they fell into bed, he thought he might drown in the silk of her flesh and the fall of her hair. The night was electric. They should have been exhausted after everything that had happened, but they made love as if it might be the last time, as if the earth might open and take them away with the morning's light.
As in fact he feared it might.
After they climaxed, when they lay replete, Scarlet didn't speak and he thought that she might have fallen asleep, curled against him, her head on his chest, one long leg draped over his body. He thought about their marriage and the way it had been destroyed, and he wondered again how they had managed to tear each other apart so completely.
And then she spoke.
”I understand now,” she said softly. ”I understand how you can't walk away from a case like this.”
”No. It's not right-it will never be right-for a job to take precedence over a marriage,” he said. ”Most people would have thrown me out long before you did.”
She sat up and looked down at him, a hand on his chest. ”In case you haven't noticed, I'm not most people.” She grinned slightly. ”Though I might have been stupid and acted as if I was.”
He only meant to hold her, but the minute he pulled her into his arms the urgency returned, the feeling that they had to cling tightly to one another because the cataclysm was coming and it would try to pull them apart.
They made love again. Afterward, when she curled up against his side, he held her close and they slept.
Diego began to dream, and in his dream the old Cuban refugee woman was back. She walked up to him through a sunlit field, and he realized he was standing on the mountain, and in the distance he could see the Rocky Mountains tipped with brilliant, sparkling snow.
”You're a good man,” the old woman said. ”But sometimes that isn't enough. You have to listen, listen with your soul. Only then will you know how to survive.”
She smiled as she stopped speaking and faded into the sunlight. He stood on the mountain alone as a chill breeze began to blow, flattening the gra.s.s around him. In seconds the daylight was gone and it was full night. The white mountaintops began to move closer, but they weren't mountain peaks dazzling with snow anymore.
They were gravestones.
He woke with a start and realized that his phone was vibrating under his pillow.
It was Lieutenant Gray.
”They've lost Charles Barton,” he said without so much as a h.e.l.lo. ”My men watched the d.a.m.ned hotel all night and never saw him leave, but his wife called us this morning, crying hysterically, saying he was gone. I've got her down here right now. You want to come talk to her? She's a mess-certain the killer got hold of him somehow.”
Scarlet was still feeling the effects of a very deep and comfortable sleep when Diego woke her to tell her what was going on.
Charles Barton had eluded the police, and they were torn between suspecting that he was a victim, or the killer. Gwen was a basket case down at the station, and Diego was going down to question her. He explained that he was going to take Ben and Trisha down with him, which the group had decided on the night before.
Linda had gotten dressed and gone out very early; Jane and Adam were following her. Meg and Matt were watching Angus, while the police were still a.s.signed to keep an eye on Terry and the Levins.
Scarlet said she would be fine with Brett and Lara, but he promised that if he was going to be detained long at the station, he would send someone to pick her up and bring her down to be with him.
She nodded vaguely when he left her.
She started to drift back to sleep and then woke with a start. She looked around, suspicious that someone was in her room, but it seemed to be empty. Still, she decided to shower and dress, then head into the kitchen.
Company would be good right now.
The company of the living.
She found Brett and Lara at the kitchen table. They'd brewed coffee, and cereal, milk and juice were on the counter. Lara was working on her laptop, and Brett was pacing back and forth by the window that looked out on the stables.
Lara grinned at Scarlet and told her in a whisper, ”He hates sitting around watching. He's an action kind of a guy.”
”I heard that,” Brett said. ”And I'm absolutely fine.”
”We're supposed to stay right here, right?” Scarlet asked.
”Unless there's a compelling reason to be somewhere else,” Brett said. ”If there is, I let Diego know I'm taking eyes off the stable, then stick to you like glue. He's really afraid for you, Scarlet. You know that. And he's not being overprotective. You are in danger here.”