She liked James Quinlan even better. âThereâs not much todo here in The Cove. I donât know if youâll last out the week.â
âWho knows?â James said, tossed his napkin into the white trash bin, and left the ice cream shop.
His next stop was Amabel Perdyâs house, the small white one on the corner of Main Street and Conroy Street. Time to get it done.
When he knocked on the trim white door, he heard a crash from inside. It sounded as though a piece of furniture had been knocked down. He knocked louder. He heard a womanâs cry of terror.
He turned the knob, found the door was locked. Well, shit. He put his shoulder against the door and pushed really hard. The door burst inward.
He saw Susan St. John Brainerd on her knees on the floor, the telephone lying beside her. He could hear the buzz of the dial tone. Her fist was stuffed in her mouth. Sheâd probably terrified herself when she screamedâthat or she was afraid someone would hear her. Well, he had, and here he was.
She stared at him as he flew into Amabelâs small living room, huddled herself against the wall like he was going to shoot her, jerked her fist out of her mouth, and screamed again.
Really loud.
4
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âS TOP SCREAMING ,â HE yelled at her. âWhat the hellâs the matter? What happened?â
Sally knew this was it. Sheâd never seen him before. He wasnât old like everyone else in this town. He didnât belong here. Heâd tracked her here. He was here to drag her back to Washington or force her to go back to that horrible place. Yes, he could work for Beadermeyer, he probably did. She couldnât go back there. She stared at the big man who was now standing over her, looking at her strangely, as if he was really concerned, but she knew he wasnât, he couldnât be, it was just a ruse. He was here to hurt her.
âThe phone,â she said, because she was going to die and it didnât matter what she said. âIt was someone who called and he scared me.â
As she spoke, she slowly rose and began backing away from him.
He wondered if she had a gun. He wondered if sheâd turn and run to get that gun. He didnât want this to turn nasty. He lunged for her, grabbed her left arm as she cried out, twisted about, and tried to jerk away from him.
âIâm not going to hurt you, dammit.â
âGo away! I wonât go with you, I wonât. Go away.â
She was sobbing and panting, fighting him hard now, and he was impressed with the way she jabbed him with her knuckles just below his ribs where it hurt really good,then raised her leg to knee him.
He jerked her back against him, then wrapped his arms around her, holding her until she quieted. She had no leverage now, no chance to hurt him. She was a lightweight, but the place where sheâd gotten him below his ribs really hurt.
âIâm not going to hurt you,â he said again, his voice calm and low. He was one of the best interviewers in the FBI because he could modulate his voice just right, make it gentle and soothing, mean and vicious, whatever was necessary to get what he needed.
He said now, in his easy and soft tone, âI heard you cry out and thought someone was in here with you, attacking you. I was just trying to be a hero.â
She stilled, just stood there, her back pressed against his chest. The only sound breaking the silence was the dial tone from the telephone.
âA hero?â
âYeah, a hero. You okay now?â
She nodded. âYouâre really not here to hurt me?â
âNope. I was just passing by when I heard you scream.â
She sagged with relief. She believed him. What the hell should she do now?
He let her go and took a quick step back. He leaned down and picked up the telephone, dropped the receiver into the cradle and set it back on the table.
âIâm sorry,â she said, her arms wrapped around herself. She