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Around the boats, spilt fuel created greasy rainbow rings in the water. The whole place had a run-down dirty air to it, but retained a certain picturesque quality, even so. More like a film set than real life.

Next to the building sat the rusting hulk of an old step-side pickup, a relic from the 50s. It was no longer possible to tell what colour the body might once have been. Tough grasses and weeds had grown up past the level of the floor and were making slow but steady progress in retaking the ground they’d lost during the first engagement.

“Where are you planning on putting them?” Haines asked as he approached. He had Trey by the scruff of his neck, casually shoving him along in front of him.

Mason glanced at Brown before replying, as though he didn’t like being questioned by the cop. “We’ve a couple of storerooms in the back,” he said, short, jerking his head towards the timber building. “They can stay there for a couple of hours or so. Until it’s time.”

Haines shrugged and nodded. “Sounds good to me,” he said and then he turned to Brown. “What do you want to do about the others – the kids she was with in Daytona?”

“Let’s make sure this mess is cleared up first, then you can go tie up the loose ends,” Brown said.

Trey started to squirm harder, protesting. Haines didn’t even bother to look at him, just tightened his grip. I could see his knuckles turning white with the effort he was putting into punishing the boy.

“Let him go,” I said with quiet feeling.

Haines looked at me and smiled while Trey thrashed at the end of his arm like a hooked fish.

“Or what?”

“Oh, leave him be,” Brown said with mild irritation. “You’ll get your chance for that.” He checked his watch. “Anyhow, I gotta scoot. It’s welcome night and I have to go play genial host up at the clubhouse.”

Haines dropped his hold with marked reluctance, even though he was still smiling at me.

Brown ignored him and moved back to the Suburban. He climbed in and cranked up the engine before leaning out of the window. “Let me know when it’s done.”

He rolled up the tinted window and the Chevy quickly disappeared down the narrow track cut between the Cypress trees. We could see his dust trail long after he had gone.

Mason looked at Whitmarsh and Lonnie. “Well, I guess you got a choice now,” he said. “Either you do what the boss man wants with these people, or you join ‘em. What’ll it be?”

Despite the doubts I’d tried to plant on the ride down there, Whitmarsh barely hesitated. “We’ll do it,” he said, looking me right in the eye as he spoke. “Don’t you worry none about that.”

***

They put Sean and me into one storeroom and Trey and his father into the other. The rooms had bare concrete floors and a row of tiny windows, little more than meshed glass vents up under the roof line. Apart from that they were empty of either creature comforts or possibilities for escape.

Mason’s only concession to our well-being was to take the keys from Whitmarsh and unlock the restraints. I think it was probably down to Whitmarsh’s obviously lack of enthusiasm for letting Sean loose that made Mason do it, rather than any particular concern on his part. When Sean shook his hands free I could see the bloody bracelet marks on both wrists but he never even winced.

Then they put us inside our prison and locked and padlocked the door behind us. We listened in silence as their booted footsteps receded.

“So this is it.” Sean’s voice was disembodied in the gloom.

“Maybe,” I said. “We still have a chance to get out of this.”

I felt him turn. “You reckon?”

“You remember what was said at the Ocean Center?” I asked. “Well, Trey and I have been helped out over the last couple of days by a retired FBI man called Walt – lives down on the beach. He gave me one of those micro-cassette tape recorders to try and get a confession out of Gerri Raybourn.” I blanked out my own reasons for wanting to confront Gerri and pushed on. “It was in my bag at the Ocean Center. It should have got everything that happened there.”

For a moment Sean was silent. “If it recorded OK from the inside of a bag,” he said at last. “If the local cops bother to play it back. And if they recognise its significance and pass it on to the FBI, we might have a chance. That’s a lot of ‘ifs’, Charlie.”

“I know that,” I said, hearing the wobble in my voice. “But right now it’s the only hope we’ve got of getting out of this, so please don’t take it away from me.”

I heard him sigh. “Come here,” he said. My eyes were beginning to adjust to the dimness now. I could see his outline more clearly but I would have known where to find him, in any case. My system was tuned to his, alert and sensitive.

I walked into his open arms without a stumble and laid my head against his chest. Under my ear his heart beat a steady hypnotic rhythm. His hands closed gently across my back, enveloping me.

I wanted to stay like that forever.

“I thought I’d never get to do this again,” he said into my hair, so quiet I had to strain to catch the words.

I said nothing. What could I say? That I’d already accepted his death? I kept the cold little secret to myself. It sounded so faithless to admit it out loud.

Sean didn’t seem to notice my silence. “They got me getting out of the bloody swimming pool – how stupid is that?” he said, rueful. Those agile fingers had begun to stroke up and down my spine, feeling their way across each vertebra, almost distracted.

“I managed to put Whitmarsh on his arse before Chris waded in and then Lonnie turned up with that shotgun and made it pretty damned clear I was a disposable item. Chucked some clothes at me, then it was the usual blindfold and cuffs and into the boot of his car.” I felt him shrug to try and slacken the tension that was tightening him up as he recounted the story. “I thought that was it. Game over. They’d lined the whole thing with plastic.”

“I know,” I said, remembering what we’d found in the boot of the Taurus I’d hijacked outside Henry’s place.

“The worst thing was knowing what they had planned for you and not being able to do a damned thing about it,” he went on. “They were talking about you like you were already dead.”

“We probably would have been if I hadn’t found the SIG where you left it,” I said. And as I said it I remembered that I’d abandoned the gun, too, in the little flowered bag at the Ocean Center. What I would have done to have it back right now.

“I wasn’t sure if they’d miss it when they cleaned out my room,” Sean said, “but I knew if they did you’d find it. If you made it back to the house.”

“Yeah, we made it.”

“So I understand. You know where I was when that little bit of news came through?” Sean said and his voice had taken on a flat, dispassionate tone now, like he was debriefing after a disastrous operation, burying the emotion and keeping strictly to the facts.

I gave a slight shake of my head, though I realised his question was largely rhetorical.

“Haines took me out into the Everglades – some godforsaken track in the middle of nowhere – and they put me on my knees and he put a gun to the back of my head,” he said calmly, although under my cheekbone his heart was punching like a fist. “And just before he did it Haines’s mobile rang and that’s when he found out that they’d missed you at the house, and then again at the motel. And they thought I might still have some value, after all.”

“Jesus,” I murmured.

He told me the rest then, not that there was much to tell. They’d kept him and Keith in a darkened room not unlike this one and told him nothing. The only time he’d gleaned that something was happening was when Whitmarsh’s crew had suddenly tooled up and cleared out in a hurry yesterday. Their mood had been one of jubilation, he said, as though they’d set a trap for me.