“Then why did you come here?”
“For the story.”
“And the money.”
“You said you knew who Sally’s killer was.”
“And I’m willing to tell you. But not without a deal on the inheritance.”
“I’m not interested in making that kind of deal with you. So you can just keep your ring, keep your story, and keep away from me. Understand?”
She waited for a response, and the silence on the line only heightened her sense of being watched. “I know you’re still there,” she said. “I’m hanging up now. Listen to what I’m saying. I don’t ever want to hear from you again. Got it?”
“Yeah,” he said. His voice was especially deep, and the voice altering device only seemed to emphasize his anger. “I got it.”
The call ended, and Deirdre immediately rang her boyfriend on speed dial. “Johnny, get over here right now.”
“You okay?”
“Yeah, just scared. Meet me at my car.” She disconnected, wheeled on one foot, and sprinted for the gate. It was a hundred-yard dash in the dark to the exit, and Deirdre was running full out, gobbling up in no time the same stretch of driveway that had taken several minutes to cover earlier in her timid entrance. Arms pumping, legs churning, she was flying by row after row of stacked pallets. She kept her eyes focused on the gate ahead, ignoring the dark crevices between boxes that had frightened her on the way in. She was at top speed when she reached the fence, and she practically slammed into the chain link.
Outside, her boyfriend’s car pulled up next to hers. He jumped out and ran to the gate.
Deirdre reached for the latch and yanked on the padlock. It didn’t budge.
“Are you okay?” her boyfriend asked from the other side of the fence.
“Yes, yes. Just-I can’t get out of here!”
He tried the padlock. “It’s locked.”
“Damn,” she said. “That creep locked me in.”
“Can you climb over?”
She looked up at the tangle of razor wire that ran the length of the nine-foot-high fence. “I would say no.”
Her boyfriend’s expression suddenly went cold. “I would say you’d better.”
Deirdre turned and froze. A pair of Doberman Pinschers emerged from the darkness. They were approaching slowly, like lanky cheetahs stalking their prey, growling with teeth bared.
“Don’t move,” said her boyfriend.
The watchdogs inched closer. Deirdre looked at one, then the other. The bigger one barked and snapped, then pulled away. Deirdre threw herself back against the fence.
“Don’t move,” her boyfriend said in an urgent whisper.
“I’m scared!”
“And don’t look them in the eye, either. They’ll think you’re challenging them.”
“Johnny, do something!”
“I’m calling the cops. Just don’t move a muscle.”
“I have a can of mace in my purse.”
“Leave it. These dogs are trained to go after people who reach for weapons.”
The dogs snarled, saliva dripping. Deirdre’s voice shook as she said, “They’re going to kill me.”
“Not if you don’t move.”
“We have to do something!”
“Just stay put.”
The bigger dog barked again, six or seven quick bursts that rattled off like machine-gun fire. Deirdre screamed, which made the dog snap at her. Deirdre reached for her mace, and the other dog went for her leg. She kicked him away, but the big dog sank his teeth into her wrist and pulled her to the ground.
“Deirdre!”
She kicked and punched wildly, trying desperately to cover her head and roll away. Her arm shook violently in the dog’s teeth. Then, suddenly, it released her arm, and both dogs froze. Deirdre was shaking, too frightened to make a move. The dogs had stopped snarling, as if they’d completely lost interest in her. They seemed to be listening to someone or something, but Deirdre heard nothing.
As quickly as they’d come upon her, they turned and ran toward the loading dock. Deirdre’s thoughts weren’t lucid, but it was as if they’d heard a dog whistle.
Still on the ground, Deirdre checked her arm. The dog’s teeth had torn through her clothes and into her skin. She gasped at the sight of her own blood.
“Stay quiet,” said Johnny, still on the other side of the fence.
“Cops are on their way.”
She started at the sound of her ringing cell phone. Her purse had flown off somewhere in the attack, but the noise was coming from behind her. She crawled on all fours, grabbed the phone, and answered.
“Are we a team?” he said. It was that mechanical voice again.
Deirdre grimaced, as her arm was throbbing with pain from the dog bite. “What the hell did you just do?”
“A night watchman will do anything for a little extra cash. Even disappear and loan me his dog whistle. Funny how that works, isn’t it?”
“I don’t think this is funny at all. Let me out of here!”
“Relax. I’m giving you a choice, Deirdre.”
“What choice?”
“A very simple choice. You can be a winner, or you can be a loser. It’s that simple.”
“What the hell are you talking about?”
“We’ll talk later, after you’ve calmed down. In the meantime, you breathe a word about this to anyone-I mean anyone-and you’re definitely a loser. Big-time loser. You hear?”
She didn’t answer.
“Do you hear?” he said.
“Yes.”
“Good. The key to the lock is taped to the light pole. Now get the hell out of here.”
With a chirp of her phone, the call was over. Deirdre rolled onto her side and put pressure on her arm to stop the bleeding, fighting back tears in the darkness.
Nineteen
Probate Judge Leonard Parsons looked mad as hell. Worse, he was looking down from the bench and straight at Jack’s client.
The phone call from the judge’s chambers had come at 9 A.M. A battered Gerry Colletti had filed an emergency motion, and the judge ordered each of the beneficiaries under Sally Fenning’s will to be in the courtroom at eleven o’clock sharp.
“Good morning,” the judge said. His tone was cordial, but the eyes were two smoldering black coals beneath bushy white eyebrows. A scowling judge was a bad sign in any courtroom, but especially so in the relatively courteous world of Whisper Court.
“Good morning, Your Honor.” The reply was a mixed chorus of lawyers and clients. Even Gerry Colletti, supremely confident in his own abilities, had retained counsel for this hearing. Counting Jack and his client, there were ten suits altogether. Eight of them-Colletti, Sally’s ex-husband, the prosecutor, the reporter, and their counsel-were crowded around a single table near the jury box, the opposite side of the courtroom from Jack and his client, as if they suddenly couldn’t put enough distance between themselves and Tatum Knight. Seated behind them was Vivien Grasso, the personal representative for the estate. She seemed to be staking out a position of neutrality, sitting at neither table, choosing instead a seat at the rail that separated the lawyers from public seating.
The courtroom was otherwise empty, Jack noted, which meant that the sixth beneficiary was still a no-show.
“Mr. Anderson,” said the judge, addressing Gerry Colletti’s lawyer. “Would you speak to your motion, please?”
Colletti remained seated. The right side of his face was purple and swollen, and he had a large Band-Aid across his forehead. His lawyer rose, thanked the court, and stepped forward.
“Judge, it’s quite obvious that Mr. Colletti is in pretty bad shape. Although this is an evidentiary hearing, we request that the court accept my client’s written and sworn affidavit as a substitute for his live testimony. If counsel would like to cross-examine him, he is available.”
“Seems reasonable to me. Any objections?” asked the judge.
“None here,” came the chorus from the other side of the room.
“No objection,” said Jack.