She knew he wanted some kind of response from her, wanted this to be an ongoing (walking) conversation until they reached their destination. If there was one thing Dan liked more than loose women, it was hearing himself talk. A part of her wanted to deny him, but she needed answers. Despite everything Walter had already told her, there were still holes, information that she didn’t have.
“You planned this,” she said.
“How much did Walter tell you before…well, you know.”
“Everything he knew, but it wasn’t everything, was it?”
He shrugged. “He probably told you that Gorman and Smith’s days are numbered. It’s been for a while, ever since the Feds first started sniffing around, thanks to a few loose lips. Why did you think I hired you? Single, a long way from home, and just the right age. Not too young, not too old. Besides, you’re just his type. Right down to the blue eyes.”
“Why?”
“Because I needed to give Walter a reason. Lucy alone might have done it, but why settle for one when you can have two? The combination of a future with you, and freedom for Lucy, was enough to convince him. He knew as well as I did that when the Feds made their move, we’d all be under the gun.”
“Walter told me that he planned it, that all of this was his idea, including the three mercenaries back at the house.”
Dan chuckled. “Of course he did.”
“But it was always you. You planted the seed. And I was a part of it.”
“Don’t be so modest. You were a big part of it, Allie. The hardest part was getting him to reach for the brass ring. You. I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but Walter can sometimes be a little meek. He needed nudging, and I have very sharp elbows.” He mimed nudging for her. “Of course, it was lust at first sight for him. Like I said: You’re his perfect type.”
Oh, Walter. You never knew, did you? He played you all along. He played us.
She swiped at something dripping down her right eyebrow and flicked it away, purposefully not looking to see what it was. She didn’t want to know.
“You told Jack and the others to kill us when Walter was done, didn’t you? That’s why they showed us their faces. I bet you didn’t bother to tell Walter that part.”
“No comment.”
“You fucker.”
He shot her a warning glance over his shoulder. “Let’s watch the language.”
She ignored him, said, “How are you going to get the money now, genius? Walter’s dead.”
He flashed her a smug grin before turning back around. “You really think I’d tell these boys to pop ol’ Walt if that part was still in doubt? You know me better than that, Allie. I was mirroring everything on the laptop Jack gave Walter from the time it booted up. I recorded every keystroke, every URL, and every account. Walter, bless his soul, was never going to last long after tonight. Even if everything worked out perfectly, he’d break. Either to the Feds, or to Gorman and Smith. It’s in his nature. These boys were always supposed to deal with Jack and the other two, but I have to admit, I didn’t know Gorman and Smith would send their goons first. But hey, that’s why they call them contingency plans, right?”
“He trusted you,” she said. “Jesus, he trusted you like a brother.”
“What’s that saying, ‘Bros before hoes’? I like to think of it as, ‘Dough before bros.’”
From the very beginning, Walter. He played you from the very beginning. And you had no idea, did you, you poor, dumb bastard.
“What now?” she asked. “Why haven’t you shot me yet?”
“You anxious to get shot, Allie?”
She didn’t answer him, and he let the silence linger for ten, then twenty seconds, where the only sounds were their footsteps and those of the armed men around them.
“The girl,” he finally said.
She didn’t have to ask him who “the girl” was. Lucy.
“She took off when my men put down Monroe’s guy,” Dan continued. “She’s somewhere in that house, hiding. The problem is, I don’t have all day to tear the place apart looking for her.” He glanced down at his watch, the moonlight gleaming off the gold Rolex. “Help me bring her out of hiding, and I’ll let you go. Tell me that’s not the best deal you’ve gotten all night.”
Bullshit. I was born at night, but not last night, you fucker.
But Allie said instead, “What’s so important about a fifteen-year-old girl? You’re just going to disappear after tonight anyway, aren’t you?”
“Walter.”
“Walter?”
“He pulled a fast one on me, that bugger.”
She felt a smile coming and didn’t fight it, since Dan couldn’t see it anyway. “He outsmarted you.”
“I wouldn’t go that far. More like he wanted to make a point.”
“To you?”
“To Lucy. His way of showing her that all of this was for her would be my guess. Walter always could get a little hammy from time to time.”
“I don’t understand…”
“He put the money in her name,” Dan said. “She’s the only one who can retrieve his half. All forty million of it.”
Apollo, where the hell are you?
The dog hadn’t been present when Dan’s people murdered Walter and Monroe. It was a good thing, as it turned out, because as fast and cunning as the dog was, Allie didn’t think for one second he could survive four men with assault rifles.
So where was he now? And did Dan know about him? He’d said that Walter had called him on the phone, told him about her, but had Walter also mentioned the trouble Apollo had caused Jack and the others? Dan, of course, knew about her dog, but how much did he know — if anything — about what Apollo had done tonight?
She sneaked a look around her — first left, then right, then even slightly behind her by pretending she was spitting — but there were no signs of Apollo. Either the dog had taken off or he was hanging back. Despite the two years since the animal had come into her life, Allie had to admit she hadn’t known what he was fully capable of until tonight. Maybe he was a lot smarter than she gave him credit for, and she thought he was plenty smart already.
He had to be out there somewhere, doing…what? If one of the mercenaries had shot him, wouldn’t Dan have mentioned it? Maybe.
After what seemed like hours of walking and listening to Dan crow, they finally stepped out of the woods and into the clearing around the familiar two-story house. There were two extra vehicles parked around Monroe’s black SUV, both minivans, along with two more men in black military uniforms. One of them was standing on the front porch while the other one was moving around on the other side, looking into the shadows.
“There was another man,” Allie said. “Inside the house, on the second floor.”
“Someone already put him out of his misery before we showed up,” Dan said, “so no fair putting that body on me, too.”
“What about Lucy?”
Dan led her to one of the black minivans with its side hatch open and nodded at one of his mercenaries. “Tell her.”
The man slung his rifle and pulled a bottle of water out of the van. “Window on the second-floor master bedroom was open, but I think that’s a trick. She’s still in the house but wanted us to think she jumped down. I had men in the back at the time, and they would have seen her.”
“You know she’s still in the house, but you can’t find her,” she said.
The man nodded and took a sip of water. “That’s correct. We’ve searched all the rooms. Every closet and pantry, but it’s a big house. It’ll take all day to find all the cracks and secret rooms, assuming there are secret rooms.”