“About what.”
So empty, he was … vacant down to his soul. “What I see now … is the worst part of it all.”
As Assail stood on the shores of the Hudson, he was once again dressed in black with a black mask over his face. Behind him, Ehric was silent and at attention, wearing the same articles of clothing.
Both of them had guns in their hands.
“They’re late,” his cousin said.
“Yes.” Assail listened hard. “We give them five minutes. Not one more.”
Off to the left, about four meters into the tree line, his bulletproof Range Rover sat ass to the river, Evale in the driver’s seat with the engine running.
Assail glanced up to the night sky. Following an earlier snowstorm, the moon now had some lazy clouds drifting over its face, and he hoped they took their own sweet time. More light they did not need—although the site was otherwise discreet enough: remote, in a bend on the shoreline, with forest that came nearly up to the river’s frozen edge. Also, the way in had been a lumpy, bumpy barely-there lane, even the SUV struggling in its off-road mode—
“I am worried about you.”
Assail glared over his shoulder. “I beg your pardon?”
“You do not sleep.”
“I am not tired.”
“You do too much of the coke.”
Assail turned back around and prayed for the appearance they awaited for a fresh reason. “Worry not, cousin.”
“Do you know if they made it to their destination.”
It had been so long since Ehric had asked after anyone, that Assail had to pivot around once more. And indeed, his primary instinct was to shut the inquiry down quick, yet the true concern on that hard face stopped him.
He resumed watching the sluggish, icy water. “No, I do not.”
“Will you call her?”
“No.”
“Not even to make sure they are safe.”
“She doesn’t wish for that.” And the whys of this waiting by the Hudson were proof of the soundness of her decision to leave him. “A clean break it is.”
Even he heard the hollowness in his voice.
God, he wished to hell he had never met that woman—
The sound was at first indistinguishable from the ambient night noises, but the hum quickly became distinct: Coming from the left, it announced that perhaps their wait was over.
The fishing boat that puttered around the corner was as low to the river as a floating leaf and nearly as silent. As prescribed, there were three men in it, all of them clad in dark clothes, and each had a line in the depths, as if they were naught but plying what open water there was for a meal.
They pulled in bow-first.
“Catch anything?” Assail inquired as he’d been told to.
“Three trout.”
“I had two last night.”
“I want one more.”
Assail nodded, putting his gun away and stepping forward. From that moment, everything went silently and with speed: a tarp was lifted and four duffel bags changed hands, moving from the boat to him and then to Ehric—who hung them off his shoulders. In return, Assail passed over a black metal briefcase.
The tallest of the men put in the code he had been given, popped the lid, inspected the layout of bundles of bills, and nodded.
There was a quick handshake … and then Assail and Ehric retreated into the trees. Duffels went in the rear, Ehric in the back, Assail in the passenger seat.
As they headed off, bumping back over the rutted lane, windows were cracked to catch any sounds or smells.
There was nothing.
As they came out to the road, they stopped and waited whilst still hidden in the trees. No cars coming or going. The coast, as the saying went, was clear.
On Assail’s command, the gas was hit and off they went, into the night.
With five hundred thousand street dollars of cocaine and heroin.
So far, so good.
After extracting everything from both Benloises’ phones, he’d combed through the numbers and the texts—particularly the international ones. He’d found two contacts in South America with whom there appeared to be a lot of communication, and when he’d called from Ricardo’s phone, he’d been routed into a network of secured connections, a number of clicks occurring before a proper ringing started.
Needless to say, there had been a good deal of surprise after Assail had introduced himself and explained the purpose of his call. Benloise had, however, informed his compatriots of his new, biggest client—so it was not a complete shock to them that the one who had once been the wholesaler had become superfluous … and been eliminated.
Assail had offered them a deal to start the relationship off upon the right foot: One million in cash for half a million in product—as a gesture of good faith.
Partnerships had to be cultivated, after all.
And he had approved of the men sent to do the transaction. They were a clear step up from Benloise’s street thugs, totally professional.
Now he and his cousins simply had to parcel the product for street sale, and connect with the Forelesser for distribution. And business could resume as if Benloise had never existed.
Perfectly engineered.
“This went well,” Ehric said as they got onto the road that would take them out to Assail’s glass house.
“Yes.”
As they went along, he stared out the window, watching the trees pass by. A house. That hunting cabin.
He should have been more pleased. This was, after all, going to open up tremendous earning potential. And he loved money and all its power. Truly, he did.
Instead, the only thing on his mind was worry over where his female was whether she had in fact made it down to Miami in one piece with that grandmother of hers.
And there was nothing he could do about it.
She was gone.
Forever.
SIXTY-ONE
As Beth woke up, the first thing she did was a body scan for the urge to run for the bathroom. When that came back with a not-right-now, she pushed herself to a vertical and swung her feet to the floor. How long had she slept for? The shutters were still up so it wasn’t yet daylight, but man, she felt like she’d been out for days.
Looking down at herself, she put her hands on her belly—
Holy crap, she didn’t remember swallowing a basketball.
Under her palms, her stomach was swollen and hard, the protrusion such that she doubted she would be able to pull her pants on.
Her first instinct was to reach for the phone and call Doc Jane, but then she dialed back on the panic and got to her feet.
“Feeling okay,” she murmured. “Feeling pretty good…”
As she went over to her closet, she felt like her body was a bomb about to go off—and, man, she hated it: She’d had no idea how much she took for granted in the health department until she’d deliberately tried to complicate herself—
For no apparent reason, the Saturnine Ruby slipped right off her finger.
Glancing down, she watched the ring bounce on the carpet—and frowned as she bent over and picked the thing up. She and Wrath had traded back for convenience because both had struggled with something that didn’t fit—and the symbols of their marriage had meaning no matter whose hand they were on.
Or falling off of, as was the case—
“What the hell?” she breathed.
As she went to put the thing back on, she realized that her fingers were positively skeletal, the skin stretched over knobby knuckles and a sunken palm.
Heart starting to hammer, she rushed to the mirror in the bathroom, turning on the lights—
Beth gasped. The reflection staring back at her was all wrong—all totally frickin’ wrong. Overnight, literally, her face had hollowed out, all the fat gone from her cheeks and her temples, her chin sharp as a knife, the tendons in her neck standing out in bald relief.