Drea nodded, stripped her gloves. “I’ll be right there.”
Avery let Gunner guide her into the kitchen, where everyone else was sitting around the table. Grace had made some eggs and bacon and toast. She pushed coffee in front of Avery when she sat, and Avery drank it gratefully.
Despite what they’d been through that night, coming out safe on the other side always made for more of a happy atmosphere, no matter how bad the danger still was. This time, there was no immediate danger, but it was imminent just the same.
“Where do we start?” she asked quietly, as if she was waiting for any of them to tell her she wasn’t ready for this.
But no one did. Gunner was sitting next to her, but he turned and spoke directly to her. “We don’t know if Donal’s killed Drew and is impersonating him, or if the men are working together. It doesn’t matter, because the plan’s the same. Rather than going directly after Landon, our best bet it to start by taking out his customers. Then his suppliers. Hit him where it hurts, which makes things safer for us.”
“We’ll have to do it fast,” Key said.
“Set up on different sides and blow them all at once,” Jem agreed. “As dangerous as being separate is, staying together is worse.”
“Avery and Gunner shouldn’t be together,” Dare said.
“Landon will expect that,” Avery said. “Which is exactly why I’m not letting Gunner out of my sight.”
“Way to take his manhood,” Jem said. “You’ve got to let him say that about you.”
“If that’s the way it’s supposed to be, forget it.”
“Guess I have a bodyguard,” Gunner said, a small smile on his face. “That plan works for me.”
“So we blow things up and then what?” Grace asked. “Go right after him?”
“I don’t think so,” Dare said slowly. “Let him stew. Let him reach out to other contacts.”
“Contacts that we’ll infiltrate,” Key added.
“It’s a semi-long-term approach. Six months of planning,” Gunner said. “Which means we need a place that’s secure as shit. Because we need to be together for the planning.”
Grace was pacing and then she snapped her fingers.
“Honey?” Dare said.
“I think I know the perfect place,” she said.
Dare pressed his lips together grimly before saying, “Absolutely fucking not.”
“We all sacrifice,” she started.
“And you already have,” Dare pointed out.
“Get the feeling we’re missing something?” Jem asked.
Grace told them, “Right before Dare and I came back here, I found out that Rip left everything to me.”
Avery’s eyes widened. “Everything as in . . .”
“The island. The money. Everything. A locked will. The attorney doesn’t even know what it says. Just sent me to open a safe-deposit box. Everything was put into my name, although that information is guarded by the banks under a different name. He thought of everything.” Grace paused. “We were going to tell you guys right away, but there was so much else to work on. It wasn’t an urgent matter, but now . . .”
“We go to the island. Clean it up, security-wise, and it could work,” Jem said.
“You don’t think Landon will watch the island?” Dare demanded.
“Why? We’d never thought of it,” Key said, and Gunner got up so fast his chair slammed against the wall behind him. Avery went to get up, but Grace put a hand on her shoulder.
“I’ve got this,” she told Avery, and Avery knew it was important enough to stay put and let Grace work some magic.
Gunner was in the living room, pacing, when he saw Grace push through the kitchen door. Of all people to send after him now, she would definitely be the most effective.
He wondered if she’d gotten Dare to say yes in that short time. In which case, the guy was definitely whipped.
Like you’re not.
“Grace, I appreciate you coming out here, but—”
“You were trying to tell me that you were Rip’s son, that night, at Darius’s, when I had the fever,” Grace said, and no, that wasn’t what he had expected.
He thought about the first time he’d met her, how sick she was. How Dare told him about the scars that covered her body.
How Gunner already knew that living with Powell was like a death sentence, with the majority of time served on death row with no hope of actually escaping. “Maybe. I wanted you to know you weren’t alone.”
But that wasn’t the only reason. What good would telling her have done? For her to know that maybe there was someone out there who knew what she’d gone through, because he’d been there. . . .
“There was nothing you could’ve done. No way you could’ve known. If anything, my mother and I got you chased out,” Grace told him firmly.
“You’re a mind reader now?” he asked to try to break the tension.
“I’m good with feeling guilty over things I had no control over. I recognize that instantly,” she shot back.
“It wasn’t that. Powell had a business deal gone bad. I was a fair trade.”
“I’m sorry. So sorry about what happened to both of us. I know going back to that house will be as hard on you as it will be on me. Maybe I had no right to make that decision before speaking to you.”
“Going back there is going backward, Grace. Touching that place . . . it’s fucking poison,” he told her.
“No place is poison, not if we don’t let it be,” she said.
“I think we’re getting ahead of ourselves,” Jem told them. Gunner had seen him come into the room, and Dare probably had too, but suddenly Crazy Man was the voice of reason. Again. “First, we need someone to pose as a job—a criminal who needs to leave the country.”
“How about a criminal’s wife?” Grace asked. “That would make things less suspicious.”
“Woman, you are really pushing things tonight,” Dare growled. “You did not just offer yourself for the job, did you?”
“He’s never met me in person. He’s seen me on the tape with a gag in my mouth,” Grace pointed out.
“A guy like Landon can use facial-recognition software,” Key reminded them.
“And he already has,” Gunner told them.
“How do we know that for sure?” Avery asked.
“Because I was identified.” Gunner went into the kitchen, came out and sat on the couch. He typed in the code and then turned the screen outward to face them.
Avery blinked. “It’s us.”
“Like the fucking Brady Bunch,” Jem muttered, and indeed, the screen was split into six boxes, showing Gunner, Dare, Grace, Jem and Key. The last box was blank at the moment, but the shots had been taken from when they’d been on Powell’s island.
“Can’t we wipe Landon’s computers?”
“I already did. Doesn’t mean he doesn’t have copies. Everyone uses facial-recognition software these days,” Gunner said.
“But if we disguise Grace’s face, put some fake cheekbones and shit, it’ll throw the software off,” Jem said. “She’s our best shot.”
“She’ll have to change the way she walks. The best software does more than faces,” Gunner said.
“I can change anything if it means getting rid of this guy from our lives,” Grace promised.
“Or I could help.”
Jem turned at the sound of Drea’s voice. She’d remained in the doorway of the kitchen but now moved forward and Jem willed her not to say anything more.
Which obviously didn’t work when she said, “The asshole who hurt Avery doesn’t know me. I could do it.”
“No way,” Jem said before Avery could open her mouth.
“Why not?” Dare asked, arms crossed.
“She’s not trained, for one,” Jem pointed out.