Read 3 Lies Online

Authors: Helen Hanson

Tags: #Thriller, #crime and suspense thrillers, #Thrillers, #suspense thrillers and mysteries, #Suspense, #Spy stories, #terrorism thrillers, #espionage and spy thrillers, #spy novels, #cia thrillers, #action and adventure, #techno thriller, #High Tech

3 Lies (2 page)

BOOK: 3 Lies
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He was the only one he knew without a cell phone: dockworkers, old ladies walking their ankle-biters, certainly all the drivers in all the cars in all the merging lanes of I-93 had one. Hell, even school kids. He could afford one. He just didn’t want one. Like so many people, most of that crap was unreliable.

Beth’s neighbor Janet Raffety—she’d let him use the phone. He walked across the street and looked for any sign of activity. If she was working in the kiln, he didn’t want to disturb her. The house was quiet, but a glow came from her shop.

The next pang hit him harder as the extra-bold French roast etched a hole in his stomach lining. Louie probed a Mayflower cluster when Clint caught the leash and went back to the truck. Louie scrambled into the back seat, and Clint drove off.

Thirty-five miles from Boston, the tourist town of Clement had few businesses operating this time of year. Even fewer opened at this hour. Clint decided his best shot was near the freeway. The congregation of trucks outside Maggie Mae's Blue Bird Diner lit his hope.

Maggie Mae was a large, hairy man in his sixties with a round, fleshy face. Clad in a red-striped apron and matching cap, his picture could only be completed with the addition of a burning cigarette dangling from the side of his mouth. Armed with twin decanters of fresh coffee, he made his way round the tables of regulars chatting up each in turn. A quiet man by diner standards, he gave instructions to the kitchen staff by means of hand gestures, facial expressions, and head movements—a performance Marcel Marceau would have admired.

Clint found the pay phone by the restrooms—naturally. He dropped in some coins and called Beth.

After four rings Beth’s voice answered, "Hi. I can’t take your call right now. Please leave a message, and I’ll return it when I can."

“Hey, it’s me. Pick up the phone.” He waited for the click of her receiver, for the happy lilt to her voice when she said his name, for a swift end to his growing sense of loss.

“Beth, are you there? We had plans today, remember?” No reply. “I’ll try your other phone.”

He smacked down the receiver. Damn it. They’d made a date. Breakfast was her idea, and she promised breakfast would be ready at six-thirty sharp. They planned to go fishing for striper and meet up with Abe later. It was nearly seven. Where the hell was she?

After digging around his pocket, he came up with more change and placed a call to her cell phone. Voice mail kicked in after three rings. “It’s me, Clint. I’ve tried all the numbers I know. I’m going to grab something for us to eat and come back. Hope you’re up by then.”

The clank of dishes rising from the dining room joggled Clint’s attention to his hunger. He ordered four breakfast burritos and coffee at the counter. He took the to-go bag and drove back to her house.

He banged on her front door until his hand hurt. She would have heard that. Fear tiptoed through his veins. If she could.

He ran to the kitchen window and peered around the curtain's edge. From here, he could see her bed, and Beth wasn’t in it. He moved to another window to check the bath. The shower curtain was pulled back. Unless she was in the tub, she wasn’t there either. Calm down. She’s in good health, considering. She’s not going to keel over from a day’s delay in her dialysis. At least that’s what she told him.

“Enough of this. Let’s eat.”

Clint turned on the water spigot long enough to make a puddle for the dog and plopped down on Beth’s porch rocker. His long legs draped over a milk can painted with rose buds, cherry blossoms, and blue hydrangeas that Beth said were the same hue as Clint’s eyes.

Yeah. Sure.

He poured salsa from a plastic ramekin onto one burrito and tossed another to Louie. The dog intercepted the package like an NFL cornerback. He hoisted the food around with his teeth, biting it and choking large chunks down his throat.

Clint finished his meal and wadded all the trash back in the original bag. He took his boot knife out of the sheath and threw it into a tree. Louie retrieved it. With each toss, the knife stuck where he aimed. The activity helped pass the time and freed his brain for thinking. Interest in the game waned before he’d done any lasting damage to the bark.

He stared at Beth’s door, but decided against trying again. “It’s her turn. Huh, Lou?”

When he hit the road in front of Beth’s, he saw Janet pulling a large box from an old Subaru wagon. He called to her and ran over to her side. “Allow me?”

“Why thanks.” She hauled out another box. “These go in the shop.” She led the way.

“I was looking for Beth. Have you seen her this morning?”

“No, I’ve been loading my kiln. What’s up?”

He stepped into the shop and set the box down. “I was due at her place for breakfast, but she’s not around.”

They returned to the wagon for more boxes.

Clint knew Beth hadn’t told Janet about the dialysis. Beth preferred to keep some details of her life private. After the continuing saga of Paige, he found such discretion refreshing.

They landed the last load into Janet’s shop.

“Thanks for your help.”

“If you see Beth, let her know I came by.”

“Will do.”

Louie led him back to the truck by the main road for the all-important tree survey. For a dog that lived on a boat, wooded lots represented the ultimate in luxury. Clint loaded Louie in the truck. He threw the bag with Beth’s burrito on the floorboard and drove off for home, spinning his rear wheels in the effort.

Along the coast road, the surf vibrated with a crystalline sheen. They should have been out there by now, together. He and Beth.

He’d never seen a more beautiful woman. Not perfect but simply enchanting. Ah hell, admit it, she was perfect. Her bamboo-shoot green eyes sparkled amid her heart-shaped face. Golden tresses cascaded in loose ringlets all the way to her gorgeous butt.

Botticelli painted her only in his dreams.

But beauty never kept Clint engaged. Not like his buddy, Todd. Todd swapped women like designer ties. For Clint, the packaging intrigued, but any genuine gift remained hidden inside.

While Beth’s illness didn’t seem to worry her, it left him unnerved. She loomed fragile, ethereal, a morning mist that might seep through his hand. Like catching a butterfly, then opening your cupped hands slowly to see if it was there. When they were together, he caught himself checking to see if she was still in the room with him.

He tousled Louie’s furry neck. “I’ve only known her two months. Who needs this?”

Stood up by a damn butterfly.

Clint pulled into Clement Marina and parked. Louie stayed on alert while Clint cleaned out the last two days mail from his box.

Merlin, one of the Clement Marina staff, walked up to them and sidled in close. “Guess what landed in your slip?”

“What do you mean?”

“A lass. An angelfish. She came looking for you, so I let her in. You let me know if you want to throw her back, mate. I’ll get my net.”

Jungle rhythms pummeled Clint’s chest. He wiped sweaty palms down the front of his pants. “Where is she?”

“At your boat.” Merlin rubbed on his scraggly chin. “A real swimmer, that one.”

Clint threw his backpack over a shoulder and headed to the security gate, down the gangway to his slip at the end of the dock. This time, Louie followed.

He looked back at the dog. “Why’d she come here?” Louie’s expression didn’t change.

Half the damn morning—gone. She knew they were meeting at her house. But he couldn’t stay mad because Beth was here, now.

He hated this feeling. Neediness. It didn’t suit him. He didn’t want it to suit him. But his relief trumped any anger.

She was here now. That’s all that mattered.

She didn’t stand him up.

She just changed the plans.

She—

She wasn’t Beth.

Paige Masters sat on the port gunwale of Clint’s 45-foot sailboat. Even with the expansive view of the harbor, the glorious Atlantic beyond, there she sat filing her acrylic fingernails.

“I’ve been trying to reach you. Your cell phone isn’t working.” She finally looked up at Clint. “What’s the matter? Can’t afford the payments anymore?” Her third-grade smile glowed with the intensity of a lighthouse as seen from the battered ship.

For a moment, Clint stopped breathing.

In less than five months, their divorce would be final.

Technology and future ex-wives. Both highly unreliable.

Chapter Three

From the ambient light of the building, Amir tracked a snowflake as it fluttered earthward. It joined a trillion others from the endless Colorado winter that already lay on the four hundred-acre ski resort. At this altitude, the mountain would wear black for perhaps another hour—no more. With eighty-seven inches of base snow and another four of fine, fresh powder, skiers from across the globe looked forward to a day on the slopes. Amir, however, was not there for pleasure.

He unstrapped the modified 9 mm Glock from under his pant cuff and connected it to the silencer. The weapon slid into the breakaway pocket of his parka, awaiting orders. Dark sunglasses covered his eyes, and a faux fur-lined hood shrouded his face. The padded clothing belied the dense musculature of his physique.

Amir had seen no one since his arrival except three guys from the ski patrol who departed to the backcountry. He waited mid-mountain by the ski-out suites for clients of wealth.

He felt the vibration on his hip and answered his phone. “Yes.”

“It is a go.”

“Affirmative.”

He walked to suite 121 and knocked.

A voice creaked from behind the door, “One minute.” Shuffling noises continued inside. “Who’s there?”

“Ski patrol.”

“Who?”

“Ski patrol, sir. We need only a moment of your time.”

A wiry man of about sixty wrapped in a green-plaid robe opened the door. “Yes?”

Amir leaned in closer and turned to his side. “Sir, are you Myron Walters?”

The man looked long at Amir. “Who wants to know?”

“Ski patrol.” Amir flashed a fake identification. “Could I have a word with you inside?”

Myron planted both feet in the doorway. “Not until you tell me what this is about.”

“I need to speak with you briefly about an incident yesterday. May I come in please?”

“I already answered that question.”

Amir pulled the Glock from his pocket. “Back up, sir. And you won’t get hurt.”

Something glinted as Myron withdrew his hand from a pocket.

“Like hell I will.”

Amir swung his left hand forward and chopped into Myron’s larynx. The prominent Adam’s apple crunched under the weight of Amir’s blow. Myron clutched his crushed throat. His mouth opened, but no sound escaped. He piled onto the foyer floor in a green-plaid heap. His eyes fixed in an angry gaze.

Amir closed the door then checked Myron’s robe for a weapon. He found a Kimber Custom 1911 pistol with a stainless steel slide. The old man moved too slowly. Amir felt for Myron’s carotid artery. The pulse was weak. Very weak. Amir dropped his Glock and the 1911 into separate pockets, dragged the body into the living room, and deposited it behind the couch. Blood seeped from the injured man’s lips. Amir shook his head. Blood was a complication. He didn’t like complications.

“Hi.”

Amir turned at the greeting. His Glock aimed from within his coat.

A girl. A tiny girl of about four years-old surveyed him from the hallway. Her dark hair draped over a pink fairy nightgown.

“I-, I’m part of the ski patrol.” The rehearsed lie fell from his mouth. He stepped from behind the couch to where she was standing. At her height, she wouldn’t see the body.

“Is anyone else here?”

“Uncle Myron.” It came out sounding like
unka my-won
.

“Where do you keep your coats?”

She brushed past him to the closet by the front door. “In here.” She yawned. “Where my Uncle Myron?”

Amir picked out the only coat that could be hers. More pink. Another fairy. “He went to make a snow house and asked me to come get you so you could help him. Here put this on.” He opened her coat.

“Oooh. Snow house.” Her eyes glistened, and she stuck her arms out straight from her sides while Amir threaded her arms through the coat.

He zipped it to her chin and flipped the hood over her head. The neck strap fastened up over her mouth. “C’mon. It will be faster if I give you a ride.”

He swung her up to his chest with her back to the couch. They slipped out the front door into the cold dark.

He circled toward the service alley at the back of the building. The frigid weather suppressed the usual stench of the dumpsters. Camp Robber birds perched on the edge of a green dumpster, gathering bits for their winter cache. They ignored Amir and the girl.

“Birdies fly.” She flapped a wing.

Amir pulled her closer.

“Where’s the snow house? Uncle Myron?”

“Uncle Myron is around the corner.”

Behind them, someone opened a door and entered the alley. Amir’s pace quickened.

He whispered. “Let’s hurry and get there.”

He pushed the girl’s face into his jacket. A male voice yelled at the birds, and the dumpster lid bounced closed.

They rounded the end of the building where the van waited. He opened the rear door and got in with the girl. Dark tinted windows masked them from the outside.

“Who the hell is she?” The driver craned his neck to see Amir and his small bundle.

The girl’s brown eyes squinted at the driver’s harsh voice. The corners of her mouth set south of a smile.

“Is she even out of diapers?”

“Just drive.”

The girl looked up at Amir and cried. “I want Uncle Myron.”

The driver accelerated slowly over the snow-packed road and took the first turn down hill. He glanced back repeatedly at Amir and the unhappy girl.

Tears streaked her face. “Uncle Myron.”

“Quiet.” Amir said it louder and with more force than he’d planned. He snapped a seat belt across her lap and chest.

Her eyes clenched like tiny fists. Her body quivered in liquid motion with her mouth opening fully in a suspended wail.

He pulled a blanket from the rear of the van. “Here, take this.” The blanket dampened the shrillness of her scream until she shoved it back at Amir.

BOOK: 3 Lies
6.92Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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