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Grace bounced with excitement. “Major Wolfe, are you married?”

Will chewed the steak the same way Sara’s greyhounds chewed the bitter medication she gave them for heartworms. He swallowed audibly. “No.”

Grace deflated like a balloon.

“I, uh—” Will swallowed again. “I went to a wedding once.”

Sara knew that Will had barely attended his own wedding. The entire shitshow was predicated on a double-dog dare.

Will said, “They served fresh muffins at the reception.”

“Ohh.” Grace was intrigued. “What kind of muffins?”

“Chocolate chip. Oreo. Cranberry. Blueberry. Snorkelberry.” Will scratched his hideous beard. The girls could not tell if he was being serious or not. “Did you hear about the two muffins that were baking in the oven?”

Grace was so excited she could only shake her head.

“One muffin, he’s looking around the oven, and he says, ‘Wow, it is really, really hot in here.’” Will wiped his mouth, drawing out the suspense. “And the other muffin, he starts screaming, ‘Help! A talking muffin!’”

The girls were not used to jokes. There was a slight pause before they erupted into laughter. Even Gwen smiled. Grace was so taken in that Sara had to keep her from falling backward off the bench.

Dash started tapping his fingers on the table. The laughter stopped abruptly. Sara thought about the pre-pubescent boys Dash had sent away.

He did not want the competition.

Dash said, “I didn’t realize you were funny, Major Wolfe.”

Sara tried to break the tension. “Grace, did I tell you about—”

“Dobie,” Dash said. “Could you escort Dr. Earnshaw to her cabin? I’m afraid Lance is still under the weather. And Major Wolfe, you’ll keep him company. You can drill with the team later. It’s better in the dark anyway. I’ll send someone to find you when we’re ready for you.”

Sara felt a rush of heat go through her body. Will taking her to the cabin. That silly kid hanging around. Will could easily knock him out. They could run, but where? Will had to have a plan. He always had a plan. She gripped her hands together under the table to keep them still.

Dobie stood up. He sat down again when he realized Will wasn’t joining him.

Sara felt her teeth on edge. What was he doing? This was their chance. They could run into the woods and—

Get shot by the men in the deer stands. Or the guards in the forest. Or Will could return fire and end up killing one of the children.

Sara’s tears began their endless flow again.

Will swirled the Gatorade in the bottle and gulped the rest of it down. Beside him, Dobie did the same. His throat worked like a stork’s. Will finally stood. His little shadow followed him around the table.

Will grabbed Sara’s arm.

She cried out, though he hadn’t hurt her.

Dash said, “Gently, Major Wolfe. Dr. Earnshaw is a very important part of the Message.” He nodded to Dobie. “Keep an eye peeled.”

Sara stood up. She felt like her knees were going to give out. She walked ahead of them, through the clearing, down the path. The entire time, she thought about walking to her BMW two days ago, the fear that had welled up inside of her chest as she’d realized that she was going to be taken.

What now? What now?

Will’s footsteps were solid behind her. Dobie was dragging at a slower pace. Sara wanted to turn around. To pause the world and let Will hold her for just a few seconds.

They were at the cabin. Sara stepped up onto the log. Will’s hand was at her back. He barely touched her, but her body shivered from the idea of him.

The door shut behind her.

“Dude, I guess we’re being punished.” Dobie’s voice was close by as he fumbled with the padlock.

Sara wanted to scream. Only Dash had the key.

Dobie said, “I wanted ice cream.”

Will offered, “You can go and get some.”

“Shit no, bro. Dash’ll rip my hide.” He howled out a tremendous yawn. “Damn, I’m tired.”

“Adrenaline.” Will was sitting on the log outside the door. His voice was different; deeper, rougher. “Go ahead and get comfortable. We’re gonna be here for a while.”

Sara laid flat to her belly. She looked under the door. She could see Will. The gap was wide enough for her to slip her hand underneath. She could touch him. Her heart fluttered with longing and fear and panic. The boy might see. Could she risk it? She could just brush her fingers along his back to anchor herself again.

Couldn’t she?

Dobie yawned. “What I think is—” Another yawn broke his train of thought.

Will said, “It’s a big day tomorrow.”

“Yeah, the Message. Whatever that is.” Dobie’s head thumped repeatedly against the door. The padlock rattled. “Did Dash tell you what we’re doing?”

Will must have shaken his head. “Do you know?”

Dobie must have shaken his head, too. The rattling had stopped.

Will said, “I’ve got to admit, I’m a little scared, man. It’s not easy doing something like this. People are going to die. I counted around ten thousand rounds in the staging area. Three dozen AR-15s. Forty men. Five black vans. Two teams training to take over a hotel lobby or a mosque or a shopping center or—I don’t know what.”

Sara felt a switch flip on in her brain. He was telling her what he had seen.

Will said, “Bravo goes in one direction. Charlie goes in the other. We’re Charlie, right? That’s six of us, all in Team Two. But what about the thirty-two guys in Team One? What are they going to do before we get there? And I keep wondering, why go to the trouble to cover the bullets in pork brine? Dead is dead, am I right? And what about those boxes we replaced at the warehouse?”

Black boxes?

Will said, “Why replace a bunch of boxes with the exact same type of box? There were at least two dozen. Brown cardboard with shipping labels, about thirty-by-thirty inches. The ones we stole are stuck over in that metal storage building on the other side of the fake building. What happened to the ones we left in the warehouse?”

“Dunno.” Dobie’s voice was faint. He sounded like he was drifting off to sleep.

“We’re running those drills,” Will continued. “Up the stairs, T off at the top. There’s an LG spray-painted on one side. A G on the other. What does that even stand for? The LG is close to the top of the stairs, but the G is at the other end of the balcony. Maybe it’s not an L in the LG. Could be a capital I.”

Dobie smacked his lips.

Will said, “It’s crazy. Right, bro?”

Dobie offered no response. His breathing was deep. Sara looked under the door, but she could only see his narrow shoulders.

She heard Will snap his fingers. The sound was like a stick breaking.

“Dobie?” he asked. Then, “Hey, kiddo?”

Sara watched Will lift him up like a child. He turned away from her. He walked into the woods. She saw him disappear in pieces, his legs, then his shoulders, then the top of his head. Sara waited. And waited. She got up on her knees, pressed her palm to the door.

What was he doing? Was he leaving? Would he come back?

“Sara?” Will’s hand reached under the crack in the door. He wriggled his fingers, searching for her. “Sara? Are you there?”

She was overcome. All she could do was lean over and press her lips to the palm of his beautiful hand.

“Sara,” Will’s voice was strained, “are you okay?”

She sobbed quietly, her face resting against his palm. His fingers held on to her. All of the longing from the last two days broke open inside of her.

I love you. I need you. I missed you so much. Please don’t leave me.

“I’m here.” Will cleared his throat. He sniffed. “I’m here.”

Sara cried harder, because she knew he was trying not to.

“Babe.” His voice raked up on the word. He cleared his throat again. “Is that—is that a new dress?”

Sara laughed through her tears.

He said, “It really brings out the red in your skin.”

She laughed again. She held on to his hand with both of hers. “I made it myself.”

“Really?” Relief filled his voice. “I couldn’t tell. It’s so—it’s beautiful.”

Sara leaned her forehead against the door. She closed her eyes, banishing the piece of wood that separated them. Her head on his shoulder. Her arms around his waist. “What happened to Dobie? Can he hear us?”

“Well, uh, there’s a funny story behind that.” Will paused. “I’ve been taking some pills Amanda gave me. I think it’s Percocet.”

“What?” Sara’s shock overrode her concern. He never took anything for pain. He just winced and groaned until she wanted to strangle him.

“Amanda told me it was aspirin, but then I realized it was the same thing she gave Beau when we went to the park.” Will skipped the details. “Anyway, it all got smooshed in the pouch, because I got too hot, but I guess I put about two and a half tablets in Dobie’s Gatorade.” He paused. “Did I kill him?”

“I don’t—no.” Sara shook her head in frustration. Why the hell was he drawing out a stupid story about Dobie?

Her heart sank.



Tags: Karin Slaughter Will Trent Mystery