“Or what? You’ll knife me? Killing the pilot wouldn’t be a very smart move, would it?”
“No, which is why I would knife your girlfriend instead. Not kill her. Just make her bleed a lot.”
Rye didn’t respond to that. But as the plane lifted off the runway, he said, “Oh, hell.”
Timmy looked at him with alarm. “What?”
“I forgot to take my meds.”
4:04 p.m.
As Rye had predicted, he had to dodge several storm cells, which had added time to their flight. Their descent had been bumpy, but he executed a smooth landing and was now taxiing toward the far end of the runway, where, through the window of the plane, Brynn could see a vehicle waiting. It looked like something used by the Secret Service.
Nate lamented the sad state of his designer suit, which was only semi-dry after having been rained on. “I hate to arrive in this soggy condition.”
Brynn couldn’t stomach Nate’s vanity in light of her defeat, which was a solid and unrelenting pressure against her heart. Throughout the entire ordeal, she had clung to the premise that until the drug was coursing through Richard Hunt’s bloodstream, there was still a chance for Violet to get it. Her optimism now seemed incredibly naïve. How could she possibly have succeeded against such a juggernaut?
Even worse than being vanquished was knowing that Violet felt abandoned by her.
When they reached the end of the runway, Rye turned the plane around, so that the right side, on which they would deplane, was facing the long, black SUV. Goliad was standing beside it. As soon as Rye killed the engine and the propeller began to wind down, Goliad approached the plane. He opened the doors to the passenger cabin from the outside, looked in, and motioned Nate out. He alighted with a bounce in his step.
Brynn ignored the hand Goliad extended to assist her down, and climbed out on her own. Timmy walked down the wing from the copilot’s seat.
Rye came last. When he reached the ground, he squared off with Goliad.
After assessing the damage he’d done to Goliad’s face early that morning, he said, “I hope that hurts as bad as it looks.”
Goliad withstood Rye’s goading with characteristic stoicism. “I would enjoy repaying you, but Senator and Mrs. Hunt are waiting.”
“Then let’s get going.” Rye took only one step toward the SUV before Goliad flattened his hand firmly against his chest. “You’re not coming.”
Brynn’s pulse spiked. She looked at Rye with alarm and could tell that he didn’t like that arrangement any more than she did. “Lambert said the Hunts were looking forward to meeting me.”
“Lambert was wrong.”
“I beg your pardon,” Nate said. “Delores told me herself—”
One baleful look from Goliad shut him up. Going back to Rye, Goliad said, “This runway is private property. The Hunts reported your landing to the sheriff’s department, who reported it to the local FAA office. Turns out, the agency is already familiar with you. You’re meeting with an investigator tomorrow about that crash up in Howardville. Add this trespassing matter, and you have a lot to answer for. Starting now.”
He tipped his head. They all looked in that direction. A police car was speeding up the intersecting road toward them, lights flashing.
Rye whipped off his sunglasses and took a step toward Goliad. “You gotta be kidding.”
“Kidding? No. The FAA didn’t think it was funny, either. You can’t charm, trick, or talk your way out of this one, Mallett. You’re over.”
The squad car, with the sheriff’s department seal on the side, came to a halt beside the SUV. Two uniformed deputies got out. As they approached the group, one said, “Rye Mallett?”
“Me.”
“We’ve been looking for you since last night. Had people chasing all over the city, running down cell phones in trash cans and such. And here you are, landed in our backyard.”
The second deputy said. “More accurately, the senator’s backyard. He’s filed a formal complaint of trespassing.”
“And I filed a flight plan,” Rye fired back.
“We know. We called the flight service ourselves soon as we saw you touch down. The guy you talked to remembers you bragging about the red carpet treatment you’d get upon arrival.”
“My point exactly. The Hunts knew I was coming.”