“Thanks, shorty.” Before anyone was prepared for it, Rye snatched the box from Timmy.
Goliad took two steps toward him, but he was drawn up short by the pistol in Rye’s right hand, aimed at his chest. “Timmy, you try sticking me, and I’ll blow a hole through your elbow.”
Brynn gasped, “Rye, what are you doing?”
Goliad patted the air. “Last thing my boss wants is trouble.”
“Well, I’ve already got trouble with your boss for sending you to bang on my door and demand to be let in.”
“Put the gun down,” Goliad said. “Timmy, back off. Everybody take a deep breath.”
“My breathing’s fine, thank you,” Rye said.
“Give me the box, and we’ll be on our way.”
“No can do.”
“It doesn’t belong to you.”
Rye glanced at Brynn. “Are you going to explain, or want me to?”
Goliad shifted his sizable body to better see her while remaining watchful of Rye. “Explain what?”
Brynn tried to appear as though she knew exactly what Rye’s explanation consisted of. “Perhaps you had better.”
Rye addressed Goliad. “Until the box is delivered, I’m responsible for it.”
“You delivered it last night.”
“Not technically.” His hand made a jerky movement that shifted the gun’s aim from Goliad’s chest to the ceiling.
Timmy lurched forward.
Goliad barked, “Calm the fuck down, Timmy.”
“Yeah, Timmy, calm the fuck down,” Rye said. “While you’re at it, take two steps back.”
At a brusque nod from Goliad, Timmy complied. “You’ll get yours,” he snarled.
Rye ignored him and said to Goliad, “Are we cool? I’m going to put the gun away and reach into my back pocket for the receipt.”
“Receipt?”
Moving slowly now, Rye slid the gun back into his pocket and took from it a folded sheet of paper. “A receipt with the name Dr. Lambert printed above the signature line.” He shook out the folded receipt and held it up so Goliad could read the name. “I’ve learned that Lambert’s first name is Nathan. Even without checking her driver’s license, I know that she ain’t him,” he said, tilting his head toward Brynn.
“I’m supposed to deliver the payload to the person on the receipt unless a courier”—again he indicated Brynn—“has written permission to take delivery. She doesn’t.”
That was the first that Brynn had heard of this, and she seriously doubted its veracity. Even if it were an FAA regulation etched in stone, Rye wouldn’t rigidly adhere to a technicality that inconvenienced him to that extent, or at all.
But she didn’t have to believe it, as long as the two other men did. If Rye’s speculations about them were correct, they had tried to crash him and had assaulted Brady White. It didn’t surprise her that Richard and Delores Hunt would occasionally require bodyguards, but these two seemed more suited to protecting a crime boss than a U.S. senator and his wife. They frightened her.
Rye had threatened to leave her to them if she didn’t play along with him. In the past couple of minutes, he seemed as dangerous as they, but at least he was the devil she knew.
She continued to play along. “When I volunteered to come up here and get the package, I didn’t realize that written authorization was necessary, nor did Dr. Lambert. I’ve told him it doesn’t matter,” she said, casting a sour look in Rye’s direction. “He’s been mule-headed about it.”
Goliad’s eyes narrowed with suspicion and said to Brynn, “You had the box with you in the café.”
“Which is why I got my ass chewed good by the guy I was flying for,” Rye said. “He caught my boo-boo, reminded me that if this box isn’t delivered to Lambert, he can get into all kinds of dutch with the FAA, and I’d get fined or my pilot’s license suspended, neither of which I want to happen.