“Yeah, I figure Simon, you, and Conrad would be suspects,” says Christian. “You’d be right in there. And if you’re a suspect in any way, or even if Simon is—you wouldn’t be in a position to take Simon’s money. There’d be too much scrutiny on you.”
“You’re right,” I say. “You’re absolutely right.”
“Which is why I think... I have to be the one who does it,” he says.
“You...?” I look at him. “But...”
“But what?” he says. “You said yourself, you can’t be anywhere near this. They’ll look hard at everything about you.”
“I know, but—Christian, you’re like this successful— You have all this money and you’re so successful. You don’t have to get mixed up with something like this.”
He moves over to me, kneels down, takes my hand. “This money means everything to you. It’s a chance for a new life.”
“For me, yes. But you? You have more money than God.”
“I wouldn’t be doing it for me,” he says. “I’ll do it for you.”
“I can’t... I can’t ask you to do that.”
“You didn’t ask.” He touches my face. “You still don’t get how I feel about you, do you?”
I look down and shake my head. “I’ve never been in... I’ve never—”
“Me neither,” he says. “Until I met you. I didn’t think I was capable.”
I laugh. “I didn’t thinkIwas capable.”
He reaches for my shirt, starts to unbutton it. “I’ll do this for you,” he says. “If you’re okay with it. You have to be okay with it.”
If I’mokaywith it?
I am one hundred percent, absolutely, totally, completely okay with it.
Why do you think I’m with you, Christian? Because I care about you? Because you’re hot? Because I’m a “lonely wife” who can’t get enough of your giant, throbbing manhood?
Please. I picked you for this very task. I’ve known about Lauren since before I first met you. Today was just the day I decided to tell you. I’ve been planning this since the first time I walked into your office.
You’re not a successful investor. You’re Nick Caracci, a two-bit swindler, a con man, a grifter, who thinks he’s hit the jackpot with me.
You were never going to invest that money. I was never going to let younearthat money.
I just need you to help me kill Lauren Betancourt.
58
Christian
Good. So far, so good with Vicky. I have buy-in. She’s willing to go along with this.
I let it simmer for a while. I don’t want to hit her with the entire plan all at once and overwhelm her. But Gavin and I have put together an initial outline.
For one thing, it has to happen on Halloween. Between now and November 2, when Simon goes to his divorce lawyer, there’s no other day that makes sense. Today is Tuesday the twenty-fifth. Tomorrow or the next day—Wednesday or Thursday—is too soon. I need more time than that. The weekend is not going to work. Friday, Saturday, those nights are too unpredictable, and based on Lauren’s Facebook page, she seems to reserve those nights for her girlfriends, usually downtown.
And Monday the thirty-first—Halloween—is perfect, right? Most people are home so they can answer the door to trick-or-treaters. I can wear a costume that lets me waltz around in anonymity. I can hide a weapon in a costume or in some fake trick-or-treat bag. It’s the only day of the year that a woman would open her door to a man wearing a disguise over his face.
But like I said, I don’t want to hit Vicky with this all at once, so I give her a Nicky Special, fucking her upright, holding her up, pinned against the wall, her legs wrapped around my back, drilling her until she cries out in climax. I’ll bet Simon never didthatto her. I’ll bet he couldn’t hold her up. It doesn’t take long to make her come. It usually doesn’t. And all the talk about murder is probably an aphrodisiac on top of it. I know it is for me.
That should help remind her what a great deal she’ll be getting down the road, after she’s done with little Simon.