“You want to die, don’t you?” Katherine asked him.
Valentine didn’t answer.
Dane pushed Valentine into the back of the car. Kept his gun out and aimed at the killer the whole time.
Katherine was conscious of her own weapon. So close.
She slid into the passenger seat. Glanced back through the protective glass to see Valentine smiling.
“Are the medics coming in the helicopter?” he wanted to know.
“The chopper’s coming,” Mac noted as he cranked the car.
“Then we’re all set.” Valentine’s voice was mild. “Start driving, Detective, and I’ll tell you exactly where to go.”
Katherine already knew where he wanted to take them. Hell.
“Be sure to buckle your seat belt, Kat,” Valentine murmured. “Cops can be such terrible drivers.”
Mac cursed under his breath.
Then they started driving. And driving. Valentine gave directions in a low, calm voice. They left the city. Drove toward the swamp. The road narrowed to just two lanes, an old highway filled with potholes and heavy cracks.
“So far away,” Dane said from the darkness of the car’s backseat.
Katherine’s sweaty palm curled around her door handle.
Dane sighed. “You wouldn’t just be leading us on a wild goose chase, would you, Michael?”
Michael. Katherine flinched at the name.
“No, Detective,” Valentine said in that same calm voice. “After Boston, I learned the importance of not shitting where I eat.”
Her jaw dropped.
“So I keep my kills far away from my house now.”
Katherine glanced back, but in the heavy darkness, she couldn’t make out more than the outline of his features.
“Go about thirty yards, then turn right, Mac,” Valentine said.
The car began to slow.
“You’re both incredibly trusting, for cops.” Now a rougher tone had entered Valentine’s voice. “You let me lure you both out here, with Kat. And, Dane, I’m betting you even gave her a gun before she climbed into the car.”
Katherine felt the gun in her jacket pocket.
“How do you know,” Valentine asked, tone curious, “that Kat isn’t working with me? That the goal wasn’t to pull you both out here, and when we make that turn in a few minutes, when Mac is working hard to control the wheel because there’s going to be one huge dip up there—how do you know Kat won’t pull out her gun then and blow a hole in Mac’s head?”
Silence.
The car was still slowing as Mac prepared to make that turn.
“When she shoots Mac, I can ram my head into your face, breaking your nose the same way I did that prick’s at the station. I’ll disarm you, and, while we’re fighting, Kat will come around to the back of the vehicle and open the door. When you look up, my Kat will have the gun pointed dead-center at your forehead.”
She didn’t speak. Her heart was racing, the thunder echoing in her ears.
“All along, Kat could have been secretly working with me. We lived so close to one another, saw each other every single day…”
Mac was turning onto the dirt road.
“Does a part of you suspect her, Dane?” Valentine’s dark question poured through the car. “Inside, deep down, are you one hundred percent sure that you can count on her? Is your heart racing fast? Are you nervous, are you wondering—”
Dane was laughing.
The car hit the heavy dip, jostling the whole vehicle. Swearing, Mac fought to keep the car steady.
“Save your bullshit,” Dane rasped. “I trust Katherine.”
“Funny. I trust her, too.”
The weird part was Katherine knew it was true. Valentine did trust her.
“But what about you, Mac?” Valentine asked.
Katherine glanced toward Mac. The light from the dash barely illuminated him.
“Do you also trust Kat? Or do you keep glancing at her from the corner of your eye, every few moments?”
He had been looking at her. She’d felt his gaze slide to her more than a few times during the drive.
“Dane’s f**king her, so, of course, he’ll say she won’t turn on him, but what do you think? Do you think she’s just waiting? That she’s going to attack when she has that perfect moment?”
“Stop,” Dane snapped at him.
“Kat is the one who got your girl to talk in the hospital.” Valentine’s voice was even deeper now. “Kat is the one who sealed Ronnie’s fate. I told Ronnie that she could live as long as she didn’t talk, but she had to go and break the rules.”
“Shut up,” Mac gritted out.
“When I found her in that basement, she was crying. Tears were tracking down her cheeks. She had duct tape over her mouth and—”
“Shut the f**k up!” Mac was screaming now, his hands locked tightly around the wheel.
“Mac…” Katherine began. “Look at the road.” Because it was dark. Bushes and branches were beating at the vehicle, and Mac was driving faster now. Faster.
“Don’t say another word,” Dane warned Valentine.
But that was just going to make him want to say more. She knew it would.
“The ropes were around her arms and legs. Her skin was slashed open. Her blood was dripping off the table. At first, I thought about just shoving my knife in her chest. That would have been so easy.”
Katherine glanced back. Saw the shadow of Dane’s gun. It was rising toward Valentine.
“But I decided to let her live. Then. I won’t make the same mistake again. I’ll go for her. I’ll slip into her bedroom. I’ll tie her up. Maybe leave the tape off so she can beg.”
Mac spun toward him. “Shut him up, Dane! Or I’ll f**king—”
“Then I’ll drive the knife into her chest.”
Katherine was looking straight ahead, staring in horror because she’d just tried to grab the car’s steering wheel, and she realized that dark spot in the dirt up ahead…it wasn’t just hard mud or a big crack in the surface of the area.
“Spikes!” she cried as they came into focus beneath the glare of the car’s headlights. “Stop!” Her scream.
But it was too late. She couldn’t reach the brake from her position. Mac wasn’t even looking at the road. He turned back, too late, and jerked the wheel to the right.
The car hit the spikes. The front wheels blew out instantly. Mac was trying to control the car, just like he’d done minutes before, but this time there was no saving the vehicle. He’d yanked the wheel too hard to the right. The vehicle was spinning now, hurtling over onto its side, and the bushes had hidden the fact that on that right side was only swampy water waiting below. They were up on an incline, and as the car tumbled over and over again, it rolled down that incline.