Page 33 of Sweet Talk (Buchanan-Renard 10)
She was so rattled she had to think about the question a minute before blurting, âIt was money I saved.â
âThatâs another lie,â Ronan said. He tried to sound disappointed.
âI donât know what youâre talking about. I really donât.â
Ronanâs voice hardened. âWe traced it, Vicky. The money came from Carl Simmonsâs account.â
âNo, no, it didnât. I saved all that money.â
âCarl withdrew that precise amount,â he said. He didnât have proof that Carl had done any such thing, but he was going to see if Vicky would take the bait. âAnd you deposited that amount. Thereâs only one conclusion we can draw. Carl gave you the money. So now I have to ask, why? Could it be for the alibi you gave him?â
She hadnât asked for an attorney, so Ronan kept at her, question after question, trying to wear her down.
Grayson spoke again. âYouâre going to prison for a long time if you lie to us. Youâre as much responsible for shooting Olivia MacKenzie as Carl is.â
âNo. Why would you thinkââ
âYouâre lying for him to give him an alibi, so youâre in it with him,â Ronan said. He slapped his hand down on the table, and the sound reverberated around the small room. Vicky jumped.
âTell her about the proof we have that sheâs lying,â Grayson told Ronan. âThe other proof.â
What the hell? Ronan had no idea what Grayson was talking about, but he nodded and said, âI will. Iâm getting to it.â
âThereâs more proof?â Vicky was scared and unsure now.
âI donât understand,â Ronan said, shaking his head. âCarlâs going to go to prison for his other crimes. Why are you protecting him? You certainly donât have to worry about giving the money back to him.â
Grayson knew they were going to have to let her go. Aside from the fact that Vicky had deposited ten thousand dollars, everything they claimed to know about her was fabricated. He wasnât through messing with Ronan, though. âGo ahead, Agent Conrad. Tell her about the other proof.â
Ronan was going to have to come up with something, and Grayson couldnât wait to hear what he would say. He knew his friendâs mind was scrambling.
Vicky panicked. âI want a deal.â
âYou what?â Ronan asked. Heâd also been thinking they were going to have to cut her loose.
Grayson stepped forward and leaned on the table. âWhat kind of deal?â
âIâll tell you what really happened, and you donât put me in lockup. You let me go for good. No charges . . . ever.â
They nodded, but before they spoke their agreement or disagreement, she blurted, âYes, I lied. He made me. He was with me that night, but only for a little while. He left early. He seemed to be in a real hurry.â
âDid you see what he was driving?â Grayson asked.
âI did. Iâd never seen it before, so I asked him about it. It was a brand-new SUV. One of those big fancy ones. He said it belonged to the fleet that they used whenever lawyers from other branches were in town.â
âWhat color?â Ronan asked.
âBlack. Real shiny black.â
Grayson walked out into the hall. Ronan followed him. âA black SUV doesnât prove anything.â
âUnless we can show where itâs been,â Grayson said and then added, âGPS.â
Ronan smiled. âOf course. Simmons spends most of his time in New York. He canât be that familiar with D.C. He might have needed directions to Oliviaâs apartment.â
âOr maybe even Martinâs house to plant a gun. If he programmed an address into the GPS, there would be a record.â
âItâs worth a shot.â
âLetâs go find that SUV.â
* * *
Carl Simmonsâs misery started and ended with Olivia MacKenzie. She had set out to destroy her father and him, and she had succeeded. He tried, but he hadnât been able to shut her up or stop her relentless quest.
Carl had estimated he had at least another good year to draw more and more rich investors into the Trinity Fund. Heâd tucked away a little bit in foreign banks, but he simply hadnât had enough time to hide what heâd need to live on. It was too late now. He had to figure out a way to get out of the country.
Heâd made sure there werenât any papers to prove he was a silent partner in the fund. Nothing in writing to damn him. That was only slowing the Feds down, though. Eventually theyâd have enough to fry him.
Yes, it started and ended with her. Heâd tried to stop the woman by threatening her, but she didnât scare that easily, so he took it to the next step and went to her employers to discredit her. That didnât work either. Killing her seemed the most logical solution.
Kline needed money and agreed to do it, but he backed out at the last minute. Simmons decided that he would have to pull the trigger himself. Three bullets and he still couldnât get rid of her.
He felt confident heâd covered his tracks pretty well, but then finding out about Ray Martin was a lucky break. His arrest was covered in all the papers, so Carl took advantage of his good fortune and decided to hide his gun at Martinâs house. Simple as could be. Martin would go down, and maybe Olivia would be so shaken sheâd worry about the shooting and back off her persistent prying. He actually thought it was a possibility . . . that is, until she started messing with Robertâs deal with Jeff Wilcox. She brought in the lawyer, Mitchell Kaplan, and Carl knew that pit bull wouldnât stop until their whole operation was exposed.
All theyâd needed was a little time, a few days for them to clean out their accounts and hide what was left of the money before they took off and disappeared, but when he learned about her visit to Jeff Wilcox, he could almost hear the clock ticking down the minutes before he and Robert MacKenzie were destroyed. Carl should have killed Olivia then, but he had to act quickly, so heâd tried to use the mental illness ploy to get her hauled away to an institution for a few days. He never should have trusted those idiots, Kline and Vogel. They screwed up everything, and if heâd just been a little quicker, he would have gotten away before the Feds showed up.
Carl refused to be defeated. They may have arrested him, but he was smart enough to convince the judge to release him on bail. Obviously theyâd underestimated him. He had a plan. He was going to leave in the middle of the night, drive one of the fleet cars that wouldnât be recognized, and hightail it to Miami. He had connections there, people who could get him out of the United States.
Everything was in place. He was all set to leave that night, but then he got the phone call that changed everything. An inside source, an attorney who had a contentious relationship with the FBI and who owed Simmons a favor, called to let him know his bail was going to be revoked. The Feds were on their way to his house to take him in. He was being charged with attempted murder. The source told him about the evidence. The GPS had damned him, and Carl knew there wasnât any way out of this now. Even if he tried, he couldnât get away.
When heâd been arrested for his white-collar crimes, he hadnât panicked. Even if he didnât make it out of the country, at the very worst, heâd be sent to a minimum-security prison, or as the media liked to call these facilities, a country club. Now that he was going down for attempted murder, minimum security was off the table. The judge would put him in a hard-core federal prison, and Carl knew he couldnât handle that. Just thinking about it terrified him.
Heâd rather die.
The more he thought about it, the more sense it made. He would die. It would be quick and over. No long years of terror in prison. Heâd go out on his own terms. And he wouldnât go alone. Yes, heâd take her with him. It was fitting, wasnât it? Sheâd caused all this pain in his life. She had been his ruination. Now he would be hers.
He already had the fleet car waiting, a dark blue Honda. It was parked on a street a couple
of blocks away. Heâd removed the license plate and swapped it with one he found on another Honda in a parking lot.
He had to act fast. Once the Feds discovered he wasnât at his small D.C. apartment, theyâd put out a search for him. He knew he couldnât evade them long. He took the gun he kept in his safe and hurried down the street to the waiting car. He drove to Oliviaâs apartment building, pulled into the garage across the street, and waited. Darkness was descending. It was Saturday, and he hoped sheâd go out. Heâd follow her and ambush her. It wasnât much of a plan, but he hadnât had time to figure out something more elaborate.
There were other cars parked on the street across from the entrance to her building. People were sitting inside them. Newspeople, he knew, waiting for a chance to talk to her about her father. He might just get lucky and shoot a couple of them, as well. They certainly hadnât been kind to him. Why should he care about them?
Carl decided heâd have a better vantage if he joined the other vans and cars. An Acura left, and he pulled into its slot behind a white van. It was a great spot. A red SUV honked at him because heâd gotten to the space first. Like the other vans and SUVs and sedans, he kept his motor running. Slinking down in his seat, he waited. Condensation quickly covered the windshield and windows, making it difficult for anyone walking by to see inside.
Carl had brought a flask of whiskey with him. He took a long swallow and felt the liquid burn his insides. The whiskey gave him courage. Before he killed himself, he hoped he could watch Olivia die. He smiled thinking about it and took another swig. It would all be over soon.
* * *
Grayson paced in Oliviaâs apartment while he waited to hear that Simmons had been picked up. Agents were on their way to Simmonsâs apartment now, and it shouldnât be much longer before Grayson got the call that the bastard was in handcuffs. Only when Simmons was in lockup would Grayson stop worrying.
Olivia was getting ready to go out. Grayson was taking her to a dinner party honoring Dr. Pardieu.
She had taken the news about Carl Simmons well and admitted she was actually more relieved than surprised.
âThe GPS was his big mistake. He left a clear record that heâd driven to Martinâs house to plant the gun,â Grayson told her. âAre you happy now that you know it was indeed Simmons who tried to kill you?â he asked.
She laughed. âHappy? This will put him away forever, so yes, I guess I am.â
Grayson had told her that as soon as Simmons was picked up they could leave.
The bedroom door opened, and there she stood. She wore a black dress with a V-neck that showed just enough cleavage to make Grayson nuts.
âYou look beautiful,â he told her as he pulled her into his arms and kissed the side of her neck. âEvery time I get near you, I want to take you to bed.â
She felt the same way. She kissed him on his cheek and pulled away. âWeâre going to be late if we donât leave now. Itâs a thirty-minute drive to the restaurant.â
âI havenât heard about Simmons yet. Weâre going to waitââ
âCouldnât we get in the car and start driving?â
âOlivia . . .â
The warning in his voice didnât deter her. âIf we get to the restaurant and Simmons still hasnât been taken into custody, weâll turn around and come back. I donât want to wait here, then drive like crazy to get there before itâs over. Itâs Dr. Pardieu,â she said. âI canât miss it. Heâs like a father to me.â
He relented. âOkay, weâll leave now, but you have to promise youâll stay in the car and not balk if we have to turn around.â
She smiled. âIâm not sure about the balking, Grayson. Iâll stay in the car, but I feel Iâm entitled to a little balking.â
He helped her with her coat, kissed her neck again, and buttoned his suit jacket. âReady to walk the gauntlet?â
âHow many reporters did you see?â
âThree vans, a couple of SUVs. Theyâll try to swarm as soon as you step outside. Keep your head down,â he told her. âIâll get you out of here as fast as I can.â
âYou should park in the garage from now on,â she suggested.
âTheyâre down there, too,â he replied. âMore than are on the street. When we get back, Iâll talk to the doorman about sweeping the garage.â
He pulled up her collar as the elevator door opened in the lobby. âReady?â
She nodded. Grayson took her hand and strode past John. She waved to him as she was being pulled through the door.
A door opened on every car that was parked across the street, and cameramen and reporters came running. Grayson noticed a blue Honda opposite the apartment entrance. It hadnât been there when heâd arrived. The sedan was squeezed in between two vans. As Grayson hurried Olivia around his car to get to the passenger side, out of the corner of his eye he saw the door of the Honda open and Carl Simmons step out into the street.
Olivia was blinded by camera lights. She put her hand up to shield her eyes, unaware of the danger.
Simmons swung his right arm up, and Grayson saw the glint of steel. He moved so quickly, Olivia didnât have time to brace herself or react. He threw her behind him, and she fell to her knees before he flattened her with his body. In one fluid motion, he covered her and trained his gun on Simmons.
He shouted to the reporters, âGet down, get down . . .â
âWhatââ was all that Olivia could utter. Grayson had knocked the wind out of her. Gunshots stopped her from asking questions. She squeezed her eyes shut and prayed Grayson wouldnât get hit. Protecting her, heâd made himself a target.
Camera lights illuminated the scene that was unfolding. Simmons ran toward them, shooting again and again, trying desperately to get Olivia. Grayson fired only one shot. That was all he needed. The bullet sliced into Simmonsâs black heart. His arms flailed, his legs buckled, and he crashed spread-eagle to the ground, face-first.
The noise was ear-piercing. People were screaming and running every which way. Oliviaâs heart pounded in her chest, and she couldnât catch her breath. Grayson lifted her, checking to make certain she hadnât been hit by one of Simmonsâs bullets. Her dress was ripped all the way up to the top of her thigh, her elbow was scraped, and she was shaking from head to toe.
Graysonâs eyes showed fear mixed with his rage. âAre you all right? Did heââ
âIâm okay,â she whispered, surprised by how weak her voice sounded. âWhat happened?â
âCarl Simmons.â
Stunned, she asked, âHeâs here?â
âHeâs dead. Can you walk? I want you to get inside. Tell John to lock the door. Donât talk to anyone. Just sit and wait for me. I need to get to Simmonsâs gunââ
âGo,â she said.
John held the door for her, blocking two eager reporters from entering. He bolted the door behind her and led her to the security room behind the desk. âNo one will bother you here, and you can watch the street, see what Agent Kincaid is doing.â
Grayson ran across the street. Pushing reporters out of his way, he knelt beside Carl to check for a pulse while he called it in.
Others had called 911 already. Within bare minutes, police and agents filled the street. Olivia waited patiently, but her chest was getting tight, and she knew she was going to be in trouble if she didnât use her inhaler. She then realized she didnât have her purse. She must have dropped it when Grayson pushed her. John found it under the car and brought it to her, and once sheâd used her inhaler, she felt immediate relief. She put her head back, closed her eyes, and tried to calm her racing heartbeat.
She thought about Grayson and how calm heâd been while that maniac was shooting at them. He was completely in control, until it was over. Then his composure turned into fury that Simmons had tried to hurt her. He had put his life on the line to save hers, she
realized, and her eyes filled with tears at the thought of what could have happened to him.
Knowing it would be some time before Grayson was finished, she went back upstairs. She stripped out of her clothes, washed her hands, and cleaned the cut on her elbow. She slipped into her silk robe and curled up on the sofa to wait for him.
He arrived a half hour later and found her standing at the kitchen window, looking down at the street.
âIs he really dead?â she asked.
âYes.â
âWhat was he thinking to come here? With all the reporters . . . He couldnât have thought heâd get away with it.â
âHe wanted to die, but he wanted to kill you first.â
âHe really hated me, didnât he?â
âYes, he did. You stopped him from destroying more innocent peopleâs lives. The worldâs a better place without him.â Grayson tossed his tie on the table. âYou took your clothes off,â he commented.
âYes.â
He took a step toward her and stopped. âItâs not too late. We could catch the end of the party I guess.â
She took a step toward him. âI donât want to go out. I could fix dinner . . . microwave something. Are you hungry?â
He slowly looked her up and down, smiled, and said, âYeah, Iâm hungry.â
Lifting her into his arms, he walked into the bedroom and kicked the door shut behind him.
THIRTY-THREE
Grayson wouldnât leave Olivia alone. He was determined to marry her, and nothing she could do or say would change his mind. He had listened to her protests for two months, but he was persistent.
âIf I were to get sick again, youâd have to suffer with me,â she argued. âAre you ready for that?â
âHow about I toss you out if you get so much as a cold?â
âIâm serious.â
âWhat happens if I get sick?â he countered.